International News

French parliament votes to extend state of emergency to May 26

PARIS, Feb 17, (APP/AFP) – The French parliament voted to extend
the country’s state of emergency, implemented after the November 13 terror attacks, by a further three months to May 26 as the government warns the threat of an attack remains great.
Deputies of the National Assembly gave the green light by 212 votes
to 31 with three abstentions The upper house Senate had already approved the
extension by an overwhelming majority last Tuesday.
France declared a state of emergency after militants attacked
several sites in Paris, killing 130 people and leaving hundreds wounded.
Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said the terror threat “has never
been higher”, stressing that “an imminent danger has not gone away”.
The exceptional measure allows the interior minister to place under
house arrest any person whose behaviour is considered “a threat to security and public order” and to order searches of homes at any hour without involving the court.
Since November, around 3,340 searches have been conducted and 578
arms seized. More than 340 people have been taken into custody and 285 house arrests are currently being enforced.
Since the beginning of the year, 40 people have been arrested on
suspicion of being involved in networks making threats or praising terrorism, Cazeneuve said.
Facing criticism about the modest number of arrests, Cazeneuve
pointed to the advantages given the interior ministry under a state of emergency.
The searches “have been able to disrupt the organisation of the
networks which arm and finance terrorism, in particular with regards to the trafficking of arms and drugs,” he told lawmakers.
He added that the elements collected contribute to the files of
information which can be used later in cases against terror suspects.