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EU leaders scrutinized over anti-terror efforts

Reporter: Elena Casas 丨 CCTV.com

07-30-2016 17:32 BJT

After reports revealed that both men responsible for killing a Catholic priest in Normandy were on a terrorism watch list, the French government is coming under increasing pressure to change its policies towards suspected terrorists. Right wing opponents are calling for much harsher measures - while Germany's chancellor, Angela Merkel also faces growing calls to change her open-arms stance towards Syrian refugees -- after a series of terrorist attacks on German soil.

Hundreds of people, of all faiths and none, came to Notre Dame cathedral to pay tribute to the life of Father Jacques Hamel - brutally murdered in his own church on Tuesday by two teenagers claiming they were acting in the name of ISIL.
But in politics, there's been less solidarity as opposition figures savage the government for its supposed laxism - after it turned out both attackers were already on the terrorism watch list.

"I ask the government to implement all the proposals that we presented months ago, without delay. We cannot waste any more time," said Nicolas Sarkozy, French Republicn Party.

Sarkozy wants every person on the terrorism watch list to be electronically tagged - but there are just too many of them for the already stretched police to monitor.

European officials insist they have learnt from mistakes made before the Paris attacks last November and those here in Brussels in March - and improved intelligence gathering and sharing. But there are over 10 000 people on the terrorism watch list in France alone - of whom about 6000 have returned from Syria and Iraq - meaning deciding who is dangerous enough to be watched around the clock often comes down to informed guesswork.

One of the Normandy church killers had twice tried to travel to Syria - but he was released from prison in March on probation after convincing a judge he regretted it.

Experts say it's hard to prove where suspects have been in the Middle East, or what they've done there.

"Most of the time the only evidence we have is digital evidence - these guys were very narcissistic at the beginning of all this, putting pictures of themselves on Facebook, but now they're a bit more cautious. So digital evidence is critical, and that presents a challenge for us, because most of the time it's stored in a cloud somewhere in California," said Gilles De Kerchove, EU counter-terrorism coordinator.

It's not just the French government under pressure to change tack. Politicians on the German right have blamed Angela Merkel's refugee policy for a spate of four attacks there in a week - three of them carried out by refugees. Merkel is standing firm.

"Today I am just as convinced as I was last year that we can manage to cope with this historical test. We can manage it, and we have already done a lot in the past 11 months," Angela Merkel said.

Germany remains on edge though - anti-terror squads searched a mosque and eight apartments near Hanover on Thursday.

Back in a France in mourning once again, much of the media has decided to stop publishing photos of terror suspects - and some will no longer even use their names - in a bid to deny the killers the fame they seek.

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