French officers detained after fury over beating video

French authorities on Friday detained four officers
suspected of beating and racially abusing a black music producer in Paris in a
case that has shocked President Emmanuel Macron and drawn outrage from
celebrities and sports stars.
Images published by the Loopsider website show how
music producer Michel Zecler was repeatedly beaten by police for several
minutes and subjected to racial abuse as he tried to enter his music studio
Saturday evening.
Celebrities including football World Cup winners
Kylian Mbappe and Antoine Griezmann condemned the beating, while French star
singer Aya Nakamura said she wished the producer strength, adding “thank you to
those who filmed.”
A presidential official said Friday that Macron,
too, was “very shocked” by the images.
The incident raised questions over the future of
Paris police chief Didier Lallement, already in the spotlight after the
controversial forced removal of a migrant camp in Paris earlier in the week.
It also put the government on the backfoot as it
tries to push through new security legislation that would restrict the right of
the media to publish the faces of police agents.
Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin, who is in charge
of the police forces, told French television that the officers tarnished the
reputation of France’s security forces.
The four officers, all men, were detained for
questioning on Friday, a source close to the case told AFP.
The officers, who had already been suspended from
duty, were being held at the National Police Inspectorate General (IGPN), and
prosecutors opened an investigation into violence by a person in authority and
false testimony, the source said.
Three of the four were being questioned on suspicion
of “violence with a racist motive” committed intentionally in a group,
prosecutors said. The fourth is being questioned on suspicion of using violence
but is not accused of racism.
Zecler was initially himself detained for causing
violence, but prosecutors threw out that probe and began investigating the
officers instead.
Macron on Thursday held talks with Darmanin to call
for tough punishments for those involved in the beating, a government source
added.
“Nausea,” said the front page headline in the
leftist Liberation daily over a close-up picture of Zecler’s swollen and
bloodied face.
“The new video of a rare ferocity... adds to a
problem fed over the last months by a succession of blunders and a tendency to
revert to authoritarian tendencies,” it said.
The death in US police custody of George Floyd in
May and the Black Lives Matter movement have reverberated in France where
allegations of brutality against police officers are commonplace, particularly
in poor and ethnically diverse urban areas.
“French police has a structural problem with
violence, violence that is committed against visible minorities,” Fabien
Jobard, a sociologist, told AFP.
“Unbearable video, unacceptable violence,” Mbappe
wrote on Twitter next to a picture of the injured producer. “Say no to racism.”
The outcry comes after the lower house of parliament
on Tuesday evening approved a security bill which would restrict the publication
of photos or videos of police officers’ faces.
Media unions say it could give police a green light
to prevent journalists from potentially documenting abuses, as well as stopping
social media users from posting incriminating footage.
A protest against the draft law, which has yet to
pass a Senate vote, has been called for Saturday in Paris.
In a sign that the government could be preparing to
backtrack, Prime Minister Jean Castex announced late Thursday that he would
appoint a commission to redraft Article 24 of the law that would restrict the
publication of images of the police.
But this in turn sparked accusations that the prime
minister was trying to bypass the legislature.
“It is not for the government to substitute the work
of an external committee in the place of parliamentary prerogatives,” the
speaker of the lower house Richard Ferrand told Castex, his office said.
Macron swept to power in 2017 as a centrist who
rallied support from across the political spectrum. But critics and even some
supporters accuse him of tilting to the right as he seeks re-election in 2022.
“Already accused of attacking public freedoms
through the security bill... the executive faces an accumulation of cases of
violence and police abuse, the images of which have disturbed even the ruling
party,” said Le Monde daily.