The 2005 civil unrest in France of October and November was a series of riots and violent clashes, involving mainly the burning of cars and public buildings by gangs of youths at night. Events spread to deprived housing projects (the cités HLM) in various parts of France. Triggered by the death of two teenagers in Clichy-sous-Bois, a poor and isolated commune in the eastern suburbs of Paris, the violence predominantly involved second-generation immigrant youths who live in underprivileged neighborhoods and led to strong debates about integration and discrimination in France.
The riots began on Thursday 27 October 2005, triggered by the deaths of two teenagers in Clichy-sous-Bois, a poor commune in an eastern banlieue (suburb) of Paris. Initially confined to the Paris area, the unrest subsequently spread to other areas of the Île-de-France région, and spread through the outskirts of France's urban areas, also affecting some rural areas. After 3 November it spread to other cities in France, affecting all 15 of the large aires urbaines in the country. Thousands of vehicles were burned, and at least one person was killed by the rioters. Close to 2900 rioters were arrested.
On 8 November, President Jacques Chirac declared a state of emergency effective at midnight. Despite the new regulations, riots continued, though on a reduced scale, the following two nights, and again worsened the third night. On 9 November and the morning of 10 November a school was burned in Belfort, and there was violence in Toulouse, Lille, Strasbourg, Marseille, and Lyon *.
On 10 November and the morning of 11 November, violence increased overnight in the Paris region, and there were still a number of police wounded across the country According to the Interior, violence, arson, and attacks on police worsened on the 11th and morning of the 12th, and there were further attacks on power stations, causing a blackout in the northern part of Amiens [http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20051112/wl_nm/france_riots_dc_141;_ylt=ArRHFTwls0_pf7tLpcDDZLjgelIB;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl.
Rioting took place in the city center of Lyon on Saturday, 12 November, as young people attacked cars and threw rocks at riot police who responded with tear gas. Also that night, a nursery school was torched in the southern town of Carpentras *.
On the night of the 14th and the morning of the 15th, 215 vehicles were burned across France and 71 people were arrested Thirteen vehicles were torched in central Paris, compared to only one the night before. In the suburbs of Paris, firebombs were thrown at the treasury in Bobigny and at an electrical transformer in Clichy-sous-Bois, the neighborhood where the disturbances started. A daycare centre in Cambrai and a tourist agency in Fontenay-sous-Bois were also attacked. Eighteen buses were damaged by arson at a depot in Saint-Etienne. The mosque in Saint-Chamond was hit by three firebombs, which did little damage [http://fr.news.yahoo.com/15112005/5/violences-urbaines-plus-de-200-vehicules-incendies-dans-la-nuit.html.
Only 163 vehicles went up in flames on the 20th night of unrest, 15 November to 16, leading the French government to claim that the country was returning to an "almost normal situation". During the night's events, a Roman Catholic church was burned and a vehicle was rammed into an unoccupied police station in Romans-sur-Isère. In other incidents, a police officer was injured while making an arrest after youths threw bottles of acid at the town hall in Pont-l'Évêque, and a junior high school in Grenoble was set on fire. Fifty arrests were carried out across the country [http://permanent.nouvelobs.com/societe/20051116.FAP6521.html?0833.
On 16 November, The French parliament approved a three-month extension of the state of emergency (which ended on the 4 January 2006 aimed at curbing riots by urban youths. The Senate on Wednesday passed the extension - a day after a similar vote in the lower house. The laws allow local authorities to impose curfews, conduct house-to-house searches and ban public gatherings. The lower house passed them by a 346-148 majority, and the Senate by 202-125[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4441246.stm. The same day, hooded youths burned two cars, erected street barricades, and fired gunshots at police in the town of Pointe-à-Pitre on the island of Guadeloupe, a French territory in the Caribbean. Police returned fire.
A wine festival in Grenoble, Le Beaujolais nouveau, ended in rioting on the night of 18 November, with a crowd throwing rocks and bottles at riot police. Tear gas was deployed by officers. Sixteen youths and 17 police officers were injured. Though those events might have been easily linked with the riots in Paris suburbs, it appears they differ completely in nature and might just well be considered as predictable "wine festival" casualties, caused by misunderstanding and alcohol.
On December 10, France's highest administrative body, the Council of State, ruled that the three-month state of emergency decreed to guarantee calm following unrest was legal. It rejected a complaint from 74 law professors (led by Frédéric Rolin) and the Green party, declaring that the conditions that led to the unrest that started on October 27, the quick spread of violence and the possibility that it could recur justify the state of emergency, which is to end in mid-February. The Council of State argued that "each night, between 40 to 60 cars are torched, and we have to be cautious with New Year's Eve approaching". The complaint challenged the state of emergency's necessity, and said it compromised fundamental liberties. The Syndicat de la Magistrature, a magistrates' union, declared to Le Monde that "with such a decision, it can be feared that the state of emergency will be declared each Christmas".
The state of emergency was subsequently lifted in January 2006 by president Chirac.
Three of the teenagers, thinking they were being chased by the police, climbed a wall to hide in a power substation Malian background, and Zyed Benna, a 17-year-old of Tunisian origin" *" target="_blank" >(electric substation. Muttin Altun, 17 (whose parents, Haseyin and Aïcha, are Turkish Kurds) was injured and hospitalized. A friend of the three stated that Clichy-sous-Bois "has three principal communities, the Arabs, the Turks and the Blacks. The three victims each represented a community". *" target="_blank" >[http://www.lemonde.fr/web/article/0,1-0@2-3226,36-707269@51-704172,0.html
Citing two police investigations, The New York Times reported that the incident began at 17:20 on Thursday, 27 October 2005 in Clichy-sous-Bois when police were called to a construction site there to investigate a possible break-in. Six youths were detained by 17:50. During questioning at the police station in Livry-Gargan at 18:12, blackouts occurred at the station and in nearby areas. These were caused, police say, by the fatal electrocution of the two boys and the injury to the third. *
"According to statements by Mr. Altun, who remains hospitalized with injuries, a group of ten or so friends had been playing football on a nearby field and were returning home when they saw the police patrol. They all fled in different directions to avoid the lengthy questioning that youths in the housing projects say they often face from the police. They say they are required to present identity papers and can be held as long as four hours at the police station, and sometimes their parents must come before the police will release them." *
There is controversy over whether the teens were actually chased. The local prosecutor, François Molins, has said that although they believed so, the police were actually after other suspects attempting to avoid an identity check Molins and Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy maintain that the dead teenagers had not been "physically pursued" by the police. This is disputed by some: The Australian reports "Despite denials by police officials and Sarkozy and de Villepin, friends of the boys said they were being pursued by police after a false accusation of burglary and that they 'feared interrogation'" [http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,17112484%255E2703,00.html. There were initial police accusations that the boys were thieves and well known by the police, accusations immediately echoed by Dominique de Villepin on national television, which turned out to be false and were later withdrawn. Such inconsistent statements by police and Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy have fueled public mistrust of the authorities since the riots began.
This event ignited pre-existing tensions. Protesters told The Associated Press the unrest was an expression of frustration with high unemployment and police harassment and brutality in the areas. "People are joining together to say we've had enough," said one protester. "We live in ghettos. Everyone lives in fear." *" target="_blank" >The rioters' suburbs are also home to a large, mostly North African, immigrant population, allegedly adding religious tensions which some right-wing commentators believed contribute further to such frustrations. However, according to Pascal Mailhos, head of the Renseignements Généraux (French intelligence agency) the influence of radical islamism in the 2005 civil unrest in France was nil. [http://www.lemonde.fr/web/article/0,1-0%402-3224,36-713756%4051-713595,0.html
Commenting other demonstrations in Paris a few months later, BBC summarized reasons behind the events included youth unemployment and lack of opportunities in France's poorest communities *. But during the riots, many focused on other social issues and particularly on immigration and racial discrimination as rioteers were mostly second-generation immigrant youths.
The head of the French intelligence agency (Renseignements généraux - RG) denied any Islamic factor in the riots, while the New York Times reported on November 5, 2005 that "while a majority of the youths committing the acts are Muslim, and of African or North African origin" local residents say that "second-generation Portuguese immigrants and even some children of native French have taken part." *
The BBC reported that French society's negative perceptions of Islam and social discrimination of immigrants had alienated some French Muslims and may have been a factor in the causes of the riots; "Islam is seen as the biggest challenge to the country's secular model in the past 100 years" It reported that there was a "huge well of fury and resentment among the children of North African and African immigrants in the suburbs of French cities." separatism and that "the suburbs are full of people desperate to integrate into the wider society." [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4414442.stm" target="_blank" >*
The inhabitants of the French suburbs (banlieue) suffer from unemployment at a much higher level than that of the rest of France. According to the BBC, unemployment of people of foreign origin is 1.5 times higher than that of people of French origin, after adjusting for educational qualifications. An unemployment rate of 5% for French university graduates can be compared to the unemployment rate of 26.5% for university graduates of North African origin (BBC).
Racial and social discrimination against persons with dark skin or Arabic and/or African-sounding names has been cited as a major cause of unhappiness in the areas affected. According to the BBC, "Those who live there say that when they go for a job, as soon as they give their name as "Mamadou" and say they live in Clichy-sous-Bois, they are immediately told that the vacancy has been taken." The nonprofit organization SOS Racisme, associated with the French Socialist Party (PS), said that after they sent identical curriculum vitaes (CVs) to French companies with European- and African or Muslim-sounding names attached, they found CVs with African or Muslim sounding names were systematically discarded. In addition, they have claimed widespread use of markings indicating ethnicity in employers' databases and that discrimination is more widespread for those with college degrees than for those without. * * *
Prime minister Dominique de Villepin, in an interview to the US TV channel CNN, said:
However, this claim was only partially correct, in the measure that the original spark which lighted the riots were precisely the death of two youths pursued by the police.
| day | vehicles burned | arrests | extent of riots | sources | |
| 1. | Friday October 28 2005 | NA | 27 | Clichy-sous-Bois | * |
| 2. | Saturday October 29 2005 | 29 | 14 | Clichy-sous-Bois | * |
| 3. | Sunday October 30 2005 | 30 | 19 | Clichy-sous-Bois | * |
| 4. | Monday October 31 2005 | NA | NA | Clichy-sous-Bois, Montfermeil | |
| 5. | Tuesday November 1 2005 | 69 | NA | Seine-Saint-Denis | * |
| 6. | Wednesday November 2 2005 | 40 | NA | Seine-Saint-Denis, Seine-et-Marne Val-d’Oise, Hauts-de-Seine | |
| 7. | Thursday November 3 2005 | 315 | 29 | Île-de-France, Dijon, Rouen, Bouches-du-Rhône | * |
| 8. | Friday November 4 2005 | 596 | 78 | Île-de-France, Dijon, Rouen, Marseille | [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4405620.stm |
| 9. | Saturday November 5 2005 | 897 | 253 | Île-de-France, Rouen, Dijon, Marseille, Évreux, Roubaix, Tourcoing, Hem, Strasbourg, Rennes, Nantes, Nice, Toulouse, Bordeaux, Pau, Lille | [http://www.france-echos.com/actualite.php?cle=7518 |
| 10. | Sunday November 6 2005 | 1,295 | 312 | Île-de-France, Nord, Eure, Eure-et-Loir, Haute-Garonne, Loire-Atlantique, Essonne. | * |
| 11. | Monday November 7 2005 | 1,408 | 395 | 274 towns in total. Île-de-France, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, Midi-Pyrénées, Rhône-Alpes, Alsace, Franche-Comté. | * |
| 12. | Tuesday November 8 2005 | 1,173 | 330 | Paris region, Lille, Auxerre, Toulouse, Alsace, Lorraine, Franche-Comté | * |
| 13. | Wednesday November 9 2005 | 617 | 280 | 116 towns in total. Paris region, Toulouse, Rhône, Gironde, Arras, Grasse, Dole, Bassens | ** | *" target="_blank" >[http://www.breitbart.com/news/2005/11/08/D8DON2L00.html
| 14. | Thursday November 10 2005 | 482 | 203 | Toulouse, Belfort | [http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2005-11-10T073440Z_01_HO756911_RTRUKOC_0_UK-FRANCE-RIOTS1.xml&archived=False | *
| 15. | Friday November 11 2005 | 463 | 201 | Toulouse, Lille, Lyon, Strasbourg, Marseille | * |
| 16. | Saturday November 12 2005 | 502 | 206 | NA | * |
| 17. | Sunday November 13 2005 | 374 | 212 | Lyon, Tolouse, Carpentras, Dunkirk, Amiens, Grenoble | * |
| 18. | Monday November 14 2005 | 284 | 115 | Toulouse, Faches-Thumesnil, Halluin, Grenoble | * |
| 19. | Tuesday November 15 2005 | 215 | 71 | Saint-Chamond, Bourges | * | *
| 20. | Wednesday November 16 2005 | 163 | 50 | Paris region, Arras, Brest, Vitry-le-François, Romans-sur-Isère | [http://www.nzz.ch/2005/11/16/al/newzzEG35LKJD-12.html |
| TOTAL | 20 nights | 8,973 | 2,888 |
Sarkozy reiterated his previous qualifications of housing projects youth as "rabble", which, with his pre-riots call for the suburbs to be "Karcherised" - a reference to a common brand of high-pressure industrial cleaner - were said by rioters to be one of the main reason of the civil unrest. *
The controversial Union of Islamic Organisations of France (UOIF) issued a fatwa against the riots, without much result. Dalil Boubakeur, mufti of Paris' Great Mosque and leader of the French Council of Musulman Faith (CFCM), as well as Marseilles's mufti, criticized the UOIF for this irrelevant fatwa and opposed Nicolas Sarkozy's controversial use of Islamic organizations, declaring that their role was not to intercede for the youth. Henceforth, the leading authorities of French Islamic organizations refused any political deviation of Islam, which was to be maintained in the private sphere as a personal matter.
The families of the two youths killed, after refusing to meet with Sarkozy, met with Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin. Azouz Begag, delegate minister for the promotion of equal opportunity, criticized Sarkozy for the latter's use of "imprecise, warlike semantics" *, while Marie-George Buffet, secretary of the French Communist Party, criticized an "unacceptable strategy of tension" and the not less unexcusable definition of French youth as "scum" (racaille) by the Minister of Interior, Sarkozy; she also called for the creation of a Parliamentary commission to investigate the circumstances of the death of the two young people which lighted the riots .
On the 20 November 2005, Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin announced tightened controls on immigration: Authorities will increase enforcement of requirements that immigrants seeking 10-year residency permits or French citizenship master the French language and integrate into society. Chirac's government also plans to crack down on fraudulent marriages that a minority of immigrants use to acquire residency rights and launch a stricter screening process for foreign students. Anti-racism groups widely opposed the measures, saying that greater government scrutiny of immigrants could stir up racism and racist acts and that energy and money was best deployed for others uses than chasing an ultra-minority of fraudsters. *
An extra 2,600 police were drafted on 6 November. On 7 November, French premier Dominique de Villepin announced on the TF1 television channel the deployment of 18,000 policemen, supported by a 1,500 strong reserve. Sarkozy also suspended eight police officers for beating up someone they had arrested after TV displayed the images of this act of police brutality. *.
Foreign news coverage was criticized by president Chirac as showing in some cases excessiveness (démesure)and Prime Minister Villepin said in an interview to CNN that the events should not be called riots as the situation was not violent to the extent of the 1992 Los Angeles riots, no death casualties being reported during the unrest itself – although it had begun after the deaths of two youth pursued by the police.[http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/europe/11/29/devillepin.text/.
Emergency laws | History of France | History of Paris | Politics of France | Riots and civil unrest in France | Seine-Saint-Denis
Безредици във Франция (2005) | Disturbis a França del 2005 | Unruhen in Frankreich 2005 | Disturbios de Francia de 2005 | Tumultoj en Francio en 2005 | Émeutes de 2005 dans les banlieues françaises | 2005년 파리교외 소요사태 | 2005 Francia incendiadi | Kerusuhan sipil Perancis 2005 | Rivolte del 2005 nelle banlieues francesi | המהומות בצרפת (2005) | 2005-ös franciaországi zavargások | Rellen in Frankrijk 2005 | 2005年パリ郊外暴動事件 | Opptøyene i Frankrike 2005 | Zamieszki we Francji, 2005 | Revolta de jovens dos subúrbios de Paris em 2005 | Массовые беспорядки во Франции 2005 | Ranskan lähiöiden väkivaltaisuudet 2005 | Parisupploppen 2005 | 2005 Fransa azınlık başkaldırısı | 2005年法国骚乱
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