EURO
PE NEWS

EU
Eyes Budget Deal as Britain Offers New Rebate Cut
Chirac said the EU summit was heading towards a
budget deal.
Britain offered Friday to slash a 10.5 billion euros
($12.57 billion) off its cherished EU rebate, sources said, raising
hopes of a breakthrough to a fierce standoff over the bloc's future
budget. French President Jacques Chirac, who has demanded an outright
end to the British budget cheque, immediately said EU leaders appeared
to be heading "little by little" toward a deal on the 2007-2013 funding
plans. "Not everything is resolved but we are heading little by little
towards a solution ... which would allow us to get out of this
difficulty, this impasse," he said as a crunch summit headed into its
final hours. Talks on the European Union's 2007-2013 budget have been
stalled due to Britain's refusal to give further ground on its
long-cherished rebate, and France's resistance to reform of the bloc's
disputed farm subsidy system. A European source said that in its latest
proposal Friday, Britain offered to cut an extra 2.5 billion euros off
its EU rebate, from which it had already proposed slashing 8 billion
euros over the seven-year period. The new offer was presented to EU
leaders on the second evening of a summit dominated by the budget
wrangle. The other key problem has been French resistance to reforming
the bloc's generous farm subsidy system. Chirac voiced cautious optimism
of a deal. "I haven't got an answer at this moment to the question: will
there be an agreement? The discussions are fairly positive," he told
reporters, but added that the state of negotiations was "fairly
positive." Meanwhile an EU source added that Britain was proposing a
total EU budget for 2007-2013 of 862.5 billion euros, increasing its
previous proposal by 13.2 billion euros. If confirmed, it would match a
proposal by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose country has long been
the EU's biggest net contributor.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel appears to have been one of the chief reasons
the EU managed to agree on a budget deal during two days of haggling at
a Brussels summit.
Photo: Merkel has started making a name for herself in Brussels.
The EU finally announced it had found a compromise on the bloc's 2007
to 2013 budget in the early hours of Saturday morning. Britain said it
would cut 10.5 billion euros ($12.57 billion) off its
jealously-guarded budget rebate, with funds being shifted towards the
poorer mainly former communist countries that joined the EU last year.
France agreed to drop resistance to a spending review that could
reduce its agricultural subsidies. The 25 member states also decided
to boost budget by nearly 862.4 billion euros. "The long wait was
worth it," said Germany's Merkel. It was her first EU summit as
chancellor and, many officials said she played a key mediating role.
"I am convinced ... we have concluded a good agreement for Europe's
future, a signal of hope for European development," she added. "Merkel
played an extraordinarily important role behind the scenes," said
Austrian Chacnellor Wolfgang Schüssel. "She has acted calm, sober and
very professional." Romanian President Traian Basescu said: "She
brokered the deal from start to finish. She was the first to break the
deadlock with a proposal." Merkel has played a very constructive
role," a European diplomat told Reuters. "The absence of (former
German Chancellor Gerhard) Schröder and his unquestioning support of
Chirac has meant the French president has to be more careful."
Germany compromises, too:
But
Merkel gave way too, announcing Germany would be prepared to do
without 100 million euros which would instead come to the aid of
Poland's poorest regions. Polish Prime Minister Kazimierz
Marcinkiewicz described Merkel's actions as the "a wonderful gesture
of solidarity" as he celebrated the deal. "The taste of victory is as
good as the finest French champagne," he pronounced. "Every fifth euro
will be spent on Poland," he told journalists. British Prime Minister
Tony Blair, who was charged with brokering the deal in his role as EU
president, also lauded the plans. "This is an agreement that allows
Europe to move forward," he said. "If we believe in enlargement, we
had to do this deal now. If we'd failed to reach an agreement at all,
I think that Europe would have been in a very severe crisis." His
comments were echoed by French President Jacques Chirac, his perennial
summit sparring partner, who also said the deal was "a good accord for
Europe, which gives it the means necessary to fund its ambitions."
"Once again, the crisis has been resolved," Chirac added, saying the
deal had met French requirements. "Europe is now marching forward
again," he said. Accord on the budget plans had been blocked chiefly
by Britain's refusal to give more ground on the EU rebate which
then-prime minister Margaret Thatcher famously secured in 1984. The
other main sticking point was France's resistance to calls for a major
reform of the EU's long-disputed farm subsidy system, of which it is
the main beneficiary. Another apparent mediator, Luxembourg Prime
Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, said that unlike during his country's
turn at the presidency, which failed in June to get an accord, "this
time all delegations attending the meeting were ready to take a
decision." European Commission head Jose Manuel Barroso admitted that
the deal, which represents 1.045 percent of EU-wide gross national
income, was not as big as the budget initially sought by his EU
executive team. But he too hailed the extra money for the new members.
"Without solidarity there is no union," he said.


Parisian
Patisserie for pets
Photo: Mon Bon Chien makes 200 to 300 biscuits every day.
Paris is well known as a canine form of
paradise, with the city's 200,000 dogs welcome in department stores
and even allowed to eat at the table in the best restaurants. Now
though one entrepreneur has ingeniously combined Parisians' two real
passions - for their pets and gourmet food - to produce the perfect
Parisian patisserie: a bakery devoted to dogs. It sells bacon biscuits
in the shape of a cat, or garlic and cheese flavour, and even
bone-shaped cookies made of real foie gras. All are on offer here,
sugar and salt-free for the sensitive pet. 'Pastries and pets':
The boutique's owner is an award-winning pastry chef. But - whisper it
quietly, so that spoilt Parisian pooches don't hear - she's an
American. Harriet Sternstein moved to Paris from the United States
with her dog Sophie-Marie, a golden labrador with a love of biscuits
and glamorous pink nail varnish. Sophie-Marie provided the inspiration
for the new business for her owner, who decided the best way to make a
living was to combine her biggest enthusiasms - pastries and pets. And
so far, the patisserie Mon Bon Chien has been a real hit with
Parisians - both the two- and four-legged varieties. "Everything is
made in the back of the boutique," said Ms Sternstein.

Photo: Proprietor Harriet Sternstein is an award-winning pastry
chef.
"Every day, I make 200 to 300 biscuits and special
orders are taken on a daily basis. "The Parisians come - and the first
time they think it's very funny and they look at it, and buy the ones
that they think are the cutest. Then the dogs come back and choose
which flavours they like the best. "It's not so much a matter of the
form that they're in, but the taste. We have peanut butter bears, we
have vegetable stars, we have foie gras, which is actual foie gras
that you and I would eat," she explains. "Those are the butterflies
and then their little shapes; we also have the bacon cats. "I change
flavours, based on what's going on for the holidays. We did a whole
Halloween one, Christmas and next, I think it will be Valentine's
Day." The biscuits can also be eaten by humans, although Ms Sternstein
advises using your back teeth to chew them rather than your canines!
-By Carolinne Watt.
Gwyneth's
haunted house
Photo:
The 33-year-old is adamant her London home is haunted and wants to
create a good energy before she gives birth to her second child .
Gwyneth Paltrow is
planning to have her home exorcised, it has been reported. The
33-year-old is adamant her London house is haunted and wants to create
a good energy before she gives birth to her second child. Gwyneth and
husband Chris Martin have repeatedly said their £3.5 million mansion
in Belsize Park is full of 'bad energy'. The couple have apparently
blamed their home for Gwyneth's turbulent second pregnancy and have
sought help from the London Kabbalah Centre - as recommended by pop
pal Madonna. It is rumoured that ten male Kabbalah followers will read
a series of psalms and blow a ram's horn as part of the exorcism.
There were reports last year that Gwyneth and Chris were going to
up-sticks and move across the pond to New York, but it looks as though
the couple will be staying in the UK, if the exorcism goes to plan.


The Da Vinci Code at the Louvre
The Louvre Museum in Paris had a record number of
visitors in 2005, with successful soirees for young people, crowd-pleasing
exhibitions and promotion from "The Da Vinci Code," a top administrator
said Tuesday. About 7.3 million people visited the art museum in 2005,
up from 6.7 million in 2004 -- the previous record -- general
administrator Didier Selles told The Associated Press. Definitive 2005
figures are expected in coming weeks. Selles said Dan Brown's mystical
thriller "The Da Vinci Code" was in part responsible for drawing fans to
the Louvre, though likely "not in gigantic proportions." Some travel
companies offer Da Vinci code tours that make stops at the Louvre. The
museum expects more dramatic results starting this spring, when
Oscar-winning director Ron Howard's movie based on the novel debuts.
"There is perhaps a 'Da Vinci Code' effect, but in my opinion it will be
truly stronger when the film comes out," Selles said in a telephone
interview. The movie stars Tom Hanks and Audrey Tautou, and was shot
partly in the Louvre. In one of the story line's opening scenes, the
Louvre curator is murdered and discovered naked, arms and legs
outstretched, with a five-pointed star drawn on his chest in blood. The
murder leads to the search for the so-called Da Vinci code. The movie's
producers are considering hosting the European premiere for the film at
the Louvre, but they also might opt for the Cannes Film Festival in May,
Selles said. Another factor in the booming attendance was Friday night
soirees that are free for those under age 26. The Louvre also made efforts
to cut down on waits for visitors. "It is rare today, except in very, very
crowded periods, to have to wait more than 15 minutes to get into the
museum, with (lines for) the coatroom included," Selles said. More
galleries have also been opened up to the public. In 2001, 25 percent of
the Louvre's rooms were closed, compared to 13 percent now. Two successful
exhibits in 2005 included a show on Romanesque art from France, which drew
205,000 visitors, and a retrospective on the Romantic painter Anne-Louis
Girodet, which brought in 150,000 people and is traveling next to the Art
Institute of Chicago, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the
Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. About one-fourth of everyone who visits
Paris makes a stop at the Louvre, Selles said. One-third of Louvre
visitors are French, and Americans are next, at about 18-20 percent. In
2004, Chinese tourists made up 4 percent of visitors -- for the first
time, ahead of the Japanese, with 3.5 percent.

The
sinful magic of the Parisian style
Photo: The smells of Paris can be ferociously intense
If I shut my eyes and breathe in deeply, I would
know exactly which city I was in. West Berlin, where I lived for
many years, is the smell of lime trees in spring and horse-chestnuts
in autumn, filling the tree-lined avenues. London is exhaust fumes
from black cabs and double-decker buses. Moscow and East Berlin were
hard to tell apart - cheap adulterated petrol outdoors and, indoors,
corridors sponged with dirty mops dipped in pungent cleaning fluid.
But Paris? Paris I am still trying to work out, to imprint the smells
of my new home on my memory.

Photo: In summer the scent of lilies and palms wafts across the
River Seine.
Just right: I knew I had found the right
flat in the old cobbled streets of the Marais the minute I walked in.
It was not just the light streaming in over the grey slate rooftops,
or even the muffled laughter from the cafes below. It smelt just right
- a faint hint of polished wooden floors and fresh white paint, mixed
up with cafe crème from downstairs. When I moved here it was June -
the hottest month so far - and the smells of Paris seemed ferociously
intense to nostrils accustomed to polluted Moscow summers, where
petrol was the defining note. Collecting my pushbike from the cellar
to cycle to work, I had to hold my breath. Every decent Paris flat has
a room or cave, to store dustbins and bicycles.
An unexpected mix: That first day the
rubbish collectors, like all good public servants, were on strike -
and a week's worth of rotting vegetables, cigarette ends and damp
newspapers filled the windowless room. Pushing open the door I gulped
in the fresh air - but it proved an unexpected mix of dog mess on the
pavement, and the distinct smell of human urine, all brought to a full
bouquet by the morning heat. I was loath to apportion blame for the
latter - but on every doorstep in my street lives a different tramp.
The one who has been there longest is the elderly man who lives in a
box on the pavement next door. His wooden home is the size of a small
ice-cream stand and at night his feet poke out at the end. During the
day, he sits and feeds the pigeons, whose droppings add to the smell-scape
outside my door. Perhaps these smells are not so surprising. This is,
after all, the Marais, or swamp - land reclaimed in the 17th Century
as Paris expanded eastwards. It was craftsmen and artisans who built
the honey-coloured stone buildings that still stand solidly today,
giving off a dank whiff of centuries of livelihoods and lives played
out in the shaded alleyways. Those same trades people bequeathed a
wealth of other smells too - the sheer deliciousness of the
boulangerie downstairs, whose rising yeast and croissants wake me up
hungry every morning as they drift in through the window. Sometimes at
night, a more recent arrival intrudes - an aroma of cardamom and curry
from the Indian restaurant opposite drifting up six floors, the Marais'
newest immigrants. But in the morning on the westward cycle to work,
the bakery is replaced by the distinctive early morning smell of Paris
- the workmen sluicing the pavements clean of the night before.
Paris style: This warm August, when the
traffic is light, a wonderful scent of cut lilies and palms wafts
across the River Seine as I cycle past the flower market. Sometimes I
make a forbidden detour through the Tuileries - away from the river
and into the smell of summer leaves and fresh grass - though heaven
forbid anyone should be allowed to lie on it. Much like the people,
the parks in Paris are mainly for smart public display. The traffic
lights on Place de la Concorde always seem to be on red. And that is
when you can smell Parisians on their way to work. They wear more
perfume and aftershave than Londoners, or indeed Muscovites do, and
they are smarter, too. It is kitten heels and matching handbags for
the women, dark suits and white shirts for the men, even in the heat.
Scent of money: And as the sun blazes down,
you can smell the trickling sweat of a hot Paris morning, mingled with
smoke from Gauloises dangled from immaculately manicured fingers. Then
up a narrow street next to the Champs-Elysees and finally, to rue du
Faubourg St-Honore - a street where the scent of money oozes from the
upmarket boutiques. The distinctive smell of the lobby greets me every
day; a whisper of old lady's cologne and a hint of mop on marble
floor. Then up a dank staircase and into the bureau - with its own
patina of a thousand yellowed newspaper cuttings and yesterday's
coffee grinds in the bins.
Sights and sounds: Cycling home at night,
the smells are richer still, fermented by the day's sunshine. The
meaty odour of sizzling thick steaks emerges from hundreds of pavement
brasseries, until the classic French cuisine of the eighth and first
arrondissements gives way to the foreign smells of the fourth, where
oriental spices mingle with couscous and kebabs as I near the Marais.
I know that when the time comes to leave this city in a few years, I
may forget some of the sights and sounds. But if I shut my eyes, I
know that, imprinted on my memory, I will always have the smells of
Paris.
-By Carolinne Watt.
Muslim
head says gays 'harmful'
Photo: Sir Iqbal Sacranie said everyone's views should be heard.
A British Muslim leader has told the BBC he believes
homosexuality is "not acceptable" and denounced new same-sex civil
partnerships as "harmful". Head of the Muslim Council of Britain Sir
Iqbal Sacranie said introducing the partnerships did "not augur well" for
building the foundations of society. Nevertheless, he told BBC Radio 4's
PM programme, everyone should be tolerant. Peter Tatchell of gay rights
group OutRage! said: "It is tragic for one minority to attack another
minority."
Disease: Sir Iqbal said of civil partnerships:
"This is harmful. "It does not augur well in building the very foundations
of society - stability, family relationships. And it is something we would
certainly not, in any form, encourage the community to be involved in." He
said he was guided by the teachings of the Muslim faith, adding that other
religions such as Christianity and Judaism held the same stance. "Each of
our faiths tells us that it is harmful and I think, if you look into the
scientific evidence that has been available in terms of the forms of
various other illnesses and diseases that are there, surely it points out
that where homosexuality is practised there is a greater concern in that
area." He said everyone in society should be tolerant, and if they are not
happy then engage in the democratic processes to give their views. "We may
not be happy with the views being expressed by others. But the difficulty
comes in that at the end of the day we are human beings." He said both the
opponents and supporters of civil partnerships had the right to speak out.
Mr Tatchell, the founder of OutRage!, added: "Both the Muslim and gay
communities suffer prejudice and discrimination. We should stand together
to fight Islamophobia and homophobia."

Cameron vows to defend 'free' NHS
Photo: David Cameron will ditch the Tories' "patient passport" plan.
Tory leader David Cameron is promising to defend the
values of the NHS against those in his party who want a new system based
on medical insurance. Mr Cameron is due to announce his health policy
after meeting an ambulance crew in central London. He will promise to keep
the NHS as "free at the point of need" to everyone, whatever their wealth.
And he will underline his decision to scrap the previous Tory policy of
subsidising patients to go private.

Photo: David Cameron says he would go further in reforming the NHS.
Transformation? Mr Cameron said during his
campaign to become Conservative leader that he would drop the "patients
passport" plan, where patients could take half the cost of their NHS
operation to be treated privately. He said the policy could show the party
"wants to get people out of the NHS, rather than improve the NHS". The new
leader will stress his commitment to the NHS in Wednesday's speech. He
will say: "Some people think that we Conservatives want to change the NHS
into something that it isn't. "Well, they're right. We do. We want to
change the NHS into a more efficient, more effective and more patient-centred
service. We want to change it into something of which we can be even more
proud. "Other people - some of them in my own party - urge me to go much
further. They want me to promise that under the Conservatives, the NHS
will be transformed beyond recognition into a system based on medical
insurance. "I will never go down that route. Under a Conservative
government, the NHS will remain free at the point of need and available to
everyone, regardless of how much money they have in the bank."
'Breaking barriers': Some Conservatives want
schemes used elsewhere in Europe where everybody pays for health insurance
instead of paying taxes - with the costs met for those unable to afford
them. Mr Cameron rejects such calls but he will also use his speech to
claim he would go further than Labour on reforming the NHS. He will say he
wants to give hospitals more autonomy and "break down the barriers"
between private and public sector providers so the NHS becomes more
efficient and effective. The government has said that by 2008 private
sector providers will provide up to 15% of procedures on behalf of the NHS.
Supervision warning: But Conservative shadow
health secretary Andrew Lansley has suggested his party would impose no
limits on the use of the private sector. He told the Daily Telegraph: "You
cannot get proper investment from the private sector if you have such
limits. "Those companies will not see it as a long-term business if you
adopt that approach." Outgoing Audit Commission chairman James Strachan
has warned that, if the private sector accounts for 15% or 20% of NHS
work, it will have implications for the remaining NHS services. He wants a
small group of strategic health authorities or a commissioner - not a
regulator from outside the NHS - to keep sight of that larger picture. In
an interview with the BBC News website, Mr Strachan said: "Somebody, if
those changes are made, should really assume responsibility for making
that mixed economy work effectively without in any way, for example, just
standing back and watching key parts of a hospital being farmed out such
that it makes it very difficult for its A&E department to run itself
because it's lost some of the underpinning surgical divisions which it
needs to function."

ENTERTAINMENT/CELEBRITIES
A Hitler comedy

Photo: Dani Levy is no stranger to controversy.
Filming starts on a controversial new project this
month - a comedy, in German, about Adolf Hitler. It is the work of
the Swiss Jewish director Dani Levy, who in 2005 had a big hit with a
comedy called Alles auf Zucker! - about Jews in Germany today. The new
film, Mein Fuehrer - The real truth about Adolf Hitler, will portray the
Nazi leader as a weakling helped to the top by a Jewish comedian. Mr
Levy says Nazi leaders have been "put on pedestals" in documentaries.
It is time to take them down, he says. The Berlin and
Brandenburg Film Board, a public body, put up more than $500,000 to help
finance the film. Mr Levy's film Alles auf Zucker! (Go for Zucker!) was
a huge risk, but was well received. His new project is even more
ambitious. Another recent German film, The Downfall, provoked an anxious
debate here about where the boundaries lie with its grim dramatisation
of Hitler's last days in the bunker. -By Ray Fulong.
Lulu
relights her fire
Photo:
Lulu is re-recording her vocals for the single Relight My Fire - 13
years after first recording the track .
It has been revealed that
pint-size singer Lulu is preparing for another session with Take That.
Lulu is re-recording her vocals for the single Relight My Fire with
Gary, Jason, Mark and Howard, who plan to re-release the single in April
- 13 years after they first recorded the track. It was announced late
last year that Lulu would accompany the lads on their tour and she is
certainly getting into training for the part. The songstress has studio
time booked for rehearsals in preparation for the concerts, where she
will be joining the backing dancers to get into shape for the hectic
tour schedule. Relight My Fire was first recorded back in 1993 and was a
smash hit flying in at number one in the UK charts. The new version of
the single is due to be released just before Take That embark on their
30-date sellout nationwide tour in May.
Dame Judi
Dench: "I am not an intellectual".
Photo: Dame Judi plays a widowed theatre owner in Mrs Henderson.
Presents
Dame Judi Dench has admitted she never reads the
plays she stars in, saying she merely takes roles "because someone asked
me to". The respected actress told US magazine Newsweek that she was
no intellectual. "I've got myself into real trouble by saying yes to a
play, then going to the first reading and realising, 'This is a
bummer!'," she said. US magazine Premiere predicts Dame Judi will be
Oscar nominated for her role in Mrs Henderson Presents.
Golden Globe nominee: In the movie Dame Judi plays a
widow who opens a nude theatrical review in 1930s London. It earned Dame
Judi her sixth Golden Globe nomination. Mrs Henderson Presents also
earned eight nominations at this year's British Independent Film Awards,
including best film and best director for Stephen Frears. Dame Judi and
co-stars Bob Hoskins, Kelly Reilly and ex-Coronation Street star Thelma
Barlow have also been nominated.
Britney's
popularity to plummet?
Photo:
Kevin Federline has struggled to find a label willing to launch his tune
Popozao.
It seems Britney Spears may be in for a disappointing 2006 - a US poll
predicts the new mum's popularity will plummet this year. However the
news is brighter for talk show queen Oprah Winfrey, with her reign over
American television expected to continue. Meanwhile, Britney's hubby
will be hoping his own popularity will soar with the release of his
debut rap single. Kevin Federline has struggled to find a label willing
to launch his tune Popozao. But the former backing dancer is convinced
that once we hear it, the track will storm straight to the top of the
charts.
Madge
pimps her ride
Photo:
Madge is ditching her snazzy range of motors to delight legions of boy
racers with a Pimp My Ride-style video for her next single .
Queen of Pop Madonna is
getting Tim Westwood onside to jazz up her Ford Cortina in the video for
her new single. The Ford banger is a world away from the £300,000
Mercedes Maybach limo she relaxes in whilst at her home in LA. Madge is
ditching her snazzy range of motors to delight legions of boy racers
with a Pimp My Ride-style video for her next single Sorry. UK Pimp My
Ride host Tim Westwood will make a cameo appearance in the new video by
taking the Cortina and shaping it up so it looks as good as new. The
idea behind the video is a rags-to-riches story and the track it is
being made for will be remixed by the Pet Shop Boys. It seems Madonna
likes a bit of car bling in her video's - for her No1 single Music in
2000, Ali G turned up dripping with gold and diamonds whilst driving her
limo.
Mozart
Magic in Austria
Photo: All kinds of Mozart memorabilia can be found in Salzburg.
Austria is celebrating the 250th birthday of one
of its most famous sons - the composer, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
Salzburg, the city of his birth, is hoping to cash in with a mixture
of kitsch and high culture and its Mozart industry is going into
overdrive this month. An enterprising local dairy has developed a new
Mozart yogurt and a Mozart dessert drink - flavoured with chocolate,
hazelnut and marzipan. The yogurt is one of hundreds of new products
being developed for the composer's 250th birthday on 27 January. As
well as yogurt, you can buy Mozart sausage, Mozart baby bottles and
Mozart perfume. Traders here are hoping for a bumper year. Some
Austrians think it all too much, including Kurt Palm, himself the
author of a new book about Mozart. "The new slogan for 2006 is not sex
sells, but Mozart sells. If Mozart could see what happens now only in
Austria, in Vienna or Salzburg this year, he would either only laugh
about it or he would be disgusted," he says. But for Salzburg,
Mozart-marketing and tourism brings in the money. The city's mayor
Heinz Schaden says the composer is one of the city's most important
sources of income. "It's probably difficult to calculate it in euros
but if you make an opinion poll with all the tourists who come to
Salzburg, many would say I want to see the city where Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart was born. Salzburg is hard to imagine without Mozart. He put
this city on the map."
'Exciting': But amidst the kitsch, Salzburg
has not forgotten what really matters about Mozart: his music. This
summer there will be a chance to see every opera that Mozart wrote.
For the first time, the famous Salzburg Festival is staging all 22
operas in five weeks. Suzanne Staehr from the Salzburg Festival says
it is a huge logistical and artistic challenge. "Normally we show five
or six operas in a festival season. Next season we will show 22
operas. But when should this experiment be done except in the
anniversary year - and where else but Salzburg? The city of his birth
takes on this challenge," she says. World-famous musicians and
conductors will be performing Mozart including Simon Rattle, Nikolaus
Harnoncourt and Riccardo Muti. It is a prospect that even excites
jaded Salzburgers. "For real Mozartians there can never be too much
Mozart and in any case there is going to be a lot of Mozart, we
perhaps haven't heard so much before and that's going to be exciting,
discovering the undiscovered Mozart," a shopper in central Salzburg
says. "Mozart is a very famous citizen of Salzburg and we are proud to
have him and we enjoy celebrating his 250th birthday," says a local
civil servant. "We hope many people come to Salzburg - the more often
they come the better it is for us." In the ice rink in Salzburg's
Mozart Square, there is even the chance to go skating to the strains
of the Queen of the Night aria from The Magic Flute. All this Mozart
may be too much for some people, but Salzburgers know when they are on
to a good thing. -By Bethany. Bel.
|
|



AND NOW HEAR THIS...
Immigration sex claims
In
the UK, The Home Office is investigating claims UK visas were handed
to female immigrants in exchange for sex. A former administrator's
told a newspaper women were allowed to stay if they slept with staff
at the Lunar House centre in Croydon. He also claims some security
checks were not carried out properly. Anthony Pamnani, 23, said he
quit after four years in disgust at the behaviour, which he claimed
also included mocking any "ugly" applicants. Those considered good
looking would be seen straight away while others queue for hours, he
said. The whistleblower, who said his complaints were ignored, also
told the paper that vital security checks on immigrants were not
carried out. He said: "One girl came in and told us an admin officer
had visited her flat and they had slept together. She got indefinite
leave to stay." Brazilian girls would be given permission to stay in
the country longer than their boyfriends for no valid immigration
reason. Mr Pamnani said that in "many cases" passports were not
checked to ensure immigrants had no previous convictions and were not
wanted abroad. "It was lazy because they only had to walk a few yards
and swipe it through a computer reader." He told the paper the final
straw for him came when staff were given instructions to allow in more
immigrants from eastern Europe at the expense of those from India. "I
lost what remaining respect I had for the job," he said. Home Office
Minister Tony McNulty said: "I have every confidence that staff within
the Immigration and Nationality Directorate carry out their roles with
professionalism and integrity. "There are clearly established systems
for staff to raise any concerns that they may have with working
practices within their team and to take the issue further if they feel
it is necessary. "These are serious allegations and I will ensure that
they are fully investigated. "Until the outcome of that investigation
is known, it would be inappropriate for me to comment further but
clearly I will not condone this type of behaviour amongst staff."



LES FOLIES BERGERE

Variété et
chanson françaises du 09/12/2005 au
05/01/2006.
LES FOLIES
BERGERE 32, rue Richer
75009 PARIS
.

SOL EN CIRQUE
Les Aventuriers de la Pierre Molle Musique/concert pour enfants du
07/12/2005 au
08/01/2006.
LE BATACLAN 50, Bld
Voltaire 75011
PARIS



FRANCE JEWEL
 
 
 
 

|