Hollande under fire over papal wisecrack

Republican Guards surround France's President Francois Hollande as a guest departs the Elysee Palace in Paris.

Republican Guards surround France's President Francois Hollande as a guest departs the Elysee Palace in Paris.

Published Feb 12, 2013

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Paris - French President Francois Hollande came under fire on Tuesday after cracking a joke about Pope Benedict XVI's decision to resign because of his failing health.

At a press conference with Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan on Monday, Hollande initially observed sombrely that the Catholic church should be left in peace to organise Benedict's succession.

But he could not resist adding with a smirk: “We won't be putting up a candidate!”

The Socialist leader's irreverence at a time of great consternation for many Catholics was slammed as inappropriate by former interior minister Claude Geant.

“Everyone knows that Francois Hollande is not very well disposed to religion in general and to the Catholic church in particular,” Geant told Canal + television.

“But to make a joke about such a dignified decision is not good at all. It is completely out of place.”

Geant also took a swipe at Hollande's minister for older people, Michele Delaunay, who tweeted under the hashtags #Age and #JobsforSeniors: “I have to admit that, rightly or wrongly, Benedict XVI failed to consult me before taking his decision.” She later deleted the message.

Geant commented: “They are joking about someone of such stature, it's really not very good at all.”

Hollande, who was brought up by Catholic parents and attended a private Catholic school, has been widely described as an atheist. Jealously protective of his private life, he has only confirmed that he does not practice any religion while having respect for all faiths.

The president's domestic arrangements are certainly not compatible with Catholic teaching. Hollande lives with his glamorous girlfriend, Valerie Trierweiller, for whom he left the mother of his four children, whom he never married. - AFP

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