BUILDING COLLAPSE IN
MARSEILLES
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Three buildings before... |
On November 5th, under a mid-day clear-blue sky, a five-story
apartment house in a popular neighborhood in the center of
Marseilles suddenly collapsed in a heap,
pulling its next-door neighbor with it in a roar and a cloud of dust. As fire trucks
and rescue services got to the scene it was quickly apparent that a fragilized
third building was in danger of toppling without its neighbor's supporting walls
and was preventively destroyed. All three had been in poor condition and one of
them, owned by the City of Marseilles, had been declared uninhabitable in 2015 but
was squatted. Final tally:
eight bodies pulled
from the rubble, 100 people displaced, and some ugly facts about
Marseilles brought to the surface.
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...and after collapse |
In this second-largest city of France, with over a million inhabitants,
there is no dearth of dilapidated buildings. Some of them have been
expropriated by the City while others are owned by unscrupulous investors or
the mafia who buy up distressed property and pocket the government subsidies that
serve to renovate these buildings and bring them up to code. However, these
renovations are often largely cosmetic and the apartments are then rented to
immigrants or low-income people who receive rental subsidies from the
government. Lax and infrequent building inspections, which rarely seem to
result in the necessary repairs, have caused the number of run-down buildings
to grow over time while the City of Marseilles proceeded on a major renovation
of the touristy Vieux Port area and of the main railway station, built several new
museums including the stunning MUCEM, expanded the metro lines, built a new modern
tramway, expanded the airport with a low-cost hub, built a new cruise ship
port, and gradually turned Marseilles into an attractive business environment
and a desirable tourist destination that earned it the designation of Cultural
Capital of Europe in 2013. Good for Marseilles, but bad for its stock of aging
buildings.
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Jean-Claude Gaudin, Mayor of Marseilles |
The uproar over the collapsed buildings forced the local
authorities to rapidly inspect and subsequently evacuate a number of decrepit
buildings throughout the city. In the end, 703 people were rendered homeless and
temporarily housed in hotels while awaiting essential repairs. After initially
trying to blame the recent heavy rains for this disaster, 79-year-old Mayor Jean-Claude Gaudin finally admitted that the city had failed its low-income tenants
and that the inspection system would be overhauled. Gaudin, who has been mayor
of Marseilles for 23 years, is known to have a cozy relationship with the local
mafia, which is no doubt of mutual benefit. A grandfatherly figure, who is
generally seen by the Marseillais as someone who does no harm and manages to
keep the various factions (unions, mafia, political opponents) in check, found
himself roundly booed this time when he showed little emotion after the
disaster, took no personal responsibility for it, and did not show up for
either of the two marches in honor of the victims. Angry citizens carrying
placards reading "Gaudin Assassin!" and calling for his resignation were
kept at a safe distance from City Hall and tear-gassed when they refused to
disperse.
His mandate runs until 2020 and he has refused to resign.
But the cry of the people and the results of an investigation into his part of
responsibility for this tragedy may well cut short his final term. It may be
too much to expect rectitude and total transparency from a complicated city
like Marseilles, but it certainly deserves better than what it's got.
COMMEMORATION OF ARMISTICE
On November 11, France celebrated the 100th anniversary of
the signing of the 1918 Armistice that ended the First World War and led to the
signing of the Peace Treaty of Versailles six months later. This devastating
four-year war that killed ten million soldiers and nearly seven million
civilians was ultimately won with the help of American troops, some 126,000 of
whom were killed and lie buried in American cemeteries in France.
More than 70 world leaders attended this centennial
commemoration in Paris, including Donald Trump, Angela Merkel, Theresa May, and
Justin Trudeau, who would each visit a cemetery of their countrymen prior to
the official ceremony on Sunday before the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at the
Arc de Triomphe. [After visiting a British cemetery in Belgium and in France,
Theresa May flew back to London to attend the British commemoration there on Sunday with the Queen.]
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Trump at American cemetery at Suresnes |
Donald Trump's program listed a visit to the American
cemetery of Aisne-Marne, about 50 miles northeast of Paris, on Saturday but this
was canceled due to rain. Apparently, his helicopter could not fly safely with
low-cloud coverage, even though the distance could easily have been covered by
car, as Merkel, May had Trudeau had done. Trump's cavalier decision drew sharp
criticism and was considered particularly insensitive in view of the fact that
most of these soldiers had died in a grueling trench war, falling face down in
the mud after weeks of rain. The unplanned cancellation left Mr. Trump with a
free afternoon which he is said to have spent watching television in his rooms at
the American Embassy. The following morning, stung by the criticism and
ridicule, he did go and pay his respects at a closer-by American cemetery in
the Paris suburb of Suresnes. Yes, it was still raining and he went by car.
Trump's Paris visit got off to a bad start when upon his
arrival on Friday morning, even before Air Force One had come to a full stop on
the tarmac, he fired off an angry tweet to his host President Macron, accusing
him of wanting to create a European army to defend itself against the US.
"Very insulting! " This was a misreading, misunderstanding or poor
translation of what Macron had said a day earlier in a radio interview, when he
explained the need for a European army because "faced with a menacing Russia
which is at our borders, we should be able to defend ourselves without relying
solely on the US and in a more sovereign way". Later on in this interview
he talked about cyber threats and the attempts by many to "intrude into
our cyberspace and interfere with our democracy. We must protect ourselves
against Russia, China, and even the United States."
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Clear body language |
Later, when they met face to face before TV cameras, Macron
explained to Trump that he had meant that the EU should do more to coordinate
its 27-nation efforts in a common defense force, i.e. create a European army,
to be able to react quickly without depending on the United States; a message repeated
forcefully by Chancellor Merkel before the Bundestag in Berlin. Macron did,
however, agree with Trump that the EU should pay a greater share of the NATO
budget to which the US contributes proportionately more. This seemed to have
calmed the waters and they shook hands on it. But Trump appeared sullen and moody
throughout his visit and on his return to Washington sent another accusatory
tweet to Macron, showing that nothing was forgiven or forgotten.
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World leaders walking to the Arc de Triomphe |
The Sunday ceremonies were somber and moving, starting with
a brief walk of all the Heads of State (except Mr. Trump who arrived later by
car), sheltered under a sea of black umbrellas against the persistent rain, to
the Arc de Triomphe where school children around the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier read messages written by soldiers in
various languages, a European youth orchestra played with a Russian conductor,
and Chinese-American cellist Yo-yo Ma played Bach. President Macron then addressed the assembled leaders, including Trump, Putin,
Merkel, Erdogan of Turkey, Netanyahu of Israel, Trudeau of Canada, the kings of Spain and Morocco, and many more. His speech focused on the importance of international
cooperation to avoid war, the need for a rules-based world that is open and
multilateral, and specifically rejected nationalism which he called "a
betrayal of patriotism. By saying 'Our interests first, who cares about the
others,' we erase what a nation holds dearest, what gives it life and what is
essential: its moral values."
Following the Sunday ceremonies and lunch at the Elysée
Palace, President Macron had organized a Peace Forum as an opportunity for the
Heads of State and Government or their representatives from 84 countries "to
reflect on world governance while we commemorate the end of World War I and
recognize our collective responsibility." The 3-day Forum, held in the
beautiful Grande Halle de La Villette in Paris, was opened by UN Secretary
General Antonio Gutteres, and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Turkey's
president Erdogan and Russia's president Putin were among the speakers that afternoon. The
Forum was conceived as an annual event for project leaders worldwide, "bringing
together political, economic, and civil society representatives [...] to seek
solutions to current world challenges with an emphasis on multilateral and
collective action."
This is not President Trump's cup of tea. He snubbed the
Forum and flew home.
It is a sad day when a president of the United States, Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces (and repeated draft dodger), attends an all-important commemorative event and, in full view of the entire world, shows a shocking lack of respect for those Americans who fought and died here, apparently incapable of behaving with even a minimum of decorum and
courtesy as he slouches through two days of
ceremonies as if he had better things to do elsewhere.
As the rest of the world looks on with embarrassment or
glee, Trump keeps bumbling along, ignorant and belligerent, not knowing the difference
between the Balkans and the Baltics, disrespecting the press and dismissing
journalists he does not like, to say nothing of his inane tweeting which nobody
can seem to control.
His tweet storm directed at Emmanuel Macron after the Paris
visit got no response from Macron, who said days later when questioned in an
interview: "I don't do policy or diplomacy by tweets." Somebody
please pass that on to Mr. Trump.