Saturday, June 06, 2026

#METOO BELATED

Debate in Germany after Wim Wenders pulls film over child nudity

04.06.2026, DPA

German director Wim Wenders - German director Wim Wenders attends the German Film Award ceremony. (is associated with: «Debate in Germany after Wim Wenders pulls film over child nudity»)

Photo: Sebastian Gollnow/dpa

By dpa correspondents

The decision by German director Wim Wenders to withdraw a 1975 film over a nude scene depicting a 13-year-old has sparked widespread debate in Germany on whether artworks should be changed retroactively, with some industry figures hailing the moment as a "big opportunity."

The controversial scene in the 1975 film "Wrong Move," a modern adaption of a novel by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, features then 13-year-old actress Nastassja Kinski with a bare upper body.

Kinski, now 65, has said that she had asked Wenders for years to remove the 2-minute scene.

Wenders publicly apologized to Kinski in a statement released on Wednesday, announcing that he would withdraw the film from distribution until "a mutually agreed solution" was found.

Reacting to the move, the German Film Academy said on Thursday it would hold a meeting in September to address the issues raised by Wenders' decision.

Academy presidents Vicky Krieps and Florian Gallenberger noted the question inherent in Wenders' decision - whether films and other works of art should, must or are permitted to be altered after their release - had sparked “intense debate” not only in the public sphere but also within the institution.

It would take time to consider the legal, ethic, artistic and cultural dimensions in equal measure, meaning a decision on how the academy would deal with the film in the future should be expected following the meeting in September at the earliest, they said.

German director Julia von Heinz, who described Wenders' move as a "big opportunity" for the industry in an op-ed for Germany's Süddeutsche Zeitung daily, noted that her colleague had several options to deal with the scene.

Wenders could either grant Kinski her request and remove it, she said, or provide a “softer form of reparation” by creating supplementary material and allowing Kinski to contribute an interview or essay to be distributed alongside the film.

Von Heinz argued that Wenders' concern over the film's legacy could only be explained with a concept of genius “which assumes that a film is created frame by frame – that is, shot by shot – and that this form is the only true one and must not be altered.”

Yet films are often the result of chance, she wrote.

In his statement from Wednesday, Wenders writes that "it is necessary for our society to find appropriate ways of dealing with controversial film works from the 20th Century and to face new learning processes and inclusive perspectives regarding cinema."

He also said that he would seek dialogue with film institutions and other industry figures on the issue.

Before Wenders' announcement, Kinski's lawyer Christian Schertz had said that the acclaimed director had “refused for years” to discuss the scene with his client in person and announced that she would take legal action.

Schertz welcomed Wenders' decision to withdraw the film, while describing it as "long overdue."

"I also regret that this only came about as a result of public pressure, after he had initially tried to shift the blame in his speech at the German Film Awards and indirectly dismissed Nastassja Kinski’s request as censorship, which was truly despicable."

The 80-year-old director, whose films include "Paris, Texas," "Wings of Desire," and "Perfect Days," used his acceptance speech at the German Film Awards, where he received an honorary award last week, to call for a broader discussion about how the film industry should handle controversial scenes in older works.

Referring to the controversy linked to "Wrong Move," Wenders said he would not shoot the scene the same way today. However, he said he was "at a loss" as to how to deal with films made in a different era, as cutting the scene would set a precedent for all films to come.

Prague's Václav Havel Library on the brink of closure

05.06.2026, 13:28 Uhr

The renowned Václav Havel Library in Prague is facing closure following the withdrawal of several sponsors and a change in the stance of the widow of the former Czechoslovak and Czech president who gave the library its name.

Speaking to the CTK news agency on Friday, Václav Havel's widow, Dagmar Havlová said she no longer had the strength to continue supporting the project, despite always having believed in its objectives. 

Havlová's withdrawal caps a period of escalating tensions within the institution. This culminated in the resignation last month of the entire staff in protest against the allegedly chaotic management style of Tomáš Sedláček, who has been director since March 2025.

Sedláček, a 49-year-old economist who won acclaim for his 2011 book "The Economics of Good and Evil," has refused to step down despite the departure of the staff.

Final rescue attempts

The remaining members of the library's supervisory and administrative board say they will still seek a solution to the crisis. This could prove difficult, as Havlová holds the rights to her late husband's name.

Modelled on US presidential libraries, the library was founded in 2004 while Havel was still alive. As well as housing a large archive, it also serves as a vibrant venue for political and social debates.

The playwright and civil rights activist Havel, who died in 2011, became the first freely elected president of what was then Czechoslovakia following the democratic transition of 1989.

Following the peaceful separation from Slovakia in 1993, he became the first president of the new Czech Republic and remained in office until February 2003. He is known for plays such as "The Garden Party" and an extensive body of essays.

 

New Hungarian leader restricts permits for migrant workers

06.06.2026, DPA

Hungary PM Magyar restricts permits. - Hungarian Prime Minister Peter Magyar arrives at the Wawel Hill during his visit in Krakow. Magyar is in Poland for his first state visit since taking office, embarking on a three-city tour of Krakow, Warsaw and Gdansk to signal a major European diplomatic reset. (is associated with: «New Hungarian leader restricts permits for migrant workers»)

Photo: Kai Jane/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa

The new Hungarian Prime Minister Péter Magyar restricted the influx of migrant workers from non-EU countries by a government decree published on Saturday, keeping a promise he made to voters. 

New residence permits under the migrant worker scheme introduced by the previous government under former prime minister Viktor Orbán will no longer be issued with immediate effect. The decree has just been published in the Hungarian Official Gazette.

Magyar took office on May 9, after his centre-right Tisza Party won a clear victory in the parliamentary elections in April. Some 90,000 workers from non-EU countries are employed in Hungary, accounting for around 2% of the workforce, according to estimates. 

Most work in the battery and automotive industries, in construction, as seasonal workers in agriculture and in delivery services. The majority come from the Philippines, Ukraine, China, Vietnam and India.

Restricting the influx of migrant workers was among the promises Magyar made while campaigning to replace long-time leader Orbán. The new leader justified the vow by arguing that more Hungarians should be getting jobs and that companies should be prevented from driving down wages by employing foreigners, though there is a labour shortage in many sectors in Hungary, according to industry and employers’ associations.

The new regulation stipulates that existing residence permits remain valid until their expiry. It does not specify whether expiring permits can be extended. 

It does not signify a complete end to the granting of residence permits to non-EU citizens. Instead, the ban refers to the Orbán government’s simplified guest worker scheme, which enabled the relatively smooth recruitment of workers from outside the EU through agencies controlled by Orbán. Magyar slammed this practice during campaigning.

WHITE REPLACEMENT THEORY

U.S. Vice President blames British student’s murder on migrant ‘invasion’


US Vice President JD Vance has been a fierce critic of European migration policies
US Vice President JD Vance has been a fierce critic of European migration policies – Copyright AFP Kent NISHIMURA

US President JD Vance on Friday blamed Britain’s handling of the murder of a white student by a Sikh man on what he called civilizational decline caused by an “invasion” of migrants.

Vance’s comments on the case of 18-year-old Henry Nowak sparked a swift denunciation from British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s office, which rejected attempts to “interfere in our democracy.”

“Henry Nowak died the same way a civilization dies: abandoned, handcuffed by authorities who neither trusted nor cared for him, and accused of hate crimes he did not commit,” Vance said on X.

“His murder is as tragic as it is enraging.”

Vance, a longtime critic of European migration policies, called for “righteous anger” in response to the case.

The case of Nowak, who was handcuffed by police as he lay dying after being stabbed by Vickrum Digwa in the southern city of Southampton in December, has become a lightning rod for right-wing anger around the world and sparked riots in Britain.

Digwa, 23, lied and told police he was the victim and that Nowak had racially insulted him.

US tech tycoon Elon Musk, the billionaire owner of X and a friend of Vance’s, has posted numerous times on the platform about the police response to the stabbing.

The US State Department then weighed in on Thursday condemning what it said was “ideological conditioning and two-tiered policing” that had led to the case.

Vance is now the highest-ranking official in US President Donald Trump’s to comment.

“He should still be alive today, and he would be if the last few generations of European elites had stood their ground against the politics of self-hatred and the mass invasion of migrants, many of whom despise the West and the people who love it,” Vance added.

“Henry was far from the first to so needlessly lose his life, and I fear he won’t be the last.”

Vance is one of the most vocal proponents of the Trump administration’s pushing of theories of Western civilizational decline due to mass migration.

The British government rejected the US intervention in the case.

“We have seen people trying to interfere in our democracy and seeking to stir up division on our streets,” a spokesperson for British premier Starmer said in a statement.

The spokesperson added that the family of student Henry Nowak had said they did not want his killing “to be used to create further division, hatred or tension.” 

Starmer himself accused billionaire Musk on Thursday of “trying to whip up division” in Britain.

Hegseth urges Europe on D-Day to counter present-day ‘invasion’ on beaches


US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth urged allies to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with America
US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth urged allies to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with America – Copyright AFP LOU BENOIST

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Saturday urged Europe to counter what he termed an “invasion” of its coastline by migration, as he marked the 82nd anniversary of the World War II D-Day landings in northern France.

Hegseth also called on European countries to do more to contribute to their defence, in a speech at the American military cemetery in Colleville-sur-mer in Normandy.

He was however conspicuously set to skip the main international ceremony marking the anniversary of the landings, which heralded an end to World War II, later in the afternoon.

“Sadly, today different European beaches are stormed by different dangerous ideologies,” Hegseth said.

On “beaches in Spain and Italy and Greece and Bulgaria, boats and men arrive,” he said.

“When will European capitals do something about that invasion? Or is it too late?”

His comments echoed the argument of the administration of US President Donald Trump that mass migration represents a danger to European civilisation.

US Vice President JD Vance on Friday blamed Britain’s handling of the murder of a white student by a Sikh man on what he called civilisational decline caused by an “invasion” of migrants.

“May we learn from this past,” Hegseth said in reference to the pivotal involvement of American troops in the Allied landings.

“The men buried here fought in a war-fighting alliance where every partner… brought its full measure of industry, courage and sacrifice,” he said in front of the 9,387 white crosses of American soldiers killed in action during the Battle of Normandy.

“Not empty slogans, not lavish summits, not communiques.

“Real allies doing real things, taking real losses for a shared cause worth fighting and dying for.”

– Peace ‘through strength’ –

He said that while America “will lead” its “capable allies must be right there with us, shoulder-to-shoulder in the breach when it matters”.

The Trump administration has also accused Europe of not pulling its weight to ensure the continent’s security and has even floated pulling out of NATO.

“Peace is secured only through strength,” he told the audience including French armed forces Minister Catherine Vautrin, without referring explicitly to the US-Israeli war against Iran.

“And it’s strength on both sides of the Atlantic, fortified by readiness, shared military capabilities and an unwavering political will,” he added.

The Normandy landings on June 6, 1944, were the largest amphibious operation in history. 

An armada of 6,939 ships and 132,700 British, Canadian, American, Belgian, Norwegian, and Polish troops stormed 80 kilometres (50 miles) of Normandy beaches. 

The operation contributed decisively to the victory over Nazi Germany, which was also being squeezed by USSR forces to the east.


US defence chief Hegseth demands West's backing on 

D-Day anniversary

Hegseth made a highly charged comparison between the Normandy landings in Nazi-occupied France and migrant crossings in the Mediterranean, which he labelled an "invasion." 

06.06.2026 DPA


Pete Hegseth - FILE PHOTO - US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth attends the meeting between US President Trump and German Chancellor Merz at the White House. (is associated with: «US defence chief Hegseth demands West's backing on D-Day anniversary»)

Photo: Kay Nietfeld/dpa

US defence chief Pete Hegseth on Saturday called on Western allies to provide greater support to Washington in defending peace and freedom, in a speech marking the 82nd anniversary of the D-Day landings in Normandy.

"Peace is secured only through strength and its strength on both sides of the Atlantic, fortified by readiness, shared military capabilities, and an unwavering political will," said Hegseth at the US war cemetery in Collville-sur-Mer. 

"Our world is safer and more prosperous when the United States of America and our allies are strong, free, and unapologetic in defence of our Western tradition of freedom."

Hegseth said "America will lead," but insisted that "capable allies must be right there with us, shoulder to shoulder in the breach when it matters."

"We stand by our allies, and we expect our allies capable and ready to stand alongside us," he added. 

The politician - dubbed the secretary of war by US President Donald Trump - argued that "much of the West" has grown "comfortable" since World War II. 

"We forgot that freedom is not free. We forgot that peace is not wished into being. It is bought with purpose, with honour, and with strength," he insisted. "The men who landed on these beaches knew this."

Hegseth made a highly charged comparison between the Normandy landings in Nazi-occupied France - which began on June 6, 1944 and played a key role in the defeat of Adolf Hitler's Third Reich - and migrant crossings in the Mediterranean, which he labelled an "invasion." 

"Sadly, today, different European beaches are stormed by different dangerous ideologies," he said, highlighting landings in Spain, Italy, Greece and Bulgaria.

Hegseth was accompanied by his French counterpart, Catherine Vautrin, at the commemoration on Saturday.

Ukraine launches fresh drone attack on St. Petersburg region on final day of ‘Russian Davos’

Ukraine on Saturday fired hundreds of drones targeting the St. Petersburg region in the second such attack on Russia’s second-largest city in less than a week. The attack came on the final day of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, President Vladimir Putin’s annual investment forum known as “Russia’s Davos”.

Issued on: 06/06/2026 - 
By: FRANCE 24

Satellite image provided by Vantor shows fire crews working to control the fires onboard the Russian guided-missile corvette Boikiy at the Kronstadt naval base west of St. Petersburg, Russia, June 3, 2026. Vantor via AP

Residents of St. Petersburg were told not to leave their homes after a large-scale Ukrainian drone attack targeted Russia’s second-largest city Saturday morning, underscoring Kyiv’s growing ability to hit deep inside Russia.

The attack came a day after Russian President Vladimir Putin refused an offer to meet his Ukrainian counterpart.

St. Petersburg Governor Alexander Beglov advised the residents not to go outside and warned of possible disruptions to mobile internet service, while regional Governor Alexander Drozdenko said 141 drones were shot down over the surrounding Leningrad region.

Russia’s Defence Ministry said its air defences shot down 376 Ukrainian drones.

“Last night, our drones covered a distance of about 1,000 kilometres to the St. Petersburg region – to the enemy navy’s arsenals and a base in Kronstadt,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky wrote on X.


Although no casualties were immediately reported, the renewed attack on St. Petersburg is the latest embarrassing blow to Putin’s efforts to cast the conflict as a distant event that doesn’t affect Russian daily life.

Cars are seen parked near banners with branding for the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) at the forum's venue as black smoke rises in distance in Saint Petersburg on June 3, 2026, where Ukrainian drones hit energy and military sites. © AFP
02:03



A Ukrainian drone strike set ablaze an oil terminal in the city and hit a nearby naval base Wednesday, hours before the opening of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, Putin’s annual showcase for investment.

Speaking at the forum, Putin said Thursday that Russia will strengthen its air defences to counter recent Ukrainian drone attacks, which have reached deep inside his country and cast a cloud over the event in his hometown of St. Petersburg.

Putin on Friday rejected a proposal by Zelensky for a face-to-face meeting on the four-year-old conflict, saying he sees “no point” in it. Thursday’s letter, the first public message Zelensky has written directly to Putin since Russia sent troops into Ukraine in 2022, was a sweeping critique of the Russian leader’s 26 years in power, as well as some taunts about his age.

Responding to Putin's dismissal of the proposed meeting, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said Saturday that things would “only get worse for Russia.”

"Failures will get more humiliating," he wrote on X, warning that there are “no safe places in Russia that can be exempt” from Ukrainian long-range attacks, and that the intensity of attacks “will continue to grow.”

With the front line barely moving as swarms of drones hinder advances, both sides have sought an edge by launching long-range strikes.

In Ukraine, one person was killed and three wounded overnight into Saturday in the Dnipropetrovsk region, as Russian forces struck three districts nearly 30 times with drones and artillery, regional head Oleksandr Hanzha said.

In Zaporizhzhia, seven people sought medical care after a Russian drone strike started a fire at a parking lot, according to regional head Ivan Fedorov.

Russia targeted Ukraine overnight with 272 strike drones, and air defences shot down 249 of them, the Ukrainian air force said Saturday.

(FRANCE 24 with AP)

Ukraine banks on its defence industry to drive economic growth

06.06.2026, DPA

Ukrainian drone from Quantum Frontline Industries - FILE PHOTO - Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is presented with a drone during a visit to drone manufacturer Quantum Frontline Industries ahead of the Munich Security Conference. (is associated with: «Ukraine banks on its defence industry to drive economic growth»)

Photo: Sven Hoppe/dpa

Ukraine regards its defence industry as a lasting source of economic strength, Finance Minister Serhii Marchenko said on Saturday.

“The demand we have created in Ukraine has given rise to an economic sector that is now practically booming. It is therefore a very important part of our future,” Marchenko said at the annual meeting of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) in Riga. 

The key now is to strengthen the industry, provide it with development capacity and open up its military potential to a broader market, he explained. To this end, Ukraine is facing the decision to allow the export of military goods.

According to Marchenko, expanding and utilizing this potential could lead to more than just further progress in military equipment and weapons. 

“I believe these developments can help create a natural civilian environment after the war. Because some of the production we currently use for military purposes can also be used for civilian purposes,” the Ukrainian official added.

With Western assistance, Ukraine is defending itself against a Russian invasion – and, in the fifth year of its defensive struggle, is regarded as a world leader in drone warfare. 

At the same time, the government in Kiev hopes to receive the first tranche of funds from a €90 billion ($105.5 billion) European Union loan as early as June, which is also to be used for defence purposes. Given the ongoing war, it is quite problematic and difficult to attract private investors, said Marchenko.


Supporters of India's Gen Z 'cockroach' party stage first protest in New Delhi

Hundreds of mostly young Indians gathered in New Dehli on Saturday for the first street protest organised by the Cockroach Janata Party – a movement which began as an online joke but has quickly gained momentum among Indian youth disillusioned with their education, employment and economic prospects.


Issued on: 06/06/2026 - 
By: FRANCE 24
Video by: Navodita KUMARI

A person wearing a mask holds a poster which reads "I am a Cockroach" as supporters of the Cockroach Janta Party (CJP) gather in New Delhi, India on June 6, 2026. © Adnan Abidi, Reuters
01:35




Hundreds of supporters of the Cockroach Janata Party, an online joke that drew millions across India, gathered for the first time in the national capital on Saturday, taking the social media movement off screens and into its biggest real-world test yet.

The protest at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi, marks the movement’s first foray into street politics after weeks of dominating social media feeds and news headlines, attracting millions of online followers and widespread support among young Indians.

The immediate trigger for Saturday’s protest was reported irregularity in a recent exam that has dominated headlines in India, angering a large community of students.

Hundreds of mostly young Indians gathered in the heart of New Delhi’s protest zone near the parliament building, some with placards and cockroach masks.

Abhijeet Dipke, founder of the online movement, joined the protest after he landed in the capital from the US on Saturday morning. Police had laid steel barricades at arrivals at New Delhi’s international airport.


Abhijeet Dipke, head of the Cockroach Janta Party (CJP), speaks to supporters at a sit-in protest in New Delhi on June 6, 2026. © Adnan Abidi, Reuters

Dipke said in a social media post shortly after arriving that police granted permission to the Cockroach Janta Party, or CJP, to hold the protest, adding: “Cockroaches gather at Jantar Mantar.”

CJP organisers used social media to rally supporters for Saturday’s march, demanding the resignation of Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan. The demand grew out of an exam irregularity controversy in May that quickly became a broader outlet for frustration over India’s education system and limited job opportunities.

Supporters chanted slogans including, “Cockroaches are coming, Dharmendra Pradhan is going!” One placard read: “Waiting for exams that don’t leak.”

Participants were encouraged to bring India’s national flag and a book, which organisers said symbolised the right to education and equal opportunity for all. Organisers also urged demonstrators to remain peaceful and avoid any confrontations with police.

“Time to turn this tiny joke into a revolution,” the official CJP account on X posted Friday.
India’s Cockroach Janta Party goes viral as Gen Z movement grows


© France 24
01:58


Mansi Sehgal, a 26-year-old protester, said the protests began around exam issues, but the deeper problem is that people haven’t had a space to speak up or ask questions. “CJP is doing that. So, this is literally the first thing that people can connect and ask questions,” she said.

“This is a long fight. We are seeing that’s it’s nearly a month that we are demanding (Pradhan’s) resignation,” Dipke said at the venue.

How many ultimately would join the protest remained unclear, making the event an early test of whether the movement can channel its online popularity into a broader grassroots support around growing frustration among young Indians over education, jobs and economic prospects.

The other main challenge would be how the party navigates the kind of pushback earlier protest movements have faced under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government.

Over the past decade, authorities have sought to stamp out protests against his government, including demonstrations against a controversial citizenship legislation and yearlong farmers’ protests. Some protest movements also have faced legal action against organisers and activist arrests, which critics say reflects a broader effort by the government under Modi to suppress dissent.

But despite challenges, protesters expressed optimism for a change.

This is a youth first movement,” said Satya Prakash Yadav, a young student. “Youth is the future and we will ensure that our future is secure.”

The CJP emerged only three weeks ago to become an unlikely outlet for discontent among supporters who proudly call themselves “cockroaches.”

India’s Chief Justice Surya Kant likened critics and some unemployed youth to cockroaches during a May hearing, sparking backlash among frustrated young Indians. Dipke, a political communications strategist and Boston University student, used the insult as inspiration for a parody political party. Weeks after launching a website and social media accounts, CJP’s Instagram page has until now amassed more than 22 million followers.

The party has turned the cockroach into a wry badge of endurance and political articulation. Videos and memes lampooning unemployment, corruption and political dysfunction have drawn millions of views online. Parody CJP accounts also have adopted the cockroach as a political symbol and use memes, mock campaign slogans and satirical commentary.

The movement’s tongue-in-cheek messaging blends self-deprecating humor with political criticism. Supporters jokingly describe themselves as unemployed, perpetually online and shut out of meaningful influence. Beneath the humour lies a broader criticism of Modi’s government. CJP supporters argue that under Modi ordinary Indians, particularly young people, have been left with fewer opportunities.

Young people in India make up more than a quarter of the population but face limited job opportunities, rising unemployment and growing disillusionment with traditional politics. Many young voters also are critical of Modi’s ruling Hindu nationalist ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, citing concerns over rising religious polarisation, widening inequality and mounting economic pressures.

The movement’s skeptics, particularly supporters of Modi’s party, dismiss the phenomenon as little more than a social-media gimmick. They argue the movement’s online popularity may not translate into street mobilisation and that its rapid rise is likely fleeting.

The group’s rise echoes a similar trend across South Asia of youth movements born out of social media playing a central role in anti-government protests, including uprisings in Sri Lanka and Bangladesh and unrest in Nepal.
French billionaire Stérin reveals far-right agenda in first public hearing

French billionaire Pierre-Edouard Stérin has used his first appearance before lawmakers to lay bare his "meta-political" campaign to bring free-market and conservative ideas into power to battle "socialism, wokism, Islamism and immigration", less than a year before France’s presidential election.


Issued on: 05/06/2026 - RFI

Protestors hold a banner reading "No to La Nuit du Bien Commun (Night of Common Good), Sterin get out" as they demonstrate against a gala for a movement co-founded by Pierre-Edouard Sterin, in Nantes, western France, on June 5, 2025. AFP - FRED TANNEAU

The self-made entrepreneur and tax exile was summoned to appear before the Senate as part of an inquiry into political finance that is investigating in part whether Stérin's organisations are abiding by regulations.

“Our aim is to spread free-market, conservative ideas as widely as possible," Sterin told senators on Thursday, describing his operation as "meta-political".

"We hope it will, in the coming months and years, bring free-market, conservative right‑wing ideas to power in France.”

Stérin, who has previously declined to appear in response to parliamentary summons, denied any wrongdoing. “There is no ongoing legal procedure, no investigation, no breach of the law,” he said.

He also asked senators to change a law dating back to Napoleon so that he can disinherit his offspring and give his fortune to charity, arguing France's inheritance rules were an attack on personal liberty.

“I would like to give my entire estate to philanthropic causes,” he said by video link. "I'm in favour of being able to do whatever you want with your patrimony.”

Pierre-Edouard Stérin attends the Senate hearing by video link on 4 June, 2026. AFP - -


Support for re-migration


Through his organisation Pericles, Sterin funds several initiatives designed to advance his agenda. Internal documents published in French newspaper L'Humanite in 2024 and confirmed by Sterin described his aims as fighting "socialism, wokism, Islamism, immigration".

Pericles co-founder Francois Durvye has since joined the leader of the far-right National Rally (RN) Jordan Bardella, as a special adviser.

Sterin, 52, a devout Catholic and father of five, lives in Belgium. During his Senate appearance he confirmed his stance on immigration.

“I am in favour of the re-migration of foreign criminals, undocumented migrants or those unemployed for more than 12 months,” he said, adding that these positions placed him "to the right of the [French ] far right".

Sterin, who made his fortune with a gift voucher company called Smartbox, described himself as a “tax exile of the François Hollande generation", in reference to the former Socialist president.

Hollande came to power in 2012 promising to slap a 75 percent tax on millionaires, prompting Sterin to Belgium that year.

While France’s Constitutional Council struck down the tax in December 2012, saying it violated equality rules, Sterin did not return to France.

Plans to introduce the high tax were scrapped altogether in 2015.

“Hollande doesn’t like the rich, and I don’t like the social‑communists,” he said.

Sterin said living abroad had allowed him to save €100,000 to €200,000 a year in taxes and redistribute far larger sums to charity projects in France.

(with Reuters)