Rabat – Marine Le Pen has asked Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau to ban the Muslim Brotherhood in France, and expressed urgency that her party has been saying this for years.
The chairman of the National Rally (marginal) parliamentary group dealt with the problem on social media for retailleau spoke From Cnews.
“He has detailed information about the dangers of the Muslim Brotherhood. We have warned for years. What is it waiting for to prohibit this totalitarian movement, which spreads its influence everywhere, even within the Parisian mosque, a symbol of gratitude towards Muslim soldiers who fought for France in World War II in World War II.” Le pen wrote On X.
In his interview, Retailleau spoke about several topics, including the attack on a rabbi in Orleans, anti-Semitism, the debate about wearing the veil in sport and what he described as “anti-white racism”.
He confirmed his position to ban the veil in sports and, among other Islamophobic remarks with the principles of the Republic, called him incompatible.
“The veil must be prohibited in sports competitions,” he said in the same interview. He argued that the permission of religious symbols in competitive environments undermine the neutrality of public spaces.
“For me, the veil is not a sign of freedom, but a symbol of submission and apartheid in our society,” he added. He framed the topic as a social gap and said that such practices violated the values of gender equality and secularism.
A greater attack on Islam
The minister also criticized the left -wing party La France Insoumise (LFI) and accused the basics of France to threaten.
“I think La France Insoumise is a danger to the republic today,” he said. Previously, he accused LFI of making radical ideologies possible by refusing to take a clear attitude towards Islamist extremism.
Retailleau also combined the increasing anti -Semitism in France with Islamist movements. “The anti -Semitic hatred is distributed by Islamism,” he said, led to the recent attacks, manifestations and tensions on what he described as radical ideologies.
He claimed that Islamist networks take advantage of complaints to promote the split, and at the same time warned that their influence between religious circles extends into political and social areas.
The minister even took his Islamophobic comments on a new level and today compared Islamism with fascism in the past and said: “Islamism is now like fascism.”
In France, Islam is immeasurable control and is often perceived by a lens of suspicion, especially in connection with increasing concerns about radicalism.
Many frames of Islamism as a direct threat to national values and link them with questions of security, secularism and social integration.
As a result, Islam is increasingly viewed with skepticism, which creates an environment in which its practices are frequently frowned upon or completely rejected, and Muslims are confronted with increasing Islamophobia and violence.