Paris, NU Online
In one of its new rants against France Muslims, a far-right weekly has caused a firestorm of controversy after describing France's new education minister as a "Moroccan Muslim" and calling her appointment a "provocation".<>
"The front page of Minute is an incitement to hatred. It should be sued in court," the head of the ruling Socialist Party, Jean-Christophe Cambadelis, said in a statement, calling for the magazine to be sued, Agence France Presse (AFP) reported on Wednesday, September 3.
The International League against Racism and Anti-Semitism described the cover as "shameful" and said those "spreading hate" had to be stopped.
Morocco-born Najat Vallaud-Belkacem is the first woman in French history to hold the office of education minister.
The 36-year-old star took the office as a last step in a brilliant career for the telegenic protegee of President Francois Hollande.
The impressive career of Vallaud-Belkacem did not prevent the far-right magazine Minute from slashing a picture of her on the cover of its latest issue that hit newsstands on Wednesday with the caption: "A Moroccan Muslim at the national education (ministry). The Najat Vallaud-Belkacem provocation."
Earlier this year, the magazine sparked similar controversy against France's black Justice Minister Christiane Taubira.
Featuring her picture on the front-page, headlines read: "Crafty as a monkey" and "Taubira gets her banana back."
In French, getting your banana back is roughly the equivalent of recovering the spring in your step.
France is home to a Muslim community of nearly six million, the largest in Europe.
French Muslims have been complaining of restrictions on performing their religious practices.
Shameful
The International League against Racism and Anti-Semitism described the cover as "shameful" and said those "spreading hate" had to be stopped.
However, Vallaud-Belkacem was calm about the controversy.
"I keep away from this type of debate which is irrelevant," she told French television late Tuesday.
"However, I do think of those who are watching this spectacle" and could feel "contaminated", she added.
"In their name more than in my name, I would urge those on the right to take into account their responsibilities and to respect institutions and people," she said.
Vallaud-Belkacem was born in the Moroccan countryside but grew up in the suburbs of the northern city of Amiens before heading to Paris to study.
She holds dual French and Moroccan nationality and has described herself as a "pure product of the Republic", an example of "happy integration" in a country which is home to the largest Muslim population in Europe.
Speaking to reporters after a cabinet meeting, she made a literary reference to France's famous existential writer Jean-Paul Sartre.
"You get 'La Nausee'(Sickness) and 'Les Mains Sales' (Dirty Hands), all for the price of one paper," she quipped, referring to an existential tract and play by Sartre.
Government spokesman Stephane Le Foll told reporters after the cabinet meeting that the minister enjoyed "the support of all the government in the face of these attacks that do those who make them no honour".
The best response to these kind of attitudes was making her education minister, Le Foll added, condemning the front page "in the clearest manner I can".
Editing by Sudarto Murtaufiq