The Borneo Post

Russia accused of ‘smear campaign’ against Macron

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PARIS: An aide to French presidenti­al candidate Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday accused Russia of trying to derail his campaign by spreading false rumours, echoing charges of Russian meddling in the US election.

Macron’s spokesman Benjamin Griveaux accused the Kremlin of mounting a ‘smear campaign’ via state media against the 39year- old centrist former economy minister, a staunch defender of the European Union who is riding high in polls.

“The Kremlin has chosen its candidates: Francois Fillon and Marine Le Pen,” Griveaux told the broadcaste­r i-Tele, referring to the conservati­ve Republican­s candidate who is pushing for closer ties with Moscow, and the leader of the anti-immigratio­n, anti-EU National Front.

Russia’s choice was “for a very simple reason: they do not want a strong Europe, they want a weak Europe,” he alleged.

Griveaux accused the stateowned Russia Today (RT) channel and the Sputnik news agency, both of which have French-language sites, of trying to taint Macron, who was forced last week to deny rumours of a gay affair.

The claims echo accusation­s by US officials that Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered cyberattac­ks on US organisati­ons to help Donald Trump get elected.

Moscow vehemently denied the French allegation­s.

“We never had, and do not have, the intention of interferin­g in the domestic affairs of other countries, and especially not in their electoral process,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

RT and Sputnik echoed the denials.

We never had, and do not have, the intention of interferin­g in the domestic affairs of other countries, and especially not in their electoral process.

The allegation­s came as a poll showed Macron’s campaign stagnating for the first time in weeks.

The Opinionway poll showed Le Pen stretching her lead in the first round of the election in April to 27 per cent compared to 22 per cent for Macron.

While Macron was shown easily beating her in a May runoff between the top two candidates, former frontrunne­r Fillon, who is battling an expenses scandal, appeared to halted his slide, gaining one point to 20 per cent in the first round.

Fillon has been dogged by revelation­s that his Welsh-born wife Penelope was paid for years for a suspected fake job as a parliament­ary aide.

He insists she played a real role. On Tuesday, he faced down another attempted putsch from within his party, telling Republican­s lawmakers there was no question of him stepping aside after winning November’s rightwing primary.

A day earlier, a group of around 20 MPs from the party has said they could no longer bring themselves to campaign on his behalf.

Those present at Tuesday’s meeting however said the “vast majority” of the party’s MPs had reiterated their support for the 62year- old former premier.

Rumours about Macron’s private life had grown louder in recent weeks, in tandem with his poll surge.

Last week, he tackled the gossip head on, laughing off claims he was cheating on his wife with the head of French radio, Mathieu Gallet.

In an opinion piece in the daily Le Monde on Tuesday headlined “Russia must not be allowed to destabilis­e the French presidenti­al election”, the secretary-general of Macron’s movement En Marche (On The Move) accused RT and Sputnik of fanning the ‘slanderous’ claims. — AFP

Dmitry Peskov, Kremlin spokesman

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 ??  ?? Emmanuel Macron, head of the political movement En Marche!, or Onwards!, and candidate for the 2017 French presidenti­al elections signs a memory book at the Basilique Notre Dame d’Afrique in Algiers, Algeria. — Reuters photo
Emmanuel Macron, head of the political movement En Marche!, or Onwards!, and candidate for the 2017 French presidenti­al elections signs a memory book at the Basilique Notre Dame d’Afrique in Algiers, Algeria. — Reuters photo

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