PARIS,
July 14 (IslmOnline.net & News Agencies) - A French woman, who
claimed she was the subject of an "anti-Semitic" attack by
six youths of North African appearance on a train in the suburbs of
Paris, was taken into police custody Tuesday, July 13, after admitting
to having invented the assault story.
French
police said they had detained the 23-year-old woman after questioning
her for a second time about the alleged incident on July 9, Agence
France-Presse (AFP) reported.
"The
first declarations of the young woman reveal that her accusations were
lies and that she had been making it all up," the public
prosecutor's office in the Paris suburb of Pontoise said late Tuesday
in a statement.
"There
are elements that have cast a large shadow of doubt on her
statements," said Paris police chief Jean-Paul Proust, adding he
could not draw any conclusions until investigators wrapped up their
probe.
Investigators
said closed-circuit cameras at the station north of Paris did not show
the six youths and despite government pleas for witnesses to come
forward, no one had yet surfaced to corroborate the woman's story.
Railway
personnel at the ticket office where the woman said she reported the
affair could remember nothing about it, investigators said.
A
28-year-old man told AFP he had seen the woman on the platform of the
station where she said she boarded the train before the attack.
He
said her clothes were already torn and she was crying, adding: "I
asked her if she wanted help and she said no."
Reporting
the invented story to police, the woman, identified only as
Marie-Leonie L. in the press, had claimed that six youths had slashed
her clothes and drawn swastikas on her stomach after mistaking her for
a Jew.
She
said her alleged attackers believed her to be Jewish after discovering
that she had once lived in the French capital's upmarket 16th
district.
"Only
Jews live in the 16th arrondissement," she quoted one of the
alleged attackers as having said.
She
had also alleged that they swiped her bag and tipped over the baby
carriage with her 13-month-old child inside.
She
said some 20 people had been in the train car at the time of the
incident, prompting nationwide outrage that no one had come to her
aid.
Failing
to help a person in danger is punishable by up to five years in jail,
according to AFP.
A
police source told AFP on Tuesday that the woman had filed six prior
complaints in recent years -- one for theft and one for sexual assault
-- but that the alleged criminals had never been found.
Now,
she could face up to six months in prison and a 7,500-euro ($9,200)
fine if convicted.
Justice
Needed
French
President Jacques Chirac on Wednesday, July 14, dismissed the hoax
attack as "regrettable."
"Whenever
there is manipulation, the manipulator must be punished," Chirac
said during his annual Bastille Day televised interview broadcast live
on TF1 and France 2 television.
Even
the woman's mother joined the criticism chorus.
"It's
not right that she has put France in such a state. There were
demonstrations for her. I don't accept this kind of thing, and so I
want justice to be done," the unidentified mother told RTL radio.
The
mother said "we knew she was fragile" and that she had
already received psychiatric care.
"You
can't treat someone against their will."
Some
of France's political elite, which had initially rallied around the
woman, seemed to be backing away on Tuesday.
"I
hope there's not going to be too much doubt about this affair,"
the Socialist president of the Paris region, Jean-Paul Huchon,
whispered to state secretary for victims' rights Nicole Guedj in an
aside recorded and broadcast by France 2 television.
Double
Standards
The
purported assault sparked outrage across France and sharp
condemnations from across the political spectrum.
Pascal
Boniface, the director of the French Institute for International and
Strategic Studies, said the extensive coverage the hoax had received
in French media demonstrated a double-standard approach in dealing
with racist attacks in the European country.
"At
a time when anti-Semitism crimes soar, we also find another kind of
racism targeting the younger generations of immigrants, which is
poorly covered by media," Boniface told IslamOnline.net.
"More
and more, French citizens of Arab descent who are cruelly treated by
police don’t receive slightest media attention, which does great
injustice to this community."
Several
mosques in France have recently come under a string of racist attacks
and arsons.
Mosques
and Muslim graves in two cemeteries have been defaced with swastikas
and Neo-Nazi slogans last month, while gunshots were fired at a mosque
in northern France.
On
June 27, racist slogans have been sprayed on the wall of a mosque near
Paris.
The
mosque in Nanterre, a suburb west of Paris, was sprayed with three
giant inscriptions, telling Muslims to "go home" and
extolling the policies of Jean-Marie Le Pen, leader of the xenophobic
far-right National Front party.