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French MPs in move to award wronged officer Dreyfus higher rank

Former French prime minister Gabriel Attal is among a group of parliamentarians who have prepared draft legislation to posthumously promote Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish army captain wrongly convicted of treason in 1894 amid a virulent anti-Semitic campaign, and finally rehabilitated after serving several years of a sentence to life in a penal colony, to the rank of brigadier general.

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A group of French members of parliament said on Tuesday that they want Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish French army captain wrongly convicted of treason in 1894, to be awarded the higher rank of brigadier general, reports FRANCE 24.

Dreyfus was accused of passing secret information to the German military attaché and put on trial amid a virulent anti-Semitic press campaign.

The parliamentarians, led by former prime minister Gabriel Attal, said a law to that effect would be an act of reparation for Dreyfus, whose condemnation came against a backdrop of the late 19th century's rampant anti-Semitism in the French army and wider society.

It would, said Attal, also send the signal that the fight against anti-Semitism continues today, more than a century after the Dreyfus affair divided French society and gave rise to writer Émile Zola's famous "J'accuse" pamphlet in favour of the disgraced captain.

"The anti-Semitism that targeted Alfred Dreyfus is not in the distant past," Attal said in a draft law to be submitted to parliament.

"Today's acts of hatred remind us that the fight is still ongoing."

Dreyfus, a 36-year-old army captain from the Alsace region of eastern France, was accused in October 1894 of passing secret information on new artillery equipment to the German military attache.

The accusation was based on a comparison of handwriting on a document found in the German's waste paper basket in Paris.

Dreyfus was put on trial, amid a virulent anti-Semitic press campaign.

Despite a lack of evidence, he was convicted of treason, sentenced to life imprisonment in the infamous Devil's Island penal colony in French Guiana and publicly stripped of his rank.

But Lieutenant Colonel Georges Picquart, head of the intelligence services, reinvestigated the case in secret and discovered the handwriting on the incriminating message was that of another officer, Ferdinand Walsin Esterhazy.

When Picquart presented the evidence to the general staff of the French army, he himself was driven out of the military and jailed for a year, while Esterhazy was acquitted.

In June 1899, Dreyfus was brought back to France for a second trial. He was initially found guilty and sentenced to 10 years in prison, before being officially pardoned – though not cleared of the charges.

Only in 1906, after many twists, did the high court of appeal overturn the original verdict, exonerating Dreyfus.

He was reinstated with the rank of major. He served during World War I and died in 1935, aged 76.

Read more of this report from FRANCE 24.