Belfast Telegraph

Tributes as ex-french president dies aged 94

- By Sylvie Corbet

TRIBUTES have poured in for former French president Valery Giscard d’estaing who has died aged 94.

Germany was quick to praise the convinced European who died after contractin­g coronaviru­s.

“France has lost a statesman, Germany a friend and all of us a great European,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said.

French presi dent Emmanuel Macron praised Mr Giscard’s achievemen­ts at home and abroad of the man whose “seven-year term transforme­d France”.

“He allowed young people to vote from the age of 18, women to legally terminate unwanted pregnancie­s, divorce by mutual consent, got new rights for people with disabiliti­es.”

But he also “worked for a stronger Europe, a more united Franco-german couple, and helped stabilise internatio­nal political and economic life by founding the G7”.

France’s prime minister Jean Castex praised his leadership during the economic turbulence of the 1970s, during which he “significan­tly advanced the building of Europe and the internatio­nal influence of France, whose history he marked”.

Known a f f e c t i o na t e l y in France as simply by the initials VGE, his name sometimes too long to pronounce, Mr Giscard was president from 1974 to 1981.

He was the model of a modern French president, a conservati­ve with liberal views on social issues, but was also full of contradict­ions.

Like an elected monarch with a technocrat’s skill and a feel for the zeitgeist, he played his accordion in working class neighbourh­oods.

One Christmas morning, he invited four passing binmen to breakfast at the presidenti­al palace.

He calmed a prison riot in Lyon by chatting with inmates in their cells.

But having long groomed himself for an office he won at 48, Mr Giscard then seemed to lose touch with common concerns.

When two newspapers reported he had accepted diamonds from self-proclaimed Central African Emperor Bokassa I, Mr Giscard airily refused comment and stopped reading them.

After French police arrested the man who had produced documents related to the scandal, the influentia­l Le Monde commented: “France is no longer a democracy.”

Mr Giscard eventually countered the charges. But by then a new election was approachin­g, and France wanted a change.

He lost to Francois Mitterrand in 1981, after just one term.

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