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EVA JOLY

Eva Joly enraged by ‘racist attack’

Norway-born politician Eva Joly, the French Green movement’s presidential candidate, has slammed as “racist” a column in a prominent magazine that appears to mock her French accent.

Eva Joly enraged by 'racist attack'
Photo: Marie-Lan Nguyen (File)

Speaking to reporters in Paris on Sunday, Joly said the column in the weekly Le Point magazine was “a racist attack, a form of ostracism.”

She also branded the article by novelist Patrick Besson “symptomatic of the French state.”

“It’s a casual form of racism which seeks to remove from positions of power anybody not born in the right areas or the right territories.”

In his column, Besson depicted a scenario in which Joly had become president due to the sudden deaths of all the other candidates.

The entire column is written from the perspective of a heavily accented Joly, and begins with the greeting: “Zalut la Vrance!”

“He thinks this is of no consequence because it’s about a Norwegian kitted out with a German accent and not somebody from Africa or the Middle East,” said Joly.

Despite her anger at the piece, Joly said she did not intend taking legal action against the author or the magazine.

Joly, who turned 68 on Monday, is best known to the French as a campaigning magistrate against corruption who took on some of France's biggest business interests during the 1990s as an investigating judge.

Born, Gro Eva Farseth in Oslo, she moved to Paris when she was 20 to work as an au pair.

"In Norway, after high school, lots of young people left to move abroad to discover the world," she told French magazine Gala in a recent interview. "Paris and the Parisians represented the new wave, a certain way of living and a culture that was rich and passionate. This was in contrast to the Norwegians who were more thrifty and lovers of nature."

She married the older son of the family that employed her, a medical student, Pascal Joly, and used her middle name, Eva, as it was easier to pronounce in French.

Joly became a magistrate at 38, joining the High Court of Paris as an investigating judge specializing in finance in 1990.

Some of the major corporate interests and personalities she went up against included oil company Elf Aquitaine, well-known business tycoon Bernard Tapie and the Crédit Lyonnais bank. She was subjected to death threats during some of her cases and won admiration for her courage.

Her husband, Pascal, committed suicide in 2001 and Joly left her job in 2002, returning to Norway to work as an advisor on a global anti-corruption and money laundering commission.

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POLITICS

France vows to block EU-South America trade deal in current form

France has vowed to prevent a trade deal between the European Union and the South American Mercosur bloc from being signed with its current terms, as the country is rocked by farmer protests.

France vows to block EU-South America trade deal in current form

The trade deal, which would include agricultural powers Argentina and Brazil, is among a litany of complaints by farmers in France and elsewhere in Europe who have been blocking roads to demand better conditions for their sector.

They fear it would further depress their produce prices amid increased competition from exporting nations that are not bound by strict and costly EU environmental laws.

READ ALSO Should I cancel my trip to France because of farmers’ protests?

“This Mercosur deal, as it stands, is not good for our farmers. It cannot be signed as is, it won’t be signed as is,” Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire told broadcasters CNews and Europe 1.

The European Commission acknowledged on Tuesday that the conditions to conclude the deal with Mercosur, which also includes Paraguay and Uruguay, “are not quite there yet”.

The talks, however, are continuing, the commission said.

READ ALSO 5 minutes to understand French farmer protests

President Emmanuel Macron said Tuesday that France opposes the deal because it “doesn’t make Mercosur farmers and companies abide by the same rules as ours”.

The EU and the South American nations have been negotiating since 2000.

The contours of a deal were agreed in 2019, but a final version still needs to be ratified.

The accord aims to cut import tariffs on – mostly European – industrial and pharmaceutical goods, and on agricultural products.

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