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by Soeren Kern • November 10, 2017
at 5:00 am
- Article 57 of the
French Civil Code states that the name chosen by parents must be
in "the best interests of the child." If the public
prosecutor thinks the name "Jihad" is contrary to the
law, he can ask a judge to order the name to be changed. If the
parents are unable or unwilling to choose a new name, the judge
has the right to choose a name.
- Of the 1,900 French
jihadists fighting with the Islamic State, as many as one-fifth
have received as much as €500,000 ($580,000) in social welfare
payments from the French state, according to Le Figaro.
- Henda Ayari, in an
interview with Le Parisien, gave detailed public testimony
accusing Tariq Ramadan of sexually assaulting her in Paris. She
said that Ramadan believes that "either you wear a veil or
you get raped."

France
recently announced that it will maintain border checks with its
European neighbors until April 30, 2018, because of
"persistent" terror threats. France resumed passport checks
and other protective measures on borders after the November 2015
jihadist attacks in Paris. Pictured: French border and customs police
control vehicles at the France-Italy border. (Photo by Murielle
Gander Cransac/Getty Images)
October 1. A 29-year-old illegal immigrant from
Tunisia stabbed two women to death at the central train station in Marseille.
Witnesses heard the assailant shout "Allahu Akbar" as he
lunged at the women with a 20-centimetre (eight-inch) knife before
threatening soldiers, who shot him dead. The man, identified as Ahmed
Hanachi, was using seven different identities and had a long criminal
history. He had been arrested in Lyon for shoplifting just days
before the attack, but those charges were dropped due to a lack
evidence. He was released, despite not having the documents needed to
live in France. Why he was never deported remains unclear.
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