French court fines 7 people for antisemitic abuse of Miss France runner-up

April Benayoum was targeted online after revealing her father is Israeli

April Benayoum. (Screen capture: YouTube)
April Benayoum. (Screen capture: YouTube)

PARIS — A French court on Wednesday fined seven people for a torrent of antisemitic abuse on social media aimed at the runner-up of the latest Miss France contest.

April Benayoum, who competed for the Miss France title in December, became the subject of hate messages after saying at the event that her father is of Israeli origin.

The insults — such as “Hitler forgot about this one” and “Don’t vote for a Jew” — were posted mainly on Twitter and drew condemnation from politicians and associations.

On Wednesday, a Paris court ordered seven defendants, four women and three men, to each pay fines ranging from 300 to 800 euros ($350-$930).

An eighth suspect was acquitted, with the court finding that his tweet did not target Benayoum directly.

During the trial, the suspects all admitted to publishing the messages, but denied they were antisemitic, with some arguing they were making a political statement defending the cause of the Palestinians.

But the court found that the posts expressed “a rejection of a person because of their origins” or “because of their presumed religion” and that they targeted Benayoum directly.

Screen capture from video of April Benayoum, who was targeted with online anti-Semitic abuse as she participated in the Miss France 2021 contest, December 2020. (YouTube)

The seven were also told to pay one euro in damages to the contestant and to several associations against racism and antisemitism that had joined the plaintiffs.

Four of them were also told to attend a two-day civics class having, according to the court, not fully grasped the seriousness of their actions.

While calling the penalties “light,” Jean-Louis Lagarde, a lawyer for the MRAP anti-racism association, said they were still “educational.”

The judgment showed that “you can’t hide behind the internet, or behind Twitter,” he said.

Benayoum’s lawyer Jean Veil said he blamed Twitter itself because the messaging platform had allowed the offensive tweets to remain visible for several days.

“My client believes that Twitter’s negligence is to blame in this case,” Veil said, adding that a separate case had been brought against the platform.

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