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Marine Le Pen at the Questions to Government National Assembly in Paris on 19 January Lionel Urman/Sipa USA/PA Images

French far-right leader Marine Le Pen on trial over IS tweets

She is charged with breaking hate speech laws by tweeting pictures of Islamic State atrocities in 2015.

FRENCH FAR-RIGHT leader Marine Le Pen will go on trial today on charges of breaking hate speech laws by tweeting pictures of Islamic State atrocities, a case she has slammed as a violation of free speech.

The trial comes as opinion polls show Le Pen will likely face off again against Emmanuel Macron in next year’s presidential contest, after her National Rally made its strongest showing ever in the 2017 vote.

Le Pen shared the gruesome images in December 2015, a few weeks after Islamic State group jihadists killed 130 people in attacks in Paris, in response to a journalist who drew a comparison between IS and her party.

One of the pictures showed the body of James Foley, an American journalist beheaded by the Islamist militants.

Another showed a man in an orange jumpsuit being run over by a tank, and the third was a Jordanian pilot being burned alive in a cage.

“Daesh is this!” Le Pen wrote in a caption, using an Arabic acronym for IS.

Le Pen later deleted the picture of Foley after a request from his family, saying she had been unaware of his identity.

In 2018 a judge charged her as well as Gilbert Collard, a National Rally colleague who also tweeted the pictures, with circulating “violent messages that incite terrorism or pornography or seriously harm human dignity” and that can be viewed by a minor.

A trial was ordered last year but was delayed by the coronavirus pandemic.

The crime is punishable by up to three years in prison and a fine of €75,000.

‘Deforming the spirit of the law’

Le Pen, a lawyer by training, has said she is the victim of a political witch-hunt — she refused an order to undergo psychiatric tests as part of the inquiry.

She was also stripped of her parliamentary immunity over the pictures.

“Marine Le Pen had no intention, nor even any awareness, of endangering any minor. She was responding to an attack, a provocation, by a journalist,” her lawyer David Dassa-Le Deist told AFP.

He accused prosecutors of “discrimination” by “deforming the spirit and the letter of the law … to limit Mrs Le Pen’s freedom of speech.”

Since taking over France’s main far-right party from her father, Le Pen has run twice for the French presidency, and recent polling shows her closer than ever to her ultimate prize.

That has rekindled speculation about whether the anti-EU, anti-immigration populist could finally enter the Elysee Palace.

Tomorrow, she is set to have a prime-time TV debate with Macron’s Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin, which will be closely watched after critics panned her debate performance against Macron before the 2017 vote.

Le Pen has another legal challenge looming, over claims that she and other party officials improperly spent millions of euros in public funds to pay their assistants while serving in the EU Parliament.

Investigators say almost €7 million was diverted from the European Parliament between 2009 and 2017. An eventual trial date has not yet been set.

© AFP 2021

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