Friday, February 11, 2011

Sarkozy under pressure as French judges take to the streets

Guardian
February 10, 2011

Thousands of judges and lawyers have taken to the streets in unprecedented protests against Nicolas Sarkozy, paralysing the legal system and shutting down almost all France's courthouses this week.

Magistrates' unions have for days expressed outrage at the president by hearing only urgent cases, after the president used a shocking murder case to attack judges for being too lax.

The gruesome Laetitia case gripped France after a teenage waitress disappeared one night after her shift in western France. Her severed limbs and head were found in the waters of an abandoned quarry after a lengthy search, but the rest of her remains have not been recovered. The suspect, a 31-year-old, refused to co-operate with the search or the inquiry. Recently out of prison after completing a sentence, he had 15 previous convictions.

The case struck a chord with Sarkozy's longrunning campaign to appeal to the rightwing vote by cracking down on repeat offenders. Sarkozy publicly branded the suspect "presumed guilty", slammed judges for incompetence and making mistakes after his prison release, and said: "Our duty is to protect society from these monsters."

Judges were furious that Sarkozy would declare a suspect guilty before either a trial or the end of investigations. They accused him of using the case to boost his "tough on crime" image ahead of what will be a tough race for presidential re-election next year.

"It's an old habit of his, using people's legitimate feelings of outrage ... for ends that are clearly electoral and demagogical," said Nicolas Leger, national secretary of the USM magistrates' union.

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