France’s War against Firefighters, Police

France’s War against Firefighters and Police

YVES MAMOU

  • A silent war against French police and firefighters is in full swing. “2,280 firefighters were assaulted in 2016… As a result, the police are called to certain areas just to protect the firefighters.” — National Observatory of Delinquency, Radio Europe 1.
  • Two Paris police officers, who risked their lives to save children from a burning apartment, were attacked and stoned by a mob when they emerged from the blaze carrying the children in their arms.
  • As usual, politicians are minimizing the problem. The government does not consider the spread of urban violence to be terrorism. As usual, the government will try to buy peace with money.

France’s Minister of the Interior, Gerard Collomb (pictured), was clearly happy on January 1st. Why? No terrorist attack had occurred on New Year’s Eve. Collomb warmly thanked the 140,000 police officers, soldiers, firefighters, and civil security associations who had been mobilized to GerardCollombblock any potential terrorist attack. To give just an inkling of the size of this security deployment on New Year’s Eve, consider that the entire French army (land forces only) consists of only about 117,000 active-duty soldiers.

All French governments since 2015 have denied that Islam is at war with France, but the Ministry of the Interior nevertheless mobilized higher numbers of security personnel than the French army has soldiers, to make sure that this New Year’s Eve would be a peaceful event.

In a press release, Minister Collomb said:

“Because of the strong police presence combined with efficiency of protection measures, the festivities of New Year’s Eve were able to happen peacefully for everyone in France.”

Although no terrorist attack took place on New Year’s Eve, calling it a “peaceful” night is, at best, a stretch. In keeping with the annual “tradition,” 1,031 vehicles were intentionally burned (compared to 935 in 2016) in the majority-Muslim suburbs of many big cities.

250 cars were torched in the Paris area alone, and eight police officers and three soldiers of the Gendarmerie were attacked and wounded. A video went viral on the internet, showing a mob of “youths” (the euphemism used by the media for African and Arab young men) assaulting and savagely beating a female police officer (see featured image). She had been trying to disperse a crowd of “youths” attacking a private party in the Champigny suburb of Paris.

In Strasbourg, according to Alliance, a police union, “five police officers were slightly injured, including four victims of fireworks that were used as weapons.” In addition, 70 cars were torched intentionally.

XVM6557588e-ef24-11e7-9096-73ddd6499d95In every big city, dozens of cars were burned, and in the suburbs, “youths” attacked the police.

Even in central Paris, where the police were demonstrably visible, “incidents” resulted. According to Le Figaro, which leaked a confidential report from the Ministry of Interior, there were no end of assaults:

“At 8.50 pm, at the corner of the Champs-Elysées and Balzac Street, gendarmes arrested seven individuals who threw empty bottles into a crowd. The victims could not be identified. The attackers, illegal migrants from Afghanistan, were placed in administrative detention.”

The report also mentions a waiter at the restaurant Le Fouquet’s on the Champs Elysées; he was wounded with a knife while trying to put an end to a fight. This confidential report was dedicated only to violence committed in the Paris area. A far larger report, indexing the violence in all of France, arrived on the Interior Minister’s desk.

All these events — except the car-torchings, which for years have sadly been the New Year’s “fireworks” tradition of the suburbs — are not confined to New Year’s Eve. Assaults and crime are the suburbs’ daily bread. On January 2, 2018, two police officers, who risked their lives to save children from a burning apartment in a Paris suburb, were attacked and stoned by a mob when they emerged from the blaze carrying the children in their arms.

In November 2017, the radio station Europe 1 released confidential data about attacks against firefighters:

“The figures of the National Observatory of Delinquency, released exclusively by Europe 1, show a 17% increase in assaults against firefighters in 2016. 2,280 firefighters were assaulted in 2016, compared to 1,939 in 2015. …firefighters are confronted on a daily basis with increasingly extreme situations. With 366 assaults in 2016, the Paris area is the most affected region, after Aquitaine, in southwest France, with 406 reported assaults. As a result, the police are called to certain areas just to protect the firefighters.”

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About the author

Yves Mamou, author and journalist, based in France, worked for two decades as a journalist for Le Monde. He is completing a book, “Collaborators and Useful Idiots of Islamism in France,” to be published in 2018. Follow Yves Mamou on Facebook

Image of firefighters: Jean-Marc LOOS / PHOTOPQR / L’ALSACE / MAXPPP