Young rioters became discordant with police and looted general stores on Friday as a young rioter was encountered in a street, which has created more pressure on President Macron, who advised guardians to look after their children, and he has blamed social media for this adverse situation. Rioters also burned down cars, raided banks, and erected barricades in other parts of the country. The largest library in Marseilles, Alcazar, was set on fire by an agitated mob.
The seventeen-year-old child, Nahel, had been shot dead on Tuesday morning when he was driving a yellow Mercedes in the Paris suburb of Nanterre. He was driving a yellow Mercedes when he was pulled over for a traffic violation.
The police officers informed him that he had been shot dead as he was driving his car at the police. The footage shows that two policemen were standing by the stationary car and told the mob to stop the car by pointing a gun. But Nahel tried to drive his car towards them, and for that, one police officer shot his gun at him.
The riot has been continuing for four nights, whether or not the protestors clashed with the police.
French President Emanuel Macron had told parents to become alert, keep their children in houses, and keep watch on them so that they would not play video games and become active on social media, as the governing authority does not want any more deaths of adolescents.
471 ARRESTED ON FRIDAY NIGHT AT 4.45 A.M.:
The French minister of interior, Gerald Darmenin, had announced that a penetrating operation started nationwide on Friday night, during which 471 people were arrested for spreading agitation. But he declared that the violence was less intense than on other days.
NAHEL’S FAMILY SEEKS PRIVACY IN THE FUNERAL AT 3.40 A.M., SATURDAY:
The family of Nahel M. M. has requested that all journalists and the public stay away from the funeral process that will happen in Nanterre on Saturday.
VIOLENCE SPREAD THROUGH OVERSEAS TERRITORIES:
Riots exploded on Friday night in Caribbean territory, whether the agitated people set fire to damaged buildings for protesting against the shooting death of a teenager.
The condition worsened in French Guinea, where police officers came under fire and a stray bullet killed a 54-year-old government employee on Thursday in the capital, Cayenne.
A thick black cloud had covered the space of Cayenne; the street became hazy as it had been created for spontaneous raids by the police of that region, and the authority calmed the region for another possible riot.
Officials said that the man who was killed on Friday was working in the government’s mosquito control office, and he was on his balcony when he was hit by a bullet at night.
As per reports, roads and places were vacant in Cayenne, and the police authority deployed 300 police officers with drones and helicopters on Friday night to prevent harassment and riots.
MARSEILLE, THE FRENCH CITY, WAS HIT BY VIOLENCE AT 2.30 A.M. ON FRIDAY:
Marseille, the second-largest city in France, was worse hit by the agitated mob. As per the report, a very old port had been set on fire at night. 80 rioters in the southern part of Marseille were arrested by police authorities, and some rioters looted a gun store and stole some pistols and rifles, but the ammunition was well placed. A rioter had been arrested on the spot, and the store was guarded by the police.
MAN DIED FALLING FROM THE BUILDING AT THE TIME OF RIOT IN NORTHERN FRANCE AUTHORITIES:
A young man died falling from the roof of a suburb of the northern French city of Rouen during overnight riots. As per the news, the man was buying items from the supermarket when the rioters looted the market, and seeing them, he became frightened and jumped from the building.
CANADIAN PM TRUDEEAU PROTESTED AGAINST THE TEENAGE DEATH, 2.15 A.M., FRIDAY:
Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau protested against the teenage deaths that had happened in the riot, and he also condemned France for supporting Ukraine.
FRENCH FOOTBALL LEGEND MBAPPE PEACEFULLY PROTESTED AGAINST THE SHOOTING OF A TEENAGER:
Kylan Mbappe protested against the shooting of the teenager and added, “Like all French people, we were taken aback and shocked by the brutal death of young Nahel. First of all, our thoughts go out to him and his family, to whom we extend our sincere condolences.
Of course, we cannot remain insensitive to the circumstances in which this unacceptable death took place.
Since this tragic event, we have witnessed the expression of popular anger, whose substance we understand but whose form we cannot endorse. Many of us come from working-class neighbourhoods, and we share these feelings of pain and sadness. But to this suffering is added that of assisting the powerless in a real process of self-destruction. Violence solves nothing, even less when it inevitably and tirelessly turns against those who express it, their families, loved ones, and neighbours.
It is your property that you are destroying—your neighbourhoods, your council estates, your places of fulfilment and proximity.
In this context of extreme tension, we cannot remain silent, and our civic conscience should make us call for appeasement, awareness, and accountability. That of social actors—parents, older or younger brothers and sisters in our neighbourhoods—who must work to restore peace to our council estates. The “living together” that we hold dear is in danger, and it is our responsibility to preserve it.
There are other peaceful and constructive ways to express yourself. That is where we should focus our energy and our thoughts.
The time of violence must end to make way for that of mourning, dialogue, and reconstruction.”
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