Category: France

  • Sarkozy accused of using ‘extras’ to pose as supporters

    Sarkozy accused of using ‘extras’ to pose as supporters

    Nicolas Sarkozy has been accused of stage-managing a visit to a construction site by bussing in fake “workers” to make him look more popular.

    Conseil Europeen
    Nicolas Sarkozy has been accused of stage-managing a visit to look more popular Photo: AP

    By Henry Samuel, Paris

    The accusations against the French president come ahead of elections he is polled to lose.

    Mr Sarkozy, 57, received a warm response from workers when he visited the social housing construction site in Mennecy, Essonne, near Paris on Thursday.

    However, yesterday it was claimed that half the crowd of “workers” who braved the cold to meet the President had been specially drafted in for the occasion and had nothing to do with the building work.

    “I only recognised two or three but I didn’t know the others,” Ambroise, one bona fide bricklayer told Europe 1 radio.

    “They wanted more people around Nicolas Sarkozy,” he said, adding that there were twice as many workers than usual.

    Bosses on sites from other locations had ordered staff to attend. They were then told to “pretend to work in front of the press,” he said.

    In theory, none of them should have been working due to the unusually cold weather, and the place was deserted shortly after Mr Sarkozy’s departure.

    “It’s total nonsense, it’s ludicrous,” said the Elysée.

    Management of the construction company in charge of the site “categorically denied” any stage-management, saying “only the 67 workers working daily on the site, were present, as well as support staff.”

    But a spokesman for the opposition Socialists slammed the visit. “If correct, this episode says a lot about the relationship with the truth the outgoing president keeps with the French,” said Claude Bartolone.

    “It is proof of his taste for permanent trickery.”

    The far-Right National Front wrote: “The workers are abandoning him, extras will have to do.”

    The controversy could not have come at a worse time for Mr Sarkozy, a day after an Ifop poll placed him behind Marine Le Pen, the National Front leader, in voting intentions among France’s active workforce.

    Miss Le Pen stood to win 24 per cent of the vote, with Mr Sarkozy on 18 per cent.

    François Hollande, the Socialist candidate, was in first place with 27 per cent.

    Mr Sarkozy is still tipped to reach round two in nationwide polls.

    This is not the first time the French president has been accused of stage-managing visits. In September 2009, factory workers at the Faurecia auto parts company in Normandy said they had been hand-picked to appear alongside the diminutive leader because they were short.

    The Elysée dismissed the reports as “grotesque and absurd”, despite the fact that staff confirmed they had been selected because they were “no bigger than the President”.

    www.telegraph.co.uk, 3 Jan 2012

  • Turkey may have banned dead French soldiers’ flight over Armenian genocide law

    Turkey may have banned dead French soldiers’ flight over Armenian genocide law

    By RFI

    Turkey may have banned the flight repatriating the bodies of four French soldiers killed in Afghanistan from crossing its air space in retaliation for the Armenian genocide bill recently passed by the French Senate.

    Pro-Turkish demonstrators in Paris last month Reuters/Charles Platiau
    Pro-Turkish demonstrators in Paris last month Reuters/Charles Platiau

    Ankara has introduced the first sanctions against France in response to the both houses of the French parliament approving a law that declared it illegal to deny that an anti-Armenian genocide took place in Turkey during World War I.

    Dossier: AfPak news and analysis

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyep Erdogan has replaced his official car, a Renault, by a Ford as a first sanction on France, according to RFI Istanbul correspondent Jérôme Bastion.

    More seriously, two French warships and a military plane have had to change their route after being denied access to Turkish waters or airspace, the French ambassador to Turkey has told RFI.

    France will no longer ask for permission for military missions to cross over Turkey or through its waters until the spat about the law is resolved, he said.

    However, a flight carrying a French minister was allowed to fly over Turkey, the embassy says.

    “So it is highly likely that the flight that was redirected was the one that was bringing back the bodies of the soldiers killed in Afghanistan on 20 January,” RFI’s website in French says, adding that the minister’s flight was probably that of Defence Minister Gérard Longuet, who went to Kabul on 21 January.

    Automatic authorisation for the French military to dock in or overfly Turkey was suspended when the National Assembly approved the Armenian genocide law.

    A ban on ministers passing through has been threatened but is not due to take effect until the Constitutional Council rules on whether the law is valid.

    via Turkey may have banned dead French soldiers’ flight over Armenian genocide law – France – Turkey – RFI.

  • Analysts say Turkey unwise on Armenia law reaction

    Analysts say Turkey unwise on Armenia law reaction

    Turkey’s attempts to intimidate France over the question of the Armenian genocide is bound to backfire, analysts said as the 100th anniversary of the bloodshed approaches. Duration: 02:00

  • Clinton sidesteps dispute between Turkey and France over genocide legislation

    Clinton sidesteps dispute between Turkey and France over genocide legislation

    WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Thursday sidestepped a delicate dispute between two allies over the World War I-era killing of Armenians in Turkey.

    HilaryClinton1

    Clinton was asked why the United States has not matched a move by French lawmakers to criminalize denial that the killings were genocide. The French legislation has enraged Turkey, which has threatened sanctions if French President Nicolas Sarkozy signs the bill.

    The U.S. administration has avoided calling the killings genocide despite support for recognition by both Clinton and President Barack Obama when they were senators.

    Clinton said the administration was wary of compromising free speech. She said the issue was best left for scholars.

    “To try to use government power to resolve historical issues, I think, opens a door that is a very dangerous one to go through,” Clinton said at an event with U.S. State Department employees.

    via Clinton sidesteps dispute between Turkey and France over genocide legislation – The Washington Post.

  • Turkey Freezes All Diplomatic Relations With France Over Armenian Genocide

    Turkey Freezes All Diplomatic Relations With France Over Armenian Genocide

    Turkey Freezes All Diplomatic Relations With France Over Armenian Genocide

    by sheikyermami on January 25, 2012

    Ihsanoglu Meltdown

    OIC claims that adoption of genocide law is a sign of Islamophobia in France

    I am not in favor of laws restricting the freedom of speech, but this response from the OIC is consistent with its own attempts to restrict truth-telling about Islam and jihad under the guise of criminalizing “religious hatred.” Note also that by labeling the French law an example of “Islamophobia,” Ihsanoglu is tacitly admitting that the Armenian genocide was an Islamic jihad action; otherwise, what would Islam have to do with this law at all?

    Mohammedan Slaughter Cannot Be Genocide Because Allah Wills it:

    saudi sudan turkey 2010 1 2 17 12 163

    OIC Top Dog Ihsanoghlu & Sudan’s Genocidal Tyrant Bashir

    “OIC: Adoption of genocide law sign of Islamophobia in France,” by A. Taghiyeva for Trend, January 24:

    The adoption of the law criminalizing the denial of the so-called “Armenian Genocide” is a sign of Islamophobia in France, Secretary General of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu told Trend on Tuesday.“This law contradicts three fundamental principles of democracy — equality, freedom and brotherhood. It is a sign of growing Islamophobia,” Ihsanoglu said.

    He called the law unacceptable, non-complying with historical facts and demonstrating double standards.

    It always cracks me up when a muselmaniac tries to lecture us by our own values that we should commit collective suicide……

    Related:

    Erdogan huffs and puffs:

    “This policy is based on racism, discrimination and xenophobia,” thundered Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Thursday….

    After a nearly eight-hour debate, the French Senate adopted the bill. Some 127 senators voted in favor, while 86 senators voted against on Jan.23.

    The lower house of the French parliament adopted a bill criminalising the denial of the so-called “genocide” on Dec.22. Some 45 out of 577 French MPs voted with 38 voting for and seven against the adoption of the bill.

    The bill demands a year’s imprisonment and a fine of 45,000 euro for denying the so-called “genocide.” In response to the decision, Turkey announced that it has frozen all diplomatic relations with France.

    MPs from the French president’s Union for Popular Movement (UMP) party, which has the parliamentary majority, proposed the bill aimed at criminalising the denial of the so-called “genocide” to the legislative committee of the National Assembly in early December.

    Armenia and the Armenian lobby claim that the predecessor of the Turkey – Ottoman Empire had committed the 1915 genocide against the Armenians living in Anadolu, and achieved recognition of the “Armenian Genocide” by the parliaments of several countries.

    via Turkey Freezes All Diplomatic Relations With France Over Armenian Genocide — Winds Of Jihad By SheikYerMami.

  • Turkey Warns France over ‘Racist’ Genocide Bill

    Turkey Warns France over ‘Racist’ Genocide Bill

     

    Turkey is urging French President Nicolas Sarkozy not to sign a bill that would make it a crime to deny that the killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks nearly a century ago constituted genocide.

    FranceTurkeyFlag LG

    France’s parliament approved the genocide bill late Monday.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan called the decision “racist,” and within hours of the vote his countrymen were reacting.

    “I condemn France. I’m boycotting all things French and I’m not buying any French products,” said Recep Ayanoglu, a resident of Istanbul.

    “I think our country should retaliate for this action,” Istanbul teacher Irfan Canturk added.

    Historians say around 1.5 million Christians were killed in what is now eastern Turkey during World War I, and was the 20th Century’s first genocide.

    Armenians claim the 1915 killings were part of a deliberate policy of genocide ordered by the Ottoman Turk government.

    Turkey has denied the charge for years and has said many Turks also died as the Ottoman Turk Empire disintegrated.

    In Armenia’s capital city of Yerevan, citizens awoke Tuesday morning to the news that the French had voted 127-86 to pass the bill.

    “This day will be written in gold not only in the history of friendship between the Armenian and French peoples, but also in the annals of the history of the protection of human rights worldwide,” said Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian.

    Under the measure, anyone who denies the killings were genocide will be jailed up to a year and fined around $57,000.

    Twenty countries including Germany, Sweden, Russia and Canada recognize the violent acts in 1915 as genocide. Forty-three U.S. states have done so as well.

    The bill requires Sarkozy’s signature in the next 15 days to become law.

    via Turkey Warns France over ‘Racist’ Genocide Bill – World – CBN News – Christian News 24-7 – CBN.com.