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Showing posts with label failed state. Show all posts
Showing posts with label failed state. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 21, 2017

France’s Macron Sees No ‘Legitimate Successor’ to Assad, Declares Terrorism a Common Enemy in Syria

I like this guy more every day; he's smart and
doesn't seem all tied up in political baggage

French President Emmanuel Macron © Julien de Rosa / Reuters

There is currently no viable alternative to Bashar Assad to prevent Syria from turning into a failed state, the new French president has said, departing from his predecessor’s position that the Syrian leader must be toppled to stabilize the war-torn country.

“The new perspective that I have had on this subject is that I have not stated that Bashar al-Assad’s departure is a pre-condition for everything because nobody has shown me a legitimate successor,” Emmanuel Macron said in an interview with eight European newspapers.

The new approach is seen as a stark departure from the political discourse of former French President Francois Hollande, who openly advocated for regime change in Syria. Under Hollande’s leadership, France was ready to support the US to strike Damascus in the autumn of 2013, until Moscow stepped in to de-escalate tensions while also ensuring the liquidation of the Syrian chemical stockpile.

“Assad is the origin of this problem, and cannot be part of the solution,” Hollande told the UN General Assembly in 2015. 

Macron says French policy towards Syria is now more aligned with Russian objectives in the country. “My lines are clear: Firstly, a complete fight against all the terrorist groups. They are our enemies,” he said. “We need everybody’s cooperation, especially Russia, to eradicate them.”

Macron said he will not allow US “neo-conservatism” to seep into France, and that the focus of French policy will be aimed at achieving “stability” in Syria, rather than getting dragged into a Libya-style conflict.

“What was the outcome of these interventions? Failed states in which terrorist groups flourished. I do not want that in Syria,” the French leader emphasized.

While adopting a more flexible approach to the Syrian conflict, Macron warned of red lines beyond which Paris would be ready to seek direct military intervention against Damascus.

“If it is proven that chemical weapons are used on the ground and we can trace their provenance,” Macron said France will conduct unilateral strikes “to destroy the stocks of identified chemical weapons.”

“France will, therefore, be completely aligned with the United States on this,” Macron added, referring to the unilateral American strike on Shayrat Air Base in April – the US’ response to an alleged chemical weapons attack in Idlib that was swiftly pinned on Damascus.

However, the 39-year-old French leader noted that he shares “convergent views” with Russian President Vladimir Putin who is “obsessed” with “fighting terrorism and avoiding a failed state” in Syria.

“I respect Vladimir Putin. I had a constructive exchange with him. We have real disagreements, on Ukraine in particular, but he has seen my position,” Macron said. He welcomed constructive dialogue with Moscow and said he is optimistic about cooperation between the two countries.

The French president made clear that France’s domestic security is directly linked to the ongoing war in Syria, as recent terrorist attacks in France, which killed over 230 people, were fueled by IS ideology which flourished amid the ongoing armed conflict.

“My deep conviction is that there needs to be a diplomatic and political roadmap. We won’t solve the question only with military force. That is a collective error we have made,” he said, reiterating Moscow’s long-standing policy towards Syria since the start of the conflict in 2011.


Tuesday, October 11, 2016

French Police Say Lawless ‘No-Go’ Areas Exist, Challenge PM Valls Who Says They Don’t

Police stand guard near a burned police vehicle (R) and a van in Viry-Chatillon on October 8, 2016 after police in their patrol car were attacked by individuals who launched Molotov cocktails, leaving two officers injured. © Thomas Samson
Police stand guard near a burned police vehicle (R) and a van in Viry-Chatillon on October 8, 2016 after police in their patrol car were attacked by individuals who launched Molotov cocktails, leaving two officers injured. © Thomas Samson / AFP

France has no-go zones where police can’t intervene and work safely, police unions say, adding that criminals are under no law there and can attack citizens. This contradicts the words of French PM Manuel Valls, who said there are only “difficult areas.”

“Of course there are no-go zones in France where the police cannot intervene and do their jobs in safety,” Denis Jacob from the union Alternative police-CFDT told The Local. “And it’s the same for fire fighters or pretty much any representative of the state.” 

Jacob added that in these ‘no-go’ areas, “police can’t apply the law, they are attacked.”

“If the police can’t do their work it’s because there are criminals and delinquents who don’t respect the law… A section of the population has no respect for the police or the state anymore,” said Jacob.

A failed state

According to Jacob, this is not entirely due to the current French government headed by President Francois Hollande, but is a problem “with all French governments over the last 20 years.”

“Governments will never admit there are no-go zones because it’s a sign of a failed state,” he said.

After the recent attack in Viry-Châtillon commune, where several officers were attacked with fire bombs by at least 15 individuals, scores of riot police were sent to the area. The move, however, won’t solve anything, said Jacob.

“When it calms down the riot police will go and when they do, things will just return to how they were. The government needs to reinvest in permanent local police forces,” he said.

On its website, Alternative police-CFDT calls the attack on the officers “neither crime, nor violence, but terrorism!”

Jacob’s words echo a statement by Nicolas Comte, a spokesman for France’s second-biggest police union, Unité SGP Police.

On Monday, he said that “despite all the reassurances, there are still no-go zones in France ruled by a handful of gangs of criminals who get more and more radical as the years go by,” he said, as cited by Reuters.

Four police officers were injured when their cars were set ablaze in the troubled Paris working class housing estate Grande Borne in Viry-Châtillon, the southern suburbs of Paris on Saturday. One of them is still described as being “between life and death,” according to police officials. Since the attack, no one has been arrested in connection to the incident.

The statements from the police unions come after French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said on Monday that “there are no no-go areas” in France, but there are “particularly difficult areas.”

“These individuals [who attacked officers in Viry-Châtillon] will be found, brought to justice and severely punished because when we attack the police, we attack France itself,” said the PM.

On Sunday, the National Observatory of Delinquency and Criminal Responses released a report, saying that the number of police officers injured in violent attacks rose by 25 percent in 2015 in comparison to 2014, French media reported.

According to the document, at least 5,674 police officers were injured while on duty in 2015, while in 2010, the number stood at 4,535. In addition, the number of injured gendarmes, who are considered part of the French Armed Forces, jumped to 1,807 in 2015, compared to 1,408 in 2010.