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Thousands Join Paris Police Rally Against Violence, Insecurity

Lisa Bryant

   PARIS - After protests against police violence in France, tens of
   thousands of officers and their supporters staged their own rally
   Wednesday in Paris, demanding tougher measures against violence and
   insecurity that have targeted their ranks.

   Police, politicians and ordinary Parisians braved a mix of sun and
   pelting rain to protest outside France's National Assembly.

   Loren Bazan, 29, whose parents are in the military, said he wanted to
   show solidarity with the police -- who have died just doing their daily
   jobs, because they were police.

   Earlier this month, an officer was killed during an anti-drug operation
   in Nice. Another worker was killed as she entered the police station
   outside Paris in a suspected Islamist terrorist attack -- one of
   several such attacks targeting French police in recent years.

   Police aren't the only ones raising alarm about growing insecurity in
   France. Members of France's military community -- active and retired --
   have published a pair of open letters recently, warning of what they
   allege could be a brewing civil war fueled by growing Islamism.

   One officer who agreed to be interviewed but declined to give his name,
   said France's police force is committed to protecting citizens but
   isn't treated the way it deserves. He worries peace is unraveling in
   France.
   Police keep order at Worker Day demonstrations in Paris, where they
   were booed, May 1, 2021. (Lisa Bryant/VOA)

   The demonstration offered a counterpoint to allegations of police
   violence and racial profiling that have surged with the Black Lives
   Matter movement.

   Politicians from a rainbow of parties were out in force -- ahead of
   regional elections next month and presidential and legislative ones
   next year. But the welcome wasn't always warm. Some booed French
   Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin as he arrived.

   Darmanin said he was simply there to support the officers during a
   difficult time. There's nothing more normal, he added, than supporting
   officers in a republic.
   A supporter of the May 19, 2021, police protest holds a sign in Paris.
   Translated, it reads, "Illegitimate violence of delinquents forces the
   legitimate force of police." (Lisa Bryant/VOA)

   Not everyone agreed with that sentiment. Some French experts said it
   was highly unusual for him to be present.

   But one demonstrator, Ludovic, said he believed Darmanin came as an
   ordinary citizen. He said police needed more political support.

   Members of France's main opposition party, the far-right National
   Rally, were also present, along with leftist politicians. But the far
   left France Unbowed party refused to attend, saying it did not share
   the police demands.