Outrage after French magazine depicts black MP as a slave

French President Emmanuel Macron has condemned the racist depiction of Daniele Obono

(FILES) In this file photo taken on November 24, 2017 French leftist La France Insoumise (LFI) member of Parliament Daniele Obono poses during a photo session in Paris.    The French conservative magazine Valeurs Actuelles has published a 'politic-fiction' article and illustration  on LFI MP Daniele Obono, portrayed as a slave, which sparked a wave of indignation, including French Prime Minister's condemnation, on August 29, 2020. / AFP / JOEL SAGET
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French President Emmanuel Macron led nationwide outrage on Saturday after an ultra-conservative magazine portrayed a black politician as a slave.

The French presidency said Mr Macron called Daniele Obono from the far-left party France Unbowed and “expressed his clear condemnation of any form of racism”.

The magazine, Valeurs Actuelles, which caters to readers on the right and far right, showed Ms Obono in chains with an iron collar on her neck to illustrate a seven-page fictitious story.

Prime Minister Jean Castex said it was a “revolting publication that calls for clear condemnation” and told Ms Obono she had the government’s backing.

“I share the indignation of lawmaker Ms Obono,” he said.

“One is free to write a putrid novel within the limits fixed by the law. One is free to hate it. I hate it,” said Justice Minister Eric Dupond-Moretti.

Ms Obono tweeted: “The extreme right – odious, stupid and cruel. In brief, like itself.”

The anti-racism body SOS Racisme deplored rising hate speech against African and Arab politicians and said it was considering what legal measures could be taken to counter this.

The magazine however denied it was racist, saying the story concerning Ms Obono was “a work of fiction... but never nasty”.

An official from France’s far-right National rally party, Wallerand de Saint-Just, said the story was “in absolute bad taste”.

France witnessed several protests in June and July against racial injustice as well as colonial and police brutality, inspired by the Black Lives Matter movement and George Floyd’s death at the knee of police in the United States.

Mr Macron, a centrist, who raised eyebrows when he gave an interview to Valeurs Actuelles last year and praised it as a "good magazine", has pledged to root out racism.

But he also said France will not take down statues of figures linked to the colonial era or the slave trade, as has happened in other countries recently.