Paris - The French interior minister has ordered police in
western France to take action against a mayor and lawmaker who allegedly told a
group of itinerant Roma, parked illegally near his town, that Hitler had not
killed enough of them.
Gilles Bourdouleix of the UDI centrist party was recorded by
a local newspaper reporter making the comment during an altercation with the
group, which had parked more than 100 camping cars on a field near Cholet
without a permit.
His remarks were reported as President Francois Hollande
moves to defuse growing anger over illegal Roma camps from conservatives and
frustrated taxpayers, who, in a time of austerity, feel that social services
provided by the state are being abused.
The mayor told a television channel that his comments had
been distorted. He was not immediately available for comment to Reuters.
“I mumbled something like, ‘if it was Hitler he would have
killed them here’, meaning, ‘thank goodness I’m not Hitler and so there’s no
reason to call me Hitler,” he told BFM news TV. “This is shameful
score-settling which aims to smear me.”
Last week, Hollande’s Socialist Party proposed a law making
it easier to evict such groups, amid worries that the issue could prove
damaging to his unpopular government in municipal elections one year from now.
“This is not a slip of the tongue,” Interior Minister Manuel
Valls told news channel i>Tele TV.
“A case has been brought before the courts because this is
praise for the crimes of World War Two, it’s praise for Nazis, and coming from
a mayor it’s unbearable,” he said.
At Valls’s request, a police prefect in western France filed
a complaint with a state prosecutor, accusing Bourdouleix of ‘praising crimes against
humanity’, police said.
The prosecutor was not immediately available for comment. A
person found guilty of praising crimes against humanity can face up to 45,000
euros in fines, a year in jail, or both.
France numbers about 250,000-300,000 itinerant Roma, mostly
French citizens. They have a special status that allows them by law to
temporarily park their mobile homes in designated open-air areas with power and
water hook-ups during the summer.
But reports of them parking elsewhere - sometimes on municipal
sports fields - has angered many.
Earlier this month, the center-right mayor of the southern
city of Nice expelled one group from a sports field, vowing to “crush” the
“delinquents”, and urged other mayors to revolt against what he called leniency
by the Socialists.
The head of the UDI, Jean-Louis Borloo, has said he would
seek to exclude Bourdouleix at the next meeting of the party’s executive
committee, according to media reports.
Under Hitler’s rule, Nazi Germany attempted to exterminate
the Roma people of Europe. Estimates of how many were killed in Nazi
concentration camps range from 220,000 to 1,500,000.
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