1967 Guadeloupe riots

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DateMay 20 – May 28, 1967
Location
GoalsIncrease of Wages, Separatism
1967 Guadeloupe riots
(May 67 Massacre)
Part of Guadeloupe Independence movement
A mural painted in the remembrance of the victims in Point-à-Pitre
DateMay 20 – May 28, 1967
Location
Caused byRacism, Socio-economic inequalities and Low Wages
GoalsIncrease of Wages, Separatism
MethodsRiots, Traffic Obstruction and Civil disobedience
Parties

Demonstrators

Lead figures

De Gaulle
Guadeloupe Pierre Bolotte

Jacques Nestor 

Casualties and losses
30+ wounded
~87–200 killed

The riots of May 1967 in Guadeloupe were clashes which occurred between gendarmes and demonstrators on the island during strikes following a racially motivated attack. The riots resulted in the deaths of 87 people (1985 estimate, 1967 estimate reported 7 deaths).[1][2] Other sources estimate the number to be between 80 and 200.[3]

Guadeloupe, an island with a number of socio-economic inequalities between the peoples of European and African ancestry [4][5] significantly increased by the social transformation policies relaunched by the French government to compensate for the damage caused by Hurricane Inez .[6]

Moreover, due to the Decolonisation movements taking place in other parts of the world, similar separatist movements also began to take form in Guadeloupe, such as GONG but the Gaullist movement in France was not willing to negotiate because of the strategic location of the island.[7] So these movements came into direct conflict with the French authorities, police and paramilitaries.[8]

Timeline

On March 20, 1967, Vladimir Snarsky, white owner of a large shoe store in Basse-Terre, unleashes his German shepherd to chase away Raphaël Balzinc, an old black and disabled shoemaker who set up his stall in front of the store.[9][10] The white owner, was the local leader of the Gaullist UNR party, ironically asked his dog "Say hello to the nigger!" This racist incident sparked riots and strikes in Basse-Terre and Pointe-à-Pitre. Two squadrons of National Gendarmerie were deployed in Guadeloupe.[11]

On May 24, 1967, construction workers in Guadeloupe went on strike to obtain a 2.5% salary increase and parity in social rights.[12]

On May 26, at noon, a crowd gathered in front of the Pointe-à-Pitre Chamber of Commerce and waited while negotiations took place between union organizations and the employer representatives. Around 12:45 p.m., they learned from a representative that the negotiations had broken down and rumors began to spread.[13]

The employers' representative, Georges Brizzard, reportedly said: " When the Negroes are hungry, they will go back to work!". The Demonstrators started chanting " Djibouti, Djibouti" to recall the violence which had taken place there, with the French Army shooting separatist demonstrators on sight.[1]

The clashes began with tear gas grenades fired by the gendarmes against demonstrators who threw Lambi conch shells, stones and glass bottles. On the morning of May 26, Mobile Gendarmerie opened fire during violent demonstrations by strikers, causing several injuries.[14] When a gendarme took off his helmet to wipe his forehead, he received a violent blow to his head severely injuring him, the Mobile Gendarmerie open fire in retaliation, causing the death of Jacques Nestor, a prominent activist of the Guadeloupe National Organization Group. . According to the authorities, the firefight was initiated by demonstrators who opened fire first.[14]

The French authorities initially believed the insurrection to be fomented by the GONG but investigations revealed the riots to be spontaneous.[10]

Some sources state that the opening of fire on demonstrators was knowingly approved by the French government.[15]

Casualties

Demonstrators

The official toll from the authorities at the time of the massacre was 7 to 8 dead. In 1985, the Secretary of State for the French Overseas Territories, Georges Lemoine, confirmed the death toll of at least 87 victims, cross-checked from several administrative sources, including the General Intelligence.[16] Most estimates put the death toll between 80 and 200, exact death toll was difficult to determine due to the destruction of archives.[3] MP Christiane Taubira put the death toll around one hundred.[17]

Law enforcement

More than 30 Gendarmes (some red kepis 'Mobile Gendarmerie"[18]) and members of the Republican Security Companies were reportedly injured by the demonstrators[19]

Commemorations

References

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