The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Security aide scandal upends French parly

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PARIS. — A dismissed security aide for French President Emmanuel Macron was to face a judge yesterday over his alleged assault of a protester, a scandal which has forced the government to suspend parliament­ary proceeding­s.

So far, Macron has refused to address the potential charges against Alexandre Benalla (26), who was fired on Friday after a video emerged where he is seen beating up a young man during a May Day demonstrat­ion in Paris.

Benalla is seen wearing a police helmet and visor while assaulting the man alongside police, though Benalla is not a police officer and Macron’s office has said he was only supposed to be accompanyi­ng the police as an observer.

An investigat­ing judge opened an inquiry yesterday before auditionin­g Benalla and his associate Vincent Crase, an employee in Macron’s Republic on the Move (LREM) party who also attended the protest.

Three police officers suspected of providing video surveillan­ce footage to Benalla last week so he could try to clear his name will also be questioned.

The man struck by Benalla, along with a young woman whom Benalla violently wrestled to the ground during the scuffles with police — seen on a second video of the incident which emerged on Thursday — are also expected to testify at a later date.

Investigat­ive commission­s have been created in both the National Assembly and the Senate, with some lawmakers accusing the government of trying to cover up a scandal which should have been reported to prosecutor­s immediatel­y.

Since last Thursday they have effectivel­y blocked the government’s efforts to debate a constituti­onal reform bill promised by Macron during his election campaign.

It was not clear who informed Benalla’s superiors of his assault, but Macron’s office said last week that he had been suspended without pay for two weeks in early May and transferre­d from security affairs to an administra­tive role.

Yet Benalla has continued to be seen in Macron’s security details since then.

“If Macron doesn’t explain himself, the Benalla affair will become the Macron affair,” far-right leader Marine Le Pen posted on Twitter.

Laurent Wauquiez, the head of the rightwing Republican­s party, accused the government of “trying to camouflage a matter of state”.

But an LREM spokesman, Gabriel Attal, said that if Macron addressed the issue now, “we’d have indignant commentato­rs everywhere saying his comments could influence the inquiry.”

Yet French daily Le Parisien reported that Macron organised a crisis meeting on Saturday with his top advisers, including Interior Minister Gerard Collomb and Justice Minister Nicole Belloubet.

Collomb will appear before MPs for questionin­g today, after media reports suggested he knew about Benalla’s assault, but kept quiet. — AFP.

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