Leon Gautier: Final French D-Day fighter dies aged 100

The final surviving French D-Day fighter, Leon Gautier, has died aged 100.

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Mr Gautier was a part of a French commando unit alongside different Allied forces within the D-Day landings in Normandy on 6 June 1944 - the biggest sea invasion in historical past that in the end liberated Western Europe from Nazi management.

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Only a number of males from the 177-strong French battalion escaped dying or damage that day - considered one of them being Mr Gautier.

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In his later years, he would decry warfare as "ugly" and rife with "misery".

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The veteran's dying was introduced by mayor Roman Bail of Ouistreham, a commune in Normandy the place the Allies landed virtually 80 years in the past and the place the Frenchman spent his remaining a long time.

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Mr Gautier had been in hospital for the previous week affected by lung hassle, Mr Bail stated.

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'Hero of 1944, but additionally the little previous man everybody knew'

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The mayor praised Mr Gautier's affect as "a father to us, a grandfather to us, an important figure of daily life" and "the hero of 1944, the hero of June 6, but also the little old guy that everyone knew".

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Mr Gautier was born in 1922 and joined the navy in 1940. He could be transferred to England later that 12 months when France fell to Nazi occupation.

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On D-Day, Mr Gautier and his fellow troops, beneath the command of Captain Philippe Kieffer, had been among the many first to cost the German-controlled seashores in Normandy.

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Mr Gautier recalled how the unit was "at the head of the landing" with the British forces letting them go "a few metres in front".

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He stated: "We were being shot at, but we shot at them too. When we arrived near the walls of the bunkers, we threw grenades in through the slits.

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"For us, it was the liberation of France, the return into the household... we had been glad to return residence."

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Mr Gautier injured his ankle, which sidelined him for a lot of the rest of the warfare.

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After it ended, he labored within the automotive trade constructing automobile our bodies and coaching mechanics, residing in England, Nigeria and Cameroon earlier than returning to his homeland.

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Read extra:Funeral of black RAF pilot who fought in Second World War attracts hundreds'It's not riots - it's war', says police chief in French town where mayor's home was attacked

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French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted a tribute to the centenarian saying: "The last member of the Kieffer commando who landed with his 176 French comrades in Normandy on June 6, 1944, hero of the Liberation, LΓ©on Gautier has left us. We won't forget him."

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Mr Gautier is survived by many descendants - together with a great-great-grandson, born on 6 June 2017 - precisely 73 years after D-Day.

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