Benzema, French minister clash over 'Muslim Brotherhood' claim
The lawyer
of Karim Benzema has hit back at France's interior minister after he accused
the French football star who plays for Saudi team Al-Ittihad of links to the
Muslim Brotherhood Islamist group.
Interior
Minister Gerald Darmanin made the accusations after the reigning Ballon d'Or
winner and former Real Madrid forward posted a message on social media about
the conflict between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas.
"All
our prayers are for the inhabitants of Gaza who are once again victims of these
unjust bombings which spare no women or children," Benzema wrote on X, formerly
Twitter.
Hamas on
October 7 launched shock raids into Israel, killing 1,400 people, mostly
civilians, and seizing about 200 hostages.
Israel has
since then launched wave after wave of retaliatory air strikes, killing more
than 3,000 Palestinians in Gaza.
Darmanin,
speaking on the CNews Channel, alleged that Benzema "has a notorious link
with the Muslim Brotherhood", a Sunni Muslim Islamist group with its
origins in Egypt that is now banned by Cairo.
"This
is false! Karim Benzema has never had the slightest relationship with this
organisation," Benzema's layer Hugues Vigier said in a statement.
He said that
Benzema was expressing "natural compassion" with "what many
today describe as war crimes being committed in Gaza, but which does not
detract from the horror of the terrorist acts of October 7, something not open
to discussion".
The lawyer
added that he was planning to file a complaint against Darmanin for his
comments.
'Intolerable
exploitation'
A source
close to Darmanin doubled down on the minister's comments, criticising Benzema
over an alleged "drift" towards a tougher interpretation of Islam
over the last years.
But his
lawyer Vigier said: "We are once again witnessing an intolerable
exploitation of Karim Benzema and the 'symbolic figure' that we like to make
him."
Benzema, 35,
who was born in France to parents of Algerian origin, has been one of the
standout French stars of the last decade.
He joined
the Saudi club on a hugely lucrative three-year deal this year after 14 seasons
with Real Madrid where he lifted five Champions Leagues, four La Liga titles
and three Copas del Rey.
But after a
stellar 2021-22 season when he led Real to Champions League glory and was
rewarded with the Ballon d'Or for the world's best player, he was troubled by
injuries that ruled him out of France's World Cup campaign in Qatar last year.
Darmanin,
41, has carved out a reputation as a hardliner in the mould of his political
mentor ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy and makes no secret of his own presidential
ambitions.
French
hard-left figurehead and three-time presidential candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon
weighed in on the controversy to back Benzema while admitting: "I don't
know you and I don't know anything about football."
"The
government and its friends have chosen to demonise you," he said, accusing
the authorities of seeing Benzema as "French only on paper".
Benzema is
not the only Muslim football star to enter the debate, with Liverpool and Egypt
player Mohamed Salah calling for humanitarian aid to be allowed into Gaza and
an end to "massacres".
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