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The book raised no more than literary eyebrows when it was published, and it drew little attention when Mitterrand was named to the government in June. Until he became France's guardian of culture, Mitterrand was known primarily as a television personality who made eloquent profiles of the famous.
The culture minister's uncle, President Mitterrand, was a classic example of the hands-off policy applied to politicians' private lives by the French media and his colleagues, many aware for years of his daughter born out of wedlock -- and whom he introduced to the nation before dying of cancer.
"Each time I was with people who were my age, or who were five years younger -- there wasn't the slightest ambiguity -- and who were consenting," he said.
He has said that he uses the term "boys" loosely, in his life and in the book.
The far-right National Front party says it went looking for dirt on Mitterrand after his praise for Polanski.
"Frederic Mitterrand must resign because his presence in the government as a representative of France is an indelible stain (for) the entire world," National Front Vice President Marine Le Pen said Thursday. Le Pen triggered the controversy earlier this week.
Leftists joined in. Socialist Arnaud Montebourg said Thursday that Mitterrand "deliberately acted in violation of national and international laws" and appealed to Sarkozy and Prime Minister Francois Fillon to fire him.
"It is impossible that a minister representing France can encourage violation of his own international commitments to fight sexual tourism," Montebourg's statement said.
In the book, written in the first person, Mitterrand's narrator describes being taunted in childhood by peers and being troubled by his attraction to other boys.
In Bangkok, surrounded by "boys" or "kids" who tell him in broken English "I want you happy," he finds a liberty he never had when he was a child.
"Money and sex, I am at the heart of my system, that which is functioning at last, because I know that no one will refuse me. ... I can at last choose. The Western morality, the endless guilt, the shame that I drag with me, shatter," one passage reads.
France Police, a minority police union, announced plans Thursday to seek a judicial investigation against Mitterrand under part of the penal code that makes it a crime to frequent prostitutes who are minors.
The book raised no more than literary eyebrows when it was published, and it drew little attention when Mitterrand was named to the government in June. Until he became France's guardian of culture, Mitterrand was known primarily as a television personality who made eloquent profiles of the famous.
The culture minister's uncle, President Mitterrand, was a classic example of the hands-off policy applied to politicians' private lives by the French media and his colleagues, many aware for years of his daughter born out of wedlock -- and whom he introduced to the nation before dying of cancer.
[Associated
Press;
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