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Reading reports, it appears that Macron is going full on towards a tougher approach but is that the only way to address this issue?
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However him and the French people see it fit to protect their culture and values.
The way they deal with white nationalism
1) Take a step back and inhale deeply because you are inept at your job and need it.
2) Ask Charlie Hebdo to stop for a while to let the dust settle.
3) Condemn terrorist beheadings and PRAISE the muslims of France in the same statement which will make a clear distinction between terrorism and Islam. Also condemn stabbings of muslim women and the Right wing terrorists who are pretending to be muslims.
4) Invite French muslim organizations to talk and publicize the outcome.
5) Order an investigation to see whether the right wing is funding Charlie Hebdo. Nothing will come off this investigation because it will be biased from the get go but it will be symbolic and will restore the faith of French muslims in their government.
1) Take a step back and inhale deeply because you are inept at your job and need it.
2) Ask Charlie Hebdo to stop for a while to let the dust settle.
3) Condemn terrorist beheadings and PRAISE the muslims of France in the same statement which will make a clear distinction between terrorism and Islam. Also condemn stabbings of muslim women and the Right wing terrorists who are pretending to be muslims.
4) Invite French muslim organizations to talk and publicize the outcome.
5) Order an investigation to see whether the right wing is funding Charlie Hebdo. Nothing will come off this investigation because it will be biased from the get go but it will be symbolic and will restore the faith of French muslims in their government.
Points 3 and 4 are sensible. Hedbo seem like Morons though, if they are asked to do something like this by Macron then they will inevitably try to publicise it and make themselves out to be victims.
Agree. I suppose the Muslims will also seek to protect their cultures and values. I don't think that clashes are inevitable, people for the most part can tolerate small differences, if there has been flashpoints in France recently, they were over totally avoidable issues.
Considering that the other option is La Pen. You should think again.He should quit
For starters Macron should stop try to gain political advantage from terrorist attacks. It is insulting to the victims and Muslims world wide.
There are more than 3 million Muslims living in France. He shouldn't insult so many French Muslim citizens by dividing community.
From Macron's latest actions, only terrorists and far right are benefiting. This guy should get his priorities straight.
His priorities are pretty straight. Preserve French culture, society and nation. Nowhere will a 3million minority will dictate terms to 66 million others.
On this very forum people like you were pontificating to Indians about how they should live in Muslim countries.
French will remain French, they have made a country where muslim immigrants from other countries want to go and settle in. So they should be ready to accept how the French society is.
What makes you think the Muslims in France are preventing French people from living their own culture? Can you give some examples?
Well the French President has said it.
No he hasn't.
His priorities are pretty straight. Preserve French culture, society and nation. Nowhere will a 3million minority will dictate terms to 66 million others.
On this very forum people like you were pontificating to Indians about how they should live in Muslim countries.
French will remain French, they have made a country where muslim immigrants from other countries want to go and settle in. So they should be ready to accept how the French society is.
Well the French President has said it.
Yes he has talked about muslim separatism.
It sounds like you are projecting your BJP viewpoint onto France.
Where did French president say it? Provide a source please.
Bjp seems to have dented your psyche. You keep bringing them.
Anyways this is what the French President said.
French President Emmanuel Macron has announced plans for tougher laws to tackle what he called "Islamist separatism" and defend secular values.
In a keenly awaited speech, Mr Macron said a minority of France's estimated six million Muslims were in danger of forming a "counter-society".
https://www.google.co.in/amp/s/www.bbc.com/news/amp/world-europe-54383173
But you were saying that the 3 million Muslim minority was dictating to 66 million others, in that quote there is no suggestion of that. From that it seems the President is dictating to the minority how to live, not the other way round.
Read the post i replied to.
But you were saying that the 3 million Muslim minority was dictating to 66 million others, in that quote there is no suggestion of that. From that it seems the President is dictating to the minority how to live, not the other way round.
Macron also didn't say he approves of those cartoons. Did he?
If he didn't approve of them they wouldn't be projected on govt buildings would they?
Were they projected by the govt?
One may not approve of many things but that may not mean they are illegal.
Good from Macron.
Diffuse the situation.
==
French President Emmanuel Macron says he understands the feelings of Muslims who are shocked by the displaying of cartoons of Prophet Muhammad but added that the “radical Islam” he is trying to fight is a threat to all people, especially Muslims.
Macron’s comments to Al Jazeera, in an exclusive interview to be aired in full on Saturday, come amid heightened tensions between the French government and the Muslim world over the cartoons, which Muslims consider to be blasphemous.
“The caricatures are not a governmental project, but emerged from free and independent newspapers that are not affiliated with the government,” Macron said.
He was referring to the recent republishing of the caricatures by the Charlie Hebdo magazine to mark the opening of the trial for a deadly attack against its staff in 2015 when the Paris-based publication’s cartoons were cited as a reason for the assault.
Macron had defended the “right to blaspheme” under free speech rights at the time of the republication in September, weeks before he prompted backlash from Muslim activists on October 2 when he claimed in a speech that Islam was “in crisis globally” and announced his plan “to reform Islam” in order to make it more compatible with his country’s republican values.
The French president reiterated his stance about the cartoons after a French teacher, who showed the caricatures to his pupils in class during a discussion on free speech, was beheaded by an attacker on October 16. Last week, the depictions were projected on French government buildings.
‘Muslims the first victims’
While Muslims in France have condemned the killing of the teacher, they have also expressed fears of collective punishment amid a government crackdown targeting Islamic organisations and attacks by vigilante groups on mosques.
Meanwhile, Macron’s comments stirred anger across the Muslim world, leading tens of thousands of people – from Pakistan to Bangladesh to the Palestinian territories – to join anti-France protests. As a debate over Islam and freedom of expression deepened in recent weeks, many officials and protesters in Muslim-majority countries issued calls for a boycott of French-made products.
“I think that the reactions came as a result of lies and distortions of my words because people understood that I supported these cartoons,” Macron said.
The prophet is deeply revered by Muslims and any kind of visual depiction is forbidden in Islam. The caricatures in question are seen by them as offensive and Islamophobic because they are perceived to link Islam with “terrorism”.
“I understand the sentiments being expressed and I respect them. But you must understand my role right now, it’s to do two things: to promote calm and also to protect these rights,” Macron said in the interview.
“Today in the world there are people who distort Islam and in the name of this religion that they claim to defend, they kill, they slaughter … today there is violence practised by some extremist movements and individuals in the name of Islam.”
“Of course this is a problem for Islam because Muslims are the first victims,” Macron continued. “More than 80 percent of the victims of terrorism are Muslims, and this is a problem for all of us.”
Marwan Bishara, Al Jazeera’s senior political analyst, said Macron’s comments appeared to be “an attempt at clarifying … where he stands on issues that are of importance to France and the Muslim world”.
“I think the damage is done. But I’m not sure it needs to continue to escalate, because at the end of the day … there is no winner. Europe standing shoulder-to-shoulder against a number of countries in the Muslim world over cultural and religious issues and interpretations of these issues,” Bishara said.
“No one is a winner, and if there are any losers, it will be a lot of the Muslims in Europe. So it is in everyone’s interest if the French president is sincere about contextualising and about backtracking some of the things he said – that he now understands clearly that they were controversial, and he did not mean to criticise Islam as a religion – that should begin to improve the atmosphere between France, Europe, and the Muslim world.”
France was sent into further shock on Thursday when a knife-wielding Tunisian man killed three people at a church in the Mediterranean city of Nice. That same day, a Saudi man stabbed and lightly wounded a security guard at the French consulate in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
Leaders of many Muslim countries offered their condolences to France after the Nice attack and expressed their solidarity as they condemned the violence.
https://www.aljazeera.com/amp/news/...nd-independent-news?__twitter_impression=true