
Amnesty International warned on Tuesday that laws designed to fight terrorism in a number of European Union countries discriminate against Muslims and refugees and threaten their rights, and the human rights group has sounded the alarm due to security measures adopted by 14 countries in the European Union. Over the past two years, members include expanding surveillance powers.
These actions coincided with the attacks that were mostly built by the Islamic State that killed nearly 280 people in France, Belgium and Germany, the attacks raised immigration tensions, increased the popularity of right-wing parties and made security a major topic in the French language for the upcoming Dutch and Dutch elections. Fear and isolation An anti-terrorism expert at the Julia Hall of Artificial Intelligence, who wrote the report, said, "Across the European Union's regional scope, equality between Muslims and foreign terrorists is seen. This view has a typical disproportionate impact on these societies, leading to a high degree of fear and alienation," and she warned That the control measures, search powers, arrest and detention, which I described as "harsh", such as those used in France since November 2015, when they killed 130 people, could be misused to target militants or members of minorities who did not pose any real security threat Protects. She criticized the draft European Union law to be adopted this year, and aims to punish people for traveling or planning to travel to join the terrorist group, saying that the drafting of the law is clear and loose. A European Commission spokeswoman refused to criticize Amnesty International, saying that the European Union would be wary of any possible violations of the use of such laws in the 28 member states. European Union Security Commissioner Julian King endorsed Amnesty International's report in part rather than jeopardizing fundamental rights. "This is what the terrorists attacked," he wrote on his Twitter site. The Amnesty International report said that new measures to curb verbal support or find a justification for terrorism reduce freedom of expression. He added that a third of the trials in France in 2015 for defending terrorism and the total number exceeded 380 were minors, and Amnesty International condemned the report using curfews, travel restrictions and police checks to monitor individuals who did not. They were convicted of any crime, and they usually do not know what they are accused of, and the report added that the declaration of a state of emergency in France and extended five times since the November 2015 attacks in Paris has become a "new familiar situation" that allows the authorities to ban demonstrations and conduct searches without prior permission. Hungary, the country's currently declared state of emergency allows the authorities to ban any public gatherings and significantly restrict freedom of movement and allow them to freeze assets, according to the organization. He criticized what she described as "the government's attention to someone and saying it seems too suspicious to me to believe your actions, because I think you may have committed a crime."

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