Police fanned out around the outskirts of Paris amid fears of renewed 
violence Friday as mourners marked the deaths a year ago of two teenagers that 
ignited three weeks of riots in largely immigrant housing projects across 
France. 
 
 
   A French police investigator inspects the charred remains of 
 a city bus Wednesday, Oct. 25, 2006, at the bus station of Nanterre, west 
 of Paris. The bus was set on fire on Wednesday night in Nanterre by a gang 
 of youths, after they forced passengers out. The attack came as France 
 prepares to mark on Friday the one-year anniversary of riots last year by 
 suburban youth, and raised the specter of a repeat of the three weeks of 
 violence. [AP] | 
The outburst of anger at the 
accidental deaths of the youths, electrocuted in a power substation while hiding 
from police, grew into a broader challenge against the French state that has 
continued to simmer. 
Attackers have torched four buses after forcing off passengers in the 
outskirts of Paris in recent days, and police have been ambushed in several 
organized attacks in recent weeks, raising fears of a new wave of violence 
around the anniversary. 
Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy pledged Thursday to assign police to 
protect buses serving some of the troubled communities, and more than 500 extra 
riot police have been assigned to beef up security this week. 
Last year's events jolted France into recognizing its failure to offer its 5 
million Muslims, and its minorities — especially those of Arab and black African 
origin — a fair shake. Instead of France's vaunted "egalite," or equality, 
immigrants and their French-born children suffer police harassment, struggle to 
find work, and live in cinderblock public housing rife with crime and poverty. 
The government passed an equal opportunities law this spring and has poured 
funds into "sensitive" areas, but disenchantment still reigns. 
On Friday, several hundred residents of Clichy-sous-Bois and other 
communities outside Paris held a silent march in honor of Zyed Benna and Bouna 
Traore, the teens of African descent who took refuge in a power substation from 
what they thought was a police chase on Oct. 27, 2005. In the minds of young 
people here, it was fear of police that led to their deaths. 
No police were visible at Friday's march. 
Carrying a banner reading "Dead For Nothing," families of the teens led the 
ethnically diverse crowd away from city hall toward the power station. 
"They became a symbol in the projects. People came here in large numbers 
because they wanted to show their solidarity," said a cousin of Traore who gave 
her name as Coulibaly. 
"I don't see why the violence should recur. That will not solve the 
problems," she added. 
A memorial to the youths was erected near city hall later Friday, though the 
site where they died is adorned only with the graffiti and rubble that are the 
signature of such neighborhoods. 
Clichy-sous-Bois has no police station, so officers patrolling here come from 
outside and have no connection to residents. There is no public transport and 
few here have private cars, leaving most people virtually trapped. Unemployment 
among its 28,000 residents is well above the 9 percent national average, at 23.5 
percent, and rises to 32 percent for those between the ages of 15 and 24, 
according to the newspaper La Croix. 
France's inability to better integrate minorities and the recent violence 
have become key issues in the campaign for next year's presidential and 
parliamentary elections. 
Candidates for the opposition Socialist Party's presidential nomination 
criticized the government's handling of the issue during a debate Thursday night 
ahead of next month's party primary. 
Former Prime Minister Laurent Fabius said the recent flare-up of violence 
showed the government's policies are a "total failure." 
"One year ago, Bouna and Zyed were burned to a cinder," he said. "Nothing has 
changed" since then, he said. 
Sarkozy, the interior minister and leading contender on the right, is blamed 
by many for fueling the riots with hard-line statements about youths in the 
projects. 
"I have decided to mobilize all the mobile forces we dispose of in order to 
serve those who take public transport," Sarkozy said following a meeting 
Thursday evening with public transportation officials. 
The 500 additional police officers pulled in to the outskirts of Paris this 
week will be in five units meant to reinforce the 13 units already assigned to 
the area. 
"It's better to be over-prepared than to come up short," said Marc Gautron, 
national secretary of the UNSA police union. "We want to be able to make the 
maximum number of arrests if a bus or a person are attacked." 
Another police union, Alliance, called for officers to stage protests in 
front of city halls across France on Nov. 13. 
"Police cannot be the only ones to confront the difficulties of the suburbs," 
said Alliance Secretary General Jean-Claude Delange.