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Europe
Court Says French Jihadist can be Stripped of Nationality
2015-01-24
[AnNahar] La Belle France's top legal body ruled Friday that stripping a binational convicted jihadist of his French nationality was lawful, just as the country upped its fight against extremism.

The ruling by the Constitutional Council comes after the government announced a series of anti-terror measures in the wake of the deadly Gay Paree attacks earlier this month and mulls whether to use this move more widely.

Ahmed Sahnouni, a Moroccan naturalized by La Belle France in 2003, was convicted and handed a seven-year prison term in March 2013 for being part of a terrorist organization and was stripped of his citizenship in May last year.

Born in Casablanca in 1970, he was convicted of overseeing recruitment networks of aspiring jihadists to Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia, and the Sahel region
... North Africa's answer to the Pak tribal areas...
of North Africa, raising funds for them and also of overseeing the operational coordination of volunteers once on the ground.

Under French law, authorities can strip people of their naturalized citizenship if they are convicted of "terror acts" -- but only if they have another nationality to fall back on. The measure has been used eight times since 1973.

The law also states that a person's nationality can be removed anytime during a 15-year period after being naturalized, or 15 years after being convicted of terror acts -- up from 10 years previously.

Sahnouni's lawyer Nurettin Meseci argued that the law creates inequalities between those who are French by birth and those who are naturalized.

"Are there French people who are more French than others?" he asked in court.

He also argued that the move aimed to expel his client to Morocco, "where he risks being sentenced to 20 years in prison."

Added to this, Meseci said that increasing the time period during which a person can be stripped of their nationality from 10 to 15 years was "disproportionate."

But the Constitutional Council ruled that the seriousness of the fight against extremism justified the move and did not "violate the principle of equality."

Meseci said Friday he regretted the "emotional context" in which the decision had been taken.

The ruling comes as La Belle France still reels from the January 7-9 attacks in Gay Paree that left 17 people dead, sending shockwaves around the world.

On Wednesday, the government unveiled a raft of measures to curb radicalization and better monitor jihadists.

Prime Minister Manuel Valls said the attacks had raised "a legitimate question" as to what should be done about those who attack the country of their birth, or which gave them citizenship.

Where foreign jihadists were concerned, Valls said 28 people had been expelled from La Belle France over the past three years.

For those who are French, he proposed a cross-party debate on bringing back the offense of "national disgrace" -- used after World War II against collaborators with the Nazi regime and abolished in 1951.

Less severe than treason, and allowing authorities to strip citizens of some rights, Valls said that reviving the offense would be a strong symbol of "the consequences of... committing a terrorist act."

On Friday, he welcomed the Constitutional Council ruling.

"We must absolutely not deprive ourselves of the means provided by law to assert our values and say we don't accept that those we welcomed on our soil can attack and threaten La Belle France," Valls said.

Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve, meanwhile, said the government would continue to strip those found guilty of "acts of terrorism" of their nationality.

The Constitutional Council's decision also comes at a time of serious diplomatic crisis between La Belle France and Morocco over torture complaints filed against top Moroccan officials last year.

Since then, bilateral judicial relations have been cut and anti-terrorism cooperation frozen.
Posted by:trailing wife

#3  Unless you're rich and want to remain rich

The government let the 75% or whatever it was surtax in millionaire incomes expire at the end of last year, as it unexpectedly lost the government significant money instead of providing the planned surplus. Which doesn't mean someone else won't come up with exact same idea in a decade or two -- France seems to trundle round the same cycles every generation. It's the Fifth Republic now, as I recall, and each previous one was followed by revolution and restoration. Though to be fair to the fourth, the second world war did somewhat force things.
Posted by: trailing wife   2015-01-24 12:02  

#2  Unless you're rich and want to remain rich or at least comfortable. Then its negotiable.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2015-01-24 09:35  

#1  La Belle France's top legal body ruled Friday that stripping a binational convicted jihadist of his French nationality was lawful, just as the country upped its fight against extremism.

Evidently citizenship still means something in France.
Posted by: Besoeker   2015-01-24 06:35  

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