The mayor of Carnac, Olivier Lepick, insisted he adhered to the legislation in granting planning permission for the shop, known as Mr Bricolage.
Situated alongside the blustery Atlantic coast within the Brittany area, the realm is well-known for its intensive fields of Neolithic-era stones, known as “menhir.”
According to Lepick, excavations carried out up to now few years on the location, which lies 3km away from a protected vacationer attraction, decided that it had a “low archaeological value” and didn’t benefit particular safety.
The elimination of the menhirs was dropped at the eye of nationwide media by means of a weblog put up by native newbie archaeologist.
Christian Obeltz accused native authorities of finishing up a number of actions “denaturing this globally recognised site.”
Obeltz stated the mayor of Carnacest had given planning permission for a Mr Bricolage retailer, “destroying 39 menhirs”.
The web site is a part of an utility for UNESCO World Heritage Status set to be submitted to the French Ministry of Culture on the finish of September, the put up stated.
“Whether it’s little or not, [the site] has an archaeological value,” Obeltz instructed BFMTV.
Meanwhile, Lepick instructed French news channel CNews that protection of the controversy by French media does “not reflect the reality” of the scenario on the bottom.
“There were never 39 menhirs in this place,” Lepick stated.
“The preventative excavations we carried out in 2015 clearly show this.”
The stones have been positioned in a business zone, reverse a service station, close to a grocery store and recycling centre, he stated.
“It’s really not the kind of images described in certain media articles,” the mayor stated.
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“I feel like I have destroyed the Mona Lisa when I read certain articles.
“There weren’t archaeological stays of adequate worth to reject planning permission,” the mayor said.
On Thursday, French far right politician, Marine Le Pen retweeted a link to an article by local French newspaper, Ouest France, calling the removal “deplorable” and remarking that the French state “protects neither our residents or our heritage.”
Source: www.9news.com.au