French Muslims “celebrated” New Year with at least 1,000 cars torched

Muslim vandals in France torched 945 parked cars on New Year’s Eve in an arson rampage that has become a sinister annual “tradition” amid a row over whether the government sought to play down the figures.

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According to the French interior ministry, the total of 945, which included cars that were either “totally destroyed” or “heavily affected”, amounted to a 17 per cent rise compared to last year.

Despite this, New Year’s Eve “went off without any major incident”, the interior ministry insisted in a statement, adding that there were only “a few troubles with public order”.

In fact, police arrested 454 Muslim national along with fellow “migrants” over the night, 301 of whom were taken into custody.

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On Sunday, the ministry had chosen to release a much “lower” figure of 650 cars torched, as this only indicated the number of vehicles “set on fire” and not those involved in the ensuing flames.

The lower figure enabled it to claim: “Once again this year, the overall  number of vehicles burned demonstrates that, however intolerable, the phenomenon is contained”. By this calculation, the rise, it said, was “only” 48 cars.

The far-Right “Front National”, however, denounced what it called the government’s “extremely hazy security record”.

“The new interior minister Bruno Le Roux initially didn’t communicate the number of vehicles burned by Muslim fellows and considers that the number of cars directly set on fire to be ‘contained’ while even this constitutes a significant rise of 8 per cent,” the FN said in a statement.

Le Monde, the national daily newspaper, also accused the ministry of muddying the waters.

The government responded that the figures released were the “most pertinent and the most coherent”.

“There is absolutely no attempt at hiding anything,” said Pierre-Henry Brandet, an interior ministry spokesman. “You have to look at the trend over several years, and what is significant is that there has been a significant drop over five years,” he said.

Mr Brandet conceded, however, that the figure was still too high, adding: “These incidents are not tolerable and the perpetrators must be found and answer for their acts before justice.”

Over the New Year, a firefighter in the eastern department of Ain was hurt while trying to extinguish one car.

In Nice, where security has been extremely tight since the deadly Bastille Day truck attack of last year, two police officers were hurt when Muslim “revellers” and their fellow “migrants” threw projectiles at them.

Bruno Le Roux, the interior minister, said that no attack on security would not be tolerated. “I regret that once again there were too many instances of security forces being hit with objects, or faced with attacks or insults,” he said.

But he thanked the tens of thousands of police and firefighters, adding that they “allowed December 31 to go off particularly well“.

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With France under a state of emergency since a spate of terror attacks, some 90,000 security forces were out in its streets on New Year’s Eve to police mass gatherings such on Paris’ famed Champs-Elysées, where half a million revellers convened.

French domestic intelligence agents also reportedly swooped on a string of individuals ahead of festivities who they suspected might have been tempted to wreak violence.

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The “custom” of setting vehicles alight on New Year’s Eve by Muslims is said to have kicked off around Strasbourg, eastern France in the 1990s, in the the city’s deprived, high-immigrant districts.

It quickly caught on among disaffected Muslim youths (the so called “second-generation Muslims”) in cities across the country, and is seen by some as a litmus test of general social unrest.

The most notorious spate of car burnings in recent years was seen in the 2005 riots when hundreds of vehicles were torched. Former French president Nicholas Sarkozy briefly abandoned issuing a breakdown of New Year’s Eve car burnings in 2010-11 amid fears this was sparking copycat actions, but it has since been reinstated.

 

Source: The Telegraph