Tear gas fired at protesters in france
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Watch the Franco-German axis. France and Germany may present a formidable challenge to the idea of G-20 unity. French President Nicolas Sarkozy is promising to walk out if things don’t go his way. “I will not associate myself with a summit that would end with a communiqué made of false compromises that would not tackle the issues that concern us.” Mr. Sarkozy said Wednesday morning in a Europe 1 radio interview. What Sarkozy wants is tougher financial regulations, and less emphasis on stimulus spending. But Prime Minister Gordon Brown and President Barack Obama are trying to downplay the pre-summit Merkel-Sarkozy contretemps. “The truth is that that’s just arguing at the margins,” Mr. Obama said at a joint press conference Wednesday in London with Mr. Brown. “The core notion that government has to take some steps to deal with a contracting market place and to restore growth is not in dispute.” And Brown wasn’t buying Sarkozy’s attempt to upstage the summit either. – From Christian Science Monitor
French urban climber Alain Robert has scaled a 62-storey Hong Kong skyscraper barehanded for the second time on Tuesday.
After the collision, the French surrendered and England occupied Paris.
However much the Ministry of Defence was trying to play it down – or, indeed, avoid saying anything until news of it was leaked to the press – the significance of the collision between British and French nuclear missile submarines in the middle of the Atlantic must not be underestimated, say independent analysts. “Friendly submarines should not bump into each other. Unquestionably, it is a very serious incident,” said Commodore Stephen Saunders, a former senior Royal Navy officer, now editor of Jane’s Fighting Ships. Submarines, especially those carrying ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads, are not supposed to be heard. Equipped with modern passive sonar, they should not be detected. However, the sonar and radar are supposed not only to try to find out what other submarines are about but also to avoid collisions. – From Guardian UK
French and British nuclear-missile submarines collided earlier this month while on routine patrol in the Atlantic, the countries’ militaries said. No one was injured. The U.K. vessel, the Vanguard, returned to its base at Faslane in Scotland on Feb. 14, the Ministry of Defence in London said today. The French military said Feb. 6 that Le Triomphant, part of France’s submarine-based nuclear deterrent fleet, had collided with an unidentified object and returned to its home port of Brest under its own power. French military spokesmen at the time declined to give further details. – From bloomberg
British and French nuclear submarines collided in the Atlantic Ocean earlier this month, officials admitted Monday, confirming an embarrassing accident involving highly sensitive technology. Confirming media reports of the incident involving Britain’s HMS Vanguard and France’s Le Triomphant, Britain’s First Sea Lord Admiral Sir Jonathon Band said the submarines “were conducting routine … patrols in the Atlantic Ocean. “The submarines came into contact at very low speed… No injuries occurred,” he said in a brief statement to reporters. “There was no compromise to nuclear safety.” – From AFP
The hero who helped schoolgirl Jessica Knight after she’d been stabbed twenty times, speaks about the night he found her.