Bchu invokes a form of national unity

The bill aimed at responding to the urgency of the work after the urban violence that occurred at the end of June-beginning of July “is intended to create, in the service of faster and quality reconstruction, a form of national unity”, has pleaded Christophe Béchu in the Senate on Tuesday.

We do not let go of those who are delighted by the spectacle of easy destruction, assured the Minister for Ecological Transition and Territorial Cohesion, for whom this unity would first and foremost be the most scathing denial to rioters, delinquents, criminals.

What this text is not, it is a global response to the situation we have experienced, the minister immediately stated.

We are now in the time of dealing with the consequences and will of course come back to school the time for resolute action on the causes, on the policies to be carried out, he promised.

Rebuilding is not erasing or erasing, it is doing justice to the silent majority, it is not leaving the last word to the rabble-rousers for whom the response must be legal, Christophe Bchu further affirmed.

In terms of results, the figures are three times higher than those of the three weeks of 2005, indicated the minister.

274 police stations, gendarmerie brigades or municipal police stations, 105 town halls, 243 schools (…) including a dozen completely destroyed schools, 47 establishments under the Ministry of Justice, 3 hospitals, were damaged. .., he numbered.

Christophe Bchu further assured that the derogatory measures that the text authorizes the government to take by ordinance are temporary and limited only to buildings destroyed by the riots.

The challenge is that these ordinances can be promulgated as soon as possible, he added.

The bill must be passed by the Senate in first reading on Tuesday, before going to the National Assembly, with the aim of final adoption by Friday.

source site-96