Paris
Four French police officers were charged on Monday over the beating and racial abuse of a black music producer, as President Emmanuel Macron scrambled to contain the political fallout from the case that has sparked outrage in France.
The attack on Michel Zecler — which was caught on camera — has become a new rallying cause for critics of the police, who accuse the force of institutionalised racism and brutality.
It has also ramped up pressure on the government to scrap or revise a bill that would restrict the filming of police after mass demonstrations at the weekend that left dozens injured.
Lawmakers from President Emmanuel Macron’s party said on Monday that they would propose a “complete rewrite” of part of the draft law.
Christophe Castaner, the parliamentary chief of Macron’s ruling LREM party, denied that it marked a climbdown by the president.
He said the rewrite aimed to balance the need to protect the police with “the basic right to freedom of information”.
The announcement came after Macron held a crisis meeting with cabinet ministers and parliamentary leaders.
The meeting aimed to come up with “suggestions to restore confidence” between the police and the population, government sources said.
Castaner acknowledged the “deepening incomprehension” over the draft law, which aims to restrict the right of the press — and of social media users — to publish images of on-duty police.
Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin was to face questions from a parliamentary commission over the law later on Monday.
Earlier Pierre Person, a member of the parliamentary commission said that “a rewrite of the article or the creation of yet another committee won’t put an end to the mistrust felt by a part of the population.” “I am therefore in favour of deleting Article 24,” he told the Le Parisien newspaper.
Human rights activists say the images of the beating — first published by the Loopsider news site — might never have been made public if Article 24 had already been in force.
The bill would criminalise publishing images of the police with the intent of harming their “physical or psychological integrity.” It was passed by the lower house National Assembly this month, though it still requires approval from the Senate.
A Paris investigating magistrate early on Monday charged all four officers involved with assault by a person holding public authority. Three were also charged with fabricating their statement on the incident.
Two of the accused will remain behind bars but the other two were freed on conditional release, a judicial source said.
On Sunday, Paris prosecutor Remy Heitz called for three of the officers to also be charged with racial abuse.
He said that the officers had acknowledged that their use of force was unjustified, but that they claimed they had acted in “fear” and “panic,” and denied any racist abuse.—AFP