Interview: Monaco’s show jumping prodigy Íñigo López de la Osa Franco

At just 22, Íñigo López de la Osa Franco is already rewriting Monaco’s equestrian history, becoming the first male Monegasque rider to compete in the FEI Jumping World Cup and qualifying for the 2026 World Championships. Quietly ambitious and relentlessly disciplined, he has emerged as one of the Principality’s most promising sporting talents. We meet the young champion carving his name into the record books.

When Jan Tops, founder of the Global Champions League, personally selects you for his elite circuit, you know you’ve arrived. For Íñigo López de la Osa Franco, that call represented the culmination of years of discipline, sacrifice and an unwavering focus on reaching show jumping’s highest level.

“I was very happy. It’s always been a dream of mine to be part of the Global Champions League,” Íñigo tells me at his family’s stables in Ventimiglia, Italy, reflecting on his selection for the Stockholm Hearts team. “We’d always had a team in the past, but I was too young to be involved. Two years later, I was jumping in bigger classes and thought it would be a great opportunity. I couldn’t be prouder to be competing at that level.”

The Global Champions League is often called the Formula 1 of equestrian sport, and the comparison is apt. Only the world’s best riders compete across seven stages in some of the planet’s most stunning locations. For Íñigo, the step up from junior competitions has been transformative.

“As Jan Tops said, ‘I want the best for the best,'” Íñigo explains. “You’re competing in the most beautiful places in the world. The shows are amazingly organised, and the level is the highest you can have in the sport today.”

An enfant du pays

Born in Monaco in 2003, Íñigo represents a rare breed in the Principality — a true local who has grown up immersed in the Principality’s culture. When he made history as the first male Monegasque rider to compete in the FEI Jumping World Cup in Verona, the achievement carried extra weight.

“Representing Monaco is amazing, especially because I was born here and grew up here,” he says. “I’m an enfant du pays, as we say in Monaco. That makes a big difference for me. Those of us who were born here, who went to school here, who learned the Monegasque dialect — getting the passport is an incredible opportunity. I’m very happy to be riding for Monaco at this stage.”

His path to representing the Principality wasn’t straightforward. Íñigo’s career began with Italy, then Spain — following his father, Spanish champion Íñigo López de la Osa Escribano. At 17, he switched to Monaco when an opportunity arose to build a team with fellow riders Stazia Nielson and Stena Cabanova.

“At 18, I was lucky enough to get the Monaco passport, so I could represent the Principality at any stage,” he says. The decision has defined his career, allowing him to write new chapters in Monaco’s equestrian history.

Training with the best

Since 2024, Íñigo has been based in Metz, France, training under Simon Delestre, the former world number one who won bronze at the Paris 2024 Olympics. The experience of working alongside Olympic medallists daily has shaped his approach to the sport.

“Without hard work, you don’t get anywhere. Simon is one of the hardest workers I’ve ever seen,” Íñigo says with evident admiration. “He’s always there, trying to achieve perfection, always wanting to do better. For him, every horse is a new story. He studies each one, makes sure he knows every horse inside and out to give us the best chance at every stage. He ensures the horses have the best conditions, and he’ll spend hours at night working on it. That’s what makes him the rider he is today.”

That dedication to excellence has rubbed off. Íñigo’s daily routine reflects the same commitment: mornings spent riding all his horses, afternoons in the gym working on physical conditioning.

“Not many riders actually go to the gym and train. I’m happy to be one of them,” he says. “Since I started training, I’ve definitely improved with the horses. It’s like any sport—if you train, you have a better chance of being successful. You can see the best riders in the world are at the gym, so it’s clearly important.”

The Global Champions League experience

Competing in the Global Champions League has taken Íñigo from Doha to Mexico City, Saint-Tropez to Rome, with each stage presenting new challenges and experiences. His debut in Doha stands out as a particular highlight.

“My debut in Doha was great. Mexico was amazing. Every show had its important moments, but I still think my debut with the team in Doha was the highlight,” he recalls.

But nothing compares to competing at home. When the Global Champions League came to Monaco, Íñigo had the rare privilege of performing not only in front of his home crowd, but also Prince Albert II.

“The day of the team competition, the Prince was there. That was really special. He came to support us, and the Monegasque crowd was fantastic,” he says.

The partnership with horses

With 25 international wins across nine different horses, Íñigo has developed a reputation for adaptability and horsemanship. Building those partnerships, he explains, requires time and genuine connection.

“Spending time with them, getting to know them — it’s important to create a bond,” he says. “Especially when you reach the most critical moment in competition. It’s very stressful for everyone, but if you know your horse, you know it will be okay. You just have to create that bond.”

One partnership stands above the rest. Jade, a mare he’s competed with at the Junior European Championships, holds a special place.

“She’s one of my best horses and has a special place in my heart,” Íñigo says. “We’ve been through a lot together — beautiful moments, but also difficult ones. She’s always been there for me. She was the first of many, so I’d definitely say she’s my favourite.”

His love for working with horses is evident. “They’re amazing, they’re sweet,” he says. “I enjoy being with them, spending time with them. Some are naughtier than others, but you always appreciate the sweeter ones.”

The reality of elite sport

Show jumping, Íñigo is quick to point out, is not a sport for those seeking constant validation. Success is rare, and failure is frequent.

“It’s a sport where you fail more than you succeed,” he says candidly. “Sometimes you have weekends you just want to forget. But when you have a good weekend, enjoy it — because you never know when the next one will come. It’s a very difficult sport. We’re always humble, calm and focused. And these are animals, they have feelings too. We’re two beings working together, which is perhaps the most difficult part.”

His biggest challenge thus far has been maintaining consistency at the top level. “I had a bit of bad luck this year. It was a good year, but there were some difficult moments. Staying at the top is the challenge,” he reflects.

Yet he’s quick to credit the team around him. “I have an incredible team, they’re the real people behind all of this, they take care of the horses. They’re the most important ones, because without them I wouldn’t be here.”

Engineering and show jumping

Between competitions, Íñigo is studying Industrial Engineering at the University of Eindhoven. The choice, he admits with a laugh, came through a process of elimination rather than burning passion.

“I was watching Netflix and thought, ‘I want to become a lawyer’ — you know, from watching Suits. But I realised it was too much reading, so not for me,” he explains. “My father studied medicine, so I’d have loved to be a doctor, but I can’t stand the sight of blood. Engineering was the third option. I think I made the best choice — I’m very happy about it.”

More seriously, he sees the degree as essential insurance. “It’s important to always have something on the side. Many things can happen in this sport, so having a back-up is very important.”

Looking ahead

The next 12 months hold significant challenges. Beyond the 2026 World Championships in Germany — where he’ll be the first male rider to represent Monaco at this level — Íñigo has the Mediterranean Games on his calendar.

“It’s like the Olympics for Mediterranean countries, so there are two important competitions ahead,” he says. “I always try to stay at the top level. I’ll have a good number of horses next year, between six and eight, which is ideal. But it’s just about keeping working, keeping improving, and we’ll see what happens.”

Looking five years ahead, his ambitions remain grounded yet determined. “We’re producing a lot of young horses, so hopefully we’ll be competing at the top level with them. That would be amazing.”

For now, Íñigo López de la Osa Franco is focused on the present — training daily, competing at the highest level, and continuing to make history for Monaco. From an 11-year-old who simply told his father “I want to ride” to competing alongside Olympic medallists in the Global Champions League, his journey exemplifies what dedication, discipline and genuine love for the sport can achieve.

As Monaco’s show jumping scene continues to grow, Íñigo remains at its forefront — serious, ambitious, and hungry for the next challenge.

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Main photo credit: Cassandra Tanti. All competition photos provided

 

 

France condemns Trump’s Greenland threats: “Borders cannot be changed by force”

France declared solidarity with Denmark on Monday following fresh threats by US President Donald Trump to take over Greenland.

“Borders cannot be changed by force,” French Foreign Ministry spokesman Pascal Confavreux told television channel TF1. “Greenland belongs to the Greenlanders and the Danes, and it is up to them to decide what to do with it.”

The French statement came after Trump doubled down on Sunday on his claim that the autonomous Danish territory should become part of the United States, declaring “We need Greenland from the standpoint of national security, and Denmark is not going to be able to do it.”

Trump’s military intervention in Venezuela last week, which resulted in the seizure of President Nicolas Maduro who is now detained in New York, has intensified European concerns about his territorial ambitions. The US president announced Washington would “run” Venezuela indefinitely and tap its vast oil reserves.

France denounces violation of UN Charter

Confavreux said international law had not been respected during the US intervention in Venezuela. “We will not mourn” Maduro, who “had lost his legitimacy,” the spokesman stated, but added it was the duty of “prominent, permanent members” of the UN Security Council such as France to denounce any violation of the United Nations Charter.

“We deplore it, we are preparing for this advent of the law of the strongest, but we are not resigned to it,” he said.

The French position reflects growing alarm in Paris about what officials view as an increasingly aggressive US foreign policy that challenges post-war international norms. As a permanent Security Council member, France has positioned itself as a defender of multilateralism and the UN Charter against what it characterises as unilateral American actions.

Denmark warns NATO at stake

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen delivered a stark warning on Monday that any US military action against Greenland would destroy 80 years of transatlantic security arrangements.

“If the United States decides to militarily attack another NATO country, then everything would stop—that includes NATO and, therefore, post-World War II security,” she told TV2 network.

Frederiksen called on Washington to stop “threatening its historical ally” and described US claims on Greenland as “absurd.”

Greenland Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen told Trump on social media: “That’s enough now. No more pressure. No more insinuations. No more fantasies of annexation.” He added the territory was open to dialogue “but this must happen through the proper channels and with respect for international law.”

European solidarity emerges

France joined a chorus of European support for Denmark. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said “only Greenland and the Kingdom of Denmark” could decide the territory’s future, whilst leaders from Finland, Sweden and Norway issued similar statements.

EU foreign policy spokesperson Anitta Hipper told reporters the bloc was committed to defending the territorial integrity of its members.

The controversy escalated after Katie Miller, wife of Trump adviser Stephen Miller, posted an online image on Saturday showing Greenland in the colours of the US flag with the caption “SOON.”

Stephen Miller, widely seen as architect of many Trump policies, told CNN on Monday: “The United States should have Greenland as part of the United States. Nobody’s going to fight the United States militarily over the future of Greenland!”

Strategic Arctic prize

Greenland sits on the shortest missile route between Russia and the United States, and Washington maintains a military base there. The territory holds untapped rare earth deposits and could become strategically vital as polar ice melts, opening new shipping routes.

Trump has ramped up pressure over recent months, claiming in December that Russian and Chinese ships were “all over” the territory’s coast. China’s foreign ministry hit back on Monday, urging Washington to “stop using the so-called China threat as an excuse to seek personal gain.”

Aaja Chemnitz, who represents Greenland in the Danish parliament, accused Trump of “spreading lies about Chinese and Russian warships” and told Agence France-Presse that “the people of Greenland should go into preparation mode.”

Trump told reporters he would discuss Greenland again “in about two months” or “in 20 days,” suggesting continued pressure on Denmark.

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Photo credit: Aningaaq Rosing Carlsen, Unsplash

 

Fairmont Monte Carlo seeks 300 staff at recruitment day on 20th January

The Fairmont Monte Carlo will hold a major recruitment day on Tuesday 20th January, seeking 300 new staff members to join its teams ahead of Monaco’s busy season of prestigious events.

Interviews will run from 9:00am to 5:30pm in the hotel’s Salle d’Or, with positions available across departments as the hotel prepares for the Rolex Monte Carlo Masters, Monaco E-Prix, Formula 1 Grand Prix, Monaco Yacht Show and summer season.

The hotel is highlighting competitive conditions that make working in Monaco particularly attractive, with salaries averaging 28 percent higher than comparable positions in France, alongside higher tips and position-adjusted remuneration.

Benefits package

Staff receive transport allowances of €17 per month for those living within 8km of Monaco and €56 per month for those residing further away. A monthly food allowance of €253.20 is provided, whilst the hotel covers Monaco Parking charges.

Employees also receive exclusive discounts on hotel services including restaurants, spa and fitness facilities, and the hair salon.

“The Fairmont Monte Carlo operates in a constantly evolving environment,” said Johanna Lamand, human resources director. “Our ambition this season is to attract committed talent, ready to make a difference and contribute to sustainable growth, building strong, innovative teams focused on the future.”

Prospective applicants can find more information on available positions at group.accor.com/fr-FR/careers or contact the hotel directly at fmc.recrutement@fairmont.com.

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Photo credit: Cassandra Tanti

 

Théâtre Princess Grace explores life of playwright Jean-Luc Lagarce

The Théâtre Princesse Grace of Monaco is set to present an intimate portrait of one of the 20th century’s most celebrated French playwrights this month.

Il ne m’est jamais rien arrivé (Nothing ever happened to me), based on the personal journals of Jean-Luc Lagarce, will take to the stage on Tuesday 20th January at 8pm. The one-hour production, performed without an interval, offers audiences a glimpse into the private life of the acclaimed dramatist.

French actor and comedian Vincent Dedienne brings Lagarce’s diaries to life under the direction of Johanny Bert. The performance draws from the writer’s intimate reflections, chronicling his experiences as a young man moving between Paris and Besançon during the 1980s.

The journals reveal a complex portrait of a theatre enthusiast navigating a solitary yet deeply emotional life during a turbulent period in French history. Lagarce’s writings document the emergence of the AIDS crisis and the deaths of French cultural icons Coluche and Simone Signoret.

The production is adapted from Le Journal de Jean-Luc Lagarce, published by les Solitaires Intempestifs.

January programme

The production is part of a diverse January season, which also includes David Lescot’s ‘Je suis trop vert‘ on January 6th and Clea Petrolesi’s ‘Personne n’est ensemble sauf moi‘ on January 13th.

Theatre enthusiasts can also attend the Philosophical Encounters of Monaco on January 15th, focusing on the theme of redemption. On January 28th at 8pm, the theatre also presents a special film screening of Claude Autant-Lara’s ‘Occupe-toi d’Amélie‘ in partnership with the Institut Audiovisuel de Monaco.

The month concludes with Léna Breban’s staging of Beaumarchais’ classic ‘Le Mariage de Figaro‘ on January 30th.

Tickets are available through the theatre’s box office on +377 93 25 32 27 (Monday to Friday, 9:30am-1pm and 2pm-5pm), by email at spectateurs@tpgmonaco.mc, or online at montecarloticket.com.

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Photo credit: Christophe Raynaud De Lage

 

French doctors launch mass strike affecting Côte d’Azur as 85% prepare to walk out

French general practitioners across the Côte d’Azur have joined a nationwide strike that began on Monday and will continue through 15th January, with an estimated 85 percent of doctors participating in protest against proposed social security reforms.

The walkout, which has already seen over 15,500 physicians register as strikers across France, will cause considerable disruption to healthcare services. Surgeries will be postponed, prescriptions will be difficult to obtain, and sick leave authorisations will be delayed as doctors close practices to all but chronically ill patients.

The action targets proposed social security financing legislation that would give government power to modify reimbursement rates for certain procedures and increase control over sick leave authorisations.

Alternative solutions for patients

Patients unable to obtain prescription renewals can approach pharmacists, who now have authority to extend treatments for chronic conditions. Recent pharmacy reforms grant pharmacists access to patient care histories, allowing them to continue necessary medications without doctor consultation.

However, treatments requiring medical examination or where renewal is not automatic will prove more complex. Teleconsultation booths recently installed in some pharmacies offer another option, though wait times outside strike periods already reach 45 minutes to 90 minutes, and could extend to three to four hours during the walkout.

Government requisitions

Health Minister Stéphanie Rist announced on Sunday that measures have been implemented to organise continuity of care with regional health agencies and healthcare establishments. Prefects can issue requisition letters to striking doctors, legally requiring them to provide care and suspending their right to strike.

Requisitions are determined by local healthcare availability. If regional authorities identify high strike participation threatening care access, they can compel specific practices to remain open. Doctors cannot refuse requisition orders.

Emergency services under strain

Patients requiring urgent care should call SAMU (15) before attending emergency departments, according to regional health agencies. Already hospitalised patients will continue receiving treatment, but those arriving at emergency departments or maternity wards will be transferred to public hospitals except in life-threatening situations.

Emergency services are expected to experience intense saturation during the 10-day period. SOS Médecins France, which supports the strike, will operate with some structures closed and others providing minimum service.

Strike tactics

Beyond practice closures, participating doctors are conducting a coordinated withdrawal from administrative systems. The strike includes refusal to use the Carte Vitale electronic health card system, forcing reversion to paper reimbursement forms, and rejection of the shared medical file (DMP) database that doctors are refusing to complete.

The peak impact is expected between 10th and 15th January, when the highest number of doctors will be off work simultaneously. Medical unions acknowledge the mobilisation will penalise patients but maintain they attempted to anticipate disruption by seeing urgent cases beforehand and rescheduling appointments where possible.

Underlying grievances

The strike reflects deeper tensions in French healthcare beyond the immediate legislative trigger. Doctors report constant pressure over prescription patterns and sick leave authorisations from health insurance monitors, particularly when treating complex patient populations requiring more intensive care.

Administrative burden has become a major complaint, with paperwork consuming time that doctors argue should be spent with patients. Practitioners object to what they describe as unilateral government decisions that bypass conventional negotiation processes with medical professionals.

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Photo credit: National Cancer Institute 

 

Monaco opens school enrolment for 2026-27 with simplified online process

Monaco has opened enrolment for the 2026-27 academic year across public and state-contracted private schools, with a newly simplified online registration process requiring significantly fewer documents than previous years.

Families can register children through the MonGuichet.mc portal (Education section), accessible 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Paper forms remain available at individual schools for those who prefer traditional registration.

Primary school registration runs from 5th January through 13th March, covering preschool and elementary levels. Secondary school registration periods vary by institution, with most opening 12th January. Post-baccalaureate applications run from 19th January through 1st April, with all programmes now consolidated into a single process.

Children aged three or older who are Monegasque and/or resident in the Principality are eligible for primary enrolment. Students living outside Monaco or seeking enrolment at a school outside their geographical zone must request derogation from the Direction of Education, Youth and Sports (DENJS) between 1st January and 1st May.

The streamlined process results from collaboration between DENJS and the Interministerial Delegation for Digital Transition as part of the Extended Monaco programme, which aims to make public services more accessible and efficient.

Full registration details, specific dates for each institution, and information on sport-study programmes are available at education.gouv.mc.

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Photo credit: Lilartsy, Unsplash