Tag: riots

  • French mayors hold anti-violence rally to ease riots

    French mayors hold anti-violence rally to ease riots

    The situation of unrest in France is showing signs of deescalation, following five days of intense riots triggered by the shooting of teenager Nahel M during a police traffic stop.

    On Sunday night, the level of violence significantly decreased, resulting in fewer arrests being made.

    Nevertheless, President Emmanuel Macron has instructed the interior ministry to maintain a “massive” police presence on the streets as a precautionary measure.

    In response to the unrest, mayors have organized rallies outside town halls on Monday to express their opposition to the violence and looting.

    In Nanterre, Nahel’s hometown, mayor Patrick Jarry said he was pleased the violence had subsided, but added that “we shouldn’t lose sight of the incident that sparked this situation and the continuing need for justice”.

    The mayor of Reims, a city just over two hours away from Paris, told a crowd of several hundred people that the rioters had “looted the businesses that they visit every day”.

    Although Sunday night showed a significant improvement in the level of unrest, authorities exercised caution in declaring a complete return to normalcy on Monday.

    To ensure a continued restoration of order, bus and tram services in the Paris region will once again be suspended early on Monday evening. President Macron has instructed the interior ministry to maintain a “massive” police presence throughout France, aiming to guarantee a sustained period of calm.

    Over the past three nights, approximately 45,000 officers have been deployed across the country to maintain security.

    On Sunday night, the number of arrests decreased to over 150, compared to the previous night’s total of over 700.

    There were 297 incidents of cars being set on fire, a significant reduction from Thursday’s count of 1,900. Additionally, 34 buildings were either damaged or set ablaze, a considerable decrease from the 500-plus incidents reported on Thursday.

    In a press release shared on Sunday, an association of the country’s mayors noted that “communes everywhere in France are the scene of serious unrest, which targets republican symbols with extreme violence”.

    In one act of violence, the home of a suburban Paris mayor was attacked, and rioters fired rockets at his fleeing wife and children, breaking her leg and injuring one of the children. The incident is being treated as attempted murder.

    At the weekend, the family of Nahel, the teenager who was killed by police, called for the violence to end.

    His grandmother accused rioters of using Nahel’s death as an excuse and urged them to stop destroying public goods.

    Another relative told the BBC that the family did not want his death to spark riots, but insisted the law around lethal force at traffic stops must change.

    She also said her “heart is in pain” about a GoFundMe page for the family of the police officer who shot Nahel, which as of Monday had raised more than €1m (£859,963), with over 50,000 donations.

    The fundraiser, which was set up by a far-right media commentator, has been criticised by several politicians – but the platform told French newspaper Le Parisien that GoFundMe’s terms and conditions were not being broken because the funds are destined for the officer’s family and “not meant for the legal defence of an alleged violent crime”.

    On Tuesday, President Macron will meet the mayors of 220 municipal areas that have been affected by the violence.

    On Sunday, a 24-year-old fireman was killed while seeking to douse several cars which had been set alight in an underground car park in Seine-Saint-Denis, north of Paris, Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said.

  • Brazil court to investigate Jair Bolsonaro role in anti-Lula riots

    Brazil court to investigate Jair Bolsonaro role in anti-Lula riots

    Prosecutors will look into Jair Bolsonaro’s possible “instigation and intellectual authorship of the anti-democratic acts’ that ‘resulted’ in the riots.

    Brazil’s Supreme Court has agreed to open an investigation into former President Jair Bolsonaro for allegedly encouraging anti-democratic protests that ended in the storming of government buildings by his supporters in the capital Brasilia.

    Prosecutors will investigate Bolsonaro, who is in the United States, for possible “instigation and intellectual authorship of the anti-democratic acts that resulted in vandalism and violence in Brasilia last Sunday,” the top public prosecutor’s office said in a statement on Friday.

    “Public figures who continue to cowardly conspire against democracy trying to establish a state of exception will be held accountable,” said Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who agreed on Friday to the request by federal prosecutors to launch the probe.

    The Supreme Court had already ordered the arrest of Bolsonaro’s former justice minister, Anderson Torres, for allowing the protests to take place in the Brazilian capital after he assumed responsibility for Brasilia’s public security.

    The federal district’s former governor and former military police chief are also targets of the Supreme Court investigation made public on Friday.

    Both were removed from their positions when thousands of Bolsonaro supporters vandalised the Supreme Court, Congress and presidential palace last weekend, seeking to provoke chaos and a military coup that would remove President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and restore the far-right Bolsonaro to power.

    Having lost Brazil’s October election to Lula, Bolsonaro left Brazil for the US on the eve of the end of his term, avoiding passing the presidential sash to his leftist rival at his inauguration.

    Torres, who like Bolsonaro is in Florida, has said he plans to return to Brazil to turn himself in. Bolsonaro said on social media he will move forward his return to Brazil.

    Justice Minister Flavio Dino told a news conference he would wait until next week to re-evaluate Torres’s case, indicating a possible request for his extradition if the former minister does not turn himself in.

    The arrest warrant against Torres was issued by de Moraes, who also removed Brasilia’s security chief from his post just hours after the rampage.

    On Thursday, police found a draft decree in Torres’s house that appeared to be a proposal to interfere in the result of the election. Torres claimed the document was among others in a stack that was being thrown out. He said they were “leaked” to the Folha de S.Paulo newspaper in his absence to create a “false narrative”.

    Dino said he has made no requests to the US regarding Bolsonaro.

    The political party to which Bolsonaro belongs, the right-wing Liberal Party (PL), decided to beef up its team of lawyers in preparation for the defence of the former president, a party official told Reuters.

    Also on Friday night, the popular social media accounts of several prominent right-wing figures were suspended in Brazil in response to a court order, which US journalist Glenn Greenwald obtained and detailed on a live social media broadcast.

    The order, also issued by Justice de Moraes, was directed at six social media platforms and established a two-hour deadline to block the accounts or face fines.

    The accounts belong to a digital influencer, a YouTuber recently elected federal legislator, a podcast host in the style of Joe Rogan and an evangelical pastor, among others.

    Bolsonaro now faces several investigations for anti-democratic statements he made as president, including repeated claims the election system was open to fraud.

    PL party leaders fear he will be held responsible for Sunday’s storming of government buildings. While they do not think he will face arrest, they fear he could be declared ineligible to run in the 2026 election, the party official said.

    Source: Aljazeera.com