Kouchner sees no rise in terrorist threat in France

July 27 (Reuters) – French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said on Tuesday he saw no increased threat of terrorist action in France in the wake of the killing of a 78-year-old hostage kidnapped in Niger.

“I don’t think we have the slightest bit of evidence of an increased danger,” Kouchner told RTL radio in an interview.

The foreign minister was speaking from Mali after being sent to the Sahel region on Monday by President Nicolas Sarkozy to discuss increased security measures for French nationals.

Kouchner said he had not urged French nationals to leave the Sahel but had asked that they take increased safety precautions.

Al Qaeda’s North African wing announced on Sunday it had executed Frenchman Michel Germaneau after a raid by Mauritanian and French troops last week in which six Islamists were killed. (Reporting by Vicky Buffery; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Bettencourt aide denies illegally funding French party

(Reuters) – The wealth manager of France’s richest woman has denied giving illegal cash donations to Labour Minister Eric Woerth, ahead of the questioning of the L’Oreal heiress and the minister by police later this week.

The allegation was made by a former bookkeeper for Liliane Bettencourt, 87, main shareholder in cosmetics giant L’Oreal, and has led to probes into alleged tax evasion and money laundering, transfixing France and embarrassing President Nicolas Sarkozy’s government.

The bookkeeper, Claire Thibout, told police this month she had been involved in withdrawing 150,000 euros ($200,000) in cash to be given to Woerth in unmarked envelopes as a donation to Sarkozy’s 2007 election campaign.

The president and minister have both denied receiving illicit donations.

When asked in an interview in the Journal du Dimanche whether he had handed over the 150,000 euros to Woerth in January 2007, Patrice de Maistre said:

“I have never dealt with their (Bettencourt family) personal wealth,” he said. “The accusations of Madame Thibout are simply ridiculous.”

FAMILY FEUD

What began as a family feud over lavish gifts by Bettencourt to a close friend, society photographer Francois-Marie Banier, has turned into a political scandal as evidence has emerged of undeclared Swiss bank accounts, an island in the Seychelles and the alleged donations to conservative politicians.

Maistre said he had originally met Woerth in 2006 after Bettencourt’s late husband asked him to find out how to finance Sarkozy’s UMP party and his presidential election campaign.

French law limits donations to parties to 7,500 euros per person per year. Only 150 euros may be given in cash.

Woerth also faces allegations that he used his influence to secure a position for his wife with a company that manages part of Bettencourt’s fortune.

“Eric Woerth never asked me to hire his wife, just as the Bettencourts have never told me who to hire,” Maistre said.

Bettencourt has demanded an end to what she has described as harassment by her daughter on and intrusions into her private life, after a prosecutor blocked a bid to have her declared mentally unfit.

In a separate development, the Paris court of appeals ruled on Saturday that secret recordings of conversations between Bettencourt and Maistre –leaked by news website Mediapart that kickstarted the scandal — did not violate her privacy.

(Reporting by John Irish; editing by Andrew Roche)

Bettencourt aide denies illegally funding French party

PARIS, July 25 (Reuters) – The wealth manager of France’s richest woman has denied giving illegal cash donations to Labour Minister Eric Woerth, ahead of the questioning of the L’Oreal heiress and the minister by police later this week.

The allegation was made by a former bookkeeper for Liliane Bettencourt, 87, main shareholder in cosmetics giant L’Oreal (OREP.PA), and has led to probes into alleged tax evasion and money laundering, transfixing France and embarrassing President Nicolas Sarkozy’s government.

The bookkeeper, Claire Thibout, told police this month she had been involved in withdrawing 150,000 euros ($200,000) in cash to be given to Woerth in unmarked envelopes as a donation to Sarkozy’s 2007 election campaign.

The president and minister have both denied receiving illicit donations.

When asked in an interview in the Journal du Dimanche whether he had handed over the 150,000 euros to Woerth in January 2007, Patrice de Maistre said:

“I have never dealt with their (Bettencourt family) personal wealth,” he said. “The accusations of Madame Thibout are simply ridiculous.”

FAMILY FEUD

What began as a family feud over lavish gifts by Bettencourt to a close friend, society photographer Francois-Marie Banier, has turned into a political scandal as evidence has emerged of undeclared Swiss bank accounts, an island in the Seychelles and the alleged donations to conservative politicians.

Maistre said he had originally met Woerth in 2006 after Bettencourt’s late husband asked him to find out how to finance Sarkozy’s UMP party and his presidential election campaign.

French law limits donations to parties to 7,500 euros per person per year. Only 150 euros may be given in cash.

Woerth also faces allegations that he used his influence to secure a position for his wife with a company that manages part of Bettencourt’s fortune.

“Eric Woerth never asked me to hire his wife, just as the Bettencourts have never told me who to hire,” Maistre said.

Bettencourt has demanded an end to what she has described as harassment by her daughter on and intrusions into her private life, after a prosecutor blocked a bid to have her declared mentally unfit.

In a separate development, the Paris court of appeals ruled on Saturday that secret recordings of conversations between Bettencourt and Maistre –leaked by news website Mediapart that kickstarted the scandal — did not violate her privacy. (Reporting by John Irish; editing by Andrew Roche)

France to build two warships for Russia-Sarkozy

July 23 (Reuters) – French President Nicolas Sarkozy said on Friday he was “certain” France would build two Mistral class helicopter carriers for Russia.

Russia hopes to buy four Mistral class warships to modernise hardware that was exposed as outdated during its war against Georgia in 2008. France has said it is willing to sell the ship, but talks have got bogged down over technology sharing.

“We will build with our Russian friends the two (Mistral),” Sarkozy told workers at a shipyard in Western France. “The contract is still in negotiations, but the decision is taken … it’s certain,” he said.

The deal is expected to be sealed by year-end, an executive at the ship yard told reporters.

Russia has said that if it had had the Mistral during its 2008 war with Georgia, it would have achieved its military goal in 40 minutes instead of 26 hours.

However, the potential sale by France of one or more of the 400-500 million euro ($482-602 million) carriers has alarmed Washington and Eastern European NATO nations.

The vessel can carry up to 900 men, helicopters and tanks. (Reporting by Emmanuel Jarry; writing by John Irish; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter)

French sleaze case puts spotlight on legal system

PARIS, July 10 (Reuters) – The uproar over a political funding scandal has once again cast the spotlight on France’s justice system, which critics say risks losing its independence under reforms planned by President Nicolas Sarkozy.

Sarkozy’s overhaul would lead to the scrapping of independent examining magistrates, or “juges d’instruction”, a French peculiarity that dates back to Napoleonic times.

The government has in recent years been appointing more and more public prosecutors to big cases instead of independent magistrates, who used to handle most investigations of major significance, and in theory have wider powers.

The magistrates themselves argue that, because the prosecutors answer to the Justice Ministry, the system could be exposed to political influence.

The role of Philippe Courroye, the prosecutor leading an investigation into whether L’Oreal (OREP.PA) heiress Liliane Bettencourt and her late husband made illegal donations to Sarkozy’s election campaign, is a case in point.

Courroye earned a reputation as a fighter for judicial independence in the 1990s after securing the conviction of two right-wing mayors for corruption.

He also led an investigation into arms sales to Angola that ended in the conviction of the eldest son of late Socialist president Francois Mitterrand, Jean-Christophe.

But Courroye’s decisions since his appointment to his current post have sparked concern, and two magistrates’ unions this week publicly demanded that he step down.

The unions are asking for Courroye to be replaced by an independent examining magistrate in the Bettencourt case, in which a butler made secret recordings of conversations between the heiress and her financial and legal advisers.

The recordings suggest that Courroye, a friend of Sarkozy’s, informed the president’s office weeks in advance of a decision he planned to take on the investigation. Sarkozy has vehemently denied that his party received any illegal funding as alleged.

LEAKS AND WHISPERS

French investigations are also often heavily leaked. Evidence documents, minutes of police questioning and secret tape recordings can surface with astonishing speed, and with no penalty from court or libel restraints.

Sarkozy has said that a reform of the legal system is needed to avoid a repeat of the Outreau scandal in 2000, in which over a dozen people were wrongfully imprisoned after a flawed investigation by a young and inexperienced magistrate.

The case was widely viewed as one of the worst miscarriages of justice in France since the end of World War Two.

But lawyers, judges and court officials have taken to the streets in their thousands to protest against the reform.

They argue that the Outreau case provides convenient cover for the government to get rid of magistrates who have a history of uncovering embarrassing cases of political corruption.

Examining magistrates were also behind a series of sensitive examinations that dogged Mitterrand and his right-wing successor, Jacques Chirac, for years.

Independent magistrates were also behind criminal cases against major French firms and their senior executives, including a huge 1990s scandal centred on the state-owned oil company Elf and its dealings in Africa. (Reporting by Sophie Taylor; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Sarkozy’s office denies heiress donation report

July 6 (Reuters) – President Nicolas Sarkozy’s office denied on Tuesday a media report that he had received a 150,000 euro ($201,300) cash donation from France’s richest woman for his 2007 presidential election campaign.

A former accountant who worked for Liliane Bettencourt, the main shareholder in cosmetics giant L’Oreal, was quoted on Tuesday as saying she gave Labour Minister Eric Woerth the donation in cash.

An official in Sarkozy’s office, asked if the president had received a cash payment, said: “That’s totally false.”

Asked whether Woerth, treasurer of Sarkozy’s campaign in 2007, had received such a donation, the official said: “That seems unfounded but you must check with the treasurer of the campaign.”

News website Mediapart, which last month reported secret recordings of telephone conversations between Bettencourt and her wealth manager, said it had exclusively interviewed a former bookkeeper who said the billionairess and her late husband had regularly given cash donations to conservative politicians.

“She cites two names, Eric Woerth, the current labour minister, who has long been treasurer of the UMP party, and she recounts how in March 2007 she gave him cash — so much that she had to go and fetch some in Switzerland — altogether 150,000 euros, and she gave it to him for Nicolas Sarkozy,” Mediapart editor Edwy Plenel told France Inter radio.

Woerth, whose wife worked for Bettencourt’s wealth manager until she resigned last month, has denied any wrongdoing and rejected any conflict of interest between his dual roles as treasurer of the ruling party and budget minister until March.

A spokesman for Woerth was not immediately available for comment.

Plenel did not disclose the name of the former accountant. The story on Mediapart’s homepage identified her only as Claire T.

A public prosecutor who reported suspicions of tax evasion by Bettencourt to the budget ministry last year planned to open an investigation into the suspected laundering of evasion proceeds, his office said on Monday.

(reporting by Emmanuel Jarry and Thierry Leveque, writing by Paul Taylor)

CORRECTED – EU leaders work on ways to prevent new debt crises

BRUSSELS, June 17 (Reuters) – European Union leaders hope to agree on ways to strengthen budget discipline and economic policy coordination on Thursday to show financial markets they can prevent a repeat of the euro zone debt crisis.

Leaders of the 27 member states and the executive European Commission will also work on tightening financial regulation to help prevent another global economic crisis, including a levy to ensure banks pay for any future crises. [ID:nLDE65F24E]

The leaders have agreed on a 500-billion-euro ($617.2- billion) safety net to help struggling countries that use the euro and a 110-billion-euro aid mechanism for Greece.

But despite repeated denials, they have not allayed concern that Spain will follow Greece by seeking financial help.

“The turmoil in the sovereign debt markets has cast a serious shadow over financial stability in Europe, which could … derail the still nascent recovery of the real economy,” EU Monetary Affairs Commission Olli Rehn warned on Wednesday.

A show of unity is likely at the one day-summit, which will review the findings of a task force set up to look at reforms designed to prevent debt building up, increase cooperation and set up a permanent aid mechanism for countries in debt trouble.

Failure to show solidarity could increase the market nervousness that has helped drive down the euro and shares.

The leaders broadly agree on the need for closer economic policy coordination, or “economic government”, and on the need for tighter financial regulation, but do not all see eye to eye on how to go about it.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy set the tone on Monday by pledging unity to defend the euro from its worst crisis since it was founded 11 years ago.

Sarkozy bowed to German demands for tougher budget rules and accepted euro zone states which persistently breach deficit limits should have their voting rights in the bloc suspended, even if it requires treaty changes.

He also accepted closer “economic government”, or greater economic policy coordination, should involve all 27 EU member states and not just the 16 that use the euro, and dropped demands for dedicated euro zone secretariat.

“More than ever, Germany and France are determined to talk with one voice, to adopt common policies, to give Europe the means to met its legitimate ambitions,” Sarkozy said.

MOUNTAIN TO CLIMB

But EU diplomats say differences remain and there is a long way to go to convince the markets and get through the crisis.

Britain, for example, is hostile to important parts of the drive towards closer budget surveillance and says it will not allow its budget plans to be submitted to the Commission for review before the national parliament.

British Prime Minister David Cameron is likely to defend his position strongly at his first EU summit. [ID:nLDE65F1JD]

Swedish Prime Minster Fredrik Reinfeldt ruled out any changes of the EU treaty to strengthen budget discipline on Wednesday, opposing calls for amendments led by Germany to step up sanctions on budget sinners. [ID:nLDE65F2CC]

“My mood is still bleak. We are not over the hill on this, we are still climbing up it,” a senior EU envoy said.

A decision by Moody’s rating agency to cut Greece’s debt to non-investment grade on Monday served notice of the need for the EU to remain alert over the debt crisis.

Spain, which has a closely watched bond auction on Thursday, also is a cause for concern although member states say it is not on the agenda of the summit and have denied repeatedly that Madrid is seeking financial help. [ID:nLDE65F24E]

Madrid won plaudits from Merkel on Wednesday for announcing labour reforms to try to boost its competitiveness. But financial analysts questioned whether its plans, or pension reforms announced by France the same day, go far enough.

The leaders are expected to press ahead with moves towards Europe’s own banking levy after the world’s top economies failed to agree on such a tax for an industry widely seen as one of the main culprits behind the global economic meltdown.

They aim to agree a joint position for the G20 summit in Toronto on June 26-27.

Pressure also is mounting for European regulators to publish results of stress tests on individual banks to restore market confidence and overcome a partial freeze in inter-bank lending. Such tests show banks’ ability to withstand liquidity problems.

Finland’s finance minister said on Wednesday that support for more transparent bank stress tests was growing in Europe, but it was not clear whether such moves would be on the agenda.

For more on the EU, double-click on [EU/LOOK]

For more on the euro zone, double-click on [ID:nTOPNOW2]

(Editing by Michael Roddy)

Germany, France present united front on policy

(Reuters) – Germany and France on Monday moved to mend fences on policy splits, agreeing the European Union needs economic governance by all 27 member states, not just euro zone nations, as Paris had previously proposed.

World | France | Germany

Meeting in Berlin, Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Nicolas Sarkozy stressed their desire to speak with one voice in Europe, pledging to tighten policy coordination and improve budget discipline to contain an ongoing debt crisis.

“More than ever, Germany and France are determined to talk with one voice, to adopt common policies, to give Europe the means to met its legitimate ambitions,” Sarkozy told reporters at a joint news conference with Merkel.

“So (we will have) economic governance at the level of the 27 (member states) and in the event of necessity, there’ll be meetings concerning euro problems within the euro zone.”

The EU must convince financial markets the bloc has a common response to the worst crisis to hit the 16-country euro zone since the single currency was created 11 years ago and can prevent Greece’s debt problems spreading to other countries.

Paris and Berlin had been at loggerheads over how to approach to closer economic governance, and the two postponed talks initially scheduled for last week for fear they would be unable to reach an agreement, a French government source said.

Merkel stressed that government by the 27 was particularly important to her and that measures aimed at punishing budgetary sinners in the euro zone needed to be ramped up.

“We need a strengthening of the (EU) Stability and Growth pact. We also agree that we need to consider changes to the (EU) treaties,” Merkel said, noting that Germany and France would submit proposals on this matter soon.

“One point here could involve withdrawing voting rights for notorious sinners in the euro zone, which seems important to us, because we really need treaties with bite to make this stability and growth culture work,” she added.

Sarkozy said the two leaders did not want to create new institutions within the EU to realize their vision.

“I am convinced, like Madame Merkel, that the solution to Europe’s problems will not come by creating new institutions but by being able to hold operational, pragmatic meetings,” he said.

Merkel and Sarkozy said they were sending a joint letter to Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, the G20 chairman, seeking to accelerate reforms in financial regulation.

The letter also pushes for a global tax on financial transactions and agreement in principle on a levy on banks to pay for the cost of financial crises, Merkel said.

“Germany and France want to make things move rapidly at Toronto,” Sarkozy said.

Merkel, whose ruling coalition is under fire at home, rejected fears that budgetary cuts she planned would choke off growth in Europe’s largest economy and noted that France was planning “important steps” to overhaul its own finances.

(Additional reporting by Noah Barkin, Sarah Marsh, Andreas Rinke, Crispian Balmer and Emmanuel Jarry; Editing by Andrew Hay)

ECB’s Noyer says French deficit targets realistic

(Reuters) – European Central Bank board member Christian Noyer on Sunday said France’s aim to bring its budget deficit down to 3 percent from 8 percent of GDP by 2013 was realistic.

France

Noyer was echoing a similar pledge by Prime Minister Francois Fillon at the weekend who said France planned to cut its deficit by 100 billion euros over the next three years, in part by slashing expenditures and eliminating tax exemptions.

France is keen to voice its commitment to fiscal austerity ahead of a meeting in Berlin on Monday between President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel to discuss European economic governance. For related story see ID: nLDE65C0EL

Germany last week unveiled its biggest austerity push in more than half a century and has been pressing Paris to emulate its efforts and unveil concrete savings measures.

“I am totally confident in the fact that it is possible to get there,” Noyer said in an interview on France 5 television and RFI radio, talking about France’s deficit target.

“The measures (to cut the deficit) are complicated to decide. We need not only measures on (public) spending and receipts but also structural measures,” Noyer added.

Addressing the issue of governance, Noyer said was he was in favor of strong banking regulation but called for caution regarding taxes on banks which could harm the economy.

“One has to be very careful,” Noyer said, referring to the idea of introducing taxes on banks which could raise borrowing costs.

(Reporting by Astrid Wendlandt and Laure Bretton; Editing by Matthew Jones)

UPDATE 1-ECB’s Noyer says French deficit targets realistic

PARIS, June 13 (Reuters) – European Central Bank board member Christian Noyer on Sunday said France’s aim to bring its budget deficit down to 3 percent from 8 percent of GDP by 2013 was realistic.

Noyer was echoing a similar pledge by Prime Minister Francois Fillon at the weekend who said France planned to cut its deficit by 100 billion euros over the next three years, in part by slashing expenditures and eliminating tax exemptions.

France is keen to voice its commitment to fiscal austerity ahead of a meeting in Berlin on Monday between President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel to discuss European economic governance. For related story see [ID: nLDE65C0EL]

Germany last week unveiled its biggest austerity push in more than half a century and has been pressing Paris to emulate its efforts and unveil concrete savings measures.

“I am totally confident in the fact that it is possible to get there,” Noyer said in an interview on France 5 television and RFI radio, talking about France’s deficit target.

“The measures (to cut the deficit) are complicated to decide. We need not only measures on (public) spending and receipts but also structural measures,” Noyer added.

Addressing the issue of governance, Noyer said was he was in favour of strong banking regulation but called for caution regarding taxes on banks which could harm the economy.

“One has to be very careful,” Noyer said, referring to the idea of introducing taxes on banks which could raise borrowing costs. (Reporting by Astrid Wendlandt and Laure Bretton; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Merkel, Sarkozy to show united front ahead EU summit

(Reuters) – The leaders of France and Germany will seek to overcome deep-rooted disagreements on European economic governance at a meeting in Berlin Monday, setting the tone for a European Union summit later this week.

France | Germany

A show of unity from Berlin and Paris, the motors behind European integration, is seen as crucial for reaching decisions at the summit Thursday on tightening policy coordination and strengthening budget discipline to contain a debt crisis.

The EU must persuade financial markets the bloc has a common response to the worst crisis to hit the 16-country euro zone since the single currency was created 11 years ago and can prevent Greece’s debt problems spreading to other countries.

“The crisis showed the European system had arrived at its limits: you cannot have a common currency and such gaps in competitiveness,” a French government source said. “You cannot have one country (Germany) where everything is oriented toward gains in productivity and competitiveness and other countries favoring consumption and social protection.

“Either we manage to come closer or we risk having a political crisis as well as an economic and financial crisis.”

Yet Paris and Berlin are at loggerheads over the correct approach to closer economic governance — so much so that German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy postponed their talks initially scheduled for last week for fear they would be unable to reach an agreement, the source said.

Influential German magazine Der Spiegel said at the weekend Franco-German relations had reached a “historic low.”

France’s priority is to create an “economic government” for the euro zone — something Germany has resisted — with regular summits of the 16 leaders and a dedicated secretariat, to coordinate economic policy and focus on rebalancing the European economy and boosting growth.

Paris has also called for Germany to boost domestic spending in order to balance its huge trade surplus.

Berlin last week launched the biggest austerity drive in Germany since World War Two and sees budget discipline as a priority, pressing Paris to implement savings measures.

The German Finance Ministry has circulated a 9-point plan demanding stiffer sanctions against governments that flout European fiscal rules, including suspending repeat offenders’ EU voting rights, and an insolvency procedure for states.

CONCESSIONS

Nonetheless, Sarkozy and Merkel went some way to assuaging concerns about a French-German rift last week by issuing a letter to the European Commission calling for faster financial reform and an EU-wide ban on naked short selling of shares and sovereign bonds.

In addition, France looked to anchor its commitment to tighter fiscal policy at the weekend by pledging to cut the budget deficit by 100 billion euros by 2013 and to bring it down to the EU target of 3 percent of GDP.

According to the French government source, Paris believes firmer budget commitments by euro zone governments and other concessions such as approving Bundesbank President Axel Weber to succeed Jean-Claude Trichet at the head of the European Central Bank, could enable a rapprochement with Berlin.

He added new EU institutions for economic governance would not likely see the light of day any time soon.

“Economic governance is something that will take one or two years. You shouldn’t think we will have a breakthrough on June 14 or 17,” he said. “It is a birth that will be long and difficult because the interests at stakes are colossal.”

(Editing by Janet Lawrence)

PREVIEW-Merkel, Sarkozy to show united front ahead EU summit

BERLIN/PARIS, June 13 (Reuters) – The leaders of France and Germany will seek to overcome deep-rooted disagreements on European economic governance at a meeting in Berlin on Monday, setting the tone for a European Union summit later this week.

A show of unity from Berlin and Paris, the motors behind European integration, is seen as crucial for reaching decisions at the summit on Thursday on tightening policy coordination and strengthening budget discipline to contain a debt crisis [nLDE65C0FB].

The EU must persuade financial markets the bloc has a common response to the worst crisis to hit the 16-country euro zone since the single currency was created 11 years ago and can prevent Greece’s debt problems spreading to other countries.

“The crisis showed the European system had arrived at its limits: you cannot have a common currency and such gaps in competitiveness,” a French government source said. “You cannot have one country (Germany) where everything is oriented towards gains in productivity and competitiveness and other countries favouring consumption and social protection.

“Either we manage to come closer or we risk having a political crisis as well as an economic and financial crisis.”

Yet Paris and Berlin are at loggerheads over the correct approach to closer economic governance — so much so that German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy postponed their talks initially scheduled for last week for fear they would be unable to reach an agreement, the source said.

Influential German magazine Der Spiegel said at the weekend Franco-German relations had reached a “historic low”.

France’s priority is to create an “economic government” for the euro zone — something Germany has resisted — with regular summits of the 16 leaders and a dedicated secretariat, to coordinate economic policy and focus on rebalancing the European economy and boosting growth.

Paris has also called for Germany to boost domestic spending in order to balance its huge trade surplus.

Berlin last week launched the biggest austerity drive in Germany since World War Two and sees budget discipline as a priority, pressing Paris to implement savings measures.

The German Finance Ministry has circulated a 9-point plan demanding stiffer sanctions against governments that flout European fiscal rules, including suspending repeat offenders’ EU voting rights, and an insolvency procedure for states.

CONCESSIONS

Nonetheless, Sarkozy and Merkel went some way to assuaging concerns about a French-German rift last week by issuing a letter to the European Commission calling for faster financial reform and an EU-wide ban on naked short selling of shares and sovereign bonds. [ID:nLDE6580AA]

In addition, France looked to anchor its commitment to tighter fiscal policy at the weekend by pledging to cut the budget deficit by 100 billion euros by 2013 and to bring it down to the EU target of 3 percent of GDP. [ID:nLDE6510ZJ]

According to the French government source, Paris believes firmer budget commitments by euro zone governments and other concessions such as approving Bundesbank President Axel Weber to succeed Jean-Claude Trichet at the head of the European Central Bank, could enable a rapprochement with Berlin.

He added new EU institutions for economic governance would not likely see the light of day any time soon.

“Economic governance is something that will take one or two years. You shouldn’t think we will have a breakthrough on June 14 or 17,” he said. “It is a birth that will be long and difficult because the interests at stakes are colossal.” (Editing by Janet Lawrence)

Somali group issues video of French hostage

(Reuters) – An Islamist group in Somalia has issued a video of a French hostage held in the Horn of Africa country, showing him asking France to meet his captors’ demands.

World | France

The video appeared on a website often used by Islamist militant groups around the world, which said the hostage, named as Denis Allex, had issued a “message to the French people.”

A copy of the video issued by U.S.-based SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors militant internet traffic, shows the captive in an orange outfit with armed men standing behind him while he reads a statement in French.

Two French security advisers were kidnapped by the Shabaab rebel group in Somalia last year but one, Marc Aubriere, escaped a month later.

The Islamist group issued a statement of demands in September, which included an immediate end to French support for the Somali government and the withdrawal of African Union peacekeepers.

In the video, Allex repeats those demands and says the group will issue a list of names of prisoners it wants released. He says the defeat of President Nicolas Sarkozy’s party in recent French regional elections showed France opposes his policies.

“We ask the French people to do everything for my liberation,” he says, noting that other hostages have been released in Somalia, Sudan and Algeria.

“You can imagine my state of mind … I miss my family a lot and hope to see them as soon as possible,” he says, adding he has not been mistreated.

The message contains no threat against his life.

“The Shabaab movement made its demands to the government without any response and it is me who is paying the price by remaining in their hands as a hostage for a long time,” he said.

“Even though they have not and they are not physically abusing me, it is severely affecting my mental and psychological health.”

(Reporting by Andrew Hammond; editing by Diana Abdallah)

Somali group issues video of French hostage

DUBAI, June 9 (Reuters) – An Islamist group in Somalia has issued a video of a French hostage held in the Horn of Africa country, showing him asking France to meet his captors’ demands.

The video appeared on a website often used by Islamist militant groups around the world, which said the hostage, named as Denis Allex, had issued a “message to the French people”. A copy of the video issued by U.S.-based SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors militant internet traffic, shows the captive in an orange outfit with armed men standing behind him while he reads a statement in French. Two French security advisers were kidnapped by the Shabaab rebel group in Somalia last year but one, Marc Aubriere, escaped a month later.

The Islamist group issued a statement of demands in September, which included an immediate end to French support for the Somali government and the withdrawal of African Union peacekeepers.

In the video, Allex repeats those demands and says the group will issue a list of names of prisoners it wants released. He says the defeat of President Nicolas Sarkozy’s party in recent French regional elections showed France opposes his policies.

“We ask the French people to do everything for my liberation,” he says, noting that other hostages have been released in Somalia, Sudan and Algeria.

“You can imagine my state of mind … I miss my family a lot and hope to see them as soon as possible,” he says, adding he has not been mistreated.

The message contains no threat against his life.

“The Shabaab movement made its demands to the government without any response and it is me who is paying the price by remaining in their hands as a hostage for a long time,” he said.

“Even though they have not and they are not physically abusing me, it is severely affecting my mental and psychological health.”

(Reporting by Andrew Hammond; editing by Diana Abdallah)

Somali group issues video of French hostage

DUBAI, June 9 (Reuters) – An Islamist group in Somalia has issued a video of a French hostage held in the Horn of Africa country, showing him asking France to meet his captors’ demands.

The video appeared on a website often used by Islamist militant groups around the world, which said the hostage, named as Denis Allex, had issued a “message to the French people”. A copy of the video issued by U.S.-based SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors militant internet traffic, shows the captive in an orange outfit with armed men standing behind him while he reads a statement in French. Two French security advisers were kidnapped by the Shabaab rebel group in Somalia last year but one, Marc Aubriere, escaped a month later.

The Islamist group issued a statement of demands in September, which included an immediate end to French support for the Somali government and the withdrawal of African Union peacekeepers.

In the video, Allex repeats those demands and says the group will issue a list of names of prisoners it wants released. He says the defeat of President Nicolas Sarkozy’s party in recent French regional elections showed France opposes his policies.

“We ask the French people to do everything for my liberation,” he says, noting that other hostages have been released in Somalia, Sudan and Algeria.

“You can imagine my state of mind … I miss my family a lot and hope to see them as soon as possible,” he says, adding he has not been mistreated.

The message contains no threat against his life.

“The Shabaab movement made its demands to the government without any response and it is me who is paying the price by remaining in their hands as a hostage for a long time,” he said.

“Even though they have not and they are not physically abusing me, it is severely affecting my mental and psychological health.”

(Reporting by Andrew Hammond; editing by Diana Abdallah)

EU hails call for speculator clampdown

(Reuters) – The European Commission welcomed German and French calls for speedy measures to clamp down on speculators in government debt Wednesday, though the likelihood of a bloc-wide ban still appears remote.

In a display of solidarity that may ease concerns over recent policy splits between the euro zone’s top two economies, Berlin and Paris urged the Commission to consider an EU-wide ban on naked short selling of shares and sovereign bonds.

EU Internal Market Commissioner Michel Barnier has already said he will propose measures to regulate short selling, such as greater transparency requirements, while national regulators have called for banning powers in times of extreme market volatility.

A Commission spokeswoman welcomed the “sense of urgency” expressed in the Franco-German letter but stopped short of promising to copy a unilateral ban on naked short selling of sovereign bonds and related derivatives that Germany implemented last month.

“We do welcome the support reflected in the letter for our ideas,” the spokeswoman said, adding that concrete proposals would be made during the summer.

The premium investors demand to hold 10-year Italian and other euro zone government bonds rather than German debt fell as investors sought to avoid being caught short if a ban were to be imposed on some sales of credit default swaps.

French Economy Minister Christine Lagarde told reporters in Paris Wednesday that financial regulation was “an imperative response to restore confidence in the markets.”

In a joint letter published by Berlin Wednesday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy told European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso the EU executive needed to accelerate the pace of financial reform.

“In particular we think it’s imperative to improve the transparency of short-selling positions on shares and bonds, particularly sovereign bonds,” the letter said.

The Commission should also look at the possibility of an EU-wide ban as introduced in Germany, it added.

Berlin moved in May to ban naked short selling — in which the seller does not hold the underlying asset — of shares in its biggest banks, euro government bonds and related credit default swaps.

Banks say the CDS market is far too small to influence debt prices and simply reflect government failure to cut deficits.

EU STATES SPLIT

Common pan-EU transparency requirements appear inevitable but so far there is no consensus on a German-style ban.

“When Paris and Berlin cannot agree on issues like banning short selling, they call on Brussels to act. It is surprising the letter does not mention an economic (governance) agreement, another key subject that countries can’t agree on,” said one EU official.

National regulators in the EU are split over whether to copy the German ban but have indicated the need for powers to impose shortselling curbs in extreme market conditions.

Britain’s Financial Services Authority, which polices Europe’s biggest derivatives market, had no comment. Mark Hoban, a junior UK treasury minister, said last week any crackdown should be proportionate and evidence-based.

Lagarde said last week that France has no plans to copy Germany’s ban on naked short selling of government debt but that supervisors should have powers to curb on market abuses.

In the joint letter, the two leaders said the Commission should also explore the possibility of harmonizing deadlines for the settlement and delivery of securities across the EU.

The securities industry is already looking at harmonizing settlement times across the EU. Most of Europe settles on the third day after a trade (T+3) but may eventually move to T+2, as in Germany.

The Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME), a banking lobby, said reducing settlement times was an ineffective way to curb shortselling.

Wednesday’s announcement followed talk of strains in Franco-German relations, revived by a decision to postpone a scheduled summit Monday.

Germany and France have been split on the future of the euro zone, with Berlin seeking to accelerate budgetary consolidation across the bloc to support the single currency and Paris hitherto warier of embarking upon swingeing austerity measures.

France’s top priority is to create an “economic government” for the euro zone, with regular summits of the region’s 16 leaders and a dedicated secretariat, to coordinate economic policy and focus on rebalancing the European economy and boosting growth.

On this front, however, Germany is so far unconvinced.

(Additional reporting by Huw Jones and George Matlock in London, John O’Donnell in Brussels and Yann Le Guernigou in Paris, editing by John Stonestreet/Ruth Pitchford)

CORRECTED – UPDATE 3-EU hails call for speculator clampdown

BERLIN, June 9 (Reuters) – The European Commission welcomed German and French calls for speedy measures to clamp down on speculators in government debt on Wednesday, though the likelihood of a bloc-wide ban still appears remote.

In a display of solidarity that may ease concerns over recent policy splits between the euro zone’s top two economies, Berlin and Paris urged the Commission to consider an EU-wide ban on naked short selling of shares and sovereign bonds.

EU Internal Market Commissioner Michel Barnier has already said he will propose measures to regulate short selling, such as greater transparency requirements, while national regulators have called for banning powers in times of extreme market volatility.

A Commission spokeswoman welcomed the “sense of urgency” expressed in the Franco-German letter but stopped short of promising to copy a unilateral ban on naked short selling of sovereign bonds and related derivatives that Germany implemented last month.

“We do welcome the support reflected in the letter for our ideas,” the spokeswoman said, adding that concrete proposals would be made during the summer.

The premium investors demand to hold 10-year Italian and other euro zone government bonds rather than German debt fell as investors sought to avoid being caught short if a ban were to be imposed on some sales of credit default swaps. [ID:nLDE65817D]

French Economy Minister Christine Lagarde told reporters in Paris on Wednesday that financial regulation was “an imperative response to restore confidence in the markets.”

In a joint letter published by Berlin on Wednesday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy told European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso the EU executive needed to accelerate the pace of financial reform.

“In particular we think it’s imperative to improve the transparency of short-selling positions on shares and bonds, particularly sovereign bonds,” the letter said.

The Commission should also look at the possibility of an EU-wide ban as introduced in Germany, it added.

Berlin moved in May to ban naked short selling — in which the seller does not hold the underlying asset — of shares in its biggest banks, euro government bonds and related credit default swaps. [ID:nLDE6510VL]

Banks say the CDS market is far too small to influence debt prices and simply reflect government failure to cut deficits.

EU STATES SPLIT

Common pan-EU transparency requirements appear inevitable but so far there is no consensus on a German-style ban.

“When Paris and Berlin cannot agree on issues like banning short selling, they call on Brussels to act. It is surprising the letter does not mention an economic (governance) agreement, another key subject that countries can’t agree on,” said one EU official.

National regulators in the EU are split over whether to copy the German ban but have indicated the need for powers to impose shortselling curbs in extreme market conditions. [ID:nLDE64P0M5]

Britain’s Financial Services Authority, which polices Europe’s biggest derivatives market, had no comment. Mark Hoban, a junior UK treasury minister, said last week any crackdown should be proportionate and evidence-based.

Lagarde said last week that France has no plans to copy Germany’s ban on naked short selling of government debt but that supervisors should have powers to curb on market abuses. [ID:nLDE6531GQ]

In the joint letter, the two leaders said the Commission should also explore the possibility of harmonising deadlines for the settlement and delivery of securities across the EU.

The securities industry is already looking at harmonising settlement times across the EU. Most of Europe settles on the third day after a trade (T+3) but may eventually move to T+2, as in Germany.

The Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME), a banking lobby, said reducing settlement times was an ineffective way to curb shortselling.

Wednesday’s announcement followed talk of strains in Franco-German relations, revived by a decision to postpone a scheduled summit on Monday. [ID:nLDE657264]

Germany and France have been split on the future of the euro zone, with Berlin seeking to accelerate budgetary consolidation across the bloc to support the single currency and Paris hitherto warier of embarking upon swingeing austerity measures.

France’s top priority is to create an “economic government” for the euro zone, with regular summits of the region’s 16 leaders and a dedicated secretariat, to coordinate economic policy and focus on rebalancing the European economy and boosting growth.

On this front, however, Germany is so far unconvinced.

(Additional reporting by Huw Jones and George Matlock in London, John O’Donnell in Brussels and Yann Le Guernigou in Paris, editing by John Stonestreet/Ruth Pitchford)

Euro zone crisis: it’s the politics, stupid!

(Reuters) – Bill Clinton famously won the U.S. presidential election in 1992 with the motto “It’s the economy, stupid.” But when it comes to the future of the euro, “It’s the politics, stupid!” is the more appropriate slogan.

Since its inception, the single European currency has always been as much a political as an economic project.

The euro has come under attack on financial markets this year because of debt and deficit problems in its weaker southern members, most acutely in Greece but also in Portugal and Spain, and growing economic imbalances among its 16 nations.

But the history of the 1990s shows that investors who bet against European monetary union can get their fingers burned.

While political mistakes could yet undo the 11-year-old monetary union, it is far more likely that Franco-German political leadership will save it.

“If the euro fails, not only the currency fails. Europe fails too, and the idea of European unification,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said in a May 13 speech. “This test is existential — it must be passed.”

In Paris, too, the political will to do whatever it takes to underpin the euro is absolute.

President Nicolas Sarkozy may have been impatient with Merkel’s slow decision-making during the crisis, and too eager to claim political credit for giant rescue packages for Greece and the wider euro area.

But he has moved a long way toward supporting German calls for stricter sanctions to enforce budget discipline in the euro zone, even calling for a German-style constitutional amendment in France to anchor a commitment to deficit reduction.

PRIMACY OF POLITICS

Merkel has talked repeatedly of the need to restore “the primacy of politics over the financial markets” to justify her support for a $1 trillion reserve fund to stabilize the euro.

Some of her own actions, under domestic political and legal pressure, have contributed to the crisis of confidence.

She delayed an unpopular financial rescue for Greece until contagion began spreading to other southern European countries. Her stark warning that the euro was in danger, meant to rally voter support for bailing out Greece, rattled investors.

And Berlin’s sudden, unilateral ban on certain speculative trades — driven by a need to show taxpayers that the government was acting against speculators — provoked exactly the kind of market turmoil it was meant to stop.

But Merkel can credibly argue that euro zone partners are now taking seriously Germany’s message that they must cut budget deficits swollen by the financial crisis and adopt painful pension and labor market reforms to mend their public finances.

In the last month, Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy have adopted substantial public spending cuts. France has imposed a three-year freeze on extra spending and is debating raising its legal retirement age from 60.

A combination of bond market discipline and European peer pressure has made cuts or freezes in public sector pay, pensions and hiring politically feasible, despite trade union resistance.

The European Central Bank has eased the pressure on southern euro members’ debt by buying up government bonds.

The next stage is for finance ministers to pin down in detail next week how the $1 trillion stabilization mechanism will work in practice. The money would be lent on strict policy conditions to euro zone countries that were shut out of capital markets, as happened to Greece.

But the bigger test of political leadership will be to agree on new rules for fiscal and economic policy coordination.

“What needs to happen now is for France and Germany to sit down and thrash out an in-depth reform of euro zone governance, which won’t fully satisfy either side but will be acceptable to both and will thus become the template,” said Thomas Klau of the European Council on Foreign Relations, co-author of a history of the single currency.

Apart from stricter budget discipline and surveillance, the compromise should involve a procedure for managing an orderly default in a euro zone country, and a method for rebalancing the European economy between surplus and deficit countries.

Paris and Berlin would be well advised to involve their parliamentarians in the process, since the reform is bound to affect national budget sovereignty, Klau said.

“Despite the current cacophony of contradictory statements within and between governments, it is plausible that a consensus could be forged by October,” he said. “That may sound like a very long time to markets reacting in real time to each comment. But that is the way Europe is constructed.”

(Editing by Noah Barkin)

France’s Sarkozy hopes Africa won’t strike twice

France (Reuters) – French President Nicolas Sarkozy said on Monday he hoped South Africa would not humiliate the France team at next month’s soccer World Cup as fellow Africans Senegal did in 2002.

Sports

France and hosts South Africa will meet in Bloemfontein in what could be a deciding match in Group A qualifying at the tournament which kicks off on June 11.

“Dear Jacob, I hope the Bafana Bafana will on June 22 be more accommodating with the French team than the Lions of Teranga were in 2002,” Sarkozy said in his dinner toast to about 40 African leaders at the 25th Africa-France summit.

Addressing South African President Jacob Zuma, Sarkozy was referring to the 2002 World Cup in South Korea and Japan when then holders France lost to Senegal in their opening game and ultimately went out early in the competition.

France, who also made a group-stage exit from Euro 2008 and have kept frustrating their fans with uninspired performances since, still have work to do if they are to make an impact at the World Cup after managing just a draw with Tunisia on Sunday.

Earlier on Monday, Zuma diplomatically told reporters he hoped South Africa would squeeze a draw out of the France.

France will now fly to the French Indian Ocean island of Reunion to play China on Friday in their final warm-up for the June 11-July 11 finals in South Africa, where they will face the the hosts, Uruguay and Mexico.

(Reporting by John Irish; Editing by Sophie Taylor and Sonia Oxley; To comment on this story: sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

France pressing for euro zone leaders group-press

May 31 (Reuters) – French President Nicolas Sarkozy is pressing his European partners to set up a group of euro zone leaders with a secretariat to act as an economic government for the single currency bloc, Le Monde said on Monday.

Currencies | Global Markets

“Nicolas Sarkozy is looking for ways to get Germany back into the European game,” the newspaper said in an article published on its web site.

“According to his entourage, the French president once again envisages the creation of a forum of heads of state and government from the euro zone, with a secretariat, which would be the true economic government of Europe,” it said.

The newspaper noted that Germany had already rejected similar proposals for a formal body to coordinate economic governance in the euro zone.

But it said Paris believed firmer budget commitments by euro zone governments and other concessions, such as approving Bundesbank President Axel Weber to succeed Jean-Claude Trichet as the head of the European Central Bank could help sway Berlin.

“If it judges that the guarantees that have been obtained are sufficient, Germany might accept the Eurogroup,” Le Monde said.

The newspaper said that French authorities were moving cautiously with the idea in order not to provoke any open rejection from Berlin.

“The French president has taken the precaution of not describing publicly the economic government which he envisages because a display of Franco-German disagreement could be fatal to the euro,” the newspaper said. (Writing by James Mackenzie; Editing by Charles Dick)