Police forces walk past burning cars in Nanterre, outside Paris, June 29. The death of 17-year-old Nael by police during a traffic check June 27 in the Paris suburb of Nanterre elicited nationwide concern and widespread messages of indignation and condolences. Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said 1,200 police were deployed overnight and 2,000 would be out in force June 28 in the Paris region and around other big cities to “maintain order.”AP Photo/Christophe Ena

French President Emmanuel Macron has held a crisis meeting with some of his ministers, as security forces have arrested 150 people in a second night of violence after the killing of a teenager by police.

In a sign of the seriousness of the situation, Mr. Macron held an early morning crisis meeting of his ministers on June 29, the Elysee announced, after a second night of rioting in which cars and buildings were set alight in towns and suburbs across France.

“The last few hours have been marked by scenes of violence against police stations but also schools and town halls, and thus institutions of the Republic and these scenes are wholly unjustifiable,” Mr. Macron said as he opened the emergency meeting.

Police arrested 150 people across France on the night of June 28, Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said, describing the unrest as “intolerable,” and added that several public buildings were “burned or attacked.”

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The police killing of  Nahel, a 17-year-old boy of North African descent, has intensified concerns about police brutality and racial discrimination within the French law enforcement. A growing number of police-involved incidents has sparked widespread condemnation from human rights organizations and various nations worldwide.

“A night of intolerable violence against symbols of the republic, with town halls, schools and police stations set on fire or attacked,” Darmanin wrote on Twitter … expressing support for police, adding, however, “Shame on those who did not call for calm.”

Around 2,000 riot police were called up in suburbs around Paris on June 28 to quell the raging protests over the killing of Nahel, who was shot point-blank during a traffic search on the morning of June 27.

Protesters set fire to rubbish bins and fireworks in Nanterre as well as in other communes of the Hauts-de-Seine region, where the shooting took place. Clashes spread from neighborhoods around the capital to other French cities, including Toulouse, Dijon and Lyon.

“We are sick of being treated like this. This is for Nahel, we are Nahel,” said two young men calling themselves “Avengers” as they wheeled rubbish bins from a nearby estate to add to a burning barricade.

One said his family had lived in France for three generations but lamented, “They are never going to accept us,” as the teenager who died was of North African origin.

In the southern city of Toulouse, several cars were torched and responding police and firefighters were pelted with projectiles as thick black smoke billowed high into the sky, a police source said.

Earlier on June 28, Mr. Macron appealed for calm to allow investigators time to find out what happened and said the deadly police shooting was “unexplainable and inexcusable” and that “nothing justifies the death of a young man.”

“A teenager was killed. That is inexplicable and unforgivable,” he said during a visit to the Mediterranean city Marseille, adding that the case had “moved the entire nation.” He also expressed “respect and affection” for the family of the victim.

In addition, lawmakers held a minute’s silence in the National Assembly, where Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne said the shooting “seems clearly not to comply with the rules.”

Moreover, celebrities known for their social activism have expressed support for the 17-year-old and his family.

The 17-year-old victim was driving a rental car on June 27 when police pulled him over for breaking several road rules, prosecutors said.

Police initially reported that one officer had shot at the teenager because he was driving his car at him. But this version of events was quickly contradicted by a video circulating on social media that was authenticated by French news agencies.

The footage appears to show a police officer shooting into the driver’s side window as the car speeds off. Prosecutors claim the teenager failed to comply with an order to stop his car and that officers feared for their lives after he threatened to run them over, but that is disputed by lawyers for his family.

The police officer who fatally shot Nahel is now being investigated for voluntary homicide, a local prosecutor said on June 29, and France’s human rights ombudsman has opened an inquiry.

“On the basis of the evidence gathered, the public prosecutor considers that the legal conditions for using the weapon have not been met,” Pascal Prache, the prosecutor, told a news conference.

His killing was the third fatal shooting during a police traffic stop in France so far in 2023, down from a record of 13 last year, a national police spokesperson said, with a law change in 2017 that gave officers greater powers to use their weapons now under scrutiny.

There were three such killings in 2021 and two in 2020, according to a Reuters tally, which shows the majority of victims since 2017 were Black or of Arab origin.

“I hurt for my France. Unacceptable situation. All my thoughts go to the family and loved ones of Nael, this little angel gone much too soon,” tweeted Kylian Mbappé, captain of the French men’s national football team and star player at Paris Saint-Germain. (PressTV.ir)