
France's premier faces questions from an inquiry on a Catholic school abuse scandal
French Prime Minister François Bayrou was set to face questions Wednesday from a parliamentary inquiry into alleged abuse at a Catholic school amid accusations that he has hidden what he knows about the scandal.
Lawmakers at the National Assembly, France's lower house of parliament, are expected to ask Bayrou what he knew about allegations of physical and sexual abuse over five decades at the private Catholic school Notre-Dame de Bétharram, near the town of Pau in southwestern France.
Bayrou is a longtime and prominent elected official in that region and a number of his children attended the school. He has been the mayor of Pau since 2014 and continues to hold that office since becoming prime minister five months ago. He has been a member of parliament from that area for about 20 years and was the national education minister from 1993 to 1997.
Over 200 complaints have been formally filed since February 2024 over alleged abuse at the school, including dozens of alleged rapes by priests, said Alain Esquerre, the spokesperson for a group of victims.
The scandal took a political turn when Bayrou told the National Assembly in February that he had never been informed of abuse at the school until recent years. A few days later, he said he actually had been aware of 'a slap' by a school supervisor in 1996 when he was education minister, leading him to commission a report.
Political opponents have accused him of having lied to parliament.
Bayrou has links to the school on a personal level because several of his six children attended the school and his wife used to teach catechism there.
In 1998, Father Carricart, the school's former director from 1987 to 1993, was handed preliminary charges of rape against children under 18 and placed in custody.
A judge who handled that case told the parliament's inquiry commission that he had a meeting with Bayrou at the time, during which the politician expressed concern about his son, who was a student at the school.
Carricart committed suicide in 2000 before a trial could be held.
Bayrou's eldest daughter, Hélène Perlant, last month revealed she was among children who were abused, saying a priest beat her at summer camp when she was 14. Now 53, Perlant said she never talked about it to her father or anyone else until the recent release of a book in which she tells her story. 'I remained silent for 30 years,' she said.
Esquerre, the spokesperson for the victims, himself a former student and victim of abuse, told the inquiry commission in March that 'it was a time of terror, and no one could imagine that we were in the hands of priests who were also the aggressors.'
Showing a printout with a list of names, Esquerre said : 'I am holding here a list of all the priests over the last 70 years, all of them aggressors, all these priests. And so, there still is a number of victims who will little by little, of course, join the already substantial number of plaintiffs.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Small boats? Now migrants are coming by luxury yacht, writes SUE REID. So are the numbers arriving EVEN WORSE than we think?
A luxury yacht named Tacoma sailed out of a smart French marina in April, supposedly for a jaunt along the Brittany coast. The sleek blue and white vessel worth £70,000 had been hired by man with an Austrian passport from a reputable boat charter company operating at a quayside office in Brest. 'The renter's credentials were checked by us,' Valery Roue, co-owner of the Eridan charter company, told the Mail this week. 'His passport, his identity details, his maritime certificate. Everything seemed in order. This Austrian hired the yacht for a two-week local sailing holiday with friends. Or that is what he told us.' What actually happened next to the six-berth Tacoma is a shocking tale that exposes how pleasure yachts hired in France are being stolen by criminal gangs to bring illegal migrants here. Today, the 'Austrian' who hired the vessel has disappeared. He is being hunted by British and French police across Europe and the Balkans because one of the documents he used for the yacht hire shows he originally hails from North Macedonia. Far from pottering along the Brittany coast, the 23ft yacht was soon spotted by Monsieur Roue, using a vessel tracking device, leaving French waters to head for Cornwall. He alerted the UK Border Force who pounced on the yacht as it reached the mouth of the Helford River, near Newquay, on Sunday, April 13. Hiding inside the cabin were 17 Albanian migrants, including one woman, hoping to slip illegally into Britain. They are thought to have been picked up by the Tacoma from a secret location along the Brittany coast soon after the yacht sailed from Brest with three men, including a skipper, on board. Roue explained: 'I became suspicious after my yacht left Brest. I watched its route and found her sailing across the Channel. Border Force stopped it at Newquay but the "Austrian" was not there.' This week, we found the Tacoma back in Brest, a couple of hundred yards from Roue's office. After 52 days impounded in Cornwall by Border Force, she was sailed back to France by a crew from the charter company a few days ago. The incident has led British and French immigration authorities to sound the alarm over French charter yachts being targeted to bring migrants into the UK. A 'high alert' has been sent out by the French customs authority to all charter boat companies along the Brittany coast, warning them to be vigilant about migrant- smuggling gangs who may try to hire, or simply steal, their yachts. Meanwhile, British Border Force is using extra surveillance to check pleasure craft arriving at UK ports, private marinas and remote inlets from France, Belgium and the Netherlands. The force is responsible for securing the 11,000 miles of British coastline. 'We patrol 24/7, carrying out proactive, as well as reactive, operations,' Charlie Eastaugh, its director of maritime, told the BBC after the Tacoma incident. But he added that there are hundreds of harbours and marinas in the UK, and it would not be a reasonable expectation to have a 'fixed presence' in all of them. A recent BBC exposé about a British ex-soldier and yachtsman known by the pseudonym of Nick, who smuggled hundreds of clandestine passengers – many Albanian and Vietnamese – into private marinas at seaside towns across south-east England, had also identified 'vulnerabilities' in the system, said Mr Eastaugh. A Home Office statement about the Tacoma migrants explained: 'This case shows that while small-boat Channel crossings remain under close scrutiny, people- smuggling gangs are adapting their methods, using pleasure craft to try to evade detection.' The Mail has discovered that this vessel is not the only Brittany yacht used for migrant journeys this spring. On May 8, according to authorities, a second vessel hired at a marina 14 miles from the picturesque French port of La Trinite-sur-Mer was found abandoned near Falmouth, Cornwall. The yacht was 'very similar in design and size to the Tacoma' and it is suspected that illegals on board simply jumped off on arrival and disappeared into the UK. Our French sources told us those on this second vessel are also likely to have been from Albania, a country whose citizens now face deportation from the UK if they arrive on smugglers' small boats across the Channel. 'They are prepared to pay for a yacht crossing because they do not want to be caught up in the lengthy British asylum system or deported. Most pay huge prices to enter Britain secretly by sea to work on the black market or survive by crime,' they added. The Albanian passengers on the Tacoma have been interviewed by police from the National Crime Agency – Britain's FBI – by immigration authorities and Border Force officers. They are likely to face deportation. Meanwhile, an investigation is under way into the crew who sailed the boat to Britain. Two of them are Albanian men in their 30s who have been named publicly and pleaded guilty in April at Bodmin magistrates' court to breaching previous UK deportation orders. They are due to be sentenced in the near future. As for the missing 'Austrian' mastermind of the Tacoma operation (which stood to reap £250,000 from the migrants on board), he may never be found. The passport and maritime certificate he handed over to Mr Roue's charter boat company could have been faked or stolen. 'They looked genuine, but we just don't know,' Mr Roue said. 'Although I was the person who alerted your British Border Force, it has charged us for every day the Tacoma was impounded in Cornwall during a police investigation. 'When we sailed the yacht back, she was in good order considering how many Albanian migrants were found below deck on a sea journey that takes at least 20 hours.' His company has been operating boat charters for nearly 40 years. 'This is the first time that we have had a yacht taken by gangsters.


Reuters
5 hours ago
- Reuters
France's Macron says Iran responsible for destabilising region
PARIS, June 13 (Reuters) - French President Emmanuel Macron said on Friday that Iran bore a heavy responsibility for destabilisation of the Middle East and that it had pushed ahead with an unjustified nuclear programme, but he also urged restraint after Israel struck Iran. After a day of talks with regional and international leaders following Israeli strikes on Iranian military targets, notably its nuclear sites, Macron said Tehran was close to a "critical point" in acquiring a nuclear weapon. Iran has consistently denied seeking one. "Iran bears a very heavy responsibility for the destabilisation of the region," Macron said. "Iran is continuing to enrich uranium without any civilian justification and to levels that are very close to what is needed for a nuclear device," he said. While he urged restraint, Macron acknowledged that resuming diplomatic efforts, specifically U.S. negotiations on a nuclear deal with Iran that started two months ago, would be difficult. "The current situation has a risk of uncontrolled escalation," he said, adding that Iran's activities threatened Europe. Warning of a possible impact on the global economy, Macron said France would defend Israel if it was attacked by Iran as it had done in the past, but he ruled out taking part in any operation against Tehran. France and Israel, traditionally close allies, have had frosty relations in recent months with Macron increasingly critical over Israel's war in Gaza. Macron said France's support for Israel was not unconditional and that Paris has the right to disagree with some Israeli government decisions because "they are sometimes against Israel's security interests."


Reuters
5 hours ago
- Reuters
France's Macron: Iran nuclear programme was close to a critical stage
PARIS, June 13 (Reuters) - French President Emmanuel Macron said on Friday that information France had on the Iranian nuclear programme was most concerning, adding that the programme was close to a critical stage. Macron, speaking at a news conference, said France did not recommend attacking Iran's nuclear sites, saying there was still a "diplomatic route" to resolve the issue.