Europe can no longer ignore the far-right ideas governing France, or attacks on civil society, says ENAR

Europe can no longer ignore the far-right ideas governing France, or attacks on civil society, says ENAR


For several months European Network Against Racism (ENAR) has warned of the increasing threats to civil society in France.

According to a new report by the French Observatory of Associative Freedom (Observatoire des Libertés Associatives), there was a systematic absence of legal or factual basis for abusive sanctions documented across 20 cases against organisations between 2016 and 2021.

As a result, the freedom of association and fundamental rights of racialised people in France, and Muslims in particular, are severely endangered.

With political discourse in the media and directly by government agencies targeting Muslims and civil society organisations who work against racism and anti-Muslim hatred in the country at an all-time high, far-right ideology in France is not only rising; it’s already here and Europe should be concerned.

The French government has not been shy about its increasingly divisive discourse and strategies. Under the guise of national security, civil society organisations have been dissolved, mosques have been raided, and schools and Muslim-owned businesses closed in ways that defy the rule of law and free association and expression, with a chilling effect on Muslim communities and civil society, who are being considered guilty until proven innocent.

In the process, the government has been aggressively promoting vague constructs, such as ‘Islamism’. It is attacking and silencing peaceful speech that argues that manifestations of racism, including Islamophobia, are grounded in structural and institutional racism and demands a response from the state to protect the rights and dignity those affected by it.

Recently, an official French governmental body attacked several Human Rights organisations including ENAR for calling out these racist practices. Just this week, a popular presidential candidate delivered a speech encouraging police officers to act as “hunters” towards Muslims, which he regarded as a separate civilisation with whom peaceful cohabitation was impossible. Though France denies it has an anti-Muslim hatred problem, the lack of condemnation towards racist narratives omnipresent in the media and presidential candidates’ speeches indicate otherwise.

In September 2021 Council of State upheld the dissolution of a CSO despite revoking the reasons which were put forward by the government to justify their dissolution in the first place, and sometimes using the argument that these organisations were denouncing Islamophobia as an institutional problem. This indicates a worrying trend of disregarding the rule of law to attack voices critical of the government. With the French mainstream media now also joining the fold in attacking civil society and demonising Muslims, the country is showing marks of a growing far-right within its institutions.

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