Terrorist attacks throughout Europe

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (777 of them)

Chances are they were targeting the Christmas market.

pomenitul, Tuesday, 11 December 2018 20:01 (five years ago) link

Once had a mean viande de cheval in Strassbourg.

Not looking good, this. Xmas market indeed.

lbi's life of limitless european glamour (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 11 December 2018 20:02 (five years ago) link

1 dead, 6 wounded. Shooter still on the run.

pomenitul, Tuesday, 11 December 2018 20:09 (five years ago) link

Of course there's already talk on Twitter of how this is a government-devised conspiracy to distract us from the gilets jaunes.

pomenitul, Tuesday, 11 December 2018 20:27 (five years ago) link

nine months pass...

We going to talk about how an alleged Neo-Nazi tried shooting up a synagogue on Yom Kippur or not?

He couldn’t break in because the door was reinforced, but he shot two other people and streamed the whole thing on Twitch, great.

In a chilling echo of the Christchurch mosque shooting, the gunman recorded the attacks on a head-mounted camera and uploaded it online with an antisemitic and rightwing extremist rant. German media identified the killer as Stephan Balliet, a 27-year-old German citizen.
One woman was shot dead outside the synagogue near a Jewish cemetery and one man killed in a nearby kebab shop.

The German interior minister, Horst Seehofer, described it as an antisemitic attack.

gyac, Wednesday, 9 October 2019 19:11 (four years ago) link

meant to bump this for the murdered Paris police officers too, nothing helpful to offer rn tho tbh

nashwan, Wednesday, 9 October 2019 20:01 (four years ago) link

I was going to post on this thread earlier but I couldn't remember what it was called.

Terry Micawber (Tom D.), Wednesday, 9 October 2019 20:14 (four years ago) link

depressing, and part of a v.worrying trend of rising anti-semitism

be goose, do crimes (||||||||), Wednesday, 9 October 2019 20:16 (four years ago) link

one year passes...

How is yesterday's attack in Conflans-Sainte-Honorine being covered in your countries? It is obviously the only subject of discussion here in France today.

All cars are bad (Euler), Saturday, 17 October 2020 16:09 (three years ago) link

mainly just reporting - haven’t seen any commentary. i’ll ignore the very rapidly published editorial position of the spectator which is i’m afraid as you might expect.

Fizzles, Saturday, 17 October 2020 16:21 (three years ago) link

actually i should be more careful - the spectator piece is relatively cautious. it’s probing fault lines - it states a failure of the education system in poor areas, and talks about the electoral problems the attack poses macron, and says it compounds issues raised by the toulouse massacre, as well as bataclan and charlie hebdo. the implication is that the state is failing on terrorism, and that this will raise the salience of the issue over the build up to elections in a year and a half’s time.

the area which feels most provocative but i don’t have enough info to judge is where it says the government assertion there are no “no go zones” to be absurd, citing evidence of weekly attacks on police stations and police officers.

Fizzles, Saturday, 17 October 2020 16:30 (three years ago) link

I live in one such "no-go zone" in Paris, where my kids have been among the very few non-Muslims in their schools, so I'm sensitive to how these places are perceived from the outside.

I don't know what the electoral consequences will be---Mélenchon gave one of the earliest and loudest condemnations of the attack, and Macron has been working on an anti-separatism law. But it would seem indeed that Le Pen will receive a boost from this.

But the sheer number of emails I've received today from fellow parents indicates that this attack has struck a particular nerve. Liberty of expression in particular against religion is one of the founding values of the Republic, and this is an attack on that value. I think the desire to protect this liberty of expression is strong enough to unite elements of the far right and far left---unite to do what is the question. And where the centrists fall, those who think that this liberty of expression is generally compatible with personal religious beliefs, is another question.

Suffice it to say that this is an enormous event in French history.

All cars are bad (Euler), Saturday, 17 October 2020 16:40 (three years ago) link

the murder of the teacher is grotesque and offensive. do you think it will be socially/politically significant than other recent terrorist events?

it seemed to me one reason it might be more potent is because it’s to do with the secular teaching principles.

this meant one thing i was surprised about reading the description of what took place in the class was that the teacher said that muslim students (13-year olds) could leave before he showed the picture to avoid causing offence. i think my immediate, cautious, reaction was to question whether it could have been approached in a way that didn’t have to mean students might want to leave the room.

Fizzles, Saturday, 17 October 2020 17:48 (three years ago) link

Yes, I think it will be more politically/socially significant than other recent terrorist attacks here, because it targets both French secularism (laïcité) and education, and the relation between the two. These are revolutionary topics, they're at the heart of the Republic.

All cars are bad (Euler), Saturday, 17 October 2020 18:05 (three years ago) link

My wife is quite shook. Her father, now retired, taught histoire-géo for many years at the collège level.

Quebec media outlets are strongly focused on the event, and it's worth noting that 'laïcité' is also highly valued here. A quick peek at Canadian newspapers reveals little to no coverage at all.

pomenitul, Saturday, 17 October 2020 18:39 (three years ago) link

That approach of telling Muslim children they could leave the room was so ham-fisted and divisive, even if you wouldn't expect the terrible outcome that happened - some kind of shit storm was guaranteed.

calzino, Saturday, 17 October 2020 18:53 (three years ago) link

so that's an extremely fucked up thing to say in context

it bangs for thee (Simon H.), Sunday, 18 October 2020 00:21 (three years ago) link

I was making a very serious point here, if you want say that is fucked up I don't really care tbh. You are currently the most tedious cunt on here and I've got zero respect for you.

calzino, Sunday, 18 October 2020 00:38 (three years ago) link

“some kind of shit storm” yep I guess so

sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Sunday, 18 October 2020 02:01 (three years ago) link

good thinking calz, nobody else had considered that aspect of the story

sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Sunday, 18 October 2020 02:02 (three years ago) link

you know very well I didn't mean some kind of deadly violence by "shitstorm" and I meant just controversy or cultural offence. but yeah go fuck yourself as well tbf- you are just as full of shit.

calzino, Sunday, 18 October 2020 02:14 (three years ago) link

was recently reading a book about The Raj that talked about the differences between French and British colonialilism. The French made more of an effort to asimilate their "subjects" into some sense of extended nationhood than the Brits. The shrunken dying remains of both these empires have problems it seems, yes. I won't take anything back I have posted on this thread, especially at the behest of a military flag fucker, serial apologist of US imperialism.

calzino, Sunday, 18 October 2020 02:23 (three years ago) link

Keep it up, tough guy, you’ve got us all dead to rights

sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Sunday, 18 October 2020 02:24 (three years ago) link

You’re literally the guy in the “if you run into assholes all day...” trope.

sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Sunday, 18 October 2020 02:27 (three years ago) link

I'm only talking to you here, so less of the "all". And as a mod it is in quite bad taste and poor form to take your personal beefs onto a thread like this.

calzino, Sunday, 18 October 2020 02:28 (three years ago) link

I have nothing personal against you. The way you consistently call other posters cunts with almost no provocation is not a personal beef.

sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Sunday, 18 October 2020 02:32 (three years ago) link

I should say “my problem with the way you call other posters etc etc”

sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Sunday, 18 October 2020 02:35 (three years ago) link

next some clueless showboating prick want's to call me "fucked up" I won't it as a provocataion, if i haven't had a few drinks. But if I do - well it's all part of the game i'm afraid!

calzino, Sunday, 18 October 2020 02:35 (three years ago) link

I'm very calm most of the time. But if I feel like I'm being wronged/misrepresented by some other prick I will stick up for myself.

calzino, Sunday, 18 October 2020 02:39 (three years ago) link

You can stick up for yourself without calling people names and cursing them out all the time. It’s a thing.

sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Sunday, 18 October 2020 02:45 (three years ago) link

I mean I absolutely do the same shit sometimes, I’m not innocent here. But blasting Simon as a “tedious cunt” right out the gate seemed a bit much, he was just taking issue with your phrasing.

sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Sunday, 18 October 2020 02:47 (three years ago) link

the manner in which you have just derailed this thread over personal beefs (and yes I am at fault myself as a mere fucked up poster as well). If I was a mod I would resign in discgrace. You fight fire with gasoline. If someone wants to criticise another poster in a quite arsey + lame fashion and not except some lively pushback on a saturday night, then fuck this board and it's shitty moderators tbh.

calzino, Sunday, 18 October 2020 03:15 (three years ago) link

this is about France right now, right? Euler, hope things are ok where you are

mh, Sunday, 18 October 2020 03:37 (three years ago) link

fwiw folks, if you feel you’re being detoured from the topic at hand when people are actually dying, by all means take it to another thread

mh, Sunday, 18 October 2020 03:38 (three years ago) link

as for the issue of allowing children who did not want their religious beliefs denied, allowing them to leave the room — this reminds me of a high school spanish language teacher who was very religious who showed us a movie that implied off-screen sex was going on, who thought it was a good film but decided not to continue it the next day because of a conflict of beliefs

any kids who didn’t want to watch for religious reasons likely already got the point. they’re very aware of what those cartoons entail, because it’s a part of being a muslim in france. I could see where it could be interpreted as “bully these students because they’re the bad muslims” but the articles make clear that was not the framing

mh, Sunday, 18 October 2020 03:47 (three years ago) link

I mean, ffs, there were kids whose parents opted out from the simplest sexual education when I was young and I have no idea who wasn’t in those class sessions, because who cares? This is just how parental and social controls in classes flush out, and it’s always awkward and there is no easy way to present material and start conversation without a minority opting out

mh, Sunday, 18 October 2020 03:51 (three years ago) link

I can’t remember anyone opting out from sex ed at my high school, including the more evangelical types.

santa clause four (suzy), Sunday, 18 October 2020 11:04 (three years ago) link

thanks mh. yeah, things are ok where I am. The attack was in a suburb of the city, whereas we live in the city proper. The suburbs are a different story, because while the government officially requires integration, in practice minorities are allowed to form their own subcommunities. Islamic immigrants are numerically the most important of these. In the case of the present murderer, a Chechen of a Muslim family, his mother was rarely seen outside the home, and was veiled when seen. The veil is a key issue in French life today, because it seems to contradict the liberty of women. In the clash between religious liberty and women's liberty, I think the Republic stands and will continue to stand more with women than with religious people. For instance, Macron banned homeschooling last week, in order to prevent Islamic separatists from continuing to have their children avoid French public school "indoctrination", but also to make sure that women are not forced to stay home to attend to their children. It does not surprise me that most of the discussion I've been involved in over the last few days has been with mothers who want to make sure that nothing like this happens again.

There are other fault lines exposed. One of the 10 people who is currently being held by the state in connection with the murder is a man, Abdelhakim Sefrioui, who has run a pro-Palestinian organization for some time (his organization is named after one of the founders of Hamas who was murdered by the Israeli military). Sefrioui is active in anti-Islamophobia and in anti-Semitism. He produced a video this week decrying the teacher who was murdered, a video that was widely distributed. The investigators are trying to determine if the murder was inspired by the video.

All cars are bad (Euler), Sunday, 18 October 2020 12:27 (three years ago) link

Paywall warning, but this is a good summary (in French) of the timeline leading up to the murder:

https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2020/10/18/attentat-de-conflans-comment-un-incident-mineur-est-devenu-hors-de-controle_6056460_3224.html

pomenitul, Sunday, 18 October 2020 12:42 (three years ago) link

Yes, that's a terrific article.

All cars are bad (Euler), Sunday, 18 October 2020 12:43 (three years ago) link

Tbh, the way that Islam and its adherents are racialized in the West makes any attempt by the West to curb Islam a racial attack, IMHO, even if it isn't meant to be.

healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Sunday, 18 October 2020 16:37 (three years ago) link

And I write that as someone who both finds religiosity more than a little unpalatable AND has worked at an Islamic burial ground, digging graves and helping with services.

healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Sunday, 18 October 2020 16:38 (three years ago) link

Is the exercise of the right to liberty of expression against a religion, an attempt to curb that religion, in your view?

All cars are bad (Euler), Sunday, 18 October 2020 17:09 (three years ago) link

prevent Islamic separatists from continuing to have their children avoid French public school "indoctrination"

Teaching the equality of women and the political beliefs of the Enlightenment as social norms is a form of indoctrination. Having grown up in a society that accepted these norms, I find them to be beneficial doctrines.

It is a thorny problem to settle the question of how much of a foreign culture and its norms immigrants are able to retain, when those norms contradict the norms of the host society. There is an inherent friction there that cannot be remedied, but only managed to some degree. Ghettoizing immigrant cultures has been one traditional answer to this problem, but it brings a raft of new problems with it. Assimilation is the other obvious path, but not all immigrant communities can accept assimilation, because it entails the loss of their core identity and is as unthinkable as self-mutilation or suicide.

Good luck, France.

the unappreciated charisma of cows (Aimless), Sunday, 18 October 2020 19:05 (three years ago) link

Euler, since adherents of Islam are racialized in the West, much of what amounts to freedom of expression against Islam amounts to vile racism, in my opinion, and should be sanctioned. The West and not the adherents of Islam made it about race, so either the West continues to racially persecute Muslims via denying religious expression, or the West owns up to the racial element of its denial of religious expression and makes it clear that it's about freedom from religion, not race. I'm not counting on the latter happening.

healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Sunday, 18 October 2020 20:20 (three years ago) link

Right, so you are against the liberty of expression against Islam, but not necessarily other religions. I’m just trying to get your view right, so correct me if I’m mistaken.

All cars are bad (Euler), Sunday, 18 October 2020 20:53 (three years ago) link

There's been a lot of bullshit posted on this thread, over an attack that really sickened me (my sister is a teacher), and I just want to address this specific point and go:

The veil is a key issue in French life today, because it seems to contradict the liberty of women. In the clash between religious liberty and women's liberty, I think the Republic stands and will continue to stand more with women than with religious people. For instance, Macron banned homeschooling last week, in order to prevent Islamic separatists from continuing to have their children avoid French public school "indoctrination", but also to make sure that women are not forced to stay home to attend to their children. It does not surprise me that most of the discussion I've been involved in over the last few days has been with mothers who want to make sure that nothing like this happens again.

Oh well of course no women are religious, nor are they capable of thinking for themselves. Amazing how acceptable it seems to be to paint such a big group of people as these thoughtless drones.

When I lived in London, I would occasionally see veiled women, and it was something really new to me, and I won't lie, I understand why people find it a bit offputting. I started going to a pharmacy near where I lived, where occasionally the pharmacist was a veiled woman (this in itself was very unusual as iirc veiling is far more common among Arab women in London and I was in the Kurdish/Turkish bit of town where you almost never see it), and that made me think about it a lot. Pharmacists are extremely highly qualified, she was hardly some little woman sitting in the corner afraid to speak or leave the house. If she wanted to wear a veil, if doing so made it more easy for her to do her job, how was it my problem to say otherwise? (Frankly, I started buying all my embarrassing stuff from that pharmacy cos if she was laughing at me, I didn't know, lol). The attitude of why-do-women-wear-veils is very strange and has definite misogynistic overtones to me; the demand that one should be entitled to see a woman's face or body is at the root of a lot of attitudes to it. And the hijab ban is even worse, for God's sake, it's a hair covering. Nuns used to cover their hair! I thought that decision was one of the worst, because it's explicitly saying, you're not welcome if you do this, you're not one of us and you never could be.

Laicité originated with the state's need to strip power from the Catholic Church, and I can fully understand the strength of the French attachment to it, having been raised in a country where the health and education systems were run by the Church, where you couldn't get divorced til 1996. But I do very much still - still! - consider myself a Catholic despite all that, and so I think I have some insight into how fucked the Church/state relationship can be, and then when I think of things like the hijab ban, I think of what Riz Ahmed said a few years back about 9/11:

Ahmed was 18 years old on 9/11, and he saw it change everything for his community. “In the ’80s we were called black, at least politically black,” he says. “In the ’90s we were ‘Pakis.’ But after 9/11, suddenly we were Muslims.” It did not surprise him that hatred toward Asian immigrants spiked after the attacks, but what happened among his friends and family did surprise him. “What you start getting is this rising conservatism of the Muslim community in Britain. People’s parents used to watch Zee TV” — an Indian entertainment channel — “now they’re watching Islam Channel. I saw so many people who used to be D.J.s, rude boys. They chopped up their vinyl, grew beards. So you had the retreat of British Muslims from culture post-9/11. Because people all have to pick a side.”

How is something like this not pushing French Muslims to do the same, to pick a side? You say they're not allowed in public schools or buildings if they wear a headscarf, how is that not forcing people who would like to belong into a conflict they didn't choose to be in? And for that matter, a French Muslim woman wearing a headscarf in public, wearing the veil in public, is not being submissive, she's being defiant - of the state's ability to tell her what she can and can't wear. If a religious woman wants to cover her hair but the state forbids it, how is that not taking her liberty from her?

Laicité was designed for the Catholic Church, to be a wrench from centuries of influence and control. Its use to prohibit minority religious communities from freely practicing their religion in public is inappropriate in my view, and let's be honest - tons of people with no interest in any women's rights or freedoms are very happy to use it against French Muslims. If you look at just the headscarf ban in isolation, it's saying to girls and women and their families that they have to pick a side, and if they pick the wrong one then they're choosing society's margins. How can that be freedom? Freedom for who, exactly? If Muslim children aren't attending public schools because of the law, where are they going? Private Muslim schools or homeschooling, for example. What's that doing for integration?

Also, I have searched and searched for a piece where a teacher was talking to Muslim students about the history and context for laicité and its cultural importance, but I can't find it.

I just find it utterly confounding to look at France's approach over the past few decades and think that it's working. I can't pretend I have any answers but I do want people to read and consider that Riz Ahmed quote.

seumas milm (gyac), Sunday, 18 October 2020 21:06 (three years ago) link

gyac, judith butler wrote about this dynamic particularly well imo:

In this context, I want to point to a few sites of political debate involving both sexual politics and anti‐Islamic practice that suggest that certain ideas of the progress of ‘freedom’ facilitate a political division between progressive sexual politics and the struggle against racism and the discrimination against religious minorities. One of the issues that follows from such a reconstellation is that a certain version and deployment of ‘freedom’ can be used as an instrument of bigotry and coercion. This happens most frightfully when women's sexual freedom or the freedom of expression and association for lesbian and gay people is invoked instrumentally to wage cultural assaults on Islam that reaffirm US sovereign violence. Must we rethink freedom and its implication in the narrative of progress, or must we resituate? My point is surely not to abandon freedom as a norm, but to ask about its uses, and to consider how it must be rethought if it is to resist its coercive instrumentalization in the present and have another meaning that might remain useful for a radical democratic politics.

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1468-4446.2007.00176.x

budo jeru, Sunday, 18 October 2020 21:14 (three years ago) link

Thank you, that’s really interesting, I’ll have to check out her writing on that. :)

seumas milm (gyac), Sunday, 18 October 2020 21:20 (three years ago) link

There’s a lot to respond in your post, gyac, but I’ll stick with just a couple of things. One, the veil ban is against all religious symbols in public institutions like schools, not in the streets generally. If you come to my neighborhood you’ll see the streets full of headscarved women, and a few neighborhoods over, many men in kippah. They just have to take them off in public school and the mairie. Two, this isn’t why so many Muslim children in France have not been inscribed in public school: rather, it’s because their parents want their children taught Koranic Arabic and rather little else. Laïcité was not established just to have another religious take a protected place in French life.

All cars are bad (Euler), Sunday, 18 October 2020 21:22 (three years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.