<p>French Prime Minister Jean Castex said on Saturday the government would keep "fighting relentlessly" against radical Islam as he paid tribute to the three victims of a knife attack in the southern city of Nice last month.</p>.<p>A Tunisian man shouting "Allahu akbar" (God is Greatest) beheaded a woman and killed two other people in a church in the coastal city on October 29 before being shot and taken away by police.</p>.<p>"We know the enemy. Not only has it been identified, but it has a name, it is radical Islam, a political ideology that disfigures the Muslim religion," Castex said in a speech during the ceremony.</p>.<p>"(It is) an enemy that the government is fighting relentlessly by providing the necessary resources and mobilising all of its forces every day," he added.</p>.<p>The Nice attack followed the beheading of a schoolteacher in a suburb of Paris on October 16 by a Chechen-born man who was apparently incensed by the teacher showing a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammad in class.</p>.<p>The attack in Nice took place amid worldwide Muslim anger over France's defence of the right to publish cartoons depicting the prophet.</p>.<p>A 21-year-old man recently arrived from Tunisia, suspected of being the Nice attacker, is still in a critical condition after being shot by municipal police and was transferred to a Paris hospital on Friday.</p>
<p>French Prime Minister Jean Castex said on Saturday the government would keep "fighting relentlessly" against radical Islam as he paid tribute to the three victims of a knife attack in the southern city of Nice last month.</p>.<p>A Tunisian man shouting "Allahu akbar" (God is Greatest) beheaded a woman and killed two other people in a church in the coastal city on October 29 before being shot and taken away by police.</p>.<p>"We know the enemy. Not only has it been identified, but it has a name, it is radical Islam, a political ideology that disfigures the Muslim religion," Castex said in a speech during the ceremony.</p>.<p>"(It is) an enemy that the government is fighting relentlessly by providing the necessary resources and mobilising all of its forces every day," he added.</p>.<p>The Nice attack followed the beheading of a schoolteacher in a suburb of Paris on October 16 by a Chechen-born man who was apparently incensed by the teacher showing a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammad in class.</p>.<p>The attack in Nice took place amid worldwide Muslim anger over France's defence of the right to publish cartoons depicting the prophet.</p>.<p>A 21-year-old man recently arrived from Tunisia, suspected of being the Nice attacker, is still in a critical condition after being shot by municipal police and was transferred to a Paris hospital on Friday.</p>