Hundreds march in Corsica after anti-Arab protests

Hundreds march in Corsica after anti-Arab protests
Updated 28 December 2015
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Hundreds march in Corsica after anti-Arab protests

Hundreds march in Corsica after anti-Arab protests

AJACCIO, France: Hundreds of people marched in Corsica after two days of violent anti-Arab riots, sidestepping a ban on demonstrations in a flash point neighborhood by taking their protests elsewhere in the capital.
Two people were detained over days of rioting on the French Mediterranean island, which saw demonstrators vandalize a Muslim prayer hall and set fire to religious books.
Hundreds marched through poor areas of the capital Ajaccio on Saturday for a second straight day, shouting slogans such as “This is our home!” and “Arabs get out.”
Corsica’s administrator Christophe Mirmand announced a ban on all protests and gatherings until at least Jan. 4 in the poor Jardins de l’Empereur housing estate, the epicenter of the violence.
But hundreds took to the streets again on Sunday, dodging the ban by marching through other Ajaccio neighborhoods chanting: “We fight against scum, not against Arabs!“
“We aren’t thugs, we aren’t racists,” they cried as they marched to the police station and then through several low-income areas, before returning to the Jardins de l’Empereur estate where they were blocked by police.
The unrest followed a Christmas Eve clash in which two firefighters and a police officer were injured at the estate, home to some 1,700 people, half of them of non-French origin.
Regional official Francois Lalanne said a fire had been deliberately lit in the neighborhood in a ruse aimed at “ambushing” the emergency services.
A firefighter told French television that about 20 people armed with iron bars and baseball bats had tried to attack them, but were unable to smash through the windows of their truck.
Two men in their 20s were held in custody as part of a probe into the unrest.
“Their involvement in the attack against the firefighters is still under investigation,” said prosecutor Eric Bouillard, adding the men had had brushes with authorities in the past.
The next day, 600 people gathered outside police headquarters in Ajaccio in a show of support for the police and firefighters. But some 300 broke away to head for the housing estate.