The builders also claimed they were unaware that the site was on the heritage map. “I’m not an archaeologist, I don’t know menhirs; low walls exist everywhere. If we’d known that, we’d obviously have done things differently”, Stéphane Doriel, in charge of the building operation, told Ouest France.
The mayor insisted he had “followed the law”, arguing that he was advised the site had “low archaeological value” given the objects found during checks before the construction process began.
The Regional Office of Cultural Affairs (Drac) for Brittany, which is responsible for ensuring the law protecting cultural monuments is respected, also played down the importance of the losses given the “non-major character of the remains”.
But Obeltz said local authorities failed to properly investigate. “There weren’t archaeological excavations in order to know if the stones were menhirs or not,” he said.
He also suggested that “elected officials in the area and the department are in a hurry to build up anything [around the archaeological area] because once it is classified with Unesco, it won’t be possible anymore.”
“We’re witnessing a series of failings. The state no longer protects our fellow citizens or our heritage. Appalling,” said hard-Right leader Marine Le Pen.
Eric Zemmour, anti-immigrant and Islam president of Reconquête!, broadcast a video from the site in which he said “we destroy the past, and we plaster over it” and then wrongly attributed the menhirs to the “Celtic era”.
“How could the town allow such a massacre to take place on the site of the megalithic alignments of Carnac, at a time when all Breton elected officials are mobilising to have them listed as a World Heritage Site?,” asked conservative Les Républicains MP Marc Le Fur, demanding a commission of inquiry. Two Breton pro-autonomy groups did likewise.
“Destroying thousand-year-old menhirs for a store. What better illustration of our madness?“, blasted feminist-ecologist MP Sandrine Rousseau.
Carnac is renowned for its vast fields of stone megaliths which stand in long lines close to the Atlantic coast. There are around 3,000 of them on the two main protected areas which extend over more than four miles. The stones are thought to have had a sacred and funereal function, although various theories exist.
With online fury snowballing, the mayor said he was the victim of a witch hunt.
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“It’s as if I’ve destroyed the Mona Lisa. Everything is in place for me to get lynched,” he told Le Monde.
He said he and his family were under police protection.
“They threatened to burn my house,” the mayor told local press. “They threatened to kill me for being a traitor,” he added.
“One of my daughters, aged 20, even received messages targeting me on her personal Instagram account. I’m angry to see my wife and my children accused and threatened.”
Last weekend, vandals daubed a local church with the words “raze everything, like the menhirs.”
Le Monde said the furious media coverage had turned him overnight into “the most hated man in France”.
While acknowledging there had been “an administrative error”, the mayor said that “this slip-up was not the town’s fault”.
Last month, the French government unveiled a “security package” to protect officials after a worrying rise in the number coming under threat or attack around France.
The Telegraph, London