Taxi drivers revolt at Paris airport over 'brutal' arrest 2nd sep 2009

Police and taxi drivers fought running battles
using rubber bullets and stones at the main Paris airport early
yesterday, blocking access to a small terminal for three hours.
The
mini-riot followed the alleged brutal arrest of a taxi driver for
failing to pay the monthly rent on his taxi licence. Road access to
terminal three, the smallest of the three passenger sections of Charles
de Gaulle airport, was obstructed from 1am to 4am.
The
French interior ministry ordered an investigation into the incident and
into reported tense relations between some drivers and a special police
unit known as les boers.
"Things got out of hand. Projectiles were thrown
at the police, who struck back," said the French Interior Minister,
Brice Hortefeux.
Drivers said the clashes
began after the special police taxi unit arrested a 38-year-old driver
called Zine, who was accused of failing to pay the monthly "rent" of
€2,400 (£2,100) to the owner of his taxi badge, or licence. Other
drivers protested that the arrest was unnecessarily brutal and that the
police had no jurisdiction in a private dispute. One driver interviewed
by French radio, Tarek Moktad, said that there had been growing
tensions between the special police unit and taxi drivers who queued
for return fares at Charles de Gaulle airport.
"The
police stop us from smoking, from playing cards and from praying," he
said. "We want the government officials to come here and see the
situation for themselves." When one driver had been arrested
"violently", he said, "the whole profession got into a temper".
Until
a decade ago, taxi driving in Paris was an almost exclusively male,
middle-aged and white profession. But many women and men from immigrant
backgrounds have bought or rented taxi badges and drivers say that
tensions with the 70-strong police taxi unit sometimes have racial
undertones. The police deny the claim and say they have been trying to
persuade the drivers to return to Paris and comb the streets for fares
rather than allow their cars to pile up in excessive numbers of up to
300 at the airport.
Djillali Ouanfouf, the
secretary general of the Paris taxi drivers defence union, said that
his members had planned a demonstration at Charles de Gaulle airport.
"Under the law, the police have no right to get involved in disputes
between the people who rent out cars and badges and those who hire
them," he said.
IT;S NOT JUST THE IRISH POLICE THAT HAVE A PROBLEM THEN...
thats whats needed here..
listen we cant get five cars together to make a single decision here, how many taxi rep bodies do we have now, Davide and conquer . Were to stupid to see it..
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