Macron seeks backing for law against 'radical Islamism'

President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday seeks his
cabinet's blessing for draft legislation combatting "radical
Islamism" after a spate of attacks, which critics fear risks targeting all
Muslims.
Macron argues the legislation is needed to shore up
France's staunchly secular system but the plan has further stirred up social
tensions over the consequences for Europe's largest Muslim community.
"The enemy of the Republic is a political
ideology called radical Islamism, which aims to divide the French among themselves,"
Prime Minister Jean Castex told Wednesday's edition of Le Monde.
He argued that rather than targeting Muslims it
aimed to "free Muslims from the growing grip of radical Islamism".
The legislation will be discussed at a cabinet
meeting at the Elysee Palace with Castex announcing the outcome in the early
afternoon.
But the government's staunch defence of the
foundations of the French state that date back to the French Revolution has
caused unease even among allies, with the US envoy on international religious
freedom saying he was concerned by the legislation.
"There can be constructive engagements that I
think can be helpful and not harmful," Ambassador Sam Brownback told
reporters.
"When you get heavy-handed, the situation can
get worse," he said.
The text was originally titled the
"anti-separatism" bill, using a term Macron uses to describe
ultra-conservative Muslims withdrawing from mainstream society.
Following criticism of that term, it is now called a
"draft law to strengthen republican values", mostly secularism and
freedom of expression.
The law was in the pipeline before the murder in
October of Samuel Paty, a junior high school teacher who was attacked in the
street and beheaded after showing cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed in a class.
But the killing, committed by an 18-year old Chechen
after a virulent social media campaign against the teacher, gave fresh impetus
to the bill, prompted the inclusion of the specific crimes of online hate
speech and divulging personal information on the internet.
Paty's death is one in a string of jihadist-inspired
attacks in France this year including a knife assault outside the former
offices of the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine and deadly stabbings at a
church in the Mediterranean city of Nice.
The draft law sets out stricter criteria for
authorising home schooling of children over three years old in a bid to prevent
parents taking their children out of public schools and enrolling them in
underground Islamic facilities.
Doctors, meanwhile, would be fined or jailed if they
performed a virginity test on girls.
Polygamy is already outlawed in France, but the new
law would also ban authorities from issuing residency papers to polygamous
applicants.
It would also require city hall officials to
interview couples separately prior to their wedding to make sure that they were
not forced into marriage.
Macron has become a figure of hate in some Muslim
countries, with some boycotting French products, after saying that the right to
blaspheme would always be guaranteed in France and that Islam was "in
crisis".
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has called
the draft law an "open provocation", while scholars at Egypt's
prestigious Sunni Islamic institution, Al-Azhar, called Macron's views
"racist".
Macron has also been forced onto the defensive by
critical headlines in influential English-language media, such as the Financial
Times and New York Times.
Muslims in France -- the former colonies of which
include predominantly Muslim countries in north and west Africa as well as the
Middle East -- are estimated at nearly four million, about six percent of the
population.
Once, as is expected, the cabinet backs the draft
law, it heads to parliament at the start of next year for what promises to be a
heated debate.
France's state council, which advises the government
and the National Assembly on future laws, has already signalled that some parts
of the bill, especially on education, may clash with the principle of freedom
of choice enshrined in the French constitution.