Muslim persecution is on the rise in France.
Muslim persecution in France: Two Muslim sisters stabbed near the Eiffel Tower
Two French women have stabbed two Muslim women wearing hijabs near the Eiffel Tower in the French capital, Paris. They also tried to remove the hijab of the two Muslim women and used racist language.
The condition of injured Muslim women is critical. The French military confirmed the incident to AFP on Tuesday. Source: Al Jazeera.
It is known that the attacking Christian terrorists said during the attack, "Dirty Arabs" leave this country.
Al Jazeera reported that the terrorist attack took place last Sunday evening, but sadly the French media and authorities did not make any statement or indication about it before Tuesday. According to Al Jazeera, the subsequent revelation of a terrorist attack on Muslim women has drawn widespread criticism on social media.
A teacher named Samuel Patty was strangled to death last Friday for showing a portrait of the Prophet in a classroom. The assailant, Abdullakh Anjarov, of Chechen descent, was later shot dead by police. Following the incident, some extremist Christian terrorist groups attacked mosques in France, and the government began unjustly arresting Muslim organizations.
Police have been deployed for security in the Beziers and Bordiax areas in the face of threats of violence. The situation has reached such a stage that the Muslim minority in the country is now in a state of panic.
"Muslims are being targeted," said Yassine Luati, a French Muslim rights activist. President Macron is using Islamophobia to intensify his election campaign.
The French government said on Monday it was stepping up its crackdown on suspected extremists. Multiple arrests have already been made. Not only that, as part of the operation, more than two hundred Muslims have been threatened with expulsion from the country.
The government has targeted more than 50 Muslim organizations. An organization called 'Check Yassin Collective' has been banned. Police have arrested the group's founder, Abdul Hakim Sefrioi, for condemning the murder of Samuel Patty.
Surprisingly, organizations working against Islamic terror are also on the government's ban list. Home Minister Gerald Dermanian has proposed banning Collective Against Islamophobia in France (CCIF). Calling the group an "enemy of the country", he said he would suspend the activities of several organizations, including the CCIF, at the personal request of President Macron.
Darmanian anti-Muslim sentiment is nothing new. His negative remarks about Muslims at various times are quite popular with conservative and extreme right-wing parties.
In an interview with a television channel on Tuesday, he said he was shocked to see halal food in supershops. He believes that separatism is being nurtured in France through this.
Two more mosques have recently been attacked in France. In addition to vandalizing the mosque in the attack, they also painted various satirical writings on the walls, as well as images of brutal torture on the Muslim community.
.
News BBC TV.
0 Comments