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Dieudonné gives Queen the quenelle after UK ban

French comedian Dieudonné M'bala M'bala on Monday answered Britain's decision to ban him from entry by giving Queen Elizabeth II his trademark quenelle salute, which he says is an anti-establishment gesture, but critics say is anti-Semitic.

Dieudonné gives Queen the quenelle after UK ban
Dieudonné responds to being banned by the UK by the Queen of England the quenelle salute. Photos: AFP

The comic, who has a string of convictions for hate speech in his homeland, performed the stiff-armed gesture after naming the queen in a rant during a show in the Swiss town of Nyon.

Britain's interior ministry earlier on Monday said it had slapped an exclusion order on 47-year-old Dieudonné, who had said he planned to visit his friend, French footballer, Nicolas Anelka on the grounds of public security.

Dieudonné invented the allegedly anti-Semitic "quenelle" gesture that Anelka used during a goal celebration in December, landing the striker with a charge from English footballing authorities.

"We can confirm that Mr Dieudonné is subject to an exclusion order," a Home Office spokeswoman said in a statement.

"The home secretary (Theresa May) will seek to exclude an individual from the UK if she considers that there are public policy or public security reasons to do so."

British media last week quoted Dieudonné as saying that he was planning to perform a show in Britain and hold a press conference in support of Anelka, a former international on a stint with West Bromwich Albion.

The Home Office refused to give further details on the order banning him from Britain.

But a British government source told AFP on condition of anonymity: "The reason for the exclusion order is that he was going to come to the UK."

Dieudonné, who also faces accusations of fraud at home, says he is being persecuted by the French authorities.

"So many things have happened over the past year. Just today… Shit, what have I done? I don't know," he said during his show in Nyon.

His lawyer Jacques Verdier said he did not know if his client had actually intended to go to London.

He said that the ban showed British authorities were "nervous" and added that "it's appalling but nothing surprises us at the moment."

Anelka has been charged by the Football Association, the sport's governing body in England, after he made the "quenelle" gesture.

The striker made the gesture during a goal celebration after scoring against West Ham during an English Premier League match on December 28.

Anelka denies the charge, saying he is neither anti-Semitic nor racist, and that he made the gesture in support of Dieudonné.

Britain has used exclusion orders on rare occasions in recent years to keep out public figures deemed as having extreme views.

People banned include firebrand US pastor Terry Jones and the US anti-Muslim political bloggers Pamela Geller and Robert Spencer, all of whom were planning to attend rallies by the far-right English Defence League.

France has in recent weeks intensified a crackdown on Dieudonné, who has been widely accused of promoting anti-Semitism and has been convicted in France for hate speech and other related offences.

The French government in December succeeded in preventing him from starting a nationwide tour of a new show, "The Wall", because of its perceived anti-Jewish content.

Last week French police seized €650,000 and $15,000 in cash during a raid on his house as part of a probe into suspected fraud.

Authorities are currently trying to force Dieudonné to pay more than €65,000 in outstanding fines related to his convictions and suspect that the 47-year-old was planning to fraudulently declare himself bankrupt.

The "quenelle" is Dieudonné's trademark stiff-armed gesture that critics say is a disguised Nazi salute but that he defends as a generic "up yours" to the French establishment.
 
Some followers of Dieudonné have been photographed doing the quenelle at sites including Auschwitz, synagogues and outside a Jewish school in Toulouse where a rabbi and three children were shot dead by Islamist gunman Mohamed Merah in 2012.

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BIRTHDAY

Over 100,000 Danes sing for Queen on her birthday

Over 100,000 Danes sung the country's birthday song for Queen Margrethe II at midday on Thursday, after her 80th birthday celebrations were cancelled as a result of the coronavirus lockdown.

Over 100,000 Danes sing for Queen on her birthday
Danish singer Thomas Buttenschøn sings alongside others in the Facebook broadcast. Photo: Facebook screenshot (with permission)
The event, organised by the group singing organisation Danmark Synger (Denmark sings), has gained 191,170 members since it was launched on March 26.  It was also broadcast on Denmark's two national television stations and livecast on Facebook
 
The country's popular Queen followed the event from the sofa of her living room in Denmark's Fredensborg Palace. 
 
“Thanks for the song. It was truly a fantastic experience. It went straight to the heart,” she said in a short statement to public broadcaster DR after the performance was finished. 
 
The sing-a-long was led by musicians from the Copenhagen Phil symphony orchestra, the singer Thomas Buttenschøn, and 130 selected children and adults, with Danes encouraged to join in from their homes, workplaces or schools. 
 
As well as Denmark's birthday song “Idag er det Dronningens fødelsedag” (Today, it is The Queen's birthday), the performance also included “Solen er så rød mor” (The sun is so red, mother) “I Danmark er jeg født” (I was born in Denmark), written by Hans Christian Andersen, and the Kim Larsen song “Papirsklip”, or Paper Chain.
 
“We think it went really, really well. It attracted more than a million viewers I guess, and a lot of schools and neighbours got together,” Stine Isaksen, from the organisation Sångens Hus which helped organise the event, told The Local. 
 
“My youngest daughter went to school for the first time in a little bit more than a month, and the whole school was participating in this event.” 
 
She told the Ritzau news agency that the event was supposed to “give a feeling that it is all of us are collected together for the birthday.”
 
“For example, if you stand on your balcony or outside in the garden, we hope you will be able to hear the neighbours singing along.” 
 
 
The “Denmark sings for the Queen” group was originally created by the graphic artist Kim Bruhn. 
 
“When it was canceled, I thought we had to do it in a different way, and then it took off,” he told Ritzau.
 
On the Queen's birthday, there is a tradition that well-wishers travel to Copenhagen's Amalienborg Palace to sing the birthday song, Isaksen told Ritzau. 
 
“This time many others have also got the chance to sing for Her Majesty,” Isaksen said. “Of course it is a pity that people cannot physically gather, but now everyone can join in wherever they are.”
 
Well-wishers can leave their congratulations digitally on the Royal Court's website. Margrethe II will give a birthday address to the nation at 7pm, the court announced early today in a press statement
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