Kuwait Times

Historic lakeside villa spruced up for Biden-Putin talks

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GENEVA: Tomorrow’s Geneva summit between US President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin will take place in a plush 18th-century lakeside villa steeped in the Swiss city’s history.

The Villa La Grange, set in Geneva’s biggest park which slopes down to the shore, is well used to hosting showpiece events-but the Biden-Putin talks will rank as the most high-powered of them all.

The mansion, spruced up for the occasion, has played a part in landmark internatio­nal agreements before, notably the first Geneva Convention. And words said on its lawns by a former world leader resonate today ahead of the US-Russia summit. “We can establish an even deeper and more effective relationsh­ip,” said pope Paul VI in 1969.

Addressing a crowd of 70,000 in front of the villa, the pontiff evoked the opposing forces of love and hate and called for “generous peacemaker­s”.

Lakeside location

The setting is spectacula­r. Views from the threestore­y classical mansion sweep down over the Parc de La Grange, across Lake Geneva towards the United Nations and the Jura mountains beyond.

The villa has been a whirlwind of activity in preparatio­n for the summit, with vehicles scurrying in and out of the park. The paint has been touched up and the chandelier­s polished, while antique furniture has been rearranged to make way for the two presidents. The scene is set in the showpiece library: two wooden armchairs clad in red leather have been set either side of a globe, against a backdrop of brown and gold tones. Two imposing stone lionsfresh­ly scrubbed down with pressure hoses-guard the main entrance gates to the 20-hectare park.

In the immaculate­ly-manicured gardens, new turf has been rolled out to cover any bare patches.

During the summer, the gardens would typically be filled by picnickers. But the chances of anyone getting in and breaking out some Gruyere cheese and a bottle of local Genevois wine on Wednesday will be somewhat slim. The park has been closed off and ringed with barbed wire-topped steel fencing, while hundreds of troops and security officers will guard the site.

Villa a bibliophil­e’s dream

The grand, classical villa was owned by Genevan patrician families and was ultimately bequeathed to the city. On rare occasions, the public can take guided tours that take in the library, reception rooms and bedrooms. The estate was created in the 1660s by the merchant Jacques Franconis. Marc Lullin, a banker, bought it in 1706 and three of his sons built the French-style mansion and its surroundin­g buildings between 1768 and 1773. Banker

Jean Lullin, having been ruined by the French Revolution, sold it in 1800 to Francois Favre, a Geneva ship owner who made his fortune trading with the East from the French port of Marseille.

The Favre family transforme­d the house and park, adding the large library which contains some 15,000 books belonging to Francois’ son Guillaume. The oldest volumes date back to the 15th century and the collection is especially strong in history, literature, and ancient languages. —AFP

 ??  ?? GENEVA: Cars ride past the Interconti­nental hotel, Sunday in Geneva, ahead of the summit between US President Joe Biden and Russian leader Vladimir Putin. —AFP
GENEVA: Cars ride past the Interconti­nental hotel, Sunday in Geneva, ahead of the summit between US President Joe Biden and Russian leader Vladimir Putin. —AFP

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