
For a powder keg to explode it needs powder and a fuse. Without the fuse, the powder will not ignite. Without the powder, the fuse will fizzle out. Recent events in the banlieues—the deprived districts around France’s cities— provide a simple demonstration of this.
If the interior minister, Nicolas Sarkozy, is to be France’s next president he must secure a lasting advantage over the prime minister, Dominique de Villepin, and the rival leaders from the extreme right, Jean-Marie Le Pen and Philippe de Villiers. So, in an attempt to demonstrate his fire-fighting skills, he has resorted to arson. Some members of the police seized upon his provocative language as a pretext to behave like a colonial army in deprived areas whose inhabitants, though French, are of Arab or African origin…
It is a question not just of basic morality, but also of national interest. The children of yesterday’s immigrants and their descendants have little chance of a decent life while they remain excluded from French society. And the nation has equally little chance of surviving its current crisis if it deprives itself of the support, energies and abilities of a tenth of its population… If we want to end ghettoisation we must speed up regeneration in poor areas and encourage diversity in rich ones. But this will take tens of billions of euros and the political will to implement new planning laws introduced to promote urban renewal and combat social segregation…
Excerpted from ‘Le Monde Diplomatique’, December 25