Violence erupts at Montreal's Francofolies festival
Police said the crowd was throwing rocks, bottles and orange cones at them
Officials are picking up the pieces after a Friday night riot left 20 buildings around Montreal's Quartier des spectaclesvandalized includingpolice headquarters.
Mayor DenisCoderredenounced theviolence that overshadowed the closing weekend of the annualFrancofoliesmusic festival and assured the public that people can feel safe at Montreal's summer festivals.
Cmdr. Vincent Rocherof theMontrealpolice force (SPVM)confirmed there were 12 separate incidents and that six police officers sustained injuries. About 100 people took part in the riot that broke out aroundmidnightnear the Francofoliesoutdoor stage behind police headquarters.
A 24-year-old has been arrested for obstruction charges and a 25-year-old is facing charges of assault with a weapon.
An eyewitness who lives in the area said rioters were throwing poles and rocks at police.
"It looked like a fight, then we noticed they were attacking the police station," saideyewitnessSteven Hoffart.
"Police came out in their full riot gear and started pushing people back. People started throwing cans and glass at them. They pushed the people back towards the theatre and the police set up a perimeterfor about an hour or two."
In a news conference Saturday morning Coderreblamed the crowd which cameto see a Parisian rapper.
"There were some who weren't able to control themselves," Coderre said.
He added that it wasn't the genre of music which was the problem but people in thecrowd whotook advantage of the situation.
Vice-presidentand COO ofFrancofolies,Jacques-Andr Dupont,spoke of what happened from the festival's point of view.
"What we saw were young people who wanted to party a bit too hard,"Dupont said."We saw some climb onto the stage and I think after that people left in a bad mood and the rest followed."
Const.Abudullah Emran of Montreal police says the riot may have started as a fight between concert-goers, but the crowd then turned its attention to buildings along St-Urbain Street, including police headquarters.
A video shot at the scene and posted online shows dozens of people throwing orange traffic cones along St-Urbain, a downtown Montreal street.
a dgnre aux francos #manifencours pic.twitter.com/kwv3Ar7THB
—@Fredtm08
Police say the damage extends between St-Denis and Drummond streets.
The Francofolies festival wraps up Saturday night.
with files from Sudha Krishnan