Macron says France needs return to authority ‘at
every level’ after unrest
President calls for ‘order, order, order’ and suggests
poor parenting was one of reasons for disorder
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris
@achrisafis
Mon 24 Jul
2023 17.37 BST
Emmanuel
Macron has said France needs a return to authority “at every level” after recent
urban unrest over the police shooting of a teenager, suggesting that poor
parenting was part of the reason teenagers had taken to the streets.
The police
killing of Nahel, a 17-year-old of Algerian background, during a traffic stop
last month triggered protest marches and six nights of disorder as young men
clashed with police and set alight public buildings and cars. Many accused the
government of allowing a culture of institutional racism in the police to
fester. The officer who fired at Nahel has been charged with voluntary homicide
and jailed awaiting trial.
The French
president used his first TV interview since the unrest to condemn what he
called the “indescribable violence” of the clashes on the streets, including
“the burning of schools, city halls, gyms and libraries” and “the violence of
looting”.
He said:
“The lesson I draw from this is: order, order, order.”
Macron did
not refer to concerns on the left and from rights groups that the rioting
reflected longstanding anger over racism and discrimination in law enforcement.
He instead took a hard line on the need for more authority, law and order,
saying, “Order must prevail. There is no freedom without order.”
Macron
repeated his suggestion that poor parenting, particularly by single parents,
had contributed to teenagers as young as 16 taking to the streets against
police. He said of those arrested: “An overwhelming majority have a fragile
family framework, either because they come from a single-parent family or their
family is on child support benefits.” He said he would launch policies in the
autumn to focus on parenting skills and supporting families.
Macron also
repeated his criticism over the role of social networks during the unrest and
looting, saying: “We need to better protect our teenagers and young adults from
screens.” He said certain content should be removed when it was a call to
violence and that “public digital order” was needed “to stop excesses”.
Macron was
also questioned about the growing controversy over the jailing of a police
officer accused of violently assaulting a young man during clashes in
Marseille.
A
21-year-old man, named as Hedi, said he was beaten by four or five men, who he
identified as police. Hedi’s lawyer said he was also hit in the head by a blast
ball fired by police, had to undergo surgery, and risks losing sight in an eye.
Four
Marseille police officers were charged last week over the incident, one of whom
was remanded in custody awaiting trial.
But
France’s national police chief, Frédéric Veaux, said in a newspaper interview
that law enforcement officers under investigation should not be jailed like
ordinary citizens.
“Knowing
that he is in prison is stopping me from sleeping,” Veaux told Le Parisien. “In
general, I believe that ahead of a possible trial, a police officer should not
be in prison, even if he may have committed serious faults or errors in the
course of his work.”
The Paris
police chief, Laurent Nuñez, tweeted that he shared Veaux’s opinion. Several
hundred Marseille police officers have gone on sick leave in protest over the
officer’s detention.
The French
left reacted with fury, saying the police chief was essentially considering
police officers to be above the law.
Macron
steered clear of giving a direct reaction, saying he understood the “emotion”
of the police after the difficulties of tackling the recent unrest, but
emphasised that “no one in the republic is above the law”.
The
Socialist party leader, Olivier Faure, said: “It’s extremely serious, the
entire police hierarchy places itself above justice and the rules of pre-trial
detention … What’s at stake here is democracy and respect for the rule of law.
Parliament must be reconvened urgently.”
Cécile
Mamelin, the vice-president of the Union of Magistrates, said the comments by
the national police chief were “scandalous” and “extremely serious in a state
of law”.
Macron’s
views on the urban disturbances were also criticised by opposition politicians.
The left condemned him for pointing the finger at single parents, and Faure
said of Macron’s promise of “order, order, order”: “Let’s keep it to liberty,
equality, fraternity, thank you.”
Marine Le
Pen’s far-right National Rally party said Macron had failed to establish a
culture of law and order.
.webp)
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário