French ministers weigh in on Polanski film amid new rape claims
Two French government ministers have spoken out against the film "J'accuse" by director Roman Polanski, who has found himself at the centre of a new rape allegation.
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Government spokeswoman Sibeth Ndiaye says she will not go and see the film the film An Officer and a Spy, or J’accuse in French, but wouldn't go as far as to officially boycott it.
"I think it's good that women are speaking out about their experiences," she said "but you can't condemn someone in the place of the justice system," she told French radio on Thursday.
This point of view was shared by French minister for gender equality, Marlène Schiappa, who also said in light of the controversial accusations, she had no intention of seeing the film.
Hash tags such as #Boycott Polanksi have also appeared on social media with reference to changing the film name to J'abuse - or I abuse.
The media promotion of the film has also been disrupted, with the cancellation of media interviews with the film's key actors this week.
Activists on Tuesday night disrupted the Paris premiere of his new film, following fresh accusations of rape.
The 86-year-old Oscar winning director was able to avoid protesters by exiting via a backstage door at the Cinema UGC Normandie, on the Avenue Champs-Elysées.
Across town, some 40 protesters successfully prevented the film from screening at a cinema on the Rue Champollion, in Paris's Latin Quarter.
After Polanski film premiere was abandoned in Paris due to feminist protest on Monday, grafitti accuses him of rape and paedophile. pic.twitter.com/Em2totUufk
Rory Mulholland (@mulhollandrory) November 13, 2019
The demonstrations come days after an open letter was published in French daily Le Parisien, in which a French photographer accused Polanski of raping her in 1975, when she was 18 years old.
Valentine Monnier, now aged 62, said Polanski had attacked her at a chalet in the Swiss ski resort of Gstaad. Monnier said the rape was so violent, she felt she might not survive it. The release of the film, she added, had prompted her to break her 44 years of silence.
However Polanksi's lawyer, Hervé Témime, said the director disputed Monnier's allegations "in the strongest terms, adding that Polanski was considering legal action against the newspaper.
“I want to remind everyone that these allegations relate to events that are 45 years old,” Témime said. “I deplore the publishing of these accusations in Le Parisien on the eve of the film's release."
The Parisian daily said it had spoken with people close to Monnier, who confirmed that she had confided in them about the rape at the time.
Monnier is one of several women who have publicly accused Polanski of sexual assault. Last year the director, who fled the US after pleading guilty in 1977 to unlawful sex with a 13-year-old girl, was expelled from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
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