France: New Anti-Terrorism Law Takes Effect
by Soeren Kern • October 31, 2017 at 5:00 am
- The new law authorizes prefects to order the closure of mosques or other places of worship for a period of up to six months if preachers are deemed to express "ideas or theories" that "incite violence, hatred or discrimination, provoke the commission of acts of terrorism or express praise for such acts."
- French police and intelligence services are surveilling around 15,000 jihadists living on French soil, Le Journal du Dimanche reported on October 9. Of these, some 4,000 are at "the top of the spectrum" and most likely to carry out an attack.
- Of the 1,900 French jihadists fighting with the Islamic State, as many as one-fifth have received as much as €500,000 ($580,000) in social welfare payments from the French state, Le Figaro revealed on October 26.
Pictured:
Police patrol the Champs-Élysées in Paris after a terrorist attack on
April 21, 2017, in which one police officer was killed and another
wounded. (Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)
French President Emmanuel
Macron has formally signed a new counter-terrorism law which gives
prefects, police and security forces wide-ranging powers — without the
need to seek prior approval from a judge — to search homes, place people
under house arrest and close places of worship. The measure also
authorizes police to perform identity checks at French borders.
The
new law, adopted by the French Senate on October 18, makes permanent
many of the previously exceptional measures imposed under a two-year-old
state of emergency, which was introduced after the jihadist attacks in
Paris in November 2015. That state of emergency was slated to expire on November 1.
Continue Reading Articlehttps://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/11258/france-terrorism-law
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