Around 100 people marched in the Corsican capital of Ajaccio on Saturday, shouting anti-Muslim slogans. The protest happened in the same low-income neighborhood that violence erupted in earlier this week.
More than a hundred people were reportedly seen in the streets, shouting, "we are still here."
The demonstrators used firecrackers and shouted offensive nationalist slogans, witnesses said on social media.
Local authorities asked the protesters to stop their action, with the prefect of Corsica, Christophe Marmand, saying that their actions "give a disastrous image of Corsica," Le Figaro reported.
The Jardins de l'Empereur housing estate’s glass entrance doors were smashed, as protesters shouted "this is our home," AFP reported. A heavy police presence accompanied the march.
READ MORE: Muslim prayer hall damaged, copies of Koran burnt in overnight rampage in Corsica
Saturday’s anti-Muslim demo on the French Mediterranean island followed earlier protests in the region, in which a Muslim prayer hall was vandalized and books including several copies of the Koran were set on fire.