The Denver Post

Macron vows nationwide crackdown on radical Islam

- By Norimitsu Onishi and Aurelien Breeden

President Emmanuel Macron of France on Friday outlined a series of measures designed to rein in the influence of radical Islam in the country and help develop what he called an “Islam of France” compatible with the nation’s republican values.

In a long- awaited speech, Macron said the influence of Islamists must be eradicated from public institutio­ns even as he acknowledg­ed government failures in allowing it to spread.

The measures include placing stringent limits on home schooling and increasing scrutiny of religious schools, making associatio­ns that solicit public funds sign a “charter” on secularism.

While these measures would apply to any group, they are intended to counter extremists in the Muslim community.

Under the measures, the widespread practice of bringing foreign imams to work in France, where they often are accused of preaching an outdated or extreme version of Islam, would be ended.

The issue of the effects of Islamists has been a persistent one in France, amid fears of the kinds of terrorist attacks the country has faced in recent years, putting pressure on Macron as he faces reelection.

Many of the proposals from Macron were ideas that had been floated in the past or ones he had approved. His speech Friday assembled it all into a comprehens­ive package that the government is expected to present as a bill in December.

“What we must attack is Islamist separatism,” Macron said in front of six of his ministers in Les Mureaux, a town northwest of Paris.

“Secularism is the cement of a united France,” he said, calling radical Islam both an “ideology” and a “project” that sought to indoctrina­te children, undermine France’s values — especially gender equality — and create a “countersoc­iety” that sometimes laid the groundwork for Islamist terrorism.

But Macron also recognized that France bore responsibi­lity for letting that ideology spread unconteste­d.

“We built our own separatism ourselves,” he said. For too long, authoritie­s had amassed largely immigrant population­s in povertystr­icken neighborho­ods with little access to jobs or public transporta­tion, leading to a “ghettoizat­ion of our republic,” he said.

The speech was postponed several times this year as the president searched, sometimes publicly, for the best approach and language. The stakes were high, as the setting indicated: Macron’s speech and answers to journalist­s, which lasted nearly two hours, were broadcast live on television and the internet.

In a sign of how delicate the issue is for Macron, a member of his party walked out of a parliament­ary hearing last month because she objected to the veil worn by a student union leader who was testifying, setting off days of heated debate.

Crucially, Macron’s announceme­nt came as France’s political establishm­ent gears up for the next presidenti­al election in 18 months.

Accused by the far- right and traditiona­l conservati­ves of being lax against radical Islam, Macron recently has used words and adopted positions on social issues that have signaled a clear departure from his more liberal stances at the start of his presidency.

During the summer, Macron reshuffled his Cabinet with a view toward the next election, handing a key job to Gérald Darmanin, a conservati­ve, hard- charging protégé of the former rightwing president, Nicolas Sarkozy. Darmanin, now the interior minister and head of the national police, quickly helped set the tone for the remainder of Macron’s term.

Even though official data show steady or declining crime rates overall in France, Darmanin joined political rivals on the right to denounce what they claim to be the country’s supposed growing insecurity.

Darmanin began using and strongly defending the vocabulary of the far- right to describe a France supposedly “turning savage” — or undergoing an “ensauvagem­ent,” a loaded word used by the right to target nonwhite immigrants from France’s former African colonies.

 ?? AFP/ Getty Images file ?? At the Pasteur Hospital in Nice, France, in 2016, a woman learns of the death of her grandson in an Islamic State truck attack that killed 84 people.
AFP/ Getty Images file At the Pasteur Hospital in Nice, France, in 2016, a woman learns of the death of her grandson in an Islamic State truck attack that killed 84 people.

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