The Borneo Post (Sabah)

France pays tribute to beheaded teacher

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PARIS: France will pay tribute Wednesday to a history teacher beheaded for showing cartoons of the Prophet Mohamed in a free speech lesson in a gruesome attack that has shocked the country and prompted a government crackdown on radical Islam.

Seven people, including two pupils, will appear before an anti-terror judge for a decision on criminal charges over the killing of 47-year-old history teacher Samuel Paty on Friday.

Police have carried out dozens of raids since the killing, while the government has ordered the six-month closure of a mosque outside Paris and plans to dissolve a group it said supported Palestinia­n militant group Hamas.

“Our fellow citizens expect actions,” Macron said on Tuesday.

Paty was attacked shortly after leaving the junior high school where he taught in the suburb of Conflans-SainteHono­rine outside Paris.

He had been the subject of an online hate campaign after he showed pupils cartoons of the prophet in a civics class — the same images that sparked a bloody assault on the offices of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo five years ago.

A photo of Paty and a message claiming responsibi­lity for his murder were found on the cellphone of his killer, 18year-old Abdullakh Anzorov, originally from the Russian region of Chechnya.

Anzorov tweeted images of the teacher’s decapitate­d body before he was shot dead by police.

On Wednesday evening, Macron was to attend an official memorial with Paty’s family and some 400 guests at the Sorbonne university in Paris, where he will posthumous­ly award the teacher France’s highest order of merit, the Legion d’Honneur.

Nine of 16 people held over the murder were released from custody late Tuesday, including four members of Anzorov’s family and three school pupils.

Among those due to appear Wednesday was a disgruntle­d parent from Paty’s school, who had fired up anger about his lesson through messages on social media, urging ‘mobilisati­on’ against the teacher.

The parent had exchanged messages with Anzorov via WhatsApp in the days leading up to the murder.

The material he uploaded was widely shared, including by a mosque in the northern Paris suburb of Pantin, which the government will close Wednesday for six months for spreading material likely to provoke ‘hatred and violence’.

Macron has also announced that a pro-Hamas group called the Sheikh Yassin Collective would be dissolved for being ‘directly implicated’ in the murder.

The group’s founder, Islamist radical Abdelhakim Sefrioui, is among those in custody over the murder.

Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin has accused him and the school parent of having issued a ‘fatwa’ against Paty.

Hamas said in a statement Wednesday it had “no links” to the collective and Sefrioui had no ‘organisati­onal relationsh­ip’with the Palestinia­n movement.

The French government has earmarked another 50odd other organisati­ons with links to ‘radical Islam’ for dissolutio­n.

On Tuesday, in a phone call with his Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin, Macron asked Moscow for stronger cooperatio­n in the fight against terror.

Russia has rejected any associatio­n with the killer.

Putin offered Macron his condolence­s over the ‘barbaric murder’, according to the Kremlin, and the two leaders “reaffirmed their mutual interest in intensifyi­ng joint efforts to combat terrorism and the spread of extremist ideology.”

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