French journalist under police protection after documentary on radical Islam

French journalist, 34, is given police guard over her report on radical Islam in town where shops sell FACELESS DOLLS, restaurant has cubicles for women to eat and Muslim who spoke out was threatened with beheading

Ophélie Meunier fronted French documentary which aired this month exposing the influence of hardline Islamic views on a town in the north of the country Meunier and Amine Elbahi, a local Muslim who spoke out against radicalism, exposed toy shop selling faceless dolls to comply with strict view of Islam  They also found restaurant with cubicles for women to eat separate from men, and association given £53,000 grant it used to spread Islamist teachings Pair have since received death threats, and are now under police protection 



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A French journalist has been given police protection after fronting a documentary about the impact of radical Islam on a poor town in the north of the country. 

Ophélie Meunier, 34, has received death threats in the wake of documentary Zone Interdite – or ‘Restricted Zone – that aired in France on January 23 looking at the influence of hardline Islamic views in the town of Roubaix, on the Belgian border.  

Meunier found a restaurant where women are given cubicles to eat away from men, and a toy shop selling faceless dolls to comply with strict interpretations of Islam that forbid depicting facial features.

She also spoke to Amine Elbahi, 26, a Muslim lawyer from Roubaix who helped expose an educational institution that received £53,000 of public money to teach poor children, but was accused of spreading Islamic teachings instead.

Elbahi spoke out against the influence of radical Islam in the film, and has now been branded an ‘infidel’ and threatened with beheading. He is also under police guard. 

News that the pair have been threatened has caused outcry in France, where many feel the secularism on which the modern-day republic was founded is under threat from religious ideologies brought in by overseas migrants. 

Ophélie Meunier, 34, a French journalist, has received death threats after producing a documentary exposing the influence of radical Islam on a northern French town

The documentary uncovered a toy shop in  Roubaix selling faceless dolls, 

Bernard Rougier, pictured, professor of Arab civilization and society at Sorbonne Paris III University, a specialist in radical Islam, says that the faceless dolls and teddy-bears are an introduction of an ideological principle into the world of childhood

Emmanuel Macron, a centrist who is gearing up to fight a presidential election in April where he is likely to face off against a right-wing challenger, has been accused of being soft on immigration and of failing to defend French values.

Eric Zemmour, a far-right commentator and Macron rival who has twice been convicted of hate crimes for statements about Islam, was quick to align himself with Meunier after it emerged she had been threatened. 

‘Ophélie Meunier is in mortal danger,’ he tweeted on Saturday, as the documentary began garnering widespread attention.

Amine Elbahi, 26, a Muslim lawyer from Roubaix who spoke out in the film, has also been threatened with beheading

‘This is what happens when you show the French the Islamization of our country. Millions of patriots thank her for her courage.’ 

Valerie Pecresse, another right-wing challenger to Macron, tweeted: ‘Full support for ⁦Ophélie Meunier⁩ threatened and placed under protection after the courageous investigation on Islamism.’

In a clip shared on Zone Interdite’s official Twitter page ahead of the release of the full documentary, specialist in radical Islam Professor Bernard Rougier holds the faceless dolls and teddy-bears as he explains: ‘It’s a way to show that from childhood, you will be a better Muslim than others, and implies, others are not good or true Muslims.

‘And so it is the introduction of an ideological principle into the world of childhood… in that sense it is quite worrying, yes.’ 

The hidden-camera footage shows the undercover reporter going into the shops selling the dolls, which also offer books with the same imagery.

A Muslim lawyer from Roubaix, Amine Elbahi, who spoke out about radical Islam in the programme, has also been placed under police protection after saying he was threatened with decapitation. 

Mr Elbahi, 26, appears in several sequences of Zone Interdite – translating to Restricted Zone – which aired on the private French TV channel M6.

He has told French news channel BMFTV that his phone number circulated on social media, and ‘several murder calls were broadcast’.

‘I am threatened with beheading, slitting, attacking me because I held a speech of truth with my face uncovered, and in particular on the inaction of the mayor of my commune’, he said.   

‘What I said upset people. Given the threats I am receiving my aim must have been right.’

The toy stores in Roubaix also had ‘Hamza teddy bears’ on offer, which did not have any facial features, amongst other toys which follow the Islamic ruling which forbids the depiction of facial features of any kind

Books for sale in the toy shop in Roubaix included titles such as ‘who is Allah?’ and ‘Zayd, the little prince’ which also featured faceless depictions of human characters

A restaurant in Roubaix is seen with booth shielded by curtains, so that female diners could eat away from the eyes of men

The restaurant where the booths were uncovered has since been closed for ‘health and safety reasons’, local officials say

À Roubaix, certains magasins de jouets vendent des poupées sans visage afin de respecter une version ultra-radicale de l’Islam qui interdit la représentation des êtres humains.
📺 #ZoneInterdite, « Face au danger de l’Islam radical, les réponses de l’État » dimanche à 21.10 pic.twitter.com/r0EtyqeYUA

— M6 (@M6) January 21, 2022

Why do hardline Islamists forbid depictions of people? 

The Quran, Islam’s holy book, forbids idolatry – the worship of anyone or anything other than the one God, which Muslims believe to be Allah.

Meanwhile Hadith – the teachings, actions, and received beliefs of the Prophet Mohammed – prohibit the depiction of humans and, depending on interpretation, other living beings.

Traditionally, this has been justified on the basis that depictions of humans could easily become idols.

This is why depictions of prominent religious figures – such as Mohammed and other prophets – are expressly forbidden, with many observant Muslims adhering to this rule. 

For example, widespread protests broke out in predominantly Muslim countries after it emerged French teacher Samuel Paty – who was subsequently beheaded – had shown cartoons of Mohammed to his pupils. 

But interpretations of Hadith and what exactly constitutes a depiction likely to attract worship vary widely between different branches of Islam and between scholars and clerics.

The most hardline interpretations teach that any depictions of humans are haram – or forbidden.

In Afghanistan, clerics recently declared shop mannequins to be haram and ordered that they be beheaded so as to remove the faces.

And during ISIS’s 2014 conquest of vast areas of Syria and Iraq, fighters were often seen defacing religious monuments of other Islamic sects which they believed to be idolatrous. 

But others take a more-relaxed view. 

Shia Muslims, who ISIS and other extremists view as apostates, sometimes depict Husayn – grandson of Mohammed – though not the prophet himself. 

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Mr Elbahi tipped off the criminal investigation into Roubaix-based ‘association’ featured in the programme by M6, Ambitions et Initiatives pour la Réussite (Ambitions and Initiatives for Success). 

His lawyer, Mr Jean Tamalet, says that Mr Elbahi received threats on social media, particularly on Twitter, but also texts, WhatsApp messages, and voice recordings.

In the threatening messages, he is described as ‘Kafir’, which translates to ‘nonbeliever’ or ‘infidel’ in Arabic.

‘Kafir’ has been a word used by supporters of ISIS, al-Qaeda, and other Islamic extremist groups, to refer to ‘Muslim and non-Muslim adversaries’ through ‘various propaganda materials’, according to the Counter Extremism Project

Lawyer Jean Tamalet told AFP: ‘He is told that he is going to be beheaded and slaughtered. We won’t let a single threat pass.

‘We will file a complaint against anyone threatening this gentleman.’

Three members of the charity association, which received the council payout of €64,640, accused by prosecutors as being used for offering Islamic education, are to appear in court alongside the mayor of Roubaix on Wednesday.

French legislation states that public bodies are prohibited from contributing to religious charities, a law which is designed to uphold the secular values and views of the state.

Mayor Guillaume Delbar, 50, is facing charges of breaking this law ‘by negligence’ when he gave the go-ahead for the association to receive funding, but he says he may have been tricked.

The three charity members are accused of breach of trust – which they deny. They say the association never offered religious lessons. 

Muriel Cuardrado, a lawyer for one of the members of the charity, said that the association had previously helped children from disadvantaged backgrounds to get the baccalauréat, the French national academic qualification pupils can get at the end of secondary school.

‘When I read in the press that this is a proselytising association, it gives me stomach cramps,’ she said. 

Mayor Delbar said he decided to get behind the association because it ‘developed a formidable programme of help for the educational success of Roubaix’s children’.

He continued: ‘I might have been tricked. I might have made a mistake. But the debate must not be manipulated by those who see separatists everywhere.’

Separatists is a term used by President Macron to condemn Muslims who he says are ‘dividing the nation’ by living in their own communities with their own rules and customs.  

The documentary was filmed in Roubaix, a poor town in northern France, where the Muslim population is proportionately one of the highest in the country

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