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Posts Tagged ‘Nicolas Sarkozy’

Sarkozy falls ill after exercise routine

French president Nicolas Sarkozy undergoing tests in Paris military hospital after feeling faint, Elysée says
In pictures: Nicolas Sarkozy exercising

Nicolas Sarkozy, the fitness-fanatic French president, was admitted to hospital after he was taken ill during an exercise routine.

The Elysée said that the president “felt faint” while exercising and was immediately seen by his doctor.

He was under observation in a military hospital in Paris this afternoon undergoing additional tests, according to his office. The Elysée said it would release more details later today.

Sarkozy, 54, who has built much of his media image as the energetic “super-Sarko” around pictures of him on morning runs, regularly takes 45-minute jogging sessions.

He has often been photographed jogging with his ministers or while on official trips for summits. Recently he has started regular running routines with his wife, Carla Bruni, and additional workouts with her personal trainer.

The president is believed to have been taken ill during his regular Sunday morning run. The Elysée did not confirm the location but initial reports suggested he had been running near his weekend residence, La Lanterne, at Versailles, where military helicopters had been seen.

Sarkozy, known in political circles to have long suffered from punishing migraines, has always made a point of publishing his medical reports, following the intense secrecy surrounding the health of former French presidents. His latest medical report was released on 3 July, when the presidential health service said his cardiovascular and blood tests were normal.

In October 2007, Sarkozy was admitted to hospital for treatment to his throat.

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France’s Sarkozy hospitalised after collapse

French President Nicolas Sarkozy was taken to hospital on Sunday after falling ill while exercising, officials said. French television and radio said the 54-year-old president had been out jogging at the La Lanterne residence in Versaille, just outside Paris. He was taken

Row over Tory link to Polish right grows

The credibility of David Cameron’s new alliance in the European parliament is cast into fresh doubt today as the Observer reveals damning new evidence about its Polish leader’s past.

The allegations, which threaten to do serious damage to the Tory leader, centre on Michal Kaminski, a rightwinger chosen this month to chair the new and supposedly mainstream European Conservatives and Reformists group, of which the 25 Tory MEPs are members.

Opponents of Kaminski, 37, claim he has shown homophobic and antisemitic tendencies at odds with Cameron’s vision of a new tolerant Tory party. In particular, they say Kaminski was active in efforts to block an apology by his countrymen in 2001 for the massacre of hundreds of Jews in Jedwabne in July 1941. He denies this.

Speaking to this paper Kaminski also insisted he had never given an interview to a far-right Polish journal, Nasza Polska, during which he allegedly said Poles should not apologise for the Jedwabne pogrom until the Jews said sorry for collaborating with the Soviets.

“I never did an interview,” Kaminski insisted, adding that he “never tried to stop” an apology. But investigations by the Observer call those denials into doubt. Residents of Jedwabne at the time – backed by Polish journalists who covered the story – say Kaminski is misrepresenting his past role.

Footage of a television news bulletin from 5 March 2001 shows Kaminski reacting to news that the then President Aleksander Kwasniewski was to issue an apology and saying: “I think that Mr President can apologise but for other things. He should withhold apologies for Jedwabne.” The editor in chief of Nasza Polska, Piotr Jakucki, confirmed that Kaminski gave the 2001 interview.

At that time Jedwabne was the focus of international press attention after an American professor, Jan T Gross, published a book, based on the accounts of local people, which concluded that Poles, with the help of some occupying Nazi troops, locked hundreds of Jews into a barn, and set it on fire. But many people in Jedwabne and other parts of Poland, including Kaminski, believed the whole of Poland was being unfairly blamed for an unproven crime.

Maria Kaczynska, then a journalist with Gazeta Wspolczesna, recalls Kaminski’s role. “I remember all of this very vividly. I had to be in Jedwabne to write about him. I saw him in Jedwabne. He had a big folder and he pulled out a file, a petition calling on locals not to participate in apologies to the Jews.”

Kaminski also flatly denies having been involved in attempts to set up a committee aimed at defending the people of Jedwabne. “I had no involvement with them,” he said. However, Stanislaw Michalowski, the town council head at the time, said: “He was trying to set up a committee of Jedwabne defence but he failed.” Rafal Pankowski, who edits Never Again, an anti-racist magazine, said it was “incredible and appalling that Kaminski can lead a group in the European parliament that pretends to be mainstream and tolerant”.

In a letter in today’s Observer Kaminski calls claims that he is antisemitic “distressing” and insists he has spent “a lifetime of work supporting Israel and the Jewish community in Poland”.

“I have made it clear that the actions of some Poles in the Jedwabne massacre were horrific and criminal. The Polish people were also shattered by the Nazis. While we should share in commemoration I do not believe we should make the whole Polish nation culpable for the criminal acts of a small minority.”

Glenys Kinnock, the Europe minister, said: “This is another example of David Cameron’s inexperience and his willingness to leave Britain isolated. In the global downturn, it is more vital than ever that Britain remains at the heart of Europe. He needs to learn that he will not serve Britain’s national interests by resorting to isolation and extremism.”

Tories in Europe

Why has Cameron formed a new EU group?

In 2005, when campaigning to become leader, he promised Eurosceptic MPs he would quit the federalist European People’s party (EPP).

What is the problem?

He struggled to make a new group and ended up with allies on Europe’s hard right.

Does it matter?

Yes. Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy are angry that Cameron has left the EPP. It strikes important deals before EU summits.

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Sarkozy pays back €14,000 in personal expenses

First audit of Elysee Palace accounts in over 200 years praises French president’s openness but calls for cutbacks

Nicolas Sarkozy has paid back more than €14,000 to the state after it emerged that personal and family bills were put through the Elysée accounts. The expenses came to light in the first state audit of a French leader’s spending since Louis XVI just before the French revolution.

The report, published today by France’s national auditor, acknowledged Sarkozy had paid back €14,123 in personal bills from 2008. The nature of the costs was not revealed and Sarkozy had asked for the receipts to be returned to him. The auditors said he had not known the expenses went through palace accounts. He paid the money back just before the report was made public.

On official spending, Philippe Séguin, the national auditor, commended Sarkozy for opening the head of state’s accounts to scrutiny for the first time in more than 200 years. But he highlighted areas where Elysée spending needed to be reined in, including the president’s official and private trips and the costly maintenance of rural presidential retreats that were barely used.

The auditor questioned €400,000 worth of opinion polls commissioned by the palace, some of which ended up in the press or on TV. More attention needed to be paid to making different food suppliers bid for contracts to secure better deals – most of the Elysée’s meat has been supplied by the same butcher since 1969.

The company that regularly supplies marquees for the presidential Bastille day garden party was hired again last year despite charging 50% more than another bidder. The Elysée’s annual flower bill of €275,809 could also be reduced, the auditor found, and the presidential palace had spent around €3,000 on fines for late payment of electricity and gas bills.

After a row over a 140% salary increase at the start of his presidency, Sarkozy set an annual Elysée budget, of around €110m, for the first time last year in a bid to distance himself from the opaque spending habits of previous presidents who had no fixed rules. Sarkozy promised to cut the Elysée’s famously lavish spending: senior staff must now pay for their own lunchtime meals and journalists on the presidential plane are no longer served the most expensive champagne.

Seguin said that for over 200 years French heads of state had “hidden their accounts from any checks”. He said the new regime of annual audits was a “culture shock” at the Elysée – efforts had been made to make spending transparent and cut costs but more needed to be done.

The spending habits of French politicians have always intrigued the nation and the Socialist party opposition in recent years had expressed frustration at the lack of transparency of the Elysée’s costs.

Jacques Chirac was notorious for his food bills before arriving at the Elysée. As mayor of Paris he and his wife spent £170,000 on food in one year, including wholemeal bread, bio yoghurt and Corona beers for the fridge of their private apartment. Their total personal food bill over eight years at Paris town hall was £1.4m, including £40 a day spent on herbal tea.

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Blair in frame to become first EU president

Britain’s new Europe minister says ex-prime minister’s candidacy would have full backing of British government

Tony Blair is a contender to become the first president of the EU with the full backing of the British government, the new Europe minister said today.

Glenys Kinnock, in Strasbourg for the opening session of the new European parliament, said that although the former prime minister had not formally declared his candidacy, it was “certainly” the government position to support him.

“I am sure they would not do it without asking him,” Lady Kinnock said. “The UK government is supporting Tony Blair’s candidature for president of the council.”

The new post is to be created under the Lisbon treaty, which will streamline the way the EU is run if it is endorsed in an Irish referendum in early October.

Blair would be the first sitting president of the EU, who will be appointed by European government chiefs for a minimum of 30 months and a maximum of five years.

If the Irish back the treaty on 2 October, EU leaders are expected to decide on who will get the presidency at a summit at the end of that month.

“Blair is seen by many as someone who has the strength of character, the stature,” Kinnock said.

“People know who he is, and he would be someone who would have this role and step into it with a lot of respect and I think would be generally welcomed.”

While Blair has declined to declare himself as a candidate before the outcome of the Irish referendum, Kinnock’s remarks were the first solid confirmation that he is to run for the job.

However, British diplomats said her comments remained speculation for the moment because the Irish could yet vote down the treaty – as they did in their first referendum last year.

“The reality is Lisbon has not entered into force,” one diplomat said. “Blair has yet to say whether he will stand.”

A spokesman for the ex-PM said: “The job doesn’t exist, so there is nothing to be a candidate for.”

If he stands for the post, the founder of New Labour could yet in to stiff opposition in Europe.

Fredrik Reinfeldt, the Swedish prime minister – who took over the rotating presidency of the EU this month and will chair the October summit – is known to be strongly opposed to a Blair presidency.

Reinfeldt told the Guardian he would not get into any discussion about names for the post, while a senior European diplomat said the presidency would be “the absolute top subject” at the October summit.

Reinfeldt said he expected to oversee the launch of the Lisbon treaty, “including the elected council chairman [Europe president]“.

He added that if the treaty was ratified by all member states, he expected “very many names” to be put forward for the presidency.

José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, the Spanish prime minister, who will succeed to the EU presidency after Reinfeldt in January, is also an opponent of Blair.

France’s president, Nicolas Sarkozy, an early fan of the idea of President Blair, appears now to have turned lukewarm.

William Hague, the shadow foreign secretary, said the creation of a new EU president “could be enormously damaging for Europe”.

“Any holder is likely to try to centralise power for themselves in Brussels and dominate national foreign policies,” he said.

“In the hands of an operator as ambitious as Tony Blair, that is a near certainty. He should be let nowhere near the job.

“It shows what a grip Lord Mandelson now has over Gordon Brown that he has been forced to support his bitterest rival.”

 

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“Serbia is key player in region”

Despite all the difficulties, Serbia is a key player in the region and its role will increasingly come to the fore, says French Ambassador Jean-Francois Terral. In an interview with daily Danas, Terral said that during French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s recent meeting with Serbian counterpart Boris Tadić, Sarkozy had said that Serbia was a European country and that it wanted to join the EU.

Festival ban on ‘French Eminem’ sparks row

Government goes from criticising Orelsan to defending him – after rapper is dropped from event in Socialist Ségolène Royal’s region

He is known as the French Eminem: a middle-class teacher’s son from a dull town in lower Normandy who raps about the rural drug epidemic, boredom and the hopelessness of French provincial teenagers.

But ever since the political class expressed outrage at a song from Orelsan’s back catalogue in which he once sang about grotesque violence against a girlfriend who cheated on him, the 26-year-old rap star has become the centre of a national debate over censorship.

The row escalated today as politicians from all political parties waded in to express disgust that Orelsan – real name Aurelien Contentin – had been dropped from the lineup of one of France’s most important summer music festivals, the Francofolies at La Rochelle.

Nicolas Sarkozy’s ruling centre-right UMP party, which earlier this year led criticism of Orelsan’s song, Sale Pute (Dirty Slut), has now issued a statement saying it was “intolerable” to censor an artist. The party rounded on the Socialist Ségolène Royal, head of the western region where the festival takes place, saying she was “attacking freedom of expression”.

Earlier this month, Royal told a local paper she was happy Orelsan’s appearance had been pulled and that she had written to the festival for “clarification” on his part in the lineup.

Jack Lang, the Socialist and former culture minister, warned of a culture of “moral censorship” in France. He said the move to axe Orelsan was symptomatic of broader attacks against freedom of expression by local councils of all political persuasions. Last month, Orelsan’s new album was pulled from all Paris’s municipal libraries, prompting the League for Human Rights to appeal to Paris’s Socialist head of culture to think again.

Orelsan today told French radio his removal from the Francofolies festival was “really abhorrent”. He stressed that he no longer sang Sale Pute on stage, having removed it from his website, and that those censoring him had not seen his act. He said he wanted a meeting with the new culture minister, Frédéric Mitterrand.

Several other French singers made statements in his support. One of them, Cali, said the festival had totally discredited itself. In a letter made public by Orelsan’s record company, Cali said: “There will be a before and an after Orelsan. For my part, I’ll boycott all these muzzled places – with sadness but conviction.”

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EU governments back Barroso for second term

• Confirmation of president pushed back to September
• Greens led by Cohn-Bendit leading No campaign

The 27 governments of the European Union today threw their full weight behind a second five-year term for José Manuel Barroso as president of the European commission, challenging the new European parliament to rubber-stamp their choice. The parliament meets next week in Strasbourg, but government leaders’ hopes that Barroso would be instantly enthroned have been defeated by a backlash from the centre-left. Fredrik Reinfeldt, the Swedish prime minister who took over the rotating chairmanship of the EU last week, said today that the full endorsement of Barroso by 27 governments should see the former Portuguese prime minister confirmed as soon as possible.

But Reinfeldt has already suffered one defeat in his first week as EU president, seeing the parliament vote pushed back by two months until September.

“The council [of government leaders] has taken its responsibility for completing the selection of a commission president. I hope that we in Europe can move forward as soon as possible to resolve the important issues we have before us, such as the climate and financial crises,” said Reinfeldt.

He fears a leadership vacuum as Europe wrestles with economic meltdown, rising unemployment, and the run-up to the crucial global climate change negotiations in Copenhagen in December.

But the social democrats and the Greens in the European parliament have forced a delay in the vote on Barroso who is strongly supported by Britain, both Labour and Conservative, by the centre-left governments of Portugal and Spain, and by the centre-right across the EU.

Barroso has been lobbying strenuously for a quick reappointment. He has been most worried about the ambivalent support from President Nicolas Sarkozy of France.The Greens in the parliament, led by Danny Cohn-Bendit, are spearheading a No to Barroso campaign, arguing he has displayed feeble leadership. The second biggest caucus, the social democrats, have led the drive to delay the vote in an attempt to extract maximum concessions from Barroso over policies and the shape of his new commission. The social democrats’ leader, Martin Schulz, is believed to be demanding that a quarter of commission portfolios go to social democrats, a tall order that Barroso will struggle to deliver on.

Commission officials admit that Barroso is worried that his second term could fall victim to personnel horsetrading among member states following the Irish vote.

Under the Lisbon treaty the EU is to get its first sitting president and a more powerful foreign policy chief. If the Irish vote yes to Lisbon, as widely expected, the new plum posts will be up for grabs and the head of the commission post could be thrown into the mix, jeopardising Barroso’s chances.

The tussle over Barroso is part of a power struggle between the European council of national governments, traditionally the strongest power in the EU, and the parliament, which is gaining in clout and is seeking to challenge the supremacy of the governments.

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UK and France agree immigration clampdown

£15m allocated to border controls and repatriation of Calais immigrants stepped up as Brown and Sarkozy meet before G8

The government today agreed a new deal to handle the growing crisis of migrants gathered at Calais, allocating £15m to tighten British border controls, while France promised to begin voluntary and forced repatriations.

The deal, agreed as Gordon Brown met Nicolas Sarkozy for a pre-G8 summit in the Alpine town of Evian, was claimed as a breakthrough by the minister for borders and immigration, Phil Woolas – the first time France has explicitly agreed to step up removal flights from northern France.

There are currently around 1,600 mainly Afghan and Eritrean migrants sleeping rough in makeshift tents on the Nord-Pas-de-Calais coast, desperate to reach Kent by stowing away under cars and lorries. With an epidemic of scabies and lack of running water in the squatter camps known as “the jungle”, the sanitation crisis is the worst since the Red Cross centre at Sangatte closed in 2002. Last week the United Nations High Commission for Refugees started advising migrants about their legal rights.

Woolas said: “We’ve agreed to spend an extra £15m over the next two years on equipment to make the border impervious, and the French have agreed to introduce voluntary and then forced returns to source countries. We have been saying to them, ‘What’s the point of us pulling off all these measures to stop people getting through if you arrest and let them through further down the road?’”

He said Britain would invest in more scanning equipment, dog controls and lorry searches as well as a facility to process people. France would step up repatriations and planned to raze “the jungle” by the end of the year. Woolas said the next measure would be “to challenge people traffickers and routes overseas, setting up a joint office on intelligence”.

Pierre Henry of France Terre d’Asile, an NGO working with the UN to advise the migrants, warned that the measures “must strike a balance between border control, dealing with criminality but also the humanitarian element of protection for people who need it”.

Brown and Sarkozy used their second Anglo-French summit to mount a united front for the G8 summit, promising joint action to tackle climate change with new targets for reducing carbon emissions; pressure for tougher financial regulation and a clampdown on tax havens.

Brown was gushing in his praise for his French counterpart, saying “President Sarkozy, mon ami, you are truly a force of nature”, hailing his “drive and determination to make the world a safer place, a more prosperous place, a greener place”.

Sarkozy said Britain could count “unreservedly” on French support over “the totally unfair, disproportionate attacks and criticism” by the Iranian leadership. He said: “We will do whatever [the British] want us to do.” He added: “The Iranian people deserve better than the leadership they have today.”

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