Real Madrid striker Karim Benzema said he was denied the chance to play for France in the Euro 2016 this month because of his Algerian origins.
The French Football Federation denied the accusation, but Benzema’s comments, published just nine days before France hosts the tournament, have deepened a row about alleged racism in a national team once seen as a model for ethnic integration.
Last week, Eric Cantona accused coach Didier Deschamps of omitting Benzema and another French-born soccer player of North African descent, Hatem Ben Arfa, because of their foreign roots.
Deschamps’s lawyer said he planned to sue Cantona for slander. The two have a longstanding rivalry since the mid-1990s when Deschamps replaced Cantona as France’s captain and led the team to World Cup and Euro successes in 1998 and 2000.
Benzema is under investigation over an alleged plot to blackmail a team-mate, something French prime minister Manuel Valls said made him unfit to play for the national team. Benzema said his legal problems were being used as an excuse to drop him from the squad.
“They said I couldn’t be picked, but on a sporting level I don’t understand and, on a legal level, I’ve not been convicted and I’m presumed innocent,” he told Spanish sports magazine Marca.
“Deschamps succumbed to pressure from a racist part of France,” he said. “I don’t know if it’s only Didier’s decision, because I get on well with him, the president (of the French Football Federation, Noel Le Graet) and everybody.”
Deschamps was not immediately available for comment.
Le Graet said Deschamps was neither for nor against Benzema and had previously picked the forward even when he was not in good form.
“I think he has got carried away a little bit,” Le Graet told reporters at the French team’s training camp in Austria.
“I would have liked him to have been a bit more kind. These are words that don’t correspond with the realities.”
The racism row has added to tensions in a country hit by widespread strikes over proposed changes to work contracts and fears about terrorist attacks.
Ahead of the European Championship’s June 10th kick-off, the French team has also been hit by a spate of injuries.
The squad has players from various ethnicities. Deschamps last week called up Adil Rami, who is of Moroccan origin.
But memories of 1998, when France’s “black-blanc-beur” (black-white-Arab) team won the World Cup, have faded, especially since the disastrous 2010 World Cup campaign in South Africa when the players fell out with the team’s manager.
At the time, the far-right National Front party complained that the team did not fully reflect France, where the vast majority are still white.
Sports minister Thierry Braillard dismissed Benzema's comments as "unjustified" and "unacceptable."
“The French team is selected only on technical criteria and ability. There is not an inch of racism in this federation. The time has come to stand by our team,” Braillard told BFM TV.
A successful striker for Real Madrid, Benzema has often failed to excel for the national team, scoring 27 goals in 81 games at international level.