Kuwait Times

80 graves vandalized at French cemetery

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PARIS: Around 80 graves were daubed with swastikas at a Jewish cemetery in eastern France, authoritie­s said yesterday, hours ahead of nationwide marches called to denounce a surge in anti-Semitic vandalism and hate speech. The damage was discovered at a cemetery in the village of Quatzenhei­m, close to the border with Germany in the Alsace region, a statement from the regional security office said. Photos show the Nazi symbols in blue paint on the damaged graves, one of which bears the words “Elsassisch­es Schwarzen Wolfe” (“Black Alsacian Wolves), a separatist group with links to neo-Nazis in the 1970s.

The top security official for the region, Jean-Luc Marx, condemned “in the strongest possible terms this awful anti-Semitic act and sends his complete support to the Jewish community which has been targeted again”. “It just doesn’t stop, it’s shock after shock,” Maurice Dahan, the regional head of France’s main Jewish institutio­n, the Israelite Central Consistory of France said. In December nearly 40 graves as well as a monument to Holocaust victims were desecrated at another Jewish cemetery near Strasbourg in Herrlishei­m, about a half-hour drive from Quatzenhei­m.

President Emmanuel Macron will travel to the cemetery to inspect the damage, before visiting the Paris Holocaust memorial, Interior

Minister Christophe Castaner told RTL radio. Rallies are planned in Paris and other cities to denounce a flare-up of anti-Semitic vandalism in recent weeks, often coinciding with “yellow vest” anti-government protests. Politician­s on both the right and left have called for a massive turn-out after a prominent French writer was the target of a violent tirade by a protester in Paris on Saturday. A video of the scene showed the protester calling the philosophe­r Alain Finkielkra­ut a “dirty Zionist” and telling him “France belongs to us”.

‘Deep roots’

Police have recorded a 74-percent surge in anti-Jewish acts last year in France, home to Europe’s biggest Jewish population. Germany has also seen a sharp rise in anti-Semitic crimes, with more than 1,600 cases recorded last year. And tensions flared again this week between Israel and Poland after Warsaw pulled out of a summit over comments by Jerusalem officials referring to alleged collaborat­ion by “many Poles” with Germany during the Holocaust. The Polish government has long bristled at any suggestion of collaborat­ion with the Nazi occupiers during World War II-a claim Israeli Premier Benjamin Netanyahu was accused of making last week, though his office said he had not intended to implicate all Poles in the Holocaust.

In France, several officials have accused the grass-roots yellow vest movement of unleashing a wave of extremist violence that has fostered anti-Semitic outbursts among some participan­ts. “It would be false and absurd to call the yellow vest movement anti-Semitic,” Prime Minister Edouard Philippe told L’Express magazine in an interview published yesterday. “But certain guardrails or dikes have fallen during the yellow vest crisis,” he said. “Anti-Semitism has very deep roots in French society. “We would like to think differentl­y, but it’s a fact,” he said. Philippe, who has promised a tough new law targeting online hate speech by this summer, will be among several ministers at a Paris march starting at 7:00 pm (1800 GMT).

‘Republic is targeted’

“Each time a French citizen is insulted, threatened or even worse, injured or killed, because he is a Jew, it’s the Republic which is targeted,” Macron said at a press conference yesterday. He added that he would lay out his plans to combat anti-Semitism during a speech at the annual dinner of the CRIF umbrella associatio­n of French Jewish groups on Wednesday. But he has resisted calls by some lawmakers to explicitly penalize so-called antiZionis­t statements calling into question Israel’s right to exist as a nation.

Macron himself has been targeted in some of the anti-Semitic graffiti found in the wake of recent protests, though many prominent yellow vest demonstrat­ors have said they plan to participat­e in the anti-racism marches. But a recent Ifop poll of “yellow vest” backers found that nearly half those questioned believed in a worldwide “Zionist plot” and other conspiracy theories. “The yellow vests aren’t an antiSemiti­c movement,” said Jean-Yves Camus of the Political Radicaliza­tion Observator­y in Paris. “But it’s a leaderless, horizontal movement... and extremist elements have been able to drown out the voices of its high-profile figures in the media,” he said. —AFP

 ??  ?? QUATZENHEI­M: Photo shows svastikas painted on graves at a Jewish cemetery, on the day of a nationwide marches against a rise in anti-Semitic attacks. —AFP
QUATZENHEI­M: Photo shows svastikas painted on graves at a Jewish cemetery, on the day of a nationwide marches against a rise in anti-Semitic attacks. —AFP

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