WikiLeaks demands answers after Google hands staff emails to US government

  • Search giant gave FBI emails and digital data belonging to three staffers
  • WikiLeaks told last month of warrants which were served in March 2012

Google HQGoogle took almost three years to disclose to the open information groupWikiLeaks that it had handed over emails and other digital data belonging to three of its staffers to the US government, under a secret search warrant issued by a federal judge.
WikiLeaks has written to Google’s executive chairman, Eric Schmidt, to protest that the search giant only revealed the warrants last month, having been served them in March 2012. In the letter, WikiLeaks says it is “astonished and disturbed” that Google waited more than two and a half years to notify its subscribers, potentially depriving them of their ability to protect their rights to “privacy, association and freedom from illegal searches”.
The letter, written by WikiLeaks’ New York-based lawyer, Michael Ratner of theCenter For Constitutional Rights, asks Google to list all the materials it provided to the FBI. Ratner also asks whether the California-based company did anything to challenge the warrants and whether it has received any further data demands it has yet to divulge.
Google revealed to WikiLeaks on Christmas Eve – a traditionally quiet news period – that it had responded to a Justice Department order to hand over a catch-all dragnet of digital data including all emails and IP addresses relating to the three staffers. The subjects of the warrants were the investigations editor of WikiLeaks, the British citizen Sarah Harrison; the spokesperson for the organisation, Kristinn Hrafnsson; and Joseph Farrell, one of its senior editors.
When it notified the WikiLeaks employees last month, Google said it had been unable to say anything about the warrants earlier as a gag order had been imposed. Google said the non-disclosure orders had subsequently been lifted, though it did not specify when.
Harrison, who also heads the Courage Foundation, told the Guardian she was distressed by the thought of government officials gaining access to her private emails. “Knowing that the FBI read the words I wrote to console my mother over a death in the family makes me feel sick,” she said.
She accused Google of helping the US government conceal “the invasion of privacy into a British journalist’s personal email address. Neither Google nor the US government are living up to their own laws or rhetoric in privacy or press protections”.
The court orders cast a data net so wide as to ensnare virtually all digital communications originating from or sent to the three. Google was told to hand over the contents of all their emails, including those sent and received, all draft correspondence and deleted emails. The source and destination addresses of each email, its date and time, and size and length were also included in the dragnet.
The FBI also demanded all records relating to the internet accounts used by the three, including telephone numbers and IP addresses, details of the time and duration of their online activities, and alternative email addresses. Even the credit card or bank account numbers associated with the accounts had to be revealed.
Alexander Abdo, a staff attorney and privacy expert at the American Civil Liberties Union, said the warrants were “shockingly broad” in their catch-all wording.
“This is basically ‘Hand over anything you’ve got on this person’,” he said. “That’s troubling as it’s hard to distinguish what WikiLeaks did in its disclosures from what major newspapers do every single day in speaking to government officials and publishing still-secret information.”
Google has not revealed precisely which documents it handed over by the deadline of April 2012. But it has told the three individuals that it provided “responsive documents pursuant to the Electronic Communications Privacy Act”.
Google told the Guardian it does not talk about individual cases, to “help protect all our users”. A spokesperson for the company said: “We follow the law like any other company.
“When we receive a subpoena or court order, we check to see if it meets both the letter and the spirit of the law before complying. And if it doesn’t we can object or ask that the request is narrowed. We have a track record of advocating on behalf of our users.”
The data grab is believed to be part of an ongoing criminal investigation into WikiLeaks that was launched in 2010 jointly by the US departments of Justice, Defense and State. The investigation followed WikiLeaks’ publication, initially in participation with international news organisations including the Guardian, of hundreds of thousands of US secrets that had been passed to the organisation by the army private Chelsea Manning.
The vast stash of leaked documents including embassy cables, war logs from Afghanistan and Iraq, and a video of an Apache helicopter attack that killed civilians in Baghdad.
The warrants were issued by a federal judge in the eastern district of Virginia – the jurisdiction in which a grand jury was set up under the criminal investigation into WikiLeaks. The investigation was confirmed to be still active and ongoing as recently as May last year.
Testimony given during the prosecution of Manning indicated that at least seven “founders, owners or managers or WikiLeaks” were put under the FBI spotlight in the wake of Manning’s disclosures. Manning was sentenced to 35 years in military prison for crimes related to the leaks and is currently being held in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
The WikiLeaks warrants cite alleged violations of the 1917 Espionage Act and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act – the same statutes used to prosecute Manning. The data seizures were approved by a federal magistrate judge, John Anderson, who a year later issued the arrest warrant for the former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.
Julian Assange, WikiLeaks’ founder and editor-in-chief, said the search warrants were part of a “serious, and seriously wrong attempt to build an alleged ‘conspiracy’ case against me and my staff”. He said that in his view the real conspiracy was “Google rolling over yet again to help the US government violate the constitution – by taking over journalists’ private emails in response to give-us-everything warrants”.
The FBI warrants will be presented to the United Nations human rights council in Geneva on Monday by the Spanish judge Baltasar Garzón, who is director of Assange’s defence team. Assange remains in asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy in London, facing extradition to Sweden following sexual assault and rape allegations that he denies and for which he has never been charged.
Google’s behaviour stands in stark contrast to Twitter, which has challenged similar US government demands. In its letter to the search giant, WikiLeaks notes that “Twitter challenged the government so it could notify its subscribers of the orders, and prevailed”.
In Twitter’s case, the Justice Department demanded access to the social-media accounts of Birgitta Jonsdottir, an Icelandic MP and former Wikileaks volunteer who was part of the team that released the secret Apache helicopter footage.
Twitter informed Jonsdottir that the US government had asked for access to her messages, allowing her to mount a legal campaign to stop them. In July 2012 an appeals court ruled against Jonsdottir and two other defendants, allowing the Justice Department to keep secret information about its attempts to obtain their information without a warrant.
All the major tech companies now disclose how many requests they receive from US authorities for users’ information but it is extremely rare for them to divulge specific targets of those investigations and in most cases they are limited in what they can disclose.
In the first six months of 2014, Google received close to 32,000 data requests from governments, an increase of 15% compared with the second half of 2013, and two-and-a-half times more than when Google first started publishing it’s semi-annual Transparency Report, in 2009.

Malaysia Airlines website hacked by 'Lizard Squad'

The image of a Lizard in a top hat replaced the Malaysia Airlines official portalGroup claiming to represent the ‘Cyber Caliphate’ posts phrase ‘Plane Not Found’ on MH370 airline’s portal


The Malaysia Airlines website was commandeered on Monday by hackers who referenced the Islamic State jihadists and claimed to be from the “Lizard Squad”, a group known for previous denial-of-service attacks.
The website’s front page was replaced with an image of a tuxedo-wearing lizard, and read “Hacked by LIZARD SQUAD - OFFICIAL CYBER CALIPHATE”.
It also carried the headline “404 - Plane Not Found”, an apparent reference to the airlines’ puzzling loss of flight MH370 last year with 239 people aboard.
Media reports said versions of the takeover in some regions included the wording “ISIS will prevail”.
The airline did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Lizard Squad is a group of hackers that has caused havoc in the online world before, taking credit for attacks that took down the Sony PlayStation Network and Microsoft’s Xbox Live network last month.
The Islamic State, an extremist Sunni Muslim group, has seized large swathes of Syria and Iraq, where it has declared an Islamic “caliphate”.
It has drawn thousands of fighters from across the globe to its anti-Western cause, and shocked the world with its video-taped executions of journalists and other foreigners it has captured, the most recent being a Japanese security contractor it claimed Sunday to have beheaded.
A second Japanese captive being held by the militants has also been threatened with execution.
The IS group, which uses social media in recruiting and spreading its message, is believed to harbour ambitions of launching a cyber-war against the West.
It is unclear why Malaysia Airlines was targeted.
But concern has been rising in Malaysia after scores of its citizens were lured to the IS cause in the Middle East. Malaysian authorities last week said they have detained 120 people suspected of having IS sympathies or planning to travel to Syria.

#Game: Grim Fandango Remastered Preview

We finally got a chance to play Grim Fandango Remastered, and now nothing else matters.
Based on various legends of Mexican folklore, Grim Fandango is packed to the hilt with dancing skeletons, crime, romance, and much more. You play Manny Calavera, a mid-level worker at the Department of Death (the DOD) who's trying to work off his sins in life so that he can get to his final reward. As a reaper, Manny frees incoming souls from their shrouds, finds out what kind of underworld travel packages their goodness in life has earned them, and then sends them on their way. Unfortunately, business hasn't been very good for Manny of late. As the game begins, Calavera is told that he must sell a premium travel package to a soul or lose his job. In his search, Manny uncovers a hideous plot, a beautiful woman, and a crew of loyal friends (not necessarily in that order).
Based on the acclaimed 1998 classic, this remake of Tim Schafer's original adventure title employs the stunning technology used to bring Broken Age to life for a fresh new way to experience Grim Fandango.
Release Date: January 27, 2015
GenreAdventure

Be the first to submit a cheat for Grim Fandango Remastered. Or read the IGN Guide.



Sex, style and a happy New Year at Paris’s Crazy Horse

FRANCE 24 dropped in at Paris’s infamous Crazy Horse cabaret, where visitors from the four corners of the world celebrated New Year’s Eve with champagne, caviar and a stage-full of barely clad dancers.

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#SAME-SEX MARRIAGE: FRANCE SAME-SEX MARRIAGE, ADOPTION LEGISLATION


French protest against gay marriage draws thousands:

\PARIS - Thousands of demonstrators began gathering in Paris and Lyon on Sunday in a renewed protest against France's legalization of gay marriage, which has mobilized conservatives of all stripes.
 
Organisers and police expected tens of thousands of people to join the marches against the Socialist government's "Marriage for All" law.
 
Ahead of the protests, Interior Minister Manuel Valls vowed that any violence against police would be dealt with severely.
 
Some 1,500 police officers were deployed in Paris and 600 in the central city of Lyon.
 
President Francois Hollande's government has dismissed speculation that it plans to increase access to medically-assisted procreation and surrogacy for gay couples - which is nonetheless one of the protest themes.
 
The introduction of an "Equality ABC" program to French elementary schools has also spawned outrage among traditionalists, amid internet rumors that small children are to be taught gender theory.
 
The protests are organized by "Demonstration for All", a right-wing umbrella group that emerged in response to the gay marriage law, passed last year.
 
"We are witnessing the constitution of a Tea Party à la francaise," Valls said in an interview with Le Journal du Dimanche, referring to the right-wing US political grouping.
 
France's moderate right "has a duty to distance itself from movements that refuse to accept the democratic decisions of parliament", the minister said.
 
Geoffroy Didier, deputy secretary general of the opposition center-right UMP, blamed the government for "pulling the pins on social grenades" during an economic crisis.
 
"More and more of our compatriots indeed want to preserve their economic, social and societal model," he said on RCJ radio, while adding that he would stay away from the protest.
 
"I wouldn't want to find myself alongside a minority whose positions are dubious or even quite problematic," he said.
 
The protests come amid heightened tensions over an upsurge in racist incidents that have blighted French public life and drawn condemnation from across the parliamentary spectrum.
 
Christine Taubira, the black justice minister behind the gay marriage law, was compared to a monkey by a National Front politician and depicted on the cover of right-wing Minute magazine with a headline pun about a banana.
 
French authorities also recently banned a show by popular comedian Dieudonne M'Bala M'Bala that includes a song about the Holocaust

#Sex with underage girl: Prince Andrew denies claims he had sex with underage girl

Switzerland Davos Forum — Britain's Prince Andrew on Thursday publicly denied for the first time allegations that he had sex with an underage teenager.

The 54-year-old royal, Queen Elizabeth II's second son and fifth in line to the British throne, has faced increasing pressure to respond to the accusations after the woman, identified only as Jane Doe No. 3 in court papers, named him in documents filed with a Florida court.
The filing was part of a lengthy lawsuit against American financier Jeffrey Epstein, who the woman claims forced her to have sex with prominent people, including Prince Andrew. He is not named as a defendant in that case, and no criminal charges or formal allegations have been made against him.
Buckingham Palace officials have strongly denied that Andrew had any sexual involvement with the woman.
"I just wish to reiterate and to reaffirm the statements which have already been made on my behalf by Buckingham Palace," Prince Andrew said Thursday during a visit to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. "My focus is on my work."
U.S. lawyers representing the woman have filed papers requesting that the prince respond to her claims under oath.
The woman says in court papers the prince's denials are false.
"I hope my attorneys can interview Prince Andrew under oath about the contacts and that he will tell the truth," she says in the papers.
The woman claims she was forced to have sex with the royal in London, in New York and on a private Caribbean island from 1999 to 2002.
The prince, also known as the Duke of York, has been dogged for years over his relationship with Epstein. In July 2011, he stepped down from his role as a U.K. trade ambassador following the controversy over his links with the billionaire.
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#Sex News: Sex News every girl must know!

For eons, women have been told how complicated their bodies are, especially sexually. And while it's true that women don't have a point-and-shoot anatomy, new research shows that we have just as much pleasure potential if not more, as men do.
women and sex

"Unfortunately, wo
men subconsciously place limits on what they think their bodies are capable of," says Laura Berman, Ph.D., Assistant Clinical Professor of Ob-gyn at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University, United States. "They underestimate the fact of how easily they can be stimulated."
And we would never stand for your underestimating yourself. So we got our hands on some recent groundbreaking studies that debunk the long-standing conventional wisdom about how the female body responds to desire. Then we took this research one step further by explaining how to use it to tap into a new dimension of sheer bedroom bliss.

Maybe this rings a bell: Your guy wants some action and you're stuck in that "whatever" mode. But before you blow him off because you're not into it, consider this: New research proves that your body can be turned on even during those moments when your mind is turned off.

That's because desire and arousal are two separate animals. Desire occurs in the mind (sexual thoughts), while arousal unfolds in the body (feeling hot and lubricating). True, desire usually leads to arousal, but our bodies don't need desire to get to that warm, tingly place.

Problem is, many women think that sex will be a drag if they're not registering any interest in their brains. What to do when he's horned up and you aren't: Have him zone in on your physical hot buttons, says Sari Locker, Ph.D., author of The Complete Idiot's Guide to Amazing Sex. "Focus on your body, and give in to the feel of his lips against your neck or the way his hand is brushing up against your back."

And feel free to sharpen your body's sexual antenna-it is searching for stimuli 24/7. The more you indulge your physical senses, the more you'll be primed for sex. "Even if your brain is checked out, your body has a memory of feel-good sensations," says Berman. Another testament that you don't necessarily need desire to relish doing the deed-one recent study found that many women experience heightened arousal when anxious or stressed.

READ ON FOR DETAILS... 

#sexual intercourse: Mode of delivery in childbirth associated with pain during or after sexual intercourse

Operative birth is associated with persisting pain during or after sexual intercourse, known as dyspareunia, suggests a new study published in BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (BJOG).
The study aimed to investigate the contribution of obstetric risk factors, including mode of delivery and perineal trauma to postpartum dyspareunia. It also examined the influences of other risk factors, including breastfeeding, maternal fatigue, maternal depression and intimate partner abuse.
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A cohort of 1244 first time mothers across six maternity hospitals in Melbourne, Australia was used. Data were taken from baseline and postnatal questionnaires at 3, 6, 12 and 18 months. The mean gestational age of the study participants at the time of enrolment was 15 weeks.
Of the women sampled, 49% had a spontaneous vaginal birth, two thirds of whom sustained a sutured tear and/or episiotomy, 10.8% had an operative vaginal birth assisted by vacuum extraction and 10.7% gave birth assisted by forceps. Additionally, 9.7% were delivered by elective caesarean section and 19.9% were delivered by emergency caesarean section.
Results showed that 78% of the study population had resumed sexual intercourse by 3 months, 94% by 6 months, 97% by 12 months and 98% by 18 months postpartum.
With regards to dyspareunia following childbirth, most of the women (85.7%) who had resumed sex by 12 months postpartum experienced pain during first vaginal sex after childbirth. Dyspareunia was reported by 44.7% of women at 3 months postpartum, 43.4% at 6 months, 28.1% at 12 months and 23.4% at 18 months postpartum. Of the women who reported dyspareunia at 6 months postpartum, a third (32.7%) reported persisting dyspareunia at 18 months postpartum.
Compared to women who had a spontaneous vaginal delivery with intact perineum or unsutured tear, women who had an emergency caesarean section, vacuum extraction or elective caesarean section had double the risk of reporting dyspareunia at 18 months postpartum, adjusting for maternal age and other risk factors.
Other factors associated with dyspareunia at 18 months postpartum include pre-pregnancy dyspareunia, intimate partner abuse and maternal fatigue. One in six women (16%) in the study experienced abuse by an intimate partner in the first 12 months postpartum. One third of these women (32.4%) reported dyspareunia at 18 months postpartum, compared with 20.7% of women who did not experience intimate partner abuse. The authors of the study highlight that these results suggest that clinicians should be alert to the possibility that intimate partner abuse is a potential underlying factor in persisting dyspareunia.
The authors conclude that greater recognition and understanding of the role of mode of delivery and perineal trauma in contributing to postpartum maternal morbidities is needed. Additionally, ways to prevent postpartum dyspareunia should be explored.
Ellie McDonald from the Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, Victoria, Australia and co-author of the study said:
"Almost all women experience some pain during first sexual intercourse following childbirth.
"However, our findings show the extent to which women report persisting dyspareunia at 6 and 18 months postpartum is influenced by events during labour and birth, in particular caesarean section and vacuum extraction delivery.
"Not enough is known about the longer term impact of obstetric procedures on maternal health. The fact that dyspareunia is more common among women experiencing operative procedures points to the need for focusing clinical attention on ways to help women experiencing ongoing morbidity, and increased efforts to prevent postpartum morbidity where possible."
Patrick Chien, BJOG Deputy Editor-in-chief added:
"This is the first study with detailed, frequent and long-term follow-up to assess associations of dyspareunia with obstetric risk factors.
"This study provides us with robust evidence about the extent and persistence of postpartum dyspareunia and associations with mode of delivery and perineal trauma. Future research could look into ways of preventing dyspareunia."

#Porn: Dershowitz on sex slave case: 'I'm hiding nothing'

Don't mess with Alan Dershowitz. Not if you're going to accuse him of having sex with an underage girl.
On the Today show this morning, the famed criminal attorney and Harvard Law School professor refuted the sex slave story that has ensconced him and Prince Andrew.

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It's not the first time Dershowitz, 76, has vehemently denied having sex with Virginia Roberts, now a 31-year-old mother of three, who has joined a civil lawsuit in Florida in which she accuses Dershowitz and Prince Andrew of having sex with her in 2001 when she was a "sex slave" for financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
On Today, Dershowitz told Savannah Guthrie, "I've never seen her, I've never met her." He added that she should come forward to make her charges. "She is categorically lying and making the whole thing up." She claims they had sex six times.
He said, "This is Pinocchio's nose grow longer and longer."
Dershowitz also said he welcomes an investigation into the case. He would welcome depositions on both sides.
"I'm afraid of nothing. I am hiding nothing. She is afraid of revealing this in public. She is afraid of giving dates or specifics," he said. "I have been absolutely upfront in answering every question and the lawyers are lying through their teeth when they say I refuse to be deposed. They're hiding her. We sought to depose her."
Meanwhile, Prince Andrew is also expected to make an official statement about the allegations today at the World Economic Forum in Switzerland.

Hagel: Sexual Assault 'Has to be Fixed, it Will Be Fixed' in Military.

'It's So Cool!': Sidecar Dogs Make Easy Riders



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The first time he put a sidecar on his motorcycle, JD Whittaker was in Egypt, carting around radio equipment for the Air Force during the Cold War. When he got home, he built one for his family.
"Kid grow up and, of course, they want to bring their dog," said Whittaker, one of 18 riders and their dogs featured in "Sit. Stay. Ride: America's Sidecar Dogs," a Kickstarter-funded documentary. "When the kids are gone, all you've got left is the dog."
Even though none of the dog owners met during filming, "we all spoke with one voice," Whittaker told NBC News. "Such a diverse group of people, a diverse group of motorcycles, a diverse group of dogs, and we're all speaking with one voice."
That voice might best be summed up by Philippe Murat, who rides with his wife and two beagles, who says in the film: "There are two reasons to have dogs in your sidecar. One is because you don't want to go anywhere without your dogs. And the second reason is because it's so cool!"
In an email to NBC News, filmmaker Eric Ristau said: "Sidecars are such an antiquated, unusual form of transportation. The image of a dog wearing doggles, sitting in a sidecar and having a blast riding down the road was just so refreshing and joyful."
Ristau and his wife, Geneva — who own a vintage BMW sidecar themselves — have rescue dogs, and most of the dogs in the film are rescues. The Ristaus dedicated the film "to all rescue dogs, on motorcycles or off," and they're donating all proceeds from theatrical screenings and 25 percent of digital and DVD sales to dog rescue organizations.

#Paris Terror Attacks: Muslims in France - 'They say we're not French'

The French Prime Minister Manuel Valls caused a stir this week when he said France was suffering from “social and ethnic apartheid”.

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https://grabtrk.com/
While many castigated him for his choice of words, few disagreed that France has a longstanding problem that numerous governments have either failed to deal with or turned a blind eye to.
After riots spread across French cities in 2005, the conclusion was that France was failing to integrate second-generation youths, most of them Muslims from North Africa, living in the poor “banlieues” on the edge of cities, out of sight, and out of mind.
Some of the damage left after the Paris riots in 2005. Photo: AFP
Ten years later, after Cherif and Said Kouachi, two men born in France gunned down the staff at Charlie Hebdo, the same conclusions were being made.
On the streets of the 18th arrondissement in Paris, a district which is home to the picturesque Montmartre as well as more deprived areas around La Chapelle, it seems many Muslims do not feel much loyalty to France.
The Local spoke to 17-year-old Sira and 22-year-old Hasfa, two French-born Muslim sisters who run a local shop selling women’s accessories.
“The French say that we aren’t French,” Hasfa said. “People always ask me: ‘Where are you from?’”

The women's accessories shop. Sira and Hasfa preferred not to be photographed. Photo: The Local
Other Muslim women shared their view. 
“I felt French until people told me I wasn’t,” said 28-year-old Aïcha who was also born in France. “We have never felt integrated. It's frustrating.”
She pointed to France’s controversial law of 2004 which banned the wearing of the Muslim headscarves in schools and then a following law of 2011 which banned the full face veil in public.
Although the government said the laws were necessary to reinforce France’s secular values or for security reasons, many Muslims felt they were specifically targeted to pander to rising far right.
“People see a woman wearing a veil and think she’s not educated, that she doesn’t know anything, but in reality that woman might be a doctor or a teacher,” Aïcha added.
“When I see how everyone’s religion is respected in Sweden, I wish it would be the same in France. We feel excluded from society because we wear the veil,“ she said.
“We’re not here to shove the Quran in your face, we’re not here to make you listen to Islamic  chants, we’re not trying to convert you. Respect our religion and let us live.”
Her friend, 26-year-old Mariam suggested France would be better off teaching about different religions in schools rather than reinforcing secularism.  
“Why don’t we learn religion at schools? Maybe we would start respecting all religions then."

Mariam thinks religion should be taught at French schools. Photo: The Local
International footballer Sofiane Feghouli, who was born in a suburb of Paris but plays for Algeria, raised a few eyebrows this week when he explained his motives to play for the country where his parents are from.
"With all that I have experienced, I don't feel fully integrated into French society... I just feel Algerian,“ said the footballer.
The testimonies of Feghouli and those The Local spoke to are supported by studies that have been carried out in the issue of the integration of France’s five to six million Muslims.
major study into the immigrant segregation in the suburbs of Paris was carried out in 2011. By studying two districts that were mainly populated by immigrants from north and west Africa, researchers found that many residents felt totally separated from the French. 
Islamic values are replacing those of a republic which failed to deliver on its promise of "equality", and the residents of the suburbs increasingly do not see themselves as French, the researchers said at the time.
Majid Jarroudi from France’s Agency for Entrepreneurial Diversity says the problem of disengaged second generation youths lies in a lack of equality.
"The French Republic doesn’t treat the youths in the poor suburbs the same way it treats other citizens," he told CNN.
But not everyone feels cut off from the French.  A 54-year-old Muslim man of Algerian origin who works at the Doudeauville restaurant, and who did not want to give his name, told The Local: “I’m a citizen of the world. I love the country, the language, the culture. It was natural to get French citizenship. My life is here.”
Other immigrants are accepting of the fact that living in France means there are different principles and values to respect.
Yacine Dahmani is a 22-year-old working in the perfume industry. He was born in Algeria and came to France when he was 15.
“I feel human before anything else," he told The Local.

Yacine was born in Algeria, and doesn't feel French. Photo: The Local
“I have both Algerian and French nationalities but I cannot say that I am French. But I respect French laws. My wife wears the veil. It’s part of our religion but we have to respect the rules of the country we live in.”
However after the Paris terror attacks there are fears that France’s Muslims will once again be left out in the cold as the rest of the country unites with a new found sense of solidarity.
Leaders of the Muslim community have urged their followers to remain calm despite the “provocation” of another Muhammad cartoon on the front of Charlie Hebdo as well as over 110 Islamophobic incidents since the attacks.
Last week a group of Imams united in publicly singing the Marseillaise to try to force home the idea that it is possible to be feel both French and Muslim at the same time.
But many Muslims are worried things will only deteriorate in the aftermath of the attacks.
“The mosque used to be a place of peace but now there’s a feeling of insecurity. While some of us pray others are guarding the doors. It’s a pity,” a 24-year-old Muslim graphic designer told The Local.

Photo: AFP
By Ben McPartland / Priscillia Charles / Simone Flückiger
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The 20 Best Job Search Sites for Finding a Job

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