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Cordet reportedly told Muslims
leaders Paris came under intense pressures from the US and Britain
to sack the Muslim workers.
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PARIS — The expulsion of seasonal Muslim workers
from the Charles de Gaulle airport outside Paris over "security
concerns" came under pressures from American and British
authorities, sources told IslamOnlne.net.
A source with the Union of Muslim Organizations of
Saint Denis said Saint Denis Mayor Jean Francois Cordet had told
union's head Mohammed Hanish at an iftar banquet during the last days
of Ramadan about the pressures.
"He said the French government came under
intense pressures from the United States and Britain to sack the
Muslim workers," added the source, requesting anonymity because
of the sensitivity of the issue.
The seasonal Muslim workers were barred on October
21 from working at the airport after police withdrew their access
badges.
They lost their security clearances -- which
allowed them to work in airport customs zones -- because France's
Anti-terrorist Coordination Unit (UCLAT) said they posed "a risk
to the airport's security" or were simply deemed
"dangerous."
Cordet had sent notifications to the workers that
they need to establish their innocence from the charges.
The umbrella French Council for the Muslim Faith
(CFCM) has pledged to closely follow up the issue.
France has a sizable Muslim minority of six million
people, the largest Muslim minority in Europe.
Legal Proceedings
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The staff lost their security
clearances which allowed them to work in airport customs zones.
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The Movement Against Racism and for the Friendship
Among Peoples will sue Cordet for racial and religious discrimination.
The Islamophobia Coalition organization insists
that the workers were suspended because of their religious
backgrounds.
It said most of the suspended workers were asked
about their religion, prayers and Islamic rituals like hajj, the
annual pilgrimage to the holy city of Makkah in Saudi Arabia.
Some of them were also quizzed about their links to
Islamic groups in France and previous journeys to Pakistan and other
Muslim countries.
Security fears involving workers at the Charles de
Gaulle airport have been raised before, and a book claiming the
airport was infiltrated by "Islamic militants" stirred a
furor when it was published in April.
But anti-terrorist officials have cast doubts on
claims made in "The Mosques of Roissy," by right-wing French
politician Philippe de Villiers.
Villiers -- a presidential hopeful in next year's
elections – was accused of playing on public fears of Islamic
radicals to win votes.
In 2002, a French-Algerian airport baggage handler
was arrested when weapons and explosives were found in his car. Police
later said he had been the victim of a set up.