Diversity Macht Frei
November 11, 2017
[Skip to about 2.30 if you don’t understand French]
Around one hundred elected officials protested against the illegal Muslim street prayers that have been taking place for several months in Clichy-la-Garenne (Hauts-de-Seine). The mayor Rémi Muzeau and the president of the Region, Valérie Pécresse, are calling for the State to react.
At the behest of Rémi Muzeau, mayor LR [mainstream right-wing party] for Clichy-la-Garenne (Hauts-de-Seine), around one hundred right-wing elected officials for the Paris region met this Friday on the forecourt of the City Hall to protest against the illegal street prayers that have taken place every Friday at the same place.
The conflict between the town council and the Muslim associations in Clichy has been going on since 23 March, the date of the first demonstration by worshippers in Clichy to protest against the expulsion of two Muslim associations from a building that belonged to the city and was serving as a prayer room, following a decision by the Council of State in 2016.
The conflict has bogged down for months between the two parties because, on one side, the associations demand that a mosque be opened in the city, and, on the other, the mayor declares that there is already a 1500 m2 place of worship in the urban area. In 2015, Rémi Muzeau inaugurated a cultural centre for the Muslim community of Clichy, with two prayers rooms inside. But the associations say they are too small to cope with busy days, particularly for Friday prayers.
Pécresse at the mayor’s side
This Friday, around noon, around one hundred elected officials met to protest. At the same time, the street prayer was supposed to take place but very few of the faithful were present. The elected officials then walked through the adjacent streets singing “La Marseillaise”.
I find it bizarre that these elected officials, including the mayor and the president of the region, apparently don’t have enough power to force police or prosecutors to act against the Mohammedans.