Raikkonen signs with Citroen rally team

Posted on 4th December 2009 by Sydney News in france - Tags: , , , , , , ,

.Ferrari’s 2007 Formula One world champion Kimi Raikkonen has announced his switch to rallying after agreeing to a one-year deal with Citroen.
The French manufacturer said the 30-year-old Finn would take part in 12 of the 13 championship events in 2010 for its Red Bull-backed junior team.
“I always wanted to compete in rally, especially in the world rally championship at some point in my career,” Raikkonen said.
“For the moment we have a one-year contract and we will see how it goes for the future.
“This is a new but very exciting challenge.”
Raikkonen, winner of 18 grands prix, had already said he planned to take a year out of Formula One after being replaced at Ferrari by Spain’s double world champion Fernando Alonso.
“I am really looking forward to testing and taking the start of the first rally.
The Finn refused to contemplate joining any Formula One team that would not be competitive for the championship.
Britain’s Button has moved to Raikkonen’s former team McLaren alongside 2008 champion and compatriot Lewis Hamilton. .
Citroen’s French driver Sebastien Loeb has won the last six world rally titles and Raikkonen will have one of the most competitive cars in the C4.
Raikkonen has previous world rally championship experience, having competed in this year’s Finnish round in a Fiat after also entering three non-championship events, but his new challenge is a big step up. France’s rising hope Sebastien Ogier will drive the junior team’s other car.
The team said Raikkonen’s co-driver will be compatriot Kaj Lindstrom, who partnered now-retired Tommi Makinen to four successive world titles in the 1990s.
They will not compete in New Zealand.
They will not compete in New Zealand.
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Henry praises ‘superb’ All Blacks

Posted on 28th November 2009 by French News in france - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

.New Zealand coach Graham Henry celebrated “a special day” after the All Blacks outclassed France 39-12 in Marseille to end their European tour undefeated.
“It was a special day, really, a special day because all the players who played today played their role superbly,” he said.
“It was good to see two teams playing attacking football because there has been some pretty boring stuff over the last year or so in rugby, and it was just a great game with two teams wanting to attack and I think it’s pretty special. .”
The New Zealand coach, whose team beat Wales, Italy and England in its previous outings, also said it was a remarkable effort “to go through the last two tours of Europe undefeated without having our line crossed.”
France coach Marc Lievremont admitted the All Blacks were the best team on the day.
“I’m just delighted for the guys because they put their record straight and they can feel good about their season and enjoy the summer.
“Sometimes, one has to accept defeat with dignity.
“This game quickly turned into a contest between a team that were euphoric and another team that was swamped. When the All Blacks play like that, attacking the line with complete confidence, they are unstoppable,” he said.”
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Hitler was no idiot, says secret report

Posted on 20th November 2009 by NZ News in france,nz - Tags: , , , , , , , ,

.A rarely seen French secret report on Adolf Hitler is among thousands of documents on 1920s Germany that are about to emerge from obscurity as part of a major overhaul of the French National Archives.
The yellowed, hand-written note from 1924 features a photograph of Hitler in a suit and tie, sporting his trademark side-parting and moustache.
“He is not an idiot but rather a very cunning demagogue,” says the note on Hitler by an anonymous agent. It is part of a treasure trove that had been gathering dust in a Paris mansion for decades.
Part of a huge archive from the period when French troops occupied part of Germany after World War I, the Hitler report was stored separately from the rest of the papers in a metal cabinet where France keeps its most important documents.
The agent presents Hitler as “the German Mussolini” and notes that he runs paramilitary groups “of the fascist type”, but does not raise any particular alarm about the man who would go on to lead Nazi Germany and launch World War II.
Seen only by a very privileged few, the Hitler report has now been extracted from the cabinet and will soon be available for historians to study, along with tens of thousands of other papers dating back to the French occupation of Germany. .
– ‘Racist’ –
The papers, which include everything from spy reports on politicians to details of German industrial techniques that the French hoped to appropriate, were not analysed or indexed.
Those documents were transported to Paris in 1930 and have been stored ever since in the bowels of the National Archives, housed in a magnificent early 18th century residence in the heart of the historic Marais district.
All that changed four years ago, when the Archives launched a conservation project to examine every single one of the papers and create a comprehensive index that will be posted online.
As a result, they remained hidden in more than 6,000 boxes, an unmanageable mass of raw material, inaccessible to historians and slowly deteriorating as paper-clips rusted, dust accumulated and ink faded from sheets as fine as cigarette paper.
She said the newly organised archive would be moved to a new state-of-the-art storage facility which is being built in a Paris suburb.
“On both sides of the Rhine, there was a very strong demand from historians to work on the inter-war period, and particularly the roots of the Second World War,” Isabelle Neuschwander, director of the Archives, said.
As well as Hitler, the French agents in Germany scrutinised other men who would go on to become powerful Nazis including Joseph Goebbels, Hermann Goering and Heinrich Himmler. There, the papers will be kept in much safer conditions and will be accessible to any researcher.
– Industrial espionage –
Also under the French spotlight was Konrad Adenauer, the then mayor of Cologne who would become the architect of the West German state after World War II.
The Himmler note goes straight to the point: the first word is “racist”.
“Competent but drawn to subordinate roles,” the note says. But whoever wrote the Adenauer report did not take the full measure of the man.
“That is not what interests me most.
Michele Conchon, an archivist who has been working full-time on the German papers for the past four years, said that while the most eye-catching pieces were the reports on famous Nazis, they were not the most valuable to historians.
She mentioned reports on violent incidents in which ordinary Germans showed their anger at the French occupation, burning French flags or attacking isolated soldiers guarding buildings. This archive is extremely rich in what it can teach us on daily life in Germany between the wars,” she said, surrounded by boxes of dusty files.
“There are reports of factory visits that were probably carried out with the aim of industrial espionage,” she said.
“There are reports of factory visits that were probably carried out with the aim of industrial espionage,” she said.
The secret service reports even offer insights into the lives of ordinary Germans – and into the nervousness of the French, who kept close tabs on German public opinion.
Thus, a report on an obscure schoolteacher, named as Mr Hinze, reveals surprisingly close scrutiny.
“Schoolteacher, 31, neutral, no obvious prejudices, content with our occupation which ensures order, hopes to see us go when peace will be signed,” says the report on Mr Hinze.
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Ireland calls for France World Cup replay

Posted on 19th November 2009 by admin in france,nz - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

.Angry Irish football chiefs have called on FIFA to order the World Cup play-off with France to be replayed, after France’s Thierry Henry helped knock out Ireland with a clear handball.
Video replays showed Henry used his hand to stop the ball going out of play in extra-time of Thursday’s (AEDT) play-off in Paris, before passing to William Gallas to head the goal which gave France a 2-1 win on aggregate.
“The blatantly incorrect decision by the referee to award the goal has damaged the integrity of the sport,” the Football Association of Ireland (FAI) said in a statement.”
The Irish football body pointed to a precedent – a FIFA decision in 2005 to invalidate the result of a World Cup qualification match between Uzbekistan and Bahrain on the basis of “a technical error by the referee of the match”.
“We now call on FIFA, as the world governing body for our sport, to organise for this match to be replayed.
A FIFA spokesperson said the body had yet to receive a request from the FAI.
The FAI said it hoped FIFA would “act in a similar fashion so that the standards of fair play and integrity can be protected”. It had only just received the official match reports and were in the process of reading them, he added.
“It is impossible to repeat the game,” the experienced Italian said.
Ireland coach Giovanni Trapattoni told a press conference minutes before the statement was released by his employers that he did not believe FIFA would grant a replay.”
Trapattoni also called for extra-time to be scrapped at the end of the two-leg World Cup play-offs, with the second match instead going straight to a penalty shootout in the event of a draw in regulation time.
He urged FIFA to explain how Swedish referee Martin Hansson, who failed to spot the incident, had been chosen for such a high-profile match, saying: “For this important game we needed a stronger referee, an important referee. The player himself admitted handling, but said the responsibility for seeing the incident fell to the match official.
Hansson, who works as a firefighter, failed to spot the Henry handball.
Trapattoni refused to blame the player, saying: “It wasn’t up to Henry to say ‘I touched it with my hand’.
Trapattoni refused to blame the player, saying: “It wasn’t up to Henry to say ‘I touched it with my hand’.
– Outrage –
Questions were asked in the Irish parliament after the Henry incident, with Justice Minister Dermot Ahern also suggesting Ireland appeal to FIFA for a replay.
The draw for the finals is due to be made in Cape Town on December 4, leaving little barely two weeks for a replay to be scheduled in a calendar already crowded by club matches.
“It’s the least we owe the thousands of devastated young fans around the country.
“They probably won’t grant it as we are minnows in world football but let’s put them on the spot,” he told RTE state radio.”
The Irish press were unanimous in their condemnation. Otherwise, if that result remains, it reinforces the view that if you cheat, you will win.
A Facebook page entitled “We Irish hate Thierry Henry (the cheat)” also drew hundreds of comments – some of them unprintable – including a call for an Irish boycott of French goods.
“We were robbed” said the Irish Star, “Le Cheat” added the Irish Mirror, while the Irish Sun splashed with the “Hand of the Frog” – a play on Diego Maradona’s 1986 “Hand of God” goal against England.
One financial expert said Ireland’s failure to make next year’s World Cup finals will cost the already recession-bound Irish economy millions of euros.
“I would say croissant sales will slump today,” said one contributor to the social networking site page.
Reacting to the growing row, shaving company Gillette said it had no plans to axe star striker Henry from its advertising.
Reacting to the growing row, shaving company Gillette said it had no plans to axe star striker Henry from its advertising.
“Thierry Henry has publicly acknowledged that it was a handball… This is not going to affect our relationship with Thierry Henry,” said a spokesperson for Gillette, part of US consumer products giant Procter and Gamble.

Sheens denies fielding ‘B’ team

Posted on 3rd November 2009 by German News in france - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

.Australian rugby league coach Tim Sheens has rubbished suggestions he is fielding a second-string side in the Four Nations match against France this weekend.
Sheens has opted to resting star Melbourne trio Greg Inglis, Cameron Smith and Billy Slater for the Paris clash.
The Kangaroos coach stuck to his pre-tour vow to give every member of the touring party a run during the tournament, with Michael Jennings, Josh Morris and Cooper Cronk all named to play.
Sheens claimed the inclusion of his number one halves pairing proved the Australians meant business in Paris, where a win will book a berth in the November 14 final in Leeds.
Jennings and Morris will start in the centres – the latter lining up alongside twin Brett on the left edge – while Cronk will come off the bench as back-up to starting halves Darren Lockyer and Johnathan Thurston, as well as new hooker Robbie Farah.
“If I’m resting anyone it’s because they’ve had a couple of hard hit-outs and they’ve finished with a long season and I think that’s indicative of Thurston and Lockyer starting.
“It might come across to some back in Australia as ‘oh, he’s resting people’ – it’s not the case,” Sheens said.
“The side I put out, that’s a very good side.
“I’ve changed both sides and I’m going into the third game just keeping the structure.
“For anyone to say that’s a second-string side – I don’t think we have a first-string side.
Most open are the spots on the bench, with Farah, Kurt Gidley and Cronk all battling it out for the back-up playmaker’s spot.”
While the likes of Inglis, Smith and Slater will no doubt come straight back into the side, Sheens has indicated that the squad for the November 14 final is far from decided.
Sheens also said his decision to leave Hayne on the wing and not give him a run at full-back – where he starred for Parramatta this season – was made with one eye on the final.
It is just as tight in the back row, with Ryan Hoffman and Trent Waterhouse given another chance to push for selection after being named to play France in place of injured duo Anthony Watmough (concussion/groin) and Paul Gallen (neck).
“Jarryd’s coming to terms with the wing again,” Sheens said.
“Jarryd’s coming to terms with the wing again,” Sheens said.”
Two players going nowhere are Lockyer and Thurston, though Sheens did admit the pair had been given another run just to iron out a few kinks.
“If I had a problem at the back (during the game) Jarryd would move.
“I’m concerned about getting Darren and Thurston on the same page – that hasn’t been as comfortable as I thought or as slick as it should be,” Sheens said.
It had been assumed Cronk would get the number seven jumper for the clash with France, with Australia all-but assured a finals berth.
“Game two was better. .”
Australia: Kurt Gidley, Brett Morris, Josh Morris, Michael Jennings, Jarryd Hayne, Darren Lockyer (c), Johnathan Thurston, Petero Civoniceva, Robbie Farah, Ben Hannant, Trent Waterhouse, Ryan Hoffman, Nathan Hindmarsh. I’d like to improve it, I’d like things to be working better and Darren getting good ball when he wants it.
– AAP

. Interchange: Cooper Cronk, Luke Lewis, David Shillington, Sam Thaiday

Ljubicic ends title drought in Lyon

Posted on 1st November 2009 by NZ News in france - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

.Croatian Ivan Ljubicic ended a title drought stretching back over two years overnight as he claimed the 650,000 euros Lyon ATP trophy beating Frenchman Mickael Llodra 7-6, 6-3.
The third-seeded Ljubicic, who won the first of his nine career titles at this event in 2001, required one break of serve in the first set in the 12th game to edge into the lead having wasted two break points in the sixth game.
However, that was the high point of his match as Ljubicic, ranked 29 in the world, stormed back to take the next five games and ultimately the match to claim his first title since winning on grass at s’Hertogenbosch in the summer of 2007.
Llodra, ranked 107th in the world and who required a wild card invitation to compete here, fought back to break Ljubicic in the first game of the second set and then took a 2-0 lead.
“I felt good on court and I played really good tennis. .
“My level of play was top notch and I will remember the manner in which I played such fantastic tennis this week.
“If I continue to play like this, there will still be good things to come.
“I wasn’t quite as strong physically as I had been and the semi-final against Gilles Simon took its toll on me,” said Llodra, whose previous final this year was in Marseille in February.”
Llodra, principally regarded as a doubles specialist, lamented the fact he had not been able to play as he had done for the rest of the week.
“Here I was not able to get enough first serves in.
“My general play was pretty good except for my serve which had held up alright prior to Sunday.
“My target this year was to finish in the top 100 and I will be definitely well inside that mark,” added Llodra, who has been plagued by shoulder and groin injuries this campaign.”
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Kelleher gets suspended jail term

Posted on 28th October 2009 by Asia News in france,news,nz - Tags: , , , , , , ,

.

Former All Black Byron Kelleher has received a two-month suspended jail term and been fined NZ$8700 for driving under the influence of alcohol and violent behaviour from an ensuing fight.

Kelleher appeared at court in Toulouse last night (NZ time) and pleaded guilty to both charges. People close to the scene then joined in the brawl.Last month, Kelleher was briefly held in custody after hitting a car and getting into a fight with its driver after attempting to escape.Kelleher released a statement to news agency AFP after the hearing.Kelleher picked up a minor shoulder injury and facial bruises in the scuffle.”I would like to reiterate my sincere apologies to those who would have found my behaviour shocking and now wish to draw a close to the matter, turn the page and to go back to my career.”The punishment delivered appears to me to be justified and corresponds to the seriousness with which I took this incident,” AFP quoted the halfback as saying.”When you make a mistake you have to own up to it, to have the courage to square up to it and say sorry,” he said. . It should never have escalated like it did.”Our cars collided. I was mixing with the wrong types. I got stupidly angry, due for sure to drink.”

.”I don’t want people in Toulouse to believe I’m proud of what happened, I have different values than that

Swine flu postpones French Ligue 1 match

Posted on 25th October 2009 by German News in france - Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

.The French football match between Marseille and Paris Saint Germain was postponed overnight after players contracted swine flu according to a source close to Marseille.
Paris Saint-Germain had on Saturday confirmed that its former France international attacking midfielder Ludovic Giuly and defender Mamadou Sakho had contracted swine flu. One of these was believed to be striker Louis Arnaud.
It was then announced on Sunday that midfielder Jeremy Clement had also contracted the virus and there were fears that two of the rest of the squad had symptoms of the illness. .
The squad had been visited on Sunday morning by a French Football Federation doctor and the players are taking an anti-swine flu drug as a preventive measure.
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Nuclear payments blow to French Polynesia

Posted on 14th October 2009 by German News in france - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

.Activists fighting for victims of French nuclear testing in the Pacific are stunned by conditions imposed in a compensation bill by France’s upper house.
There was praise in July when the National Assembly approved a bill for compensating the victims of tests carried out in French Polynesia and Algeria over more than three decades.
Roland Oldham, president of the Mororua e Tatou Association representing French Pacific nuclear test workers, told Radio Australia’s Pacific Beat the actions of the French Senate reflected arrogance in metropolitan France towards its territories.
About 150,000 civilian and military personnel took part and many later developed serious health problems.
“For our Polynesian people it’s going to be hard.
He said the Senate has imposed strict requirements on applicants to prove their case on various grounds.
“A lot of us people don’t keep a document. A lot of our people won’t be part of compensation,” he said. So it’s going to be very difficult for them. We don’t have the same conception of things.
“It’s the same people that have done the nuclear testing in our place, in our island,” Mr Oldham said.”
He said the Senate had further rejected a bid by his organisation to be part of a compensation committee, which will now be made up of only people nominated by the French Ministry of Defence.”
Mr Oldham says the geographic zone from which claims would be considered has been greatly limited.
“They’ve been saying for many years that the tests are clean and today they’re going to decide about compensation on their own.
“And finally, there’s only one person decides if the case is going to be taken into account, [if a victim] is going to have compensation or not – and that’s the Ministry of Defence,” he said.
He says the views of Polynesians have not been taken into account. I mean, to me it’s very restricted.
“And they call that democracy. .”
He says Mororua e Tatou will now think about other strategies, including strong political action and seeking Pacific-wide support, to win their battle

Missing student’s family not happy with police search

Posted on 9th October 2009 by German News in france,news,nz - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

.

A missing Indian student’s family say Auckland police diverted resources to search for two-year-old Aisling Symes, leaving them to look for Srikanth Rayadurgam on their own.

Mr Rayadurgam, 23, disappeared on his way to class at the Auckland University of Technology eight days ago. Aisling went missing in West Auckland on Monday evening.

Acting Detective Senior Sergeant Joe Aumua of Avondale police told One News the two cases did not have the same officers working on them.

The Kakanoor family told 3News they have been left to search for Mr Rayadurgam on their own, and questioned whether it was because of the colour of their skin. This inquiry is being dealt with by the Avondale police station and I’m happy with the resources that we have,” he said.

“The inquiry out west is a separate inquiry.

Mr Rayadurgam’s brother-in-law Nageesh Kakanoor found his backpack, mobile phone and his left shoe scattered along the waterfront.

They said when police divers were finally called to search the harbour they were suddenly pulled off the case to join the search for Aisling.

Mr Kakanoor and his wife Padam said Mr Rayadurgam had no enemies and was not suicidal, but police acted far too slowly.

“I honestly don’t know, to tell you.

Mr Kakanoor and his wife questioned why one missing person’s case was more important than another.

.