cheka.
9th March 2017, 10:23 AM
never forget, it's the teachers' fault that these animals cant pass a test
https://heatst.com/life/54-teenagers-arrested-in-paris-suburbs-after-violent-clashes-with-police/
More than 50 teenagers were arrested in Paris yesterday after a riot broke out in three schools in the increasingly dangerous suburbs north of the French capital.
Armed with iron bars and concealing their identities by wearing hooded tops, the children claimed to be protesting against alleged police brutality.
Social media groups organized a demonstration outside the schools in Saint-Denis because of several notorious cases involving the police including that of Théo Luhaka, 22, from Aulnay-sous-Bois, who was allegedly beaten and sexually assaulted while being arrested by several police officers on February 2.
The Lycée Suger in Saint-Denis was ransacked by about 100 pupils, according to reports. Staff said teenagers set fire to furniture and lit smoke bombs and explosive devices. One person doused a stairway in petrol before setting it on fire and a paving stone was thrown through a staff room window as several teachers hid inside.
The school was evacuated but about 80 teens carried on rioting, heading for two other schools nearby. This led to a violent clash between them and police. A total of 54 youths were arrested, most of them pupils at Lycée Suger aged between 15 and 18.
After the incident, politicians from all sides weighed into what has become a growing debate on problems with France’s youth population, with accusations that ethnic and religious tensions together with drug dealing are leading to lawlessness.
With a general election later this year Marine Le Pen, leader of the far-right National Front, is thought to have been the main beneficiary of the unrest, using the situation to pump out her message and bolster her support.
She said: “It is not tolerable that hoodlums threaten the future of our country and put teachers and pupils in danger.” She accused the Socialist government of a “minimal reaction” while also calling for a zero-tolerance policy on crime.
Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, the education minister, said: “A dam seems to have burst with the introduction of violence inside schools. These are very serious acts.”
https://heatst.com/life/54-teenagers-arrested-in-paris-suburbs-after-violent-clashes-with-police/
More than 50 teenagers were arrested in Paris yesterday after a riot broke out in three schools in the increasingly dangerous suburbs north of the French capital.
Armed with iron bars and concealing their identities by wearing hooded tops, the children claimed to be protesting against alleged police brutality.
Social media groups organized a demonstration outside the schools in Saint-Denis because of several notorious cases involving the police including that of Théo Luhaka, 22, from Aulnay-sous-Bois, who was allegedly beaten and sexually assaulted while being arrested by several police officers on February 2.
The Lycée Suger in Saint-Denis was ransacked by about 100 pupils, according to reports. Staff said teenagers set fire to furniture and lit smoke bombs and explosive devices. One person doused a stairway in petrol before setting it on fire and a paving stone was thrown through a staff room window as several teachers hid inside.
The school was evacuated but about 80 teens carried on rioting, heading for two other schools nearby. This led to a violent clash between them and police. A total of 54 youths were arrested, most of them pupils at Lycée Suger aged between 15 and 18.
After the incident, politicians from all sides weighed into what has become a growing debate on problems with France’s youth population, with accusations that ethnic and religious tensions together with drug dealing are leading to lawlessness.
With a general election later this year Marine Le Pen, leader of the far-right National Front, is thought to have been the main beneficiary of the unrest, using the situation to pump out her message and bolster her support.
She said: “It is not tolerable that hoodlums threaten the future of our country and put teachers and pupils in danger.” She accused the Socialist government of a “minimal reaction” while also calling for a zero-tolerance policy on crime.
Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, the education minister, said: “A dam seems to have burst with the introduction of violence inside schools. These are very serious acts.”