France boosts security after surge of protests
PARIS — French officials said Tuesday, following a surge of violence during yellow vest demonstrations over the weekend that led to intense criticism of the government’s handling of security around tourist neighborhoods and wealthier areas, that they would ban potentially violent protests in key areas like the Champs-Élysées in Paris.
Prime Minister Édouard Philippe said in a televised statement from Paris that after the “intolerable” events over the weekend, the government had decided to ban any future yellow vest demonstrations “in the areas that have been most targeted,” if authorities became aware of “extremist elements” that intended to vandalize.
Philippe said one of those areas would be the Champs-Élysées, a major avenue in western Paris with luxury stores and tourist attractions that has become a focal point for the protests.
On Saturday, “breakers,” or casseurs, smashed an upscale restaurant, looted 27 stores and set kiosks and a bank on fire, forcing firefighters to evacuate a mother and her baby who were trapped on the building’s second floor.
The government said 10,000 yellow vest protesters had marched in Paris, including 1,500 “ultraviolent” activists.
In a sign of the government’s effort to address the criticism, Philippe said that the head of the Paris police, Michel Delpuech, who has been under fire, would be replaced this week.
Although the main yellow vest demonstration was dwarfed by other “marches for climate and social justice” that gathered 36,000 protesters in Paris and more than 145,000 throughout France on the same day, the damage in Paris still dominated Monday’s news cycle.
Philippe acknowledged that a new law-enforcement strategy put into place after the first violent protests had not been “correctly executed,” with “dysfunctions” in several areas.
In December, after weeks of increasingly violent demonstrations, security forces adopted a more flexible strategy, to try to quickly stop and apprehend rioters. On Saturday, the police arrested 237 protesters and took 144 of them into custody, compared with 1,100 arrests on Dec. 8, on the first weekend the new strategy was used.
The controversy over the use of rubber bullet launchers, nonlethal weapons that have caused dozens of facial injuries, forced police forces to reduce their use, Philippe said, hinting that the police would be allowed to adopt tougher measures.
He announced that the police would use drones, special products to mark rioters and video surveillance to arrest them. In addition to Paris, Philippe also mentioned squares in Bordeaux and Toulouse where protests might be banned.
A contentious law passed this past week by senators, which allows administrative rather than judiciary authorities throughout France to ban protests, will not go into effect until a review by the country’s constitutional council. Philippe said the law would help prevent masked rioters from gaining access to demonstration areas.