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Yellow vests: France set to bring in controversial anti-rioting bill

French MPs have started debating a controversial anti-rioting bill which aims to crack down on the sort of street violence that has marred "yellow vest" anti-government protests since November.

Yellow vests: France set to bring in controversial anti-rioting bill
Photo: AFP
The bill notably aims to ban individuals identified as habitual hooligans from taking part in demonstrations, and force protesters involved in acts of violence to pay for the damage.
   
Some MPs also want more severe penalties for organisers of unauthorised demonstrations as well as people who cover their faces during violent protests.
   
But the bill has drawn fire — even within President Emmanuel Macron's own centrist party — from critics who say the proposals represent a threat to civil liberties.
   
Announcing the draft law earlier this month, Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said some of the anti-Macron “yellow vest” protests had led to unacceptable violence.
   
“In many towns in France, demonstrations have been peaceful — but we cannot accept some people taking advantage of these demonstrations to cross the line, break things and set things on fire.”
 
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Photo: AFP
 
Freedom to protest
 
The protests began in November against rising fuel taxes, but quickly spiralled into a wider revolt over accusations that Macron, a former banker, is out of touch with ordinary people in small-town and rural France.
 
Across France tens of thousands have joined protests and road blocks, although the numbers have eased in recent weeks after Macron announced a series of policy climbdowns and a public consultation so people could vent their anger.
   
In several cities — but especially Paris — the weekend protests have repeatedly descended into violence. 
   
Rioters in the capital torched cars and looted shops in early December, and also ransacked the Arc de Triomphe monument.
 
Interior Minister Christophe Castaner insisted the bill, backed by police unions, was not “an anti-yellow vest law” or “anti demonstration” law. 
 
Photo: AFP
   
“It's a law to protect demonstrators, shopkeepers, local residents and police,” he told BFM television.
   
Yael Braun-Pivet, the LREM head of the national assembly's cross-party laws commission, said protecting the right to demonstrate would be front and centre in the debate.
 
“What guarantees are being put around this procedure?” she demanded, telling the Journal du Dimanche newspaper earlier this month that she was “reticent” over certain measures.
   
Leftist critics have decried the bill as “liberticide” and have been little reassured by Castaner's suggestion that a protest ban would concern fewer than 300 people.
   
Already revised by Braun-Pivet's commission, more than 200 amendments have been proposed to the bill, with a final vote due next Tuesday.
   
The draft law could also see protesters who mask their faces fined up to 15,000 euros ($17,000) and handed a one-year prison term.

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RIOT

Dozens of police injured during riots at Berlin’s last hold-out squat

Sixty police officers were injured in riots that erupted Wednesday at one of Berlin's last squats ahead of disputed fire protection checks on the building.

Dozens of police injured during riots at Berlin's last hold-out squat
Burning barricades in the Rigaer St. on June 16th. Photo: dpa | Andreas Rabenstein

Its facade covered in murals and anti-capitalist graffiti, the occupied building at 94 Rigaer Strasse is among the squats that mushroomed across the city after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Numerous attempts have been made in recent years to clear the squat, but each time they have ended in violence.

Ahead of Thursday’s planned fire protection inspection, police had declared the zone a restricted area and banned all demonstrations in the environs.

But as officers arrived on the scene to secure the area, they were met with a hail of stones flung from roofs and the street.

Firecrackers were also hurled from windows and barricades set up by far-left activists were set on fire.

Police said officers were attacked by “around 200 people from the street and from the roof with stones”.

“Material was brought on the street and set on fire,” they added on Twitter.

As water cannons were brought in to put out the fires, officers partially withdrew from the scene.

But they later returned, backed by climbing experts, who were helping them get on the roof of the building to remove stones placed there by residents, added police.

Officials have planned a heavy deployment lasting into Thursday.

Berlin’s interior minister Andreas Geisel vowed a tough crackdown on the militants, saying there can be no special treatment or a “law for Rigaer Strasse”.

Rigaer 94 has been branded by Germany’s domestic security service as the centre of Berlin’s anarchist scene.

While some want to see the counter-culture bastion wiped off the capital’s map, others have defended it as a vestige of an old Berlin rapidly disappearing as property prices and rents rise sharply.

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