French Tennis
NATO examines friendly fire report in French deaths
Peter O'Neil, Canwest News Europe Correspondent
Published: Wednesday, August 20, 2008
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Olivier Laban-Mattei/Pool/Reuters08France's President Nicolas Sarkozy speaks with French paratroopers at Camp Warehouse in Kabul, August 20, 2008.
PARIS -- France's worst single military loss in a quarter-century, which is expected to shake public confidence -- though not President Nicolas Sarkozy's resolve in the war on terror -- may have been caused by friendly fire, according to a report published Wednesday.
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization said it will look into a media report alleging that the French soldiers, after being ambushed by insurgents, faced fire by aircraft and Afghan soldiers sent to rescue them, according to Agence France-Presse.
"We are aware of the media reports and therefore we have to look into it," an unidentified official told AFP, referring to interviews with soldiers in the newspaper Le Monde.
Ten French paratroopers were killed and 21 wounded in the worst single battlefield defeat for the allies since the Taliban regime was ousted in 2001. It was France's biggest loss since a truck bomb killed 58 French soldiers in Beirut in 1983.
"I came to tell you that the work that you are doing here is essential," Sarkozy told French troops after flying to Kabul Wednesday.
"The best way to be loyal to your comrades is to continue your work, is to raise your head, to be professional."
Some of the wounded soldiers were to arrive here Wednesday evening, as well as the bodies of those killed
hakira will also march in Paris
Colombian pop star Shakira will join former hostage ingrid Betancourt during the July 20 march against the FARC in Paris and will be joining the massive call to liberate all hostages.

On the day Colombia celebrates its independence, people in many Colombian and international cities will march to demand the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages currently held captive by Colombia’s largest rebel group.
Ingrid Betancourt, marching in Paris for security reasons, already had the company of Colombian rocker Juanes, French singer Manu Chao and Spanish singer Miguel Bose.
Shakira has not yet confirmed her cooperation with the concert following the march.
The last march against the FARC in February mobilized millions of people worldwide.
Ooh La La – Celebs Seek Parisian Chic!
Stylish city Paris got a fashion injection this week as Fashion Week took over the city, with celebs and fashionistas descending on the French capital. Liv Tyler and Eva Mendes represented Hollywood, taking in several gorgeous shows over the week, Janet Jackson also visited the city in a whirlwind and – flying the flag for us Brits – was the awesome Helen Mirren, and Alexa Chung who looked amazing at the Chanel show. Lesser known singer/model Micky Green gets my pick for looking cool in her funky monochrome look, and French natives Lou Doillon and Charlotte Gainsbourg looked stylish as usual in their laid back and more formal get-ups.

Patricia Arquette's mind wasn't wholly on fashion, as she started talking about the children's book she's writing, and the intriguing film Boyhood – a 12-year-long project by director Richard Linklater:
"We shoot for a week each year. It's about kids growing up. They age on film and so do I."
I think that sounds totally fascinating, but I guess I'll have to wait a while to see it!
To see many more photos of the stars including Olivier Martinez, Michelle Yeoh, Lynda Carter, Camilla Belle and Maria Sharapova
Eva Green
French actress was born in Paris

Justin's Parisian Jaunt

Justin Timberlake hits up Louis Vuitton while in Paris. Perhaps he picked up a souvenir for his girlfriend Jessica Biel?
Paris Webcams

Paris Hilton: Lookin’ Sexy in LA

Getting all dolled up in a stunning black dress, Paris Hilton was spotted out on a pharmacy run in Los Angeles on Friday (June 6).
The former Simple Life star was with boyfriend Benji Madden, who picked up some take away food from a local restaurant near Hilton’s home while she popped into the drug store.
According to paparazzi on the scene, “The two were accompanied by a driver and bodyguard, but Paris was in a delightful mood and walked slowly to the car in her elegant dress with her bodyguard walking behind her.”
Ready to head back home, Benji, like a real gentleman, waited by the car door and opened it for her before getting in himself and being driven off.
Later on in the evening, the hotel heiress made her way to TAO, as part of filming for her new MTV reality show Paris Hilton’s My New BFF.
Paris stimulates the senses, demanding to be seen, heard, touched, tasted and smelt. From romance along the Seine to landscapes on bus-sized canvases to the pick-an-ism types in cafes monologuing on the use of garlic or the finer points of Jerry Lewis, Paris is the essence of all things French.is the capital city of France. It is situated on the Seine river, in northern France, at the heart of the Île-de-France region. The City of Paris has an estimated population of 2,167,994 within its administrative limits (January 2006).The Paris unité urbaine (or urban area) extends well beyond the administrative city limits and has an estimated population of 9.93 million (in 2005),while the Paris aire urbaine (or metropolitan area) has a population of nearly 12 millionand is one of the most populated metropolitan areas in Europe.
Gaze rapturously at its breezy boulevards, impressive monuments, great works of art and magic lights. Savour its gourmet selection of cheese, chocolate, wine and seafood. Feel the wind in your face as you rollerblade through Bastille, or a frisson of fear and pleasure atop the Eiffel Tower.
Sights and museums
Although the last few years have brought little dramatic change on the scale of François Mitterrand’s famous grands projets, Paris has produced a steady stream of improvements, renovations and, yes, the occasional all-new attraction.
One of the latter is a museum of non-Western arts on the left bank near the Eiffel Tower
, the Musée du Quai Branly, itself a pet presidential project – the president in this case being Jacques Chirac. Opened in specially-built premises by Jean Nouvel in June 2006, the museum amalgamates the defunct Musée des Arts d’Afrique et d’Océanie and the ethnology collections of the Musée de l’Homme, and its impressively broad scope has room for Dogon and Gabonese sculpture, Vietnamese and Peruvian costumes, and masks from Cameroon.
On the ‘old renewed’ front, 2006 has been a good year, with the reopening of several major museums: the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Musée de l’Orangerie, Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris and Musée du Petit Palais. Just across the road from the latter, the Grand Palais has also emerged from a period of extensive renovation looking absolutely magnificent. All it now needs is a worthwhile function.
But the new and revamped are just a fraction of what Paris has to offer: this is, after all, the home of the Louvre, alone worth several museums in cities elsewhere. The Louvre, too, like a colossal work in progress, has been progressively finessed in recent years, most notably with the opening in 2005 of a brand new gallery for the Mona Lisa.
Elsewhere, the list is almost endless – from defining monuments like the Eiffel Tower to lesser-known but entirely cherishable museums like the Musée de la Vie Romantique. Even the city’s largest attraction, the Seine, is enjoying something of a renaissance lately, with the annual Paris Plage jamboree, a brand new floating swimming pool and regular cycle- and rollerskate-only days along the riverside roads in the city centre.
All this, and far more that we haven’t mentioned in this introduction, in a city that’s of manageable size and, into the bargain, blessed with one of the best transport networks in the world. Cities don’t come more visitor-friendly than Paris.
Neighbourhoods
Paris residents think of their city with two systems, the named districts – the Marais, the Latin Quarter, Beaubourg and so on – and the arrondissements. Of the former, many have uncertain boundaries. The latter, numbering 20, are fixed administrative districts that spiral out, clockwise and in ascending order, from the Louvre.

Together, they make a jigsaw puzzle compared by novelist Julien Green to medical models of the human brain, and each piece has its connotations. 5th: intello. 6th: chic. 16th: affluent and stuffy. 18th, 19th, 20th: lively and multicultural. Rightly or wrongly, residents are often assessed, at least at first encounter, by their postcodes – and many will tell you that Paris is not a city but, in fact, a coagulation of distinct villages.
The Champs-Elysées & Western Paris section has as its spine the famous avenue, lined with shops and concept stores; it also includes the fashion’s glammest thoroughfare, avenue Montaigne, and fashion’s second glammest thoroughfare, rue du Faubourg-Saint-Honoré.
Montmartre & Pigalle has, at its northern end, picturesque Montmartre with its steeps flights of steps, narrow windy streets and iconic Sacré-Coeur; and, to the south, Pigalle, famous for the Moulin Rouge, sleazy strip clubs and scuzzy bars, though now a far cleaner act than it was, say, 20 years ago. Opéra to Les Halles covers much of the city’s shopping heartland, as well as its biggest cultural hitter, the Louvre – ably supported by the Palais Garnier and the Musée de l’Orangerie. There’s no shortage of history, either: take a stroll around pretty Palais-Royal to see what we mean.
Northeastern Paris is the part of Paris visitors from the UK are likely to see first: here, at the Gare du Nord, is where Eurostar trains terminate. The area is bisected by the charming Canal St-Martin, with the length of which is a steadily up-and-coming stretch of hip little cafés and fashion boutiques; further east lies the Parc des Buttes Chaumont, with its grottoes and its romantic bridge. Marais, Bastille & Eastern Paris is barfly territory, especially along rue Oberkampf and rue Jean-Pierre-Timbaud.
The Marais itself is the city’s gay heartland, but is also terminally trendy, seething with art galleries and dinky little purveyors foodstuffs and accessories. The Islands – Ile de la Cité, oldest part of the city, home to Notre-Dame cathedral, and the quieter Ile St-Louis, home to shops and restaurants – are unlike any other parts of the city, and should not be overlooked.
Star attraction of the affluent (and often stuffy and institutional) 7th & Western Paris area is the Eiffel Tower, the monument most people think of when they hear the word Paris. Always elegant, it’s prettiest after dark, when tens of thousands of flashbulbs attached to it give the effect of a shimmering sequinned dress. The nighttime is also the best time to ascend the Tower, when queues are at their shortest.
St-Germain-des-Prés is, in popular mythology, the intellectual bit of the city, famous for Sartre and co. These days it’s more a pillar of fashion, and the cafés are too expensive for impecunious brainiacs. But the city’s loveliest park, the Jardin du Luxembourg is here, and it costs nothing; and the Musée d’Orsay, though not free, is still terrific value.
To the east, the Latin Quarter is where several of the city’s academic institutions are based – and, in pleasing contrast, home to some of its jazz institutions. South is Montparnasse, no longer the artistic stronghold of the 1920s, but good for cafés and the dead – the Cimetière Montparnasse is home to some of France’s most illustrious deceased.
Making the most of it
Invest in a Mobilis travel pass and travel cashless through the city by bus and métro. The Paris métro is a world champion among public transport networks and merits a ride in its own right (especially on the driverless line 14); the local buses are clean, frequent and cheap, and are ideal for getting a handle on the city’s topography. Some good bus routes to try just for their sightseeing opportunies are 24, which takes you through St-Germain-des-Prés and the Latin Quarter, 29, which goes through the Marais, 73, which runs up the Champs-Elysées and beyond.
But in the main, you just can’t beat walking. Your best chance of hearing this city’s heartbeat lies in putting one foot in front of the other, above ground, among the people who live and work here; only then will you be able to see the ‘museum city’ clichés for what they are. Paris is alive, thriving: joyous proof that a city can love the trappings of the contemporary world without forgetting – or fossilising – its past.Paris Attractions
Probably the best known landmark in Europe, the Eiffel Tower is the symbol of Paris.
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The Notre Dame de Paris is one of the first Gothic Cathedrals ever built.
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This triumphal arch located at the end of the Champs-Elysées commemorates Napoléon's victories.
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Once the residence of the French King, now one of the world's most famous museums.
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The Sacré Coeur is a basilica in Roman-Byzantine style located on the Montmartre hill.
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More Attractions
The smallest arch on the grand axis between the Louvre and La Défense.
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This amphitheater built in the 1st century A.D. is one of the traces of Paris's Roman heritage.
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Paris's modern library is housed in four 24-story buildings shaped as open books.
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A museum of modern arts, a library, cinema and cafetaria, all in one distictive and controversial building.
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The most fashionable street in the world is copied by many cities, but none can match the original.
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A long list of famous people are buried here at one of the world's most famous cemeteries.
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Paris's highrise business disctrict features a modern version of the Arc de Triomphe.
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A large green square with underground a large shopping center and movie theater.
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The Grand Palais, built for the World Fair of 1900, features a large glass domed roof.
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The City Hall of Paris is a grand building located near the Seine river.
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This former accommodation for war veterans is now home to several museums, among them a large military museum.
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This botanical garden was created in 1626 as a medical garden.
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The most central park in Paris, situated between the Louvre Museum and the Place de la Concorde.
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This great park was created in the 17th century and opened for the public in the 19th century.
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Due to its location and classical greek design, the Madeleine is one of Paris's best known monuments.
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The world's most famous cabaret opened in 1889 as "a temple of music and dance". Today its show attracts visitors from across the world.
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In 1986 this beautiful 19th century railway station was turned into a popular museum.
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This opulent building in Second Empire baroque style is one of the grandest opera houses ever built.
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This former palace built by the daughter of King Louis XIV and his mistress Montespan is the seat of the French lower house.
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The Royal Palace was built by the powerful Cardinal Richelieu in 1630. King Louis XIV lived here during his youth.
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The crypt of the Panthéon contains the vaults of several of France's famous countrymen.
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A modern innovative park at the site of a former Citroën automobile plant.
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A park in the 19th arrondissement featuring steep hills and a 100ft high waterfall.
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This 18th century park, at the edge of the fashionable 8th district, is one of Paris's most popular parks.
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The Petit Palais was built to house a large exposition of French art during the World Fair of 1900.
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The French Revolution started here, at the site of the former Bastille stronghold.
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The largest square in Paris connects the Tuileries with the Champs-Elysées
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The oldest square in Paris also features the Victor Hugo museum.
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This square was once the site of a fortress built to defend the Île de la Cité, the historic center of Paris.
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Probably the most prestigious square in all of Paris. The central column honors Napoleon's victory at the battle of Austerlitz.
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Pont Alexandre III
A beautiful 19th century bridge, lavishly decorated with many sculptures. Read More...
Pont Neuf
This 16th century bridge is the oldest and most famous bridge in Paris. Read More...
Rodin Museum
The Rodin Museum is dedicated to France's most famous sculptor, Auguste Rodin. Read More...
Sainte-Chapelle
This magnificent chapel was built in the 13th century to house important religious relics. Read More...
Tour Maine Montparnasse
The largest office tower in the center of Paris features an observatory. Read More...
Which brings me, of course, to Paris ...
