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Pressure mounts on French comic in racism row

Officials in several cities where Dieudonne is set to perform during his January tour have said they are trying to ban his show.

Veteran Nazi hunters Serge and Beate Klarsfeld have called for a protest on Wednesday at a theatre in the western city of Nantes, where Dieudonne is due to perform.

And Patrick Klugman, the lawyer representing SOS Racisme, said Sunday the organisation would “look into all legal possibilities of holding liable those who allow Dieudonne’s commercial venture to prosper”, such as those who sell tickets to his shows.

But the comedian has scores of die-hard fans who feel he is being hounded by the media and politicians.

“There are some who say much worse things than him and no one says anything to them,” one netizen said on a Facebook page that presents itself as Dieudonne’s official page, and has 466,000 likes.

“Leave him alone, I saw him twice in Lille (northern France)… He’s great.”

The controversy comes at a sensitive time for France, where racism has shot to the fore after the country’s black justice minister became the victim of a series of racial jibes – prompting President Francois Hollande to pledge intransigence on racism in his New Year’s address.

Valls himself has been accused of discrimination after he said in September that Roma did not want to integrate.

The French-born son of a Cameroonian father and a white mother, Dieudonne M’Bala M’Bala shot to fame in the 1990s in a double-act with his childhood friend, Jewish comedian Elie Semoun.

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But in 1997, he fell out with Semoun, who has since accused him of “living in a world of hatred”.

Dieudonne veered to the far right, cosying up to National Front founder Jean-Marie Le Pen and becoming politically active in what he calls anti-Zionism, standing for EU-wide elections in 2009 on an anti-Zionist platform, although he won little over one percent of the vote.

He visited Iran and professed admiration for its leaders, described Holocaust commemorations as “memorial pornography” and made “Heil”-like signs in televised sketches.

But his shows at a small theatre in Paris that he manages attract packed audiences.

At one of his shows on Thursday, the comedian performed for 75 minutes, regularly railing against “the Jews”, “Jewish people”, “kippa city”, or “the banking slave master” to general hilarity, an AFP journalist witnessed.

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