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French prime minister says 600-plus people have left France for Syria or Iraq
By Reuters - Mar 20,2016 - Last updated at Mar 20,2016
PARIS — More than 600 people have now left France for Syria and Iraq, with about 800 more wanting to leave to join the Daesh terror group, Prime Minister Manuel Valls said on Sunday.
The figures show little respite in the number of people joining the extremist group despite multiple bombing campaigns against Daesh strongholds and a crackdown by French authorities to prevent people from leaving the country after two major attacks in France during last year.
"We are in a battle on our soil," Valls said in a speech to Socialist Party supporters.
"Each day [we]... trace networks, locate cells, arrest individuals. Today 2029 French citizens or residents are implicated in jihad networks."
European governments have been tightening anti-terrorism laws as the Syrian conflict enters its sixth year, agreeing to share more intelligence and taking down radical websites to try to stop their citizens from going to fight in the Middle East and bringing militancy home.
Breaking down the figures, Valls said 609 people who are French nationals or have French resident's status are currently among fighters, including 283 women and 18 minors. Almost 170 have been killed while in Syria or Iraq and 300 have returned to France from those countries.
"Almost 800 would today like to go to these wars zones, according to intelligence services," Valls said, adding that 1,000 people are being monitored closely.
In February 2015, only weeks after an attack in Paris that killed 17 people, Valls said there were 1,400 French citizens or residents linked to militant networks, with 410 present in Syria and Iraq and about 80 killed on the ground.
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