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Tag: French President

  • France asks Israel to boost security at Jerusalem consulate after protests

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    “France expects the Israeli authorities to fulfill their obligations under the Vienna Convention and provide protection for diplomatic and consular staff and their buildings,” a French source said.

    France has asked the Foreign Ministry for Israel to bolster security at the European country’s consulate in Jerusalem following protests against it, N12 News reported on Thursday.

    The outlet stated that the ministry had received the request, which was submitted following protests in September and October, and was also sent to the police.

    “France expects the Israeli authorities to fulfill their obligations under the Vienna Convention and provide protection for diplomatic and consular staff and their buildings,” a French diplomatic source told N12.

    The consulate, established in 1843 in the western part of Jerusalem, handles France’s diplomatic relations with the Palestinians in east Jerusalem, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip. It also serves around 25,000 French citizens living in the city’s western half.

    In recent months, the consulate was at the heart of a diplomatic spat between France and the Jewish state. Israeli media reported at the time of the protests that Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar had supported closing it after French President Emmanuel Macron announced his intention to recognize a Palestinian state.

    A picture shows the French consulate in Jerusalem on June 18, 2024. (credit: Menahem Kahana/AFP via Getty Images)

    The same was reported by French newspaper Le Figaro in September, which noted that a source close to Macron had said the Foreign Ministry had informed France of the potential move.

    MK Ohad Tal confronts French consulate worker

    Further, N12 noted a more recent incident where, last week, Knesset members were at the location during a tour of the Israeli capital.

    According to the report, Religious Zionist Party MK Ohad Tal, who was on the tour, confronted a French representative who was outside the consulate and asked, “Why do you work from here if you represent the Palestinians? This is Israel. We will make sure that you can no longer operate from here and represent our enemies.”

    Referring to the incident, the French diplomatic source told N12 that “any attack on our staff at the consulate is unacceptable. There have been campaigns against the consulate for a long time. This cannot happen.”

    The source continued, saying, “This is clearly a hostile act against a French representative; we are concerned.”

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  • French relief as Algeria frees jailed novelist at centre of diplomatic crisis

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    Almost a year to the day since French-Algerian writer Boualem Sansal was arrested on arrival at Algiers airport, the Algerian president has pardoned him and allowed him to leave the country.

    Sansal, 81, has been at the centre of a bitter diplomatic row between Paris and Algiers and President Abdelmadjid Tebboune’s decision came in response to a direct approach from German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

    The writer arrived in Germany on a military plane on Wednesday evening and was taken to hospital.

    French President Emmanuel Macron, who spoke to Sansal by phone, said France had used respect and calm to bring about his freedom.

    “I thank President Tebboune for this act of humanity,” said Macron.

    Although Paris had for months sought to lower tensions with Algeria, it was the German president’s role that secured Sansal’s release because of his good relations with Algeria’s leader.

    French ambassador Stéphane Romatet, who was recalled from Algiers earlier this year for consultations because of the row, told French radio on Thursday that the crisis in relations was so deep that “from the start we knew a happy outcome… would go through a trusted third party and the German solution quickly came forward”.

    Steinmeier said this week he had asked President Tebboune to pardon Sansal, “given his advanced age and fragile health”, so the writer could receive medical treatment in Germany.

    Tebboune said on Wednesday he had decided to respond favourably to Steinmeier’s request “because of its nature and humanitarian motives”.

    Sansal is being treated for prostate cancer.

    He was given a five-year jail sentence in July for undermining national unity with remarks that questioned Algeria’s borders.

    The novelist has long been a critic of Algeria’s government, which had not responded favourably to France’s appeal for clemency.

    Relations had already been on the slide after President Macron announced France was recognising Moroccan sovereignty of Western Sahara and backed a plan for limited autonomy for the disputed territory.

    Algeria backs the pro-independence Polisario Front in Western Sahara and is seen as its main ally.

    The spat worsened in April when Algeria expressed outrage after one of its consular staff in France was arrested over the kidnapping of a government critic in Paris.

    The crisis between the two countries was seen as unprecedented in more than 60 years since Algeria secured independence from France in 1962.

    Some French commentators and political figures blamed what was seen as a confrontational stance to Algeria taken by right-wing former Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau and others on the right of French politics.

    Algerian minister Sofiane Chaib also blamed Retailleau earlier this year for the “fabricated spat”.

    Then at the end of last month a motion by France’s National Rally was narrowly passed by MPs opposing a 1968 Franco-Algerian migration accord that granted residency rights to Algerians.

    Although the move was seen as a potential setback, the decision to replace Retailleau with Laurent Nuñez as interior minister appeared to signal a new mood.

    “He has completely changed the way relations with [Algeria] are handled”, ex-diplomat Jean-Christophe Ruffin told French radio.

    Retailleau responded to Sansal’s release on Wednesday speaking of “immense relief and great joy”.

    Tensions between the two countries remain, though, after French sportswriter Christophe Gleizes was jailed for seven years in July for allegedly trying to interview a member of a movement designed by Algeria as a terrorist group.

    French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot praised diplomats for their work in securing Sansal’s release, and said they remained focused on Gleizes, “whose imminent release we are hoping for”.

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  • Macron and Abbas plan committee towards Palestinian state

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    France and the Palestinian Authority plan to establish a joint committee to work on the consolidation of a future Palestinian state.

    “This committee will deal with all legal, constitutional, institutional and organizational aspects,” French President Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday after talks with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Paris.

    The committee is also expected to contribute to drafting a new constitution.

    Abbas expressed full support for the creation of the constitutional committee and reiterated his call for Palestinian transitional institutions in the Gaza Strip to maintain links with the Palestinian Authority.

    Meanwhile, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently noted that it remains unclear whether the Palestinian Authority, which administers parts of the West Bank, would have a role in the Gaza Strip in the future.

    Israel has historically opposed such arrangements.

    The Palestinian militant Hamas group, which has governed the Gaza Strip since 2007, has also opposed Palestinian Authority control in the territory.

    French President Emmanuel Macron welcomes President of the Palestinian National Authority Mahmoud Abbas ahead of their meeting at the Elysee presidential palace. Julien Mattia/Le Pictorium via ZUMA Press/dpa

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