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Thursday, March 23, 2017

Will France, England And Germany Have To Guts To Wage War Against Islamic Terror? We Doubt It.



France shudders after London attack, 

Le Pen demands border controls


Far-right leader Marine Le Pen on Thursday said the lone-wolf attack outside
 parliament in London underscored the need for tighter border controls, as
 France shuddered at an incident that reopened wounds inflicted by similar 
assaults at home.
Security is a major campaign issue ahead of next month's close-fought
 presidential election, in which Le Pen is seen reaching the second round
 on a nationalist, anti-immigration platform.
Wednesday's attack has dominated French news coverage and served as a
 poignant reminder of militant attacks on French soil that have killed more
 230 people since the start of 2015.
"The problem we have nowadays is this form of low-cost terrorism," the
 National Front leader told BFM TV and RMC radio, adding "we must
 control our borders".
Three French schoolchildren were among those hurt by the London attacker
who ploughed into pedestrians as he sped along Westminster bridge toward
the British parliament.
British Prime Minister Theresa May said the assailant who killed three
 people and injured dozens before being shot dead was British-born.
 Police arrested eight people in a series of raids in London, Birmingham
 and other parts of the country.
The deadliest attacks in France over the past two years have been claimed by
 Islamic State, the hardline militant group that controls swathes of Iraq and Syria.
In one of those attacks, a Tunisian-born devotee of Islamic State killed 86 people
in the southern city of Nice when he drove his truck along a seafront promenade.
British investigators say the London assault was an act of terrorism that Prime
 Minister May said had been sparked by a warped Islamist ideology.
Le Pen, who has the backing of about a quarter of the electorate and is running
second in opinion polls behind centrist Emmanuel Macron, said countries
 needed to co-operate more with each other on sharing intelligence.
She advocated closing down mosques with links to
 extremism and revoking the French nationality of
those with more than one passport who were guilty of
committing attacks.
Socialist Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault, who was
 in London to meet British ministers and the injured
schoolchildren's families, said knee-jerk measures
were not the answer.
"We won't put up a wall that would stop life from continuing," he told reporters.
France is a member of the open-border Schengen agreement that operates among
 several European countries.
French anti-terrorist police opened an inquiry into the incident on Thursday -
 an automatic move that was due to the involvement of French victims.
(Reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta, Editing by Dominique Vidalon and Richard Lough)

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