Brigitte Macron relative beaten up at family’s
chocolate shop
French first lady condemns what appears to be
politically motivated attack in Amiens
AFP in
Lille
Tue 16 May
2023 17.47 BST
The French
president’s wife, Brigitte Macron, has denounced an attack on her great-nephew,
who was beaten up outside her family’s chocolate shop in an apparent
politically motivated assault.
Jean-Baptiste
Trogneux was returning to his apartment on Monday evening above the Trogneux
chocolate shop that he runs in Amiens in northern France, when he was set upon
by anti-government protesters.
The
30-year-old was hit on the head, arms and legs by his aggressors, who insulted
“the president, his wife and our family” before running away, the victim’s
father, Jean-Alexandre Trogneux, said on Tuesday.
“They’ve
crossed the line. I’m flabbergasted,” Trogneux said, adding that his son was
being checked by a doctor and was awaiting the results of a scan.
Brigitte Macron
issued a rare statement condemning the “cowardice, stupidity and violence” of
the attack.
“I am in
complete solidarity with my family and have been in touch constantly since 11pm
yesterday,” she said.
“I have on
several occasions denounced this kind of violence that can only lead to the
worst.”
Local
police said they had arrested eight people after the attack, which took place
shortly after President Emmanuel Macron appeared on the country’s main
television news programme on Monday evening.
Brigitte
Macron’s family have run the Jean Trogneux chocolate shop in Amiens for six
generations, specialising in a sugary local almond-based treat known as the
Amiens Macaron.
She met her
husband while he was a pupil and she was a teacher at a private school in the
city in the 1990s.
The
Trogneux family business, which has expanded around northern France, has been
repeatedly targeted by protesters during Macron’s six years in power amid
rumours – repeatedly denied – that the first family have a financial interest
in the company.
“The shop
is not involved in politics,” Jean-Alexandre Trogneux told the Courrier Picard
local newspaper on Tuesday. “Emmanuel Macron has got nothing to do with our
business.
“I don’t
understand all these people who continue to hassle us. Some of them even call
for boycotts of our shops and products. They’re getting everything mixed up.”
Macron has
sparked the biggest demonstrations in a generation this year over reforms to the
pension system, which include raising the retirement age from 62 to 64 later
this year.
Repeated
clashes during protests, as well as attacks on the offices of local and
national elected figures, have sparked debate about whether the country is
growing more intolerant and prone to violence.
During
protests in April, a fire was started at one of Macron’s favourite restaurants
in Paris, the upmarket La Rotonde brasserie, before it was quickly put out by
firefighters.
Last week,
the mayor of a village in western France announced his resignation after a
suspected arson attack on his home, causing an outcry among fellow politicians.
Yannick
Morez, from the village of Saint Brevin, had been repeatedly targeted by
far-right activists over his support for a local centre for refugees.
Brigitte
Macron was left shaken when she and her husband were surrounded and abused by
so-called yellow vest protesters in 2020 as they walked in the Tuileries Garden
near the presidential palace.
Interior
ministry statistics showed that reported acts of physical or verbal violence
against lawmakers increased by 32% year-on-year in 2022, when the country held
parliamentary and presidential elections.
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