French authorities have suspended three police officers after they were seen on video beating up a black music producer in central Paris.
The incidents come as the government tries to bring in laws banning the broadcast of images of police officers' faces.
Critics of the legislation say that without such images, none of the incidents which took place over the past week would have come to light.
Yesterday, French football star Kylian Mbappe, who is black, joined national teammates and fellow athletes in condemning the latest incident.
"Unbearable video, unacceptable violence. Say no to racism," he wrote on Twitter, next to a picture of the bloodied face of the injured producer, who has been named only as Michel.
The security camera video was published yesterday by online news site Loopsider.
It shows three officers kicking, punching and using their truncheons on the man, after he entered his studio. Loopsider said he had initially been stopped for not wearing a mask.
Michel said he was also subjected to racist abuse during the five minute beating.
He was detained and charged with violence and resisting arrest, but prosecutors threw the charges out and instead opened an investigation against the officers.
As he arrived at police headquarters with his lawyer to file a complaint, Michel told reporters: "People who should have been protecting me attacked me. I did nothing to deserve this. I just want these three people to be punished according to the law."
Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo said she was "profoundly shocked" by the "intolerable act".
Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin told French television that he would press for the officers' dismissal, saying they had "soiled the uniform of the republic".
Earlier this week Darmanin ordered police to provide a full report, after they violently dismantled a makeshift migrant camp in the capital, clashing with migrants and activists.
In a Twitter post, he said some of the scenes were "shocking".
Meanwhile, the French government is pressing ahead with its controversial security bill, which opponents say could undermine the media's ability to scrutinise police behaviour.
Article 24 of the bill makes it a criminal offence to post images of police or soldiers on social media that are deemed to target them as individuals.
The government argues that the new bill does not jeopardise the rights of the media and ordinary citizens to report police abuses.
But in the face of criticism the government added an amendment, specifying that Article 24 "will only target the dissemination of images clearly aimed at harming a police officer's or soldier's physical or psychological integrity".
People found guilty could be punished by a year in prison or a fine of up to €45,000 ($NZ76,525).
- BBC