On Monday, July 6, Senator Celeste Amarilla, 61, who has held office since 2023 , published a lengthy racist message on X (formerly Twitter) targeting Mbappé. Her posts included:
The posts mocked Mbappé's background, education, and identity in explicitly racist terms, drawing immediate outrage .
Mbappé responded on X on July 6, calling Amarilla a "despicable woman unworthy of her office" and labeling her remarks "blatant racism" . In his post, he wrote in French: "Par votre inconscience et votre médiocrité, vous insultez tout un peuple. Vous êtes une femme méprisable, indigne de votre fonction" ("By your ignorance and mediocrity, you insult an entire people. You are a despicable woman, unworthy of your office")
. Mbappé also praised the Paraguayan team and people, distinguishing them from the senator's remarks
.
The backlash was swift and reached the highest levels:
Reported condemnation from the United Nations was mentioned in some outlets but could not be independently verified from the highest-authority sources obtained.
On July 7, the Paris prosecutor's office confirmed it had opened a formal investigation into Amarilla for aggravated public insult and incitement to hatred or violence . The inquiry commenced following the FFF's complaint
. French prosecutors are considering whether to pursue charges against the senator under French law, which allows prosecution for racist online attacks directed at French citizens, even when the perpetrator is abroad
.
Facing massive backlash, Amarilla deleted the posts. But she then escalated the situation by:
She did not apologize for the racist content of her own posts.
The controversy dominated World Cup headlines in the days following the match, with French media and international outlets focusing on the racism row rather than France's on-field achievement or their upcoming quarterfinal opponent . The incident added a major distraction for the French camp as they prepared for the next stage of the tournament
.