Tag: emmanuel macron

  • Israel rejects call for Palestinian State

    Israel rejects call for Palestinian State

    “Do not threaten Israel with sanctions” as it will continue to build a “Jewish state” on the ground,” Israeli Defense Minister, Israel Katz, warned on Friday.

    He also rebuffed a call by French President Emmanuel Macron for establishing a Palestinian State.

    In open defiance of international law, Katz claimed that world powers may recognize a Palestinian state “on paper.”

    Katz made the remarks during a visit to Sa-Nur, an illegal outpost in the northern West Bank that the Tel Aviv government recently decided to officially designate as a settlement for illegal Israeli settlers.

    In a direct message, Defense Minister Israel Katz targets French President Macron and European allies. He also dismissed the potential international consequences.

    He said: “They will recognise a Palestinian state on paper, while we will build the Jewish Israeli state on the ground.

    “Don’t threaten us with sanctions. You will not make us bow. The State of Israel will not kneel before threats.”

    His comments came hours after President Macron stated that recognising the State of Palestine was a “moral duty”.

    Macron also reiterated that France may move toward official recognition during an upcoming international conference focused on the two-state solution.

    Earlier this week, Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported that the Israeli Security Cabinet had secretly approved the establishment of 22 new illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank.

    In response, the Israeli anti-settlement group Peace Now issued a statement Thursday, revealing that 12 of the newly approved settlements were previously unauthorised outposts and farming sites established in recent years.

    According to Peace Now, there are currently 156 illegal settlements and 224 outposts across the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, with over 736,000 illegal Israeli settlers living on occupied Palestinian land.

    The international community, including the UN, considers the Israeli settlements illegal under international law.

    The UN has repeatedly warned that continued settlement expansion threatens the viability of a two-state solution, a framework seen as key to resolving the decades-long Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

    In July 2024, the International Court of Justice declared Israel’s decades-long occupation of Palestinian land illegal and demanded the evacuation of all existing settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

  • President of France slapped by his “elder-wife” [VIDEO]

    President of France slapped by his “elder-wife” [VIDEO]

    President of France, Emmanuel Macron and his “elder-wife”, Brigitte Macron, were involved in fisticuffs when they arrived in Vietnam on Sunday.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the unexpected scene was caught on camera during the arrival of the couple at the airport in Hanoi, Vietnam. They are on a tour of Southeast Asia.

    From the video circulating on social media, President Macron appeared to have received a “dirty slap” from Brigitte before they both descended from the presidential jet that took them.

    The “dirty slap” caused Macron to step back in bewilderment. After recovering and regaining balance, the French President waved at the press from the foot of the steps of the presidential jet.

    Meanwhile, Brigitte remained momentarily hidden behind the plane’s fuselage, blocking any view of her body language. The couple then descended the steps of the plane together.

    As the couple descended the steps, Macron offered Brigitte his arm, which she refused to take, opting instead to hold the railing.

    However, Macron’s office has passed off the incident as “a moment of closeness”.

    “It was a moment when the president and his wife were relaxing one last time before the start of the trip by having a laugh. It was a moment of closeness,” an official told Reuters.

    TNG reports 47-year-old Macron and 72-year-old Brigitte have been married since 2007.

  • Macron goes to Washington today after Trump’s 90-minute call with Putin

    Macron goes to Washington today after Trump’s 90-minute call with Putin

    French President Emmanuel Macron will be in Washington on Monday to discuss Russia’s war against Ukraine with U.S. President Donald Trump.

    The meeting comes on the day of the third anniversary of Russia’s all-out invasion of Ukraine and days after Trump falsely blamed Ukraine for starting the war.

    It also comes after Trump held a 90 minute phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin – without Ukrainian or European participation.

    Last week Macron called European heads of state and prime ministers to Paris for crisis talks and then spoke to Trump on the phone.

    Among other things, the meeting dealt with the question of European peacekeeping forces to secure a possible ceasefire.

    Trump is also expected to meet UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer in Washington in the next few days.

    According to media reports, Starmer could be keen to present the concept for a peacekeeping force.

    On Saturday, Trump had a brief exchange with Polish President Andrzej Duda on the fringes of the CPAC conservative political conference just outside of Washington.

    There had been concern that the United States would reduce its troop strength in Europe or even withdraw its soldiers altogether.

    However, Duda said he was convinced that this would not happen following a visit on Feb. 14 by U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to Poland, which shares a border with Ukraine.

  • What I will tell Trump about Putin when we meet – Macron

    What I will tell Trump about Putin when we meet – Macron

    French President Emmanuel Macron will use his upcoming trip to the White House to try and convince U.S. President Donald Trump to align with European allies.

    Macron is expected to meet with Trump on Monday to discuss the situation in Ukraine.

    During an online question and answer session on Thursday evening, Macron said he planned to tell Trump that showing any weakness to Russian President Vladimir Putin would make it harder to deal with China and Iran.

    “I will tell him: deep down you cannot be weak in the face of President (Putin).

    “It’s not you, it’s not what you’re made of and it’s not in your interests,” the French leader said.

    Following the online session, Macron said he had another phone conversation with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, the fourth in the past week.

    The pair had reviewed “all the contacts I have had with European partners and allies willing to work towards a lasting and solid peace for Ukraine and to strengthen Europe’s security,” Macron wrote on X.

    Zelensky said the call was “long and substantial” as well as constructive.

    “We thoroughly discussed our views on security guarantees – a just and lasting peace is our shared goal, and we are working towards it together. This is how true partners should work,” he wrote on X.

    Macron has hosted European leaders over the past week to seek a common line on Ukraine against the backdrop of the U.S. plans for a possible end to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

  • Olympics: Paris 2024’s opening ceremony threatened by unrest

    Olympics: Paris 2024’s opening ceremony threatened by unrest

    The opening ceremony of the 2024 Paris Olympics might not take place along the Seine River if the security situation in Europe worsens.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports French President, Emmanuel Macron said this in an interview with broadcasters BFMTV on Monday.

    “We can do it and we will do it,’’ Macron stressed, but he added that plans B and C are being prepared.

    The French president indicated that, in the event of a threat, the opening ceremony will be limited to the Trocadéro, or even the Stade de France stadium as a precaution.

    The opening ceremony would take place on July 26 and for the first time outdoors.

    Around 160 boats will take the athletes on a six-kilometre route across the Seine along the most beautiful sights in Paris, from the Pont d’Austerlitz to the Trocadéro.

    Some 326,000 spectators are expected to attend the ceremony.

    Recently, potential terrorist threats forced authorities to increase security around sports events.

    Last week, France and Spain ramped up their security plans ahead of the Champions League quarter-finals matches due to reported threats from jihadists.

    In March, the Munich police increased their presence around the Allianz Arena, where Bayern Munich was hosting the Bundesliga match against Borussia Dortmund after a user on X, formerly twitter,  posted a picture with a target placed on spectators around the stadium.

  • France will never forget Wigwe – Macron

    France will never forget Wigwe – Macron

    French President, Emmanuel Macron, has joined others to pledge the preservation of the legacies of late Group Chief Executive, Access Corporation, Dr Herbert Wigwe, to ensure his visions are actualised.

    Macron made the pledge on Wednesday night at the ‘Night of Tributes’ in honour of Wigwe, in Lagos.

    Macron, represented by a former Minister of Culture, Franck Riester, said Wigwe took over as the President of the France-Nigeria Business Council in 2023 and had brought in several entrepreneurial innovations to strengthen the bilateral relationship.

    He said that Access Bank was the first bank to open a subsidiary in France last year, adding that, “France was ever grateful for his caring friendship.

    “I can assure you that we will do our best to keep his legacy alive and make his vision a reality,”

    He reeled out achievements of the late economic and financial icon to include the Wigwe University, which showed Wigwe’s believe in youths in Nigeria, and Africa to change the narrative for speedy growth.

    “France has lost a great friend in Herbert Wigwe,” he said.

    Macron added that France will never forget Wigwe.

    Former CBN Governor, Lamido Sanusi, narrated how Wigwe stood with him through thick and thin when he was deposed as the Emir of Kano, providing both financial and emotional support to stabilise him and his family.

    Sanusi said he put Wigwe in trust of education of all his several children because of the commitment of the deceased to academic excellence and his great vision for the nation.

    Sanusi who wept profusely, said, “I was thinking I will die and leave Hebert.

    “Wigwe was selfless, always about other, not himself.”

    According to him, he sacrificed so much for him, hisfamily, Nigerians and people from all walks of life.

    “You never could have imagined how one human being can be so many different things to different people,” he said.

    He expressed joy that Wigwe, in his last moment, had opportunity to know that he was loved by him.

    Wigwe’s Personal and Technical Assistant, Mr Olusola Faleye, explained how he cheated death because he opted to take the family’s luggage ahead by road.

    Faleye gave details of initial flights and how he later secured permission of his boss to continue to the next destination on road to avoid delays of trying to get out their luggage.

    “I went up to him and said, “Sir, I think its safer and will be secured for me to just ride and bring the luggage to you. He said, brilliant idea, and I said safe flight,” he recalled.

    Reeling out various ways Wigwe had impacted his life and brought transforming changes, Falaye said “he comes to you in times of storm and he rescues you”.

    He said Wigwe was alive because of his numerous visions and achievements, saying, “I still see him, he lives, he’s just everywhere living because his dream is scattered everywhere, germinating and growing.”

    Wigwe’s daughter, Tochi eulogising her dad, shared how close she was to the father who inspired, mentored and monitored her progress every step.

    Weeping throughout her tribute, she expressed hope of seeing her father again in the after life, to catch up on gossips and several other moments.

    Wigwe’s brother, Emeka, narrated episodes from their adventurous childhood and adulthood together  saying, “I can’t see wrong in him”.

    Wigwe’s sisters, cousins and other relatives took turns to express thier grief and the exciting moments with the departed legend.

    The Board Chairman, Access Bank, Paul Usoro, led members of Access Bank from various branches in Nigeria, Cameron, Zambia and other African countries, to chant the Access slogan in a bid to let Wigwe know the Access Warriors were keeping his dreams alive.

    Other dignitaries from across the globe and Nigeria also paid tributes.

  • Gabriel Attal, 34, becomes France’s youngest Prime Minister

    Gabriel Attal, 34, becomes France’s youngest Prime Minister

    French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday appointed 34-year-old Education Minister Gabriel Attal as France’s new Prime Minister.

    This is in a bid to seek to breathe new life into Macron’s second mandate ahead of European parliament elections.

    The move will not necessarily lead to any major political shift, but signals a desire for Macron to try to move beyond last year’s unpopular pension and immigration reforms and improve his centrist party’s chances in the June EU ballot.

    Opinion polls show Macron’s camp trailing far-right leader Marine Le Pen’s party by around eight to 10 percentage points.

    Attal, a close Macron ally, who became a household name as government spokesman during the COVID pandemic, will replace outgoing Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne.

    Attal, one of the country’s most popular politicians in recent opinion polls, has made a name for himself as a savvy minister at ease, on radio shows and in parliament.

    Macron, at the end of 2023, had said he would announce new political initiatives.

    “Dear @GabrielAttal, I know I can count on your energy and your commitment to implement the project of revitalisation and regeneration that I announced,” Macron said.

    Attal will be France’s youngest Prime Minister and the first to be openly gay.

    He and Macron have a combined age just below that of Joe Biden, who is running for a second mandate in this year’s U.S. presidential election.

    Macron has struggled to deal with a more turbulent parliament since losing his absolute majority shortly after being re-elected in 2022.

    Jordan Bardella, the 28-year old leader of Le Pen’s National Rally party, said: “By appointing Gabriel Attal, Emmanuel Macron wants to cling to his popularity in opinion polls to alleviate the pain of an interminable end to his reign.

    “Instead, he risks taking the short-lived education minister with him in his fall.”

    Other opposition leaders were quick to say they did not expect much from the change in prime minister, with Macron himself taking on much of the decision-making.

    “Elisabeth Borne, Gabriel Attal or someone else, I don’t care. It will just be the same policies,” Socialist Party Leader Olivier Faure told France Inter radio.

    However, MP Patrick Vignal, who belongs to Macron’s Renaissance party, said Attal is “a bit like the Macron of 2017”, referring to the point at which the president first took office as the youngest leader in modern French history – at the time, a popular figure among voters.

    “It is clear, he has authority,” Vignal said.

     

  • Macron plays the outlaw in Niger Republic – By Owei Lakemfa

    Macron plays the outlaw in Niger Republic – By Owei Lakemfa

    FRENCH President Emmanuel Macron loves acting on the world stage. In the on-going drama about the West and some West African leaders threatening to use force against the military regime that came to power in Niger Republic on July 26, 2023, he chose to play the outlaw.

    Exactly a month after they came to power, the new authorities in Niger declared French Ambassador Sylvain Itte persona non grata saying he “no longer enjoys the privileges and immunities attached to his status as a member of the diplomatic staff of the embassy”. He was given 48 hours to leave the country. The deadline expired on August 28. The Nigeriens also withdrew the diplomatic cards and cancelled the visas of his family.

    But Macron sent a counter-order, directing Ambassador Itte to defy the order and refuse to leave the country.

    The 64-year-old Itte who was born in Bamako, Mali, as an experienced ambassador having served as ambassador in Uruguay for three years from 2016, Angola for four years until 2020 before being sent to Niger Republic in October, 2022, knew once expelled he had to leave the country.

    He doubtlessly would be conversant with Article 9 of the 1961 Vienna Treaty on Diplomatic Relations which states that: “The receiving state may at any time and without having to explain its decision, notify the sending state that the head of the mission or any member of the diplomatic staff of the mission is persona non grata or that any other member of the staff of the mission is not acceptable. In any such case, the sending state shall, as appropriate, either recall the person concerned or terminate his functions with the mission.”

    So he knows he cannot play the outlaw, but that role is what his principal, President Macron, asked him to play. Consequently, the poor ambassador sat put in the embassy which became a type of prison as neither he nor his fellow diplomats could leave and return to the embassy. While the French diplomats were holed up, Nigeriens who were in support of their country’s government converged daily with a public address system in front of the embassy, singing, dancing and chanting: “Down with France!” In Macron’s unique mind, this was an indication that Itte and the embassy staff are “being held hostage”. This is wrong because an hostage is a person seized by an abductor; in this case, nobody seized the French.

    Macron had also rejected the expulsion of I,500 French soldiers from Niger on the same laughable basis that France does not accept the new rulers in that country and that only ousted President Mohamed Bazoum whom he described as the “sole legitimate authority” in Niger Republic, could order the French out. As a claimed democrat who believes in democracy, how can Macron claim a single individual is the “sole legitimate authority” in a country?

    In response, the Nigerien Government said its diplomatic victory over France is “a new step towards sovereignty” and insisted that the pull-out of the French military “must be set out in a negotiated framework and by mutual agreement”. This, of course, is the correct way countries should relate rather than one country assuming to be the master of another and thinking it can continuously dictate terms.

    Macron might have thought he could hold out in Niger as there was an expected military intervention by the Economic Community of West African States, ECOWAS. However, that invasion did not materialise as the African people were clearly against the blood of fellow Africans being shed. In any case, what gives France the impression that it has a right to determine the leadership of an African country?

    France might also have thought the incensed Nigerien populace would storm its embassy or military base and thus give it an excuse to invade the country in the guise of protecting or saving French lives. But the Nigeriens were wiser, they rather elected to wear out the ambassador and his team.

    Finally, one month after refusing to leave the embassy, the ambassador and six others, with their tails between their legs, left, defeated, arriving Paris on Wednesday, September 27. It reminded me of the French Army in Dien Bien Phu, Vietnam which after 57 days of being besieged threw in the towel on May 7, 1954.

    The French having finally succumbed, tried to put up a bold face when Itte arrived. He was received by Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna who purported “to thank him and his teams for his work in the service of our country under difficult conditions”.

    Reacting to the French ambassador’s forced departure, a Nigerien who spoke the minds of the majority of the people said: “Today is a very proud day for me, and especially for the Nigerien people, hearing of the French ambassador’s departure who stubbornly stayed in Niger to show that the new government was not a real authority. But today, he saw that Niger was not a little country.”

    Macron who announced the recall of Ambassador Itte in his Sunday TV interview also announced that French troops would be withdrawn from the African country in “the months and weeks to come”, with a full pull-out “by the end of the year”.

    He cheekily added that the Nigerien government “no longer wanted to fight against terrorism”. This once again, is a manifestation of the presumptuous character of President Macron: that only the French can fight terrorism; so asking the French forces to leave means the African country has accepted terrorism and is no longer interested in fighting the scourge.

    France with a beautiful cultural history is known to be quite fastidious and tricky in foreign relations, refusing to stop its exploitation of other peoples. This it has done for centuries. So although it seems diplomatically defeated in its stand-off with Niger, it cannot be trusted to truly depart.

    France cannot live a healthy life without nakedly exploiting other peoples, so it is likely to fight back. This is why I am not surprised by Tuesday’s attempted coup in Burkina Faso against its anti- French government.

    By the way, we shouldn’t forget that it is not only France that has military presence in Niger Republic. The United States, US, maintains some 1,100 military personnel there. Although it has not been as noisy as France, but it remains in that country despite Nigerien demands that the soldiers be pulled out. It is only in the light of the announced decision of France to pull out its unwelcome troops, that the US says it will “evaluate” its future in the small African country.

    But like France, Nigeriens and Africans should not assume that they would pull out quietly and stop meddling in African affairs.

  • France ready to train Ukrainian fighter jet pilots – Macron

    France ready to train Ukrainian fighter jet pilots – Macron

    Hours after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visited Paris, French President Emmanuel Macron said the country would train Ukrainian fighter jet pilots, but he would not send the planes.

    “We have opened the door to train Ukrainian pilots. “The trainings can start from now.

    ”Several European countries had decided it was now necessary to start training,” Macron said.
    Zelensky made the surprise trip to France on Sunday, on the heel of visits to Germany and Italy.

    A Ukraine-France joint statement said new supplies would be prepared to address the most pressing and immediate needs to strengthen Ukraine’s defences.

    The statement said that Paris would continue to help Kiev defend itself, “focusing its effort in supporting Ukraine’s air defence capacities in order to defend its population against Russian strikes.”

  • WATCH VIDEO: France’s president, Emmanuel Macron slapped again

    WATCH VIDEO: France’s president, Emmanuel Macron slapped again

    The President of France, Emmanuel Macron on Sunday faced an embarrassing moment once again after he was slapped in the face by a protester.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports this would be the second time in two years Macron would be slapped in the public glare.

    In a video that is now viral on Twitter, Macron, dressed in a white shirt and a pair of black trousers with a nose mask, was slapped by a woman before she was overpowered by the president’s guard.

    It took the efforts of the security guards to shield Macron from being further assaulted by the woman, as seen in the video attached below.

    Recall French President Macron was slapped in the face by a man in a crowd on June 8, 2021, evoking a global uproar. The man, later identified as Damien Tarel, was tried in court and sentenced.

    Watch video below: