Paris: French President Emmanuel Macron has provoked outcries in parliament and protests from election rivals by using vulgarity to describe his strategy for pressuring vaccine refusers to get coronavirus jabs.
Macron used the French word emmerder, rooted in the French word for crap and meaning to rile or to bug, in an interview published by French newspaper Le Parisien on Tuesday night. The president made the explosive remark as lawmakers are heatedly debating new measures that would allow only the vaccinated to enjoy leisure activities such as eating out.
The unvaccinated, I really want to bug them. And so we will continue doing so, to the end. That's the strategy," Le Parisien quoted the French leader as saying in a sit-down interview at the presidential Elysee Palace with a panel of its readers.
His use of earthy language more commonly heard at the counters of French cafs further complicated the already difficult passage in parliament of the government's planned new vaccine pass. Lawmakers debated into early Wednesday morning before their discussions were again suspended, disrupted by the furor over Macron's remarks.
The vaccine pass will exclude unvaccinated individuals from places such as restaurants, cinemas, theaters, museums and sports arenas. The pass will also be required on inter-regional trains and buses, and on domestic flights.
Opposition lawmakers protested audibly in the National Assembly chamber as Macron's health minister, Olivier Veran, sought to defend the president's choice of words.
Veran said Macron's interview demonstrated his intention, above all, to protect the population.
Critics accused Macron of behavior unbecoming a president and of targeting the unvaccinated to win support from the 90per cent of French adults who are fully vaccinated. Opposition lawmaker Sebastien Jumel said Macron deliberately chose to add hysteria to the debate.
Macron is facing reelection in April.