Fearful French See Crime On The Rise
Fearful French See Crime on the Rise
Spate of Incidents Fuels Concern Country Is Becoming More Dangerous Place
By Keith B. Richburg
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, August 21, 2001; Page A12
PARIS, Aug. 20 -- A 27-year-old immigrant from Chad walked into a bank
outside Paris from which he had been laid off. He was disguised as a woman,
with a long black dress and a fuzzy wig, and carried two pistols. After
herding employees and customers into a basement room, he hunted down the
bank's financial counselor and shot him in the throat, then shot the bank
manager in the head. He took several hostages to secure his getaway, and
shot and killed a motorist who refused to give up his car.
The gunman was later captured, but his rampage just over a week ago left
three dead and six injured.
Such incidents can happen anywhere -- and shootings, sometimes involving
disgruntled or laid-off employees, have become numbingly common in the
United States. But in France, this and other similar incidents have added to
a general feeling that this country, which prides itself on civility and
culture, has become a more violent and dangerous place.
The bank attack occurred just days after another grisly murder riveted the
public. A 17-year-old girl named Karine, from a small town in the Lorraine
area in the northeast, had been missing for 11 days. A 23-year-old man
arrested in the case told police he had accidentally hit the girl with his
car while she was cycling, then panicked and hid the body. But the suspect's
female companion later told investigators that the girl had been raped and
killed and her body set on fire.
The Karine case exploded in the media just as the French were assessing the
damage from a spate of violent youth gang attacks in the suburbs ringing
several major towns and cities, including Paris. In one incident, on July
14, Bastille Day, some 130 cars were torched by young hoodlums in the town
of Aulnay.
Tourists have not been spared. Pickpocketing and assaults against visitors
have reached such alarming levels that the State Department, on its Web
site, cautions Americans traveling to Paris to be careful. China has advised
its citizens to be watchful because Asians appear to be frequent targets.
Opinion polls indicate the French are putting an increasing sense of
insecurity at the top of their list of concerns. And crime has become the
topic of many dinnertime conversations. During a nationally televised
interview on Bastille Day, President Jacques Chirac mentioned rising crime
as the country's greatest concern. "People are scared," he said.
Chirac cited as reasons for the trend a "lack of state authority" and "lack
of political will" to tackle the problem, a direct jab at the government led
by the rival Socialist Party of Prime Minister Lionel Jospin. Chirac
proposed a "zero-tolerance" policy much like that of Mayor Rudolph W.
Giuliani of New York.
The statistics bear out the concern. In the first six months of the year,
crime rose about 9.6 percent over last year, according to the Interior
Ministry. And a widely circulated new report, drawing on statistics from the
Interior Ministry and the FBI, shows the crime rate to be higher in France
than in the United States.
Last year France recorded 4,244 crimes per 100,000 inhabitants, compared
with 4,135 in the United States, where crime has been steadily decreasing.
The United States still leads France in the number of murders and rapes per
100,000 residents, but France leads in violent thefts and some property
crimes, including car theft.
For violent theft, France recorded 185 incidents per 100,000 people,
compared with 145 in the United States. For simple theft, France had 2,588
incidents per 100,000 people, compared with 2,475 in the United States. And
car theft was far higher in France, with 507 reported cases per 100,000
compared with 420 in the United States.
For many French, who view the United States as a Wild West-style place with
an abundance of firearms, the new statistics are alarming.
"For myself, and my fellow French citizens, we were used to reading about
these things in the United States," said Alain Brunier, who heads the Europe
and Middle East branch of a medical device and technology company. "Now it's
right here, in a country much, much smaller than the United States."
"I feel 100 percent safer in Lebanon than I do in Paris," Brunier said. He
described how his daughter's car was hijacked while she was opening her
garage door, and how his vehicle was almost carjacked while he was driving
in the capital. "Paris has become a dangerous city. You have to be very,
very streetwise now."
The fact that so many crimes in France now involve firearms -- everything
from pistols to machine guns to grenade launchers used in a spectacular
armored car heist last year -- raises questions about France's supposedly
strict gun control laws compared with what is seen as a much more permissive
system in the United States.
Under French law, any weapon of more than 7.65mm is prohibited for all but
security personnel. Smaller weapons, such as pistols, can be obtained only
by people with high-risk jobs, such as jewelry store owners, and only after
a full background check. Hunters with a valid permit can buy hunting
weapons, and sports shooters must be members of the French Shooting
Federation. But authorities said there are lapses, and they are trying to
tighten the rules.
"We are using every legal way to limit the circulation of weapons," a
national police spokesman said.
One problem for France is its central location. Many weapons filter in from
Spain, Italy and Belgium, and also from Eastern Europe, where weapons have
been plentiful since the outbreak of ethnic warfare in the Balkans. "The
stock here is low, unlike in the United States," a diplomat said. "But the
supply is only two hours away."
For the most part, however, guns have been used by professional criminals,
or in dramatic attacks like the recent bank assault. The common tools of the
street gangs in the rough and gritty suburbs are knives and metal bars.
Most muggings are committed by teenagers using knives or, more commonly,
their fists to assault their victims. "I've been mugged twice in two weeks,"
said Leslie Gladsjo, an American filmmaker who has lived in Paris nearly
five years. "I've lived in Paris all this time, and nothing like that has
ever happened to me before. I've always felt totally safe here."
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