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Paris court defends racist provocateurs exploiting plight
of homeless
By Antoine Lerougetel
13 January 2007
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The Paris Administrative Tribunal has twice defended the right
of an openly racist organisation, Solidarité des Français
(SDF), to offer pig soup to homeless people in Paris, deliberately
excluding those whose religion or customs forbid this food.
The anti-racist organisation MRAP (Movement against Racism
and for the Friendship between the Peoples) reported in a January
2 statement that the previous evening the SDF had given out pig
soup to some 30 homeless people in front of Montparnasse station
in the 15th arrondissement of Paris, thus deliberately excluding
Parisian homeless people of the Jewish or Muslim religions who
do not eat pork.
The Paris police banned the SDFs soup distributions but,
on appeal by the organisation, the Paris Administrative Tribunal
quashed the police order on December 22, and on December 28 supported
another appeal against a further ban by the police authorities.
The tribunals judge issued a statement: These two
rulings recognise that this organisation is pursuing manifestly
discriminatory aims against people whose religion forbids them
to eat pig meat. It asserts, however, that only a
risk of a public disturbance authorises the tribunal to issue
a ban on an action and that the police chief had in
no way given proof of such a risk.
The judge asserted that, as there was no evidence that the
SDF had refused to serve Jews and Muslims, it could not be accused
of discriminating against them. The Paris police préfecture
were ordered to pay 1,000 in costs to the group.
The SDF group is linked to a neo-fascist organisation called
Bloc Identitaire. Street pig soup operations have been
going on since 2002 in Paris, and in Strasbourg and Nice. Similar
provocations have taken place in Belgium, in Charleroi and Brussels.
Where the far-right Jean-Marie Le Pens National Front
has won control of town halls, such as Toulon, school canteens
have been ordered to serve pork without offering alternatives
for Muslims and Jews.
The Guardian newspaper quotes an SDF soup kitchen notice:
The only condition to eat with us: to eat pig. It
continues: Attention: cheese, dessert, coffee, clothes,
snacks go with pig soup: no pig soup, no dessertthe only
rule of our action: our own people before the others.
The minister of the interior and presidential candidate for
the ruling UMP (Union for a Peoples Party), Nicolas Sarkozy,
appealed to the Council of State (the French equivalent of the
US Supreme Court) against the Paris Administrative Tribunals
rulings. On January 5, the Council of State quashed the tribunals
decisions. It refuted the tribunals contention that the
police banning of the SDFs soup distribution was a
serious and illegal infringement of the right to demonstrate.
It supported the contention of the legal representative of the
Ministry of the Interior that the SDFs operation was discriminatory
and therefore constituted a danger of public disorder.
The Socialist Party mayor of Paris, Bertrand Delanoë,
issued a statement January 2 regretting the Paris Administrative
Tribunals rulings, I remind people that from June
2004 the Paris Council had voted demanding the banning of this
distribution, which knowingly excludes persons of the Jewish and
Muslim faiths.
It continued, In response to this initiative with the
stench of xenophobia, I want to express again the will of the
municipality to denounce, and combat every form of discrimination,
racism and anti-Semitism.
As the 2007 presidential elections approach, it is clear that
Sarkozy and Delanoë and the French political establishment,
although they have encouraged anti-immigrant prejudice, are nervous
of appearing to condone extreme racist groups.
The cynical refusal by the judge to recognise the highly provocative
nature of the SDF groups action gives a measure of the widespread
acceptance of racist views within the French state and establishment,
which legitimise the activities of such groups.
These attitudes are epitomised by a series of measures enacted
by the current Gaullist administration, with more or less open
support by the parties of the left:
* the law banning the wearing of the Muslim headscarf by schoolgirls,
which was supported by the Socialist Party;
* the draconian anti-immigration laws largely echoed in the
Socialist Party programme;
* the hunting down and expulsion of sans papiers (undocumented
immigrants) and the break-up of the Cachan squat involving homeless
immigrants and sans papiers, with the complicity of the
Socialist Party and the Communist Party (See France:
Immigrant squatters pressured into accepting dispersal).
* the initial support by the SP and the CP for the law imposing
the recognition of the beneficial nature of French
colonialism for the colonised, later partially modified in response
to protests.
The racist activities of the SDF group are also facilitated
by the worsening social conditions facing the poor, and the lack
of housing in particular. A housing crisis has developed in France
over the last 30 years under right and left national and local
governments. This particularly affects the Paris region. Enormous
speculative rises in the cost of land and property, as well as
insufficient public housing, have made decent homes increasingly
inaccessible to millions of people. This is most acutely felt
in the winter, particularly during the Christmas period.
The charity DAL (Right to Housing) reports that
the fire brigade estimates that every year 100 persons sleeping
rough die in the street in the Paris region. The 7th Abbé
Pierre Foundation report of 2002 (after five years of a Plural
Left government) counted 3 million inadequately housed people
in France, of which 86,000 were homeless, 200,000 lodged permanently
in hotels, in improvised housing or by relatives and friends,
half a million living in temporary or precarious dwellings and
2 million in lodgings lacking any basic sanitary provision.
This winter at the initiative of a charity group Children of
Quixote, tent protests have mushroomed in city centres all over
France demanding improvements in emergency accommodation for the
homeless and even the requisition of buildings. The Children of
Quixote have been adopted as a cause célèbre
by the entire French political establishment, from the UMP of
president Jacques Chirac and Nicolas Sarkozy to the middle class
radical Ligue communiste révolutionnaire. They are
all seeking to acquire some political capital in the run-up to
the presidential and legislative elections this year. However,
only a socialist housing policy, taking land and housing out of
the hands of the property speculators, and a massive building
programme of social housing can resolve this crisis and end the
ability of the far-right to exploit social grievances by scapegoating
immigrants and minorities.
See Also:
The pathetic end of the French anti-capitalist
left
[9 January 2007]
France: airport workers
fired in anti-Muslim campaign
[11 November 2006]
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