Tuesday, June 8, 2010

No tall guards for Sarkozy

The French president is notoriously sensitive about his 5'5" stature
Tall security agents have been discreetly advised not to apply for a job guarding the French President, Nicolas Sarkozy, police sources say.

The vertically challenged French president is said to have banned statuesque bodyguards despite their added value of being able to spot potential attackers in a crowd.
A police source told Le Parisien that "there's no point recruiting supermen" as "large-sized" candidates stood little chance of being hired.
The presidential guard, known by its acronym GSPR, has been beefed up from 50 to 80 men since 2002, when a mentally disturbed man managed to take a potshot at Jacques Chirac, Sarkozy's predecessor, with his hunting rifle before being overpowered.


Napoleon was taller
Sarkozy is notoriously sensitive and secretive  about his diminutive height of around 5ft 5 ins -- making him shorter than Napoleon.
He has gone out of his way not to stand small on the worldnicolas-sarkozy-carla-bruni stage or when next to his 5ft 10 ins former model wife, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, who mostly wears flat pumps.

Most controversial
But his most controversial move to date on the height front was when his aides bussed in a group of factory workers last September who claimed they had been picked to appear alongside the French leader because they were short.
The Elysee dismissed as "grotesque and absurd" reports that it had stage managed the visit to the Faurecia auto parts company in Normandy, despite the fact that staff confirmed they had been selected because they were "no bigger than the President".
But it only added fuel to the fire of satirists and cartoonists, who often depict Sarkozy as a dwarf.
In April, the Elysee cried foul after a German car hire firm launched a poster campaign urging customers to rent a small Citroen C3 hatchback, with the slogan, "Be like Madame Bruni, take a small French model".
However, France's first couple chose not to press charges, reportedly for fear of boosting the firm's sales.

Source

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