The Boston Globe

France makes another try to calm suburbs

- By Sylvie Corbet

ADDRESSING UNREST

President Francois Hollande backed $6.6 billion in direct investment in the suburbs.

PARIS — Two weeks after a spurt of rioting in a far-flung Paris suburb, President Francois Hollande is injecting a new dose of funds to help cure one of France’s most persistent problem areas — the suburban housing projects with their volatile mix of joblessnes­s, high immigratio­n, crime, and despair.

The government is counting on state-sponsored jobs and improved lodging to help the millions of people, often immigrants from former French colonies in North Africa living in pockets of poverty that ring major cities.

Hollande’s cure, some $6.6 billion of direct state investment with the hope it will attract $19.9 billion more, is a small response to a problem that has dogged three presidents and, Hollande has said, has only long-term solutions. But he is optimistic.

The plan was presented to the Cabinet on Friday, two days after Hollande visited Clichy- Sous-Bois, northeast of Paris, the town that since 2005 has symbolized urban unrest.

Three weeks of fiery riots that started in Clichy-Sous-Bois hopscotche­d around the housing projects of France.

The unrest was France’s wake-up call to the urban misery long hidden from view, in part because of poor transport to the nearby hub cities.

Two days of riots two weeks ago, with dozens of cars set afire in Trappes, a suburb southwest of Paris, was a new reminder of the simmering anger. The unrest there was triggered by the arrest of a man who allegedly attacked a police officer for ticketing his wife for covering her face with an Islamic veil — banned in French streets. But urban specialist­s and residents said the veil issue covered concerns over unemployme­nt, discrimina­tion, poor integratio­n of many residents, and despair over the future.

During his Wednesday visit to Clichy-Sous-Bois, Hollande refused to comment on the unrest in Trappes and neighborin­g cities, but he acknowledg­ed that suburban projects remain a tinderbox despite the injection of tens of billions of euros since 2005.

‘‘The slow-burning fuse is still lit but, while this fuse burns slowly, we can stop it with projects that are longterm, very long-term,’’ he said.

In Clichy-Sous-Bois, population 30,000, the jobless rate is over 20 percent — twice the national average — and soars to some 40 percent for those under 25.

But the presidenti­al message was one of optimism. He pointed to changes wrought in Clichy-Sous-Bois where urban renovation has been underway since 2005 — but which just this year will get its first unemployme­nt agency.

Hollande’s plan for urban renovation is spread over 1,300 priority neighborho­ods, chosen for their high levels of poverty, but zeroes in on 230 of them.

He instigated a plan this month, called ‘‘Real Jobs,’’ in which companies that hire under-30s in impoverish­ed areas who have been unemployed for at least a year receive $6,600 from the state. The goal is to recruit 10,000 people within three years.

France began injecting funds into its housing projects in 2004 under President Jacques Chirac a year before the riots, with a $16 billion plan over 10 years that grew to $53 billion with private investment­s. More than 91,000 buildings have been razed and some 81,000 new ones built

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