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Sarkozy – as good as his word?

August 21st, 2007 · Post your comment (No Comments)

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The suggestion that a French President, who is of second generation Hungarian Jewish origin may be an (admittedly), unlikely candidate to receive the accolade of the most nationalist head of state, will doubtless seem controversial to the many adherents of the old style nationalist parties across Europe, who have regrettably inherited and furthermore institutionalised some degree of anti-Semitism.

However the BNP looks forward, not backward and looks beyond such blinkered vision and while acknowledging that President Nicolas Sarkozy was elected on a populist patriotic nationalist platform at the expense of the BNP’s friends in Le Pen’s Front National, there is no doubt that Le President is continuing to deliver the goods to the long suffering voters of France.

Yesterday the no-nonsense President announced new measures to deal with repeat sex offenders in response to a high-level paedophile scandal.

Mr Sarkozy said a secure hospital would be built to detain molesters. In future, he added, offenders would not be released until doctors had decided they were no longer dangerous.

The President’s moves follow an admission by a French prison doctor that he prescribed Viagra to a serial child molester accused of attacking a boy after his release.

The doctor told police he had not been given access to the criminal records of the man, who had told him he wanted relationships with women.

President Sarkozy said the government wanted to draw conclusions from an ‘unacceptable situation which has greatly shocked the French’.

He added that ‘everything must be done to make sure this won’t happen again’.

Left unsupervised

The alleged aggressor, Francis Evrard, was a convicted paedophile who had spent most of the past 30 years behind bars.
Yet within weeks of his release in early July, the 61-year-old had been left unsupervised.

Speaking after meeting senior ministers, Mr Sarkozy said that in future sex offenders would have to complete their sentences. Evrard had served 18 years of a 27-year term.

Mr Sarkozy added that serving a full term would not necessarily mean freedom. Sex offenders still regarded as a threat could be detained in a secure hospital to be built in Lyon.

Under certain circumstances, Mr Sarkozy said, they would be allowed to leave the hospital. They would be tagged, and some may be chemically castrated.
Evrard, 61, was found with a five-year-old boy within a few hours of the boy’s abduction, police say.

He was located the help of a new nationwide alert system that makes intense use of radio and television announcements as well as public notices at train stations and on highways.

The boy was abducted in a garage in the northern town of Roubaix on 15 August.
Before the emergency cabinet meeting, Mr Sarkozy met the boy’s father and grandfather.

Magistrates and health professionals complain that a lack of resources means medical treatment and monitoring procedures for released offenders are not carried out effectively.

One to watch

President Sarkozy is definitely one to watch. As all of Europe faces the common enemy of militant Islam; the scourge of Marxist-liberalism; the interference of the unelected European Commission and the widespread decline of an industrial economic base, it remains to be seen whether Sarkozy’s actions are merely headline grabbing window dressing or genuine action to rescue a nation under threat from within and without. How France responds to these issues could set the scene for replication across all of Europe, including the UK.

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