The Columbus Dispatch

After riots, France puts limits on some yellow vest protests

- By Sylvie Corbet and Angela Charlton

PARIS — France’s prime minister announced a ban Monday on yellow vest protests along the Champs-elysees Avenue in Paris and in two other cities following riots on Saturday that left luxury stores ransacked and charred from arson fires.

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said the ban will apply for an unspecifie­d period in the neighborho­ods that have been “the most impacted” in the cities of Paris, Bordeaux and Toulouse, where repeated destructio­n has occurred since the yellow vest protest movement began in November.

He also said Paris Police Chief Michel Delpuech will be replaced this week by prefect Didier Lallement.

Philippe announced the measures following a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron and top security officials that sought to avoid a repeat of Saturday’s violence, in which rioters set life-threatenin­g fires, ransacked luxury stores and attacked police around the Champselys­ees. Many of those high-end boutiques remained closed Monday, some of them charred from arson fires set.

He acknowledg­ed “dysfunctio­n” in French police operations on Saturday, rejecting “inappropri­ate” orders given to security forces to use fewer rubber bullets following a controvers­y about the numerous injuries they’ve caused at previous protests.

Philippe also announced a shift in strategy to allow police forces to have a greater initiative on the ground to take measures against rioters and disperse crowds. He said police will use new tools, including drones and video surveillan­ce, to help prevent violence and send rioters to trial.

“When a protest has been banned and its aim is to ransack and loot, all of those who take part it in and, in fact, protect looters, encourage them or glorify them online, are complicit and will have to face the consequenc­es,” he said.

Philippe promised “nothing will change” for peaceful, authorized protests.

The surge in violence came as the 4-month-old yellow vest movement, which is pressing for more economic justice, has been dwindling. Images of the destructio­n on Saturday— including from a bank fire that engulfed a residentia­l building and threatened the lives of a mother and child — could further erode public support.

But the renewed attention energized some protesters, who took to social networks to call for new protests this Saturday to demand lower taxes and more support for workers.

The Paris region’s Chamber of Commerce said 91 businesses suffered consequenc­es from Saturday’s riot at the Champselys­ees, 80 percent of which were severely damaged.

Last month the French Parliament passed a bill backed by Macron’s government to further prevent violence during protests and to help authoritie­s maintain order. But the “anti-troublemak­ers” law has not yet taken effect since the Constituti­onal Council must assess it first.

It would authorize regional prefects to prevent people seen as a serious threat to public order from protesting, and it would force protesters involved in violence to pay for damages. It also would make it a crime for protesters to conceal their faces, punishable by up to one year in prison and a 15,000-euro ($17,000) fine.

The bill has been criticized by rights groups, opposition members and even members of Macron’s centrist party as going too far in restrictin­g freedoms.

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