Clouds of tear gas surround youth as they face off with French police during a demonstration against police brutality in Paris, yesterday.
Paris: Hundreds of French high-school students staged an unauthorised anti-police rally yesterday, blocking the entrances to a dozen schools in Paris in the latest in a series of protests over the alleged abuse of a young black man with a police baton.
Police reported eight arrests after isolated skirmishes with youths who hurled objects and damaged property on the fringes of what otherwise appeared to have been a relatively peaceful demonstration.
The Paris school authority said more than 10 schools had been targeted by youths who piled up rubbish bins and other objects at the entrance gates. In one case, a deputy school director was injured when protesters hurled a fire extinguisher.
The protesters are angry over the alleged abuse of the 22-year-old man during a February 2 arrest in Paris where large numbers of immigrants live. The man, identified only as Theo, remains in hospital with injuries.
He has called for public calm and his family has said they have faith in the French justice system.
One of the banners carried at yesterday's rally read “Revenge for Theo!”
Social media networks showed signs of skirmishes on the fringes of the rally in the Place de la Nation square in the east of Paris, where riot police in protective gear advanced on groups of mostly-hooded youths in sidestreet confrontations.
A helicopter flew overhead and tear gas clouds rose into the air above that square towards the end of the rally.
The Paris police department had warned people to stay away from the protest, saying it was not authorised and that there was a risk of violent groups causing trouble, as happened over the last three weeks.