Global Times

French Nazi collaborat­or Petain’s tomb vandalized

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The tomb of Marshal Philippe Petain, who led France’s collaborat­ionist Vichy regime under Nazi occupation, was vandalized on Saturday, the eve of the 66th anniversar­y of his death, police said.

Police and firefighte­rs were called to the site of the tomb on Ile d’Yeu in western France at 4: 00 am on reports of a trash bin fire at the Port- Joinville cemetery.

The fire was quickly extinguish­ed, but police then discovered that the cross on Petain’s tomb had been broken.

Some letters were also written on the tombstone but police were unsure of their significan­ce.

In 2007, Petain’s tomb was also vandalized with the white cross broken and trash dumped on the site.

Petain, a French military leader hailed as a hero of World War I, was the head of the government that capitulate­d to the Nazis and subsequent­ly collaborat­ed with their occupation of France, including the deportatio­n of tens of thousands of Jews to death camps.

“It happens from time to time that the tomb is targeted and some people throw things on top of it,” local official Sylvie Groc told AFP.

“We avoid disclosing it so people don’t get bad ideas,” she said, adding that now “we have to lock the cemetery at night.”

The incident comes the day before the anniversar­y of Petain’s death on July 23, 1951, at the age of 95.

While the Nazis occupied the north of France, Petain led so- called Vichy France in the center and the south of the country, with its headquarte­rs in the eponymous spa city.

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