Tunisian Wins Contest to Supply Elysée with Baguettes for a Year

Makram Akrout, a Tunisian-born baker who has lived in France for 19 years, has won the contest of the Best Baguette of Paris. (AFP)
Makram Akrout, a Tunisian-born baker who has lived in France for 19 years, has won the contest of the Best Baguette of Paris. (AFP)
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Tunisian Wins Contest to Supply Elysée with Baguettes for a Year

Makram Akrout, a Tunisian-born baker who has lived in France for 19 years, has won the contest of the Best Baguette of Paris. (AFP)
Makram Akrout, a Tunisian-born baker who has lived in France for 19 years, has won the contest of the Best Baguette of Paris. (AFP)

Makram Akrout, a Tunisian-born baker who has lived in France for 19 years, has won the contest of the Best Baguette of Paris in which 170 contestants participated.

Akrout will now have the chance to serve his bread at the presidential palace for a year.

The winning baker will work at the Les boulangers de Reuilly bakery in the 12th arrondissement of Paris.

“I am very proud,” Akrout told AFP, adding, “I have to impress all these people who will come here to taste the best baguettes in Paris.”

Akrout finished 10th in the competition in 2017, then finished 6th in 2018.

In addition to the award, Akrout was granted the right to supply baguettes to the Elysée for one year. He said: “I’ll prepare for this task.”

In the offices of the Union of Bakers and Confectioners of the Metropolitan Region of Paris, in the center of the French capital, all the baguettes were received and numbered without revealing the names of the bakers who made them.

Then a jury of 12 professionals from the sector and Parisians tasted and marked the different pieces of bread according to five criteria: appearance, smell, degree of doneness, the cavity inside the soft part of the bread, and, of course, taste.

Each piece of bread must be made traditionally, weighing between 264 and 314 grams and a length between 55 and 70 centimeters.



2 Elephants Die in Flash Flooding in Northern Thailand

This handout photo taken and released on October 3, 2024 by the Elephant Nature Park shows elephants standing in flood waters at the sanctuary in Thailand's northern Chiang Mai province. (Photo by Handout / ELEPHANT NATURE PARK / AFP)
This handout photo taken and released on October 3, 2024 by the Elephant Nature Park shows elephants standing in flood waters at the sanctuary in Thailand's northern Chiang Mai province. (Photo by Handout / ELEPHANT NATURE PARK / AFP)
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2 Elephants Die in Flash Flooding in Northern Thailand

This handout photo taken and released on October 3, 2024 by the Elephant Nature Park shows elephants standing in flood waters at the sanctuary in Thailand's northern Chiang Mai province. (Photo by Handout / ELEPHANT NATURE PARK / AFP)
This handout photo taken and released on October 3, 2024 by the Elephant Nature Park shows elephants standing in flood waters at the sanctuary in Thailand's northern Chiang Mai province. (Photo by Handout / ELEPHANT NATURE PARK / AFP)

Two elephants drowned during flash flooding in popular Thai tourist hotspot Chiang Mai, their sanctuary said Sunday, as local authorities evacuated visitors from their hotels and shops closed in the city center.

More than 100 elephants at the Elephant Nature Park in Chiang Mai province were moved to higher ground to escape rapidly rising flood waters, an employee who gave her name as Dada, told AFP.

But two elephants -- named in local media as 16-year-old Fahsai and 40-year-old Ploython, who was blind -- were found dead on Saturday.

"My worst nightmare came true when I saw my elephants floating in the water," Saengduean Chailert, the director of the Elephant Nature Park in northern Thailand, told local media.

"I will not let this happen again, I will not make them run from such a flood again," she said, vowing to move them to higher ground ahead of next year's monsoon.

In Chiang Mai city center, people waded through muddy water close to knee height in the night bazaar, and water flowed into the central train station, which has now been closed.

Tourists were forced to evacuate hotels and a local TV station showed a monk carrying a coffin through floodwaters to a cremation site.

Major inundations have struck parts of northern Thailand as recent heavy downpours caused the Ping River to reach "critical" levels, according to the district office. The water level peaked on Saturday but had receded slightly by Sunday.

Thailand's northern provinces have been hit by large floods since Typhoon Yagi struck the region in early September, with one district reporting its worst inundations in 80 years.

Twenty provinces are currently flooded, the Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation said Sunday.