2020 is the year of bloody violence in France
During the year 2020, France suffered from violent
terrorism, and citizens paid the price for it with their lives, as well as a
threat to the security and stability of the country, as Paris' attempts to
confront extremist groups at home and abroad made it an explicit target for
terrorist organizations.
In 2020, French cities witnessed terrorist operations, which
the world condemned. In January, a man launched a knife attack in a park south
of Paris, killing a man and wounding two others, before the police killed him.
In April 2020, a 33-year-old Sudanese refugee killed two
people by stabbing a knife in broad daylight in the town of Romans-Sur-Isire in
southeast France, to open an investigation into the murders committed in
connection with a terrorist project.
In September 2020, a gunman with a machete attacked and
seriously wounded two people in an attack in front of the former headquarters
of the satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo in Paris, just three weeks after the
start of the trial sessions of the alleged accomplices of the perpetrators of
the bloody attack on the magazine's employees in 2015.
The most violent of these operations was when the teacher
Samuel Paty was massacred by an extremist of Chechen origins after the teacher
showed cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad (may God bless him and grant him peace)
during class, and the police managed to kill the Chechen attacker.
On October 29, at least three people were killed and others
injured in a knife attack near Notre Dame Church in Nice, France. French police
arrested the perpetrator of the attack, a 21-year-old Tunisian.
Unremitting efforts to combat extremism
Paris has taken measures to control terrorism in the country
and confront it in all respects. It has sought to dismantle extremist
organizations, such as the Baraka City association, as it has ties to extremist
currents.
In October 2020, French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin
visited Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria, and presented the authorities with a list
of their citizens who are in France illegally and are suspected of being
extremists, and France wants to expel them.
According to the French Ministry of the Interior, there are
231 foreigners in the country illegaly who are on the list of extremism, and
among them are about 60 Tunisians, 60 Moroccans and a number of Algerians.
France considers deporting them as a priority.
Demands to dissolve Union of Islamic Organizations
On the level of the French street, a number of French public
figures launched an open letter signed by parliamentarians and from local
elected councils, political elites, intellectuals and activists from civil
society organizations, calling for the dissolution of the
Brotherhood-affiliated Union of Islamic Organizations in France.
French President Emmanuel Macron, Prime Minister Jean
Castex, and Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin called for the dissolution of the
extremist organization in order to preserve the values of the secular and
democratic state in the face of terrorism and extremism.



