Tuesday 8 September 2009

Sarky’s at it again!!!!

Nicolas Sarkozy 'surrounded by short people for TV speech'

Twenty short people were ordered to stand behind Nicolas Sarkozy so as to make him look taller while delivering a keynote televised speech, it has emerged.

he extraordinary scenes unfolded at the Faurecia motor technology plant in Caligny, south of Caen, Normandy, last Thursday.

Mr Sarkozy looked far more statuesque than usual as he posed in front of the large group of white coated technicians on a specially erected stage.

In scenes being broadcast across France today, a woman researcher admits on camera that she was chosen because of her small size.

Asked by a TV journalist if it was necessary for her to be no taller than the President's 5ft 5ins - a height which rises to around 5ft 7ins thanks to his trademark stacked heels - she clearly replies: 'There you have it.'

Pictures are then shown of the 20 workers on board a coach which brought them in from other parts of the three mile square Faurecia site.

Mr Sarkozy, who is notoriously sensitive about his height, did not want a repeat of the fiasco in June when he was caught using a footstool when delivering a speech alongside Gordon Brown and Barak Obama on one of Normandy's nearby D-Day beaches.

Both the 5ft 11ins British Prime Minister and 6ft 2 ins American towered above Mr Sarkozy when they used the same podium, humiliating him in front of a worldwide audience.

But while the incident in June was considered funny, this time round Mr Sarkozy was accused of scandalously manipulating his media image for political ends.

Party workers are often employed as enthusiastic 'crowds' to clap and cheer Mr Sarkozy.

Mr Schaller, France correspondent for the Belgium national broadcaster RTBF, said police had even surrounded the perimeter of the Faurecia site to keep 'undesirables' away.

He insisted that there was 'no doubt' that the French president's staff had used underhand methods to boost his public image.

When the French presidential couple met up with their American counterparts in the French city of Strasbourg earlier this year, Mr Sarkozy was again widely mocked for standing on tiptoes during a photo shoot with the far taller Obamas.

With just a few exceptions, French leaders have traditionally been men of stature, and even Napoleon Bonaparte was taller than Mr Sarkozy.

An Elysee Palace spokesman denied the latest accusation about media manipulation of Mr Sarkozy's height, saying: 'It's totally absurd and grotesque.'

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