Mbappe, PSG Coach Face Backlash for Laughing off Private Jet Question

05 September 2022, France, Saint-Germain-En-Laye: Paris Saint-Germain coach Christophe Galtier attends a press conference at Ooredoo Center ahead of Tuesday's UEFA Champions League Group H soccer match against Juventus. (dpa)
05 September 2022, France, Saint-Germain-En-Laye: Paris Saint-Germain coach Christophe Galtier attends a press conference at Ooredoo Center ahead of Tuesday's UEFA Champions League Group H soccer match against Juventus. (dpa)
TT

Mbappe, PSG Coach Face Backlash for Laughing off Private Jet Question

05 September 2022, France, Saint-Germain-En-Laye: Paris Saint-Germain coach Christophe Galtier attends a press conference at Ooredoo Center ahead of Tuesday's UEFA Champions League Group H soccer match against Juventus. (dpa)
05 September 2022, France, Saint-Germain-En-Laye: Paris Saint-Germain coach Christophe Galtier attends a press conference at Ooredoo Center ahead of Tuesday's UEFA Champions League Group H soccer match against Juventus. (dpa)

Paris St Germain coach Christophe Galtier and striker Kylian Mbappe were facing a backlash on Tuesday for laughing off a question about why the team took a private jet for a short trip to a game in Nantes at the weekend.

"Are you serious, responding like this???," Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo tweeted. "Wake up guys???"

Quizzed on PSG's jet trip to Nantes at a news conference on Monday, Galtier and Mbappe looked at each other and the World Cup winner burst out laughing as his coach responded with a quip.

"This morning we talked about it with the company which organizes our trips and we're looking into travelling on sand yachts," Galtier said. Asked for his views on the matter, Mbappe said he did not have any.

A video of their comments immediately went viral, triggering angry responses from social media users, environmentalists and ministers.

Photoshopped memes of Mbappe and Galtier on sand yachts could be seen across social media and the controversy occupied the top three tending topics on Twitter in France on Tuesday.

"I love Mbappe, we can all have the giggles at the least opportune moment and it really was the least opportune moment," Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told BFM TV on Tuesday.

"But we all have to take climate change seriously," he said, adding that Galtier's irony had been "out of place".

PSG were not immediately available for comment.

Nantes is about two hours by high-speed train from Paris.

The use of private jets has been a much-discussed topic both in France and globally this summer, with social media users tracking - and criticizing - their use amid a series of heatwaves, droughts and floods triggered by climate change.

President Emmanuel Macron on Monday told a news conference that "everyone has to do their bit" to fight climate change.



EU Countries Take 1st Step to Weaken Protected Status of Wolves

A young wolf stands in the enclosure of the Falkenstein National Park Center. Armin Weigel/dpa
A young wolf stands in the enclosure of the Falkenstein National Park Center. Armin Weigel/dpa
TT

EU Countries Take 1st Step to Weaken Protected Status of Wolves

A young wolf stands in the enclosure of the Falkenstein National Park Center. Armin Weigel/dpa
A young wolf stands in the enclosure of the Falkenstein National Park Center. Armin Weigel/dpa

Safeguards to protect wolves in the European Union could be weakened in future after member states agreed on Wednesday on the first steps towards easing these measures.

Weakening the protection of wolves aims to facilitate the culling of those deemed a threat to livestock.

Until now, wolves have been highly protected in Europe. In some regions, however, people question whether the status quo is still justified as the number of wolves is growing, dpa reported.

The wolf's protection in the EU is tied to the 1979 Bern Convention, the Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats.

EU ambassadors in Brussels agreed to propose a change to the body in charge of the wildlife protection treaty, EU diplomats told dpa.

Amending the Bern Convention is a first step which could pave the way for the European Commission to propose EU legislation to change the protected status of the wolf at a later stage.

The wolf's comeback in Europe is highly controversial.

Currently, wolves receive strict protection status under EU law with provisions allowing for local authorities to take action, including shooting wolves in case of conflicts with rural communities and farmers.

While some EU countries, including Germany and France, are in favor of easier culling, nature conservation groups campaign for different approaches, like better herd surveillance, night confinement and more guard dogs.

Having been extinct in large parts of Europe until the 1960s, there are currently around 19,000 wolves in the EU, according to conservationists.