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Following the news of the shooting, violent clashes occurred the next day between officers and protestors who took to the streets to condemn racism and police brutality.
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M’Bowole was accused of shoplifting and was reportedly handcuffed to a radiator when he was shot at point-blank range by a police officer. Kassovitz’s inspiration for “La Haine” was the Apincident in which a 16-year-old Zairian immigrant in Paris named Makome M’Bowole was killed while in police custody. In a curious inverse to many of the housing projects located in the United States, France’s poor are left to rot on the literal margins of a city, whereas America’s poor and disenfranchised dwell within urban areas while those who can afford to do so populate the suburbs. Each of the young men live in a vast housing project called the Muguet, constructed miles away from Paris’ five-star restaurants and looming Eiffel Tower in a banlieue (suburb). “La Haine” centers around a day in the life of Hubert, Saïd and Vinz-three youths somewhere between the ages of 16-20.