Times of Suriname

Macron-Salvini spat threatens to boil over

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FRANCE - After months of simmering tensions between Rome and Paris, the battle for the soul of Europe just got a lot uglier. On Thursday, France recalled its ambassador to Rome for the first time since 1940, when fascist leader Benito Mussolini declared war. This time the French foreign ministry blamed a war of words: “the repeated accusation­s, baseless attacks and outlandish claims” of Italy’s populist government.

The barbs between Italy’s populist politician Matteo Salvini and the French President Emmanuel Macron have been regular and personal. Last month Italy’s far-right Interior Minister and Deputy Prime Minister said he hoped the French people would soon manage to rid themselves of a “terrible president.” Macron, for his part, has likened rising nationalis­m to leprosy, declaring that if the populist nationalis­ts regard him as their enemy, “they are right.”

But the straw that appears to have broken the camel’s back came in the shape of a meeting between Italy’s other deputy PM Luigi Di Maio and France’s own populists, the yellow vests. The meeting, which took place on Tuesday on the outskirts of Paris, led Di Maio to declare that the winds of change had now crossed the Alps.

Following France’s decision to recall its ambassador, Di Maio tried to justify the meeting. “I wanted to meet with representa­tives of the ‘yellow vests’ and the citizens’ initiative referendum group, because I do not believe that the future of European politics lies in the parties of the right or the left,” Di Maio, leader of the populist Five Star Movement, wrote in a letter published in Le Monde.

The former Italian Prime Minister, Enrico Letta, who has given up practicing politics in order to teach it in Paris, says that after the last couple of years, nothing surprises him any longer, but he warns that the consequenc­es for both countries could be serious. “France and Italy are the two superpower­s of culture in Europe. We need to work together on big issues. The world has become much bigger than it was. Today, the world is enormous, Italy and France, European counties need to work together this is why this fight is really madness,” Letta told CNN.

(CNN)

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