Trump Paris jibe: Mayor uses Mickey Mouse to fight back Published duration 26 February 2017 Related Topics November 2015 Paris attacks

image copyright Reuters

Paris's mayor has hit back at US President Donald Trump's negative remarks about the city, using Walt Disney characters.

Anne Hidalgo tweeted a picture of herself with Mickey and Minnie Mouse celebrating the city's "dynamism and spirit of openness".

At a speech to conservative activists, Mr Trump cited a friend who no longer wanted to take his family to Paris.

President Francois Hollande said such criticisms were "never good".

Mr Trump had also criticised Europe's handling of terrorism, saying that Americans could not let recent attacks happen in the US.

More than 230 people have died in a series of attacks in France since the beginning of 2015, including in January and November of that year in Paris and in Nice in July last year.

The country has been under a state of emergency for more than a year.

What did Mr Trump say?

Speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Friday, he sought to justify his crackdown on immigration by criticising the effect it had had on some European countries.

media caption Five things we learned about President Trump from his address to conservative activists.

He singled out Paris, mentioning a friend called "Jim" who used to be a regular visitor to the city but had stopped going in recent years because "Paris is no longer Paris".

"Take a look at what's happening to our world, folks, and we have to be smart... We can't let that happen to us." Mr Trump went on.

What was the French response?

Ms Hidalgo stressed the inclusivity and energy of Paris, tweeting a picture of her launching a tourism campaign at the Eiffel Tower.

image copyright Anne/HidalgoTwitter

The remarks came as France celebrated the 25th anniversary of the theme park Disneyland Paris.

The Paris mayor also challenged the suggestion that tourist numbers from the US were in decline, saying reservations were up 30% in 2017.

Mr Hollande, meanwhile, said Mr Trump's remarks were no way to behave towards an ally.

"It is never good to show the slightest mistrust towards a friendly country," he said.

"That is not what I would do towards a friendly country and I would ask the American president not to do it to France."

In a reference to France's tighter gun control laws, Mr Hollande said: "There are no weapons circulating here. There are no people who take weapons to shoot into the crowd simply for the satisfaction of causing drama and tragedy."

A Parisian begs to differ: Agnes Poirier

If Jim really knew a thing or two about Paris, he would have told President Trump that Paris was even more Paris than before the terrorist attacks of 2015.

A born-and-bred Parisian who has lived through these difficult times, I can say that the attacks have made Paris and Parisian life even more beautiful and pleasurable than it was, for one simple reason - we don't take it for granted the way we used to.

The many joys of Parisian everyday life - going to the concert, having dinner with friends or simply having a coffee on a cafe terrasse has been greatly enhanced by the events.

We used to be blase, now we are grateful. As American novelist Saul Bellow wrote: "There are few things more pleasant in life, more civilised than a tranquil terrasse at dusk."

No doubt foreigners will continue to flock to Paris, as Saul Bellow said, "to recover their humanity".

So are tourists really deserting the City of Lights?

According to figures published by the Paris Office of Tourism (in French) , 7,356,945 foreign tourists arrived at hotels in the city of Paris between January and November 2016, 11.9% fewer than in the same period the previous year.

Among American tourists the decline was only slighter smaller - there were 1,387,191 hotel arrivals, down 9.9%.

In the same period there was a slight rise in the number of tourists from other parts of France, of 0.3% to almost six million.

image copyright Getty Images image caption France has been under a state of emergency since the November 2015 attacks

The 2015 figures mostly cover the period before the 13 November Paris attacks which shocked the country and left 130 people dead and hundreds wounded.

No figures were given for tourists staying in non-hotel accommodation such as Airbnb.

How does it compare with New York?

According to the New York mayor's office , the city welcomed 60.3 million visitors in 2016, up by 1.8 million on 2015.

This was the "seventh consecutive year of travel and tourism growth for the city", the statement said.