Europe 1 with AFP 4:17 p.m., November 17, 2022

The Paris Court of Appeal sentenced the director of "Valeurs Actuelles", Erik Monjalous, and a journalist from the weekly, Laurent Jullien, to a suspended fine of 1,000 euros for public insult of a racist nature against LFI deputy Danièle Obono.

They are also ordered to pay 5,000 euros in damages to the deputy.

The director of

Valeurs Actuelles

(VA), Erik Monjalous, and a journalist from the weekly, Laurent Jullien, were sentenced on appeal in Paris to a suspended fine of 1,000 euros on Thursday for public insult of a racist nature against LFI deputy Danièle Obono.

They are also condemned by the court of appeal to pay 5,000 euros in damages to Danièle Obono as well as a symbolic euro for the associations having constituted civil parties with the deputy.

"Stop the dissemination of racist speech", says Obono

"By condemning the editorial staff of

Valeurs Actuelles

for its infamous article 'Obono l'Africaine' which shocked the whole of France last year, the Paris Court of Appeal put a stop to the dissemination of racist and xenophobic discourse held by the extreme right and the extreme right”, reacted Danièle Obono in a press release received by AFP.

"This new decision (...) is a validation and an encouragement to continue the fight against racism in all its forms and expressions," she added.

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These sentences are nevertheless lower than those pronounced at first instance: in October 2021, Erik Monjalous and Laurent Jullien were sentenced to a fine of 1,500 euros each and to pay 5,000 euros in damages to Danièle Obono, as well as the director of the drafting of

VA

, Geoffroy Lejeune.

Thursday, Geoffroy Lejeune was released from all charges against him.

A seven-page story in question

In August 2020, the magazine published a seven-page story titled "Obono l'Africaine", where it told how the Gabon-born elected representative of Paris, portrayed as a slave, experienced "the responsibility of Africans in the horrors of the slavery" in the 18th century.

The article, accompanied by drawings representing the deputy with an iron collar around her neck, had been unanimously condemned by the entire political class, President Emmanuel Macron in the lead.

At the helm of the Court of Appeal, the elected official had come to say that she had "always felt some discomfort" since this case.

"The references of the images, the justifications that are made around, I still feel the injustice that was done to me and the humiliation that it was," she said.

The author of the article, Laurent Jullien, explained that "the principle of this episode was to demonstrate what this slavery was in reality".

In his indictment, Advocate General Michel Lernoux recalled that "it is mainly because of his origin" that Danièle Obono had been chosen.

He had requested a fine of 10,000 euros against Laurent Jullien, Geoffroy Lejeune and Erik Monjalous.