Three French medics filed a legal complaint this week against Prime Minister Edouard Philippe and former minister of solidarity and health, Agnes Buzyn. The two senior officials, the complaint alleges, failed to perform their duty and organize a proper response to the coronavirus outbreak, which by now has gripped most of Europe and put France on standstill.
As early as January, the two ministers were aware of the threat posed by the virus, but “chose not to act,” according to the complaint filed with France’s CJR, a court established to try cases of ministerial misconduct. If convicted, the accused could land in prison for up to two years and face heavy fines.
“At some point the truth needs to be told, which is that these people have been lying to us from the start,” Fabrice di Vizio, the lawyer representing the three plaintiffs, told RT.
Among the evidence cited in the legal papers is an interview that Buzyn gave to newspaper Le Monde, in which she expressed regret about leaving her ministerial office and running for mayor of Paris for President Emmanuel Macron’s La Republique en Marche (LRM) party. She said she was crying as she left the ministry “because I knew there was a tsunami coming.”
The minister was called to participate in the race after LRM’s first-choice candidate dropped out in mid-February over a sexting scandal. She took third place in the first round of the municipal election last Sunday and has withdrawn from the election.
“We should have stopped [the election]; it was a masquerade,” the ex-minister said. She added on January 30 that she suggested canceling the municipal election, but Prime Minister Philippe chose not to.
The French government denies any negligence and said it was paying close attention to Covid-19, but the scientific data did not warrant taking stronger measures in February. Buzyn said she should not have used the word “masquerade” in the interview, explaining that she was under much stress at the time, and has endorsed the government’s handling of the health crisis.
Di Vizio, the medic’s lawyer, believes the government is still more interested in scoring political points than saving lives.
“Last week the government spoke about the masks. You remember those pompous speeches by the president, who was all commander-in-chief in tone and promised the masks?” he told RT. “Masks are a primary tool of war since they protect the health workers. Have those masks arrived?”
Mask shortages have become an acute problem in France, with the government ordering 250 million pieces of the equipment on Saturday.
Police could be spreading coronavirus instead of enforcing the lockdown in France due to a lack of masks and gloves, a police union spokesperson told RT after the government was accused of not issuing protective gear to officers.
“Security officers, police and other people, who uphold law and order in the country, need to be protected. This virus doesn’t distinguish between police, medics and other citizens,” Christophe Crepin, spokesperson for the law enforcement union, France Police – Policiers en colere, told RT.
We are not even sure that we – police officers – are not potentially infecting people when we do our checks. So, we need masks and other protective equipment to keep us safe and others.
Around 100,000 police officers were deployed to enforce a strict 15-day nationwide lockdown that took effect on Tuesday.