Dragnet, planned law boost French fight of Islamic radicals

More than three dozen police officers descended on a small private school in Paris, blocked the 92 students inside their classrooms, took photos everywhere, even inside the refrigerator, and grilled the school director in her office.
“It was like they were moving
in on a drug deal,” Hanane Loukili, the director and co-founder of the MHS
middle and high school said, recalling the Nov. 17 scene.
Loukili didn’t know it then, but a team from the Cell to Fight Radical
Islam and Community Withdrawal, or CLIR, had arrived for an inspection. The
dragnet sweeps schools, shops, clubs or mosques to rout out “radicalization.”
Within a week, a shaken Loukili informed students their school was shutting
down.
Loukili insists she is no radical, but such operations illustrate the
extent of French efforts to fight extremism as lawmakers prepare to vote
Tuesday on a bill aimed at snuffing it out.
The MHS school had an unusual profile. It was secular and co-educational
but allowed female Muslim students to wear headscarves in class — forbidden in
public schools — and to pray during breaks. Unlike private Muslim schools in
France, where headscarves are allowed, MHS did not offer religion or theology
courses.
Loukili and others at the school claim it was a perfect target in what
some say is an uncomfortable climate for France’s Muslims.
Scrubbing France clean of radicals and their breeding grounds is a
priority cause of President Emmanuel Macron in a nation bloodied by terror
attacks, including the beheading of a teacher outside his school in a suburb
outside Paris in October, followed by a deadly attack inside the basilica in
Nice.
The proposed legislation is intended to re-anchor secularism in a
changing France, where Muslims are increasingly visible and Islam — the
nation’s No. 2 religion — is gaining a stronger voice.
The legislation, expected to pass the first critical vote, will also
expand and facilitate the crackdown.
Along with the bill, contested by some Muslims, politicians and others,
such strong-arm inspections risk accentuating the climate of suspicion many
Muslims feel in a country where the vast majority of Muslims don’t hold
extremist views.
Loukili, herself a Muslim, is well aware of major problems she and her
school faced linked to fire hazards, but fervently denied in an Associated
Press interview, any links to radicalism by her or staff at the school, which
opened in 2015.
Only on Dec. 9, did Loukili learn her situation was graver than she
thought. A statement from the Police Prefecture and prosecutors office
suggested the closure was part of a growing push to “fight all forms of
separatism” — the word coined by Macron for extremists who undermine the
nation’s values in a bid to create a “counter society.”
Dragnet raids like those unleashed against Loukili’s school, which were
initially carried out as an experiment shortly after Macron took office in
2017, have become the underside of the presidential priority, unearthing soft
spots on a local level to nip Islamic radicalization in the bud. They now reach
across the country, with police accompanied by education or other specialists
depending on the target.
In December alone, teams carried out 476 raids and closed 36
establishments of various types, according to Interior Ministry figures. Since
November 2019, when the program marked its first year, 3,881 establishments
have been inspected and 126 closed, mostly small businesses but also two
schools, ministry figures show.
One was an underground school with no windows or educational program,
along with sports clubs where preaching and obligatory prayer are behind-the
scenes activities. Five were closed.
The proposed law and the Cell to Fight Radical Islam program, led by
prefects in each region, are just part of a many-layered operation to rout out
what authorities call “enemies of the Republic.” Mayors of towns considered
“most impacted” by the extremist threat have been asked to sign a charter
agreeing to cooperate in the hunt for radicals, like flagging potential
suspects, the AP has learned.
The Cell to Fight Radical Islam would also get a boost from the planned
law, which would provide new legal tools to shut down facilities.
“Today, we’re obliged to use
administrative motives to close establishments that don’t respect the law,”
said an official close to Citizenship Minister Marlene Schiappa, who oversees
the Cell to Fight Radical Islam program and is also a sponsor of the proposed
law, along with Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin.
The official, not authorized to speak publicly, could not address the
case of the MHS school. Police also would not comment.
The school’s problems began more than a year ago with safety concerns
linked mainly to the large building where it was housed. Loukili, its director
and a math teacher at the school, was ordered to close the school, to stop
teaching and to not run any future educational establishment. She returns to
court March 17.
“I think they (accuse) us of
separatism because they needed to make an example,” Loukili said, noting the
school’s Paris location, its fragile finances and the leeway given to girls to
wear headscarves.
A mother who had to scramble to find new schools for her children after
the school closed said her son is fine but her 15-year-old daughter, who
insists on wearing a head scarf, had to switch to a Muslim school where the
head coverings are allowed but where boys and girls are separated inside
classrooms and at lunch.
Her daughter, unhappy in the strict climate, “comes home with her
stomach in knots,” said the woman, who asked to be identified only by her first
name, Rafika, to protect her daughter.
The MHS school “is a school like me, what I call the France of today,”
said Rafika, a working mother who wears a head scarf. “It’s a real melting pot.”
Jean-Riad Kechaou, a history teacher in the working class Paris suburb
of Chelles, sees anger in his Muslim adolescent students.
“It comes from this permanent stigmatization of their religion,” he said. “In the head of an adolescent of 12, 13, 14, 15 years old, everything gets mixed up and what comes out is his religion has been completely dirtied and fingers are pointed at him.”