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UKRAINE

Macron says France to train Ukrainian fighter pilots

France's President Emmanuel Macron said on Monday that his country had "opened the door" to training Ukrainian fighter pilots, even if he excluded sending any war planes to Kyiv.

Macron says France to train Ukrainian fighter pilots
French President Emmanuel Macron speaking with journalist Gilles Bouleau during an interview on Monday. Photo by Ludovic MARIN / AFP

Macron spoke a day after Ukraine’s leader Volodymyr Zelensky visited Paris on the second such trip since Russia invaded its pro-Western neighbour in February last year.

His comments came in an interview with TF1 for the popular evening news show 20h, during which he also spoke about the cost of living, foreign investment in France, the ‘reindustrialisation’ of the country and his recent highly unpopular pension reform.

“We have opened the door to training pilots, and this with several other European countries who are also ready. I think discussions are under way with the Americans.

“The training can start from now,” he said, without providing further details.

After months of stalemate, Ukraine has been preparing to retake ground captured by Russia and is shoring up military assistance to help make its troops more battle-ready.

Macron and Zelensky had dinner on Sunday night, as the Ukrainian leader visited several European countries to shore up his weapons stockpile.

“In the coming weeks, France will train and equip several battalions with tens of armoured vehicles and light tanks including AMX-10RC,” they said in a joint statement afterwards.

“We have decided to deliver more ammunition,” he said.

France had also decided to help “train their troops, the battalions that will be in charge of the counter-offensive” as well as “repair vehicles and cannons”.

“France still has the same position: to help Ukraine resist. A lot is at stake right now, because the success of this counter-offensive will be decisive for the capacity to build lasting peace,” he said.

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POLITICS

First French tourists evacuated from New Caledonia

The first evacuation flights for French tourists stranded in New Caledonia due to riots in the Pacific territory took off Saturday, the high commission in the archipelago said.

First French tourists evacuated from New Caledonia

The international airport in the capital Noumea has remained closed for more than a week and all commercial flights have been cancelled due to the unrest.

“Measures to send foreigners and French tourists home continue,” the high commission, which represents the French state, said in a statement.

The tourists departed Saturday from Magenta airfield in Noumea aboard military aircraft headed for Australia and New Zealand, according to an AFP journalist.

They will then have to take commercial flights to mainland France.

“I came on vacation to visit my best friend (…) The conflict broke out and I got stuck,” in Noumea, Audrey, who did not give her last name, told AFP.

Australia and New Zealand had already begun repatriating their nationals on Tuesday.

The situation has been gradually easing for the many people trapped in the territory which has been shaken since May 13 by riots over planned voting reforms.

Seven people have been killed in the violence, the latest a man shot dead on Friday by a policeman who was attacked by protesters.

President Macron’s pledge

President Emmanuel Macron flew to the archipelago on Thursday in an urgent bid to defuse the political crisis.

He pledged during his lightning trip that the planned voting reforms “will not be forced through”.

Indigenous Kanaks had objected that the planned reform would dilute their influence by extending voting rights to newcomers to the Pacific archipelago, located about 17,000 kilometres (10,600 miles) from mainland France.

“Violence should never be allowed to take root,” Macron said during a televised interview with local journalists at the end of his visit Friday.

“What I want is a message of order and return to calm as this is not the Wild West,” he said.

“A path must be opened for the calming of tensions and this will allow us to build what happens next.”

The pro-independence FLNKS party on Saturday reiterated its demand for the withdrawal of the voting reforms after meeting with Macron.

“The FLNKS asked the President of the French Republic that a strong announcement be made from him indicating the withdrawal of the draft constitutional law,” it said in a statement, saying it was a “prerequisite to ending the crisis”.

In Paris, French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal said “the situation in New Caledonia today remains extremely fragile”.

France has enforced a state of emergency, flying in hundreds of police and military reinforcements to restore order.

New Caledonia has been ruled from Paris since the 1800s, but many Indigenous Kanaks still resent France’s power over their islands and want fuller autonomy or independence.

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