The Peterborough Examiner

Muslims, residents tussle over prayers

- JEFFREY SCHAEFFER and NICOLAS GARRIGA

CLICHY-LA- GARENNE, France — Tensions erupted Friday as French officials and residents of a Paris suburb tried to block Muslims from praying in the street — a dispute that reflects nationwide problems with mosque shortages.

No one was hurt in the skirmishes in Clichy-la-Garenne, but both sides appeared to be digging in their heels in the dispute over prayer space in the town.

Carrying a large banner reading “Stop Illegal Street Prayers,” Mayor Remi Muzeau led more than 100 demonstrat­ors Friday in a show of force to dissuade Muslims from praying on the town’s market square. Worshipper­s have been praying there every Friday for months to protest the closure of a prayer room.

A few dozen worshipper­s tried to pray anyway but sought to avoid confrontat­ion with the protesters and retreated to a less visible spot. But the demonstrat­ors squeezed them toward a wooden wall.

As worshipper­s chanted “Allahu akbar,” or “God is great” in Arabic, the larger group of demonstrat­ors loudly sang the French national anthem. Some held French flags and a crucifix aloft.

Amid pushing and shoving, a banner the worshipper­s were carrying reading “United for a Grand Mosque of Clichy” was torn down.

Police with shields then formed a human barricade between the groups and Muslims eventually unrolled their rugs on the pavement, took off their shoes and held their prayers. When the incident was over, the worshipper­s clapped, and the mayor pledged to come back again next week — as did the Muslim worshipper­s.

“We’ll do it every Friday if necessary,” said Muzeau.

“I must assure the tranquilit­y and freedom of the people in my city,” he said. “We must not allow this to happen in our country. Our country, the French Republic is tarnished.”

Clichy Muslims had been renting a prayer hall from City Hall. But the town’s mayor decided to turn that space into a library for the town’s 60,000 residents, and the prayer hall was shut down in March following a court battle.

City Hall says Muslims can worship at a new Islamic cultural and prayer centre, already used by hundreds, that the town inaugurate­d last year. However some Muslims say the new facility is too small, remote and doesn’t meet safety standards.

 ?? THIBAULT CAMUS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tensions erupted as residents and the mayor of a Paris suburb tried to block the town’s Muslims from praying in the street.
THIBAULT CAMUS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tensions erupted as residents and the mayor of a Paris suburb tried to block the town’s Muslims from praying in the street.

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