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View Full Version : RIOT SQUADS STAND BY FOR BACKLASH AS SARKOZY TRIUMPHS


the eXiLe
05-07-2007, 04:19 AM
FRANCE was on riot alert last night as controversial Right-wing conservative Nicolas Sarkozy was elected president.


The 52-year-old former interior minister beat Socialist Segolene Royal, who had hoped to become the country’s first woman head-of-state, by 53 per cent to 47 per cent.

He will succeed President Jacques Chirac, who is standing down after 12 years in power.

More than 85.5 per cent of the 40 million voters turned out in an election viewed as crucial to the country’s future as it chose an “Anglo Saxon” liberal and globalised economy over a more traditional France, characterised by state interference and protectionism.

Often likened to Margaret Thatcher, Mr Sarkozy has promised to radically reform his country, slashing taxes and social security benefits, fighting the trade unions, and making the French work ­harder.

But his political enemies have cited his hardline law and order policies as proof that his presidency will be characterised by violent ­disturbances.
By yesterday afternoon, when a smiling Mr Sarkozy first acknowledged that he was heading for victory, more than 3,000 riot squad officers had been deployed around Paris, with all weekend leave cancelled.

Among numerous potential flash points was the Place de la Concorde, where supporters led by veteran rock star and “Sarko” fan Johnny Hallyday were preparing a victory parade. But it was in the poorer suburbs, where Mr Sarkozy is viewed as a hate figure by thousands of mainly immigrant youngsters, that the worst trouble was expected.

“We’re out in force in the housing estates, but every major government building and public monument in Paris is also well guarded,” said a spokesman for the notorious CRS riot police.

“All precautions are being taken to preserve public order. We are also deploying numerous plainclothed squads to mingle with gangs of youths or Left-wing agitators.”

Last night Mr Sarkozy issued a unifying call to the rest of Europe, saying he had been “a European all my life” and that France’s destiny was linked to her EU partners. “Tonight France is back in Europe,” he said.

In a message to Americans, he said: “I want to tell them that France will always be by their side when they will need her.

“But I want to tell them as well that friendship is accepting that one’s friends can act differently, and that a great nation like the United States has the duty to not obstruct the fight against global warming but, on the contrary, to head this struggle because what is at stake is the future of all humanity.”

He added: “France will make this struggle its first struggle.”

Like Margaret Thatcher before him, Mr Sarkozy has earned a fierce reputation for his hardline, confrontational style of government.

Of Napoleonic stature – he is just 5ft5in and regularly wears stacked heels – Mr Sarkozy sees the primary job of his presidency to force a ­“rupture”, or “break” with France’s state-interventionist economic ­policies.

Such a belief in “Anglo Saxon” methods has also seen Mr Sarkozy likened to Tony Blair, who last week described the “decisive and clear” Frenchman as someone he “liked very much, and respected very much”.

Mr Sarkozy worked closely with Gordon Brown when he was France’s finance minister, and is viewed as a close ally of Britain’s likely next Prime Minister.

But Ms Royal, the 53-year-old who had hoped to become France’s first woman president, was among those who warned of the “violence and brutalities that will be triggered” by a Sarkozy victory.

It was in Argenteuil, a north-west Paris suburb, that in autumn 2005 Mr Sarkozy called local troublemakers scum who should be “washed away with a power hose”.

When riots broke out days later Mr Sarkozy was demonised by first and second generation African and North African immigrants who, nationally, make up a hugely underprivileged section of French society, numbering some five million.

When asked yesterday if he had dreamt about winning while shaving in the morning, he replied: “No, I dream about it all the time.”

Mr Sarkozy will take office on May 17, and will then set his sights on the general election in June when all 577 seats in the National Assembly will be contested.


http://www.express.co.uk/news/view/6370




http://www.express.co.uk/img/dynamic/1/285x214/6370_1.jpg

HATE FIGURE: Nicolas Sarkozy voting in Paris

the eXiLe
05-07-2007, 04:25 AM
Typical UK reporting, they forgot to mention that he is also Pro-American.

There was a letter from him posted yesterday at the range where he has assured firarms owners that he has 'no plans to review the law, he respects shooters rights to perusue their passion.'

the eXiLe
05-07-2007, 04:38 AM
Violence marked Nicolas Sarkozy’s victory in the French presidential election last night as police fought running battles with demonstrators in Paris and other cities.

Clashes erupted in the centre of the capital when about 2,000 people gathered at the Place de la Bastille – the traditional meeting place of the French Left – in a show of support for the defeated Socialist candidate, Ségolène Royal.

What began as a peaceful protest swiftly turned sour as about a hundred protesters smashed cars and bus shelters and threw bricks and bottles at the police.

One climbed the statue in the centre of the square, while others held a protest on the steps of the Bastille Opera House. Riot police responded with teargas followed by several charges across the Bastille.

To the south of the square a car was set alight, and to the north a hail of projectiles and fireworks rained down on gendarmerie units brought in as reinforcements. The clashes lasted about an hour and a half before officers drove a final group of casseurs away from the Opera House and into the surrounding roads.

A long-haired man was frog-marched away, limping between two large riot police officers. Behind him a local prostitute in a tight, white dress, caught in the violence, staggered out of a cloud of teargas, holding her face and coughing.

A police officer said: “This has been quite violent and was similar to the sort of things we saw during the demonstrations last year. It’s always the same story, with the professional thugs getting in on the demonstration and wreaking havoc.”

Noemie Capart, 24, a psychology student and supporter of Ms Royal, said: “There weren’t very many demonstrators, but all of a sudden the police charged out with extreme violence.

“I really don’t think it was justified. They used an incredible amount of teargas and I was caught in the middle of it. I was choking and very, very frightened. I think the police wanted to put on a show of force and I hope this isn’t an indication of what Sarkozy’s presidency is going to be like.”

Standing next to an Opal Corsa with its windscreen smashed, Pascal Poiset, 39, a chauffeur, said: “We always get these thugs in France and I wasn’t at all surprised that the evening ended in violence here. But we have known worse over the years.”

As he spoke the police made a final sweep through the square, leaving behind a scene of desolation. Barriers had been torn down, rubbish bins overturned and graffiti scrawled on walls. The road was covered in broken glass, stones and empty CS gas canisters. A youth ran past shouting: “Mort à Sarkozy [Death to Sarkozy].”

In Nantes, 600 demonstrators were dispersed by police using teargas as they approached Mr Sarkozy’s local campaign headquarters.

In Lyons, a fist-fight broke out between supporters and opponents of the new President. Clashes between demonstrators and police were reported in Toulouse and Bordeaux.


http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article1757029.ece