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Showing posts with label Levallois-Perret. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Levallois-Perret. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 January 2010

Sarkozy the next generation - it's a boy

The French president, Nicolas Sarkozy has become a grand-father for the first time.

In the early hours of Wednesday morning Jessica, the wife of Sarkozy's second son, Jean, gave birth to a baby boy, according to the Internet site, Purepeople, which was the first to break the news.

Although there hasn't yet been an official statement from the Elysée palace, the president's office, the news has been confirmed by Patrick Balkany, a close friend of the family and the mayor of the Parisian suburb of Levallois-Perret, who told reporters (in that time-honoured tradition) that "both mother and baby were doing well."

The latest arrival to the Sarkozy family has might have some large footprints in which to tread but his will surely be a future cushioned by the fact that it'll be financially secure and potentially glowing.

His grandfather (who turns 55 at the end of this month) is of course president, and at 23 years of age his father is already an up-and-coming (already-arrived) member of the country's governing centre-right Union pour un Mouvement Populaire (Union for a Popular Movement, UMP) party as a regional councillor in Hauts-de-Seine.

And that's not forgetting his mother, who just happens to be an heiress to the big electronics company Darty.

All factors undoubtedly which have meant that, in this era in which politicians have achieved near celebrity status here in France, the Net has awash with surfers speculating none-too-seriously (perhaps) over what'll be in store for the baby.

"Nicolas Sarkozy's grandson has been appointed general manager of his future nursery," runs one tweet for example, a reference to his father's recent controversial candidature (later withdrawn) for the top job at l'Etablissement public d'aménagement du quartier d'affaires de la Défense (Epad), the development agency for business district of La Defense on the outskirts of Paris.

As for what the baby will be called - well there's no word on that yet. But a source close the president (yes it's that sort of story) has reportedly said that it'll be a "very unusual" name.

"Epad" suggested one wit in Twitter.

Wednesday, 2 September 2009

War of the roads over a one-way Paris street

Thank goodness for the prefect of the suburban Parisian département of Hauts-de-Seine, Patrick Strzoda, and the rest of his administrative team.

They've put an end, albeit temporarily perhaps, to a dispute between two neighbouring mayors within the département; a quarrel that had threatened to create havoc for local residents and businesses as well as rush hour commuters, and indeed proved to be the case on Monday.

That's when motorists using the Route Départementale 909 (RD 909) that runs through the communes of Levallois-Perret and Clichy found themselves faced at one point with one-way signs pointing in opposite directions.

Gilles Catoire the Socialist mayor of Clichy decided that as of August 31, the section of the RD 909 passing his commune would become a one-way road in the in the direction north-south.

It was a reaction to a decision made by Patrick Balkany, the centre-right Union pour un Mouvement Populaire (Union for a Popular Movement, UMP) mayor of the neighbouring commune of Levallois-Perret, to make the stretch of the same road that ran through his municipality one-way but in the opposite direction (south-north) on the same day.

The result on Monday was the inevitable absurd situation for motorists as they arrived at the point where the two sections of the road met...with one-way signs in place literally face-to-face preventing them from continuing ahead.

Instead police were on duty to redirect traffic to another street to avoid the newly-installed one-way systems which were causing near gridlock, testing nerves and of course generally adding to the woes (as well as journey time) of the nearly 20,000 vehicles that pass through the particular intersection every day.

Chaos had of course been on the cards for several weeks ever since Balkany announced his decision in an effort to decrease the amount of traffic passing along the Levallois stretch of the RD 909.

Catoire, fearing it would see a surge in congestion on the Clichy portion of the road, had threatened to retaliate with a tit-for-tat move, although to give him his due he did make the offer to Balkany to suspend the decision if his Levallois counterpart did the same.

Neither of course backed down and it was only after a morning of predictable mayhem that a "higher authority" in the shape of the prefect of Hauts-de-Seine, who presumably had a somewhat wider view on how everyone might be affected, put an end to the wrangling and suspended both newly-installed one-way systems.

So the status quo has been re-established - but for how long?

Watch this space.
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