Reception at the Hôtel de ville de Paris
January 22, 1997
Paris, France
It is a great honour for us this morning to be able to begin our
official visit to France at the City Hall in Paris.
Over the years, we have built a history together, a history of
cooperation that has greatly contributed to the growth of our
two peoples. Our cities, our institutions, our countries are facing
new challenges which call for a reorganization of our resources,
new efforts, and, above all, creativity and imagination.
Mr Mayor, the unique ties that history has forged between our
citizens are clear to see. Because of that deep-rooted attachment,
many networks have been developed over the years in all areas
of human activity. Those networks will be very useful for dealing
with the many challenges we face today.
Of those challenges, employment, especially among young people,
is certainly one of the main concerns that we share.
Part of the solution lies in our ability to expand our economic
and trade cooperation. This is an important theme, which I will
have the opportunity to talk about on several occasions during
my visit. I have just completed, with a great deal of enthusiasm,
the third Team Canada tour to Asia. This was the largest economic
mission in Canada's history, involving almost all the premiers
and some 450 businesspeople. Asia is a region of the world that
is currently experiencing rapid economic growth, and where French
and Canadians may work together.
During my visit to Paris in December 1994, I used the forum provided
to me by the Senate to promote a strengthening of the economic
and trade ties that unite us. At that time, I proposed that we
look together at ways of boosting trade between our countries
and liberalizing trade between Europe and Asia.
My proposals were initially received with some scepticism, but
have since made headway and received solid support in France,
elsewhere in Europe, and in the United States. In fact, I am pleased
to note that our governments have set the objective of increasing,
and indeed doubling, bilateral trade by the year 2000. Liberalizing
trade and eliminating tariff and non-tariff barriers is a key
part of the Action Plan Canada signed, with France's support,
with the European Union on December 17.
We must remember, however, that economic development must also
be environmentally friendly. That is another challenge that we
must take on with determination. This is especially true for our
major cities, which must ensure their citizens' quality of life.
I know that you share that concern, Mr Mayor. At a time of often
drastic budget cutting, our major centres, such as Paris, Montreal,
Toronto, Lyon and Vancouver, are experiencing difficulties in
cleaning up the environment.
How can we reconcile environmental protection with boosting urban
economic activity, which is often a source of pollution but also
of prosperity for our citizens? How can we ensure high-quality
services at a reasonable cost to taxpayers? How can we ensure
collective well-being while respecting individual freedoms? The
answers to these questions are not easy, but they increasingly
lie in less polluting technological innovations. We owe it to
our municipalities and rural communities to encourage increased
cooperation between Canadian and French researchers and companies
to form strategic alliances to ensure sustainable. Cooperation
is already occurring but needs encouragement at the political
level.
Another challenge we face is urban safety. More and more, large
cities are facing an escalation in gratuitous violence, and, in
some cases, the horrors of indiscriminate terrorism. A painful
example is the recent attack in the Paris subway. Innocent people
were wounded and lives were lost, including Canadian lives. That
tragedy well illustrates the fragility of our community life in
large cities, the fragility of liberty and fate. Together, we
must find solutions to ensure the safety of the global village,
without turning it into an armed camp. The freedom and pleasure
of strolling along the banks of the Seine or shopping on St. Catherine
Street in Montreal are part of that quality of life that we must
preserve.
With respect to international cooperation, it is noteworthy that
your predecessor, Mr Jacques Chirac, and the former mayor of Quebec
City, Mr Jean Pelletier, jointly founded in 1979 the Association
internationale des Maires francophones (A.I.M.F.). The Association
has since gone on to become a very effective decentralized network
for cooperation.
A.I.M.F. provides a framework for rich and poor cities to help
one another, share their expertise and pool their resources. I
am pleased to note that the Canadian International Development
Agency (CIDA) is involved in urban cooperation projects in the
southern hemisphere, particularly in Africa.
The Francophonie is another example of productive international
cooperation. In May, Montreal will host a major Francophone conference
on the information highway. And, after Hanoi, we hope to see Moncton
host the next Francophone Summit in 1999. Canada and the participating
governments of Quebec and New Brunswick are strongly committed
to the Francophonie, and we are pleased with the more political
role the organization will be called on to play in the future.
Mr Mayor, your city is an example of co-existence, tolerance,
and generous openness to the world. Paris has always been an international
benchmark in many areas of human activity, such as art, science,
architecture and gastronomy. It is also a beacon of respect for
individuals and their basic values. It is the cradle of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and still embodies that ideal of humanity.
In conclusion, Mr Mayor, and in keeping with tradition, allow
me on behalf of Canada to pay homage to Paris and its leaders.
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