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  • After the beheading of a French teacher prompted by an online threat campaign, President Emmanuel Macron urged the EU on Wednesday to push ahead with plans to force social media platforms to quickly remove "terrorist" posts. It is "urgent and necessary that European negotiations on the removal, within an hour, of terrorist content from the internet, must be concluded as soon as possible," the French leader said after meeting Estonian premier Juri Ratas in Paris. The European Union proposed steps in 2018 to compel social media and websites to remove "terrorist" propaganda within an hour of receiving the order from authorities. If they do not, companies such as Facebook and Twitter would risk massive fines. But negotiations are ongoing, with internet giants worried Brussels will muzzle its profitable social platforms. "Terrorist content is not like other illegal content: it is murderous, it is highly viral. It is therefore a major security issue in the context of the terrorist threat we are faced with," Macron said. On October 16, a Chechnyan radical beheaded history teacher Samuel Paty near his school outside Paris after a weeks-long hate campaign against him for having shown cartoons of the Prophet Mohamed to pupils in a class on free speech. A parent at the school had launched a campaign calling for "mobilisation" against the teacher on Facebook. After the attack, Macron vowed to take the fight to radical Islam and said France would never give up cartoons or the right to offend religion. His stance has prompted ire in the Islamic world, with calls for boycotts in many countries and protests that have seen pictures of Macron and the French flag torched. Ratas affirmed his country's solidarity with France in its defence of "republican values" and its fight "against radical Islam." The two countries signed a pact to boost cooperation on matters of defence, cybersecurity, energy and the climate. jri/mlr/js/lc
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  • Macron calls for speedy EU cyber-terror clampdown
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