French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner announced on Wednesday that following the mass desecration of graves at a Jewish cemetery in Strasbourg, the country has decided to open a national bureau to counter hate crimes.
A total of 107 graves in the cemetery were marking with swastikas and other anti-Semitic graffiti.
The vandalism took place just hours after a similar one in the nearby village of Schaffhouse-sur-Zorn, where anti-Jewish inscriptions were found. Last week, anti-Semitic tags were drawn on the walls of the town hall in Rohr, not far from Westhoffen. Jewish officials said one of the slogans in the Rohr attack appeared to refer to the Jewish cemetery in Westhoffen, BBC reported.
Also earlier this year additional Jewish graves had been vandalized. The discovery of swastikas on 80 gravestones in a Jewish cemetery in the village of Quatzenheim, also near the border with Germany, was discovered on Feb. 19.
The new office is to be part of France’s gendarmerie and will be charged with investigating anti-Semitic, anti-Muslim and anti-Christian acts, said Castaner.
On Tuesday, France’s National Assembly in Paris passed a nonbinding resolution stating that anti-Zionism is anti-Semitism and called on countries to adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s definition of anti-Semitism.
The final vote tally in the lower chamber was 154-72.