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Video Shows French Reporter Dragged Off as He Questions Le Pen


FILE - French far-right leader and presidential candidate Marine le Pen answers reporters questions at her campaign headquarters, Nov.16, 2016, in Paris.
FILE - French far-right leader and presidential candidate Marine le Pen answers reporters questions at her campaign headquarters, Nov.16, 2016, in Paris.

A video showing a reporter being grabbed by security men and hustled away after asking a question of National Front leader Marine Le Pen circulated on the Internet on Thursday amid confusion over the circumstances of the incident.

It was not clear what had happened beforehand in a room at a convention center where Le Pen was encircled by reporters and camera crews covering her presidential election campaign.

According to the National Front, it was not responsible for the reporter's ejection from the business forum she was visiting.

In the video, the reporter, Paul Larrouturou of TMC satirical show Quotidien, was filmed shouting "Get off me, get off me ... what about freedom of the press?" as he was pulled from the room.

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Outside, an altercation took place involving the journalist, a cameraman and the security guards.

Senior National Front official David Rachline tweeted on Wednesday that Le Pen's security service was not responsible.

"It is the convention center's security services who took care of that," he added.

That was denied by the Palais des Congres convention center, which said on Twitter its security service did not work in that area.

Larrouturou said the security guards were from a private company employed by the Salon des Entrepreneurs business show group that was holding the convention.

He said they had expelled him on the orders of a National Front official who was standing nearby.

A spokeswoman for the Salon des Entrepreneurs reached by Reuters said she could not immediately give a comment on the incident.

Le Pen is among the frontrunners in a closely contested election, although opinion polls show her losing by a big margin in a second-round runoff on May 7 to whichever other candidate she might face there.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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