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Anti-Muslim violence rises in France following Paris attacks: Monitors

A French soldier stands outside the Grand Mosque in Strasbourg, eastern France, November 20, 2015. (AFP)

The number of anti-Muslim incidents, including attacks on women and hateful graffiti, has risen sharply across France since the recent deadly attacks in Paris, two monitoring groups say.

Abdallah Zekri, the head of France's National Observatory of Islamophobia, said on Friday that while the group usually records four or five weekly attacks on Muslims, 32 such incidents had occurred in a single week since November 13.

Another rights group, the Collective against Islamophobia in France (CCIF), reported 29 incidents during the same time.

Zekri also said he expected more assaults on Muslims in coming days because the November 13 attacks in Paris, claimed by the Daesh terrorist group, provided an excuse for "ultra-nationalist groups, the extreme right and racists" to target Muslims.

"They take advantage of this atmosphere to lash out," he noted.

CCIF spokesman Yasser Louati said his office had been flooded with reports and complaints of attacks on Muslims as well as requests for advice on whether it was safe to send children to school.

France’s five-million-strong Muslim community, which is Europe's largest, accounts for about eight percent of the country’s total population.

People holding placards reading "Muslims twice bruised" attend a gathering at the city hall of Bordeaux, southwestern France, on November 20, 2015 as part of a public tribute to the victims of the November 13 Paris attacks. (AFP)

Following the Paris raids, anti-Muslim graffiti has appeared in many places. In the northern French town of Evreux, the town hall and other buildings were covered with hateful graffiti against Muslims.

Last week’s coordinated attacks in the French capital killed at least 130 people and left some 350 others injured.

State of emergency extended

On Friday, the French Senate voted to extend a state of emergency, announced after the deadly attacks, for a further three months.

The state of emergency allows police officers in France to carry weapons when they are off-duty. It also enables officials to prevent the movement of persons and vehicles at specific times and places, and expands police powers to carry out arrests and searches. 

According to the CCIF spokesman, the state of emergency has led to rising complaints of police violence as officers raid homes to inspect them and put people under house arrest.


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