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Post by JustJohn or JJ on Dec 13, 2015 6:37:02 GMT -7
Muslim Violence, Near Civil War In France
la guerre civile en france
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Post by pieter on Dec 13, 2015 15:51:25 GMT -7
Dear John, I already heard that French jews are leaving France and are immigrating to Israel. A lot of French people voted for the far right Front National in the first round of the regional elections last week. The Front National lost votes today, due to the fact that the democratic parties of the center left and center right cooperated against her party. The Socialist called on their voters to vote for center right parties in the regional elections. Both extreme islamists and the extreme right will continue to grow in France. Unemployed French youth and unemployed migrant youth will clash. Islamic State and Al Qaida will stil be present in the Ban Lieu's with their secret cells, called sleeping cells in the past. These cells will become awake again and destroy targets and kill people again. I hope that intelligence agencies, the French police and special forces will catch them before they can do any harm. Fact is that fear, anxiety, hatred, xenophobia, racism, discrimination and lawlessness rule some parts of France now. The no go area's in the Banlieue's, suburbs of a large cities. ( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banlieue ) Cheers, Pieter
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Post by karl on Dec 14, 2015 10:00:43 GMT -7
Yes, it appears to be a problem, yes, it is controllable. For as the article has promoted, there are areas that are dangerious for non-whites that the police do not go into.
The above is simply non-sense with these Islamic thugs to bring upon them selves a great deal of future hurt, time is not their friend.
Paris (AFP) - The French government wants to write states of emergency into its constitution in the wake of the Paris attacks, according to a draft seen by AFP Thursday.
It also wants to expand powers of house arrest and include in the constitution the power to strip dual nationals convicted of terrorism of their French citizenship.
In a rare move, France introduced a state of emergency in the immediate aftermath of the November 13 shootings and suicide bombings in which 130 people were killed in the capital.
Parliament subsequently voted overwhelmingly in favour of extending it for three months.
Up to now, the measure -- which gives police the power to carry out raids and arrests without judicial oversight -- did not feature in the constitution, only in a separate law that has rarely been used.
A more concrete change proposed by the government would see powers of house arrest extended for six months after a state of emergency expires.
The right to remove the citizenship of anyone with another nationality is also among the proposed changes to the constitution in cases where an individual is found guilty of acts that "constitute an attack on the fundamental interests of the nation or... an act of terrorism".
Any constitutional change requires a two-thirds majority in parliament.
Senior parliamentary figures were expected to examine the proposed changes Thursday, government sources said.
The state of emergency has been criticised by rights groups and lawyers.
The National Council of Barristers said it "authorises raids on every location, day or night, including the home of a lawyer, a journalist, a politician."
Lawyers for climate activists who have been placed under house arrest to prevent them from protesting during the UN talks outside Paris have accused the government of abusing the powers.
Former prime minister Dominique de Villepin of the opposition Republicans warned on Wednesday against the "temptation to slide towards authoritarianism".
Since the Paris attacks, in which 130 people died, police have carried out more than 2,000 raids across the country.
More than 300 people have been placed under house arrest and three mosques have been shut for promoting extremism -- an unprecedented step in France.
Prime Minister Manuel Valls said Tuesday the state of emergency could be extended beyond its February limit, "given the scale of the threat".
Such measures are "decided on the basis of intelligence gathered by specialist services," he said.
The hardline response has helped boost President Francois Hollande's approval ratings to their highest since 2012, though the far-right National Front is also tipped to perform strongly in regional elections that begin on Sunday.
Karl
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Post by Jaga on Dec 14, 2015 21:23:46 GMT -7
Pieter, I agree. The extreme right and extreme islamists are growing. People who lived their comfortable and isolated lives are afraid of these "muslim terrorists" and they would always see the stories which support their fears. From what I have heard the extreme right did not win in France. and yes, unemployed youth and immigrants will clash since they fight for the same. Dear John, Both extreme islamists and the extreme right will continue to grow in France. Unemployed French youth and unemployed migrant youth will clash. Islamic State and Al Qaida will stil be present in the Ban Lieu's with their secret cells, called sleeping cells in the past. These cells will become awake again and destroy targets and kill people again. I hope that intelligence agencies, the French police and special forces will catch them before they can do any harm. Fact is that fear, anxiety, hatred, xenophobia, racism, discrimination and lawlessness rule some parts of France now. The no go area's in the Banlieue's, suburbs of a large cities. ( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banlieue ) Cheers, Pieter
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