இஸ்ரேலின் அராஜக தாக்குதல்களுக்கு எதிராக
பாரிஸில் கண்டனம்
இஸ்ரேலின் அராஜக
தாக்குதல்களைகண் மூடிபார்த்துக் கொண்டிருக்கும்
மேற்கு உலக
நாடுகளுக்கு எதிராகவும் இஸ்ரேல் இராணுவத்தின் கண்மூடித்தனமான தாக்குதல்களுக்கு எதிராகவும்
பாரிஸில் மக்களின் கண்டனத்தைப் பதிவு செய்த
காட்சிகள்.
Pro-Palestinian
demonstrators march in Paris, France, on Wednesday in protest against the
Israeli army's shelling in the Gaza strip. Protesters marched through Paris
against the Israel-Gaza war under the watch of hundreds of police in an
authorized demonstration days after two banned protests degenerated into urban
violence. (AP Photo/Francois Mori )
Several thousands Wednesday held
a fresh protest in Paris against the Israeli offensive in Gaza amid tight
security days after similar rallies descended into violence and looting.
Police said the rally gathered
about 14,500 people, while organizers put the figure at 25,000.
The government, which had banned
the prior protests seeking to restrain what it called anti-Semitic radicals,
authorized the march after its organizers gave “security guarantees,” Prime Minister
Manuel Valls said.
More than 1,000 undercover and
uniformed officers were deployed along the march route, which ended in the
upscale Invalides area where several government ministries are located.
The marchers, many of whom held
Palestinian flags or stickers saying “Boycott Israel,” shouted slogans such as
“Israel killer” and “Long live Palestine, long live the resistance!.”
Samira Cheblal, a marcher, said
she had come with a simple message: “Stop the massacre of children and
civilians.”
In addition to the Paris event,
staged by a coalition of pro-Palestinian and left-wing groups, demonstrations
were also held in the cities of Lyon, Toulouse, Lille and Reims.
As the Paris marchers dispersed
after the protest, a few threw bottles at the police, who did not respond.
President Francois Hollande
issued a reminder to protesters that the “responsibility of the state, the
government and the president is to ensure that order is respected.”
Interior Minister Bernard
Cazeneuve had warned that anyone caught shouting “Death to the Jews!” or
burning an Israeli flag during the marches would be arrested.
But Cazeneuve had also denounced
the Jewish Defense League — deemed a “right-wing terrorist group” by the FBI —
whose members clashed with pro-Palestinian supporters in an earlier Paris
demonstration.
Banned rallies took place anyway
at the weekend in Paris and its suburb town of Sarcelles, and ended in clashes,
with police firing tear gas and arresting scores of protesters.
In Sarcelles, several Jewish
businesses were looted, prompting Roger Cukierman, the head of the country’s
main CRIF Jewish grouping, to voice fears of “pogroms.”
On Tuesday, four men were
sentenced to between three and six months in prison for their role in the
Sarcelles violence, and three others were given between three and five months
suspended jail sentences for their involvement in the Paris unrest.
The main organizer of Wednesday’s
protest, the National Collective for Just and Durable Peace between Israelis
and Palestinians, hailed the decision to let the demonstration go ahead.
“It’s a victory for democracy and
freedom of expression,” said Taoufiq Tahani, president of the France-Palestine
Solidarity Assocation that is part of the collective that called the rally.
Another pro-Palestinian demonstration
in Paris is planned for Saturday, and authorities have not yet said whether it
will be allowed to proceed.
The Israeli-Palestinian offensive
has stirred up huge passions in France — home to the largest Muslim and Jewish
communities in western Europe with around five million Muslims and half a
million Jews.
Valls, who was a tough-talking
interior minister until his promotion this year in a cabinet reshuffle, has
blamed extremist groups for the violence last week.
He told the Le Parisien daily
certain unspecified “networks and extremist groups are trying to capitalize on
this (Israeli offensive) by riding on sentiments of anti-Semitism and hatred”
and using it “to foment disorder.”
Responding to Cukierman’s
comments over the risk of pogroms, Valls said there was “very big concern”
among Jews in France, particularly after high-profile anti-Semitic attacks such
as the May shooting in Brussels’ Jewish Museum.
French political parties have
broadly hailed the decision to authorize Wednesday’s march.
Four groups helping to organize
the rally — the influential CGT union and three leftist parties — are also
deploying people during the rally to ensure there is no violence.
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