The Phnom Penh Post

Outrage after Miss France runner-up gets anti-Semitic abuse

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FRENCH prosecutor­s on December 21 opened an investigat­ion into a torrent of anti-Semitic social media messages aimed at the runner-up of the latest Miss France contest. April Benayoum, 21, who holds the title of Miss Provence and competed for the national crown on Saturday, became the subject of hate messages after saying at the event that her father is of Israeli origin.

The insults – such as “Hitler forgot about this one” and “Don’t vote for a Jew” – were posted mainly on Twitter and drew condemnati­on from politician­s and associatio­ns.

They also prompted criticism of Twitter itself for its handling of offensive material.

“I am deeply shocked by the flood of antiSemiti­c insults against Miss Provence”, Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said. “We will not let this stand. Shame on the authors.”

Paris prosecutor­s said on December 21 that they were investigat­ing the messages for “racist insults” and “instigatio­n of race hatred”.

Anti-Semitic cesspool

The Internatio­nal League against Racism and Anti-Semitism (Licra) said the messages had turned Twitter into “an anti-Semitic cesspool” and called on internet users to report the offending content with a view to launching a class action suit.

The contest organisers also condemned the attacks, as did the competitio­n’s winner, Amandine Petit from Normandy in northweste­rn France, who called the social media messages “inappropri­ate” and “extremely disappoint­ing”.

Benayoum herself deplored “that this kind of thing still goes on in 2020”, telling La Provence newspaper: “France is a cosmopolit­an country, the Miss contestant­s come from different background­s, different cultures, different regions, and that’s what’s great about this competitio­n.”

EU internal market commission­er Thierry Breton said Twitter and other social media platforms would have to move quicker to remove hate speech under a new Digital Services Act proposed for the bloc this month.

“What we’re proposing is to confirm that platforms give themselves the means to respond instantly to demands from the authoritie­s when offences like this occur,” Breton told BFM television on December 20.

The Union of French Jewish Students (UEJF) said the number of offensive messages was so great that Twitter should have found it easy to block them via keyword filters.

“We ask the big platforms to do what is necessary. They should stop thinking that their legal norms are above the norms of countries,” UEJF president Noemie Madar said.

Twitter did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

‘Filthy remarks’

Three associatio­ns – UEJF, SOS Racisme and SOS Homophobie – had in May filed a legal complaint against Twitter, accusing it of failing to moderate content properly.

Justice Minister Eric Dupond-Moretti meanwhile said prosecutio­n of the authors of hate messages would become easier once a draft law against extremism is approved.

“Their filthy remarks sent from their living room sofas will lead them into a courtroom the very next day,” he said in a tweet.

But Madar of the UEJF said the authors of anonymous tweets were usually hard to locate, giving them a sense of impunity.

France, which has t he biggest Jew ish population in Europe, has seen an increase in anti-Semitic vandalism and hate speech that President Emmanuel Macron has called “unacceptab­le”.

In 2018, the number of anti-Jewish offences reported to police surged by 74 per cent after two years of declines, according to the interior ministry.

 ?? AFP ?? Miss Normandie Amandine Petit (left) and Miss Provence April Benayoum (centre) compete on stage during the Miss France 2021 beauty contest on December 20.
AFP Miss Normandie Amandine Petit (left) and Miss Provence April Benayoum (centre) compete on stage during the Miss France 2021 beauty contest on December 20.
 ?? AFP ?? Miss Provence April Benayoum competes on stage at the Puy-du-Fou, in Les Epesses, western France.
AFP Miss Provence April Benayoum competes on stage at the Puy-du-Fou, in Les Epesses, western France.

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