France taking measures to tighten noose around extremists

France is taking a series of measures to rein in Islamist groups.
The European state was
the scene of repeated terrorist attacks in 2020 against the background of the
cartoons offending Islam's Prophet Muhammad and the Islamic religion.
Respect for
French Republic
The French parliament
approved on 16 February a bill proposed by President Emmanuel Macron. The bill
makes it necessary for everybody in France to demonstrate respect for the
ideals of the French Republic. The same bill also considers Islam a heavenly
religion, not a political movement.
The bill aims to counter
separatist policies by Islamists. France is afraid that Islamist movements
active in it want to establish their own independent state by forming their own
social networks.
It is also afraid that
the same movements would impose their control on the French political stage
which opens the door for separation from the French constitution and foreign interference
in French affairs.
Brotherhood
religious organizations, mosques
The bill passed into law
by the French parliament on 16 February gives state authorities the right to
supervise religious institutions and regularly revise their financing to prevent
dubious funding to them.
The French government
hopes that its supervision of the same institutions would prevent them from
graduating a new generation of extremists who will wreak havoc on French
security.
The new law also imposes
restrictions on internet content with the aim of preventing sites managed by
the religious institutions from promoting hate and violence among French
citizens.
French authorities
arrested a number of parents in the past period after accusing them of
incitement in connection with the murder in October last year of schoolteacher
Samuel Pati who showed his pupils the offending cartoons.