Macron pushes for end to France riots as tensions ease on sixth night
- Riots that have rocked France for days appeared to be ebbing, with the number of arrests dropping on Sunday night
- A large security crackdown and a plea by dead teen’s grandmother may have contributed to the relative calm

French President Emmanuel Macron is counting on law enforcement to restore order after almost a week of nationwide riots touched off by a police officer’s fatal shooting of a teenager.
Macron met with key cabinet ministers into the evening hours on Sunday in his latest attempt to craft a response to the violence, which is testing his authority and ability to carry out reforms.
He is keeping some 45,000 police, special forces and armoured vehicles deployed to contain clashes that have left hundreds of public buildings and shops damaged or ransacked in cities including Paris, Marseille, Lyon and Strasbourg.
While tensions eased overnight into Monday, the shooting of Nahel, a 17-year-old of North African descent, remains a flashpoint in a crisis over racism and inequality in France that’s drawing comparisons with America’s reaction to the murder of George Floyd in 2020.

Macron will meet on Tuesday with some 220 French mayors to discuss the situation, Agence France-Presse reported after the cabinet talks.