The Pak Banker

France draws bill to monitor jihadist websites

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France plans to strengthen its counter-terrorism laws by permitting the use of algorithim­s to detect activity on jihadist and other extremist websites.

Draft legislatio­n was submitted to President Emmanuel Macron and his government at a cabinet meeting on Wednesday, after a wave of Islamist and Islamist-inspired attacks on French soil in recent years, including last Friday.

"The last nine attacks on French soil were committed by individual­s who were unknown to the security services, who were not on a watchlist and were not suspected of being radicalise­d," Interior Miniser Gerald Darmanin told France Inter radio. "That should cause us to ask questions about the intelligen­ce methods we're using," Darmanin added.

France enacted a counter-terrorism law in 2017 to replace a state of emergency declared two years earlier following the attack on Paris by Islamist suicide bombers and gunmen.

The 2017 law, which was subject to review after four years, allowed security agencies to use algorithim­s to monitor messaging apps, as well bolstering police surveillan­ce measures such as 'home visits' to individual­s suspected of terrorism links and the restrictin­g the movement of people.

The new bill would render those measures permanent and extend the use of algorithim­s to websites. "Terrorists have changed the methods of communicat­ion. We continue to be blind, monitoring phone lines that nobody uses any more," Darmanin said. The Tunisian national who killed a police employee in a Paris commuter town five days ago had watched religious videos glorifying acts of jihad just before carrying out his attack, the anti-terrorism prosecutor has said. The bill would give security agencies more power to watch over and limit the movements of high-risk individual­s.

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