French police arrested six Jews they believe staged
vigilante attacks against suspected anti-Semites.
The attacks occurred on Dec. 21 in Lyon and Dec. 22 in
nearby Villeurbanne and are believed to have been perpetrated by members of
France’s Jewish Defense League, or Ligue de Defense Juive (LDJ), the local
branch of the militant group associated with the late Rabbi Meir Kahane.
The victims were targeted on social networks and tracked
down for performing the “quenelle,” a gesture conceived by the anti-Semitic
comedian and Holocaust denier Dieudonne M’bala M’bala,the Le Progres daily
reported.
On Tuesday, LDJ wrote on its Twitter account: “Two major
punitive actions were carried out Saturday and Sunday in Lyon against people
who performed the quenelle. The little Nazis are no longer at ease!”
The attack Dec. 22 involved six young members of LDJ, the
newspaper reported.
The report said they beat a man suspected of performing the
quenelle and locked him inside the trunk of a parked car. The report, which
named neither the suspects nor the alleged victim, said two of the six were
arrested that night and the remaining four were arrested the following day.
Two
were remanded to police custody Tuesday on suspicion of assault, Le Progres
reported. The report did not say how badly the man was hurt.
In recent weeks, the quenelle has been widely discussed in
French media because many French Jews see it as sign of mounting anti-Semitism.
According to Le Progres, the first attack began late on Dec.
21 and was directed at an employee of the Mama Shelter Hotel in Lyon. A few
small teams entered the hotel looking for the employee, who was not named,
while their friends stayed outside, the report said.
In total, a few dozen men were involved in the incident,
witnesses told the newspaper. The hotel’s security agents fought off the
intruders and prevented them from attacking the employee. Several dozen guests
were briefly evacuated from the hotel, according to the report.
In June, LDJ announced that its “soldiers” had put a young
Arab in the hospita, calling it “a rapid and effective response” to the man’s
attack on Jews at Saint-Mande, just east of Paris. The announcement drew calls
to ban LDJ. As criticism mounted, LDJ retracted the statement and denied any
involvement in the violence.
No comments:
Post a Comment