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French PM says opposition using Nice attack to 'destabilise' government

Manuel Valls accused conservative opposition of mounting campaign over police numbers on night of Bastille Day attack for 'purely political' reasons.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

A row over security on the night of the Bastille Day massacre threatened to provoke a political crisis as France’s prime minister accused the opposition of a campaign “to destabilise the government”, reports The Telegraph.

Manuel Valls said allegations that the police deployment in Nice on July 14th was insufficient to protect holiday crowds from a lorry attack that left 84 dead were “purely political”.

President François Hollande called for an end to the controversy, promising a judicial inquiry would “establish the truth”.

Mr Valls defended the interior minister, Bernard Cazeneuve, who is under opposition pressure to resign after a Nice police officer claimed that his office pressured her to lie about the police presence on the night of the massacre.

The socialist prime minister described Mr Cazeneuve, who said he would sue the policewoman for “defamation”, as “a statesman [and] a man of integrity”.

Mr Valls lashed out at Christian Estrosi, the right-wing president of the Provence, Riviera and Alps regional council, for accusing the government of “lying” about the security arrangements.

He accused the opposition of “attacking democracy and the Republic”, saying it was adopting “the same method [of] political violence” as Donald Trump. The US Republican presidential nominee has suggested that terror attacks in France and Germany were “their own fault because they allowed people to come into their territory”.

Mr Valls said Mr Estrosi should show he is “worthy of his election and worthy of the French people,” adding that he was only elected thanks to socialist supporters who backed him to prevent the victory of a far-right candidate.

Mr Estrosi responded: “The State must stop obstructing the truth.” He added that Mr Valls “is insulting us as elected officials and in a way is insulting the memory of the victims… who were our friends and in too many cases the children of our friends”.

Sandra Bertin, a municipal officer who runs the Nice CCTV control room, maintained her accusation that on the day after the attack, an envoy from the interior ministry ordered her to submit a report saying national police were guarding the seafront Promenade des Anglais.

She refused, saying only municipal officers were visible on the cameras when Mohamed Lahaouaiej Bouhlel ploughed a 19-tonne lorry through crowds at 55 mph.

Read more of this report from The Telegraph.