Miss France runner-up becomes target of anti-Semitic tweets

PARIS — The Paris prosecutor's office opened an investigation Monday to identify the authors of online anti-Semitic comments directed at the runner-up for Miss France 2021, who has Israeli origins.

French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin led high-profile condemnation of the comments, saying he was “deeply shocked by the rain of anti-Semitic insults” and that police were mobilized to investigate.

April Benayoum, 21, placed second in the Miss France pageant televised Saturday’s televised pageant, but her moment in the limelight was quickly sullied. In an on-set interview, she mentioned her Israeli roots. A wave of abuse followed on Twitter, including tweets that invoked the Holocaust.

Benayoum, who won Miss Provence before competing nationally, was born to a Serbo-Croatian mother and an Israeli father. Responding to the online comments, she told regional French newspaper Var-Matin, “It is sad to witness such behaviour in 2020.” She said she also received numerous messages of support.

The Paris prosecutor's office said it opened an investigation into charges of racist public insults and provoking racial hatred. France's minister for citizenship issues, Marlene Schiappa, said the investigation “is a strong message” to victims of such abuse and shows that online hate speech “is not harmless.”

Benayoum and anti-racism groups also filed lawsuits. France's Council of Jewish Representative Institutions, or CRIF, urged Twitter to “take responsibility," saying the social network's moderators took too long to remove the offensive comments. CRIF said it asked Twitter for more information about how it handled the case.

Pageant organizers condemned the abuse, saying it was “totally contrary to the values of the channel, the production and the show.”

The contestant crowned Miss France, Amandine Petit, told BFM TV the comments were “inappropriate” and “extremely disappointing.”

The Union of Jewish Students in France said that “Miss France 2021 is no longer a beauty contest, it is an anti-Semitism contest.”

Other groups noted that anti-Semitic comments are common online but usually go unpunished.

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Angela Charlton contributed.

Thomas Adamson, The Associated Press

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