Spain apologises for ex-PM's column questioning 'Frenchness' of France team

Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares announced Tuesday that Spain has apologized for a column by former Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy that questioned the "Frenchness" of France's men's soccer team.

Spain has apologised for ⁠a column penned by conservative former Prime ⁠Minister Mariano Rajoy contending that France's men's soccer team lacked French players, Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares said on Tuesday.

Albares told his French counterpart that Rajoy's "intolerable" remarks, which he said "carry the poison of racism and ⁠xenophobia", did not reflect the view of the overwhelming majority of Spaniards. "It's a very serious matter to go around using skin colour to determine who can be a citizen and who cannot," Albares told Cadena SER radio, hours before Spain and France were to meet in the World Cup semi-finals.

Rajoy, who was premier in 2011-2018, wrote in online publication El Debate on Friday that France would be a formidable adversary, before questioning the team's "Frenchness" in an apparent reference to some players' African and Afro-Caribbean heritage.

"France has a squad of the very highest calibre. Mind you, there are no French ⁠players ⁠in it," he said.

Rajoy could not be immediately reached for comment.

Borja Semper, a spokesperson for Rajoy's People's Party (PP), downplayed the issue, saying the column was written without ill intent and was meant as a sarcastic expression.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, who was in Paris for France's National Day on Tuesday, had criticised "those who measure nationality by a person's surname, birthplace or skin colour" in a post on X describing Rajoy's words as shamefully xenophobic.

CONDEMNATION IN FRANCE

Rajoy's quip, which came days ⁠after a scandal over a racist rant by a Paraguayan senator against France captain Kylian Mbappe, was met with rare unity in France, drawing condemnation from the government and the far-right opposition party National Rally.

"These comments are pathetic," Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot told BFM TV on Monday. "Once and for all, France has no skin colour. Any statement to the contrary is a sign of idiocy, racism, or both combined."

National Rally spokesman Julien Odoul told ⁠Franceinfo TV ‌Rajoy's comments ‌were "scandalous, shameful, deplorable".

"Rajoy is a racist, it's as simple as ⁠that," he said.

Earlier in the championship, Paraguayan Senator Celeste ‌Amarilla wrote a racist tirade on X following Paraguay's elimination, describing Mbappe as a "colonised Cameroonian, desperately trying to pass himself off as French".

Mbappe ⁠responded defending not only himself but also the Paraguay players ⁠and describing Amarilla as despicable and unworthy of her job.

The French Football Federation said ⁠it was filing a criminal complaint and Paraguay's government dismissed Amarilla's comments as "contrary to the values" promoted by the country.

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