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A fine marzo il testo arriva in Senato, la legge dovrebbe essere adottata entro l'estate
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French MPs have approved a controversial bill the government says will
strengthen the country’s secular principles, but critics argue could
harm civil rights, especially those of the 5.7-million-strong Muslim
community.
The vote on Tuesday on
the so-called “anti-separatism” bill, brought forward by President
Emmanuel Macron, paves the way for it to be passed into law within
months.
Legislators in the lower house National Assembly, which
is dominated by Macron’s centrist La République En Marche ! (LREM)
party, voted 347 to 151 in favour of the bill with 65 abstaining.
The legislation will now be passed up to France’s upper house, the conservative-led Senate. The Senate has the power to amend the bill but is expected to greenlight it.
“It’s
an extremely strong secular offensive,” Interior Minister Gerald
Darmanin told RTL radio ahead of the vote Tuesday. “It’s a tough text …
but necessary for the republic.”
Among the more than 70 separate
articles, the law expands the ability of the state to close places of
worship and religious schools, as well as to ban preachers it considers
“extremist”.
- Amid concerns about the foreign funding of mosques, it requires religious groups to declare large foreign donations and have their accounts certified.
It comes with presidential elections looming next year and with decades-long divisions about the integration of France’s large Muslim population.
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