Monday, 4 June 2012

French Justice Minister Christiane Taubira: the new lightning rod for rightists

Among the 17 women in the 34-member cabinet of French Premier

Jean-Marc Ayrault, 60-year-old Justice Minister Christiane Taubira

leaps out at you as very special.





As a divorcee, Taubira had raised 5 kids as a single mom while

pursuing a demanding dual academic and political career.





A former professor of economics, Taubira is a published author who has

penned 5 books, including the best-seller "L'Esclavage raconté à ma

fille" [Slavery explained to my daughter].





Taubira has been representing French Guiana in France's National

Assembly since 1993 up to her appointment as Justice Minister on May

17.





But prior to being an MP, Taubira had a stint in the European

Parliament where she was a Rapporteur of a committee dealing with

cooperation with African countries.





In 2002, Taubira was a presidential candidate.





A 2001 French law bearing her name (Loi-Taubira) holds that the

Atlantic slave trade and slavery are crimes against humanity.





But until the win of the presidency by socialist François Mitterrand

in 1981, Taubira was an independantist pasionaria, fighting for the

independence of the French South American territory of Guiana.





At Taubira's appointment, rightists screamed that it was a "casting

error in Hollandie."





(Just as there was "Sarkoland" or "Sarkozie," Hollandie is what the

French are now calling the "universe" of President François Hollande.)





In anticipation of the legislative elections to be held on June 10

(1st round) and June 17 (2nd round), both former President Sarkozy's

center-right party UMP (Union pour un Mouvement Populaire) and Marine

Le Pen's far-right FN (Front National) now showcase Taubira's

appointment as emblematic of the derelict character of the new

administration.





While Marine Le Pen focuses on the independantist past of Taubira,

UMP's de facto leader Jean-François Copé castigates her "laxity"

towards criminals.





(One of the first major decisions Taubira is intent on taking is to

scrap criminal courts for minors introduced in 2011 by UMP-controlled

National Assembly and to reinstate juvenile courts.)





But those tactics don't fool anyone. It seems Taubira is simply a

target for being black.





At a campaign meeting held in a conference center in Paris on June 1,

Marine Le Pen told hundreds of her supporters that Hollande's choice

of Taubira--an independantist--was erratic, "nonsensical" and

"mind-boggling."





If this kind of vicious attacks against Taubira from the far-right is

understandable, those coming from the center-right are astonishing,

and smack of desperation as polls show that Hollande might slightly

tighten his grip on power with the aggregate win of the left in the

upcoming legislative election.





In 2007, Taubira turned down an offer by Nicolas Sarkozy to be a

minister in his first so-called "consensus government" that featured

some emblematic members of the left--such as Bernard Kouchner.





Besides, tough from the left, Taubira is a maverick who isn't even a

member of the Parti Socialiste (PS) and who, some in the entourage of

Holland fear, could turn out before long to be a thorn in the side of

the new president.





Maybe the closest that the racism underlying the vicious attacks

against Taubira came to the fore was when she announced she'd

reintroduce the bill recently scrapped by the Constitutional Council

on sexual harrassment.





Reacting to that decision, Eric Zemmour, a controversial radio and TV

commentator, said:





"Christiane Taubira has chosen her boogeymen. The youths of the

suburbs are in the good camp. White men are in the wrong one."



***



PHOTO CREDITS: Le Télégramme

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