French mayors demand visit with Barghouthi in Palestine, confront repression in France
by samidoun
The
delegation is headed by Patrice Leclerc, the mayor of Gennevilliers
representing the Communist Party of France. Gennevilliers is also a part
of the network of French communities urging the release of Palestinian
elected officials, which includes 15 French cities such as La Courneuve,
Stains, Ivry-sur-Seine, La Verriere, Haveluy and Allones. All of these
cities have named Marwan Barghouthi an honorary citizen; there is
currently a campaign, supported by Desmond Tutu, Belgian parliamentarians, Tunisian and Argentinian Nobelists, and others, to nominate Barghouthi for a Nobel Peace Prize.
At the same time, on 14 June at 9 am,
fellow French mayor Azzedine Taibi, also of the PCF and mayor of
Stains, will appear before the administrative tribunal of Montreuil for
arguments in defense of the city's right to place a banner on its town
hall calling for Barghouthi's release.
The
Prefect (an official appointed by the central French state) demanded
the removal of the banner, which was refused by the mayor, Azzedine Taibi. Many
of the mayors on the delegation, including the mayors of Gennevilliers,
Montreuil, Aubervilliers, and La Courneuve have expressed their support
for Taibi and rejection of the demand that the banner be removed.
Taibi,
elected as a member of the Communist Party of France as mayor of
Stains, has refused to remove the banner where it has been posted since
2009 by his predecessor, Michel Beaumale. Taibi appeared in the court
previously on 21 March, where substantive arguments were not heard; this session will include arguments on the merits of the case.
BNVCA,
a French organization that bills itself as opposing anti-Semitism yet
places the bulk of its efforts in attempts to criminalize Palestine
solidarity and support anti-Palestinian repression, has placed itself as
a civil party in the case on the side of the central government,
demanding the banner's removal.
Following
the March hearing, Taibi said, " “We will not take down the banner. We
are defending a just cause: respect for international law, promoting the
values of peace and the right of the Palestinian people, like all
peoples, to self-determination. We are proud to display these values,
and I do not understand why the Prefect is continuing to pursue our city
for this banner that has been hanging since 2009 at our City Hall.
Daily, with my municipal team, we have so many issues to deal with in
order to defend the dignity and respect of the people of Stains. On the
issues of the rights to work, to housing, to security, to education, we
need the State to play its proper role, and not to prevent us from
freely expressing the values of the people of our town, the values of
which we are proud. Administering a city, is also taking a position to
defend the values of liberty, equality and fraternity, in our country
and in the world. Fortunately, in the past, many mayors including those
in Stains, and citizens around the world, acted to call for the release
of Nelson Mandela, who was long considered like a terrorist by part of
the French political class. As a mayor and as a citizen, it is also my
duty to defend just international causes, including denouncing the
apartheid suffered by the Palestinian people for over half a century. As
we express our support for the Kurdish people, for Syrian refugees, and
all oppressed peoples in the world."

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