Director of Tourism removed from position, “not deprived of right to stand for election,” says Government

Guillaume Rose, Director of Monaco Tourism and Congress. Photo: Manuel Vitali/DC
Guillaume Rose, Director of Monaco Tourism and Congress. Photo: Manuel Vitali/DC

According to Sovereign Order published in the Journal de Monaco on November 24, 2017, Guillaume Rose, Director of the Tourism and Convention Office of Monaco, has lost his job.

The decree No. 6.678, relating to the transferring of an official, stated, “Mr. Guillaume Rose, Director of Tourism and Congress, is transferred, in the interests of service, as Technical Advisor to the Directorate of Human Resources and Training of Public Service.”

The move comes after Mr Rose was named as an official candidate on the Primo! party list for the national elections, which take place February 11, 2018.

Prince Albert, having considered the deliberation of the Council of Government on November 23, as presented by the Minister of State, felt, by order of decree, that Mr Rose’s position was a conflict of interest.

Primo! is the party set up by Stéphane Valeri, who was President of the Conseil National from 2003 to 2010. He was then appointed Minister of Health and Social Affairs by Prince Albert in 2010, and resigned from this post on May 24 of this year.

Mr Rose, 48, was appointed Director on October 15, 2011. At the time, he was a national councillor – Chairman of the Social Interests and Diverse Business Committee – which he had held since 2008. (He lost his seat by election in 2013.)

On Sunday, November 26, the Government issued a press statement on taking issue with reports that Mr Rose has been deprived of his rights to stand for election.

The statement read: “Contrary to what has been communicated, Guillaume Rose is not being deprived of the right to stand for election in the Monegasque polls.

“During the campaign period, he is in a position to free himself from his obligation to refrain from political activities, which is imposed upon members of the senior civil service, of which he is a member.

“It is surprising that he should express his surprise, while his attention was repeatedly drawn to his situation and that solutions had been proposed to him.

“Mr Rose could have avoided being transferred in the interest of the service (with the retention of his full salary) if he had opted for one of the several proposals that had been made to him, namely to take leave for exceptional or personal reasons. He could also have been released from his obligations while retaining his title and salary.

“The measures that apply to him are not personal or as a target on a list, but rather they correspond to the impartiality expected of members of the senior civil service, which apply in all similar situations.”

It’s a race to the 2018 elections. Unlike the French elections, in Monaco there is only one round of voting, for which any Monegasque over the age 18 can cast a ballot.

Seats are attributed by a mixture of “first past the post” and proportional representation, that is 16 seats out of the total 24 are attributed to the party that receives the majority, and the remaining 8 seats by proportional representation.

Article first published November 25, 2017.


News

Prince’s Olympic experiences recognised with OLY award

Prince Albert with WOA President Joel Bouzou at the Prince’s Palace. Photo: Facebook World Olympians Association
Prince Albert with WOA President Joel Bouzou at the Prince’s Palace. Photo: Facebook World Olympians Association

HSH Prince Albert is now able to add the initials OLY to his name, in recognition of his personal experiences and achievements as an Olympic competitor.

The World Olympians Association (WOA) introduced the designation to help gain lasting worldwide recognition for its members.

A patron of the Association, Prince Albert represented Monaco in bobsleigh events at five consecutive Olympic Winter Games. On Thursday, November 23, the Prince, accepted the certificate recognising his OLY status from the hands of WOA President Joel Bouzou at the Prince’s Palace.

The Prince said: “I feel proud and honoured to receive this certificate under my athlete name, Albert Grimaldi OLY. Like many other athletes I trained hard for many years before reaching the Olympic Games and becoming an Olympian.

“As much as the goal, I treasured this journey, which taught me how to dedicate myself and build up an open-minded character. Therefore, I greatly support this initiative, which will promote the skills of many Olympians and help them find opportunities in society after the end of their sports career.”

So far more than 3,000 Olympians have registered to add OLY to their names since the scheme’s launch earlier in November at the eighth International Olympic Committee Forum in Lausanne.

OLY was created not only as recognition of past achievements, but also to promote Olympians’ social, charitable and community-based work and to act as a reminder of their responsibility to represent Olympic values in everyday life.


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Prince Albert inspects caissons for land extension

Photo: Facebook Palais Princier de Monaco
Photo: Facebook Palais Princier de Monaco

Prince Albert visited the Industrial Port of Marseille on Friday, November 24, where the company Bouygues TP is building major components as part of the infrastructure for the future land extension at Anse du Portier in Monaco.

The Sovereign Prince was able to inspect at close hand the detailed work that goes into the manufacture of the caissons.

This new district off Larvotto will be protected from the effects of waves by a belt of these large watertight chambers. Each has a box structure, 56m long x 50m wide x 27m high. This is the first time such a massive structure of this kind has been built in France.

The caissons have been designed and developed to meet the precise needs of the Monaco construction site. In total, 18 caissons, each weighing 10,000 tonnes, will be manufactured.

A technique of continuous concrete pouring by means of sliding formwork is being used to allow the construction of each box in one piece.

The Prince has been in constant contact with the teams working on the caissons and has been following progress very closely.

Seven hundred people are employed in Marseille and the region for these operations.

Article first published November 26, 2017.


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Portier land extension project makes progress

Monaco’s humanitarian associations meet students to mark Rights of the Child

Photo: Manuel Vitali/DC
Photo: Manuel Vitali/DC

Under the Patronage Prince Albert, the Principality every year celebrates the anniversary of the International Convention on the Rights of the Child, adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on November 20, 1989.

Pupils of CM2 classes, ages ten and elevent, on Friday, November 24, had the honour of meeting Presidents of various Monegasque humanitarian associations that are partners in the marking of the International Day of the Rights of the Child.

Action Innocence, Amade Monaco, Casa Do Menor, Child CARE Monaco, Children & Future, Digital Aid, Les Enfants de Frankie, Interactions & Solidarity, Mission Childhood, Support Volunteering, and Walking For Kids each presented their missions to help the children of the world whose fundamental rights are not respected.

Monaco resident Nick Danziger, the well-known British photographer and director of numerous documentaries on the Rights of the Child, meets fourth grade students from November 21 to 27, in outreach workshops in French and English.


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She Can He Can to celebrate International Day of the Girl

Let Toys Be Toys breakfast at Club 39

toys

A special breakfast is being held at Club 39 on Thursday, November 30, organised by the Monaco-based organisation SheCanHeCan.

From 9 am to 11 am, the event welcomes a guest speaker from Let Toys Be Toys, a UK-based campaign that asks the toy and publishing industries to stop limiting children’s interests by promoting some toys and books as only suitable for girls, and others only for boys.

Let Toys Be Toys believes that removing preconceived gender stereotyping, and encouraging children to pick their interests, has educational and social benefits.

BBC2 explored this subject in a documentary “No more boys and girls: Can kids go gender free?”, which aired in August of this year. The two-part production was a social experiment presented by Javid Abdelmoneim, a doctor with Médecins Sans Frontières, that involved a classroom of seven-year-old girls and boys who were treated indifferently.

For example, signs saying “boys and girls are sensitive” and “girls and boys are strong” were put up in the room. Also, the “girls’ cupboard” and “boys’ cupboard” where the students put their coats were repainted as “one big gender-neutral wardrobe”.

The episodes were met with mixed reviews, “shocking, “bold” and “potentially very harmful”.

The breakfast discussion next Thursday will touch upon the fate of our gender. “It’s about learning how to provide children with choices,” Vibeke Thomsen, Founder of SheCanHeCan told Monaco Life, “and showing them they have no limits whether they are a girl or boy.”

Reservations – €20, which includes a full breakfast – in advance: info@shecanhecan.org


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New website to help victims in Monaco of assault and offences