Showing posts with label Jacques Chirac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jacques Chirac. Show all posts

Monday, September 30, 2019

La journée d’hommage à Jacques Chirac en images


Emmanuel Macron a décrété le lundi 30 septembre journée de deuil national, en mémoire de Jacques Chirac. L’ancien président français est mort le 26 septembre, à l’âge de 86 ans.

La journée a commencé avec les honneurs funèbres militaires donnés par Emmanuel Macron aux Invalides en présence de nombreux corps de l’armée. Ensuite, à midi, Mgr Michel Aupetit, archevêque de Paris, a rendu un service solennel dans l’église Saint-Sulpice, la cathédrale Notre-Dame, où sont traditionnellement rendus les services religieux officiels, étant fermée au public depuis l’incendie du 15 avril 2019.

L’ancien chef de l’Etat a ensuite été enterré au cimetière du Montparnasse dans l’après-midi, en présence de sa famille et de ses proches.


Friday, September 27, 2019

Hommage au Président Jacques Chirac


Suivez l'allocution du Président Emmanuel Macron en hommage au Président Jacques Chirac.

Friday, July 13, 2012

Appel: La crise au Mali fait sortir Chirac de son silence

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: L'ancien président français et le secrétaire général de l'Organisation internationale de la Francophonie Abdou Diouf appellent vendredi à «sauver Tombouctou pour sauver la paix au Sahel».

«Ne pas abandonner le Mali.» Tel est en substance le message lancé ce vendredi dans une tribune au journal Le Monde par Jacques Chirac et Abou Diouf.

«Au moment où des groupes extrémistes ont entrepris de détruire les mausolées et mosquées de Tombouctou, et menacent les manuscrits conservés dans cette ville, patrimoine irremplaçable de l'islam et du monde, c'est l'avenir de l'Afrique sahélienne qui se joue», mettent en garde les deux hommes dans une prise de position titrée «Sauver Tombouctou pour sauver la paix».

«C'est un danger global: l'indifférence est impossible car, si une poignée d'extrémistes réussit à imposer sa loi dans cette région aux équilibres fragiles, c'est l'ensemble des pays du Sahel qui peut être déstabilisé, avec des conséquences funestes d'abord pour les populations locales, ensuite pour tous les partenaires de ces pays, au premier rang desquels tous les voisins du Mali ainsi que l'Europe», préviennent-ils. » | afp/Newsnet | vendredi 13 juillet 2012

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Jacques Chirac ne fera pas appel de sa condamnation

LE MONDE: Jacques Chirac, condamné jeudi 15 décembre à 2 ans de prison avec sursis pour détournement de fonds publics, a annoncé dans un communiqué qu'il ne "ferait pas appel" bien que, "sur le fond, [il] conteste catégoriquement ce jugement".

L'ancien président de la République "affirme avec honneur" qu'"aucune faute ne saurait [lui] être reprochée", avant de justifier sa décision de ne pas faire appel par le fait qu'il n'a "plus, hélas, toutes les forces nécessaires pour mener par [lui-même], face à de nouveaux juges, le combat pour la vérité". » | LEMONDE.FR avec AFP | jeudi 15 décembre 2011


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Thursday, December 15, 2011

Jacques Chirac Found Guilty of Corruption

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: A French court has found former President Jacques Chirac guilty of embezzling public funds and other charges in a trial over illegal financing of the conservative party he long led.

The first former French head of state to face prosecution since the World War II era has now been found responsible for crimes.He was given a 2-year suspended prison sentence in corruption trial[.]

But Mr Chirac, who is 79 years old, did not take part in the trial after doctors determined that he suffers severe memory lapses.

The court said Thursday it had found Mr Chirac guilty in two related cases involving fake jobs created at the party he led during his 1977-1995 tenure as Paris mayor. Mr Chirac has repeatedly denied wrongdoing.

It said the former president diverted city money to benefit his political party and reward supporters, the court ruled today.

In theory, Mr Chirac could have been sent to jail for 10 years, the maximum sentence for the charges against him. » | Telegraph’s Foreign Staff | Thursday, December 15, 2011

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: Chirac, un lion qui ne rugit plus : PORTRAIT | Sur la scène politique française depuis plus de 40 ans et à la tête du pays pendant 12 ans, Jacques Chirac est une bête politique incontournable, mais actuellement sur le déclin, en raison d'une maladie neurologique. » | AFP | jeudi 15 décembre 2011

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Jacques Chirac Will Not Vote for Nicolas Sarkozy

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Jacques Chirac stuck the knife into his successor Nicolas Sarkozy, by quipping he would vote for the prospective Socialist candidate François Hollande over his fellow conservative in next year's elections.

Mr Chirac, 78, has broken his self-imposed silence on the French president, who succeeded him in June 2007, twice in the past week.

Mr Chirac branded his onetime protégé "nervous", "impetuous" and untrustworthy in his memoirs, saying he did not share the same "vision of France" as Mr Sarkozy, widely expected to run for a second term.

He meanwhile heaped praise on Mr Hollande, currently frontrunner in a contest to obtain the Socialist Party's backing for the election next April, saying he had the stuff of a true "statesman".

Mr Chirac made his latest outburst while alongside Mr Hollande during a tour of the museum housing his many presidential gifts in the south-central Corrèze region of France.

Both men have their electoral roots in the region, where Mr Hollande is currently MP. » | Henry Samuel, Paris | Sunday, June 12, 2011

Monday, March 07, 2011

French Ex-President Chirac On Trial

After years of claiming immunity to avoid legal proceedings, Jacques Chirac, the former president of France, is finally facing a court. Chirac is the first former head of state to go on trial since the country's Nazi-era leader was exiled. The 78-year-old statesman faces a month in court on charges that he masterminded a scheme to have Paris City Hall pay for work that benefited his political party when he was mayor - before he became president in 1995. A prison term is seen as highly unlikely, but in principle if convicted, Chirac could be jailed for up to 10 years and fined $210,000. France's restive political circles are gearing up for next year's presidential race, but the fallout from this trial is unlikely to hit anyone other than Chirac and the nine other defendants including a grandson of General Charles de Gaulle and a former left-wing labor union leader. Still, the trial looms as an embarrassing coda to Chirac's 12-year presidential term, potentially denting his legacy, recent philanthropic work and image as one of France's most popular personalities since he left office. Al Jazeera's Tim Friend has the details

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

L’ancien président de la république ne fumera pas sur la couverture de ses mémoires

GALA.fr: La loi Evin a fait une nouvelle victime. D’après le Parisien, l’ancien président de la république ne fumera pas sur la couverture du premier volume de ses mémoires. Jacques Chirac (fumeur jusqu’à la fin des années 80) devait apparaître une cigarette à la main, sur le premier tome de sa biographie. Seulement, l’entourage de l’homme politique à l'origine de la lutte contre le cancer en France a finalement refusé cette photo, par souci de légalité...

Le premier tome des mémoires de Jacques Chirac sera publié avec un retard d'un mois. D’après le Parisien, le prédécesseur de Nicolas Sarkozy va devoir changer l’illustration du livre. En cause, une photo le représentant en train de fumer.

Le cliché en question mettait en scène Jacques Chirac (fumeur jusqu’en 1988) avec une cigarette à la main. Seulement, l’entourage de l’homme politique, à l'origine de la lutte contre le cancer en France, a refusé cette photo par souci du respect de la loi Evin (relative à la lutte contre le tabagisme et l'alcoolisme).

En France, la loi proposée par Claude Évin en 1991 interdit la publicité pour le tabac et l'alcool. Et Jacques Chirac n’est pas le seul à avoir fait les frais de ce texte. On se souvient qu’en juillet dernier, le beau Alain Delon voyait sa cigarette gommée sur les affiches du parfum Eau Sauvage de Dior. >>> | Mardi 15 Septembre 2009

Chirac Smoked Out

TIMES ONLINE – BLOG: Jacques Chirac, the last President, has become the latest victim of the anti-tobacco zeal that prevails these days in France. Chirac's publishers have just delayed for a month the release of the first volume of his memoirs because his staff objected to a cover portrait in which he is holding a lit cigarette.

A dangling clope was a trademark of the younger Chirac, as it was of most French stars of the last half century. The picture is a nice atmospheric shot from the 1980s of the pensive prime minister of the time. It would not have made much sense without the cigarette, though smokes have been purged in recent years from pictures of Catherine Deneuve, Alain Delon,Jean-Paul Sartre,Albert Camus, Charles de Gaulle, André Malraux, the late writer-politician, and Jacques Tati, the late film-maker.

"The release of the book has been put back because of the cover photograph," said Elizabeth Franck, spokeswoman for the NiL publishing house. "Photographs of the young Chirac smoking are quite common. Everyone has seen them (but) when Mr Chirac's staff saw the photo on the cover mock-up, they preferred to change it for a portrait of his face alone," Franck told us.

The bon vivant Chirac, 76, stopped appearing in public with cigarettes in 1988 and made cancer research one of the main priorities. His presidency ended with a smoking ban spreading in public places. Nicolas Sarkozy, his successor, is a private smoker. He enjoys one fat Cuban cigar a day in the Elysée Palace -- but never touches alcohol.

The Chirac decision has been attacked as another case of excessive obedience to the anti-smoking fervour which took hold in Chirac's years in the Elysée, from 1995-2007. "Political correctness has struck again", said Le Parisien.

The doctoring of pictures has become an issue in the cultural world, with critics accusing publishers, advertisers and museum directors of air-brushing history in the way that banished Soviet politicians were once erased from Kremlin portraits.

It's pretty clear that historic pictures are not covered by the 1991 anti-tobacco legislation, known as the Evin law. This prohibits "all propaganda or publicity, direct or indirect, in favour of tobacco and its products."

Géard Audureau, chief of the Non-smokers' Rights campaign organisation, called the Chirac cover-change silly. "This is an image of the young Chirac from a time when he smoked. It does not shock me to see a smoking president because it was the reality in that period," he told us. "It is an old-fashioned picture which does not promote tobacco." >>> Charles Bremner | Monday, September 14, 2009

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

The Departure of Jacques Chirac

THE AUSTRALIAN: PRESIDENT Jacques Chirac bade an emotional farewell to the French people today, proclaiming his love for "this great ... this magnificent nation" and pride at accomplishing his mission.

“I hand over to Nicolas Sarkozy with pride in a completed duty and great confidence in the future of our country,” said the President, who today closes 12 years in office and hands over to his former subordinate.

“It has been a very great honour to serve you,” he said, talking of the “strength of the link-which has bound me to every one of you”. Chirac departs with a plea for unity (more) By Charles Bremner

DIE PRESSE:
Der Methusalem der Macht sagt adieu

DIE PRESSE:
Sarkozy’s Frau ging nicht zur Wahl

FAZ:
Was die Franzosen nicht wissen durften

Mark Alexander

Tuesday, November 15, 2005

Chirac's measures are destined to fail!

President Jacques Chirac's measures to deal with France in crisis, France in flames, do not address the root cause of the violence; therefore, they are destined to fail.

Creating opportunities for young people is all well and good. Condemning the "poison" of racism is also to be lauded. However, it doesn't serve the French well to castigate themselves for failing to integrate the Muslims from North Africa, since Muslims generally have no intention of assimilating - their religion proscribes assimilation with the infidel - and because where people fail to assimilate, they live, by definition, in a parallel universe. It is this parallel universe which we observe in the French ghettos.

It should be pointed out that the French themsleves probably have about as little interest in integrating with the Muslims of North Africa as the Muslims of North Africa have in integrating with the French! To understand why, we need to make a few observations...

First and foremost, France belongs to the French. The French are a deeply proud nation; and there are many good reasons why it is so. French culture is high culture. The French are a clever, refined people. They have contributed much to the world: in the arts, in literature; in cuisine (think of the fine recipes and wonderful cheeses!), in viniculture (some of the finest wines in the world have traditionally been produced by the French), in fashion, in architecture, in furniture design, in science and medicine; indeed in oh so much. Who, for example, has a refined kitchen like the French? Their attention to the delights of the palette and the refinement of the table is unsurpassed by any culture. Nobody understands how to dine better than the French!

Moreover, take their language: Most languages are beautiful in their own way, at least when spoken properly; but it is difficult indeed to outclass the beauty of French when spoken and written well.

So the French have much to be proud of. Do you really think that there is much desire on the part of these people to integrate with people who come from North Africa with a totally different way of living? The French look down their snouts at the English and the Americans, and have great difficulty accepting us on equal terms! What chance have we got of withnessing their integration with Muslims, a people with a totally and utterly alien culture?

Muslims in France are equally proud. They also feel themselves to be superior. This comes from what their faith teaches them rather than from their achievements. Muslims the world over believe - firmly believe - that the world is theirs for the taking! It is their objective to Islamize the world, whether the rest of the non-Muslim world wishes to be Islamized or not.

Muslims live a different life altogether. They like to eat on the floor with their hands, they like to pray five times a day, they like to keep their women subjugated and inferior, covered up for none but the closest relatives to view, and, as we all know, they frown on the consumption of alcohol - at least officially!

For true integration to take place, there has to be some common ground. What common ground can we find between these two diametrically opposed peoples? The difference between them is as great as the difference between black and white, day and night!

Moreover, do you think that French people really want to integrate with a people who feel themselves to be superior, who eat on the floor, who do not respect art and high culture, who do not partake of fine wines, and who treat their women as inferior and as sex objects, there for the pleasure of their men? Oh, the list goes on!

The French should refrain from castigating themselves for their failures in this matter. One should ask oneself if they could have done anything to get Muslims to integrate? After all, the Prophet Muhammad exhorted his followers not to befriend the infidel, not to engage with them unless they absolutely have to. He also exhorted Muslims to kill and maim infidels where'er ye find them, and only to stop when they have been beaten into submission, when the infidel either embraces the faith or feels himself subdued, and when he is prepared to pay the Muslim community the tribute, or jiziyah! - the high tax levied on non-Muslims.

The fact of the matter is that France has just witnessed the first pangs of jihad, or holy war. The youth that rioted were heard shouting Allahu Akbar, God is Great(er)!, and chanting that this land will belong to us soon anyway! If this is not proof that there is something more sinister going on, then what is?

In general, the French response to this crisis is a typical socialist response. If there's a problem, throw more money at it! But I'm sorry to tell you that this one problem which money alone will not solve. What really needs to be done is to roll back the frontiers: The advance of Islam in France (and the West) needs to be halted, now, before it is too late.

Why does political correctness only go one way? How politically correct are Muslims? How much tolerance of non-Muslims do Muslims show? How many churches are built in the Middle East? How many Christian schools? Indeed, how many Christians are allowed to live there?

In the case of France, all troublemakers should be deported forthwith. Sarkozy has promised this. It is to be hoped that he acts on his promise. Further, it is to be hoped that the door through which they are sent is not a revolving one!

All illegal immigrants should be sent home. France is under no obligation to allow them to remain. Islam in France is growing apace. The riots have been a manifestation of this exponential growth. The growth needs to be stemmed; otherwise all good intentions, and all policies, however generous, will fail.

It would seem that France's greatest failure has been one of recognition: Recognition of the true problem facing it!

©Mark Alexander

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