World Jewish News
Aidan Burley, 33, was sacked from his job as a parliamentary private secretary to Transport Secretary Justine Greening after pictures and video taken at the stag party were published in the British press.
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France probes Nazi-themed party attended by British MP
16.02.2012, Anti-Semitism French prosecutors said Wednesday they had opened a formal probe into a Nazi-themed party attended by a British Conservative lawmaker that led to him losing his post as a parliamentary aide.
French prosecutors said Wednesday they had opened a formal probe into a Nazi-themed party attended by a British Conservative lawmaker that led to him losing his post as a parliamentary aide.
The MP, Aidan Burley, has repeatedly apologised for the incidents during a drunken night out by a group of British men in the French Alpine ski resort of Val Thorens.
A preliminary investigation was launched in December after a complaint from a French anti-racism group, and local prosecutor Patrick Quincy told AFP that authorities were now moving forward with a full official investigation.
The investigation will focus on charges of defending war crimes or crimes against humanity, promoting racial hatred, wearing the uniform of an organisation that carried out crimes against humanity and making racist insults, Quincy said.
Burley, 33, was sacked from his job as a parliamentary private secretary to Transport Secretary Justine Greening after pictures and video taken at the stag party were published in the British press.
Burley, a lawmaker from Prime Minister David Cameron's centre-right Conservatives, represents Cannock Chase in Staffordshire, central England.
British stag parties, held before a man gets married, are typically jovial, boozy nights out, often with the groom-to-be in embarrassing fancy dress.
Burley was photographed sitting next to the stag, who was wearing the black uniform of a World War II-era German SS officer.
A video showed a guest raising a toast to the Third Reich at the party and reports said the group had later chanted "Mein Fuehrer!" and the names of Nazis Heinrich Himmler and Adolf Eichmann, who were responsible for the Holocaust.
The Conservative Party said in a statement that Burley was removed from his post because of his "offensive and foolish" behaviour at the party.
In a statement after the incident, Burley voiced his "deepest regret" and insisted: "I have no sympathies whatsoever with Nazism, racism, or fascism."
EJP
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