LYON (France) May 5: A 38-year-old French voter sported gardening gloves and a clothes pin on his nose in a show of distaste as he cast his ballot Sunday in the decisive second round presidential election.

The 38-year-old man from the central city of Lyon, who only identified himself as Jean-Claude, said he wanted to “make a statement” on French political life.

“French politics are a bit nauseating as a general rule ... I wanted to make that known in a very concrete way,” he told AFP.

Left-wing groups had urged voters to wear nose-pegs or gloves to show their frustration at having to vote for President Jacques Chirac in Sunday’s run-off vote to ensure he defeats extreme right-wing challenger Jean-Marie Le Pen.

However, campaign organisers backpedalled after the Constitutional Council, France’s highest court, ruled that wearing gloves or nose-pegs could violate laws against making ostentatious political statements in polling stations that could reveal the voter’s choice.

An association calling itself the Clothes-peg Collective called on voters to “scrupulously respect the voting process, particularly inside the polling stations, by not ostentatiously wearing a clothes peg on their nose.”

The accessory, it said, should be left at the door of the station “to exhibit its meaning from there”.—AFP

Opinion

Trouble at home

Trouble at home

The country’s strength lies in its political and economic stability, not in fleeting moments of diplomatic success.

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