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There's insecurity in Saint-Denis, and that hurts businesses because people don't come out shopping anymore.
NPR: Violence Overshadows Upcoming French Elections
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On a warm fall day almost a year later, the streets of Saint-Denis are filled with shoppers and pedestrians.
NPR: Violence Overshadows Upcoming French Elections
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Ms. SOFIA TOITEE (Shopkeeper, Saint-Denis): (Through translator) It's better now for sure, but for how long I don't know.
NPR: Violence Overshadows Upcoming French Elections
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Then the newspaper Le Monde published a confidential memo sent by a Saint-Denis city official to the Interior Ministry.
NPR: Violence Overshadows Upcoming French Elections
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Those from certain rough banlieues, such as Seine-Saint-Denis, north of Paris (93), have always been treated with extra suspicion by the police.
ECONOMIST: French number plates
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At the end of September, Ms Alliot-Marie will host an EU seminar, in the heavily Muslim Paris banlieue of Saint-Denis, to discuss what to do.
ECONOMIST: Fears that terrorism is breeding in French prisons
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Mr. NICOLAS SARKOZY (Minister of the Interior, France): (Through translator) In the face of more frequent and more violent crime in Saint-Denis, I don't understand why the number of people incarcerated is down.
NPR: Violence Overshadows Upcoming French Elections
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Worse still, for those whose name is Hasim or Omar, or whose address carries the 93 postcode of Seine-Saint-Denis the department covering the northern Paris suburbs, including Clichy-sous-Bois securing even an interim job is a struggle.
ECONOMIST: France's riots
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Mr. CURTIS JACKSON (Resident, Seine-Saint-Denis): Nothing has changed.
NPR: Violence Overshadows Upcoming French Elections
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Many of the qualities that attracted Sagnier to Chabrol are similar to those that draw her on-screen alter-ego Gabrielle to writer Charles Saint-Denis (Francois Berleand) -- Charles' knowledge of life, literature and his ability to treat her like a little girl, not as an equal.
CNN: Veteran new wave filmmaker seduces French starlet Sagnier
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Ms. HAMAMA ABUBACKAR (Resident, Saint-Denis): (Through translator) Before you couldn't even talk on your cell phone in public because of the hoodlums around here - and believe me, there are plenty of them - wouldn't hesitate to just grab it from you and hit you.
NPR: Violence Overshadows Upcoming French Elections