The Borneo Post

Holocaust controvers­y back to haunt Le Pen’s election campaign

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PARIS: Controvers­y over her party’s record on the fate of Jews in World War Two returned to haunt French National Front presidenti­al candidate Marine Le Pen yesterday as the man due to replace her temporaril­y as party leader suddenly stood aside.

Jean-Francois Jalkh, a vicepresid­ent of the party, does not want to take up the post he was earmarked to fill because of allegation­s - which he firmly denies - that he made questionab­le remarks about Nazi gas chambers, National Front (FN) member Louis Aliot, who is also Le Pen’s partner in private life, said on Friday.

“He (Jalkh) feels that the climate is not conducive for him to carry out this interim role. He wants to defend himself and he will be filing a legal complaint because he feels that his honour has been attacked and I can tell you that he firmly and formally contests what he is accused of,” Aliot told BFM TV.

Steve Briois, mayor of Le Pen’s flagship town Henin-Beaumont and another of the party’s four vice presidents, will take his place, Aliot said.

Le Pen said earlier this week she would put a temporary party leader in her place while she prepares to face off with centrist favourite Emmanuel Macron in a fiercely contested presidenti­al election second round on May 7.

She has worked hard to rid her party of a reputation for antisemiti­sm.

In 2015 she expelled her father, the party’s founder Jean-Marie Le Pen, from the FN, disowning his comments that the Nazi gas chambers were a “detail” of history.

Late on Thursday, FN officials cried foul after journalist­s commented on an article in 2005 and quotes from Jalkh that could be construed as endorsing the views of Robert Faurisson, a professor convicted in court for challengin­g the extent of exterminat­ion of Jews in Nazi gas chambers. — Reuters

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