简体 | 繁体
loading...
海外博客
    • 首页
    • 新闻
    • 读图
    • 财经
    • 教育
    • 家居
    • 健康
    • 美食
    • 时尚
    • 旅游
    • 影视
    • 博客
    • 群吧
    • 论坛
    • 电台
  • 热点
  • 原创
  • 时政
  • 旅游
  • 美食
  • 家居
  • 健康
  • 财经
  • 教育
  • 情感
  • 星座
  • 时尚
  • 娱乐
  • 历史
  • 文化
  • 社区
  • 帮助
您的位置: 文学城 » 博客 »Macron Recognises NATO's Responsibility on Libya

Macron Recognises NATO's Responsibility on Libya

2018-02-02 10:41:32

风萧萧_Frank

风萧萧_Frank
以文会友
首页 文章页 文章列表 博文目录
给我悄悄话
打印 被阅读次数

 

"We Have Plunged Libya Into 'Anomie'": Macron Recognises NATO's Responsibility..

 

In front of Tunisian parliamentarians, Emmanuel Macron delivered a very frank speech about the responsibility of Western countries in the current situation of Libya, evoking the Syrian issue.

Rarely has a leader of a NATO member state been so far in recognizing responsibility for the 2011 western intervention in Libya in the country’s state today: in a speech to Tunisian deputies On 1 February, French President Emmanuel Macron declared that “Europe, the United States and some others [have] a responsibility in the current situation in Libya”.

"We have plunged Libya into anomie": Macron recognizes NATO's responsibilitySource: Reuters
Emmanuel Macron on a state visit to Tunisia
 

“The idea of ??unilaterally and militarily resolving a country’s situation is a misconception,” he said to the Tunisian parliamentarians’ applause. “I do not forget that many decided that we had to finish with the Libyan leader without there being any project for the continuation”, he added, implicitly referring to Nicolas Sarkozy, who had engaged France in an intervention aimed at dislodging Muammar Gaddafi from power. “We have collectively plunged Libya since those years into anomie without being able to resolve the situation,” he added.

While the security risks posed by political instability and violence in Libya are now also weighing on Tunisia, the speech of Emmanuel Macron has taken a particular resonance. But it is undoubtedly the situation in Syria, which many Western chancelleries have called for the resignation of President Bashar al-Assad in recent years, that the French head of state thought when he said: “Whatever “One thinks of a leader, [one can not] imagine that [one] can substitute for the sovereignty of a people to decide its future”.

Libya has been plunged into chaos since Western intervention and the fall of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. Two authorities are fighting for power today. On the one hand, the national unity government, recognized by the international community and based in Tripoli. On the other hand, an authority exercising power in the east of the country, with the support of Marshal  Khalifa Haftar  who holds his legitimacy for his military success on the ground.

Macron hails Tunisia's 'democratic revolution' on state visit

print
 
Subscribe to our videos for free!
© Eric Feferberg, AFP | French President Emmanuel Macron prepares to address the Tunisian parliament in Tunis on February 1, 2018.

Text by FRANCE 24 Latest update : 2018-02-02

http://www.france24.com/en/20180201-macron-hails-tunisia-democratic-revolution-arab-spring

France's President Emmanuel Macron paid tribute to Tunisian’s transition to democracy in a speech to parliament on Thursday, pledging to boost French investment in the country in order to buttress its faltering economy.

Addressing lawmakers in Tunis, Macron paid lengthy tribute to Tunisia's 2011 revolution, the first of the Arab Spring uprisings, and to its efforts to build a democratic system, saying they remained an example for a troubled region.

"The challenge which is yours today is to transform this cultural and democratic spring into a political, economic and social spring," that benefited all social classes, he said.

Macron's visit comes less than a month after protests erupted in towns and cities across Tunisia, triggered by price and tax hikes.

Though Tunisia has won praise for political compromises and a 2014 democratic constitution, successive governments have failed to resolve deep economic and social problems including high youth unemployment and marginalisation in the country's interior.

Activists say some democratic freedoms appear to have been eroded, criticising mass arrests carried out during the recent demonstrations.

As Macron visited, protesters calling for jobs brought all production in the country's declining phosphate industry to a halt by staging sit-ins at plants, an official said.

Macron told lawmakers they had a "vast responsibility" to ensure that "nothing that has been undertaken in the last few years is weakened or overturned".

Holding delayed local elections, fighting corruption and reforming public services were all crucial to bolster democracy, he added.

"The Arab world, the Maghreb, all the shores of the Mediterranean are watching you. They are watching you work and they need to see you succeed," he added.

To support job creation, Macron said he aims to double the rate of French private sector investment over the five years of his term, which ends in 2022.

"A number of companies have already confirmed their willingness to invest," the French president said, without naming any.

French direct investment in Tunisia was worth 3.3 billion dinars ($1.39 billion) in 2016, making it the second biggest foreign investor behind the United Arab Emirates, according to figures from the French economy ministry.

Macron had pledged more than €270 million ($335 million) in new financing for Tunisia on Wednesday, as he began his two-day state visit.

In his speech to parliament, Macron also said France would put all its energy into finding a solution to the conflict in neighbouring Libya and would push for elections to be held there by the end of the year.

He said Western powers had a special “responsibility” towards Libya, criticizing the 2011 NATO intervention sponsored by his predecessor, Nicolas Sarkozy, for leaving the country prey to instability and extremism.

(FRANCE 24 with REUTERS)

Macron urges military action in Libya to fight human trafficking - RT.com

https://www.rt.com/news/411428-macron-military-action-libya/
Nov 30, 2017 - French President Emmanuel Macron is calling for “concrete military and police” action against human trafficking in Libya.

Macron's new drive to send migrants home from Libya | World | The ...

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/.../macron-s-new-plan-to-send-migrants-home-from-libya-g...
Nov 29, 2017 - President Macron has promised “massive support” for a new international drive to repatriate African migrants stranded and enslaved in Libya.The French leader, m.

Emmanuel Macron's Africa refugee plan condemned as 'racist and ...

www.independent.co.uk › News › World › Europe
Aug 30, 2017 - Emmanuel Macron's plans for asylum requests to be handled in Libya, Chad and Niger to try and stem the flow of refugees to Europe has been branded “racist and inhumane” by left-wingers in the European Parliament. The leaders of France, Germany, Italy and Spain agreed the plan to stem the flow of ...

Macron charges European initiative to evacuate Africans trapped in ...

dailypost.ng › News
Nov 28, 2017 - ... Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday he would ask European leaders to help evacuate Africans in danger in Lybia after reports appearing to show African migrants being traded there sparked an international outcry. “I will propose that Africa and Europe come to the rescue of the people trapped in Libya, ...

From Ambition to Style to Substance: Emmanuel Macron Makes His Mark on France ...

Macron's Right: Africans Really Are Enslaving Other Africans, But ...

Macron hails Tunisia's 'democratic revolution' on state visit - France 24

The Big Lie About the Libyan War – Foreign Policy

 

登录后才可评论.
  • 文学城简介
  • 广告服务
  • 联系我们
  • 招聘信息
  • 注册笔名
  • 申请版主
  • 收藏文学城

WENXUECITY.COM does not represent or guarantee the truthfulness, accuracy, or reliability of any of communications posted by other users.

Copyright ©1998-2025 wenxuecity.com All rights reserved. Privacy Statement & Terms of Use & User Privacy Protection Policy

今日热点

  • 回国生活:如愿以偿后,逃回英国了我生活着
  • 每天都有要花钱的事多伦多橄榄树
  • 顶级海鲜餐厅The Sea 浙大同学小欢聚杭州阿立
  • 美国会对伊朗动手吗?2020的冬天
  • 人的痛苦来自于什么?淡淡的日子
  • 俺王哥,在直播 !mychina
  • 中国直播带货狂潮,为何未能颠覆西方?雅酷原创
  • 教父的智慧,与你的敌人关系要更紧密ShalakoW
  • 降息加息收割全世界蒋闻铭
  • 关税上的朝三暮四,美股获益老财主说两句
  • Garmin和Coros,我的初步体验布兰雅
  • “旅游” 第三天“香港”华人lee
  • 长篇小说《谷雨立夏间》270 一别之后可能成功的P
  • 那“瓜”之我的往事纽约代伟

一周热点

  • 回国生活:这里真的很美,外国人也多我生活着
  • 意淫的夏草: 吸精无底洞BeijingGirl1
  • 如果能一直活在四十岁多伦多橄榄树
  • 分享一下控糖减磅的理论与实践如山
  • 父亲的爱: 孝勤豁达,远离烂人烂事康赛欧
  • 当退休的时候,你富的流油了吗?mychina
  • 洛杉矶内战 — 帝国凋零前的大戏?赵大夫话吧
  • 一个大骗子的应有下场!菲儿天地
  • 日裔美国人集中营系列16——结束语(下)FrankTruce1
  • 没想到旷世奇才,竟是世俗渣男麦姐
  • 你算老几,也配当汉奸sandstone2
  • 这种房子不能买,太难卖!山里人家168
  • 千万别买加拿大的洗衣机顶级朋友
  • 中国科学论文与大学排名的海市蜃楼雅美之途
Macron Recognises...
切换到网页版
风萧萧_Frank

风萧萧_Frank

Macron Recognises NATO's Responsibility on Libya

风萧萧_Frank (2018-02-02 10:41:32) 评论 (0)

 

"We Have Plunged Libya Into 'Anomie'": Macron Recognises NATO's Responsibility..

 

In front of Tunisian parliamentarians, Emmanuel Macron delivered a very frank speech about the responsibility of Western countries in the current situation of Libya, evoking the Syrian issue.

Rarely has a leader of a NATO member state been so far in recognizing responsibility for the 2011 western intervention in Libya in the country’s state today: in a speech to Tunisian deputies On 1 February, French President Emmanuel Macron declared that “Europe, the United States and some others [have] a responsibility in the current situation in Libya”.

"We have plunged Libya into anomie": Macron recognizes NATO's responsibilitySource: Reuters
Emmanuel Macron on a state visit to Tunisia
 

“The idea of ??unilaterally and militarily resolving a country’s situation is a misconception,” he said to the Tunisian parliamentarians’ applause. “I do not forget that many decided that we had to finish with the Libyan leader without there being any project for the continuation”, he added, implicitly referring to Nicolas Sarkozy, who had engaged France in an intervention aimed at dislodging Muammar Gaddafi from power. “We have collectively plunged Libya since those years into anomie without being able to resolve the situation,” he added.

While the security risks posed by political instability and violence in Libya are now also weighing on Tunisia, the speech of Emmanuel Macron has taken a particular resonance. But it is undoubtedly the situation in Syria, which many Western chancelleries have called for the resignation of President Bashar al-Assad in recent years, that the French head of state thought when he said: “Whatever “One thinks of a leader, [one can not] imagine that [one] can substitute for the sovereignty of a people to decide its future”.

Libya has been plunged into chaos since Western intervention and the fall of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. Two authorities are fighting for power today. On the one hand, the national unity government, recognized by the international community and based in Tripoli. On the other hand, an authority exercising power in the east of the country, with the support of Marshal  Khalifa Haftar  who holds his legitimacy for his military success on the ground.

Macron hails Tunisia's 'democratic revolution' on state visit

print
 
Subscribe to our videos for free!
© Eric Feferberg, AFP | French President Emmanuel Macron prepares to address the Tunisian parliament in Tunis on February 1, 2018.

Text by FRANCE 24 Latest update : 2018-02-02

http://www.france24.com/en/20180201-macron-hails-tunisia-democratic-revolution-arab-spring

France's President Emmanuel Macron paid tribute to Tunisian’s transition to democracy in a speech to parliament on Thursday, pledging to boost French investment in the country in order to buttress its faltering economy.

Addressing lawmakers in Tunis, Macron paid lengthy tribute to Tunisia's 2011 revolution, the first of the Arab Spring uprisings, and to its efforts to build a democratic system, saying they remained an example for a troubled region.

"The challenge which is yours today is to transform this cultural and democratic spring into a political, economic and social spring," that benefited all social classes, he said.

Macron's visit comes less than a month after protests erupted in towns and cities across Tunisia, triggered by price and tax hikes.

Though Tunisia has won praise for political compromises and a 2014 democratic constitution, successive governments have failed to resolve deep economic and social problems including high youth unemployment and marginalisation in the country's interior.

Activists say some democratic freedoms appear to have been eroded, criticising mass arrests carried out during the recent demonstrations.

As Macron visited, protesters calling for jobs brought all production in the country's declining phosphate industry to a halt by staging sit-ins at plants, an official said.

Macron told lawmakers they had a "vast responsibility" to ensure that "nothing that has been undertaken in the last few years is weakened or overturned".

Holding delayed local elections, fighting corruption and reforming public services were all crucial to bolster democracy, he added.

"The Arab world, the Maghreb, all the shores of the Mediterranean are watching you. They are watching you work and they need to see you succeed," he added.

To support job creation, Macron said he aims to double the rate of French private sector investment over the five years of his term, which ends in 2022.

"A number of companies have already confirmed their willingness to invest," the French president said, without naming any.

French direct investment in Tunisia was worth 3.3 billion dinars ($1.39 billion) in 2016, making it the second biggest foreign investor behind the United Arab Emirates, according to figures from the French economy ministry.

Macron had pledged more than €270 million ($335 million) in new financing for Tunisia on Wednesday, as he began his two-day state visit.

In his speech to parliament, Macron also said France would put all its energy into finding a solution to the conflict in neighbouring Libya and would push for elections to be held there by the end of the year.

He said Western powers had a special “responsibility” towards Libya, criticizing the 2011 NATO intervention sponsored by his predecessor, Nicolas Sarkozy, for leaving the country prey to instability and extremism.

(FRANCE 24 with REUTERS)

Macron urges military action in Libya to fight human trafficking - RT.com

https://www.rt.com/news/411428-macron-military-action-libya/
Nov 30, 2017 - French President Emmanuel Macron is calling for “concrete military and police” action against human trafficking in Libya.

Macron's new drive to send migrants home from Libya | World | The ...

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/.../macron-s-new-plan-to-send-migrants-home-from-libya-g...
Nov 29, 2017 - President Macron has promised “massive support” for a new international drive to repatriate African migrants stranded and enslaved in Libya.The French leader, m.

Emmanuel Macron's Africa refugee plan condemned as 'racist and ...

www.independent.co.uk › News › World › Europe
Aug 30, 2017 - Emmanuel Macron's plans for asylum requests to be handled in Libya, Chad and Niger to try and stem the flow of refugees to Europe has been branded “racist and inhumane” by left-wingers in the European Parliament. The leaders of France, Germany, Italy and Spain agreed the plan to stem the flow of ...

Macron charges European initiative to evacuate Africans trapped in ...

dailypost.ng › News
Nov 28, 2017 - ... Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday he would ask European leaders to help evacuate Africans in danger in Lybia after reports appearing to show African migrants being traded there sparked an international outcry. “I will propose that Africa and Europe come to the rescue of the people trapped in Libya, ...

From Ambition to Style to Substance: Emmanuel Macron Makes His Mark on France ...

Macron's Right: Africans Really Are Enslaving Other Africans, But ...

Macron hails Tunisia's 'democratic revolution' on state visit - France 24

The Big Lie About the Libyan War – Foreign Policy