A traveller community in southeast France launched violent protests while inmates at a jail in the region rioted Tuesday after authorities refused a request for prison leave, concurring sources said.
The incident occurred less than two months after a similar flareup involving travellers, and Prime Minister Manuel Valls demanded a firm response.
The local traveller community in the Alpine town of Moirans had requested temporary leave for two jailed members so that they could attend the funeral of someone who had died in an accident last weekend while riding in a stolen car.
But a judge apparently turned down the request, the local town hall and prosecutor's office said.
Members of the community then blocked off a road, set fire to several cars and ransacked the restaurant at the town's train station, the town hall.
The authorities brought in 120 police and 100 firefighters to Moirans, who brought the situation under control in the early evening without casualties, officials said.
A riot also erupted in a prison at Aiton, about 100 kilometres (60 miles) away, where one of the prisoners is being held.
Around 20 inmates set fire to a passageway and destroyed the locks on their cells, according to a trade union official, who said a unit specialising in returning order to prisons had been called in.
Prime Minister Manuel Valls took to Twitter to condemn "unacceptable violence" and demand "firmness... (and) restoration of order."
The violence comes less than two months after another traveller community in northern France blocked a motorway after authorities refused to temporarily release the son of a shooting victim to attend his father's funeral, with the opposition criticising the government's response as weak.
The term traveller community in France is used for groups of people with a nomadic or semi-sedentary lifestyle, including Roma or so-called New Age travellers.
A traveller community in southeast France launched violent protests while inmates at a jail in the region rioted Tuesday after authorities refused a request for prison leave, concurring sources said.
The incident occurred less than two months after a similar flareup involving travellers, and Prime Minister Manuel Valls demanded a firm response.
The local traveller community in the Alpine town of Moirans had requested temporary leave for two jailed members so that they could attend the funeral of someone who had died in an accident last weekend while riding in a stolen car.
But a judge apparently turned down the request, the local town hall and prosecutor’s office said.
Members of the community then blocked off a road, set fire to several cars and ransacked the restaurant at the town’s train station, the town hall.
The authorities brought in 120 police and 100 firefighters to Moirans, who brought the situation under control in the early evening without casualties, officials said.
A riot also erupted in a prison at Aiton, about 100 kilometres (60 miles) away, where one of the prisoners is being held.
Around 20 inmates set fire to a passageway and destroyed the locks on their cells, according to a trade union official, who said a unit specialising in returning order to prisons had been called in.
Prime Minister Manuel Valls took to Twitter to condemn “unacceptable violence” and demand “firmness… (and) restoration of order.”
The violence comes less than two months after another traveller community in northern France blocked a motorway after authorities refused to temporarily release the son of a shooting victim to attend his father’s funeral, with the opposition criticising the government’s response as weak.
The term traveller community in France is used for groups of people with a nomadic or semi-sedentary lifestyle, including Roma or so-called New Age travellers.
