 |
|
Two
Pakistanis entering a mosque in Saint Denis.
|
By
Hadi Yahmid, IOL Correspondent
PARIS,
August 14, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – The July 7 London attacks
perpetrated by four British Muslims, including three of Pakistani
origin, are having domino effects on the Pakistani minority in France,
sparking an unprecedented Pakistanophobia.
"This
close media and security scrutiny is really playing on the nerves of
the Pakistanis in
France
," Abdel Rahman Quraishi, the chairman of the Federation of
Pakistani Organizations in
France
, told IslamOnline.net.
Minority
leaders complain that since the terrorist bombings the French people
have started looking down on Pakistanis, who expressed deep concern
about stereotyping an entire race for the work of a handful.
"A
right-wing newspaper, for instance, launched a ferocious campaign
against Pakistanis in
France
and placed them in one basket, calling them a ‘cause for
concern.’"
Quraishi,
who is also the imam of the main Pakistani mosque in Saint Denis,
northern
Paris
, said the federation is planning to take legal action against the
newspaper.
"A
delegation representing the Pakistani minority went to the British
embassy in
Paris
immediately after the attacks and offered heartfelt condolences,"
he recalled.
Four
young British Muslims attacked three
London
underground trains and a bus on July 7, killing 52 people.
Police
have found that the bombers acted on their own and had no link to
Al-Qaeda.
Under
the Microscope
IOL’s
correspondent says Pakistanis feel that their private lives are
increasingly vulnerable.
Quraishi’s
mosque has come to the fore since the attacks and its visitors feel
that they are put under the microscope.
There
are three Pakistani mosques in
France
concentrating in the capital
Paris
and its suburbs.
There
are some 60,000 Pakistanis living in France, the third biggest
Pakistani community abroad after
Britain
and the
United States
.
Authorities
have so far deported a Pakistani for "illegal residency" and
detained another at a
Paris
airport for "holding forged passports".
Many
Pakistanis have cancelled traditional summer visits to their
motherland in fear of being harassed at airport.
"It
is really provocative to feel targeted, but we will take this into our
strides," Mazar, a 43-year-old shopkeeper, told IOL.
"I’m
sure that we are being discriminated against for no reason than being
Muslims."
Shabnam
Sohil, a French activist of Pakistani origin, said Pakistanis in
France
should refuse to be provoked and lead normal lives.
"We,
as French citizens, shouldn’t forgo our rights and stand up firmly
to any sort of discrimination or harassment," she told IOL.
Sohil,
however, believes that the current mood is short-lived because the
Pakistani minority has been credited as law-binding.
French
Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy told Le Parisian newspaper in July
he was planning to put forward new anti-terror measures authorizing
eavesdropping on phone calls and archiving them for one year.
He
said that those coming into
France
from or leaving to
Syria
,
Afghanistan
and
Pakistan
would be placed under close scrutiny.