F1 drivers to face Prince’s All-Star team in charity match in Monaco

Photo: starteamforthechildren.org
Photo: starteamforthechildren.org

In the traditional build-up to the Formula One Monaco Grand Prix, Championship leader Sebastian Vettel and reigning World Champion Nico Rosberg are among those taking part in next week’s charity football match.

Formula One drivers, as well as a number of guest players, will take on the AS Star Team, which is led by Prince Albert and coached by Claudio Ranieri.

Ranieri is no stranger to Monaco, having coached the local team before being fired in 2014 after Monaco finished runners-up in Ligue 1. He went on to lead the UK’s lowly Leicester City to a surprise Premier League triumph in the 2015/16 season.

Joining Vettel and Rosberg, who retired at the end of last season, will be Felipe Massa, Daniel Ricciardo, Sergio Pérez, Esteban Ocon, Carlos Sainz Jr., Daniil Kvyat and Pascal Wehrlein.

The match, which was created by Prince Albert II in 1993, takes place on Tuesday, May 23, at Stade Louis II, with kick off at 7 pm.

Proceeds go to the AS Star Team for Children foundation, supporting underprivileged children around the world.

 

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Suspect hands over drugs from his boxers

Photo: Chuck Grimmett
Photo: Chuck Grimmett

A routine roadside inspection shortly after midnight at the Jardin Exotique surprised the policemen on duty on April 24. When one of the officers asked the driver if he was carrying drugs, the 24-year-old suspect unbuttoned his pants and handed over a bag of 23g cannabis from his boxers.

Asked about the origin of the hemp, he said he bought the drug the same evening from an individual in the parking lot of the cinema Pathé Lingostière in Nice for the sum of €70.

In her statement, using carefully-chosen language, prosecutor Cyrielle Colle defined the defendant as “a personality inclined to transgress the law”. He has 13 criminal citations in France from 2009 until 2015, including for violence and narcotics offences.

The accused was absent from the hearing, but communicated to the court that on the day in question he had come to Monaco to buy cigarettes and to refuel his BMW. He admitted smoking one to two joints a day. Despite his absence, he was sentenced to one month in prison.

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‘Ultra’ in court for punching steward

stade louisAn “Ultra” supporter of AS Monaco who punched a steward has appeared before Monaco’s Criminal Court. The steward refused access to the accused when his ticket didn’t correspond to the position he wanted at Stade Louis ll in the game against Turin on
May 3.

The 23-year-old Mali resident admitted the offence and apologised to the court. He was arrested as he left the stadium on the night of the match. “I regret my gesture,” he said. For his part, the steward said he would not be bringing a case for damages, but instead he wanted “justice to do its work”.

While the prosecutor asked for 15 days in jail, citing the need for stewards to do their work, to help avoid a tragedy when crowds move suddenly – a reference to the Hillsborough disaster in the UK – the defence lawyer called for a conditional sentence. The tribunal decided on eight days in jail.

 

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Blow for businessman Bernard Tapie

Bernard Tapie
Photo: JJ Georges
Photo: JJ Georges

France’s Court of Cassation has ruled on Thursday, May 18, that businessman Bernard Tapie repay the €404 million originally given to him in 2008 by a tribunal of arbitration to settle his dispute with Credit Lyonnais on the sale of Adidas.

The case has raised serious questions about the probity of a number of top government officials, including Christine Lagarde, now Managing Director of the IMF, who was finance minister at the time.

Tapie, 74, is well known in the South of France, having been owner of Olympique Marseille football club before becoming the owner of La Provence daily newspaper. The magnate has a fondness for the printed press, and was recently involved in the ownership of the Nice Matin Group – publishers of Monaco Matin – alongside an employees’ collective.

He has specialised, during a colourful career, in the rescue of near-bankrupt businesses. He served as Minister of City Affairs under President Mitterand from December 1992 until March 1993. During his time in football, he was accused of match fixing. In 1995 he was sentenced to two years in jail, including eight months non-suspended. In 1996 he starred in Claude Lelouch’s movie Men, Women, A User’s Manual.

 

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Monaco commits funds for emergency food aid

Food distribution in the Elleborr region of Kenya ©InterActions & Solidarity
Food distribution in the Elleborr region of Kenya ©InterActions & Solidarity

Faced with the unprecedented food crisis that threatens 20 million people in Africa, the Monaco Government has just released some €500,000 in response to several emergency requests.

The funds will be used to support crisis operations by the World Food Programme (WFP), the International Committee of the Red Cross, and two Monegasque NGOs: Fight Aids Monaco and Interactions & Solidarity. The aid will directly benefit several thousand people.

Eight countries among the most vulnerable, most of them in Africa, will be direct beneficiaries of these food aid, following repeated droughts and conflicts that have caused massive population displacement and which have affected millions of people. The eight countries due to receive the emergency aid are Kenya, Nigeria, South Sudan, Somalia, Lake Chad region, Mali, South Africa, and Yemen.

Support is also being provided to the National Bureau of Risks and Disaster Management in Madagascar following the cyclone Enawo, which, by devastating many crops, has led to an increase in rice prices and severe food shortages.

 

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