The Denver Post

Paris engulfed by worst riot in decade

- By Sylvie Corbet

France’s most violent urban riot in a decade engulfed central Paris on Saturday as “yellow jacket” activists torched cars, smashed windows, looted stores and tagged the Arc de Triomphe with multicolor­ed graff iti.

Protesters angry about rising taxes and the high cost of living clashed with French riot police, who closed off some of the city’s most popular tourist areas and fired tear gas and water cannon as they tried to quell the mayhem in the streets.

French President Emmanuel Macron denounced the violence from the Group of Twenty summit in Argentina, saying those who attacked police and vandalized the Arc de Triomphe will be “held responsibl­e for their acts.” He said he will hold an emergency government meeting Sunday about the protests.

“(Violence) has nothing to do with the peaceful expression of a legitimate anger” and “no cause justifies” attacks on police or pillaging stores and burning buildings, Macron said in Buenos Aires. He refused to answer any questions from journalist­s about the situation in Paris.

It was the third consecutiv­e weekend of clashes in Paris with activists dressed in the fluorescen­t yellow vests of a new protest movement and the worst urban violence since at least 2005. The scene contrasted sharply with other protests in France, where demonstrat­ions and road blockades elsewhere on Saturday were largely peaceful.

Thousands of French police were deployed to try to contain the violence, which began Saturday morning near the Arc de Triomphe and continued well after dark. Paris police said at least 110 people — including 20 police officers — were injured in the violent protests and 224 others were arrested.

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner, speaking on French television channel TF1, said one protester was in a life-threatenin­g condition after being part of a group pulling down a metal fence at the Tuileries gardens. A video on social media shows the heavy fence falling on some protesters.

By the afternoon, clashed continued down several streets popular with tourists. Pockets of demonstrat­ors built makeshift barricades in the middle of Paris streets, lit fires, torched cars and trash cans, threw rocks at police and smashed and looted stores.

Some demonstrat­ors removed the barriers protecting the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier from World War I under the Arc de Triomphe monument to pose near its eternal flame and sing the national anthem. They were dispersed by police.

Graffiti sprayed on the Arc de Triomphe stated: “yellow jackets will triumph.”

By Saturday afternoon, central Paris was locked down police, with all roads leading away from the Arc closed off as more police moved in. Over 20 downtown Paris metro stations were closed for security reasons and police ordered stores in nearby neighborho­ods to close early Saturday night.

Hours later, some cars still smoldered and law enforcemen­t and protesters were still facing off elsewhere in the capital.

French television showed police leading a shaken woman away from the protesters, and loud bangs rang out near the famed Champs Elysees Avenue where the violence was centered.

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo tweeted her “indignatio­n” and “deep sadness” at the destructio­n and clashes with police, saying that violence is “not acceptable.”

In addition to rising taxes, the demonstrat­ors are furious about Macron’s leadership, saying that his government does not care about the problems of ordinary people. The grassroots protests began with motorists upset over a fuel tax hike, but now involve a broad range of demands related to France’s high cost of living.

But the violence in Paris suggests that some protests appear to have been taken over by more radical far-right or far-left groups. French far-right leader Marine Le Pen urged the protesters to go home in a tweet.

 ?? Abdulmonam Eassa, AFP ?? “Yellow jacket” protesters clash with riot police Saturday at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris over rising fuel prices and the cost of living. Law enforcemen­t said at least 110 people, including 20 police officers, were injured in the protests.
Abdulmonam Eassa, AFP “Yellow jacket” protesters clash with riot police Saturday at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris over rising fuel prices and the cost of living. Law enforcemen­t said at least 110 people, including 20 police officers, were injured in the protests.

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