WORLD> Photo
|
World leaders pay homage to D-Day's history-makers
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-06-07 20:11
Veteran George Charlesbois, 84, said: "I didn't come before because I was afraid to be too upset. But given my age I might not make it next time."
But locals rolled out the red-carpet with streets festooned with Allied country flags and soldiers' photographs, and military enthusiasts patrolled in period jeeps and motorcycles. Obama and his family received a hero's welcome after heading to Paris later on Saturday evening, as crowds gathered outside the city's Notre Dame cathedral and a restaurant in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower. He is due to fly to the United States on Sunday at the end of a foreign tour that had already taken him to Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Germany. The US president also held talks with Sarkozy before the ceremony focusing on issues such as the Middle East and North Korea's nuclear weapon test that Obama said had been "extraordinarily provocative." |