PSG coach faces trial in discrimination probe

(FILES) Paris Saint-Germain's French head coach Christophe Galtier addresses a PSG press conference in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, in the north-western outskirts of Paris, on May 12, 2023, on the eve of the L1 football match against Ajaccio. (Photo by FRANCK FIFE/AFP)
Paris
Saint-Germain coach Christophe Galtier will face trial in December as a result
of an investigation into alleged discrimination, the Nice prosecutor said on
Friday.
The
56-year-old Galtier and his son John Valovic-Galtier - a player's agent -
were taken in for questioning earlier in the day following an investigation
launched in April, after claims the coach made racist and Islamophobic remarks
about players when he coached Nice in the 2021/22 season.
At a hearing
on Friday, Galtier "denied the offences of which he could be
accused", said the public prosecutor Xavier Bonhomme in a press release.
Galtier will
stand trial on December 15 before the Nice Criminal Court "on charges of
moral harassment and discrimination on the grounds of actual or supposed
membership or non-membership of a particular ethnic group, nation, alleged race
or religion", the prosecutor said.
The offences
are punishable by three years' imprisonment and a 45,000-euro (49,000-dollar)
fine.
Valovic-Galtier
"was released following his hearing", said the public prosecutor.
Galtier
guided PSG to their 11th league title last season, but was told at the
beginning of June by the club's Qatari owners he would be fired after a largely
underwhelming season in which PSG suffered 10 defeats in 2023, exiting the
Champions League, the team's main objective, in the last 16.
The
allegations stemming from his time coaching Nice, surfaced in the French media
in April.
The reports
alleged that ex-Nice sporting director Julien Fournier had written an email at
the end of the 2021/22 season in which he claimed Galtier had made
discriminatory remarks about the Nice squad.
"He
(Galtier) told me that I should take account of the reality of the city and that
in effect we should not have as many blacks and Muslims in the team,"
claimed Fournier, whose relationship with Galtier was a fraught one.
"He
told me he wanted to profoundly change the team's make-up and limit the maximum
number of Muslims."
Galtier said
he was "deeply shocked by the claims" and denied the allegations. He
launched a defamation suit, saying he had received death threats, against two
journalists and Fournier.
Judicial
enquiry
Fournier
indicated to AFP on May 22 he had been questioned as part of the judicial
enquiry without giving any further details.
Several
players and directors, including the club president Jean-Pierre Rivere and
former coach Didier Digard were also questioned by investigators.
The message
was reportedly sent by Fournier - whose relationship with Galtier was tense -
to Dave Brailsford, the former head of British Cycling and Team Sky now the
Director of Sport at Ineos, the owners of Nice.
Galtier and
Fournier both left Nice last year after working together at the club for one
season, with the former being appointed by PSG.
Galtier - a
former no nonsense defender who played most of his career at Marseille where he
was born - had enjoyed a highly successful career as a coach.
He began
with Saint-Etienne before taking on Lille and guiding them to the 2021 Ligue 1
crown but moved on to Nice soon afterwards.
He took them
to the French Cup final in 2022 - where they lost to Nantes - but he could not
resist the challenge of attempting to secure the Champions League trophy when
PSG came calling last year.
However,
despite having the troika of Lionel Messi, Neymar and Kylian Mbappe in the
team, PSG again fell short and Galtier's fate was sealed.
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