Burning cars in Paris – protests against security law escalated – today

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The anger over the planned security law in France is not ebbing. In Paris, thousands of people again take to the streets against police violence and the controversial film ban on police operations. Parliament is now reacting. Several thousand people protested against social injustice and police violence in Paris. Among the demonstrators in the French capital were many supporters of the yellow vests movement. Repeatedly chants rang out like “Everybody hates the police.” The police, who were present with a massive presence, sometimes used tear gas against the demonstrators.

Cars were set on fire and several shop windows were damaged, as can be seen on television pictures. A small truck was burning in one street, and a thick cloud of black smoke hung over the area. According to Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin, there had been 22 arrests by the afternoon. The Paris police also complained about a barricade that was holding up the march. This had started peacefully in the early afternoon at the Porte des Lilas in the east of the city and was supposed to go to the Place de la République. A total of around a hundred rallies were planned across France. Originally registered as a protest by the trade unions against social injustice, many participants came to the demonstration in Paris out of anger about a planned security law that has been causing protests for weeks. These protests were fueled by police violence reported through video footage that had caused horror across the country.

Central bank set fire to police law protest escalates in Paris

With the planned law for “comprehensive security”, the government of President Emmanuel Macron wants to make the dissemination of photos or films of police operations a criminal offense if this endangers the “physical or mental integrity” of individual officers. With the law, the government wants to protect the emergency services better. Journalists’ associations, however, fear massive restrictions on the freedom of the press. Critics also argue that, in the past, many cases of police violence would have gone unpunished if they had not been filmed and posted on the Internet. In view of the protests against the law, the government majority in parliament has now announced that they want to revise the controversial film ban in the security law. However, it is not yet known exactly how the article will be changed.

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