Paris police ban French Muslim gathering

Ban on French Muslim gathering comes as Macron weighs new security law

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A photo shows parked buses and trucks near police vehicles ahead of a demonstration by lorry and coach drivers to block the city's Boulevard Peripherique ring road, in eastern Paris, on March 30, 2026.
A photo shows parked buses and trucks near police vehicles ahead of a demonstration by lorry and coach drivers to block the city's Boulevard Peripherique ring road, in eastern Paris, on March 30, 2026.
AFP

The Paris police on Thursday banned an annual gathering of French Muslims north of the capital, citing a "major terrorist risk" that it might be targeted.

The Annual Gathering of the Muslims of France had been due to take place at Bourget, just north of Paris, from Friday until Monday.

The order banning it issued by the Paris police said there was a risk that "small far-right groups" might try to disrupt the event.

Terrorist risk

But the police order said the event was "taking place in a particularly tense international and national context".

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The gathering was "exposed to a significant terrorist risk targeting the Muslim community", it added.

The order cited a foiled bid last weekend to bomb the Bank of America building in Paris -- an event, it said, that underlined the seriousness of the threat inside France.

French prosecutors said the attempted attack might have been linked to a pro-Iran group, as security fears flare over the war in the Middle East.

Police also cited a polarised political debate during municipal elections last month.

The decision comes as the French interior ministry prepares a draft law designed to tackle the danger of radical Islamist elements infiltrating Muslim groups.

The bill is due to be presented to President Emmanuel Macron's cabinet at the end of April, the ministry told AFP, confirming a report by Le Parisien newspaper.