Friday, September 16, 2011

Muslims caught praying on the streets of Paris face arrest in tough new law

Good. The French are finally coming to terms with the Muslim push to over ride French law. Muslims taking over public streets to pray is merely a tactic to further the take over of Western society. If they were allowed to continue to flaunt French law, there would be no stopping them. Now the French must retake the 751 No Go areas and restore law and order there.

"Abdul Sidiqi, one of the country's five million-strong Muslim population, said of the prayer ban: 'This is another example of the government clamping down on Muslims, and the Muslim way of life."


Yes it is, and long overdue.

FROM DAILYMAIL.CO.UK:

'Like cattle': Muslims will have to squeeze into overflowing mosques after praying was banned on the streets of Paris

Well, boo F'n hoo.

Muslims caught praying on the streets of Paris face arrest in tough new law

By Peter Allen

Last updated at 11:34 AM on 16th September 2011

'Like cattle': Muslims will have to squeeze into overflowing mosques after praying was banned on the streets of Paris

Muslims praying while sprawled on the streets of Paris face arrest under a strict new law brought in today.

French interior minister Claude Gueant said the hundreds of prostrate worshippers 'hurt the sensitivities of many of our fellow citizens'.

Muslim men claim they have been forced into roads and alleyways to complete their daily prayers because of a lack of mosques in the French capital.

But Mr Gueant, a strict right-winger who wants to uphold France's secularity, said that the new law would be spread to other French cities, including Lyon and Marseilles, where thousands of Muslims live.

He said: 'My vigilance will be unflinching for the law to be applied.

'Praying in the street is not dignified for religious practice and violates the principles of secularism.

'All Muslim leaders are in agreement.'

But Sheikh Mohamed Salah Hamza, leader of a mosque in the north of Paris, said the government was treating Muslims like 'cattle' by stopping them from praying in the street.

He said he feared a 'climate of anarchy', despite Mr Gueant's insistence that force was unlikely to be necessary to impose the ban.

Article continues HERE.