Under pressure to tackle home-grown jihadism, the French government is opening a string rehabilitation centres to combat extremism - and the first one is already proving controversial, reports the BBC.
There's a pink sky over the vineyards of the Loire Valley. On the outskirts of Beaumont-en-Véron, a group of men and women are chatting around a garden table over their evening aperitif.
A bucolic scene? Well, not quite. Despite the perfect sunset and the chilled bottle of rose, no-one is happy.
These villagers are outraged that a small chateau on their doorstep is about to become France's first Centre for Prevention, Integration and Citizenship — or what some call a de-radicalisation boot camp.
"The government is conducting a crazy experiment over there," says Michel Carrier, pointing to a collection of 18th-Century buildings a few hundred yards away across a small road.
"We may be outside the cage, on this side of the fence," he declares, "but we feel like the guinea pigs."
Despite official assurances that the first residents of the centre would come "voluntarily" and be restricted to those who had "never been convicted for acts linked to radicalisation", Michel, who heads the local protest group, is unconvinced.
"We live with fear in our stomachs," he says, "especially after Nice."
He adds that the lorry driver responsible for mowing down 90 people on Bastille Day as they watched a firework show on the French Riviera had no criminal record.
But Michel, who once worked at the nuclear power station in nearby Chinon, also fears the centre might provide a tempting target for terrorists.
French prime minister Manuel Valls has said nearly 15,000 people in France were on the radar of police and intelligence services because they are suspected of being radicalised, while 1,350 are under investigation - 293 because of alleged links with a terrorism network.