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MEPs revoke Marine Le Pen's immunity over violent Isis images | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
MEPs have voted to lift Marine Le Pen’s parliamentary immunity to allow French prosecutors to take legal action against the far-right leader for tweeting gruesome images of killings by Islamic State militants. | MEPs have voted to lift Marine Le Pen’s parliamentary immunity to allow French prosecutors to take legal action against the far-right leader for tweeting gruesome images of killings by Islamic State militants. |
Members of the European parliament’s legal affairs committee voted on Tuesday by an overwhelming majority to waive Le Pen’s immunity, after a request from the prosecutor of Nanterre in west Paris. | |
The prosecutor opened an inquiry under a French law banning the distribution of violent images or those inciting terrorism. | |
The Front National leader, an MEP since 2004, tweeted three uncensored pictures of Isis killings in December 2015, after a spat with a journalist who had compared the FN to Isis, known by the Arabic acronym, Daesh. | The Front National leader, an MEP since 2004, tweeted three uncensored pictures of Isis killings in December 2015, after a spat with a journalist who had compared the FN to Isis, known by the Arabic acronym, Daesh. |
“Daesh is THIS!” Le Pen said in angry tweets showing the killings, posts that drew revulsion and criticism from bereaved families and French politicians across the political spectrum. | “Daesh is THIS!” Le Pen said in angry tweets showing the killings, posts that drew revulsion and criticism from bereaved families and French politicians across the political spectrum. |
The decision to end Le Pen’s immunity has still to be confirmed by MEPs at a European parliament plenary session on Thursday, but this is seen as a formality after the approval of the specialist committee. | |
On the legal affairs committee, 18 MEPs voted to lift immunity, three opposed and no one abstained. | |
Under French law, the maximum penalty for distributing violent images is three years in prison and a fine of up to €75,000 (£64,000). | |
The case is not expected to be concluded until long after the French presidential elections, in which Le Pen is expected to be in the runoff. | |
Tuesday’s vote was unrelated to a separate investigation into her alleged misuse of EU funds. | |
The European parliament and French authorities have launched inquiries after allegations that FN workers had “fake jobs” paid from EU funds. French police raided FN headquarters at Nanterre last week. | |
MEPs enjoy immunity to protect their freedom of speech, but the right is linked to their work in the European parliament and can be lifted after a request from a national authority. | |
European parliament sources state that lifting immunity is not a guilty verdict but simply allows prosecutors to act. | |
Immunity for MEPs is also tied to the parliamentary privilege that protects national deputies. | |
British MPs and MEPs enjoy a narrower immunity: they can speak freely in parliament without worrying about criminal charges or libel laws, but do not have the broad protection enjoyed by politicians in other EU countries. | |
Ukip’s Jane Collins discovered the limits of parliamentary privilege last year, when her plea to the European parliament for immunity in a slander and libel case was turned down. | |
The MEP for Yorkshire and the Humber was ordered to pay £355,000 in damages and courts costs earlier this month, after alleging that three Labour MPs knew about child abuse in Rotherham but had done nothing. | |
Refusing to withdraw her comments, Collins had turned to the European parliament in the hope of protection from the high court. | |
Her request for immunity was turned down in October, because MEPs deemed her remarks to be related to national politics, rather than her role in Brussels and Strasbourg. |