French Pilot Tied to Firing Target in Hazing Ritual
PARIS (Reuters) -- A French air force pilot has filed a criminal complaint alleging that as part of a hazing ritual he was tied to a target on a firing range while fighter planes flew overhead and fired off munitions, his lawyer told Reuters.
The complaint did not identify any of the people alleged to have carried out the hazing, or say how many of them were involved.
Colonel Stephane Spet, a spokesman for the French air force, said an internal inquiry had been ordered by air force command and those responsible had been punished.
The most severe punishment was restriction to barracks, Spet said. He did not say how many people had received this punishment, or for how many days.
The pilot said in the complaint, which was seen by Reuters, that the hazing occurred in March 2019, soon after he arrived at a combat fighter unit at the Solenzara air base on the French Mediterranean island of Corsica.
The pilot had a hood put over his head, and was forced into the back of a pick-up truck by several colleagues who drove him to the firing range, according to the complaint.
Photos, which were included in the complaint, showed a man in military fatigues with his legs and hands bound, attached to the firing range target with heavy-duty nylon straps.
Video footage, which is cited in the complaint and was provided to Reuters by the pilot’s lawyer, Frederic Berna, also showed combat jets making several low passes nearby.
The complaint alleges that, during some of these passes, the pilot tied to the target could hear the sound of live munitions being fired from the aircraft.
Spet did not dispute the authenticity of the images, but he said they created the mistaken impression that the aircraft were directing fire at the pilot who was tied to the target.
He said that the firing the pilot heard was from aircraft that were on a training exercise at a different location, and that the closest any munitions round came to him was about one kilometer (0.6 miles).
Berna said his client did not want his name disclosed publicly because of privacy concerns.
Berna said the photos and video footage cited in the complaint were filmed by service members who were present, and the images later shared in a WhatsApp group chat.
In a statement, the air force said it condemned any actions that harm the physical or mental wellbeing of its personnel, and that it would cooperate with any criminal investigation.
The complaint did not identify any of the people alleged to have carried out the hazing, or say how many of them were involved.
Colonel Stephane Spet, a spokesman for the French air force, said an internal inquiry had been ordered by air force command and those responsible had been punished.
The most severe punishment was restriction to barracks, Spet said. He did not say how many people had received this punishment, or for how many days.
The pilot said in the complaint, which was seen by Reuters, that the hazing occurred in March 2019, soon after he arrived at a combat fighter unit at the Solenzara air base on the French Mediterranean island of Corsica.
The pilot had a hood put over his head, and was forced into the back of a pick-up truck by several colleagues who drove him to the firing range, according to the complaint.
Photos, which were included in the complaint, showed a man in military fatigues with his legs and hands bound, attached to the firing range target with heavy-duty nylon straps.
Video footage, which is cited in the complaint and was provided to Reuters by the pilot’s lawyer, Frederic Berna, also showed combat jets making several low passes nearby.
The complaint alleges that, during some of these passes, the pilot tied to the target could hear the sound of live munitions being fired from the aircraft.
Spet did not dispute the authenticity of the images, but he said they created the mistaken impression that the aircraft were directing fire at the pilot who was tied to the target.
He said that the firing the pilot heard was from aircraft that were on a training exercise at a different location, and that the closest any munitions round came to him was about one kilometer (0.6 miles).
Berna said his client did not want his name disclosed publicly because of privacy concerns.
Berna said the photos and video footage cited in the complaint were filmed by service members who were present, and the images later shared in a WhatsApp group chat.
In a statement, the air force said it condemned any actions that harm the physical or mental wellbeing of its personnel, and that it would cooperate with any criminal investigation.