POITIERS (AFP-EJP)---About 70 extreme-right activists occupied a building site in the central French city of Poitiers where a mosque is under construction, for several hours Saturday, provoking angry criticism from political and religious leaders.
The occupation started before dawn when demonstrators entered the site on the outskirts of the city where a large grey building with a minaret is being built.
Climbing on to the roof they unfurled two banners, one identifying their organisation, the other proclaiming "Charles Martel beat the Arabs at Poitiers in 732."
That battle is credited with having halted the advance of Islam into western Europe.
Towards noon the activists agreed to leave and the evacuation was completed.
"We were planning to stay longer but as we had no intention whatsoever of a physical confrontation we are leaving with the police in a good mood without an unhappy ending," a spokesman for the demonstrators, Damien Rieu, said as the occupation ended.
Four of the occupiers who said they were the organisers were held for questioning, the prosecutor's office said. The rest underwent identity checks.
French Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault, "firmly" condemned a "provocation that reveals an unacceptable religious hatred."
Interior Minister Manuel Valls also condemned "hateful and inadmissible provocation" and the "questionable confusion" of the group.
The police have opened an inquiry into "an unauthorised demonstration, incitement to racial hatred, participation in a gathering with a view to carrying out joint damage."
There could be charges of theft as about 10 carpets were removed from the mosque and taken to the roof where they were badly damaged by rain.
"Poitiers is in shock," Alain Claeys, the mayor of the town of 90,000 inhabitants said.
Extreme rightwing activists had come from all over France and seemed well organised with banners and computers, he said.
Yves Dassonville, the prefect of the Vienne region in which Poitiers is situated, told reporters that the 73 demonstrators were "seemingly people of good family who came from all over France."
The Muslim national umbrella organisation, the French Muslim Council (CFCM), spoke of its "strong indignation" and "its deep concern in the face of this new form of anti-Muslim violence."
The occupation, it said, had been "serious, savage and illegal, accompanied by slogans hostile to Islam and without precedent in the history" of France, which has the largest Muslim population in Europe, of between four and six million.
The International League against Racism and Anti-Semitism ((Licra) called the occupation a "demonstration of hate" and CRIF, the umbrella group of French Jewish institutions condemned the action, stressing the "right to free expression of the religion."