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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Adam Withnall

French justice minister Christiane Taubira resigns over plans to strip terrorists of citizenship

The French government has been thrown into disarray by the resignation of its justice minister ahead of a debate over controversial laws to strip citizenship from convicted terrorists.

The constitutional reforms in the wake of the Paris attacks are popular among conservatives in France, but have proved increasingly divisive for its ruling socialist party.

Christiane Taubira, one of very few black women at the top of French politics and a devoted left-winger, has expressed reservations about the new law. 

On Wednesday morning, she tweeted somewhat cryptically: “Sometimes to resist is to remain, sometimes to resist is to leave.”

President Francois Hollande announced her resignation shortly afterwards, just moments before the French parliament was due to take up the issue of the citizenship bill.

He said Ms Taubira would be replaced with immediate effect by Jean-Jacques Urvoas, widely regarded as more supportive of Mr Hollande and the centre-leaning Prime Minister Manuel Valls.

Born in French Guiana on 2 February 1952, Ms Taubira was best known for championing legislation in parliament to legalise same-sex weddings in France.

Praise for her role in driving that change, she was nonetheless accused even by her own party of advocating too soft a touch on law and order – an issue which came to the fore in the wake of the shootings on 13 November which killed 130 people.

France faces new presidential and legislative elections next year, and French media had been talking up the possibility of a cabinet reshuffle before Ms Taubira’s apparent protest.

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