French presidential hopeful Eric Zemmour, known for his far-right views, was handed a third hate speech conviction on Monday for 2020 comments regarding unaccompanied migrant children.
A Paris court ordered Zemmour to pay a fine of 10,000 euros (more than $11,000) and several thousand euros in damages to anti-racism groups.
Zemmour said he will appeal the decision.
"I’m once more the victim of political (injustice)," Zemmour told reporters, adding "I absolutely do not regret" the comments.
Zemmour, who has two prior hate speech convictions, went on trial in November on charges of "public insult" and "incitement to hatred or violence" against a group of people because of their ethnic, national, racial or religious origin.
Samuel Thomas, president of Maisons des Potes ("Homes of Friends"), a network of anti-racism associations, said the sentence is "very light."
"We had hoped for him to be deprived of civic rights," Thomas said. "So Eric Zemmour will be able to continue his political career."
He added: "When you’re inciting racial hatred, you’re also responsible for crimes that are committed by far-right thugs."
Zemmour, a 63-year-old former TV pundit who is running in France's April 10 presidential election, is drawing fervent audiences with his anti-Islam, anti-immigration invective. He is considered among the major challengers to centrist President Emmanuel Macron, who is seen as the front-runner, according to polls. Macron has yet to confirm he will run for a second term.
The case against Zemmour focused on September 2020 comments that he made on French news broadcaster CNews about children who migrate to France without parents or guardians, calling them thieves, murderers and rapists who cost France money.
Zemmour wasn't present at court for his trial or the verdict. In a statement in November, he denounced "an attempt to intimidate (him)" from prosecutors and anti-racist groups. He maintained his comments and said the political debate doesn’t take place in courts.
Zemmour also has an appeals trial Thursday on a charge of contesting crimes against humanity – which is illegal in France – for arguing in a 2019 television debate that Marshal Philippe Petain, head of Vichy’s collaborationist government during World War II, saved France’s Jews from the Holocaust.
A court acquitted him last year, saying Zemmour’s comments negated Petain’s role in the extermination, but explained that he wasn't convicted because he had spoken in the heat of the moment.
Zemmour has repeated similar comments in recent months, and lawyers contesting his acquittal plan to cite that point as evidence in the appeals trial.
Zemmour previously was convicted of incitement to racial hatred after justifying discrimination against black and Arab people in 2010, and of incitement to religious hatred for anti-Islam comments in 2016. He was sentenced to pay court costs and a 5,000-euro ($5,660) fine.
He has also been tried in other cases where he was acquitted.
Zemmour is a descendant of Berber Jews from Algeria. He was born in France in 1958 to parents who came from the North African country, then a French colony, a few years earlier.