Macron: Images of police beating Black man ‘shame
us’
President makes views known amid widespread outrage.
BY RYM
MOMTAZ
November
27, 2020 7:35 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/macron-very-shocked-by-images-of-violence-by-policemen/
PARIS —
French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday night described footage showing
policemen beating a Black man in Paris as “unacceptable” as he attempted to
contain widespread outrage over the incident.
“The images
we all saw of the beating of Michel Zecler are unacceptable. They shame us,”
Macron said in a statement posted on Facebook and Twitter.
“France is
a country of order and freedom, not gratuitous and arbitrary violence,” Macron
said.
He called
on police to be “exemplary” with citizens and on citizens to be exemplary with
the police, but also made sure to avoid criticizing the entire police force.
“I will
never accept that the gratuitous violence of a few stain the professionalism of
the women and men who, daily, ensure our protection with courage,” Macron said.
Macron’s
statement reflected an effort to strike a balance between pushing back against
criticism that he has backed increasingly illiberal policies and maintaining
good ties with the police and right wing voters who place a premium on law and
order.
Macron also
reiterated his support for fundamental freedoms such as freedom of expression,
freedom of the press and freedom to protest.
Macron also
said he had asked the government to make proposals to “reaffirm the ties of
trust that should exist naturally between the French and those who protect them
and to fight more effectively against all discriminations.”
The video,
which was published on social media on Thursday, showed three policemen
forcibly entering a music recording studio after seeing a Black man go into the
building from the street where he was walking without wearing a mask, which is
mandatory under current coronavirus health measures.
The man,
Michel Zecler, who owns the recording studio, was unarmed and doesn’t appear to
be belligerent toward the policemen in the minutes-long video published by
media outlet Loopsider. The three policemen repeatedly punch him, kick him and
beat him with their batons. They even fire tear gas into the recording studio
at one point.
Zecler says
they repeatedly yelled “dirty negro” at him.
Macron met
Thursday afternoon with Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin, who has taken a hard
line on law and order and standing up for the police. The official close to
Macron said the president told Darmanin that “it would be good for things to
calm down.”
A few hours
later, on a primetime nightly newscast, Darmanin offered a clear condemnation
of the violence by the policemen. He said they should be expelled from the
force if found guilty by the internal police investigation.
The beating
was the second incident involving French police to spark outrage in recent days
Monday
night, police were filmed using excessive force to removing hundreds of
migrants who had set up tents in a central plaza in Paris. At ont point, a
policeman is seen brutally kicking a migrant.
These two
incidents come as the French parliament is voting on a proposed “general
security bill,” with a controversial provision that aims to make it illegal to
“publish, by any means and in any medium, the face or any other identifying
feature” of a police officer or gendarme “with the aim of manifestly causing
them physical or psychological harm.”
This part of
the proposed law has raised alarm among journalists and activists, who say it
could deter legitimate scrutiny of police officers and be abused by law
enforcement in determining the intent behind filming or taking pictures.
Darmanin
had gone as far as saying journalists would need to seek accreditation with
police before being allowed to film protests.
Three
rapporteurs on the UN Human Rights Council weighed in on the proposed bill
saying as it stands it would “significantly undermine human rights and fundamental
freedoms.”
Policemen
and their families have complained of being targeted on social media and
threatened for doing their job. Police unions also complain of insufficient
staffing, too little equipment and unpaid overtime. In 2018-2019 French police
had to deal for months with weekly protests by the anti-establishment Yellow
Jackets movement, some of which turned violent, followed by strikes related to
Macron’s pension reform plans.
Darmanin
told French TV channel BFM at the beginning of November that he had “made a
promise, that images of policemen and gendarmes, no longer be published on
social media. That promise will be kept.”
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