French Police 'Abuse' Muslims under Emergency Laws: Rights Groups


French Police 'Abuse' Muslims under Emergency Laws: Rights Groups

TEHRAN (Tasnim) - France has carried out abusive and discriminatory raids and house arrests against Muslims under its current state of emergency, traumatizing and stigmatizing those targeted, including children and the elderly, human rights groups said.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) and Amnesty International published separate research on Wednesday, pointing to cases where excessive force had been used, leading to human rights violations including violence.

Those targeted said the police burst into homes, restaurants, or mosques; broke people's belongings; threw Qurans on the floor; terrified children; and placed restrictions on people's movements so severely that they lost jobs and income, or suffered physically.

The raids were launched on November 14 in response to attacks in Paris a day earlier that left 130 people dead, and were later claimed by Daesh (ISIL) group.

Daesh's claim triggered a backlash - not just in France, but across Europe and elsewhere - as Muslim communities were collectively "punished".

There are between 5.5 million and 6.2 million Muslims in France, or roughly 7.6 percent of the total population - making the group the largest Muslim minority in Europe.

Declared by President Francois Hollande, France's emergency laws approved warrantless searches.

Both human rights groups said the raids, of which there were at least 3,200, have yielded few results, AL Jazeera reported.

According to HRW, while between 350 and 400 people have been placed under house arrest, the counterterrorism unit of the Paris prosecutor's office has opened only five terrorism-related investigations.

"France has a responsibility to ensure public safety and try to prevent further attacks, but the police have used their new emergency powers in abusive, discriminatory, and unjustified ways," said Izza Leghtas, Western Europe researcher at HRW, calling for an immediate end to warrantless searches and house arrests.

"This abuse has traumatised families and tarnished reputations, leaving targets feeling like second-class citizens."

More than 60 people Amnesty interviewed said police used excessive force and harsh measures with little or no explanation.

In January, HRW interviewed 18 people who said they had been subjected to abusive searches or placed under house arrest, as well as human rights activists and lawyers working in affected areas.

In one house raid, HRW said, police broke four of a disabled man's teeth before they realized he was not the person they were looking for.

In another case, a single mother's children were transferred to foster care following a raid.

Amnesty cited a case in the country's southeastern region of Rhone-Alpes in which a woman who was subjected to a search subsequently lost her job.

"In a context of growing Islamophobia, the French government should urgently reach out to Muslims and give them assurances that they are not under suspicion because of their religion or ethnicity," HRW's Leghtas said.

"Freedom, equality, and fraternity have been badly damaged in the weeks since the November attacks. France should live by those words and restore their meaning."

Both Amnesty and HRW also took aim at a proposed measure to strip convicted terrorists with dual nationality of citizenship, a controversial bill which France's Justice Minister, the leftist Christiane Taubira, opposed and recently quit over.

According to Le Monde, some 3.3 million people have dual citizenship in France.

"Measures under a state of emergency must respect strict conditions: they must always be limited to what is strictly required by the exigencies of the emergency situation," said the report by Amnesty, which has tracked the implementation of emergency law since it began.

"They [the measures] must never be applied in a discriminatory manner."

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