Monday, June 13, 2005

Second-generation African immigrants attack beachgoers in Portugal

Tisha Steyn:

On a sunny national holiday, scores of beachgoers were stretched out in the sands at Portugal's Carcavelos beach, when like a swarm of locusts some 500 youths descended on the relaxed crowd, stirring up panic as they robbed the stunned bathers.

Not a pretty postcard for Portuguese tourism.

But that was the scene on Friday at the beach 15km west of Lisbon, according to police.

The images flashed on Portuguese television of tensions at the normally tranquil beaches stirred concern about the social tensions in Lisbon's poor suburbs.

The youths, from 12 to 20 years old, were apparently second-generation immigrants who organised into gangs, according to initial police reports.

"The situation is worrying," said Vitor Filipe, president of the Portuguese Confederation of Tourism, calling for immediate security measures.

"If not we will have a sort of Rio de Janeiro here and our tourist image is going to take a knock."

The gangs made a clean sweep of Carcavelos beach, acting aggressively and mugging the sunbathers en masse, police and witnesses said.

Panicking, the bathers fled, some losing track of their children in the confusion.

Police called for reinforcements and fired guns into the air. Five people, including two police officers, were injured and four suspects were arrested.

But confusion remains about exactly what happened and police have not definitely established that the robbery sweep at the beach was co-ordinated between the gangs in the suburbs.

The Carcavelos beach attack shows "the existence of a lost generation of young Africans, second-generation immigrants... who do not have roots in Africa and no satisfying future in Portugal," Joao Maria Mendes, a professor, told the daily Publico Sunday.

VIDEO

Portugal youths in beach rampage

2 Comments:

At 11:49 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"The situation is worrying,"

The "situation" he's speaking about is the criminal behavior, and not more generally the presence (with more to come, no doubt) of a significant number of African immigrants in Portugal (who are, apparently, having a great deal of trouble prospering there). Unfortunately.

"no satisfying future"

And who's responsibility is someone's future? Is it the responsibility of the Portugese, not a terribly well off country to begin with, to provide a future (?) to immigrants who choose to come voluntarily? And if it is recognized that the future in Portugal for these people is mostly one of bleak poverty with accompanying alienation, then is it a good idea to allow more of them to come?

If some kind of post-colonial guilt is the problem, Portugal better get over that quickly.

 
At 8:35 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

This blogger:

http://olisiponense.blogspot.com

(in Portugal) is saying that the whole thing is a misunderstanding. I dont know Portugese so I cant be sure but I cant find reference to this follow up anywhere else.

It could just be the authorities trying some PC damage control.

 

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