Kuwait Times

False alarm leads to major police operation in Paris

Le Pen says she is ‘candidate of the people’

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PARIS: Parts of central Paris were cordoned off yesterday after a false alarm triggered a major security operation, French police said. French government security alert app - SAIP - warned citizens that a police operation was under way in Saint-Leu church in the busy shopping district of Chatelet and advised people to stay away. Interior minister, Bernard Cazeneuve, issued a statement confirming the false alarm and said that “the circumstan­ces around the interventi­on” had yet to be determined.

More than one hundred police officers, including elite units, carried out the operation and the area was reopened to traffic after it became evident that there was no danger, a Reuters witness said.

Security forces had responded to a call that claimed hostages had been taken in Saint-Leu church, interior ministry spokesman PierreHenr­y Brandet told BFM TV. “As the operation took place, the church’s priest came out as well as a number of people and the BRI (emergency interventi­on and search service) made sure there was nobody, that there was no assailant,” he said. France is on high alert for security threats after a series of attacks by Islamist militants that have killed more than 230 people since January 2015.

Election race

Far-right National Front party leader Marine Le Pen yesterday said she was eager for France’s presidenti­al election campaign to start, portraying herself as the “candidate of the people” and mocking her opponents’ primaries as cockfights. Opinion polls consistent­ly show the anti-immigratio­n,

anti-EU Le Pen making it to the second round of the 2017 election. Her ratings have been boosted by worries over Europe’s refugee crisis and concerns over Islamist attacks. But the same polls also show Le Pen losing the second-round runoff-to be held in early May-prompting her to make further efforts to polish her image and that of her camp, including with a campaign poster sporting the slogan “France Brought to Peace”, and not bearing the party’s name or logo.

“I’m very relaxed, impatient to start this presidenti­al campaign,” Le Pen told reporters. “I am eager for the match to start, to debate issues that are essential to the survival of our country as it is now.

She was speaking at her party’s annual rally, this year in the Mediterran­ean town of Frejus, where the mayor, David Rachline, is a rising party star and Le Pen’s campaign manager. Le Pen, who was alone amid France’s major party leaders to back Britain’s exit from the European Union and is also alone in supporting US Republican candidate Donald Trump, hopes to benefit from rising anti-establishm­ent sentiment amid voters on both sides of the Atlantic.

“I am, and will be, in this presidenti­al election the candidate of the people, who have been forgotten, scorned, over the 20 past years,” she said at the start of the rally in the southern France town of Frejus. Le Pen mocked the bitterly fought primaries of France’s conservati­ves and centre-right, which will pit ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy against former Prime Minister Alain Juppe and other candidates in November, and that of the Left, scheduled for January. She said they were battles of egos and cockfights.

Rachline and her niece Marion Marechal-Le Pen both told Reuters that the party’s campaign would only fully start once those two primaries are over. “As long as we don’t know who our opponents are, it is very complicate­d to launch a campaign,” Marechal-Le Pen said, while insisting the National Front, or FN, believed it could win the presidenti­al election, despite the opinion polls.

“I don’t say it will be easy,” she said. “But a lot of the pieces of the puzzles are falling into place.”

She said pointed to security concerns among voters after various deadly attacks in France, and at Britain’s Brexit vote. Rachline said Le Pen would focus on asking voters “whether France must or no regain its independen­ce” and “whether it will, or not, let radical Islam grow.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? BRATISLAVA: French President Francois Hollande (left) and German Chancellor Angela Merkel deliver a joint statement after the European Union Summit of 27 Heads of State or Government in Bratislava, Slovakia on Friday. — AFP
BRATISLAVA: French President Francois Hollande (left) and German Chancellor Angela Merkel deliver a joint statement after the European Union Summit of 27 Heads of State or Government in Bratislava, Slovakia on Friday. — AFP

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