‘Atmosphere of Islamophobia’ sees Muslim professionals leave France

‘Atmosphere of Islamophobia’ sees Muslim professionals leave France
Above, Muslim worshipers arrive at the Great Mosque of Paris to perform morning Eid Al-Adha prayers on June 16, 2024. France has the largest Muslim population in Europe, with up to 10 percent of the country’s 67 million people belonging to the faith. (AFP)
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Updated 24 June 2024
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‘Atmosphere of Islamophobia’ sees Muslim professionals leave France

‘Atmosphere of Islamophobia’ sees Muslim professionals leave France
  • Emigration of career-focused young Muslims causing ‘brain drain,’ new book claims
  • Co-author: ‘There are more and more French Muslims who no longer feel at home in France’

LONDON: An “atmosphere of Islamophobia” is pushing French Muslims to emigrate to countries including the UK and Canada, a new book has claimed.

The phenomenon has been compared to a “brain drain” by the authors of “France, Loving It But Leaving It,” The Times reported on Monday.

But unlike a conventional brain drain, Muslim professionals in France are trading one prosperous country for another.

France has the largest Muslim population in Europe, with an estimated 7-10 percent of the country’s 67 million people belonging to the faith.

Of the Muslims who have emigrated from France, more than seven in 10 reported leaving in part due to racism and discrimination.

France follows a policy of laicite, or secularism, which forbids the display of religious symbols in professional life, including in law, the civil service and education.

Many of the Muslims emigrating are among the most professionally ambitious but also the most devout, leading to a clash of values, according to one of the book’s co-authors, Olivier Esteves.

The professor at the University of Lille cited the popularity of Marine Le Pen’s National Rally as also playing a role in the brain drain. The far-right party claims that Islam is an existential threat to French identity.

Esteves said an election victory for NR would lead to a renewed surge in emigration among professional French Muslims.

“People who oppose immigration often say ‘it feels like we’re no longer at home,’” he said. “But there are more and more French Muslims who no longer feel at home in France.

“In the next few months, we will see a growing disinhibition of Islamophobic words and behaviour.

“We wrote about women who are spat on for wearing the hijab — that kind of thing is only going to get worse.”

The survey that formed the basis of the book was based on 1,000 respondents mostly on social media. About 140 of those were subject to in-depth interviews by the book’s authors.

Esteves said the number of Muslims who have left France could be in the “tens of thousands.”

Last month, Muslims gathered outside the Grand Mosque in Paris to voice their concerns about being made to feel like outsiders in their own country.

One attendee, Aminata Sylla, told The Times that she “could not wait” to leave for Britain or Oman.

“It’s been a build-up of all the negative experiences I’ve had. When it’s not that I’m black, it’s that I’m Muslim, then it’s that I wear a headscarf. I feel like I can’t breathe sometimes,” she said.

Sylla, who is studying for a master’s degree in international relations at Sorbonne University, said she was made to “feel like an animal” through a series of negative experiences, including being kicked on the Paris metro for wearing a hijab.

The 25-year-old describes herself as a “daughter of France who has been abandoned by her mother.”

Mehdi, a French teacher in Preston, England, who emigrated from his hometown Lyon three years ago, said the decision to leave was “heartbreaking.”

The 39-year-old added: “I don’t think I’d ever cried as much as when I took the ferry to leave for good. I felt it was a failure to not be able to maintain my relationship with this country.”


Harris and Trump push for every vote with just 14 days to go

Harris and Trump push for every vote with just 14 days to go
Updated 5 sec ago
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Harris and Trump push for every vote with just 14 days to go

Harris and Trump push for every vote with just 14 days to go
  • Both campaigns pumping hundreds of millions of dollars into a final push for any wavering, undecided voters who could tilt the balance in their favor
  • Polls appear to be giving Trump a slight edge recently, but all within the margin of error

WASHINGTON: One of the tightest US election races of modern times enters its final, two-week stretch Tuesday, with Republican Donald Trump making a special pitch to Latino voters as Democratic rival Kamala Harris sits down for a national network interview.

Both campaigns are pumping hundreds of millions of dollars into a final push for any wavering, undecided voters who could tilt the balance in their favor, with polls consistently showing their candidates in a dead heat ahead of Election Day.

Whatever the outcome, Americans will make history on November 5: they will either elect the first woman president in the world’s leading superpower — or they will put the first convicted felon into the White House.

Polls appear to be giving Trump, who at 78 is the oldest nominee from a major party in US history, a slight edge recently — but all within the margin of error, making them little comfort for a former president making his third consecutive White House run.

Vice President Harris — who only threw herself into the race in July, when President Joe Biden made the stunning decision to drop out and endorse her instead — will give a television interview to NBC on Tuesday.

The 60-year-old, who celebrated her birthday over the weekend, will also deploy one of her party’s most popular emissaries back into the field: Barack Obama.

The former Democratic president will hold a series of rallies in Wisconsin and Michigan, two of the seven most hotly contested swing states in the election which, under the US system of indirect universal suffrage, are likely to decide the outcome.

Trump, whose anti-migrant rhetoric is becoming coarser and more extreme by the day, will take part in a roundtable discussion with Latino voters at one of his Florida properties.

The Republican will then fly to North Carolina, another swing state where he also campaigned on Monday, for an event that is supposed to be devoted to the economy.

He rarely sticks to the topic at his rallies, however — instead, he has been criticized for a tumultuous few weeks that have featured rambling monologues and threats about weaponizing the military against Democrats who he calls “the enemy from within.”

One recent televised town hall veered into a surreal, impromptu music session as Trump abandoned discussion of the election to play his favorite hits while swaying on stage.

The Harris campaign has begun to hammer at his mental and physical fitness to serve.

But a tide of MAGA-capped supporters continue to flock to his rallies, convinced that he is the victim of political persecution, or that Democrats are instigating threats against him.

Democrats are also seeking to woo moderate Republicans turned off by Trump’s ominous rhetoric and scandals.

Harris has sought to frame herself as a “joyful warrior” seeking to turn the page on Trump’s years of outrage and move into a new generation of American political leadership.

More than 15 million Americans have already voted by mail or in person, according to the independent organization Elections Project, representing around 10 percent of the total turnout in 2020.


Uganda condemns 16 opposition members for ‘treachery’

Uganda condemns 16 opposition members for ‘treachery’
Updated 17 min 59 sec ago
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Uganda condemns 16 opposition members for ‘treachery’

Uganda condemns 16 opposition members for ‘treachery’

KAMPALA: A Ugandan military tribunal Monday convicted 16 members of an opposition party of “illegal possession of explosive devices and treachery,” according to a defense lawyer, who said the proceedings were suspect.
The prosecution alleged that the 16 members of the National Unity Platform, as well as others still on the run, were found in possession of explosives between November 2020 and May 2021, while elections were underway.
“Circumstances surrounding their plea of guilty to the charges they had denied previously was questionable,” Shamim Malende, a defense lawyer, told AFP.
Former singer and opposition figure Bobi Wine, whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, claimed the group had been forced to plead guilty and seek a presidential pardon.
Journalists were barred from attending the session.
The 16 have spent four years in jail, and will appear in court Wednesday for their sentencing.
Uganda has been ruled since 1986 by Yoweri Museveni.
The last presidential elections in 2021 were marred by fraud, and demonstrations against yet another arrest of Bobi Wine were violently repressed by the police, resulting in at least 54 dead.
“Whatever Museveni’s government is doing, one day all those under him including himself will be called to account,” Bobi Wine told AFP, saying the accused had been “blackmailed by state agents.”


Son of founder of modern Singapore says he is now a political refugee

Son of founder of modern Singapore says he is now a political refugee
Updated 58 min 5 sec ago
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Son of founder of modern Singapore says he is now a political refugee

Son of founder of modern Singapore says he is now a political refugee
  • Singapore’s government says the persecution claim was baseless and unfounded
  • Lee Hsien Yang said he had sought asylum protection in 2022, citing government persecution

Lee Hsien Yang, the youngest son of the founder of modern Singapore Lee Kuan Yew, said on Tuesday he is now a political refugee from Singapore under the UN Refugee Convention.
In a Facebook post, Lee, the estranged brother of former premier Lee Hsien Loong, said Britain has determined he faces “a well-founded risk of persecution, and cannot safely return to Singapore.”
“I sought asylum protection as a last resort. I remain a Singapore citizen and hope that some day it will become safe to return home,” he said.
Singapore’s government said the persecution claim was baseless and unfounded, ChannelNewsAsia reported, citing a response it said was provided to the Guardian newspaper.
Britain’s high commission in Singapore did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Lee Hsien Yang and his sister Lee Wei Ling, who died on Oct. 9, have been at odds with their brother Lee Hsieng Loong, who was premier from 2004 until May this year, over what to do with their father’s home after his death in 2015, in a public spat that saw the siblings estranged.
Lee Hsien Yang said he had sought asylum protection in 2022, citing government persecution against him and his family, and that he was unable to return for his sister’s funeral as a result.
He had said last week that he would apply to demolish Lee Kuan Yew’s home in line with his father’s wishes.
The government said in response it would consider issues related to the property in due course.


Taiwan again rejects South African demand to move its representative office from Pretoria

Taiwan again rejects South African demand to move its representative office from Pretoria
Updated 22 October 2024
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Taiwan again rejects South African demand to move its representative office from Pretoria

Taiwan again rejects South African demand to move its representative office from Pretoria
  • Demand to move or shut the office entirely violates a 1997 agreement between the sides
  • South Africa maintains a liaison office in Taiwan’s capital, Taipei, and the sides have a strong commercial relationship

TAIPEI: Taiwan has again rejected South Africa’s demand that it move its representative office in the country from the capital, Pretoria, to the commercial center of Johannesburg.
Taiwan Foreign Ministry spokesperson Jeff Liu said at a news conference on Tuesday that the demand to move or shut the office entirely violated a 1997 agreement between the sides on the location of their mutual representative offices following the severing of formal diplomatic relations.
“Facing this kind of unreasonable demand, our side cannot grant our acceptance,” Liu said.
South Africa maintains a liaison office in Taiwan’s capital, Taipei, and the sides have a strong commercial relationship. Liu repeated Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lung’s avowal at the legislature on Monday that Taiwan “was prepared for all eventualities” over the issue. The office is Taiwanese property and Taipei retains the right to determine its location and status, Lin and Liu said.
China, which claims Taiwan as its own territory that must be annexed by force if necessary, relentlessly seeks to minimize Taiwan’s international representation, although the self-governing island republic maintains robust unofficial relations with the US and other major nations.
South Africa confirmed last week that it had asked Taiwan to move its liaison office, in a demand seen purely as a concession to China, which has used its influence to keep Taiwan out of the United Nations and affiliated branches such as the World Health Organization, and limit its formal diplomatic partners to just 11 countries and the Vatican.
In addition to diplomatic and economic pressure, China has stepped up its military threats against Taiwan, most recently holding large-scale live-fire drills just off the Chinese coastal province of Fujian, which faces Taiwan.
South Africa’s demand that Taiwan move its office has also drawn attention in the US Congress, with Tennessee Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn posting on the social platform X that “the United States should not tolerate this behavior from South Africa.”
“I am calling on ... the Biden administration to make it clear that there will be consequences if South Africa works with the (Chinese Communist Party) to bully Taiwan,” including removing South Africa from a key trade program, Blackburn said.
“The United States must not provide trade benefits to countries that prioritize China’s influence over democratic partnerships,” she added.


Indian troops kill five Maoist rebels

Indian troops kill five Maoist rebels
Updated 22 October 2024
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Indian troops kill five Maoist rebels

Indian troops kill five Maoist rebels
  • More than 10,000 people have died in the decades-long insurgency waged by the Naxalite movement
  • The Naxalites inspired by the Chinese revolutionary leader Mao Zedong

NEW DELHI: Indian commandos shot dead five Maoist rebels in the dense jungles of central India, police said Tuesday, as security forces intensify a government bid to crush the long-running armed conflict.
More than 10,000 people have died in the decades-long insurgency waged by the Naxalite movement, who say they are fighting for the rights of marginalized indigenous people of India’s remote and resource-rich central regions.
The insurgency has drastically shrunk in recent years and a crackdown by security forces has killed nearly 200 rebels this year, according to government data.
The clash took place Monday in Maharashtra, which holds state elections next month.
“Five Naxalites were killed after they opened fire on security forces,” police superintendent Neelotpal was quoted as saying by local media.
The Times of India newspaper reported that three of those killed were women, and that a commando wounded in the firefight had to be pulled out by helicopter while under fire.
In September, Indian interior minister Amit Shah warned the Maoist rebels to surrender or face an “all-out” assault, saying the government anticipated eradicating the Naxalite movement by early 2026.
The Naxalites, named for the district where their armed campaign began in 1967, were inspired by the Chinese revolutionary leader Mao Zedong.
They demanded land, jobs and a share of the region’s immense natural resources for local residents, and made inroads in a number of remote communities across India’s east and south.
The movement gained in strength and numbers until the early 2000s when New Delhi deployed tens of thousands of security personnel against the rebels in a stretch of territory known as the “Red Corridor.”
Authorities have pumped in millions of dollars for investments in local infrastructure projects and social spending.