Shropshire Star

Statues related to France’s colonial era daubed in paint

The Paris monuments were to former minister of war Hubert Lyautey and Enlightenment thinker Voltaire.

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A man walks past a statue of Voltaire (Rafael Yaghobzadeh/AP)

Two Paris statues related to France’s colonial era were daubed with red paint amid a global movement to take down monuments to figures tied to slavery or colonialism.

One statue was of Hubert Lyautey, near the gold-domed Invalides monument that houses Napoleon’s tomb.

Lyautey served in Morocco, Algeria, Madagascar and Indochina when they were under French control, and later was France’s minister of war during the First World War.

The statue of Hubert Lyautey (Rafael Yaghbzadeh/AP)
The statue of Hubert Lyautey (Rafael Yaghbzadeh/AP)

The other figure drenched in red shows Voltaire, a leading thinker and writer of the French Enlightenment, who owed part of his fortune to colonial-era trade.

The action came amid growing demands by anti-racism activists in several countries to take down monuments that honour prominent historical figures who played a role in the slave trade or colonialism, in the wake of global protests sparked by the May 25 death in the US of George Floyd.

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