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Police face youths in Villiers-le-Bel, a northern Paris suburb, while a garbage truck burns in the background during clashes late Monday. It was the second night of violence after two teens on a motorbike were killed in a crash with a patrol car. Sunday, 21 police officers were injured, including the town's police chief. Riot police face young residents of Villiers-le-Bel, a northern Paris suburb, while a garbage truck burns in the background, during clashes late Monday, Nov. 26, 2007. Rampaging youths threw Molotov cocktails and set fire to cars in a troubled neighborhood outside Paris on Monday, the second night of street violence after two local teens were killed in a crash with a police patrol car.
Police face youths in Villiers-le-Bel, a northern Paris suburb, while a garbage truck burns in the background during clashes late Monday. It was the second night of violence after two teens on a motorbike were killed in a crash with a patrol car. Sunday, 21 police officers were injured, including the town’s police chief. Riot police face young residents of Villiers-le-Bel, a northern Paris suburb, while a garbage truck burns in the background, during clashes late Monday, Nov. 26, 2007. Rampaging youths threw Molotov cocktails and set fire to cars in a troubled neighborhood outside Paris on Monday, the second night of street violence after two local teens were killed in a crash with a police patrol car.
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VILLIERS-LE-BEL, France — Rampaging youths threw Molotov cocktails and torched cars in a troubled neighborhood outside Paris in a second night of street violence Monday after two teenagers on a motorbike were killed in a crash with a police car.

Anger focused on police, with residents claiming that officers left the scene of Sunday’s crash without helping the boys — a claim officials cast doubt on but which the police were investigating.

President Nicolas Sarkozy appealed for calm, while police braced for more problems. With more than 20 police officers injured and two police stations attacked in the first night of rioting Sunday, the violence was a reminder of the tensions that drove weeks of unrest in 2005 in poor neighborhoods with large minority populations.

Investigators were still trying to piece together what happened in the Sunday afternoon crash in Villiers-le-Bel, a town of public housing blocks that is home to a mix of Arab, black and white residents in the French capital’s northern suburbs.

Police officials said the teenagers ignored traffic rules and crashed into the police vehicle, and that the motorbike they were riding was unregistered and thus not authorized for use on French roads. Neither of the boys — ages 15 and 16 — was wearing a helmet as required by law, and the prosecutor’s office said the bike was going at maximum speed.

The internal police oversight agency opened an inquiry to probe whether the officers failed to help the teenagers and whether manslaughter charges should be filed, a police official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.

An alcohol test showed that neither of the two officers had been drinking, and initial inquiries suggested they did not appear to have caused the crash, police said. The prosecutor, Marie-Therese de Givry, told LCI television the officers called rescue services to the scene.

“The situation is tense, there are a lot of police on the ground to prevent more flare-ups,” said Gaelle James of the Synergie police officers’ union on Monday night.

In Sunday’s violence, eight people were arrested and 21 police officers were injured — including the town’s police chief, who was beaten in the face after he tried to negotiate with the rioters, police said.

Also Sunday, witnesses said, police fired rubber pellets at youths. Two police stations were targeted, one with Molotov cocktails. A McDonald’s restaurant was burned, as were about 15 cars and several garbage cans.

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