A far-right mayor in France has made headlines for his anti-Muslim rhetoric once again, saying that being French means being European, white, and Catholic. Now, an anti-racism organization has announced it is taking legal action against the politician. Robert Ménard, the far-right mayor of the southern French town of Béziers, told French news channel LCI that being French means, in the words of Charles De Gaulle, being European, white and Catholic.
He went on to complain that 91 percent of children in some French schools are Muslim.
Naturally, that is a problem, he said, adding that there are thresholds in tolerance.
Responding to the mayors inflammatory comments, anti-racism organization LICRA announced on Twitter that it has submitted a complaint to the Prosecutors Office, accusing Ménard of hate speech.
LICRA president Alain Jakubowicz said the mayors comments beat the record of shame and stupidity, Express reported.
Its not the first time that Ménard, a former journalist, has found himself in hot water as a result of his actions and statements.
In December, the National Front politician slammed a group of Muslims who, in a symbolic gesture of unity, had stood guard at a local cathedral during midnight mass at Christmas.
It is like letting the fire-starters extinguish the flames, Ménard told RT, calling the Muslims predators and pyromaniacs.
Just months prior, in September of 2015, a video emerged showing Ménard storming the squats of Syrian refugees, telling them they were not welcome in this town. He arrived at the residences alongside police and an armed guard.
In May of 2015, Ménard was criticized by the countrys education minister after his administration compiled a list of school pupils names to see how many of them were Muslim despite a French law prohibiting authorities from keeping statistics based on peoples religion or ethnicity.
The relationship between local French governments and the Muslim community has become tense, particularly since several French resort towns enacted a ban on burkinis the full-body swimsuit worn by some Muslim women adhering to ultra-conservative interpretations of Islam. Frances highest administrative court, Le Conseil dEtat (the State Council), later ruled that such bans violated basic freedoms.