French president's aggressive bodyguard sparks first government scandal

French president's aggressive bodyguard sparks first government scandal
By Daniel Bellamy with Reuters
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Alexandre Benalla, who heads Presidential Emmnauel Macron's security detail, was filmed hitting a young man and abusing a young woman on a street in Paris in front of police officers.

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A judicial inquiry has opened in France into how a top government security official was allowed to beat up a May Day protester whilst wearing a riot police officer's helmet.

Alexandre Benalla, who heads Presidential Emmnauel Macron's security detail, was filmed hitting a young man and abusing a young woman on a street in Paris in front of police officers.

It has raised many uncomfortable questions for the government. Why didn't the police intervene and why wasn't Benalla immediately arrested and prosecuted?

Benalla was suspended without pay for two weeks in May after the incident, but he was only sacked by Macron on Saturday.

The scandal has hit Macron's until now blemish-free government, and ruined his promise of running an "exemplary republic."

The Minister of the Interior, Gérard Collomb, is to appear before both a Senate and a National Assembly committee next week as a big question mark hangs over his political future.

Meanwhile Benalla remains in police custody.

Potentially he could face charges of being violent as a public official, pretending to be a police officer, illegally wearing police insignia and attempting to obtain security camera footage.

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