The Star Malaysia

Macron vows to unite France

New president takes office with pledge to heal divided nation

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PARIS: Emmanuel Macron took power as president of France in a solemn ceremony heavy with tradition at the Elysee Palace and pledged to work to heal divisions in society – a nod to the bitter campaign he fought to defeat a far-right leader.

Macron’s inaugurati­on yesterday marked a first for the world’s fifth largest economy and founding member of the European Union, installing a 39-year-old centrist newcomer unknown to the wider public three years ago and who stands outside any traditiona­l political grouping.

The former investment banker becomes the youngest post-war French leader and the first to be born after 1958, when president Charles de Gaulle put in place the country’s Fifth Republic.

In his first word in office, he addressed himself to the fraught and fiercely contested election campaign, in which he overcame the National Front’s Marine Le Pen but which was a disappoint­ment for almost half of France’s 47 million voters.

Many people feel dispossess­ed by globalisat­ion as manufactur­ing jobs move abroad and as immigratio­n and a fast-changing world blur their sense of a French identity.

“The division and fractures in our society must be overcome.

“I know that the French expect much from me. Nothing will make me stop defending the higher interests of France and working to reconcile the French,” Macron declared.

A convinced European integratio­nist unlike Le Pen and other candidates, Macron went on: “The world and Europe need more than ever France, and a strong France, which speaks out loudly for freedom and solidarity.”

Macron took power formally after an hour-long private meeting with outgoing President Francois Hollande, in which official access to France’s nuclear missile launch codes was handed over.

Macron then accompanie­d his political patron, for whom he once worked as economy minister, down the red carpet to a waiting car in which the Socialist leader departed to applause from VIP guests and his former household staff.

In a ceremony conducted with all the pomp and glitter of high state occasions in France, Macron was presented with what is effectivel­y his chain of office – a heavy golden necklace mounted on a red cushion that makes him Grand Master of the National Order of the Legion d’Honneur – an honours system for servants of the Republic.

But he also appeared determined to create an impression of personal modesty at the start of his rule.

Aides went out of their way to emphasise that the dark suit he wore to stride up the red carpet to

€ power cost about 450 (RM2,130). The Louis Vuitton lavender blue clothing worn by his wife Brigitte was on loan from the fashion house, journalist­s were told.

But Macron also displayed youthful vigour during the televised proceeding­s – at one point racing up the stairs to meet a protocol requiremen­t, something not all past French presidents might have managed.

Departing from past tradition, he chose to be driven by military jeep rather than civilian limousine up to the Arc de Triomphe to light the flame in tribute to France’s war dead at the tomb to the unknown soldier – a potent reminder of France’s role in the Nato defence alliance. — Reuters

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