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POLITICS

Petition asks Bruni to pay ‘obscene’ cost of website

An online petition is calling for France's former first lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy to reimburse the taxpayer following revelations earlier this month that the singer's personal website cost the state €410,000 over a period of two years.

Petition asks Bruni to pay 'obscene' cost of website
Screenshot of the petition website

The year 2013 has truly been an annus horribilis for the Bruni-Sarkozy family when it comes to expense scandals.

Following the revelation that former French President Nicolas Sarkozy had breached his spending limits during last year’s presidential election campaign leading to his resignation from France’s highest legal body, the Constitutional Council, the latest scandal to hit the Bruni-Sarkozy clan is certainly something they could do without.

Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, who is currently promoting her new album, ‘Little French Songs’, is now the subject of an online petition protesting the amount of public money injected into the upkeep of her personal website.

The petition, which had 51,187 signatures as of Friday afternoon, was started in reaction to a report published in mid-July from the Court of Auditors, which found that Bruni’s website received a total of €410,000 from the state over two years. The site, it said, was financed by the presidential budget at a cost of €330,000 in 2011 and €80,000 in 2012.

The man who started the petition, Nicolas Bousquet, a Paris-based web developer, describes the cost as “obscene”, estimating that “the site could have been made by anyone for less than €10,000." 

This isn’t the first time Bruni’s finances have come under scrutiny.

Earlier in May, the Prime Minister’s office, known as “Matignon” in France, was questioned about the cost of current French first lady Valérie Trierweiler to the state. It revealed that Trierweiler’s five staff cost the state €19,742, around half of what Carla Bruni’s eight assistants cost the taxpayer, which amounted to €36,448 per month.

According to Europe 1, Carla Bruni has not yet responded to the petitioners.

Meanwhile, rumours continue to circulate that Nicolas Sarkozy is preparing for a political comeback. Earlier this month, the former President was given a hero's welcome by supporters at crisis talks for his UMP party. Sarkozy, however, denied a comeback, even taking to Twitter to put the rumours to rest.  

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EUROVISION

Keep politics out of Eurovision, France says

A French government minister on Friday condemned boycott calls against Israel's Eurovision participation called for politics to be kept out of the song contest.

Keep politics out of Eurovision, France says

“Politics has no place in Eurovision,” European Affairs Minister Jean-Noel Barrot told the Liberation newspaper.

Pressure on artists to boycott Israel was “unacceptable”, he said.

Israeli singer Eden Golan, 20, qualified Thursday for this weekend’s Eurovision grand finale with “Hurricane”, a song changed from its original version which alluded to the October 7 attack by Hamas militants on Israel.

Nearly 12,000 people protested in Malmö on Thursday to voice opposition to Israel competing at Eurovision in the Swedish city because of its actions in the Gaza conflict. It will be one of 25 countries competing in the grand final on Saturday.

“At a time when creative freedom is threatened across the world, Europe must loudly and strongly defend this essential democratic principle,” the French minister said.

“In the case of Eurovision, these pressures are in contradiction to the spirit of the competition,” he said.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has wished Golan good luck and said she had “already won” by enduring the protests that he called a “horrible wave of anti-semitism”.

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