Paris attacks fuel six-fold rise in Islamophobic acts: watchdog
222 Islamophobic acts were recorded in first quarter of 2015 compared to 37 in the same period in 2014
France saw a six-fold rise in anti-Muslim acts in the first quarter of the year, fuelled by the Paris attacks, the National Observatory against Islamophobia said Thursday.
Using interior ministry figures, the body counted 222 Islamophobic acts compared to 37 in the first quarter of 2014.
Read: The Paris attack and its aftermath
Most of these acts, 178, were recorded in January after three extremists went on a three-day killing spree in and around Paris that left 17 people dead.
Read: 12 dead in gun attack at French magazine
Abdallah Zekri, president of the observatory, said the recent rise in Islamophobia was unprecedented since the body was set up in 2011.
The acts include violence against men and women, some of whom were pregnant, vandalism and destruction of Muslim places of worship or businesses and "Nazi" graffiti on mosques.
Last month, a headscarf-wearing Muslim woman in her final month of pregnancy was violently assaulted in southern France by a man who accused her of wearing a hijab to hide her hair.
Read: Pregnant Muslim woman in France attacked for wearing headscarf
"It is the first time we have recorded grenades being thrown or guns fired," Zekri said.
He said the attacks on the Charlie Hebdo magazine, a Jewish supermarket and the shooting of a policewoman between January 7-9 "in no way justify this peak in hatred or vengeance against French Muslims who are not responsible for or guilty of terrorist acts."
Using interior ministry figures, the body counted 222 Islamophobic acts compared to 37 in the first quarter of 2014.
Read: The Paris attack and its aftermath
Most of these acts, 178, were recorded in January after three extremists went on a three-day killing spree in and around Paris that left 17 people dead.
Read: 12 dead in gun attack at French magazine
Abdallah Zekri, president of the observatory, said the recent rise in Islamophobia was unprecedented since the body was set up in 2011.
The acts include violence against men and women, some of whom were pregnant, vandalism and destruction of Muslim places of worship or businesses and "Nazi" graffiti on mosques.
Last month, a headscarf-wearing Muslim woman in her final month of pregnancy was violently assaulted in southern France by a man who accused her of wearing a hijab to hide her hair.
Read: Pregnant Muslim woman in France attacked for wearing headscarf
"It is the first time we have recorded grenades being thrown or guns fired," Zekri said.
He said the attacks on the Charlie Hebdo magazine, a Jewish supermarket and the shooting of a policewoman between January 7-9 "in no way justify this peak in hatred or vengeance against French Muslims who are not responsible for or guilty of terrorist acts."