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French song urban terror game
French song urban terror game




french song urban terror game

People look at you and treat you in a certain way. The former footballer Eric Cantona told the Observer: "It's not easy growing up in a bad neighbourhood.

french song urban terror game

The comedian Muriel Robin told a chatshow: "For a guy to use words like Kärcher makes me feel bad." Some felt the minister, known for tough talking, had gone too far. Then he visited the notorious suburbs north of Paris - known as banlieues - and vowed: "The louts will disappear - we will clean this estate with a Kärcher." Kärcher is a make of high-pressure hose used to clean buildings. Leftwing opponents had even congratulated him for his support of positive discrimination for France's mainly north African immigrant community, allowing the first legal rave party and campaigning for the end to the "double penalty" under which jailed immigrants were deported after serving their sentence. His robust response to the terror threat was widely supported, and a tough new law that he sponsored, which increases surveillance options and lengthens detention periods for suspects, was adopted in parliament yesterday. Until waves of rioting and urban violence broke out in France's grim high-rise city suburbs, Mr Sarkozy, a member of Jacques Chirac's right-of-centre government, appeared to be winning friends and influencing people across the political spectrum. The comic described the minister as "a bourgeois who arrives, cameras in tow, looks at the little rebels and tells them: 'I'm going to clean you out, you bunch of rabble'." In an interview with Paris Match, Noah - recently voted France's most popular personality - declared: "If Sarkozy succeeds, then I'm off."Įven Debbouze, who had previously expressed qualified support for the minister, condemned him. "Calling people racaille, I've not heard anything so violent since Le Pen and his hatred of anyone who is different," Besson told the film magazine Premier. The tennis player turned pop star Yannick Noah, actor and comedian Jamel Debbouze, who starred in Amélie, rapper Joey Starr and film director Luc Besson - of Subway, Nikita, Big Blue and Leon fame - are among those attacking Mr Sarkozy, who has been compared to far-right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen and Napoleon.






French song urban terror game