Society's Child
At least 15,000 people in France are thought to pose a terror threat and are under the surveillance of the security services, French newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche reported on Saturday.
The suspects have been placed on France's FSPRT database of individuals suspected of involvement in terrorism or radicalization, created in March 2015. The database is managed by France's UCLAT unit for the co-ordination of the fight against terrorism.
Around 2,500 terror suspects and radicals are under surveillance without any further action taken against them, and over 2,000 of those on the list are known to be members of a terrorist network. About 4,000 of those on the list are considered high-risk and are being watched by France's General Directorate for Internal Security intelligence agency.

Days after Hurricane Matthew struck Haiti, a mother sought shelter Saturday in Les Cayes.
But the loss here runs deeper. The local hospital has registered 13 deaths since Hurricane Matthew flung 145-mile-per-hour winds and a wall of water at Port-Salut, but many more have died without so much as an official word.
Comment: Nearly 900 killed and 350,000 in need of urgent aid in hurricane-stricken Haiti (VIDEOS)
Update: The death toll has passed 1000, and the authorities are resorting to mass graves to bury all the dead. At least 13 have died in a cholera outbreak in Matthew's aftermath.
There are currently "340 people prosecuted [in France] on charges related to terrorism" in French prisons, French Justice Minister Jean-Jacques Urvoas said in an interview with Europe 1 radio on Sunday.
However, he said that didn't include those who have become radicalized in prison.
"There are people who have been imprisoned, according to common criminal law, and then became radicalized in prison.... Now I can tell you a figure with high degree of accuracy - 1,300 people."
This pro-Al-Qaeda position was news, however, to America's military personnel in that region.
Now the man has filed a federal lawsuit alleging excessive force and unnecessary escalation of the incident.
Guadalupe and Juan Martinez, both in their 70s, lost track of each other on their scooters in a Buda, Texas Walmart on October 3, 2014.
Guadalupe, searching for her husband, briefly exited the store with the items she intended to later purchase still in the basket of her scooter.
But a Walmart employee saw her leave the store, assumed Guadalupe was shoplifting, detained her, and summoned Buda police to the scene.

Israeli police and emergency personnel stand next to a car covered with bullet holes after Israeli police killed an Arab assailant who fired from the car wounding several people in Jerusalem.
The attacker escaped and headed to the tomb of the Hebrew prophet Samuel, 1.3 kilometers north of Jerusalem's Ramot neighborhood. Police officers were later able to "neutralize" the attacker, police said. "When the terrorist spotted the police he fired at them, and they managed to shoot and kill him," a police spokeswoman said, as cited by Reuters. Police spokeswoman Luba Samri said that the attacker has been identified as a 39-year-old man from the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan.
Two victims, a 60-year-old woman and a 30-year-old police officer, died in hospital following the attack, Haaretz reported. The injured victims were taken to Hadassah Hospital Mt. Scopus, the hospital said, as cited by the Times of Israel. The attacker was due to start a four-month jail sentence next week for assaulting a police officer, a spokeswoman for Israel's Prisons Service said, as cited by Reuters.
Hamas has claimed responsibility for the attack. According to the organization's spokesman, the attack was "a natural reaction" to the occupation "against our people."
Comment: All attacks are terrorist unless perpetrated by an Israeli. Should Israel be surprised that Arabs have negative reactions to illegal occupation and unwarranted use of deadly force?
The landowner was told by the organizers his farm was needed to host a gathering to raise money for the British charity Help for Heroes, which supports servicemen and women that have been injured in the line of duty. However, the event was actually held to commemorate the 23rd anniversary of the death of white supremacist Ian Stuart Donaldson who founded the extremist group "Blood and Honor," which is banned in numerous countries, but not in England. Police reportedly let the event go ahead despite knowing there was a "possible right-wing element."
The farmer, who rented out his five-acre field to the group and does not want to be named, told the Daily Mail: "I was told it was a private party with music. It was to commemorate somebody that had died and to raise money for Help for Heroes. It was logged with the police and council. Somebody from the police came out and spoke to us. We own the field next door to the farm. We put fencing up, nobody could come up to the farm. There was no trouble, we could hear the music but not much else. The police certainly didn't come. When we found out what it was, we did not take any money for it. We won't be renting the field out to anybody again."
Comment: Police must be deemed complicit in the duping of this farmer, since they were aware that this 'fundraiser' was a cloak for the right-wing Neo Nazi extremists. It doesn't matter that nothing dastardly or nefarious happened. It was both 'bait and switch' and a blatant illegal use of another organization's identity.
Rabbi Mendel Deitsch, a longtime emissary of Chabad-Lubavitch, a prominent Jewish Orthodox organization, was delivered to an Israeli hospital on Saturday after he was found bleeding and unconscious in the western city of Zhitomir on Friday, the group said on its website. The attack took place near Zhitomir's central station and involved a knife attack and robbery, according to local media, citing Ukrainian police.
Deitsch, an Israeli-French national, was first taken to a local hospital with serious head injuries, where he underwent emergency surgery, but then his family arranged for him to be airlifted to Israel through the Israeli consulate in Kiev.
Chabad added that the rabbi's condition remains life-threatening, saying that it was too early to speculate as to whether anti-Semitism was behind the crime. "It should be noted that this is an unusual case that does not in any way reflect on the community in Ukraine," said Rabbi Shlomo Wilhelm, director of Chabad-Lubavitch of Zhitomir. "Apparently, this is not a case of anti-Semitism. Rabbi Deutsch was attacked and beaten while being robbed," he continued.
Comment: Notice how this almost-deadly incident in Ukraine was not immediately labeled a terrorist attack and anti-Semitism -- in contrast to any actions attributed to Palestinians, even rock throwing by young boys.

Pakistani soldiers stand near a train at the site of two explosions in the town of Mach, 55 kilometers east of Balochistan's provincial capital Quetta.
The attack, claimed by the separatist Baloch Liberation Army, came as the Rawalpindi-bound Jaffer Express was passing the town of Much, 55 kilometers east of Balochistan's provincial capital Quetta.
"We have rushed the rescue teams to the accident site," said provincial Home Secretary Akbar Harifal, who added that the identity of the passengers was not immediately clear.
A spokesman for the Baloch Liberation Army said the attack had targeted "military personnel who travel to Rawalpindi by this train."
Comment: As the Kashmir conflict between India and Pakistan heats up, so is the fracture point of Balochistan. As predicted:
- India-Pakistan fracture points: Balochistan is not Bangladesh
- Bringing the New Cold War to South Asia: India splits up SAARC
- Offensive Defence: Balochistan is now officially an arrow in India's quiver against Pakistan

In another case, the Amro family also had their home destroyed. Three generations were made homeless.
Samer Idkik said that he demolished two rooms comprising 30 square meters which he built two and a half years ago, adding that they were being used as bedrooms for his children.
"I added the two rooms to the main house because my wife, our three children, and I used to live in only one room. Israeli municipality crews escorted by Israeli forces raided my house four months ago and delivered a demolition notice for the two rooms. The Israeli court ordered to postpone the demolition so I can demolish it by myself to avoid the demolition fees.
"Idkik is among many Palestinian residents of occupied East Jerusalem who are forced to demolish their own homes in order to avoid paying costly municipality demolition fees.
Comment: So Israel destroys a family's home and charges them for it. How sick and twisted is that?
Comment: This is the "country" the U.S. tax payers just provided with a $38 BILLION dollar "aid" package.











Comment: Have the French authorities ever given thought to the fact that all this surveillance (as opposed to getting to the real roots of terrorism), may in fact be exacerbating the problem? Well, at least one has. A little bit. Justice minister claims 1,300 French prisoners became radicalized while in jail