The French are now paying for allowing decades of unrestricted Muslim immigration, as riots break out across the country. What follows is the latest AFP article on the situation. I know it's tedious, but I had to post the whole thing to prove a point. You can just skim it.
Notice anything unusual about that piece? This is the FRENCH news agency reporting about riots in FRANCE, but it isn't until the last paragraph that AFP mentions the rioters are Muslims. Incroyable ! Muslims in France have become 10% of the population and now feel strong enough to impose their culture on the French. Altogether, there are about 32-million Muslims in Europe. You will see the same thing happening all over the continent as the religion of peace gains in numbers. Only the Swiss have had the brains to write laws banning Muslim immigration. As I have said before, Muslims do not and cannot integrate with other cultures. Wherever you find large populations of Muslims interacting with ANY other culture, you find violence and bloodshed. Islam's ultimate goal is nothing less than world domination. Although Ann Coulter's solution to the problem makes perfect sense -- invade their countries, kill their leaders and convert them to Christianity -- it is hardly practical. This disease called Islam is far more deadly than bird flu and SARS wrapped together. For all the hysterical hype, bird flu has killed fewer than 70 people in Asia. In the same time period, Muslim "militants" have killed thousands. But nobody, including we, has the common sense of the Swiss. Nobody is working to contain the deadly infection. The entire world should put out the "Not Welcome" mat for Muslims, contain them in their own countries, and let them live in the 7th century, the way they want us to do. UPDATE: Here's another AFP that cleared the wires about six hours later.PARIS, Nov 4 (AFP) - Fresh rioting broke out on the outskirts of Paris overnight into Friday as gangs of youths challenged authorities' vows to crack down on urban violence that has plagued the French capital for over a week. Police said more than 160 cars were torched in the Paris region and 33 in the provinces, but the night seemed calmer than Thursday when 315 vehicles were burnt in the Ile-de-France region around the capital.
Buses, fire engines and police were again stoned in the Paris suburbs, with five policemen reported slightly injured by projectiles, but there were fewer direct confrontations between police and "troublemakers", according to a police spokesman.
One of the worst incidents took place at Neuilly-sur-Marne where police vans came under fire from pellet pistols, but nobody was hurt. Neuilly-sur-Marne is in the worst-hit northeastern region of Seine-Saint-Denis, where 1,300 officers were deployed, and more than 30 people were arrested there and elsewhere.
A fire was started in a primary school in Stains, as police were targeted by a group of 30 to 40 people near the synagogue. Paris firemen were fighting a blaze at a carpet warehouse in Aulnay-sous-Bois in Seine-Saint-Denis. Dutch truckers told an AFP reporter that they had seen a group of youths briefly enter the building.
And for the first time since the troubles erupted on Thursday last week, there were sporadic signs of copycat rampages elsewhere in France. Police said several cars in the eastern city of Dijon were set alight, while similar attacks took place in the western Seine-Maritime region and the Bouches-du-Rhone in the south of the country. The rioting was a direct challenge to the authority of the French government and to Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin in particular.
Villepin on Thursday vowed before parliament that authorities "will not give in" to the violence and would make restoring order their "absolute top priority". "I will not allow organized gangs to make the law in the suburbs," he declared.
The clashes have gained territory virtually every night since they began, exposing what sociologists and commentators said was a blatant failure of successive governments to address the problems of low-income, high-immigration suburbs dominated by grim public housing estates, some of them little more than ghettos where crime and gangs run rampant.
The riots were sparked last week by the accidental electrocution of two teenagers who had hidden in an electrical sub-station to escape a police identity check in the suburb at the epicentre of the troubles, Clichy-sous-Bois. The opposition Socialist Party and many in the suburbs themselves blamed hardline policies by Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy for fanning the violence. Sarkozy, who Thursday said the total number of people arrested was over 140, vowed a "war without mercy" on crime and rebellious youths in the suburbs just before the rampages erupted.
The minister, also leader of the conservative UMP ruling party with ambitions of running for president in two years' time, has drawn criticism for his tough rhetoric, especially for referring to delinquents as "rabble". On Thursday, he claimed that recent rioting "was not spontaneous, it was perfectly organized -- we are looking into by whom and how."
Villepin -- who cancelled a trip to Canada to tackle the crisis -- said the violence was "unacceptable". President Jacques Chirac on Wednesday called for calm, warning that an escalation would be "dangerous". The country has 751 neighbourhoods officially classed as severely disadvantaged, housing a total of five million people, around eight percent of the population. Conditions are often dire with high-rise housing, unemployment at twice the national rate of 10 percent and per capita incomes 40 percent below the national average.
Many of France's estimated five million Muslims live in those suburbs. Thursday night was the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, a night traditionally marked by feasts and family get-togethers.
This time there is NO mention of Muslims in the story. The rioters are "youths." The French will take their political correctness to the grave with them.PARIS, Nov 4 (AFP) - A 56-year-old handicapped woman was set on fire during the riots that have raged around Paris, and is currently in hospital with severe burns, state prosecutors said Friday.
The woman was on a bus in the northern suburb of Sevran when youths threw a Molotov cocktail on board late Wednesday. All the other passengers quickly evacuated, but she was unable to get off.
According to prosecutors, one youth doused the woman with petrol before others threw a flaming rag on the vehicle. The driver rescued her, and she was taken to hospital suffering second- and third-degree burns to 20 percent of her body, they said.
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