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Play Video|0:49
France to Mobilize 10,000 Troops
France to Mobilize 10,000 Troops
Jean-Yves Le Drian, the defense minister of France, announced that the country will increase security with its military to combat threats.
Video by Reuters on Publish Date January 12, 2015. Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images.
PARIS â Seeking to reassure a jittery and unsettled population after last weekâs terrorist attacks, the French authorities said on Monday that thousands of police officers and soldiers would be deployed to protect Jewish schools and other âsensitive sites,â in one of the countryâs biggest peacetime security operations.
The defense minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, said that 10,000 soldiers would be deployed by Tuesday evening, in what he called âthe first mobilization on this scale on our territory.â
Mr. Le Drian announced the measures after President François Hollande called an emergency meeting to fashion the governmentâs response to the attacks. On Sunday, dozens of world leaders joined Mr. Hollande at the front of a march in Paris attended by more than one million people and intended as a show of unity and defiance.
The military deployment reflected Franceâs readiness to commit its armed forces to resist Islamic militants within and beyond its borders. French aircraft have joined the American-led air campaign against militant forces in Iraq, and roughly 3,000 French soldiers are deployed in Africa in efforts to counter extremist groups in countries including Chad and Mauritania.
In addition to the military deployment, the interior minister, Bernard Cazeneuve, said on Monday that 4,700 police officers would be posted to guard the countryâs 700 Jewish schools and other institutions after three days of bloodletting last week, when three assailants killed 17 people in attacks on targets including a satirical newspaper, Charlie Hebdo, and a kosher supermarket.
Mr. Cazeneuve announced the new protections in an address to parents at a Jewish school south of Paris, according to French radio and news agencies.
All three attackers were killed in raids, but there is an abiding and deep concern here that âthe threat is still present,â as Mr. Le Drian put it.
The prime minister, Manuel Valls, speaking to BFM television, said earlier that one of the attackers, Amedy Coulibaly, âundoubtedlyâ had one or more accomplices, still at large and posing a continuing threat.
Continue reading the main story
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Huge Show of Solidarity in Paris Against TerrorismJAN. 11, 2015
-
In Cold Political Terms, Far Right and French President Both GainJAN. 11, 2015
-
Victims of the Terror Attacks in ParisJAN. 11, 2015
Mr. Coulibaly, who took hostages in a kosher supermarket on Friday, is suspected of having shot a police officer on Thursday. He claimed in a video released on Sunday that he was acting on behalf of the Islamic State militant group. Four Jewish shoppers who were preparing for the Sabbath were killed in the supermarket attack.
Surrounded by heavily armed bodyguards, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrived at the supermarket in a gesture of solidarity with French Jews on Monday. Many people waving Israeli flags gathered to cheer him, and some said that they would seek to emigrate to Israel because they no longer felt safe in France.
Mr. Netanyahu was also present at the rally in Paris on Sunday along with leaders including the president of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas; Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain; and Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany.
Turkeyâs state news agency on Monday quoted the countryâs foreign minister as saying that Hayat Boumeddiene, thought to be Mr. Coulibalyâs companion, had entered Syria from Turkey on Thursday, the day before the kosher supermarket attack.
Mevlut Cavusoglu, the Turkish foreign minister, told the state-run Anadolu Agency on Monday that Ms. Boumeddiene had arrived in Turkey from Madrid on Jan. 2, and had stayed at a hotel in Istanbul.
On Sunday, a video emerged on the Internet showing Mr. Coulibaly describing his role in what he called a coordinated offensive to defend Islam, and urging young French Muslims to take up the fight.
The video surfaced as French news outlets, citing police sources, said that investigators had found a hideaway used by Mr. Coulibaly, 32, in preparation for the attacks, an apartment in the Gentilly suburb of Paris that was stocked with automatic weapons, detonators, cash and flags of the Islamic State.
Parts of the video appeared to have been produced by an accomplice after Mr. Coulibalyâs death, as they alluded to information that emerged only after he died when the police stormed the kosher supermarket.
Photo
A soldier guarded a Jewish school in Paris on Monday as part of an extensive peacetime security operation. Credit Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters
The tough French response played into an emerging and potentially divisive debate across Europe that pits civil liberties campaigners against the demands of security officials who cite the attacks as evidence of an urgent need to introduce stronger powers to monitor suspects.
Mr. Cazeneuve, the interior minister, said on Sunday that the French government would seek greater authority to monitor the Internet for activity in support of terrorist or subversive activities.
Also on Sunday, Mr. Cameron, the British prime minister, told the BBC that he favored the introduction of âmore comprehensiveâ powers of surveillance.
British intelligence and security chiefs briefed Mr. Cameron on Monday on the implications of the Paris attacks for the authorities in London, which was the site of coordinated attacks on July 7, 2005.
The participants at the meeting agreed to âstep up our efforts with other countries to crack down on the illegal smuggling of weapons across borders,â a government spokesman said, speaking on the condition of anonymity in accordance with department rules. âThe prime minister also asked the police and military to continue to work closely together to ensure that the police can call on appropriate military assistance when required across the country.â
At the Vatican on Monday, Pope Francis condemned the extremism behind the attacks, saying that religious fundamentalism âeliminates God himself, turning him into a mere ideological pretext.â
In his annual speech to diplomats accredited to the Holy See, the pope spoke of a âculture of rejection, which severs the deepest and most authentic human bonds, leading to the breakdown of society and spawning violence and death.â
âLosing their freedom, people become enslaved, whether to the latest fads or to power, money or even deviant forms of religion,â he added. âViolence is always the product of a falsification of religion, its use as a pretext for ideological schemes whose only goal is power over others.â
The pope also called on âreligious, political and intellectual leaders, especially those of the Muslim community,â to âcondemn all fundamentalist and extremist interpretations of religion which attempt to justify such acts of violence.â
Almost as a footnote, news reports over the weekend said that Mourad Hamyd, an 18-year-old who had been depicted as a third suspect in the shootings at Charlie Hebdo had been released without charge Friday night after schoolmates insisted on Twitter that he had been in class that day. He turned himself in on Wednesday at a police station in Charleville-Mézières, about 145 miles northeast of Paris, after seeing reports on social media that he was being sought by the police in connection with the shootings.
An earlier version of this article misstated the given name of the German chancellor. She is Angela Merkel, not Angel.
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- Charles M. Blow
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Play Video|0:49
France to Mobilize 10,000 Troops
France to Mobilize 10,000 Troops
Jean-Yves Le Drian, the defense minister of France, announced that the country will increase security with its military to combat threats.
Video by Reuters on Publish Date January 12, 2015.Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images.
PARIS â Seeking to reassure a jittery and unsettled population after last weekâs terrorist attacks, the French authorities said on Monday that thousands of police officers and soldiers would be deployed to protect Jewish schools and other âsensitive sites,â in one of the countryâs biggest peacetime security operations.
The defense minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, said that 10,000 soldiers would be deployed by Tuesday evening, in what he called âthe first mobilization on this scale on our territory.â
Mr. Le Drian announced the measures after President François Hollande called an emergency meeting to fashion the governmentâs response to the attacks. On Sunday, dozens of world leaders joined Mr. Hollande at the front of a march in Paris attended by more than one million people and intended as a show of unity and defiance.
The military deployment reflected Franceâs readiness to commit its armed forces to resist Islamic militants within and beyond its borders. French aircraft have joined the American-led air campaign against militant forces in Iraq, and roughly 3,000 French soldiers are deployed in Africa in efforts to counter extremist groups in countries including Chad and Mauritania.
In addition to the military deployment, the interior minister, Bernard Cazeneuve, said on Monday that 4,700 police officers would be posted to guard the countryâs 700 Jewish schools and other institutions after three days of bloodletting last week, when three assailants killed 17 people in attacks on targets including a satirical newspaper, Charlie Hebdo, and a kosher supermarket.
Mr. Cazeneuve announced the new protections in an address to parents at a Jewish school south of Paris, according to French radio and news agencies.
All three attackers were killed in raids, but there is an abiding and deep concern here that âthe threat is still present,â as Mr. Le Drian put it.
The prime minister, Manuel Valls, speaking to BFM television, said earlier that one of the attackers, Amedy Coulibaly, âundoubtedlyâ had one or more accomplices, still at large and posing a continuing threat.
Continue reading the main story
Related Coverage
]]>
Related Coverage
-
Huge Show of Solidarity in Paris Against TerrorismJAN. 11, 2015
-
In Cold Political Terms, Far Right and French President Both GainJAN. 11, 2015
-
Victims of the Terror Attacks in ParisJAN. 11, 2015
Mr. Coulibaly, who took hostages in a kosher supermarket on Friday, is suspected of having shot a police officer on Thursday. He claimed in a video released on Sunday that he was acting on behalf of the Islamic State militant group. Four Jewish shoppers who were preparing for the Sabbath were killed in the supermarket attack.
Surrounded by heavily armed bodyguards, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrived at the supermarket in a gesture of solidarity with French Jews on Monday. Many people waving Israeli flags gathered to cheer him, and some said that they would seek to emigrate to Israel because they no longer felt safe in France.
Mr. Netanyahu was also present at the rally in Paris on Sunday along with leaders including the president of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas; Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain; and Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany.
Turkeyâs state news agency on Monday quoted the countryâs foreign minister as saying that Hayat Boumeddiene, thought to be Mr. Coulibalyâs companion, had entered Syria from Turkey on Thursday, the day before the kosher supermarket attack.
Mevlut Cavusoglu, the Turkish foreign minister, told the state-run Anadolu Agency on Monday that Ms. Boumeddiene had arrived in Turkey from Madrid on Jan. 2, and had stayed at a hotel in Istanbul.
On Sunday, a video emerged on the Internet showing Mr. Coulibaly describing his role in what he called a coordinated offensive to defend Islam, and urging young French Muslims to take up the fight.
The video surfaced as French news outlets, citing police sources, said that investigators had found a hideaway used by Mr. Coulibaly, 32, in preparation for the attacks, an apartment in the Gentilly suburb of Paris that was stocked with automatic weapons, detonators, cash and flags of the Islamic State.
Parts of the video appeared to have been produced by an accomplice after Mr. Coulibalyâs death, as they alluded to information that emerged only after he died when the police stormed the kosher supermarket.
Photo
A soldier guarded a Jewish school in Paris on Monday as part of an extensive peacetime security operation. Credit Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters
The tough French response played into an emerging and potentially divisive debate across Europe that pits civil liberties campaigners against the demands of security officials who cite the attacks as evidence of an urgent need to introduce stronger powers to monitor suspects.
Mr. Cazeneuve, the interior minister, said on Sunday that the French government would seek greater authority to monitor the Internet for activity in support of terrorist or subversive activities.
Also on Sunday, Mr. Cameron, the British prime minister, told the BBC that he favored the introduction of âmore comprehensiveâ powers of surveillance.
British intelligence and security chiefs briefed Mr. Cameron on Monday on the implications of the Paris attacks for the authorities in London, which was the site of coordinated attacks on July 7, 2005.
The participants at the meeting agreed to âstep up our efforts with other countries to crack down on the illegal smuggling of weapons across borders,â a government spokesman said, speaking on the condition of anonymity in accordance with department rules. âThe prime minister also asked the police and military to continue to work closely together to ensure that the police can call on appropriate military assistance when required across the country.â
At the Vatican on Monday, Pope Francis condemned the extremism behind the attacks, saying that religious fundamentalism âeliminates God himself, turning him into a mere ideological pretext.â
In his annual speech to diplomats accredited to the Holy See, the pope spoke of a âculture of rejection, which severs the deepest and most authentic human bonds, leading to the breakdown of society and spawning violence and death.â
âLosing their freedom, people become enslaved, whether to the latest fads or to power, money or even deviant forms of religion,â he added. âViolence is always the product of a falsification of religion, its use as a pretext for ideological schemes whose only goal is power over others.â
The pope also called on âreligious, political and intellectual leaders, especially those of the Muslim community,â to âcondemn all fundamentalist and extremist interpretations of religion which attempt to justify such acts of violence.â
Almost as a footnote, news reports over the weekend said that Mourad Hamyd, an 18-year-old who had been depicted as a third suspect in the shootings at Charlie Hebdo had been released without charge Friday night after schoolmates insisted on Twitter that he had been in class that day. He turned himself in on Wednesday at a police station in Charleville-Mézières, about 145 miles northeast of Paris, after seeing reports on social media that he was being sought by the police in connection with the shootings.
An earlier version of this article misstated the given name of the German chancellor. She is Angela Merkel, not Angel.
More on nytimes.com
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