A building housing the campaign headquarters of French presidential hopeful Marine Le Pen in Paris has been targeted by an arson attempt. Those who reportedly took responsibility or the incident vowed to continue such acts “every day until the elections.”
The incident took place overnight Wednesday. Firefighters were called at about 2:40am (00:40 GMT).
A fire service spokesman told AFP that the fire was “quickly brought under control,” damaging only the door and a doormat.
The ground floor of the building was targeted and the message “FN VS KLX” was written on the wall, a police source told AFP. The cause of the fire was “not natural and probably criminal,” the source added.
Le Pen denounced the incident on Twitter, pointing the finger at leftist groups.
“The extreme left-wing groups are acting with impunity, the government is letting them go, and I demand their dissolution!” she wrote. However, Le Pen gave no details as to why she thinks that these particular groups are responsible.
Later Le Pen confirmed to RT that the attack was committed by “extreme left groups.”
“They are responsible for aggression against police which we regularly see on TV and [violence] at the end of each protest,” she said.
Interior Minister Matthias Fekl slammed the attack, calling them “unacceptable” and said that “democratic debate must take place in the ballot box.”
“We have been in touch with the National Front candidate's team since last night and will see with them if it is necessary to strengthen security procedures,” Fekl told RTL radio.
In the meantime, a representative of the group which calls itself Fight Xenophobia (French ‘Combattre la xénophobie,‘ possible abbreviation of ‘KLX’) contacted AFP and claimed responsibility for the attack.
The arson attack, carried out using Molotov cocktails, was apparently in memory of a man named Loïc “beaten by FN [National Front] militants 10 years ago,” the representative said, adding that “it will continue every day until the elections.”
The man said a similar attack had been carried out against the headquarters of the far-right Présent newspaper. However, a police source told AFP that there were “no attempts” to firebomb the paper.
Earlier in April Le Pen’s camp was outraged after a French rock band released a song dubbed “La Marine” where they call the presidential hopeful “a daughter of a “wh*re”.
“My fist will remember the taste of your teeth”, “If she wants to end up in the urn” and “She must be burned like Joan of Arc” are some of the lines in the song, available on YouTube.
FN secretary-general Nicolas Bay called the song “a call to murder.”
FN regional council for 'Île-de-France region Aurélien Legrand added a screenshot from the video, saying “if you're wondering what hate and violence is, that's it.”
Florian Philippot , vice-president of the National Front, called upon “patriots and all French people attached to democracy” to “react to this abomination.”
The first round of presidential elections will take place April 23 with Le Pen facing Socialist Benoît Hamon, Republican François Fillon and independents Emmanuel Macron and Jean-Luc Mélenchon . According to Opinionway poll, Le Pen may make it through the first round, but is tipped lose the May 7 run-off.