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Hollande vows new strategy for France and Europe
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) May 15, 2012

Hollande plane turns back after hit by lightning: ministry
Paris (AFP) May 15, 2012 - Lightning hit French President Francois Hollande's plane as he flew for Berlin on his first trip abroad as head of state on Tuesday, forcing him to turn back, the defence ministry said.

The presidential Falcon 7X "was hit by lightning" and returned to Villacoublay military airport outside Paris, a defence ministry spokesman told AFP.

"For safety reasons and as a precaution, the plane, which was not far from Paris turned back. It landed without problem at Villacoublay and the president took off again in a Falcon 900," the spokesman said.

Hollande was en route for crucial talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel just hours after he was sworn in as president.


Francois Hollande was sworn in as president of France on Tuesday with a solemn vow to find a new growth-led strategy to end the crippling debt crisis threatening to unravel the eurozone.

After brief ceremonies and a rain-lashed walkabout, the 57-year-old Socialist headed to Berlin to confront Chancellor Angela Merkel over their very different visions as to how to save the single currency bloc.

Hollande's plane was hit by lightning shortly after takeoff and returned to Paris, but the president left again shortly afterwards in a different jet.

"Europe needs plans. It needs solidarity. It needs growth," Hollande told dignitaries at his new home, the Elysee Palace, renewing his vow to turn the page on austerity and implicitly underlining his differences with Merkel.

"To our partners I will propose a new pact that links a necessary reduction in public debt with indispensable economic stimulus," he told the assembled Socialists, trade unionists, military officers, churchmen and officials.

"And I will tell them of our continent's need in such an unstable world to protect not only its values but its interests."

Hollande also named his new prime minister, Jean-Marc Ayrault, a 62-year-old longtime Hollande ally and the head of the Socialists' parliamentary bloc, who was tipped as favourite.

Ayrault's new cabinet will likely hold its first session on Thursday after which the Socialists turn to their campaign to win a parliamentary majority in June's legislative elections -- a key test for the party after Hollande's win.

The new president was welcomed to the Elysee Palace by his predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy, who led him to the presidential office for a private head-to-head and to hand over the codes to France's nuclear arsenal.

Hollande ushered Sarkozy to his car for a final farewell, outgoing first lady Carla Bruni exchanging kisses with Hollande's partner Valerie Trierweiler, elegant in a dark dress and vertiginous heels.

Hollande then signed the notice of formal handover of power -- becoming the seventh president of the Fifth Republic and only the second Socialist.

No foreign heads of state were invited to what was a low-key ceremony for a post of such importance, leader of the world's fifth great power.

After the swearing in, Hollande rode up the rainswept Champs Elysees to the Arc de Triomphe in a modest open-topped Citroen DS5 hybrid, a symbolic break with the flashy style of his predecessor.

Soaked to the skin, Hollande laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and shook hands with veterans before greeting the sparse crowd of wellwishers who braved the bad weather.

He then visited Paris City Hall, a swearing-in day tradition for the French president, for a ceremony presided over by Socialist Mayor Bertrand Delanoe and attended by the capital's elected and religious officals.

But the real work was to begin after Hollande's second plane arrived for tense talks with Merkel, the leader of Europe's biggest economy and France's key ally.

Merkel was a Sarkozy ally and the architect of the European Union's fiscal austerity drive. Hollande opposed the speed and depth of the cutbacks demanded by Berlin, and wants to renegotiate the eurozone fiscal pact.

Germany is committed to budgetary discipline, and Merkel has repeatedly insisted since Hollande's election that the pact, signed by 25 of the 27 EU countries and already ratified in some, is not open to renegotiation.

But observers say there is room for compromise, with Hollande likely to agree to additional stimulus measures without a rewrite of the pact.

Symbolising the rising pressure on the heads of Europe's two largest economies, Greece was on Tuesday facing new elections after talks failed on forming a government in the debt-wracked country.

The leaders will have to reassure worried markets they can work together after new figures showed France's economy stagnant, with statistics agency INSEE saying it recorded no growth in the first quarter of 2012.

The agency also revised downward the growth figure for the fourth quarter of 2011, to 0.1% from 0.2%, while maintaining that the economy grew by 1.7 percent overall in 2011.

After the talks with Merkel, Hollande heads to the United States where he is to meet President Barack Obama at the White House on Friday ahead of back-to-back G8 and then NATO summits.

burs-cjo/yad

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Rain, lightning, red carpet: Francois Hollande's first day
Berlin (AFP) May 15, 2012 - Francois Hollande had quite a first day as French president: swearing in, Champs Elysees parade in torrential rain, then a lightning strike to his plane en route to meet the world's most powerful woman.

Hollande could already consider himself unlucky with the one-in-a-million lightning strike that delayed his visit to Berlin to see Chancellor Angela Merkel and his luck with the weather did not improve as he arrived in Germany.

Where two hours before there was sunshine, unseasonal drizzle ensured Hollande suffered his second dousing of the day as he arrived at Merkel's squat grey chancellery for crunch talks on the eurozone debt crisis.

Merkel was all smiles as she greeted the new president and appeared relaxed throughout. Hollande, on his first foreign trip as France's leader, seemed stiffer and less at ease, only sometimes cracking a smile.

The leaders of Europe's two powerhouses engaged in a brief handshake -- gone the kisses on the cheeks Merkel had with Hollande's predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy -- then squelched onto the red carpet, flanked by a military band.

Waving briefly to a handful of onlookers huddled under umbrellas, the two leaders stood side-by-side for the two national anthems, she in her customary pose with hands clasped at her front, he almost standing to attention.

With the build-up to the meeting dominated by fears of a clash, the two literally clashed physically at one point on the red carpet, Merkel gently ushering Hollande back on track.

The journey across the Rhine was anything other than auspicious, with Hollande's presidential Falcon forced to return to Paris "for safety reasons and as a precaution" after being hit by lightning.

At the highly awaited news conference, Merkel said the fact he made it to Berlin despite the unlikely event of a lightning strike was "maybe a good omen for our co-operation."

They made the most of what they could agree on, but Hollande warned ominously that "everything was on the table" concerning EU economic policy, ahead of a meeting of European leaders in Brussels on May 23.

"This meeting wasn't intended to answer all the questions that have been asked, but was mainly meant for us to get to know each other better, to establish ties, a working method, to find a solution together" to the crisis, said Hollande.

To a journalist's question as to what language they spoke to each other, Merkel said they conversed "mainly in their native tongues" apart from a few words of English while waiting for their interpreters.

Hollande, famous for his sense of humour, said: "Even when speaking French, one can be understood by a German chancellor. And similarly, even when speaking German, a chancellor can be understood by a French president."



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