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French President Emmanuel Macron, right, with his former aide Alexandre Benalla this month. Benalla was fired on Friday in connection with the beating of a protester in May. Photo: EPA/EFE

Emmanuel Macron feels heat as former aide appears in court over beating incident

The pressure is intensifying on the French president as some suspect a cover-up in Alexandre Benalla affair

A French judge handed preliminary charges on Sunday to one of President Emmanuel Macron’s top security aides after video surfaced that showed him beating a protester at a May Day demonstration.

The initial charges against Alexandre Benalla, 26, came the same day French authorities opened a judicial investigation of the assault.

The multiple alleged offenses included violence, interfering in the exercise of public office and the unauthorized public display of official insignia.

The incident has ignited the first major political crisi of Macron’s tenure.

The Paris prosecutor’s office said Benalla and four others went before a judge on Sunday.

France’s Le Monde newspaper first made the video public on Wednesday. It showed Benalla, who handled Macron’s campaign security and remained close to him after he was elected, wearing a police helmet at a May 1 demonstration where the beating happened.

Benalla initially received only a two-week suspension. Photo: AFP

Surrounded by riot police, he brutally dragged a woman from the crowd and then repeatedly beat a young male protester on the ground.

The man was heard begging Benalla to stop. The officers did not intervene.

Benalla was fired by the presidential palace on Friday and investigators raided his house Saturday.

However, the president’s office has been heavily criticised since it revealed last week that it knew about the assault before last week.

Macron took office last year amid a pledge to restore integrity and transparency to the presidency.

Lawmakers were aghast to learn that Benalla initially received only a two-week suspension and still had an office in the presidential palace two and a half months after the beating instead of having been reported to judicial authorities.

Macron’s ‘militia’: security aide scandal draws in minister

Suspicion of a possible cover-up has surfaced over what appeared to be inconsistent answers from Macron’s office.

It said last week that since May, Benalla had been working in an administrative role instead of security. But Benalla was photographed by the president’s side as his bodyguard during France’s July 14 national holiday.

Macron’s political adversaries have seized the opportunity. Les Republicans party leader Laurent Wauquiez said the government was “trying to conceal a matter of state”.

Far-right leader Marine Le Pen tweeted: “If Macron doesn’t explain himself, the Benalla affair will become the Macron affair.”

Audrey Gadot, Benalla’s lawyer, arriving at the Palais de Justice courthouse in Paris on Sunday where Benalla as well as four other suspects faced a magistrate. Photo: AFP

Macron has remained silent about the behaviour captured on video. Lawmakers plan to question Interior Minister Gerard Collomb this week as Macron’s government faces mounting criticism over how it initially disciplined Benalla.

Macron’s office has said Benalla only was supposed to be accompanying officers to the May protest as an observer.

Macron’s security chief fired after film emerges of protest brawl

The four others under investigation are Vincent Crase, who worked for Macron’s political party and was with on the day of the attack, as well as three police officers suspected of illegally passing footage of the events to Benalla earlier this week.

The Paris prosecutor’s office said it has asked for Benalla and Crase to be prohibited from possessing weapons or working in any public function.

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