Fundraiser for police officer who killed French
teenager raises €1m
Politicians on the left have criticised the
collection, set up by a far-right activist, but GoFundMe has refused to take it
down
Kim
Willsher in Paris
Mon 3 Jul
2023 17.27 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/jul/03/fundraiser-police-officer-killed-french-teen
A row has
broken out over a collection for the family of the French police officer under
investigation for shooting dead a 17-year-old that has topped more than €1m
(£860,000) in donations.
A similar
collection to help the family of the victim, Nahel M, killed a week ago in
Nanterre outside Paris after being stopped by two motorcycle patrol officers,
has collected less than €200,000.
The
shooting last Tuesday led to a wave of rioting and violence across France and
worsened deep political divisions.
The collection for the 38-year-old officer named as
Florian M was organised by Jean Messiha, a former spokesperson for the far-right
presidential candidate Éric Zemmour, with an initial target of €50,000.
“Support
for the family of the Nanterre police officer, Florian M, who did his job and
is today paying a heavy price. Support him massively and support our police,”
it reads.
By Monday
afternoon, more than 58,000 people had made donations, the largest of which was
€3,000 from an anonymous benefactor. There were several donations of €1,000.
Nahel’s
grandmother Nadia said she was “heartbroken” by the support shown for the
officer. “He took the life of my grandson. This man must pay, the same as
everyone,” she told the BFM television channel on Sunday. “I have confidence in
the justice system. I believe in justice.”
Leftwing
politicians have described the fund as “indecent”.
Clémence
Guetté of the radical-left France Unbowedparty said the fund was “indecent and
an absolute horror”.
Manon
Aubry, a France Unbowed MEP, demanded the fund be cancelled.
“More than
a million euros collected on the initiative of a far-right polemicist [Messiha]
in support of a police officer who kills a teenager. The message? It pays to
kill a young Arab,” Aubry tweeted.
Éric
Bothorel of the ruling Renaissance party accused Messiha of “playing with fire”
and said the fund was “indecent and scandalous”.
French law
prohibits the “opening of or public announcement of subscriptions whose purpose
is to compensate for fines, costs and damages awarded by judicial sentences in
criminal and correctional matters”. The law allows for a six-month prison
sentence or a €45,000 fine if broken.
This law
was used in 2019 to close a fund in support of gilets jaunes protester
Christophe Dettinger, a former boxer who was convicted of punching two police
officers. The platform, Leetchi, deemed the fund contrary to public order after
an internal investigation and the €146,000 donations were returned to senders.
A
spokesperson for GoFundMe told the French magazine Capital that the fund did
not break any rules as the money would not go to fund the police officer’s
legal fees or defence.
“The money
will be directly given to the family, which has been added as a beneficiary,”
they said.
Messiha was
defiant on Monday, accusing “lefty progressives” of trying to block the fund.
“Our
mobilisation for the family of Florian M and our respect for the rules have
paid off,” he tweeted.
Sleeping
Giants France, a citizens’ group set up to challenge the financing and
spreading of hate, said the fund’s “sheer existence inflames the sentiment of
injustice and furthers tensions”.
Olivier
Faure, head of the Socialist party, also called for the collection to be
stopped. “You are perpetuating a rift that’s already wide open, by taking part
in the support of a police officer under investigation for culpable homicide.
Close it!” he wrote.
Éric Ciotti
of the centre-right Républicains said he understood the initiative: “I don’t
find it shocking that we should support the family of a police officer who is
going through a difficult time today.”
The French
president, Emmanuel Macron, met the leaders of both houses of parliament on
Monday as violent protests in France over the police shooting of Nahel appeared
to ease after five nights of unrest, during which thousands of people have been
arrested amid widespread destruction.

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