Bastille Day features Paris parade, but no presidential garden party

Bastille Day in France becomes a less lavish affair this year, as the country tries to keep a lid on spending.

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REUTERS/Mal Langsdon
A French paratrooper with African flags prepares to land on the Champs Elysees in Paris at the end of the traditional Bastille Day military parade in Paris July 14. Some 400 soldiers from 13 former French African colonies participate in the French national day military parade.

African soldiers from countries in France's former colonial empire marched in the annual Bastille Day military parade in Paris on Wednesday.

Planes flew over the capital trailing red, white and blue smoke. Parachuting soldiers dropped onto the Champs-Elysees bearing African flags.

Soldiers from 13 African countries that are celebrating five decades of independence marched down the Champs-Elysees avenue ahead of French troops. African leaders watched from the stands.

President Nicolas Sarkozy rode down the avenue in an open military vehicle. His wife, singer Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, watched from the stands and later signed autographs. A downpour drenched troops and the crowd during part of the parade.

A unit of female soldiers from Benin opened Wednesday's parade. Other countries invited were Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Republic of Congo, Gabon, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal, Chad and Togo. Ivory Coast, which has tense relations with France, declined to send troops, but its defense minister attended.

Another traditional Bastille Day event, the lavish garden party at the presidential palace, was canceled as France's government — like those around Europe — tries to rein in runaway debt. Skipping the party saved about €780,000 ($992,000), government spokesman Luc Chatel said.

The holiday marks the July 14, 1789, storming of the Bastille prison in Paris by angry crowds, which helped spark the French Revolution.

The invitation of African leaders forced Sarkozy to defend himself from critics. A host of associations protested about alleged human rights violations by some of the African leaders and said Sarkozy was glorifying the "Francafrique," the French nickname for what many see as cronyism between France and its former African colonies.

During a lunch with African leaders Tuesday, Sarkozy insisted the invitation was not an "expression of colonial nostalgia, or a French temptation to take over your independence celebrations."

Sarkozy said he wanted to celebrate historic bonds and "build the future together."

He also said the government would submit a draft law to ensure that veterans from France's former colonies are entitled to the same sums in pension payments as their French counterparts — a long-standing source of tension.

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