The Prague Post - French guillotine abolitionist enters Pantheon

EUR -
AED 4.194964
AFN 71.962329
ALL 95.607711
AMD 430.633064
ANG 2.044746
AOA 1047.455718
ARS 1597.169164
AUD 1.633408
AWG 2.056074
AZN 1.937983
BAM 1.947808
BBD 2.300461
BDT 140.154929
BGN 1.952481
BHD 0.434119
BIF 3390.787219
BMD 1.142263
BND 1.461603
BOB 7.892616
BRL 6.088954
BSD 1.142213
BTN 105.429411
BWP 15.564139
BYN 3.379633
BYR 22388.358054
BZD 2.297075
CAD 1.567813
CDF 2578.08801
CHF 0.903144
CLF 0.026534
CLP 1047.694983
CNY 7.877735
CNH 7.885249
COP 4206.042137
CRC 537.395008
CUC 1.142263
CUP 30.269974
CVE 109.814419
CZK 24.467299
DJF 203.395446
DKK 7.469419
DOP 70.172076
DZD 152.519197
EGP 59.872586
ERN 17.133947
ETB 178.286769
FJD 2.545759
FKP 0.858727
GBP 0.862717
GEL 3.11834
GGP 0.858727
GHS 12.404105
GIP 0.858727
GMD 83.968708
GNF 10012.915882
GTQ 8.759061
GYD 238.959522
HKD 8.941847
HNL 30.233947
HRK 7.538477
HTG 149.765495
HUF 392.485624
IDR 19372.840409
ILS 3.591663
IMP 0.858727
INR 105.756264
IQD 1496.260674
IRR 1509757.783542
ISK 144.265995
JEP 0.858727
JMD 179.214662
JOD 0.809911
JPY 182.340006
KES 147.733832
KGS 99.89057
KHR 4580.206897
KMF 492.315655
KPW 1028.036787
KRW 1716.535902
KWD 0.351166
KYD 0.951795
KZT 559.16568
LAK 24474.578059
LBP 102280.730681
LKR 355.471461
LRD 209.012399
LSL 19.183488
LTL 3.372806
LVL 0.690944
LYD 7.288096
MAD 10.757561
MDL 19.925244
MGA 4742.540823
MKD 61.388118
MMK 2398.079178
MNT 4076.711204
MOP 9.207521
MRU 45.698494
MUR 53.127208
MVR 17.648461
MWK 1980.473893
MXN 20.473351
MYR 4.4988
MZN 73.001428
NAD 19.183488
NGN 1582.606175
NIO 42.027556
NOK 11.156005
NPR 168.686859
NZD 1.97274
OMR 0.439203
PAB 1.142114
PEN 3.938839
PGK 4.994507
PHP 68.067038
PKR 318.920633
PLN 4.270853
PYG 7368.76513
QAR 4.151964
RON 5.097466
RSD 116.890386
RUB 91.630602
RWF 1666.761092
SAR 4.286839
SBD 9.197181
SCR 17.439444
SDG 686.500582
SEK 10.812155
SGD 1.46549
SHP 0.856993
SLE 28.04248
SLL 23952.699825
SOS 651.626304
SRD 42.88965
STD 23642.541316
STN 24.399885
SVC 9.993994
SYP 126.248614
SZL 19.177313
THB 36.927147
TJS 10.94768
TMT 3.997921
TND 3.37784
TOP 2.750295
TRY 50.476467
TTD 7.746216
TWD 36.774707
TZS 2975.292043
UAH 50.368233
UGX 4294.379678
USD 1.142263
UYU 45.881742
UZS 13791.412287
VES 505.685187
VND 30034.667687
VUV 135.076355
WST 3.124335
XAF 653.276533
XAG 0.014183
XAU 0.000227
XCD 3.087023
XCG 2.058454
XDR 0.812466
XOF 653.276533
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.486584
ZAR 19.332787
ZMK 10281.734904
ZMW 22.231781
ZWL 367.808273
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    22.99

    -0.48%

  • BCC

    0.3800

    70

    +0.54%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    25.57

    -0.43%

  • JRI

    -0.2300

    12.59

    -1.83%

  • NGG

    0.0900

    90.9

    +0.1%

  • GSK

    -0.8900

    53.39

    -1.67%

  • CMSC

    -0.1500

    22.99

    -0.65%

  • RYCEF

    -1.1300

    16.12

    -7.01%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    34.14

    -0.12%

  • RIO

    -2.8700

    87.83

    -3.27%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    14.41

    +0.69%

  • AZN

    -2.6000

    189.9

    -1.37%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    59.93

    +0.07%

  • BP

    0.5100

    42.67

    +1.2%

French guillotine abolitionist enters Pantheon
French guillotine abolitionist enters Pantheon / Photo: Christophe Ena - POOL/AFP

French guillotine abolitionist enters Pantheon

Robert Badinter, the justice minister who ended the death penalty in France in 1981, entered the country's Pantheon mausoleum of outstanding historical figures on Thursday, just hours after his grave was vandalised.

Text size:

Badinter, a lawyer who campaigned for an end to capital punishment after one of his clients was beheaded with a guillotine in the 1970s, died last year aged 95.

His legacy also includes a 1982 law to decriminalise homosexuality.

His remains are to stay in a cemetery outside Paris, but officers carried a symbolic casket draped in a French flag into the former church on the capital's left bank under a cascade of applause.

The coffin contained his lawyer's robe, a speech he made against capital punishment and several books, his wife told the TF1 television broadcaster.

President Emmanuel Macron inside the Pantheon said Badinter's voice would ring out in posterity.

"As he enters the Pantheon, we hear his voice advocating for these great, essential, and unfinished battles," he said, mentioning "the universal abolition of the death penalty", as well as the fight against anti-Semitism and to uphold the rule of law.

"These are causes that transcend centuries," he added.

Badinter joined other national heroes, including author Victor Hugo, French-American member of the French Resistance Josephine Baker and Simone Veil, the women's rights heavyweight and health minister who championed legalising abortion.

Until its abolition, capital punishment in France was carried out by beheading with the guillotine, a practice dating back to the French Revolution of 1789.

The soft-spoken attorney was widely vilified for pushing through legislation banning the death penalty at a time when most French people still supported the practice.

He was in his later years hailed for his integrity and statesmanship.

But his tombstone was defaced on Thursday morning, local authorities said.

"Eternal is their gratitude, the murderers, the paedophiles, the rapists," read blue graffiti on his tombstone.

Macron almost immediately responded on X: "Shame on those who wanted to sully his memory," he wrote.

- Last beheading in 1977 -

The son of a Jewish fur trader who died in a Nazi concentration camp during World War II, as a lawyer Badinter built a reputation defending clients his peers wouldn't touch.

Badinter's advocacy against capital punishment started in 1972, following the beheading of his client, Roger Bontems, for his secondary role in murdering a nurse and guard during a prison escape.

Five years later, haunted by his failure to prevent Bontems' death, he convinced a jury not to execute Patrick Henry for the murder of a seven-year-old boy, becoming an instantly hated figure among the French public.

He used the case as an opportunity to weigh the death penalty, calling in experts to describe the workings of the guillotine in grisly detail.

"Guillotining is nothing less than taking a living man and cutting him in two," Badinter argued.

In all, he saved six men from execution during his career, eliciting death threats in the process.

Badinter made ending the death penalty an immediate priority after becoming justice minister in June 1981, ushering a bill through parliament just months later.

The last person to be executed in France was in 1977 with the death of Hamida Djandoubi, a Tunisian immigrant convicted of torturing and murdering a young woman.

A museum in the southern city of Marseille earlier this month assembled an 800-kilogram (1,700-pound) guillotine to shine light on Badinter's legacy among its visitors.

After ending capital punishment, Badinter in December 1981 spoke in parliament in favour of decriminalising homosexuality, with a law passed the following year.

burs-ah/gv

N.Simek--TPP