Manawatu Standard

Prepare for riots after poll - police

-

FRANCE: Riots could break out in cities across France after results are announced of the first round of the presidenti­al election, intelligen­ce services have warned, as the most unpredicta­ble vote in decades goes ahead amid a heightened terror alert.

Trouble is almost certain if Marine Le Pen, the far-right leader, and Jean-luc-melenchon, her far-left counterpar­t, are the two candidates who make it through to the second and final round on May 7, according to a report by intelligen­ce services.

The confidenti­al document, leaked to Le Parisien newspaper, said that at the top of the list of potential security problems as millions of people cast their ballots was the ‘‘jihadist threat’’. The report came just two days after a French jihadist claiming allegiance to the Islamic State shot dead a police officer on the Champs Elysees in Paris, bringing election campaignin­g to an early end and thrusting security issues back to the top of the agenda.

Around 50,000 police officers and 7000 soldiers were being deployed to protect voters across France overnight for the first round of the election, which has turned into a four-way race between Le Pen, Melenchon, Emmanuel Macron, the maverick centrist, and Francois Fillon, the scandal-scarred conservati­ve.

An opinion poll on Friday and Saturday showed Le Pen and Macron tied on 23 per cent, ahead of Melenchon with 19.5 per cent, and Fillon on 19 per cent. But due to the margin of error pollsters factor in, there is no safe bet as to which two will make it to the second round of what has so far been the most unpredicta­ble French presidenti­al election in decades, coming in the wake of the UK’S shock decision to leave the EU and Donald Trump’s presidenti­al triumph in the US.

The French intelligen­ce report leaked to Le Parisien said that spontaneou­s demonstrat­ions which might turn violent - could be held in cities and troubled banlieues after the results are announced.

The report spoke of ‘‘public disturbanc­es in the case of the presence [in the second round] of parties which are said to be extremist,’’ a reference to Le Pen and r Melenchon, the communistb­acked firebrand.

‘‘In this case, protests are almost certainly to be expected,’’ it said. - Telegraph Group

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand