Sex Video End Griveaux Paris Mayor Race
Benjamin Griveaux |
A sex video
has ended French ruling party candidate Benjamin Griveaux's hopes of becoming
mayor of Paris.
The
ex-spokesman for President Emmanuel Macron's government, who was already
trailing in the race, was apparently targeted by a Russian protest artist
accusing him of hypocrisy.
"No-one
should be subjected to such abuse," said Mr Griveaux, 41.
The video,
showing a man in a compromising position, quickly spread on social media late
on Thursday.
Petr
Pavlensky, who sought asylum from Russia in 2017, said he had posted the video
online.
Opponents
from across France's political spectrum voiced their outrage.
Incumbent
Mayor Anne Hidalgo appealed for respect for people's private lives, while
far-left leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon condemned the attack as "odious".
Prime Minister Edouard Philippe expressed his support for his former colleague.
The video
appeared on a little known website that featured a profile of Mr Griveaux's
political ambitions and his "fanatical faith in family values". It
then alleged that Mr Griveaux had exchanged intimate mobile phone messages with
a young woman and sent her a personal video.
A link to
the site was shared by an MP who was forced to resign from Mr Macron's LREM
(Republic on the Move) party in late 2018.
Mr Griveaux
told the BFMTV news channel that for the past year he and his family had been
subjected to "defamatory remarks, lies, rumours, anonymous attacks... and
even death threats".
"This
torrent of mud has affected me and above all hurt the people I love."
Mr
Griveaux's lawyer said he would press charges over the publication of the
video, which he said violated the right to a private life.
Mr
Pavlensky, who says he posted the video online, first gained notoriety by
nailing his scrotum to Moscow's Red Square in 2013. He fled Russia and sought
asylum in France when he was accused by the authorities of a sexual assault
that he denied.
He served seven
months in jail for setting the front door of the FSB intelligence agency on
fire in Moscow. He later caused minor damage to a Banque de France branch by
setting that alight.
He told
French news channel LCI that Mr Griveaux was only the first politician that he
would target: he had only just begun, he claimed. Politicians had to be honest
and he said he would carry on fighting the "propaganda and puritanism of
politicians".
Mr Griveaux
was not favourite to win the mayoral race in March, but he has been a very
close ally of the president and his political demise is inevitably an
embarrassment for the president, the BBC's Hugh Schofield reports from Paris.
He was
trailing in third place, his campaign hampered by a dissident Macronite
candidate called Cédric Villani.
Ms Hidalgo,
the current Socialist mayor, is leading in the polls, ahead of Republicans
candidate Rachida Dati.
Mr Macron
came to power in 2017 and his new LREM party secured a majority in the National
Assembly. However, the party has seen a spate of defections in recent months
and now has only 299 MPs in the National Assembly, down from 314 three years
ago.
LREM is
expected to have poor local election results next month, but its majority in
parliament is safe because of its alliance with the MoDem party.
FROM bbc.com/news/world-europe-
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