US envoy airs concerns as France targets Muslims

"There can be constructive engagements that I think can be helpful and not harmful. When you get heavy-handed, the situation can get worse," Ambassador Sam Brownback said.

French President Emmanuel Macron looks on as he visits the IMAGINE Institute at the Necker Hospital in Paris on Friday, December 4, 2020.
AP

French President Emmanuel Macron looks on as he visits the IMAGINE Institute at the Necker Hospital in Paris on Friday, December 4, 2020.

The US envoy on international religious freedom has voiced serious concerns over France, warning against "heavy-handed" measures as President Emmanuel Macron targets Muslims in the country.

"I am concerned, obviously, for what's happening in France," Ambassador Sam Brownback told reporters when asked about Macron's initiative.

"There can be constructive engagements that I think can be helpful and not harmful. When you get heavy-handed, the situation can get worse."

Macron has ordered a crackdown on 'extremism' amid shock in France over the October 16 killing of a teacher who showed pupils caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed that are offensive to Muslims, and the stabbing deaths of three people in a church in Nice on October 29.

Under the initiative, France – which is avowedly secular and home to Europe's largest Muslim community – will shut down mosques if they are found during inspections by authorities to be promoting 'extremism.'

Brownback condemned violent expression of religion but said: "If you're peacefully practicing your faith, you're entitled to practice that faith."

"We think that countries do best when they work with religious leaders on identifying concerns and problem areas and not get into disagreements with religious groups," Brownback said.

"They have their fundamental religious freedom rights and those need to be honored and protected by the government."

READ MORE: More outrage over Macron's anti-Islam comments

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Clashing visions of secularism 

Macron's efforts have triggered protests in several Muslim-majority countries, and has also been condemned by world leaders.

Macron says he's been upset by the tone of media in the English-speaking world, after being questioned by the New York Times on his extreme stance. He claimed that journalists fail to understand the French pillar of "laicite," a hard-line form of secularism.

"When I see them legitimising this violence, and saying that the heart of the problem is that France is racist and Islamophobic, then I say the founding principles have been lost," Macron told The New York Times last month as he took issue with its coverage.

The New York Times in a recent editorial rejected the notion that it in any way justified terrorism and noted that French media have not spared the United States from critical reporting.

The media have a "function and duty to ask questions about the roots of racism, ethnic anger and the spread of Islamism among Western Muslims, and to critique the effectiveness and impact of government policies," it said.

The United States is also secular but emphasises the freedom to practice faith rather than curbs on the role of religion.

Brownback, a former senator widely respected by human rights advocates, had led the religious freedom diplomacy and been outspoken in defending the rights of Muslims, including in China's Xinjiang region where an estimated million-plus people are incarcerated.

Brownback was speaking as he rolled out annual State Department designations of "Countries of Particular Concern" on religious freedom, with Nigeria added for the first time.

Other nations on the list are China, Eritrea, Iran, Myanmar, North Korea, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan.

READ MORE: Emmanuel Macron’s Islamophobia and the boomerang effect

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