EUROPEAN
CAPITALS, November 8, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) –
The seemingly unabating unrest across France has sent shockwaves
across Europe, with similar, though limited, incidents reported in
several European countries.
Hundreds
of Muslim and non-Muslim immigrants took to the streets of Amsterdam
on Monday, November 7, to protest their deteriorating living
conditions.
The
protestors called on the Dutch government to change its policy towards
immigrants, both legal or illegal.
The
French government declared Tuesday a state of emergency in riot-hit
parts in order to combat the worst outbreak of urban unrest since the
May 1968 student revolt.
Nearly
two weeks of rioting in the country's high-immigration suburbs has
left more than 6,000 cars burned, public and private property
destroyed, tens of policemen injured and one civilian death.
The
deaths 10 days ago of two youths fleeing police ignited pent up
frustrations among young men, many of them of North and black African
origin, at racism, unemployment, their marginal place in French
society and their treatment by the police.
High
Alert
 |
|
Prodi has warned that an explosion of urban violence in Italy was "only a matter of time" as "we have the worst suburbs in Europe."
|
Security
agencies across Belgium have been placed on high alert after Molotov
cocktail were thrown Monday at two police cars in a Brussels district.
Also
Monday, a police car in downtown Brussels was also put afire.
In
another Brussels suburb, policemen exchanged fire with immigrants
after security men tried to force a young immigrant to wash a car he
had urinated.
Police
forces were unusually heavily deployed in Brussels and
high-immigration suburbs as a precautionary measure.
Many
policemen have cancelled their weekly vacations and reported to their
stations in anticipation of any emergencies.
Belgians
fear a potential spillover of the French unrest into their country.
Yet,
a provincial interior minister ruled out a repeat of the French
scenario in Belgium, arguing that living standards were far better
than those in France.
He
advised the French to provide career opportunities for the young
immigrants to bring riots to a peaceful end and achieve integration.
Wake-up
Many
politicians and observers across Europe warned that the French unrest
was a wakeup call for their own countries.
"France
is not alone", Trevor Phillips, head of Britain's Commission for
Racial Equality, wrote in The Observer newspaper.
"Everywhere,
smugness about the state of race relations is being punctured,"
he said.
"Our
French neighbors are giving us the loudest alarm call they can. Wake
up, everybody."
Italy's
main opposition leader Romano Prodi warned over the weekend that an
explosion of urban violence in Italy was "only a matter of
time" as "we have the worst suburbs in Europe."
Prodi,
a former European Commission president, said: "Our suburbs are a
human tragedy, and if we don't take serious action on social and
housing issues we will have many scenes like Paris."
Bremen-based
sociologist Lorenz Boellinger fears violence could flare up quickly in
Germany.
"There
is already an explosive mix which could lead to riots," he told
Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Boellinger
called on German authorities to provide more help for immigrant
families by giving them advice on life in Germany and setting up youth
centers and youth clubs in immigrant areas.
Late
Sunday, five cars were set ablaze in Berlin and six in the western
city of Bremen.