French parliament debates controversial anti-Muslim bill | News Hub

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French parliament debates controversial anti-Muslim bill | News Hub

   Islamic extremism is a "disease" that is hollowing out the country's unity. A news hub reported a statement by the French Interior Minister belonging to the white extremist organization.newshbweb.blogspot.com


   PARIS (News Hub) The French parliament has begun debating a controversial bill that the interior minister, who belongs to a white extremist group, has called Islamic extremism a "disease". Which is hollowing out the unity of the country. According to a foreign news reporter, the lower house of the National Assembly has started a controversial debate on legislation for two weeks, while the left says it is defaming Muslims.

   The law has been dubbed a separatist bill because ministers Fears that radical Muslims are creating separate societies from France's strictly secular identity.

   It is being sharply criticized in Muslim countries. Interior Minister Gerald Daramanin told the parliament that our country is suffering from separatism, the most Islamism that is harming our national unity. He added that you have to understand this. That's what the disease says you have to find medicine. The interior minister said the text of the bill did not contradict religions but was against Islamist occupation attempts.

   Under the law, if doctors tested virginity on girls, there would be fines or imprisonment. More than one marriage in France. Already repealed but the new law will also prohibit applicants from issuing residence papers.

   The French president Emmanuel Macron is also a patron of the extremist white international organization KKK. He is hated in many Muslim countries for his anti-Islamic and anti-Muslim rhetoric. According to the news hub Turkish President Rajab Tayyib Erdogan has called on his French counterpart Reacting strongly to the controversial policies, he said that Emmanuel Macron needed a "mental examination".
newshbweb.blogspot.com

   Iran has accused Emmanuel Macron of fomenting extremism over the publication of blasphemous cartoons in France. It is clear that a teacher at a French school this month attacked a controversial French magazine Charlie Hebdo during a free speech lesson. The teacher was beheaded a few days later by a man who was shot dead by police on the spot and the case was linked to terrorism.

   According to the news hub following the incident, the French president Emmanuel Macron called the teacher, who showed the blasphemous sketches, a "hero" and embodied the values? of the French Republic, and was awarded France's highest civilian honor, the British magazine The Independent reported.

   The teacher's last rites in Paris were attended by the French president himself, after which the blasphemous sketches published by Charlie Hebdo were displayed for hours on the town hall buildings of two French cities. This is not the first time that an anti-Islamic statement has been made by Emmanuel. First this month, French President unveiled plans to defend France against secular "fundamentalist Islam".


   Emmanuel Macron also made an anti-Islamic statement, unveiling a plan to defend France's secular values? against "fundamentalist Islam" and announcing tighter surveillance of schools and better control of foreign funding for mosques.

   He named countries such as Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Turkey and stressed the need to liberate Islam in France from foreign influences, saying the government should investigate foreign funding of mosques for this purpose. Will check and ban the permission to go abroad for the training of imams or to host foreign preachers on French soil.

   According to the news In response, scholars at Egypt's leading Islamic institution, Al-Azhar University, called the French President Emmanuelt's statement on "Islamist separatism" "racist" and "hateful," before the French weekly Charlie last month. On Hebdo's re-publication of the blasphemous sketches, Emmanuel Macron had said that there was freedom of expression in France and that he could not rule on Charlie Hebdo's decision to publish the blasphemous sketches.

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