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Dozens riot in Paris rail station | Dozens riot in Paris rail station |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Up to 13 people have been arrested after an argument over a ticket in a Paris metro station sparked riots. | |
Police used tear gas to disperse up to 100 youths at the Gare du Nord, one of Paris's major transport hubs. | |
Rioters smashed windows and attacked vending machines and shops, after objecting to the treatment of a man arrested for jumping a ticket barrier. | Rioters smashed windows and attacked vending machines and shops, after objecting to the treatment of a man arrested for jumping a ticket barrier. |
With French elections due next month, the left and right were quick to offer their interpretation of the violence. | |
Interior Minister Francois Baroin condemned the violence. | |
"A perfectly normal ticket check degenerated into urban guerrilla warfare, into unacceptable, intolerable violence. We live in a state of law and of freedom - but there is no freedom without rules," he said. | |
Mr Baroin took up the interior ministry on Monday after his predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy, who is the centre-right's presidential candidate, stepped down to concentrate on his campaign. | |
"We are the only country where it is considered abnormal to arrest someone who doesn't pay for his ticket. If the police is not there to ensure a minimum of order, what exactly is its role?" Mr Sarkozy said. | |
But the Socialists say the hostility between police and young people is a direct result of the hardline policies of Mr Sarkozy. | |
The clashes "illustrate the climate of tension, the gulf and the violence dividing the police and the population. The conditions for a relationship of calm and trust have urgently to be re-established," said Julien Dray, spokesman for Socialist candidate Segolene Royal. | |
Chanting slogans | |
France saw its most severe riots for decades in the autumn of 2005 in its poor and mainly immigrant suburbs, which led the government to declare a state of national emergency. | |
Mr Sarkozy, who made his name campaigning on a law-and-order platform, was quick to crack down on the uprisings in the suburbs, causing controversy when he labelled the 2005 rioters "scum". | |
The youths who gathered in the Gare du Nord on Tuesday shouted insults about Mr Sarkozy. | The youths who gathered in the Gare du Nord on Tuesday shouted insults about Mr Sarkozy. |
They also chanted slogans of "police are everywhere, justice is nowhere" and "down with the state, police and bosses". | They also chanted slogans of "police are everywhere, justice is nowhere" and "down with the state, police and bosses". |
Police took several hours to clear rioters from the station's main hall. | |
The violence was sparked when a 33-year-old man without a ticket jumped over a barrier. | The violence was sparked when a 33-year-old man without a ticket jumped over a barrier. |
Transport officials said the man punched two ticket inspectors who asked for his ticket as part of a routine inspection. He was eventually arrested by police. | Transport officials said the man punched two ticket inspectors who asked for his ticket as part of a routine inspection. He was eventually arrested by police. |
But a growing crowd felt that the police had used excessive force to arrest the man, and their protest turned violent. | But a growing crowd felt that the police had used excessive force to arrest the man, and their protest turned violent. |
The riots spilled out into nearby streets, where rubbish bins and street signs were set on fire. | The riots spilled out into nearby streets, where rubbish bins and street signs were set on fire. |