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France’s top magistrate lambasts Francois Hollande over book remarks | |
(35 minutes later) | |
France’s top magistrate has taken the unusual step of publicly berating the president after disparaging comments about the judiciary Francois Hollande reportedly made to journalists emerged in a book published this week. | |
The spat with the judiciary is just one of the embarrassments the book, A President Shouldn’t Say That, written by two journalists from daily Le Monde, has caused. | |
Speaking from the gilded grand chamber of the centuries-old court of justice in central Paris, France’s highest ranking magistrate Bertrand Louvel told newly appointed judges the comments attributed to Mr Hollande were degrading and dangerous for the institution. | |
“The President of the Republic has let comments be published, without denying them, in which he calls the judiciary a ‘cowardly institution’ where some ‘hide away’, ‘play the virtuous’ and ‘dislike politics’,” said Mr Louvel, wearing the traditional fur-lined red robes. | |
“His predecessor had before likened magistrates to ‘small, tasteless peas’,” the judge said, referring to comments made by former president Nicolas Sarkozy. | |
“This renewed outrage against the judiciary, at a time where all authorities should show coherence, poses an institutional problem,” Mr Louvel said. | “This renewed outrage against the judiciary, at a time where all authorities should show coherence, poses an institutional problem,” Mr Louvel said. |
Mr Hollande also reportedly told the journalists in December 2015, a month after Islamist gunmen killed 130 people in Paris, that France had “a problem with Islam”, comments that risk damaging his left-wing party base six months before a presidential election. | Mr Hollande also reportedly told the journalists in December 2015, a month after Islamist gunmen killed 130 people in Paris, that France had “a problem with Islam”, comments that risk damaging his left-wing party base six months before a presidential election. |
On Wednesday, Mr Hollande invited France’s two highest ranking judges to see him in a bid to patch up relations. On Thursday, they said the 20-minute meeting had failed to quell their anxiety. | |
“Yesterday's meeting with the president did not soften the feeling of humiliation magistrates experienced again,” top prosecutor Jean-Claude Marin said. | “Yesterday's meeting with the president did not soften the feeling of humiliation magistrates experienced again,” top prosecutor Jean-Claude Marin said. |
“What can the French people be thinking when such comments are made about their justice system by the country's highest authority?” | “What can the French people be thinking when such comments are made about their justice system by the country's highest authority?” |
A source close to Mr Hollande told Reuters the president had always respected the judiciary’s independence, adding: “The president must be judged on his actions and public speeches.” | |
Justice Minister Jean-Jacques Urvoas said: “Give me one word, one public word the president has said since 2012 where he commented on a court decision? Not a word, even less an insult, an act or an intervention in a court decision.” | Justice Minister Jean-Jacques Urvoas said: “Give me one word, one public word the president has said since 2012 where he commented on a court decision? Not a word, even less an insult, an act or an intervention in a court decision.” |
The release of the book has overshadowed an interview with Mr Hollande in L’Obs magazine, also published on Wednesday, which people close to him said was aimed at taking him a step closer to formally launching his bid for re-election. | |
Reuters | Reuters |
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