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French police arrest 10 in crackdown on radicals

PARIS (AP) — French

police rounded up 10 people in their second country-wide sweep in several days Wednesday, leading to criticism that President

Nicolas Sarkozy is ramping up raids to win votes in a tight election.

The arrests are part of a high-profile crackdown on radical Islamists in the

wake of attacks on soldiers and a Jewish school. They were carried out as part of a preliminary investigation opened Monday

into terror-linked activity in France, a judicial official said.

Another official close to the investigation said the

10 were suspected of links to Islamist websites and of threatening violence in online forums. Some of them may have been

trying to attend jihadist training camps along the Afghan-Pakistan border, he added.

Both officials spoke on condition

of anonymity, citing policy. The operation was led by France’s counterespionage agency, DCRI, and targeted people

authorities feared could turn to action, instead of just issuing idle threats, according to the judicial official. Police

seized computer hardware in the raids.

The raids in five cities, mostly in southern France, were the second in several

days and appeared to be part of a new focus on rooting out radical Islamists in France. Sarkozy, who is facing a tough

re-election, has promised to hunt down radicals and hold them to account or kick them out of the country. But he has come

under criticism for using the raids and expulsions to further his campaign and for not doing enough to prevent the killing

spree last month in and around Toulouse that left seven dead.

On Tuesday, preliminary charges were filed against 13

people who were picked up in a sweep last week, all members of a banned group, Forsane Alizza, or Knights of Pride. Nine of

them were jailed. The four others were released but must report to officials.

Some of those charged were reportedly

calling for Muslim Sharia law to be implemented in France. The second official emphasized that those arrested Wednesday were

not linked to Forsane Alizza or to the Toulouse attacks.

The raids represent the increased focus in France on

homegrown radicals. Last month’s attacks on French paratroopers and the Jewish school have been blamed on Mohamed Merah, a

23-year-old Frenchman of Algerian origin who claimed to have received weapons training during trips to Afghanistan and

Pakistan.

France expelled a foreign radical imam and a radical Islamist militant earlier this week, sending them to

their homelands. Others are in line to be forced out of France. Sarkozy on Tuesday declared a “zero tolerance” policy for

hate speech and radical ideologies at odds with French values and for those who use their role as preachers to do

so.

His administration and police came under criticism after the Toulouse killing spree for not stopping the

perpetrator sooner since they knew he traveled to Afghanistan and the Pakistani tribal area of Waziristan.

Police had

Merah under surveillance after his return, but officials have said they couldn’t arrest him. In light of the criticism, a

parliamentary delegation held a hearing Wednesday on the role and organization of France’s intelligence forces.

The

delegation’s work is considered top secret and an unusual news conference scheduled to follow the hearing was abruptly

canceled. Sarkozy’s opponents have also criticized the timing of the recent high-profile operations against suspected

radicals.

Francois Hollande, who is leading most polls in the April and May elections, said the president was trying

to make up for earlier intelligence failures. “What’s surprising is why do this after a terrorist attack that has, it’s

true, profoundly affected us,” Hollande said on RTL radio, reacting to Wednesday’s raids. “I’m not questioning all that’s

being done. I’m simply saying that we should have maybe done more before.”

Interior Minister Claude Gueant responded

to the barbs by saying that the raids would continue whenever there was sufficient evidence — and that it was the judiciary

that was driving these investigations.

“The pressure on radical Islamists and the threat they pose will not let up,”

he told iTele news channel.

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