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EURO 2016

EURO 2016

Hollande says France is healing around Euro 2016 final

President Francois Hollande said Sunday the French team’s success at Euro 2016 was helping the country to heal from the Paris attacks and that even the national team had been scarred by the events in November.

Hollande says France is healing around Euro 2016 final
Authorities are bracing for mass celebrations if France -- a country still on high terrorist alert -- win Sunday’s final. Photo: AFP

Authorities are bracing for mass celebrations if France — a country still on high terrorist alert — win Sunday’s final against Cristiano Ronaldo’s Portugal.

Tricolour flags fly from apartment blocks and bars, cafes and parks are packed for showings of Les Bleus matches on giants screens.

“The French people needed to find their way again,” Hollande said in a commentary on the wave of support for the national team that has been in disgrace in recent years.

“We saw it at the time of the attacks. We came together in the dramas, we had to find ourselves in the happiness, to come together,” he wrote in the Journal du Dimanche.

The November 13th attacks across Paris left 130 dead. The Stade de France where France were playing Germany at the time was one of the sites targeted by suicide bombers along with the Bataclan concert hall and cafes that are now packed again.

Hollande said French team playing in Sunday’s final had been “very marked” by the attacks.

“The attacks were the same for them,” he wrote.

“They have decided they want to bring joy to the French people who experienced those events.

“They want to give happiness. (Didier) Deschamps has given them this desire to make people happy. They know that this isn’t just any ordinary moment in time,” Hollande said.

On November 13th, the suicide bombers did not get into the stadium but one person was killed — a Portuguese man whose family has said there should be a tribute at Sunday’s match.

The buildup to the tournament was dominated by fears that it could be a target for more attacks but also by weeks of strikes and protests over the government’s bid to reform labour laws.

Hollande has this year recorded some of the lowest popularity scores for a post-war French president, but might still stand for re-election next year.

He admitted that reality would eventually crowd in even if France wins Sunday’s final.

“Sport allows people to come together but politics divides people,” he said.

“The Euro sweeps away everything else, it brings people together, but life will resume afterwards.”

“I support the French team, I go to all their matches but I don’t want to use sport for politics. That’s not good for sport or for politics.”

EURO 2016

Euro 2016 gave France billion euro boost to struggling economy

Hosting the Euro 2016 football tournament cost France less than €200 million ($211 million) but brought some €1.22 billion into the country, according to figures released by the ministry of sports Tuesday.

Euro 2016 gave France billion euro boost to struggling economy
Photo:AFP

There was controversy over the public funds poured into the tournament, with some 24 million euros — double the expected cost — spent on security in light of an increased terrorist threat.

The state spent a further 160 million euros on building and renovating venues for the June and July event, while private funds and tournament organiser UEFA covered the remaining costs.

But Euro 2016 brought 1.221 billion euros into the country both in tourism and spending directly related to the organisation of the tournament, according to data compiled by the Centre of the Law and Economics of Sport at Limoges University (CDES) and the consultancy firm Keneo.

In calculating the figures, researchers took into account the loss from potential tourists who would have stayed away from France to avoid the tournament, as well as the state funds which could have been used elsewhere had they not been set aside for venues.

The average tournament visitor spent 154 euros a day, with most of that going on accommodation and eating out, the study said, with tourism providing a 625.8 million euro boost to the country.

UEFA spent some 360 million euros on organising the tournament in the country, while 24 participating teams gave the economy a 34.9 million euro boost.

Accredited persons for the event spent 34.8 million euros while in the country, and sponsors 22.6 million euros, according to the figures.

Last January the CDES predicted Euro 2017 would bring in 1.266 billion euros in additional expenditure, or 0.1 percent of France's GDP.

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