Staff

Staff

Straight after France was targeted by a series of terrorist attacks this fall, President Emmanuel Macron met with other EU leaders to address the bloc's response to the threat.

Macron’s initial reaction included a promise to protect the right to caricature the Prophet Muhammad and even projection of the controversial Charlie Hebdo cartoons on public buildings in what he called to defend the freedom of expression in his country.

The world has stood by in shock after a knifing of two people outside the former offices of weekly magazine Charlie Hebdo in September, the beheading of teacher Samuel Paty in a Paris suburb in mid-October and the brutal killing of three people inside Nice's Notre Dame basilica on Oct. 29.

The attacks have initiated French officials’ rather hasty ‘find a scapegoat’ approach and Muslims were on the target.

Critics say Macron's government is exploiting the spate of violence to intensify his controversial anti-Muslim stance.

"I will not allow anybody to claim that France, or its government, is fostering racism against Muslims," Macron claimed in an article by the Financial Times.

The paper had accused Macron of "stigmatizing French Muslims for electoral purposes" and fostering "a hostile environment" as well.

Dr. Andreas Krieg, assistant professor at the School of Security at the Institute for Middle Eastern Studies, Royal College of Defence Studies at King’s College London, said he is not surprised about the polarization in the country.

"Under Macron, France has taken a strong turn against Islam and Islamism beneath the banner of tolerance and liberalism," he pointed out.

"France’s immigration policy based on assimilation rather than integration means that Muslims are forced to assimilate to a French secularist mainstream that has little tolerance towards other non-secular beliefs."

This stance leads to alienation and identity insecurity among some Muslims, which, he argued, is the root cause for extremism.

Macron’s controversial remarks

France is home to the largest population of Muslims in Europe. Islam is the second-largest religion practiced in the country next to Catholicism.

On Oct. 2, Macron spoke on the proposal of a bill outlining separatism, and expressed that Islam was "in crisis throughout the world," a claim which has been slammed by the leaders of many Muslim countries.

"This is what France is fighting against [...] hatred and death that threaten its children, never against Islam. We oppose violent extremism, not a religion," Macron, however, stressed to the FT.

The renewed attacks, and the debate, can be traced to the Charlie Hebdo massacre, a three-day terror spree in January 2015 where 12 members of the Charlie Hebdo satirical weekly were murdered by extremists in their offices in retaliation for running controversial cartoons on the publication's cover; six others were also killed in the two days following.

The day before the start of trials for the attacks in September this year, Charlie Hebdo re-published the same inflammatory cartoons on its cover.

Later that month, a knife-wielding assailant gravely injured four people standing outside the former Charlie Hebdo offices. The attacker, of Pakistani origin, confessed to the stabbings, saying his targets were the magazine’s staff.

On Oct. 16, Samuel Paty, a 47-year-old teacher of history and geography at Bois-d'Aulne College in Conflans-Saint-Honorine, a suburb of Paris, was decapitated by Abdoullah Anzorov, an 18-year-old man of Chechen origin.

Anzorov murdered Paty in response to his showing profane cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad during a lesson on freedom of expression.

Abdallah Zekri, an official at the French Council for the Muslim Faith, said in a statement that Muslims "are neither guilty nor responsible. We shouldn't have to justify ourselves."

Islamophobia

Muslim scholars like Khaled A. Beydoun, professor of Law at Wayne State University Law School and author of American Islamophobia: Understanding the Roots and Rise of Fear, saw Macron's position as a negation of deeply held beliefs.

"Instead of tending to systemic inequities and framing the horrific murder of Samuel Paty as deviant, Macron tapped into France's ugly and entrenched underbelly of Islamophobia to unleash new levels of hate against France's Muslims," Beydoun said.

Reaction to the murder was swift, with Interior Minister Gerard Darmanin vowing the government's biggest crackdown ever on suspected extremists. He launched more than 80 investigations, arrested a dozen suspects and raided homes. The National Anti-Terrorism Prosecutor's Office opened a probe and officials started dissolving 51 Islamic associations, notably the Collective Against Islamophobia.

"Macron slighted Islam, which incited violence against Muslims in France," said Beydoun.

"Divisions were inflamed, instead of using his perch to mend and frame the Paty murder for what it was: the vile act of one person, not 6 million Frenchmen and women."

In a recent critique in Bloomberg Opinion, Pankaj Mishra asserted that in an increasingly multicultural world, Macron's defense of the tradition of caricature and its unbridled freedom of expression signify a clash of civilizations.

"To put it soberingly, Macron has staked France's global reputation on crude mockery of a figure revered by more than a billion Muslims."

King's College's Krieg thinks French Muslims feel "alienated."

"Macron’s narratives have fueled radicalization among communities who feel unjustly targeted. He has singled out Islam as the single most important threat to France's 'way of life', which in itself shows that French identity is too narrowly defined within the confines of a secularist tradition and leaves millions of French Muslims alienated and excluded from French identity."/aa

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Thousands of people have rallied in Belarus on Friday following the death of a 31-year-old opposition supporter who died in a hospital after he was reportedly beaten by security forces, and the European Union condemned the continued violent crackdown that Belarusian authorities have waged on peaceful protesters.

The death of the man came about three months after mass protests began in Belarus in the wake of the Aug. 9 election that official results say gave authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko a sixth term in office. The opposition and some poll workers say the results were manipulated and have been calling for Lukashenko's resignation.

More than 17,000 people have been detained — thousands of them brutally beaten — since the election, human rights advocates say.

Thousands of people carrying flowers and candles formed human chains of solidarity in several Belarusian cities, including the capital Minsk, to honor 31-year-old Raman Bandarenka, who died Thursday at a Minsk hospital after several hours of surgery due to serious injuries. “Stop killing us,” said some of the banners demonstrators were holding.

According to Ales Bialiatski, leader of the Viasna human rights center, Bandarenka was detained in a Minsk courtyard on Wednesday evening by men in plainclothes, who came to take down red and white ribbons — a symbol of the protests in Belarus — decorating the yard. Bandarenka was handed over to police and brutally beaten inside the van, Bialiatski said in a statement.

“As a result, Raman sustained a severe head injury and in grave condition was brought to the police (department). An ambulance wasn't called for two more hours. The doctors were unable to save Raman Bandarenka's life,” Bialiatski said, calling for a criminal investigation to hold accountable those responsible for Bandarenka's death.

The authorities have confirmed that Bandarenka was brought to the hospital from a police department in Minsk, but denied responsibility for his death. Police maintained he was injured in a street fight. Belarus' Investigative Committee said Bandarenko was also diagnosed with “alcohol intoxication.” An inquiry has been launched.

Bandarenka's death elicited outrage both in Belarus and abroad. The EU condemned the violence.

“This is an outrageous and shameful result of the actions by the Belarusian authorities who have not only directly and violently carried out repression of their own population, but also created an environment whereby such lawless, violent acts can take place,” Peter Stano, the EU’s spokesman for foreign affairs and security policy, said in a statement.

He added that the Lukashenko’s government was “ignoring not only the fundamental rights and freedoms of the Belarusian people, but also disregarding their lives.”

Opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, who challenged Lukashenko at the presidential election in August, called Bandarenka “a hero” and “an innocent victim of an inhumane system.”

“The man was killed because he wanted to live in a free country,” Tsikhnaouskaya, who is currently in exile in Lithuania, said in a video statement Friday. “But we will never obey those who are ready to kill us.”

A total of four people, including Bandarenka, are reported to have died since the protests began in August as the result of the crackdown on demonstrators and opposition supporters. No criminal probes have been launched into the deaths.

The Investigative Committee on Friday has halted an inquiry into the death of Alexander Taraikovsky, a protester who died on Aug. 10. The government maintains he was killed by an explosive device that blew up in his hands, but his partner believes he was shot by police.

Video shot by an Associated Press journalist shows Taraikovsky with a bloodied shirt before collapsing on the ground. Several police are seen nearby and some walk over to where Taraikovsky is lying on the street and stand around him.

The video doesn't show why he fell to the ground or how his shirt became bloodied, but it also doesn't show that he had an explosive device that blew up in his hand, as the government has said.

The EU already has imposed sanctions on Lukashenko and several dozen officials over their role in the security crackdown launched after the contested election. Stano said Friday that the 27-nation bloc “stands ready to impose additional sanctions."

In a separate video message, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said that EU member states have asked the bloc's executive to prepare a plan of economic support for Belarus.

“The European Union stands ready to mobilize all its economic means to support and accompany democratic change," she said. “Europe’s economic influence is immense. It's up to us to make a more strategic use of our economic clout. It's up to us to take clear our positions and to enforce them with stronger actions."

A majority of voters in five states, both red and blue, passed ballot measures that legalized marijuana on Election Day.

This show of support at the polls will put more pressure on other states and the federal government to update its drug policies, according to advocates and experts.

"This indicates that people are frustrated with the outdated drug policies from the 1970s," Mason Marks, a law professor at Gonzaga University and a fellow in residence at Harvard Law School's Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, told ABC News.

In some cases, like New York, elected officials are publicly sounding the call for major policy changes.

In ballot measures passed in New Jersey, South Dakota, Montana and Arizona, residents over 21 will be able to purchase and consume marijuana for recreational purposes. South Dakotan voters also passed a separate measure that legalized medicinal marijuana in the state. Mississippi will also allow adults to use medical marijuana after voters passed an initiative on Election Day.

State legislatures and health departments in the five states will come up with the specific regulations for recreational marijuana next year.

The ballot measures came after marijuana advocates across the country ran campaigns promoting the benefits of legal marijuana by citing the examples from the states that already passed it, according to Matthew Schweich, the deputy director of the nonprofit group the Marijuana Policy Project.

A study released last year by Washington State University found "no statistically significant long-term effects of recreational cannabis laws, or the initiation of legal retail sales, on violent or property crime rates," in Washington State or Colorado, the first states to legalize recreational pot.

Last year, Colorado, one of the first states to legalize recreational marijuana, generated more than $1 billion in sales from marijuana, which increased the state's coffers.

"The message that has resonated with voters in all five states was the fact that marijuana legalization is a proven policy and worked successfully in other states," Schweich told ABC News. "Eleven states had legalized marijuana in the lead up to Election Day, and none of those states have repealed legalization."

Domino effect?

Marks said the ballot measure successes in the five states could create a domino effect for the surrounded state leaders who have been hesitant to take up the calls for drug policy changes.

"I think other states will definitely follow suit when it comes to legalizing recreational marijuana," he said.

In New York, leaders from all three branches of government have already begun those calls.

A day after New Jersey passed its ballot measure, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio called on the state, which currently allows medical marijuana use, to its lead.

"We see it in New Jersey. Now, it's time for New York State to do it. Legalize marijuana the right way," he said during his daily news conference.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo echoed that call a day later during an interview on WAMC public radio, contending the conditions for legalization were "ripe" because of the state's budget issues.

"I think this year it is ripe because the state is going to be desperate for funding," he said.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., also called on the federal government to end its marijuana prohibition "to undo the harms done by the War on Drugs, particularly in Black and brown communities."

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency classifies marijuana as a "schedule 1" drug that is illegal and has "no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse."

Resistance remains

Marks said while this rhetoric indicates more support for changing the nation's drug policy, he noted there is still resistance from major groups.

The advocacy group Smart Approaches to Marijuana, which opposes legalization, contended in a statement to ABC News that the legalization efforts have benefited corporate entities "intent on expanding addiction for profit."

Kevin Sabet, the nonprofit's president and co-founder, praised President-elect Joe Biden's marijuana policy, which emphasizes decriminalizing marijuana and expunging criminal records for people who were arrested for possessing small amounts of the drug.

"We are ready to work with the Biden Administration to help promote science-based drug policy that benefits people, not the addiction-for-profit marijuana industry and its investors from Big Tobacco, Big Alcohol, Big Pharma, and others on Wall Street," he said in a statement.

Marks noted that Biden has come under heavy criticism for his role in passing legislation in the '90s that punished Americans for minor drug offenses. He added there has been criticism of Biden's current drug policy proposals, particularly his call for diversion programs where persons arrested for drug offenses are placed in treatment programs instead of jail.

"A lot of advocates say that's the equivalent to incarceration," Marks said. "They impact people's civil rights. It could do more harm than good. If someone doesn't follow the court's order for treatment, they can still end up in jail."

Schweich said Biden's policy is good for advancing legalization across the country. He noted that the president-elect's change in drug policies since he left the Senate reflects the new tone among Americans when it comes to drug policies.

"His position represents an evolution that many Americans, particularly those of his age, have gone through," Schweich said.

Schweich added that Biden's stance on letting the states decide their marijuana policy will be an important factor in the future of marijuana. This will allow more states to pursue legalization plans and future ballot measures with less concern that the White House will block it, according to Schweich.

"On the state level, we will see more progress regardless of what happens in Congress," he said. "The marijuana reform movement has very strong momentum."

BAKU(AA)

An assistant to the Azerbaijani president on Friday said material loss Armenia caused in the occupied lands over decades would be calculated with the participation of local and international organizations.

Hikmet Hajiyev said at a news conference that Armenia fired 30,000 artillery shots against civilian targets along with 227 missiles since Sept. 27, adding that targeting civilians was part of Armenia’s military doctrine.

He went on to say that the material loss caused since the start of the conflict would be calculated separately from the decades-long destruction in the occupied lands.

He further added that the World Bank, the UN, and international organizations would be included in the calculation of material loss.

Relations between the ex-Soviet republics have been tense since 1991, but new clashes erupted on Sept. 27.

On Nov. 10, the two countries signed the agreement for a long-term and comprehensive solution to the three-decade-long conflict.

The deal declared a complete cease-fire and an end to more than six weeks of fighting. Baku liberated nearly 300 of its settlements, including the strategic city of Shusha, during this period.

BAKU

Armenians abandoning Kalbajar in line with an agreement brokered by Russia set fire to houses and forestry areas before leaving the region, which was under occupation for a total of 27 years.

According to a video footage on Russian media and social media accounts, Armenians apparently damage the environment and burn houses in Kalbajar, located northwest of Nagorno Karabakh which was occupied in 1993.

About 60,000 Azerbaijanis living in the region when it was occupied were forced to abandon their homes and they were scattered to various regions of Azerbaijan.

Yerevan also brought Armenians to Kalbajar -- where no Armenians had been living before -- and settled them illegally in the region.

On Nov. 10, Russia brokered an agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan. According to the deal, the Armenian army is supposed to leave Kalbajar by Nov. 15.

Conflict, peace deal

Fresh clashes erupted on Sept. 27 and the Armenian army continued its attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces, even violating humanitarian cease-fire agreements for 44 days.

Baku liberated several cities and nearly 300 of its settlements and villages from the Armenian occupation during this time.

Before the second Karabakh war, about 20% of Azerbaijan's territory had been under illegal Armenian occupation for nearly three decades.

On Nov. 10, the two countries signed a Russia-brokered agreement to end the fighting and work toward a comprehensive solution.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev hailed the agreement as a "victory" for his country and a "defeat of Armenia", saying Baku's military success enabled it to gain an upper hand to end the three-decade-long occupation of its territory.

Meanwhile, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said he had signed an "unspeakably painful" deal that allowed Azerbaijan to claim control over regions it took back in the fighting.

The Turkish leadership also welcomed the truce, terming it a "great victory" for Azerbaijan.

KOCAELI/ KILIS/ MUGLA/ IZMIR, Turkey(AA)

The Turkish Coast Guard on Friday rescued a total of 92 asylum seekers stranded in the Aegean Sea on two boats.

A Coast Guard vessel in the western Izmir province was sent to the coast of Seferihasar district as a sailing boat hit a fish farm cafe, according to an official statement.

A total of 70 asylum seekers were rescued, the statement added.

Another three asylum seekers, who had been pushed back by Greece to Turkish territorial waters, were rescued in the Cesme district.

Separately, the Turkish Coast Guard rescued at least 19 asylum seekers on the shores of Mugla province, said the source, who asked not to be named because of restrictions on speaking to the media.

After routine checks, the asylum seekers were transferred to the provincial migration authority.

A Turkish national aboard the boat was arrested for allegedly organizing human smuggling.

10 irregular migrants held across nation

Meanwhile, at least 10 irregular migrants were rounded up across Turkey, security sources said Friday.

Five Afghan nationals were held in the northwestern province of Kocaeli.

They were found crammed in a vehicle on the Anadolu Highway and the driver was detained right after.

The migrants were referred to the provincial migration office. Legal action was taken against the driver, identified only by initials I.B., for smuggling migrants.

Separately, police arrested five foreign nationals, including a child, in the southern Kilis province, local authorities said in a statement.

Kilis governorate said that the migrants were found in a vehicle in the Oylum neighborhood.

The migrants were referred to the provincial migration office and the driver was detained.

Turkey has been a key transit point for irregular migrants aiming to cross to Europe to start new lives, especially those fleeing war and persecution.

ISTANBUL 

The Turkish lira gained a large ground against foreign currencies during the last week, when the Turkish economy saw some significant changes.

The Turkish lira improved 10.2% against the US dollar, with the exchange rate dropping to 7.6920 at Friday's close, versus the last week's close rate of 8.5660.

EUR/TRY and GBP/TRY exchange rates also dropped 10.7% and 9.87%, respectively, over the same period.

The country recently replaced the governor of the Central Bank and appointed a new treasury and finance minister.

On Wednesday, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey will be holding a series of meetings with international investors to discuss opportunities, potential, and the support the country will extend to them.

Erdogan also said the country is set to make structural reforms to improve the investment environment, increase the depth of the financial markets and quality of public revenues and expenditures, and to prevent informal economy.

The market also focused on the Monetary Policy Meeting, to be held by the Central Bank next Tuesday to decide on policy rates. Economists expect rise in interest rates./aa

Police arrested a man Thursday in connection with a hate crime against a Turkish restaurant in the US state of California.

"A joint investigation with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Los Angeles County Probation Department resulted in the arrest of one of the primary suspects responsible for a hate crime,'' Beverly Hills police said in a statement.

On the evening of Nov. 4, a group of six to eight males entered the Cafe Istanbul restaurant located in Beverly Hills in the Los Angeles metro area, made pro-Armenia comments, destroyed property and physically attacked its employees.

William Stepanyan, a Glendale city resident, was arrested Thursday morning there, said the police department.

The 22-year-old is currently being held without bail at the police department and will appear on Nov. 16 at the Airport Courthouse.

The attack sparked anger and condemnation last week, with Beverly Hills Mayor Lester Friedman calling the assault an "unacceptable act of hate and violence."

"There is no place in our city for this behavior and we ask members of the public to please come forward with any information on the suspects in this case," said Friedman.

The Los Angeles branch of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-LA) also condemned the attack and expressed its sympathies to the owners and patrons of the restaurant./aa

A French opposition leader said Thursday there is hatred against Muslims in France disguised as secularism.

“There is hatred towards Muslims under the guise of secularism in this country. Secularism does not mean to hate a religion,” Jean-Luc Melenchon, leader of the France Unbowed movement and an MP from a Mediterranean region with a large Muslim population, told the BFM-TV channel.

Melenchon said Muslims should be respected and constant suspicion towards them should also end.

He said he would continue repeating these statements even though some people would not like it.

He also stressed that he stands against hatred towards Muslims.

Noting that he has received the signatures of 150,000 citizens in support of his candidacy in the 2022 presidential election, Melenchon said the method of fighting against terrorism should change.

His remarks come after recent anti-Islamic statements by French President Emmanuel Macron and other politicians.

Last month, Macron described Islam as “a religion in crisis" and announced plans for tougher laws to tackle “Islamist separatism” in France.

Tensions further escalated after middle school teacher Samuel Paty was murdered and beheaded on Oct. 16 in a Paris suburb in retaliation for showing his students blasphemous cartoons of the Muslim Prophet Muhammad during a class on freedom of expression.

Insulting cartoons by the French weekly magazine Charlie Hebdo were also projected on buildings in some French cities.

Macron defended the cartoons, saying France would “not give up our cartoons,” sparking outrage across the Muslim world./aa

Senegalese authorities intercepted more than 1,500 migrants trying to reach Europe via the Mediterranean Sea, local media reported Thursday.

The interceptions occurred in the regions of Saint-Louis, Mbour, Rufisque, Bargny and Soumbedioune, according to the La Nouvelle Tribune website that quoted a police news release.

No information was disclosed about the date of the operation but police said six small boats were confiscated and 29 smugglers were arrested.

There has been an influx of illegal migrants in Senegal in recent years who risk their lives in the Sahara desert and the tumultuous Mediterranean Sea in an attempt to reach Europe.

Some parents have paid smugglers to take their children on the perilous journey in hopes of a better life in Europe.

Mamadou Lamine Faye, a father of a 15-year-old teen who lost his life while crossing the Sea, was arrested in Senegal. Local media reported that Faye paid a smuggler $450 to take his son to Spain.

At least 140 people drowned after a vessel carrying 200 migrants sank off the Senegalese coast, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said in late October.

The UN agency said: “there have been roughly 11,000 arrivals to the Canary Islands this year compared to 2,557 arrivals during the same period last year. This is still far below peaks seen in 2006 when over 32,000 people arrived.”

The West African region has dynamic migratory patterns and a long history of intraregional, as well as interregional, migration flows, according to the IOM.

West Africa provides the strongest example of intraregional migration flows in sub-Saharan Africa, with 70% of migratory movements linked to employment in the region./aa

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