Claude Imbert
Claude Imbert (journalist) | |
---|---|
Born | 12 November 1929 Quins, l'Aveyron, France |
Died | 23 November 2016 (Age 87) Paris, France |
Nationality | French |
Alma mater | lycée Carnot, lycée Henri-IV |
Member of | Le Siècle, Trilateral Commission |
Interests | France/VIPaedophile |
French deep state connected columnist and editor. Bilderberg/1991. After his death exposed as France/VIPaedophile. |
Claude Imbert was a French columnist and editor. He was active in several press organizations, and founded le Point in 1972. He published several works, for which he receives three literary prizes. He attended the 1991 Bilderberg meeting. He was member of the French deep state club Le Siècle.
In 2024, more than seven years after his death, he was exposed as being part of a France/VIPaedophile network.
Background
His father worked in the finance administration, his mother at the Bank of France.[1]
After his degree at the Lycée Carnot in Paris, he did literary studies at the lycée Henri-IV in Paris, Claude Imbert began his career as a journalist at Agence France-Presse in 1950, on behalf of which he will leave for several years for Africa.
In 1964, he joined the editorial staff of Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber's newspaper L'Express, at a time when the weekly paper became a news magazine on the American model of Time or Newsweek. He has been editor-in-chief of this magazine in 1966.[2]
In 1971, during a crisis that led to dissensions between the boss of the newspaper associated with Françoise Giroud, the management team (Olivier Chevrillon) and the editorial team that he leads, Claude Imbert left L'Express with other important editors such as Georges Suffert, Jacques Duquesne, Pierre Billard, Robert Franc, Henri Trinchet, etc. He joined Paris Match as editor-in-chief.
The following year, in 1972, with the defector journalists of L'Express and Olivier Chevrillon as CEO, he founded Le Point, of which he was,for nearly thirty years editorial director and then general director. From 1976, he was also an editorial writer on Saturday mornings on Europe 1, alongside Jean Daniel and then Serge July. In 2000, he gave up his place at le Point to Franz-Olivier Giesbert but continued to deliver a weekly editorial to the magazine.[2]
He was a member of the French deep state club Le Siècle and the gastronomic Club des Cent.
In 2003, during one of the weekly debates with Jacques Julliard on LCI, Claude Imbert said: "We must be honest. I'm a bit of an Islamophobe. I don't mind saying it[3]"; this position is described as Islamophobic in several press organs.[4]
He ardently defended the vote in favor of Yes during the 2005 referendum on the treaty establishing a constitution for Europe, believing that No represented the "demagogic bitch", "the mediocre unleashing of corporate interests".[5]
France/VIPaedophile
In June 2024, more than seven years after his death, Claude Imbert was implicated by name in an investigation[6][7] by Libération,, relying on a thick judicial file of hundreds of pages, describing the "men of la rue du Bac". This group of France/VIPaedophiles, members of the "Parisian intelligentsia of the 70s and 80s"[8], allegedly perpetrated sexual abuse on children for several years, from 1977 to 1987, in several places, around 97 rue du Bac, in Paris.
Inès Chatin, at the origin of the opening on October 23, 2023[9] of a preliminary investigation by the Office for Minors (Ofmin) of the National Directorate of the Judicial Police (DNPJ), "testified to abuses and rapes committed on her from the age of 4 to 13 years, by a group of men gravitating around her adoptive father, Jean-François Lemaire", Gabriel Matzneff, Jean-François Revel,the lawyer François Gibault, and Claude Imbert. The latter is accused by Inès Chatin of having subjected her to sexual abuse in an apartment on the rue de Varenne when she was very small, then of having raped her at his home, and in his holiday home in Perroy, in Switzerland.[2]
Event Participated in
Event | Start | End | Location(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bilderberg/1991 | 6 June 1991 | 9 June 1991 | Germany Baden-Baden Steigenberger Hotel Badischer Hof | The 39th Bilderberg, 114 guests |
References
- ↑ https://www.lesechos.fr/2016/11/claude-imbert-la-disparition-dun-monument-de-la-presse-219096
- ↑ a b c https://www.liberation.fr/societe/police-justice/les-hommes-de-la-rue-du-bac-claude-imbert-un-patron-de-presse-entre-influence-et-opacite-20240616_2FYBV67D4BAE3EVLSPKXRXYRK4/ archived
- ↑ http://www.acrimed.org/article1315.html
- ↑ http://tempsreel.nouvelobs.com/societe/20031027.OBS8780/claude-imbert-persiste-et-signe.html
- ↑ Olivier Cyran et Mehdi Ba, Almanach critique des médias, Édition des Arènes, 2005, p. 17.
- ↑ https://www.liberation.fr/societe/police-justice/les-hommes-de-la-rue-du-bac-16-comment-une-bande-pedocriminelle-a-sevi-pendant-des-annees-au-coeur-de-paris-20240613_X4JG5UTH7RFWVDA7WM5PLBJHGU/ archived
- ↑ https://www.ladepeche.fr/2024/07/04/les-hommes-de-la-rue-du-bac-reseau-pedocriminel-rituels-sadiques-ce-que-revele-liberation-sur-ce-scandale-terrifiant-12058049.php archived
- ↑ https://actualitte.com/article/117665/droit-justice/autour-de-matzneff-un-reseau-pedocriminel-denonce-par-une-plaignante archived
- ↑ https://www.huffingtonpost.fr/culture/article/gabriel-matzneff-au-c-ur-de-nouvelles-accusations-autour-d-un-ancien-reseau-de-pedocriminalite_235450.html
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