-
Mbappe, Dembele fire France past Morocco into World Cup semi-finals
-
Mbappe strikes again as France beat Morocco to reach World Cup semi-finals
-
Chip titan SK hynix readies for mega US listing
-
Sick Olympic champion McKeown pulls out of Commonwealth Games, PanPacs
-
Iyer says India in 'transition' after latest thrashing by England
-
Traeen out of Tour de France after losing yellow jersey
-
Iyer says India in 'transition' after latest England thrashing
-
Ukrainian sports minister slams IOC's 'cynical' Russia decision
-
Silencing World Cup hotshot Haaland vital, says England's O'Reilly
-
Leonard return to Raptors on hold pending Clippers probe
-
Australian sprint sensation Gout Gout set to miss rest of season
-
US pushes for weaker truck pollution rules
-
England thrash India by nine wickets for T20 series win
-
Black and cream and very Roman at Fendi haute couture show
-
Wimbledon run came 'out of nowhere', says finalist Noskova
-
Spain keeping opposition far from goal at World Cup, says 'keeper Garcia
-
India captain Kaur hopes Lord's Test can offset World Cup woes
-
Czech mates Muchova and Noskova to clash in Wimbledon final
-
China factory fire kills at least 28 people
-
Bayeux Tapestry begins epic journey from France to London: source
-
Dubai Police Unveil Next Generation of ‘Ghiath’ Smart Patrols Powered by BYD
-
King in shades braves heat to visit London zoo
-
Djokovic faces Sinner showdown, Fery eyes Wimbledon final
-
Gauff expecting hate messages after Wimbledon loss
-
Noskova books all-Czech Wimbledon final clash with Muchova
-
US star Pulisic fractured leg in Belgium loss: team
-
England's Quansah handed two-game World Cup ban
-
Pogacar, like Jordan, Bolt or Djokovic?
-
UK sets record for number of days over 34C
-
Ex-Puma Urdapilleta shuns retirement to play on at 40
-
Haaland relishing 'special' World Cup showdown with England
-
Keep me away from the pool, Kipyegon tells triathlete Beaugrand
-
FIFA lashes 'unfounded allegations' after Argentina-Egypt clash
-
Nerves high in Kyiv as Russia escalates missile attacks
-
'Only revenge': Iran mourners defiant at Khamenei burial
-
Stars pay tribute to 'Total Eclipse' singer Bonnie Tyler, who has died at 75
-
Pogacar reclaims Tour de France yellow jersey with stage six win
-
'I'm ready to roll' - hungry Duplantis still motivated
-
US existing home sales dip in June as cost worries persist
-
Muchova beats Gauff in thriller to reach first Wimbledon final
-
Russia subjecting 1.6 million Ukrainian children to military brainwashing: OSCE report
-
One revolver, six bullets: Turkish president's 'unusual' gift to NATO leaders
-
Strengthening El Nino likely to 'rank among largest' on record: US agency
-
Kicking off: New York football enthusiasts defy pitch shortage
-
Jorge Jesus to take over as Portugal coach after World Cup exit
-
Fendi shows haute couture in Rome with nod to Lagerfeld
-
Ebola outbreak is 'fastest growing ever' as 600 die
-
Olympic sprint champs Alfred, Thomas bid for work-life balance
-
Stocks shrug off tensions to rise on renewed tech interest
-
How NATO leaders reacted to Erdogan's revolver gift
Will France's riots benefit far-right Le Pen?
In her first speech in parliament as France's riots ebbed this week, far-right leader Marine Le Pen accused the government of turning the country into a "hell" that she had foreseen.
"The reality is that you didn't want to hear any of the warnings," said the 54-year-old, whose 89 MPs form the biggest opposition party in parliament since elections last year.
"We predicted what is happening despite great adversity. Unfortunately we were right."
She and her father Jean-Marie have been forecasting France's demise and even civil war since the 1970s in doom-laden speeches focused on the presence of foreigners in France.
"Above all and before anything else, we need to stop anarchic immigration," Le Pen continued.
The political fall-out from France's worst urban violence since 2005 remains highly uncertain, leading to speculation about who stands to gain from the breakdown in law and order that has shocked millions of French people.
Le Pen and many others on the right have sought to blame the mass looting and clashes on immigrant-origin communities, mostly from former French colonies in Africa, who have settled in suburban areas in towns and cities since the 1960s.
Despite the riots being sparked by allegations of police brutality and racism after the fatal shooting of Nahel M. -- a 17-year-old boy of Algerian origin in Paris -- many analysts feel the far-right promise of a radical crackdown on crime and immigration could find new takers.
"I think we'll see a rise of several points for the National Rally in an extension of the quite incredible gains they've made over the last few years," Olivier Babeau, co-founder of the right-leaning Institute Sapiens think-tank, told AFP.
"Without them really doing or saying much, events are helping them convince part of the population," he added.
Le Pen achieved her highest-ever score in last year's presidential elections -- 41.5 percent in the second round --- and then celebrated record parliamentary election results two months later.
Jean-Yves Camus, a far-right specialist at the Jean Jaures Foundation, agreed that Le Pen and the even more radical anti-Islam politician Eric Zemmour looked the most likely to gain from the riots.
"There's a risk that Eric Zemmour and Marine Le Pen benefit from the situation, notably during the European elections which will take place next year," he told AFP.
- Government response -
The government has sought to counter the narrative being pushed by the far-right and in the mainstream Republicans party that immigrants were to blame for the unrest, which saw 273 buildings belonging to the security forces and 168 schools damaged.
Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said that 90 percent of the roughly 3,500 people arrested during the five nights of the most severe rioting were French nationals.
"Yes, there were some who could be from immigrant backgrounds," Darmanin, who has Algerian roots, said of the lists of names of detainees he had seen while touring police stations.
"But there were a lot of Kevins and Matteos too," he told a hearing in the Senate on Wednesday.
"This identity-based analysis seems wrong to me," he said, while acknowledging that the question of how best to integrate immigrants was "interesting."
Camus believes that the government might be credited by some voters for having brought the unrest under control in under a week thanks to a massive deployment of up to 45,000 security forces at their peak.
The last nation-wide riots in 2005 lasted for nearly three weeks and led the government to resort to a state of emergency.
"Without having to use a state of emergency and with a strategy of responding gradually, the government demonstrated that it was able to contain the movement," he told AFP.
- Left splits -
President Emmanuel Macron has condemned the "inexcusable" police shooting which sparked the riots, which saw an officer open fire at point-blank range having stopped a 17-year-old driving a Mercedes without a licence in a west Paris suburb.
The centrist head of state has promised a response, but major police reform -- called for by the left -- remains off the table.
Macron has so far focused on how to punish parents whose children commit crimes amid shock about the young ages of many of the rioters.
The country's leftist alliance is also at odds, with the head of the radical France Unbowed party Jean-Luc Melenchon creating rifts with his Socialist and Communist allies by failing to unequivocally call for calm.
He has suggested the riots were "poor people rebelling."
Left-leaning Le Monde newspaper sharply criticised him in an editorial, saying that he was "at odds with a very strong demand for a return to order which is rising in public opinion."
"In a country shocked by five days of urban riots, the left is not reassuring," it said on Thursday.
W.Moreno--AT