Arab Times

Kuwait-French ties remain excellent: Ambassador

High-level visits being planned

- By Cinatra Alvares

KUWAIT CITY, Oct 7: Ambassador of France to Kuwait, HE Marie Masdupuy, held a press conference to discuss relevant bilateral and regional issues at the French Residence on Sunday morning.

She said that French-Kuwait relations remain excellent with a number of bilateral visits taking place in both directions in the last month, including a meeting between the two Foreign Ministers in New York on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly meeting. She informed that other ministeria­l and high-level visits were being planned in the coming months. “The agenda is quite rich and it is not surprising as we have many shared interests in so many areas,” she said.

She highlighte­d that the two countries shared active cooperatio­n in areas of health, business, education, environmen­t and judicial areas. She also welcomed the news of daily direct Kuwait airways flights to Paris as a step forward.

Commenting on the short-term Schengen visa exemption for Kuwaitis, Ambassador Masdupuy remarked, “We have been advocating alongside a big majority of Schengen partners for Kuwait to benefit from a short-stay visa exemption. It was not an agenda in Brussels partly because the commission was in the end of process but we are now going to have a new commission and a new parliament and I think this issue is going to come rather quickly on the agenda.”

She remained very positive that the exemption would be adopted by Schengen member states and approved by the parliament noting that it was just a matter of having the issue put forth on the agenda of the relevant committees in Brussels and stated that results could be expected in a matter of months. She also noted that there will be other changes in Schengen visas for all countries and the Embassy is waiting for the implementa­tion directives to enforce them.

Ambassador Masdupuy stated that the French Embassy continued to issue about 50,000-55,000 visas every year to Kuwaitis and non-Kuwaitis in Kuwait. She noted that they expect a slight decrease towards the end of 2019 as a result of the ongoing social movements in France which have impacted the country’s tourism industry. She also added that as the Embassy issues many long duration, short-stay visas, for multiples visits, there are far more Kuwaiti tourists visiting France than the number of visas being issued.

Speaking on Kuwait’s tenure at the UN Security Council as a non-permanent member, she stated, “We are coming closer to the end of Kuwait’s mandate as a non-permanent member. I can reassert and reaffirm how happy we have been to work with the Kuwaiti delegation in the UN Security Council, how constructi­ve the work of our Kuwaiti colleagues in New York has been on every issue that has been on the agenda of the Security Council.”

She added that Kuwait had twice chaired the Security Council and she praised the programme for being always very rich, and correspond­ing to French expectatio­ns and interests. “We will miss Kuwait as a partner in the Security Council, we have been enjoying the close cooperatio­n with Kuwait in New York, Paris and here in Kuwait on Security Council issues.”

Ambassador Masdupuy highlighte­d recent progress made between the two countries in education, “We are very pleased that the Ministry of Education has released a new list of accredited universiti­es in France, it is a substantia­l list of 108 Universiti­es which includes many more colleges and faculties.”

She said that the current numbers of Kuwait students in France was low but these numbers are expected to improve as the new list will provide students with a larger choice of opportunit­ies to go study in France – including institutio­ns that offer English curricula, in different places and every possible area of study.

However, on the environmen­tal front, the French ambassador expressed that she was unsatisfie­d that there has been no new developmen­t concerning the project of building a waste energy plant in Kuwait. “This has been lasting issue now for many years. The concerned companies have been expecting the final decision for a long time and it will be highly welcome if a positive decision would come any time soon.”

Ambassador Madsupuy also commented upon pertinent regional political issues including Iran and the freedom of navigation and maritime trade. She praised Kuwait’s historical diplomacy and commended the role Kuwait played as a balanced actor in internatio­nal and regional relations. “As a non-permanent member of the Security Council, Kuwait has an even bigger stake in making sure that everybody understand­s the positions of other actors.”

She added that France shares the same goals with Kuwait, “We will never accept a nuclear Iran, and this is why we crafted the nuclear agreement. We also aspire for an Iran which will have more responsibl­e behaviour when it comes to regional issues and regional interferen­ce in crises in the MENA region. We also share a will to look beyond the JCPOA which will end in 2025 and have a more global agreement that will include nuclear non-proliferat­ion issues, issues of regional security, and the ballistic missiles programme which is developed by Iran.”

She informed that it is President Emmanuel Macron’s outlook that any new global negotiatio­n with Iran should include important regional countries such as Kuwait in the discussion­s. But she also stressed that they were still in the process of trying to find the conditions and principles around which concerned parties can come together around the table and noted that President Macron has been pursuing this issue actively on various fronts, such as the margins of the G7 summit, and the UN General Assembly meeting.

She also stressed that France was committed to the freedom of navigation and maritime trade, “We were very distressed and unhappy with the incidents that started to take place since last May up to the attack on Aramco sites which are a threat to regional security. We have been thinking with all our partners of what we could do to guarantee the freedom of navigation and to deter any future attacks or incidents.”

She said that the European countries are looking to establish naval surveillan­ce mission as a deterrent for potential attackers, and shared that the EU did not see extra deployment of the nature proposed by the USA as the best solution. She also noted that Kuwait and France shared a lively and dense military cooperatio­n from training and maintenanc­e to organisati­on of common exercises.

Ambassador Madsupuy also shared her thoughts on the topic of climate change and the Paris Agreement. She noted that China and Russia are two very important countries that have quite a high percentage of contributi­on to climate change problems. “We highly welcome their ratificati­on of the Paris agreement and contributi­on to ongoing discussion­s, it is not a finished process. We would like the agreement to become as universal as possible. Climate change issues are on the agenda of our discussion­s with all our partners in the world, including the USA. We are encouraged by local initiative­s in the USA concerning these issues, and the role of American scientists in working on these issues to enlighten public opinion.”

 ??  ?? French Ambassador Marie Masdupuy
French Ambassador Marie Masdupuy

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