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Muslims Toast Paris Riot Anniversary With Molotov Cocktails

All of Europe is clutched by fears of radical Islamic terrorism within each country's borders, as this spate of articles clearly show.

Gangs Attack Buses Ahead of Anniversary of Paris Riots

By John Lichfield in Paris, Published: 27 October 2006

Three buses have been attacked and burnt by gangs of youths on the outskirts of Paris as tensions deepen before the anniversary today of the outbreak of three weeks of violent riots in poor French suburbs.

In one incident, a driver and his passengers were forced to leave a bus at gunpoint in Bagnolet, just east of Paris, early yesterday. The bus was then driven through a barrier into a housing estate and burnt.

In other attacks, west and south of Paris, on Wednesday night passengers scrambled off buses after they were set alight with inflammable liquid or molotov cocktails. A fourth bus, or coach, was burnt while empty and parked.

The attacks, and another incident in which youths stoned cars on a busy dual carriageway south of Paris, suggest youth gangs in some suburbs are making a deliberate attempt to provoke new clashes with police.

This hardly comes as a surprise. One of the French internal security services, the Rénsignements Generaux, warned this week that "most of the conditions" which produced "collective violence" in poor, multi-racial suburbs across France last year remained unchanged.

But local mayors and youth workers are hopeful there will be no more than a few scattered outbreaks of "anniversary" violence. Outside the Paris area, there has been little trouble. Most of the deprived housing estates around the capital - including those in and near Clichy-sous-Bois where last year's disturbances began - have been relatively calm.

The Interior Minister, Nicolas Sarkozy, has given instructions that police should avoid entering the "territory" of youth gangs in the days approaching the anniversary. He has also criticised a series of "12 months on" articles and programmes in the French media as an invitation to resume rioting.

All the same, a heavy-handed police raid with racial overtones, in Evry, south of Paris, appears to have been at least partially responsible for the outbreak of bus burnings. Police entered a café on Monday and demanded to see the papers of the middle-aged customers of African and north African descent. Argument broke out and police used tear gas and made several arrests. A bus was burnt by youths in the nearby estate that night in retaliation for what they called an "attack on our fathers". The more recent bus attacks seem to have been more planned, "copy-cat" incidents.

Last year's riots started after two youths, aged 17 and 15, were electrocuted in a power sub-station at Clichy-sous-Bois, north-east of Paris, while fleeing police. Over the next three weeks, the car-burning and attacks on public buildings - by brown, black and white youths - spread to the suburbs of almost every large town or city in France.

The government has since promised hundreds of millions of euros investment in deprived estates and new measures to prevent job discrimination against people of Arab or black origin. Activists and social workers claim little has been done to reign in the casual racism of many of the police deployed in the banlieues, or suburbs.

There are also signs of divisions in the government on how to treat the anniversary. M. Sarkozy believes it should be ignored. He is reported to have criticised bland, anniversary comments by the Equality Minister, Azous Begag, inviting his colleague to "learn to shut his mouth".

The Prime Minister, Dominique de Villepin, also chose to defy the Sarkozy doctrine of silence yesterday and held his monthly press conference in the heart of the outer Paris banlieues, in Cergy-Pontoise. He promised "immediate and exemplary" punishment of the youths involved in the bus attacks.

The Independent, United Kingdom
http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article1932739.ece


Somber France marks riots anniversary

By Francois Murphy 1 hour, 22 minutes ago

CLICHY-SOUS-BOIS, France (Reuters) - Hundreds of people marched in silence through a rundown Paris suburb on Friday to mark the anniversary of two deaths which triggered the worst riots to hit the French capital in nearly 40 years.

"You can really feel the anger and the suffering of the people who live in Clichy-sous-Bois," said Soumeya Ata, who traveled to the suburb north of the capital from the southwestern town of Pau to attend the commemoration.

Around 1,000 mainly young people from immigrant families marched through the high-rise suburb, where the riots erupted after the electrocution deaths of Bouna Traore and Zyed Benna. Witnesses said the teenagers died while fleeing police.

Marchers, many sporting T-shirts with the slogan "Dead for Nothing," passed the electrical substation where the two died and their families wept as they laid flowers at its gate.

Organizers called for quiet reflection to mark the tragedy, although some television crews pulled out after they were threatened by local youths.

Tensions remain high in France's rundown suburbs, where poor job prospects, racial discrimination, a widespread sense of alienation from mainstream society and perceived hostile policing touched off an orgy of violence 12 months ago.

"Nothing has changed," marcher Rafika Benguedda, a 21-year-old student, said despondently.

An upsurge in attacks on buses ahead of the anniversary prompted Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy to draft in extra police late on Thursday after transport chiefs warned they could pull services if the arson continued.

Sarkozy is moving to toughen sentences for attacks on police and law and order could again play strongly in 2007 presidential elections in which the interior minister, the conservative frontrunner, is expected to run.

NO CHANGE

Sarkozy has downplayed the anniversary of the 2005 riots -- the worst since student riots in 1968. "I also have to look after the people who aren't burning things, who aren't smashing up things," he said after visiting farmers out of Paris.

The government has sought to play down anniversary talk and highlighted the 420 million euro ($531.6 million) it has earmarked since the riots to improve life in the suburbs.

"Things are better, less bad," government spokesman Jean-Francois Cope told France Inter radio.

However, while national unemployment has fallen steadily since last year, local officials saw little progress.

"What is being done in order to ensure Clichy does not have three times as many unemployed as the rest of France?" asked Olivier Klein, the Socialist deputy mayor of Clichy-sous-Bois.

Police unions too are ringing alarm bells. They say 14 officers a day are hurt and that police face an urban guerrilla war in the tinderbox suburbs that ring most major French cities.

Several officers have been hospitalized with injuries from beatings after being apparently lured into traps by gangs of youths in recent weeks.

In the first six months of 2006, some 21,000 cars were burned and 2,882 attacks recorded against the police, fire and ambulance services.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/france_suburbs_violence_dc
Yahoo News


Germans feel the clutch of terrorist threat
61% surveyed believe Islamic extremists are targeting nation

Eric Geiger, Chronicle Foreign Service, Thursday, October 26, 2006

 10-26) 04:00 PDT Munich, Germany -- Early this month, Ibrahim R, an Iraqi who has lived in Germany since 1996, became the first person to be arrested for allegedly disseminating propaganda over the Internet for a foreign terrorist group.

The 36-year-old immigrant posted videos and tape recordings of Osama bin Laden and his deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri threatening the West in an online chat room. German officials have pledged to monitor more Islamic Web sites and make more arrests.

In years past, the harsh response by officials in Lower Saxony state might have spurred criticism of state violation of privacy laws. But many Germans no longer see the war on terror as a British-American problem over Iraq.

"The case of that Iraqi suspect just proves we are not living in a safe island anymore," said Heinz Bruckmoser, a retired mechanical engineer from Duesseldorf. "It ties in with that failed train attack."

In July, Islamic extremists tried but failed to blow up two trains in northern Germany. If successful, they could have killed hundreds of people. The plot not only triggered a heated debate on national security but also sparked an upsurge of fear in a nation with some 3.5 million Muslims residents.

"We are threatened by terrorism, and that threat has never been so close," Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said after the attempted train attacks. "This time we were lucky."

According to a survey this month by the Demoskopie Institute, the nation's leading pollster, 61 percent now believe Germany is a target for Islamic militants.

Such fears lay behind the Berlin Opera House's cancellation of Mozart's opera, "Idomeneo" after an anonymous threat over a scene that included the severed head of the prophet Muhammad. In less publicized, seemingly absurd reactions, a local school in the central German town of Dillenberg ordered a gymnasium to be darkened when Muslim girls work out there, while law enforcement officials in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia ordered a woman to change the name of her horse from "Muhammad" to "Momi."

False bomb alerts have become an almost daily routine at many train stations. Sprawling railroad terminals in major cities, including Hamburg, Bonn, Koblenz and Mannheim, have been temporarily sealed off.

"We keep getting calls from worried citizens about what they presume to be terrorist activities," said a Hamburg police official who spoke on the condition of anonymity in accordance with department policy.

Last month, a two-year dialogue program initiated by the interior minister to integrate German Muslims into mainstream society began between prominent Muslims and government officials

But anti-Muslim sentiment appears to be growing. "We are already beginning to knuckle under to Islam," said a recent headline in Bildzeitung, Germany's largest-circulation newspaper, protesting the number of mosques being built in the downtowns of German cities.

Two Lebanese students studying at German universities were identified in August as the main suspects in the failed train attacks. Yousef Mohammed El Hajdid, 21, was arrested in the northern town of Kiel, while 19-year-old Jihad Mamad was detained in Lebanon. Both were identified by video cameras installed at all train stations.

No formal charges have been filed, but investigators say both harbored deep hatred toward Israel, and the West.

And while authorities stress that the overwhelming majority of the Muslim population opposes violence, the domestic intelligence agency Verfassungsschutz, or Guardians of the Constitution, has classified 32,000 Muslims as "Islamic radicals," including 4,000 described as "violence prone."

Manfred Murck, a top official of the agency in Hamburg, recently said that 30 of Hamburg's 100 mosques are being monitored for "suspicious activity," including the Al-Khuds mosque where Mohammed Atta and his Hamburg cell met daily before the Sept. 11 attacks. These mosques serve as meeting places for "clandestine agencies for Islamic extremist networks," Murck said.

Elmer Thevessen, a senior editor at ZDF national television network who has worked on numerous documentaries on terrorism, says the most likely converts to radical Islam in Germany are, like elsewhere in Europe, young, second-generation Muslims.

"They often feel isolated, don't know where they really belong, and often feel contempt for their immigrant parents, accusing them of being interested only in earning a decent living and adapting to German life," Thevessen said.

Thevessen says they are influenced by radical ideas spread on the Internet and Arabic language satellite TV networks such as Al-Manar, operated in Lebanon by Hezbollah.

"Thanks to Al-Manar, we know all about the horrible crimes committed by Israeli soldiers in Lebanon -- the murders of small babies and old sick people -- and the massacres by American soldiers of pregnant woman in Iraq and Afghanistan," said a young man who gave his name only as Mustafa as he played soccer in a parking lot in Freilassing, a commercial center in southern Bavaria.

Norbert Schneider, head of the Broadcasting Regulation Authority in North Rhine-Westphalia state, said he finds Al-Manar's programs "sordid" and "very alarming." While Al-Manar is banned in the United States and from a French-based satellite distribution network, there is no legal basis to stop its programs being broadcast in Germany. "They operate in a lawless sphere, and there is nothing we can do about it," said Schneider.


http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/10/26/MNGD3M08NA1.DTL&feed=rss.news
San Francisco Chronicle

Fear of Religious Conflict in Belgium

26 October 2006

BRUSSELS - More then six citizens in ten fear an increase in religious tensions in Belgium according to a survey by Belgian newspaper Le Soir.

A "pessimistic" attitude in contrast with the overall "moderate attitude" of Belgians towards religions, notes the evening paper.
The majority of interviewees supported a 'respectful criticism' of religions, meaning that criticism can be expressed so long as personal religious beliefs are respected.

But not all Belgians follow this moderated view: 23 percent are opposed to all critics of religion, half as much as the French notes Le Soir, while 16 percent assume a highly critical standpoint, three times more then in France.

Eric de Beukelaer, spokesman of Belgium's Francophone Bishops, said he was satisfied with the results.

"All religions can be criticised, but there are limits," he said, emphasizing the difference between "criticising" and "offending someone in his or her conviction."

The CAL, the Centre for Secular Action (Centre d’Action Laïque), agreed, although its president, Philippe Grollet said that 23 percent of Belgians thinking religion should not be criticised is "too much."  He deplores such attitudes which leave no space for debate.

Abdelmajid Mhauchi, Belgians representative of the European Muslim Network, said that Belgium has a long history of conflict between Seculars and Catholics and has learnt to respect religious liberties. "As a Muslim" he said "I accept critics of Islam … but I cannot tolerate mockery and provocation."

About 60 percent of Belgians accept the presence of religious signs and symbols in public life. A minority of 36 percent admit the wish to see these symbols and signs confined to the private sphere. This view is reflected in France's law which bans the public display of ostentatious religious symbols in republican intuitions such as schools and tribunals.

Here, too, religious institutions and organizations expressed satisfaction with these figures. Philippe Grollet of CAL pointed out that although people should be allowed to display signs of their religion, "those who represent the government (secular and neutral by definition) and the public authority – magistrates, policemen, teachers etc – should remain neutral."

 Despite these reasonable views, 60 percent of the people interviewed predict an increase in tensions between Christians and Muslims with Flemish men being the most pessimistic.
 
Only 7 percent of the interviewees forecast a decrease of tensions in Belgium. In this respect, Brussels is the Belgium capital of optimism with 12 percent predicting a decrease in tensions.

Copyright Expatica news 2006

http://www.expatica.com/actual/article.asp?subchannel_id=24&story_id=33960
Expatica


Norwegian imams criticised

The Minister of Labour and Social Inclusion, Bjarne Haakon Hanssen, is disturbed over what he calls extreme attitudes expressed by imams in Norway, - among other things denying the existence of Al Qaida and Osama bin Laden.

Hanssen's reactions come after several central imams in Norway have denied the possibility that Muslims carried out the terrorist attacks on the US on September 11th 2001.

They have also alleged that Al Qaida and Osama bin Laden have been "invented" by the US in order to legitimize the war in Iraq and Afghanistan.

- These are extreme views. What makes this particularly serious, is that these who are aking these statements are central imams, who are advisers to other Muslims.

It was imam Zulqarnain Sakander Madni who first made the surprising statements, and he has later received support by other imams in Norway.

Imam Syed Ikram Shah of the World Islamic Mission also ruled out the possibility of Muslims being behind the attacks on September 11th, pointing to the fact that Islam does not allow the murder of innocents.

The Minister of Social Inclusion is afraid of the reactions such statements will create in the Norwegian society, and he fears that this may increase the distance between immigrants and native Norwegians.

Spokesman for the Islamic Council of Norway, Mohammed Osman Rana, says he is also shocked, but he is shocked by the outcry the statements from imams have created. He points to the fact that there is freedom of expression in Norway.

He speaks out against Hanssen's criticism, and says the Minister should remember that (according to Rana) a third of all US citizens also doubt the official explanation of what happened in the time prior to September 11th 2001.

Awais Mushtaq, spokesperson for the Muslim Student Association in Norway, also backs the views expressed by the imams, NRK reports.

(NRK)

Rolleiv Solholm

http://www.norwaypost.no/cgi-bin/norwaypost/imaker?id=28088
Norway Post

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