Amnesty says France using terrorism powers to curb peaceful protests

Rights group Amnesty International accused France yesterday of using emergency powers to fight terrorism as a pretext for clamping down on peaceful protests, including over sensitive environmental and labor issues.

The report comes just days after President Emmanuel Macron said his government would ask parliament to extend by several months the emergency powers introduced in 2015 to counter the threat of militant attacks.
 
Emergency rules giving French police wider search and arrest powers were introduced after Islamist gunmen and suicide bombers killed 130 people in and around Paris in November 2015.

Amnesty said that between November 2015 and 5 May 2017, authorities had used their powers to issue 155 decrees prohibiting public gatherings. 

It also said 639 measures preventing specific individuals participating in public assemblies had been imposed, including 574 that targeted labor law reforms protesters.

The new government has said that following last week's Manchester attacks claimed by Islamic State of Iraq and tle Levant (ISIL), the emergency measures should run beyond mid-July to Nov. 1. 

"Emergency laws intended to protect the French people from the threat of terrorism are instead being used to restrict their rights to protest peacefully," said Amnesty International researcher Marco Perolini.

"Under the cover of the state of emergency, rights to protest have been stripped away with hundreds of activists, environmentalists, and labor rights campaigners unjustifiably banned from participating in protests."
Macron, who reviewed national security with defense chiefs yesterday, said security measures for the summer period would be reinforced taking into consideration the state of emergency's...

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