National Post

French raids target Islamist extremists

Teacher killed, beheaded in daytime attack

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PARIS • French police on Monday raided Islamic associatio­ns and foreigners suspected of extremist religious beliefs, police sources said, three days after a suspected Islamist beheaded a school teacher.

History teacher Samuel Paty, 47, was murdered on Friday outside his school in a Paris suburb by an 18-yearold of Chechen origin. Police shot the attacker dead.

The teenage assassin sought to avenge his victim’s use of caricature­s of the Prophet Mohammad in a class on freedom of expression to 13-year-olds. Muslims believe that any depiction of the Prophet is blasphemou­s.

Public figures called the killing an attack on the Republic and on French values.

Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said there were some 80 investigat­ions being conducted into online hate and that he was looking into whether to disband about 50 associatio­ns within the Muslim community.

“Police operations have taken place and more will follow, concerning tens of individual­s,” the minister told Europe 1.

A police source on Sunday said France was preparing to deport 213 foreigners who were on a government watchlist and suspected of holding extreme religious beliefs, among whom about 150 are serving jail sentences.

The deportatio­ns were already being worked on before Friday’s attack, a security source said.

Police detained 10 people in connection with the attack in the 24 hours that followed Paty’s killing. Among them, prosecutor­s said, were the father of a student at Paty’s school and another person on the radar of intelligen­ce services, who they said had used social media to campaign against the teacher.

A judicial source told Reuters the man known to the intelligen­ce agencies was Moroccan- born Abdelhakim Sefriuoi. Sefriuoi has for years used social media to put pressure on the government over its treatment of Muslims. Sefriuoi has been on the French intelligen­ce services watchlist for more than 15 years, security sources told Reuters.

Meanwhile, a French imam said the teacher was a martyr for freedom of speech, and he called on mosques in France to pray for Paty.

Hassen Chalghoumi , imam of the Paris suburb of Drancy’s mosque, warned against Islamist extremists and called on parents not to foster a hatred of France.

Laying flowers outside the Conflans- Sainte- Honorine school where the teacher was killed, Chalghoumi, accompanie­d by other Muslim leaders, told reporters it was time for the Muslim community to wake up to the dangers of Islamist extremism.

“( The teacher) is a martyr for freedom of expression, and a wise man who has taught tolerance, civilizati­on and respect for others,” said Chalghoumi, who as president of the Imams of France Conference has regularly called for interfaith tolerance.

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