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Immigration See other Immigration Articles Title: France sends more riot police after bus attack PARIS (Reuters) - France sent riot police reinforcements on Sunday to the southern city of Marseille where young vandals torched a bus during the night, leaving a woman severely burned and fighting for her life. The attack on Saturday sparked fears of more violence in French cities, coming as France marks the anniversary of riots that scarred the nation's poor, largely immigrant suburbs. President Jacques Chirac condemned the new unrest. "The president told the victim's family about his horror concerning this shameful act and assured them everything would be done to find the criminals and punish them with the utmost severity," Chirac's office said in a statement. Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy announced the reinforcements. Local officials said some extra 160 officers were being sent to Marseille, a city which remained largely untouched by last year's riots. They said police would enforce a 'zero tolerance' policy in troublesome neighborhoods. Police said four youths forced their way onto the bus and torched it before a French woman of Senegalese origin could escape. Officials said the 26-year old was "between life and death," with burns covering 60 percent of her body. Some media reported the vandals were 15 years old. "What is frightening ... is that (these people) are not just attacking police -- representatives of the state -- but are attacking the population," Jean-Claude Delage from police union Alliance told LCI TV. "Apparently, they did not even ask people to get off the bus (before torching it)." Vandals have torched at least half a dozen buses in suburbs surrounding Paris this past week in increasing violence ahead of the anniversary, but no one was hurt in those attacks. Police have warned the violence could once again spiral out of control. Overnight, youths set another bus ablaze in the Paris suburb of Trappes after ordering passengers off. Vandals lobbed stones at police in the suburbs of Clichy-Sous-Bois and Montfermeil. Police said they arrested 46 people. Two officers were injured. The new violence is adding pressure on the conservative government ahead of 2007 presidential and parliamentary elections. Local politicians and many youths in the high-rise suburbs say the government has not tackled the root causes of the riots, such as unemployment and discrimination. Socialist presidential frontrunner Segolene Royal said the new violence highlighted the government's failure. "We must listen to the people on the ground," she told Europe 1 radio, calling for more education spending in the suburbs. Both Royal and Sarkozy -- her likely presidential rival on the right -- have defended tough law-and-order policies to cut youth crime. The interior minister has announced harsher punishment for youngsters attacking police. Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin said he would organize a meeting on the safety of France's public transport on Monday. Some Marseille bus drivers refused to work after the attack.
Poster Comment: I lived outside of Paris as a kid and at that time there were a very few Algerians. There was no crime, it was not even an issue. Whenever the word "youth" is used in these articles concerning France, they are referring to North African and the more recent African immigrants.
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#1. To: Diana (#0)
It'd be more humane to deport them.
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