Tag Archives: French President Francois Hollande

France confirms body found in Mali is hostage

The office of President Francois Hollande has formally confirmed the death of a French hostage in Mali, one of six French citizens captured by al-Qaida’s North African arm.

A statement from the president’s office on Monday evening said an autopsy would be performed to learn the cause of death of Philippe Verdon once the body is transferred to France.

The media arm of Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, had said on Twitter in April that Verdon was dead after an unofficial announcement in march. Verdon had been captured in eastern Mali in November 2011 along with another French citizen. AQIM, al-Qaida’s North African offshoot, is still believed to be holding five French hostages.

AQIM was one of three Islamic extremist groups who controlled northern Mali until a January French-led military intervention cut their stranglehold, killing extremists and scattering others to neighboring countries.

Verdon was known to be in ill health and there has been speculation that his death was related to pre-existing conditions. However, AQIM took credit for his death, saying in April that the fate of the remaining captives “is in the hands of French President Francois Hollande and the door is still open to find a just solution.”

The presidential statement reiterated that “those responsible for the death of our countryman must be identified and judged.”

France’s Foreign Ministry had said that a body was found in northern Mali and that there was a “strong proability” it was Verdon. Tests to verify identity were carried out in Mali.

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China revives Red Flag limo in display of ambition

The massive frame, bug-eyed headlights, huge retro front grille and scarlet glass hood ornament can mean only one thing: China’s big and brash Red Flag limousine is back.

The giant homegrown sedans were once among the most distinctive icons of the People’s Republic. Chairman Mao Zedong perched in the back of one to inspect Red Guards in the 1960s. President Richard Nixon rode through Beijing in one during his breakthrough 1972 visit. Bob Hope rode in one too, and was mysteriously told that the trunk was off-limits.

The Red Flag disappeared in the 1980s, replaced by humbler joint efforts with foreign partners that produced boxy Lincoln copies and rebranded black Audis. Now Beijing is reviving the brand to its former glory as a rolling chrome-and-steel embodiment of national pride and ambition.

Since this spring, the newly designed L7 model has conveyed dignitaries including French President Francois Hollande and South Korea’s Park Geun-hye in motorcades from Beijing’s airport.

“China wants to make clear to foreign visitors that it will not become just another Western society with Western goods and taste,” said Jonathan Holslag, a research fellow at the Institute for Contemporary China Studies at the University of Brussels. “China in the first place wants to be different from the West, and in the second place to be respected as a strong, muscular power.”

The L7 is a 6-meter (20-foot) dreadnought of an automobile, boasting a mammoth 12-cylinder engine and roughly resembling an oversized Bentley Flying Spur.

Foreign dignitaries and officials above the rank of minister get the L7, while top-level Chinese officials are chauffeured in an even bigger version, the leviathan L9, which reportedly costs about $800,000 and looks like the kind of car rock stars might drive into swimming pools. Almost 40 centimeters (15 inches) longer than the L7, the L9 comes with an armored chassis, rear-opening “suicide doors” and an optional sun roof from which Chinese leaders emerge when reviewing troops.

Ministerial-level officials are assigned the much more modest H7, which starts at around $50,000.

Chinese car enthusiast Liu Weining, who owns a 2000 version based on the Audi 100 and wishes he could afford one of the latest models, thinks the future of the brand is bright because of its iconic status.

“It’s a sturdy car with a very distinctive look …read more

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AQIM warns France, allies of revenge for Mali

Al-Qaida’s North Africa branch is threatening to seek revenge against all countries taking part in the French-led war in Mali.

The terror group warned late Thursday: “No one who participated in this ferocious attack on our people in north Mali will be safe.”

Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, had taken written questions from international journalists. On Thursday, the group released a 28-page document outlining responses to the questions in English.

The terror group, which is holding a number of French hostages in the desert, said the captives’ fate “is in the hands of French President Francois Hollande.”

The group declined to comment on how many casualties it has suffered since the French-led war began in January.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/1ivIx0WR_6E/

EU mission trains troops in Mali

In preparation for a drawdown of French troops from Mali, a European Union team started training Malian soldiers for battle against jihadists who overran much of this West African country before they were pushed back by a French military intervention.

On a recent day, small groups of Malians stood in the burning heat and orange sands in the town of Koulikoro, 60 kilometers (37 miles) west of the capital Bamako, learning to hold weapons. They began the training last week, and this week they learned how to shoot from standing, sitting and prone positions.

About 550 people form the team meant to ready Mali‘s army for combat. But there is worry that the project to train thousands of soldiers may not be sufficient to keep the armed Islamic militants at bay.

French forces entered Mali swiftly and strongly in January after Islamic militants began a formidable push south toward the country’s capital. The militants, who are inspired by a radical interpretation of Islam, ruled the northern half of Mali for nearly 10 months before the French-led military operation forced them into the desert surrounding the main cities. The extremists have responded with a series of attacks, including suicide bombings.

French military spokesman Col. Thierry Burkhard said this week that about 100 French troops have been pulled out of Mali and were as of this week in Cyprus on their way back to France. Last month, French President Francois Hollande said that by July, about 2,000 French soldiers will still be in the former French colony, down from 4,000 at the peak deployment, and at the end of the year “1,000 French soldiers will remain.” He said the French troops would likely be part of a U.N. peacekeeping operation that France is pushing for.

The French-led operation with backing from regional bloc ECOWAS and under authorization of the U.N. Security Council has largely been hailed a success so far, though there are some concerns the militants will simply regroup once the French start drawing down.

Mali‘s military chain of command was broken after a coup last year. Soldiers lack respect for their commanders and superiors. There are reports that soldiers, humiliated by their defeat last year at the hands of the Islamic extremists, have carried out reprisals against the Arab and Tuareg civilians left behind.

Human Rights Watch released a report Thursday that said two Tuareg men who had been arrested in February and tortured by Malian soldiers in the

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/nmDhU81h-EQ/

In France, private assets get new public scrutiny

France’s Socialist government wants all elected officials to publicly disclose their assets, after the country’s budget minister was revealed as a tax-dodger and forced to resign.

The new rules, to be announced Wednesday, would apply to all national lawmakers and Cabinet members. In a country uncomfortable with wealth or open discussions about money, only the French president has to publicly list his assets — other elected and appointed officials file confidential disclosure forms to a commission that lacks powers of investigation.

French President Francois Hollande‘s plan came after an investigative journalism site uncovered evidence that Jerome Cahuzac, the former budget minister, had secret Swiss accounts. Some officials are releasing their finance details already in response; others are less enthusiastic about an idea they say is being imposed without debate.

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Google Targeted in European Antitrust Complaint Led by Microsoft

By The Associated Press

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Philippe Wojazer/AP Google CEO Eric Schmidt, left, and French President Francois Hollande sign an agreement at the Elysee Palace in Paris on Feb. 1. On Tuesday, more than a dozen technology companies filed a complaint against Google, alleging unfair trade practices in Europe.

By JUERGEN BAETZ

BRUSSELS — Google is using unfair practices to cement its control over mobile Internet usage on smartphones, a group of companies led by Microsoft alleged in a European antitrust complaint Tuesday.

The “FairSearch” initiative of 17 companies — which includes Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), Nokia Corp. (NOK) and Oracle Corp. (ORCL) — claims Google is acting unfairly by giving away its Android operating system to mobile device companies on the condition that the U.S. online giant’s own software applications like YouTube and Google Maps are installed and prominently displayed.

“Google is using its Android mobile operating system as a Trojan horse to deceive partners, monopolize the mobile marketplace, and control consumer data,” said Thomas Vinje, the group’s Brussels-based lawyer.

Android operating systems have the largest share of the smartphone market worldwide, followed by Apple Inc.’s (AAPL) iOS platform with systems from Blackberry (BBRY), Microsoft and others far behind.

“Google’s predatory distribution of Android at below-cost makes it difficult for other providers of operating systems to recoup investments in competing with Google’s dominant mobile platform,” FairSearch said in a statement.

The European Commission, the 27-nation bloc’s executive arm and antitrust authority, is not obliged to take any action other than reply to the group’s complaint.

Google Inc. (GOOG) didn’t address the complaint’s charges in detail. “We continue to work cooperatively with the European Commission,” said Google spokesman Al Verney.

The U.S. company is already under investigation by Brussels for practices related to its dominance of online search and advertising markets.

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That complaint, filed in 2010, alleges Google unfairly favors its own services in its Internet search results, which enjoy a near-monopoly in Europe. Google has proposed a list of remedies to address the Commission’s concerns to achieve a settlement. The Commission is currently examining the proposed changes.

In China, Google has already come under official scrutiny because of Android’s dominance of the mobile smartphone market there.

Several European data privacy regulators have also launched an investigation into Google’s practices, alleging the company is creating a data goldmine at the expense of unwitting users.

Last year, the company merged 60 separate privacy policies from around the world into one universal procedure. The European authorities complain that the new policy doesn’t allow users to figure out which information is kept, how it is combined by Google services or how long the company retains it.

The policy allows Google to combine data collected from one person as they use …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

France to take part in Mali peacekeeping after clearing out Al Qaeda rebels

French troops will take part in a future U.N. peacekeeping mission in Mali after they end their task of clearing Al Qaeda-linked rebels out of Mali‘s vast northern region.

French President Francois Hollande made the announcement Thursday as he spoke before Morocco‘s parliament, part of a two-day visit celebrating the two nations’ close cooperation.

France will soon complete its mission (in Mali) in a few weeks and African forces will take over. The security council is going to deploy a peacekeeping operation and France will play its part,” Hollande said.

He said that scenario was based on the condition that a “indispensable” dialogue take place between Mali‘s factions and the Mali government in Bamako and on the resumption of the democratic process in the West African nation.

Elections in Mali are planned for July.

Mali was plunged into turmoil after a coup in March 2012 created a security vacuum. That allowed secular rebel Tuaregs, who have long felt marginalized by Mali‘s government, to take half of the country’s vast north as a new homeland. But months later, their struggle was co-opted by Islamic jihadists, who imposed strict Shariah law in the north.

France launched a military operation on Jan. 11 against the Islamic extremists, many linked to Al Qaeda, after they suddenly started moving south and captured key towns. Backed by Chadian soldiers, French troops ousted the radical Islamic fighters from major towns in northern Mali, though many went into hiding in the desert and continue to carry out attacks.

Hollande said last week the first of France‘s more than 4,000 troops in Mali will pull out in late April and by July, will be down to 2,000 soldiers. He said just 1,000 will remain by the end of the year.

Hollande also took the opportunity to describe Morocco‘s autonomy plan for the Western Sahara region it annexed beginning in 1976 as “credible.”

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France to take part in future Mali peacekeeping

France‘s president says French troops plan to take part in a future U.N. peacekeeping mission in Mali — even after they end their mission to clear out al-Qaida-linked rebels from the West African nation’s vast northern region.

Speaking in front of Morocco‘s parliament, French President Francois Hollande said African forces will take over from the French in northern Mali in a few weeks.

He said Thursday that France‘s participation in a peacekeeping force would be conditional on “indispensable” dialogue between Mali‘s factions and the Mali government in Bamako and on the resumption of the democratic process.

Elections in Mali have been planned for July.

Hollande, in a two-day visit to the north African kingdom of Morocco, also championed joint ventures between Morocco and France to help support Africa‘s economic development.

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France confirms death of Al Qaeda chief Abou Zeid

France says Al Qaeda-linked North African warlord Abou Zeid was killed in combat with French troops in Mali in February.

In a statement Saturday the office of French President Francois Hollande said the death was “definitively confirmed” and that Zeid’s death “marks an important step in the fight against terrorism in the Sahel.”

Chad‘s president had said earlier this month that Chadian troops had killed Abou Zeid. He was a pillar of the southern realm of Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, responsible for the death of at least two European hostages.

The French military moved into Mali on Jan. 11 to push back militants linked to Abou Zeid and other extremist groups who had imposed harsh Islamic rule.

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France confirms death of Al-Qaida chief Abou Zeid

France says Al-Qaida-linked North African warlord Abou Zeid was killed in combat with French troops in Mali in February.

In a statement Saturday the office of French President Francois Hollande said the death was “definitively confirmed” and that Zeid’s death “marks an important step in the fight against terrorism in the Sahel.”

Chad‘s president had said earlier this month that Chadian troops had killed Abou Zeid. He was a pillar of the southern realm of al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, responsible for the death of at least two European hostages.

The French military moved into Mali on Jan. 11 to push back militants linked to Abou Zeid and other extremist groups who had imposed harsh Islamic rule.

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France to alter plans to raise taxes on ultra-rich

The French government‘s plan to raise taxes on the wealthy is being radically scaled back after a second legal opinion said the proposed marginal rate of 75 percent was unfair.

France‘s highest court had already thrown out the 75-percent rate, and a high-level advisory council agreed. The Socialist government on Friday said that under the decision, the rate on those with incomes above 1 million euros ($1.3 million) could not exceed 60 percent.

French President Francois Hollande campaigned on a promise to impose the tax, despite criticism that it would do little to solve growing fiscal problems and would drive away the wealthiest citizens. The current top tax rate is 41 percent.

The government says it will introduce a new measure in response to the decision.

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US OK with France, UK arming Syria's rebels

The Obama administration lent its support Monday to British and French plans to arm Syria‘s rebels, saying it wouldn’t stand in the way of any country seeking to rebalance the fight against an Assad regime supported by Russia, Iran and Hezbollah.

Secretary of State John Kerry said the longer Syria‘s two-year civil war goes on, the greater the danger of its institutions collapsing and extremists getting their hands on the Arab country’s vast chemical weapons arsenal. With some 450,000 Syrians living in neighboring countries as refugees already, he said the conflict is becoming a “global catastrophe.”

Kerry said the world needs to change Syrian President Bashar Assad‘s calculations.

“If he believes he can shoot it out, Syrians and the region have a problem, and the world has a problem,” Kerry told reporters after a meeting with Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr.

Kerry said the U.S. wants to leave the door open for a political solution. But concerning Syria‘s rebels, he added, “the United States does not stand in the way of other countries that made a decision to provide arms, whether it’s France or Britain or others.”

The comments come after French President Francois Hollande said last week that his country and Britain were pushing the European Union to lift its arms embargo on Syria as soon as possible so that they can send weapons to rebel fighters. The two countries are seeking military help for the rebels by the end of May or earlier if possible. But Germany and other EU nations have been skeptical about sending weapons, pointing to the risk of further escalation in a volatile region.

The United States long held the same conviction, with President Barack Obama and other officials saying more weapons in Syria would only make peace harder. As the violence has worsened over the last year, Washington has tempered that message somewhat. It is now promising nonlethal aid to the anti-Assad militias in the form of meals and medical kits, and refusing to rule out further escalation.

And support for greater U.S. involvement appears to be growing in Congress. On Monday, the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee introduced legislation to train and arm vetted Syrian opposition forces.

The groups must be opposed to Assad, willing to establish a peaceful and democratic Syria and committed to securing and safeguarding chemical and biological weapons. No aid could …read more
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French soldier, about 10 rebels die in Mali clash

French and Malian forces moving into far eastern Mali clashed with jihadist fighters in a spontaneous gunbattle on Wednesday, leaving a French soldier and about 10 insurgents dead, a French military spokesman said.

The skirmish about 100 kilometers (60 miles) east of Gao, northeast Mali‘s largest town, marked the latest bloodshed since French forces swooped into the West African nation in January to help its embattled government root out extremist fighters. Mali‘s regional allies have since contributed hundreds of troops in a support role.

Col. Thierry Burkhard, a French military spokesman, said the battle came as a military patrol involving troops from France, Mali, and Niger was extending into a previously uncontrolled territory. Four Malian soldiers were also injured.

Around Gao, we are on a mission to secure the area,” Burkhard said at a news conference to detail the incident, which was first announced by French President Francois Hollande‘s office. The insurgents were “rather mobile terrorist groups who were looking more to harass our actions than to hold a firm position.”

With Wednesday’s death of the soldier from an artillery regiment, France has now lost four soldiers since its military operation began Jan. 11. The goal of the intervention has been to help Mali‘s weak government take back the country’s vast north from al-Qaida-backed fighters who had seized power and imposed harsh Islamic rule for 10 months.

French officials say their blistering air and ground campaign involving Rafale and Mirage fighter jets, helicopter gunships, armored vehicles and artillery pieces have killed hundreds of militants.

The most intense and almost daily fighting over the last two weeks has been to the north of Wednesday’s firefight — in the rocky and sandy Adrar des Ifoghas range along the Algerian border. French officials say the area is a crucial base and operations center of Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb.

Hundreds of militants are said to be under pressure from a deployment of French and Chadian troops there.

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Greece's weakened workforce starts to crack

FILE - In this Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2013, file photo, old sales and for rent signs are seen in a vacant storefront in central Athens. Researchers from Greece's largest labor union, the GSEE, say the country's three-year crisis has left nearly two-thirds of private sector employees without receiving their regular salaries. GSEE has called a general strike for Thursday, Feb. 20. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis, File)

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Looking out across a room full of reporters gathered to welcome French President Francois Hollande on Tuesday, Greece's President Karolos Papoulias gave a stark warning about the state of the country after three harsh years of government spending cuts, joblessness and tax hikes.

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Greek journalists strike to protest austerity

Greek journalists have walked off the job for 24 hours to protest austerity measures and income cuts, pulling radio and television news broadcasts off the air and leaving news websites without updates from 6 a.m. (0400 GMT).

Tuesday’s strike coincides with a six-hour visit to Athens by French President Francois Hollande. Despite a court order ruling the strike illegal for state media, journalists at state-controlled outlets heeded union calls to participate, meaning no Greek media would cover the visit live.

Government spokesman Simos Kedikoglou accused the main opposition Syriza party for orchestrating the strike to cause “a news blackout” during Hollande’s visit.

Journalists’ unions have been protesting firings and pension and benefit cuts among other issues. Hundreds of journalists in the private sector frequently go unpaid for months.

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US legislators in Mali on fact-finding mission

A delegation of U.S. lawmakers met with military officials in Mali‘s capital on Monday, and urged caution as the French-led military intervention to wrest back control of the country’s north from the al-Qaida fighters entered its fifth week.

French President Francois Hollande unilaterally launched the intervention last month after the extremist groups began a push south. They later reached out to allies for logistical help. The United States is providing C-17 transport planes and in-air refueling, as well as help with intelligence gathering, but has ruled out sending troops.

The four lawmakers are led by Sen. Chris Coons, a Delaware Democrat who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee that oversees Africa issues. After meeting with French military officials as well as their Malian counterparts, Coons told The Associated Press by telephone: “My initial impression is that the French are very confident that their military intervention has been swift, decisive and effective in driving the jihadists completely out of towns in the north.”

But he added: “My concern … is that there are longstanding internal tensions in Mali that reflect development challenges, and political fractures and ethnic tension that may be dramatically worsened by how the French and their allies … and the Malians conduct themselves in the field in the next few weeks.”

Among the worrying signs are the recent back-to-back terrorist attacks in the newly-freed city of Gao in the north. Columns of French forces have had to double back to Gao to reinforce the town, even as a different unit of French troops continues to push northward. The suicide attacks, he said “suggest a level of jihadist militancy that doesn’t reflect the confidence that I heard from the French — that the jihadists are not from here, are not supported here, and have been driven away.”

Over the weekend, French forces secured the small town of Bourem, located between Gao and Kidal. French and Chadian forces were also patrolling the city of Kidal, though it remains unclear if the northern administrative capital is secure. The roads connecting the towns remain unsafe, with repeated sightings of jihadist convoys as well as several fatal incidents involving landmines planted by the extremists.

Mali, a landlocked nation of nearly 15.8 million, has long been among the poorest in the world, but until last year, it was viewed as relatively stable despite the infiltration of its remote deserts by al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb. The extremists took advantage of a March 2012 coup in the capital in order to push into the main cities …read more
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ECB member warns against trying to weaken euro

A member of the European Central Bank‘s governing council has warned that any government attempts to push the euro lower could backfire.

Jens Weidmann said Monday in the text of a speech that “politically brought about devaluations” do not lead to improved economic competitiveness. He also said indicators suggest the euro is “not seriously overvalued.”

The euro has strengthened recently, raising concern it will hurt exports from the 17 euro countries. French President Francois Hollande has suggested the eurozone needs to manage its exchange rate.

Weidmann sits on the ECB‘s 23-member rate setting council and heads Germany’s Bundesbank national central bank.

ECB President Mario Draghi indicated the bank does not seek any particular exchange rate, which is set by markets, but is monitoring the stronger euro’s effect on inflation.

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EU leaders brace for tough fight at budget summit

European Union leaders drew hard lines Thursday ahead of a bracing fight over EU spending for the next seven years that reflects deep divisions over the role of their union.

On one side, newer — and generally poorer — members see Europe as a club that is only as strong as its weakest member. Led by Poland, they argue that Europe means nothing if the budget isn’t used to bridge the wealth gap and help restart growth.

On the other side, countries led by Britain are insisting that the EU has to make the same drastic cuts that member nations themselves are making in their national budgets as they weather the continent’s economic and debt crises. They want tens of billions of euros slashed off the €1.03 trillion ($1.35 trillion) originally asked for by the European Commission, the EU‘s executive arm.

Both sides are threatening to walk away from the table — again — if they don’t get what they want. The first summit to negotiate a budget collapsed in November.

“We have to make savings, but without weakening the economy,” said French President Francois Hollande on his way into the summit in Brussels. “If Europe wants an agreement at all costs and abandons its common policies, I do not agree.”

While France‘s economy is the EU‘s second largest, it supports poorer countries and is a strong advocate for wealth-sharing. France, too, receives a significant amount of money in agricultural subsidies.

Most of the EU leaders came in with a national agenda in mind, and Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas said the proposals he had seen so far were “unfair.” Since any deal needs unanimity, Necas threatened to use his veto.

Britain was also threatening to tank the talks.

“The European Union should not be immune from the sorts of pressures that we’ve had to reduce spending, find efficiencies and make sure that we spend money wisely, that we’re all having to do right across Europe,” said Prime Minister David Cameron, who said that the numbers put forward in November were much too high.

In a late effort at compromise at that meeting, European Council President Herman Van Rompuy proposed a budget of €972 billion ($1.25 trillion) — €21 billion less than the 2007-2013 …read more
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Hollande, Merkel take in soccer game before summit

Before they face off in Brussels, the leaders of Germany and France are watching their national teams go at it on the soccer field.

French President Francois Hollande greeted German Chancellor Angela Merkel outside the Stade de France on Wednesday before they headed inside to watch the “friendly” — and to set the scene for talks on Europe‘s contentious budget, the subject of this week’s summit.

The first summit to decide how much to spend on everything from agriculture to infrastructure collapsed. Leaders from the 27 European Union countries will try again Thursday to find a compromise.

The casual locale appeared aimed at signaling that the leaders, who don’t always see eye-to-eye, are growing closer.

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Europe's costly double parliament: a movable beast

The morning high-speed train from Brussels pulled into the lonely train station of the provincial French city of Strasbourg. As the doors opened, the chaotic scramble for cabs, cars and buses heralded an extraordinary phenomenon of international politics: the European Union‘s “traveling circus” was back in town.

Hundreds of EU parliamentarians and their staff were completing their monthly 435-kilometer (270-mile) legislative migration, one that takes them from their own parliament in Brussels to, well, their own parliament in Strasbourg — for just four days.

The cost to the EU taxpayer: an estimated €180 million ($245 million) a year.

All at a time when the EU, which opens a contentious budget summit on Thursday, is desperately trying to find ways to cut spending to overcome its financial crisis.

The EU set up two parliaments, one at headquarters in Brussels, the other in Strasbourg, as part of a complex diplomatic dance in which France and Germany, the chief architects of the European project, were eager to find an emblem for their postwar reconciliation. Critics say that such lofty symbolism is an absurd luxury at a time when austerity measures are threatening pensioners, slashing health budgets and causing unemployment to balloon.

For legislators it’s simply a monumental hassle.

“I cannot stand the traveling back and forth anymore,” said Germany‘s European Parliament vice-president, Alexander Alvaro.

EU leaders are hoping to use their two-day summit to trim more out of a €1 trillion ($1.35 trillion) seven-year budget. Scrapping the expensive commute, many critics say, could come in very handy. British Prime Minister David Cameron, leader of a famously euroskeptic nation, is poised to lead the campaign to snuff out EU waste.

The head of Cameron’s Conservative party at the EU Parliament was clear on where he would look for savings: “We cannot stand here in Strasbourg at our second seat — this icon of EU profligacy — and say that there is no money that can be saved,” Martin Callanan told his fellow legislators Wednesday.

The scenes at the Brussels end point to what makes the dual legislature something of a movable beast.

On the eve of the great migration, big boxes are lined up all along the offices of the 754 legislators, ready for the reams of paperwork, background notes, extra bottles of water, even winter boots, that are to be loaded onto trucks on Friday evening to be driven in convoys to Strasbourg and unloaded at offices the lawmakers’ use for the four-day session.

“It can happen that you would be sitting there and say, ‘wow,’ I miss this crucial document because we didn’t think about putting it in the box,” Alvaro said.

And spare a thought for the lobbyists, most of whom do not enjoy EU parliamentarians’ elite perks, such as high-speed travel and generous wining and dining budgets.

Shut out of the parliamentary Thalys train service, environmental lobbyist Saskia Richartz was forced to take the slow one into Strasbourg, a 5-hour, 15-minute commute without even coffee service on board.

A half-hour after arriving, she was still standing in a long line waiting for a cab, dragging a huge mock cod in one hand and a mackerel in the other, for a Greenpeace demonstration later in the week. “It would be so much better to have it all in Brussels,” said Richartz, one of the 6,000 to 8,000 people to make the commute.

From her office at city hall across a rainy and wind-swept town, Catherine Trautmann could not disagree more.

A former Strasbourg mayor and current EU parliamentarian, the Frenchwoman has a unique, if slanted, perspective: “The calling of a European parliamentarian is to move around,” she said. “That we travel is only logical.”

Trautmann did acknowledge the severe limitations of Strasbourg’s regional airport with its few direct flights to any European capitals. And she promised new connections to places like London and Rome within the coming months.

Strasbourg may not be a transport hub, but — a stylish city with one of Europe‘s best Gothic cathedrals — it more than makes up for that in historic significance, Trautmann argues.

Often fiercely fought over by Germany and France in century of fighting, Strasbourg has both Gallic and Teutonic influences, from its street signs to its gastronomic specialties. Tucked on the French side of the Rhine river, it became an emblem of the warm ties France and Germany had nurtured since World War II. For France, the Strasbourg parliament also evolved into a symbol of its status as a European heavyweight, and a boon for the local economy.

In the 21st century, and the worst financial crisis since the start of the EU over half a century ago, many Europeans say changes have to be made.

“The outside world looks on with amazement that all of these years after the Second World War we are still perpetuating this anachronistic homage to the Franco-German reconciliation,” said British MEP Edward McMillan-Scott.

In France, it’s a different story.

On Tuesday, French President Francois Hollande, after conveniently flying in from Paris, celebrated Strasbourg’s role.

“I defend Strasbourg, the capital of Europe, because it is history that teaches us the role Strasbourg has to play,” Hollande told EU legislators. “Strasbourg is both the history and the future of Europe.”

The parliamentary sessions have become a tremendous boost for the city. When two sessions had to be canceled in 2008 because the roof of the plenary had partly collapsed, the cost to the city of 275,000 people was €7.5 million ($10.2 million).

France also said that all EU nations, including Britain, formally agreed on the dual parliament in 1992. And since any change requires unanimity, France remains in full control of Strasbourg’s destiny.

Parliamentarians may hope the EU summit will raise the issue on Thursday in the frantic search for budget cuts, although Hollande has dashed any expectation of change.

Some see offering Strasbourg other EU institutions to host may be a solution.

“Of course we understand that the French have a veto,” said McMillan-Scott. “But I am absolutely convinced that if France were offered some credible and dignified alternative to the European parliament, then Strasbourg would accept that.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News