France aims to shut down far-right anti-immigrant group

French authorities are looking at shutting down a far-right group that has staged several attempts to block migrants from entering the country by crossing the Alps or the Pyrenees mountains, Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said on Tuesday.

Darmanin, who has also led a recent crackdown on extremist Muslim organisations, said he was "outraged by the efforts by Generation Identitaire activists to undermine the republic."

Last week, around 30 members of Generation Identitaire (Generation Identity) gathered at the Col du Portillon pass on the border of France and Spain in what they called a surveillance operation to "defend Europe". Wearing identical blue puffer jackets, they deployed a drone over the border and claimed to be combatting "the terrorist and migrant risk in the Pyrenees".

It was the latest in a string of mountain demonstrations by GI activists in recent years, often involving the deployment of fences at key crossing points, that have led to skirmishes with migrants and activists.

"If there is enough evidence, I will not hesitate to advise closing it down," Darmanin told a press conference.

The public prosector in Saint-Gaudens, a town near the Portillon pass, said later on Tuesday that he had opened an inquiry into alleged "incitement to racial hatred" by the GI activists.

 

"The very clear anti-immigration statements on their banner and indeed their very reason this banner was used" justified the inquiry, prosecutor Christophe Amunzateguy told journalists. Organisers of the blockade would soon be summoned for questioning, he added.

Several lawmakers in southern France called on the government to shut down Generation Identitaire after the blockade, but it is the first time Darmanin has publicly condemned the group's actions.

In August 2019, the group's leader and two other activists were handed six-month prison sentences after they set up a blockade in the French Alps and rented two helicopters to search for migrants. In response, a group of around 100 rights activists escorted some 30 migrants into France, sparking scuffles with police.

Generation Identitaire was accused of vigilantism and the three GI members were charged with trying to pass themselves off as police officers, though an appeals court overturned that ruling last December.

The French government has promised to tighten immigration and asylum laws in response to the huge influx of people trying to reach Europe from Africa, the Middle East and Asia since 2015.    (AFP)