Corsican MPs urge France to shut radical mosques

The resolution was adopted with a landslide, with MPs from the nationalist, left and right parties voting for


Afp July 29, 2016
Members of the Muslim community pray in a mosque in Marseille during an open day weekend for mosques in France, January 9, 2016. PHOTO: REUTERS

Corsican lawmakers on Thursday called on the French state to close down radical mosques on the Mediterranean island, hours after an underground separatist movement issued a threat against extremists.

The regional parliament adopted a resolution urging Paris to ensure the immediate closure in Corsica "of prayer or meeting places that act as centres of radicalisation or where hateful speeches are made, creating an atmosphere that is favourable to violence."

France truck attack was planned for months, with accomplices

The resolution was adopted with a landslide, with MPs from the nationalist, left and right parties voting for, and only three Communists abstaining.

Passed at the peak of the tourist season, the text also calls for tighter security measures in areas frequented by holidaymakers.

The resolution was passed after a splinter group of the nationalist Corsican National Liberation Front (FLNC) in a statement warned militants that any attack on the island would trigger "a determined response, without any qualms".

"What the Salafists want is clearly to install in our home the politics of Daesh, and we are ready for that," the FLNC October 22 group said in a statement published in the Corse Matin daily, using another name for the Islamic State group.

France expected to extend emergency laws after Nice

"Your mediaeval philosophy does not scare us," the statement added.

Then, addressing "Muslims in Corsica" in general, the militant group called on them to "take a stand" by denouncing radical Islamism, and urged them to inform on "disaffected youths who are tempted by radicalisation".

The group also warned the government in Paris that it would be held partly responsible for any militant attack on the island, "because it knows who the Salafists in Corsica are".

In less than two weeks IS group militants claimed four bloody assaults in France and Germany that killed nearly 90 people, wounded hundreds and left the continent on edge.

Fear of fresh violence and tensions in France have spiked since July 14, when a Tunisian man ploughed a 19-tonne truck into a crowd leaving a fireworks display in the Riviera city of Nice.

Then on Tuesday morning, two militants slashed a priest's throat during mass in northern France.

At least 84 killed in France as truck plows into crowd

One of the attackers had been charged over terror links, after two failed attempts to join militants fighting in Syria.

In Corsica last December, angry protesters vandalised a Muslim prayer hall and trashed copies of the Holy Quran after an assault on firefighters that was blamed on local youths of Arab origin.

"The parents abandon them, the problem is education," a 35-year-old local resident named Mehdi said at the time. "But us, we want to all live together, without a problem."

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ