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EU Feb 12 summit to focus on anti-terrorism: Tusk

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European Union's next scheduled summit on February 12 will focus on how to boost anti-terror efforts in the wake of the deadly Islamist attack on a French satirical weekly in Paris, the bloc's leader Donald Tusk said on Friday.

"Terror has struck in Europe. It is, sadly, not the first time," Tusk said in Riga, the capital of Latvia which assumed EU's rotating presidency on January 1.

The EU can respond to the "barbaric attacks in Paris" by "strengthening our security."

"Next week in Strasbourg I will appeal to the European Parliament to speed up work on the EU Passenger Name Record system, which can help in detecting the travel of dangerous people. This can be our common initiative," he said.

"I intend to use the meeting... on 12 February to discuss more broadly the response the EU can bring to these challenges," following the "barbaric attacks in Paris," he said.

Tusk spoke as elite French forces hunted two brothers suspected of massacring 12 people in an Islamist attack on the satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo in Paris on Wednesday, an attack that shocked the country and sparked rallies of support across the world.

European Union’s next scheduled summit on February 12 will focus on how to boost anti-terror efforts in the wake of the deadly Islamist attack on a French satirical weekly in Paris, the bloc’s leader Donald Tusk said on Friday.

“Terror has struck in Europe. It is, sadly, not the first time,” Tusk said in Riga, the capital of Latvia which assumed EU’s rotating presidency on January 1.

The EU can respond to the “barbaric attacks in Paris” by “strengthening our security.”

“Next week in Strasbourg I will appeal to the European Parliament to speed up work on the EU Passenger Name Record system, which can help in detecting the travel of dangerous people. This can be our common initiative,” he said.

“I intend to use the meeting… on 12 February to discuss more broadly the response the EU can bring to these challenges,” following the “barbaric attacks in Paris,” he said.

Tusk spoke as elite French forces hunted two brothers suspected of massacring 12 people in an Islamist attack on the satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo in Paris on Wednesday, an attack that shocked the country and sparked rallies of support across the world.

AFP
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