Analysis
In the suburbs, too many feel France’s founding
ideals don’t apply to them
Andrew
Hussey
Emmanuel Macron has to find a way to deal with the
anger and resentment simmering in communities on the margins
Sat 1 Jul
2023 18.46 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/jul/01/france-suburbs-emmanuel-macron-anger-communities
At about
3am last Friday I was woken up by what sounded like gunfire. I wasn’t far
wrong. From the back windows of my apartment in southern Paris I could make out
fireworks being hurled at the police and hear the immediate response with
“flash-balls”, the “less than lethal” weapons used by French police for riot
control.
I had spent
the evening following the news coverage of the violent riots that were breaking
out spontaneously all over France. There were familiar images of cars and
buildings on fire and heavily armed police lines – familiar at least to anyone
who has lived through the past few years of angry protest in France. But what
was most disturbing about these riots was the sheer scale of it all: the
violence was not just contained to the banlieues of the big cities but was
everywhere, including picturesque towns such as Montargis in the Loiret.
I went to
bed just after midnight with an uneasy feeling that this was all about to get
worse. The next day I walked around my neighbourhood, inspecting the wreckage
from the night before – burned-out cars, motorcycles and rubbish bins, a
café-tabac which had been raided for cigarettes and a Chinese restaurant
smashed up for no particular reason. At the corner of rue Vercingétorix and rue
Alain I spoke to two police officers who were part of a team patrolling the
area on bikes. They were friendly enough, but edgy. I asked them about the
incident that had triggered the riots – the shooting, or “execution”, by a
police officer of 17-year-old Nahel Merzouk at a traffic stop in the Paris
suburb of Nanterre last Tuesday. They said that it was bad, but added that
sooner or later something like this was bound to happen. “You have to
understand when you go into some of these banlieues,” one said. “You have to be
constantly tense and alert, ready to be attacked at any time. It feels like a
war zone.”
This is
also the language being used by the two French police unions who issued a
communique on Friday saying that the police were “in combat because we are at
war”. This incendiary rhetoric was immediately criticised by politicians of the
left, with Jean-Luc Mélenchon of La France Insoumise tweeting that the police
unions should “shut up” given the “murderous behaviour” provoked by such
statements. Meanwhile Éric Zemmour, the far-right journalist turned politician
and former presidential candidate, is continuing to describe the riots as “the
first throes of a civil war”.
This isn’t
the first time Zemmour, or indeed Marine Le Pen, has warned of “a civil war” –
they have both been saying it for years. The far-right novelist Laurent
Obertone, who is also an influential journalist in far-right circles, has
indeed made a career of such catastrophising. His bestselling trilogy of
novels, called Guérilla, is based on the scenario of fictional civil war in
France. In the first of these, civil war breaks out in a fictional council
estate to the north of Paris when several north Africans are shot and killed by
a police officer.
French riot
police come under fire during clashes in Lyon, south-east France, on Friday.
French riot
police come under fire during clashes in Lyon, south-east France, on Friday.
Photograph: Jeff Pachoud/AFP/Getty Images
The estate
explodes into violence which, driven by social media and the mainstream media,
soon spreads throughout France. Eerily, this is pretty much what has happened
in the past few days.
The
language of war is not, however, confined to the political right. Not far from
where I had chatted to the two police officers, I spoke to Bashir Mokrani, who
lives in an apartment in one of the grey tower blocks overlooking the small,
scrubby park where we were sitting.
Unprompted,
Bashir said: “It doesn’t just feel a war. It is a war. It is a war against us,
the people who live in places like this,” he said, gesturing to the housing
estate behind us. “I am now 40 years old, I have a master’s degree and a
family, but all of my life I have been discriminated against and humiliated,
always by the police. And now this has happened. People can’t take any more.”
If there is
a war in France it is being fought, for now at least, in symbolic rather than
military terms. Amid all the chaos, it has been noticeable that rioters have
attacked not only police stations, but town halls, tax offices, schools – any
public institution that belongs to the French republic.
The anger
is being focused against everything the republic stands for – which is
ultimately the democratic ideal of “liberty, equality and fraternity”. The
reason is that a large part of the marginalised population in the banlieues
feel this ideal doesn’t apply to them, or that quite simply it is a lie.
Emmanuel
Macron faces severe challenges in the coming days. The priority will be to
somehow restore order, with minimum casualties. At the same time he has an
angry and mutinous police force to deal with as well as the risk of the riots
continuing to break out over several weeks, or longer, as they did in 2005.
Nonetheless,
this may well be the moment for the French government, and the people who live
in France, to begin a longer-term reflection on whether the French republic as
it stands is still fit for purpose in the 21st century.
Andrew
Hussey is the author of The French Intifada: the long war between France and
its Arabs (Granta)
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