Lethbridge Herald

Paris cleans up after riot

- Sylvie Corbet

French President Emmanuel Macron asked for an evaluation of possible protest security measures Sunday, a day after a Paris demonstrat­ion against increased taxes and living costs devolved into France’s worst urban riot in a decade.

Hours after he flew back to the French capital from the G-20 summit in Argentina, Macron held an emergency meeting at the Elysee presidenti­al palace while crews worked to remove charred cars, broken glass and graffiti from the famed Champs-Elysees Avenue and other top Paris sites.

Paris police said 133 people were injured, including 23 police officers, as crowds trashed the streets of the capital Saturday. Officers fired tear gas and used water cannon to tamp down the violence as protesters torched cars, smashed windows, looted stores and tagged the Arc de Triomphe with spray paint.

Paris police Prefect Michel Delpuech said some officers described encounteri­ng “unpreceden­ted” violence, including protesters using hammers, gardening tools, bolts, aerosol cans as well as rocks in physical confrontat­ions.

Some radical far-right and far-left activists were involved in the riot, as well as a “great number” of protesters wearing yellow jackets, Delpuech said. The fluorescen­t jackets, which French motorists are required to have in their cars for emergencie­s, are an emblem of a grassroots citizens’ movement protesting fuel taxes.

Fires were started at six buildings and more than 130 makeshift barricades and 112 vehicles were torched, Delpuech said.

Paris prosecutor Remy Heitz said 378 people remained in police custody as of Sunday evening, 33 of them minors.

Earlier Sunday, Macron visited the Arc de Triomphe, which had damaged statues as well as graffiti. One slogan on the famed war memorial read: “Yellow jackets will triumph.” He then headed to a nearby avenue where activists battled police on Saturday to meet with firefighte­rs, police officers and restaurant owners.

At the security meeting, the French leader asked his interior minister to consider making “adaptation­s” to security procedures to try to contain ongoing protests sparked by rising fuel taxes, Macron’s office said in a statement.

Macron also asked Prime Minister Edouard Philippe to meet with the heads of France’s major political parties and representa­tives from the grassroots movement behind the protests.

Plans for an earlier meeting between the prime minister and representa­tives of the movement collapsed last week after a request to broadcast the talks live was rejected.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? A man rides his bicycle past by a graffiti reading “Macron equal to Louis 16” to reference to the king of France during the French Revolution in 1789 on the Paris Garnier Opera house in Paris, Sunday.
Associated Press photo A man rides his bicycle past by a graffiti reading “Macron equal to Louis 16” to reference to the king of France during the French Revolution in 1789 on the Paris Garnier Opera house in Paris, Sunday.

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