It is late this Wednesday, March 6, at the National Assembly.
The session is particularly stormy.
MEPs are debating a text aimed at more severely punishing racist and anti-Semitic remarks.
Oratorical bullets fly between the left and the National Rally, when suddenly, at the end of a speech, Meyer Habib, deputy for French people abroad (including Israel), descends one by one the steps of the Hemicycle and approaches the Minister of Justice, Éric Dupond-Moretti.
Behind him, two bailiffs arrive hurriedly, in order to avoid a confrontation.
But the latter did not come down to fight: he placed on the minister's desk two printed pages of the anti-Semitic threats he had received in recent weeks, since the Hamas terrorist massacres in Israel on October 7.
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Threats which led the elected official to file a complaint nine times in recent weeks.
“You can’t even imagine what I get: “Please there is…
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