Tag: Macron

  • Tinubu, Macron agree on stronger partnership

    Tinubu, Macron agree on stronger partnership

    Nigeria and France have agreed to a stronger partnership for shared prosperity.

    The two nations struck the deal during a “production lunch” at Élysée Palace by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and President Emmanuel Macron.

    President Tinubu, who is on a 10-day working vacation in Europe made this agreement known through his verified X Handle @officialABAT.

    He wrote: “Had a productive lunch with President Emmanuel Macron today(yesterday) at the Élysée Palace. We reviewed key areas of cooperation between Nigeria and France and agreed to deepen our partnership for mutual prosperity and global stability.”

    Read Also: Tinubu orders further crash in food prices

    The meeting underscores Tinubu’s continued diplomatic outreach during his time away from Abuja, with an emphasis on consolidating Nigeria’s strategic partnerships with France, one of its longstanding allies in trade, security, and development.

    The Élysée Palace meeting adds to a growing record of high-level engagements between the two countries, which have in recent years broadened cooperation in energy, counterterrorism, climate action  and investment promotion.

  • Britain, France must keeping Europe safe, says Macron

    Britain, France must keeping Europe safe, says Macron

    French President, Emmanuel Macron, has urged Britain and France “to shoulder the burden of European security” as he appealed for the two nations to work closely on issues, including defence and migrant crisis.

    He spoke as the first European leader to receive a state visit to Britain and address both Houses of Parliament since Brexit was finalised in 2020.

    Macron said events that saw UK leave EU are in the past, and he hailed Sir Keir Starmer  for his reset of the relations.

    While he listed the economy, climate change and immigration as areas for cooperation, he put the need to defend Europe at the top of the agenda.

    He asserted that Europe would “never accept that might is right” and would resist Russian president’s attempts to subjugate Ukraine.

    “Every time Vladimir Putin’s Russia advances in Ukraine, the threat moves closer to us,” he warned, underlining importance of a summit he and Sir Keir will host on Thursday to strengthen a “coalition of the willing” to ensure peace settlement there.

    However, with Nato members agreeing to spend 3.5 per cent of GDP on defence and the US withdrawing its support under Donald Trump, Macron said the UK and France must be the pillars on which European defence is built.

    Read Also: Tinubu not distracted by 2027 election discourse, says Idris

    He said: “Our two countries … both fully shoulder the responsibility when it comes to European security.

    “And we are faced with new threats, with aggressive nuclear powers, with sometimes hesitating alliances, and return of major conflict on our continent. This is why our summit is so important, and the announcement we prepared so historical,” he said.

    He said there is an expectation that the UK and France, “faced with revisionist neighbours”, have a “special responsibility for the security of the continent”.

    While President Macron, who was accompanied by his wife Brigitte, said that Brexit was “deeply regrettable”, he celebrated the return of a close bond between the two countries, which he saw as the pivotal relationship in Europe.

    He appealed to MPs and peers gathered in the Royal Gallery to “not let the Channel grow any wider”.

    In a sideswipe at populists, the European statesman, who has refused to meet Reform UK leader Nigel Farage, also drew inspiration from Winston Churchill’s vision of “a world order based on law, justice and respect for territorial integrity” that was “today being attacked on a daily basis as we witness direct attacks on our democracies, the return of war on our continent, the resurgence of imperial impulses and the flouting of international rules by destabilising powers”.

    He also hailed an exchange of museum artifacts, which will see the Bayeux Tapestry displayed in the British Museum next year and the Sutton Hoo treasure to go to France, “as the beginning of this new era of exchange and the reopening of these mutual movements”.

    He said it is time to “make sure that not only our two countries will save themselves by their own exertions, but also that we will save Europe by our example and our solidarity”.

    The state visit is the first to the UK by an EU head of state since Brexit, and the first to be held at Windsor, rather than Buckingham Palace, for more than a decade, thanks to ongoing refurbishments at the London residence.

  • Tinubu and Macron: Leveraging friendship for development, by Tunde Rahman

    Tinubu and Macron: Leveraging friendship for development, by Tunde Rahman

    It is received wisdom that supportive, high-quality friends in good places are important in human relationships and in advancing personal and group progress. It is also the case in strengthening relationships among nations. 

    Since his assumption of office, President Bola Tinubu has activated the friendship he has built over time in his quest for Nigeria’s development. 

    The President has embarked on reforms to reposition the economy and put the country on the right track for optimal development based on his Renewed Hope Agenda. To realise this lofty objective, he is leaving no stone unturned, including leveraging his friendship and international connections. 

    President Tinubu’s three-day state visit to France provided ample opportunity for this leverage. The visit was at the invitation of President Emmanuel Macron. During the visit, the French President demonstrated he is a true friend of President Tinubu and Nigeria. President Macron rolled out the proverbial red carpet for his friend. For instance, on arrival in Paris on Wednesday, November 27, officers of the elite Republican Guard welcomed President Tinubu with a parade with full honours at Orly Airport to begin the state visit, the first by a Nigerian leader in over two decades.

    The next day, Thursday, President Macron and his wife, Brigitte, formally received President Tinubu and his wife, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, at the historic Invalides Memorial Complex in Paris, where another full parade was displayed. The two leaders then went to Elysee Palace, where their families exchanged gifts. Tinubu and Macron later had bilateral discussions on economic and political issues involving their two countries.

    The two presidents and business leaders from their countries attended a business meeting organised by the Franco-Nigerian Business Council. Later in the evening, President Tinubu, his wife, and his entourage were treated to a sumptuous dinner.

    By many accounts, President Tinubu’s state visit to France was hugely successful. The visit was unprecedented in the impressive way Macron hosted him, the issues discussed, and the benefits accruable from the trip. The French Ambassador to Nigeria, Marc Fonbaustier, said President Macron had received no other African leader in such a manner.

    Two reasons could be adduced for this exceptional reception. The first is the friendship between President Tinubu and President Macron. The French President decided to give his friend the best reception possible. 

    The other is the fact that Nigeria is pivotal in Macron’s new policy on Africa. With Paris’s waning influence in French-speaking African countries, the French President is making overtures to English-speaking African countries where Nigeria holds an important position.

    What are the immediate, short and long-term gains of President Tinubu’s France visit? 

    In the immediate term, the visit helped to put issues about the challenges confronting Nigeria and Africa on the front burner, as evident from the editorial authored by the two presidents before the visit. 

    The editorial was published in the media in Nigeria, France, and across the globe. In the article, the two leaders spoke of their readiness to collaborate as equals in addressing burning issues, which included a more robust health system, education for all, sustainable and legal migration pathways and just representation for Africa in the United Nations Security Council as well as in challenges like insecurity, climate change, security of the Gulf of Guinea and instability in the Sahel Region.

    It is instructive that while emphasising their strategic autonomy, the two countries agreed to stay non-aligned with any bloc, opting to overcome these challenges by renewing global governance and backing uniform implementation of international humanitarian laws, whether in Gaza, Sudan, or Ukraine, in a way devoid of double standards.

    Read Also: Nigerians will appreciate Tinubu for Tax Reforms – Reps deputy spokesman

    The two presidents again discussed these issues, among others, in their bilateral talks, and reaffirmed their commitments. An elated President Macron later described President Tinubu’s state visit as a milestone, heralding deeper bilateral relationships.

    There was a strategic engagement between Nigerian and French businessmen under the auspices of the Franco-Nigerian Business Council and a follow-up France-Nigeria Business Forum. At the meeting were top Nigerian business leaders such as Alhaji Aliko Dangote, Alhaji Samad Rabiu, Mr. Tony Elumelu, Mr. Jim Ovia and Mr. Aigboje Aig-Imoukuede, among others, as well as some state governors including the Chairman of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum and Governor of Kwara, Abdulrasaq Abdulrahman, Babajide Sanwo-olu (Lagos), Dapo Abiodun (Ogun) and Peter Mbah (Enugu). 

    Among the ministers at the session were the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy Wale Edun, Dele Alake (Solid Minerals), Abubakar Kyari (Agriculture), Dave Umahi (Works), Jumoke Oduwole (Trade & Investment), Hannatu Musawa (Tourism, Culture & Creative Economy), Idris Mohammed Malagi (Information & National Orientation), Mohammed Badaru Abubakar (Defence), and Bosun Tijani (Communications & Digital Economy). 

    The France-Nigeria Business Forum was held on Friday morning and attended by business leaders from both countries. The critical takeaway from the forum is the resolve of the French business people to move away from trading and to engage in value additions in crucial sectors like agriculture, manufacturing, energy transition, and power.

    Two interconnected developments during the visit are particularly noteworthy. Zenith Bank inaugurated its banking operations in Paris, while the United Bank for Africa also got approval for its operating license. President Tinubu and President Macron witnessed UBA Group Chairman Tony Elumelu and French Minister of Economy, Finance, and Industry Antoine Armand signing the agreements for the bank to commence full banking operations in Paris.

    Two transformative agreements were also signed with the French government and its development agency, AFD (Agence Francaise de Development), during the visit. Minister of Finance Edun led the Federal Government in signing the agreements collectively valued at over €300 million euros and designed to strengthen vital sectors of Nigeria’s economy and drive sustainable development. The Minister of Economy, Finance and Industry of France, Armand, co-signed for the French Government.

    During the visit, both presidents affirmed their strong commitment to enhancing investments in key sectors like food security, energy, solid minerals, education, and defence. President Macron had earlier assured of his commitment to encouraging more investments in the solid minerals sector, with the signing of an agreement at a bilateral meeting where the Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Alake, presented the sector’s potential.

    Importantly, French investments in the creative industries, particularly Nollywood and youth-focused initiatives, are underway. President Macron, who had lived in Nigeria before when he worked at the French Embassy in Lagos, described Nigerians as hugely talented and resilient people. He paid special tributes to Nobel Laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka and famous Afrobeat musician Femi Kuti, both of whom he called global icons. 

    Looking back on the three-day visit, President Tinubu thanked President Macron for the warm reception and agreements reached by the two of them and expressed the hope that the relations between France and Nigeria would be brighter and better.

    He said: “In addition to the economic prospects and what you mean to Europe, America, and the African continent, there is a good prospect that you will not forget who we are. You open your doors for investment for our friends and brothers here.

    “It is a good time for all of us. I cannot be prouder than I am to be President of Nigeria at this challenging time. I have people who are very clearly inspired, who are determined to change the course of Africa by changing the rot of the past, blending a future that our children and grandchildren can be proud of.”

    On his part, President Macron remarked: “We have confidence that you, Mr. President, will reinforce our relationship with Nigeria, and it will cover the West Coast region, with ECOWAS playing the leading role. I will seek your leadership to work as partners of progress. You are the great leader of the great country in Africa.”

    There is no doubt that President Tinubu is deploying his friendship to advance his economic development agenda for Nigeria. 

    *Rahman is the senior special assistant to the President on media matters.

  • Tinubu, Macron forge stronger collaboration on food security, energy, investment

    Tinubu, Macron forge stronger collaboration on food security, energy, investment

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu affirmed Nigeria’s commitment to strengthening cooperation with France in key sectors such as food security, energy, solid minerals, education, and defence.

    According to a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, President Tinubu made the affirmation during a high-profile meeting with President Emmanuel Macron of France at the prestigious Palais des L’Élysée in Paris.

    At a joint press conference, President Tinubu highlighted the vast, yet largely untapped potential within Nigeria’s agricultural sector and beckoned international investors to capitalize on the nation’s welcoming investment climate.

    “The French-Nigeria Business Forum is doing a lot already, but we need to do more on food security. We cannot help but invest in another country.”

    He emphasised Nigeria’s flourishing financial sector as a facilitator for foreign investment, particularly from French enterprises, as part of the drive to bolster food security.

    “Nigeria’s financial sector is evolving and flourishing. We are also creating grounds for investment in Nigeria’s economy for French nationals, especially in the area of food security.

    “It is our responsibility to put together a food security programme for the private sector to come and invest in the country.

    “We are working on stability and we are getting closer and closer, but we can do better and better,” the President stated.

    President Tinubu said Nigeria’s economy was being repositioned for more Foreign Direct Investment that would directly impact the livelihood of the citizens.

    “I can assure you that Nigeria is open for business and close to this, we have a vibrant youth population that is educated, and ready to be trained in various areas of entrepreneurship and development,” he said.

    The President implored the French government to extend to Nigeria training that would develop the youthful population.

    “Furthermore, we should de-risk the opportunities in the solid minerals. We have the potential and we have agreed on a deeper and deeper relationship,” the President added.

    President Tinubu noted that Nigeria, like most African nations, had been preoccupied with tackling issues of food security.

    “A starved nation will not care about weather or environment, and in the 21st Century no child should go to bed hungry,” he told the French President and his delegation.

    “If an African child is given a glass of milk in a class, there will be no problem in getting him to return and stay in school to learn. The more educated the children are, the better it is for us,” President Tinubu said.

    On security, the President noted that there was a need for collective responsibility to fight terrorism.

    “Nigeria is a partner in progress. We are ready to partner with France so that we can have security operations that will stop the challenge of migration,” he noted.

    President Tinubu said the blue economy in Nigeria also provides a huge opportunity for investment, with unexplored potential in fishery.

    “In Lagos, we have tamed the Atlantic ocean. For us, fishery is an important aspect of investment.

    “We want to assure the French investment community that Nigeria is open for business. It shall be easy in, and easy out,” the President noted.

    President Macron acknowledged President Tinubu’s state visit as a milestone heralding deeper bilateral relationships, particularly emphasizing collaborative growth in creative industries and youth-focused initiatives.

    The French President noted that the global humanitarian challenges could only be solved with governments working together.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Tinubu, Macron strengthen ties

    “We have confidence that you, Mr President will reinforce our relationship with Nigeria, and it will cover the West Coast region, with ECOWAS playing the leading role.

    “I will seek your leadership to work as partners of progress. You are the great leader of the great country in Africa.

    “We appreciate your visionary leadership and energy in transforming the economy of your country. We will work together for collective, global success,” he said.

    President Macron had earlier assured that he would encourage more investments in the solid minerals sector, with the signing of an agreement, during a political meeting where the Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Mr. Dele Alake, made a presentation on the potentials

    Earlier, President Tinubu and First Lady Senator Oluremi Tinubu were welcomed with full honours at Hotel Les Invalides and Palais De l’Élysée by President Macron and his wife, Brigitte Macron.

  • JUST IN: Tinubu, Macron strengthen ties

    JUST IN: Tinubu, Macron strengthen ties

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has begun his two-day visit to France, with both countries seeking increased economic cooperation.

    During the historic visit, the host country is expected to seek to strengthen ties with English-speaking nations of Africa.

    President Tinubu, along with his wife, First Lady Oluremi Tinubu, were welcomed to the Élysée Palace on Thursday, by their host, President Emmanuel Macron of France and his wife, Brigitte Macron.

    The two national anthems were rendered in the courtyard of one of Paris’s landmarks, the historic Invalides Memorial Complex, indicating the beginning of a visit aimed at encouraging economic partnerships between Nigeria and France.

    At a joint press conference, President Tinubu spoke about the nuggets of security and boosting of the economy as well as other common concerns affecting the West African region.

    The Nigerian Leader also spoke to the leaps and bounds of progress recorded in the fight against insecurity by the Nigerian government.

    Read Also: Tinubu in France for talks with Macron

    President Tinubu’s first official State visit to Paris marked the trip as the first state visit by a Nigerian leader in more than two decades to France.

    At the press conference, President Macron sought for “renewal” between Paris and Africa.

    President Macron said the visit has afforded the two sides opportunities to deepen the already dynamic relationship between France and Nigeria.

    Details shortly…

  • UK’s Starmer to meet Macron to discuss Ukraine support after Trump win

    UK’s Starmer to meet Macron to discuss Ukraine support after Trump win

    British Prime Minister Keir Starmer will meet French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday to discuss ways to help Ukraine, after the election of Donald Trump has raised concerns of reduced U.S. support for the war against Russia.

    Days after Trump was elected to begin a second term as U.S.president in January, Starmer will travel to France, where he will talk with Macron and also become the first British leader to attend French Armistice Day services since World War Two.

    Starmer and Macron will discuss “Russia’s ongoing barbaric invasion of Ukraine and the appalling humanitarian situation in Gaza,” Downing Street said.

    Trump has criticised the level of U.S. support for Ukraine’s fight against Russia since the 2022 full-scale invasion and has promised to end the conflict without explaining how.

    Britain and France have said it is essential to keep supporting Ukraine against Russia to protect the European continent as a whole.

    Europe has been the biggest provider of aid to Ukraine, allocating 118 billion euros ($126 billion) since the start of the conflict, while the United States has provided 85 billion euros in total, according to the Kiel Institute for the World Economy.

    Britain and the European Union are expected to begin talks next year on a post-Brexit security pact, covering areas such as defence and energy cooperation, as they look to take more responsibility for their own security.

    Read Also: UK PM Starmer congratulates Trump on “historic” US election victory

    Some European politicians have said Europe cannot replace the financial and military aid from the United States, including military resources such as F-16 fighter jets and Army Tactical Missile Systems (ATACMS).

    On his visit to France, Starmer is scheduled to meet the new French Prime Minister Michel Barnier. The meeting will be their first since Barnier became prime minister in September.

    The last British leader to attend the French Armistice Day commemorations was Winston Churchill, who was hosted by Charles de Gaulle in 1944, Starmer’s office said.

    (Reuters)

  • C promised the area would not be forgotten after the Olympics.

    C promised the area would not be forgotten after the Olympics.

     “I will come back after the Games to see the legacy with you and to see how life has changed,” he said.

    Meanwhile, France’s foreign minister said Israeli athletes were welcome at the Paris Games after a hard-left member of the French parliament sparked outrage by urging them to stay away because of the conflict in Gaza.

     “The Israeli delegation is welcome in France,” Stephane Sejourne said in Brussels ahead of talks with his Israeli counterpart, adding that the call by France Unbowed (LFI) lawmaker Thomas Portes for the country’s exclusion had been “irresponsible and dangerous”.

     “We will ensure the security of the delegation,” Sejourne added.

    Portes drew an angry response from French Jewish groups and both political opponents and allies.

    Yonathan Arfi, head of the Representative Council of Jewish Institutions in France (Crif), said the comments were “putting a target on the backs of Israeli athletes”.

    Arfi said Israeli athletes were “already the most in danger at the Olympic Games”, recalling the 11 “murdered by Palestinian terrorists” at the 1972 Munich Games.

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    Meanwhile, French security forces were continuing preparations for the unprecedented opening ceremony on Friday, the first time a Summer Olympics has opened outside the main stadium.

    Between 6,000 and 7,000 athletes are to sail down the river on 85 barges and boats, with a backdrop of world-famous monuments including Notre-Dame cathedral, currently being renovated after a devastating fire in 2019.

    The athletes will disembark for the culmination of a ceremony at the Trocadero opposite the Eiffel Tower that organisers promise will be spectacular.

    Up to 300,000 ticketed spectators will watch from stands and on the river banks and another 200,000 are expected to watch from the overlooking apartments.

    Turning to the sport, Slovenian cyclist Tadej Pogacar is setting his sights on Olympic gold in the road race after winning the Tour de France for the third time on Sunday.

     “We are living in the golden age of cycling,” Pogacar said after completing a commanding victory in Nice, where the finish was moved to because of the Olympic preparations in Paris.

  • Macron asks Attal to stay as PM as France faces hung parliament

    Macron asks Attal to stay as PM as France faces hung parliament

    Emmanuel Macron has asked Gabriel Attal to stay on temporarily as France’s prime minister to maintain stability after a snap general election left the country facing a hung parliament and fraught negotiations to form a new government.

    Parties on the left want to seize the moment after their shock win over the far right and yesterday met to discuss policy and potential prime minister candidates. The green-left alliance, the New Popular Front (NFP), surprised pollsters by coming first in the final round – a win that was considered highly unlikely, with pre-election polls predicting a far-right surge.

    However, with no absolute majority, efforts to form a new French government may take weeks.

    The snap election was called last month after a humiliating defeat to the far-right National Rally (RN) of Marine Le Pen in European parliamentary elections.

    Read Also: Dangote Refinery capable of solving Nigeria’s forex problems, says S&P Global 

    The NFP won 182 seats in the 577-seat national assembly, with Macron’s centrist Together coalition returning 168 deputies and the RN – which after the first round on 30 June had been eyeing a majority – finishing third on 143.

    With no single group securing an absolute majority, the options include a technocratic government of experts, the NFP trying to form a minority government and seeking bill-by-bill support, or a broad coalition of the centre left and centre right.

    Attal tendered his resignation yesterday morning after Macron’s camp lost more than a third of its MPs.

    The president asked Attal to remain in power in a caretaker capacity to see out the period of the Paris Olympics and to reassure the international community and markets that France still had a functioning government.

  • Emmanuel Macron announces dissolution of National Assembly

    Emmanuel Macron announces dissolution of National Assembly

    French President Emmanuel Macron has announced the dissolution of the National Assembly, following defeat of his party in 2024 European Parliament (EP) elections, according to local media report.

    “I have decided to give you back the choice of your parliamentary future through the vote. I am therefore dissolving the National Assembly,” Macron said in a short speech.

    “This is a serious, weighty decision. But it is above all an act of trust,” he added.

    He added that the elections to the National Assembly are to take place in two rounds on June 30 and July 7.

    Macron’s Renaissance party gained 15.2 per cent of the votes in 2024 European Parliament elections, far behind far-right National Rally who received 31.8 per cent.

    Read Also: Biden, Macron pledge continuous support for Ukraine

    “The unprecedented gap between the presidential majority and the leading opposition party reflects a stinging disavowal and rejection of the policies led by Emmanuel Macron,” RN President Jordan Bardella said after the EP elections results were unveiled, quoted by local media.

    “We’re ready for it. I call on French people to join us in forming around the RN a majority in the service of the only cause that guides our steps: France.” parliamentary party leader of RN, Marine Le Pen, said Sunday evening on social media platform X.

    The EP elections were held from June 6 to June 9, with voters of the 27 EU member states selecting 720 lawmakers to the 10th EP.

    (Xinhua/NAN)

  • Biden, Macron pledge continuous support for Ukraine

    Biden, Macron pledge continuous support for Ukraine

    United States President, Joe Biden and French President, Emmanuel Macron have advocated for unwavering support for Ukraine, emphasising the importance of standing against tyranny and defending freedom.

    Speaking at the American cemetery in Normandy in commemoration of the 80th anniversary of D-Day, Biden delivered a resolute message to Moscow, asserting that the U.S. and its allies refuse to capitulate to bullies or dictators.

    He underscored the significance of honouring the sacrifices made on the beaches of Normandy and reiterated the commitment to safeguarding Ukraine from subjugation, emphasizing that the threat posed by Russian aggression extends far beyond its borders.

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    Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and his wife, Olena, were warmly received by Western leaders at an international event on Omaha Beach.

    Macron lauded Zelenskiy for his courage, drawing a standing ovation from the assembled dignitaries. Despite the absence of UK Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, Zelenskiy’s presence elicited expressions of solidarity and support from the gathered leaders.

    Macron’s tribute highlighted the bravery of those who fought for freedom and condemned attempts to redraw borders through force, emphasising the need to honour the sacrifices of past generations by remaining steadfast in the face of modern challenges.

    Russian representatives were notably absent from the commemorations, a decision justified by French officials citing the ongoing conflict in Ukraine. However, the events were marked by strong displays of solidarity with Ukraine, reaffirming the international community’s commitment to its sovereignty and security.