The Washington Post reports:
Hollande is expected to put forward a bill this week to extend a state of emergency for three months, enhancing police power to restrict freedom of movement and gatherings at public places.
At Versailles, he also proposed constitutional changes that would allow authorities to withdraw French citizenship from people with dual nationality, even if they were born in France, and to prevent French terrorism suspects from returning to France.
(Emphasis added.)
I feel this would be unproductive; among the problems Europe has long faced is that the children and even grandchildren of immigrants feel unwelcome in the nations of their birth: I understand there are some European countries in which birth does not convey citizenship. President Hollande's proposal would dramatically exacerbate the problem and so give rise to further terrorism.
(Score: 2) by NCommander on Thursday November 19 2015, @01:25AM
Was there confirmation that the attackers were Algerian? I didn't see that on the BBC.
To be frank, a good chunk of Europe that had a navy participated in what was known as the Great Game of carving up the rest of the world into various colonial holdings. The British empire more or less broke apart after World War II. As far as I can remember from history, France still holds considerable sway from her formal holdings, such as both franc currencies used in Africa being pinned to the French Franc, and then later the Euro.
Still always moving
(Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Thursday November 19 2015, @11:28AM
I used Algeria as shorthand for 'colonial past coming home to roost.' But Syria was also under French occupation.
Washington DC delenda est.