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Fervent prayers of many Europeans are answered

Faith in the tooth fairy may have been restored according to breaking news reports. A prominent French capitalist who promoted mass migration was reportedly tied up along with his wife and tortured in his home by four men of foreign descent.

It has been reported that prominent French businessman and former politician Bernard Tapie was attacked in his home by four assailants, three of whom are African, and one of North-African origin.

Tapie, the former owner of Adidas and other high-profile businesses, was asleep and snoring in his ostentatious Parisian mansion when the attackers struck. The assault resulted in both he and his wife being tied up with electrical cords tortured by the assailants who demanded to know where the couple’s valuables are hidden.

The 78-year-old tycoon, who is also undergoing cancer treatment received a blow to the head with a baseball bat. The migrant invaders made off with jewellery, watches and some mobile phones. Tapie’s wife Dominique was also assaulted but she eventually escaped and alerted police.

While most French public figures have expressed their sympathies with the victims, one of them chose to do so while also reminding Tapie of his past stances on migration.

Jean Messiha, the son of an Coptic Christian family and diplomat father is an Egyptian-born French economist and politician and a former member of Marine Le Pen’s National Rally. He also wished Tapie a ‘good recovery’ but at the same time pointed out the correlation between Tapie’s past criticism of Jean-Marie Le Pen’s migration stances and the fact that he was attacked by four criminals with a migration background:

‘Bernard Tapie’s 4 attackers included ‘three Africans and one of the North African type’. This is the same Bernard Tapie who accused Jean-Marie Le Pen of lies about the link between the absence of security and migratory invasion. Today reality has caught up with him.!’

Tapie, who in 1992 served shortly as a minister of city affairs in Socialist Prime Minister Pierre Bérégovoy’s government, has in the past criticised the leader of the French right-wing political party National Front (since renamed National Rally), and its previous leader Jean-Marie Le Pen for the party’s tough stances on immigration. Le Pen’s daughter, Marine Le Pen, who leads the National Front’s successor party, diplomatically expressed her sympathies towards Tapie and his wife.

‘We can only sympathise with Bernard Tapie and his wife who were victims of burglary with kidnapping. These acts, which have exploded higher in France, are traumas for those who undergo them in their privacy,’ wrote Marine Le Pen.

Le Pen’s last sentence is likely a veiled reference to the reality that what the businessman and his wife have gone through is part of a wider phenomenon experienced by many in France. Le Pen, who is currently a favourite to win the French national elections in April 2022, is a vocal critic of France’s flawed immigration policies and the explosion in crime and terrorist incidents that she regards as a direct consequence of these policy decisions.

The son of Bernard Tapie, Stéphane, condemned Jean Messiha’s comments about the home invasion his father experienced, calling them ‘repulsive’ during a TV interview. He also called those who have spoken out about the possible connections between immigrants and the attack on his parents ‘idiots’.

During the interview, the reporter had pointed out that Tapie had always refused to make a link between crime and immigration. In his curt response, Stéphane Tapie had referred to the fact that Jean Messiha himself is of foreign origin.

French tycoon Bernard Tapie escorted by police officers arrives at Paris court house in Paris, Wednesday March 13, 2019. French tycoon Bernard Tapie is facing a criminal trial over a fraudulent 404 million-euro ($450 million today) arbitration package linked to his sale of sportswear company Adidas in the 1990s. (AP Photos/Michel Euler)

Former convict and fraudster Bernard Tapie, who rose from humble origins to national prominence, is no stranger to controversy. He made his fortune by buying up failing companies and selling them off for a profit, often through dubious circumstances.

He is the past owner of the famous Olympique de Marseille football club, which won the French championship under his patronage. However, Tapie was subsequently accused of fixing football matches and was forced to end his role in the sport. He had spent a short stint of five months in prison on corruption convictions and on his release was banned from standing for public office.

Rogues beget rogues: His biggest controversy came with the sale of the sports accessories company Adidas by the bank Credit Lyonnais, which Tapie claimed to have undervalued the company and sold without his consent.

He was awarded a settlement of €400 million but was later ordered to pay back the whole sum with interest. Then Finance Minister Christine Lagarde, who is currently heading the European Central Bank, was also implicated in the judgement and was convicted of negligence in the case.

3 replies »

  1. That picture is wrong. Macron should be behind the sheeple, and when they have all walked over the edge, he will turn around and walk all the way back to the bank.

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  2. I laugh in America when these liberal reporters and liberal neighborhoods get attacked by Antifa or Black Lives Matter. I love it when their pets turn on them. Karma in action!

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