French Attempt To Rival CNN Meets Waterloo
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

PARIS — France’s television dream of mounting a challenge to CNN and the BBC has suffered an embarrassing setback after claims that the new channel would broadcast most of its output in English.
Starved of realistic funding for a 24-hour news station, CII is due to be launched in December for transmission initially to Africa, the Middle East, and Europe. Its annual budget, will be about $87 million.
President Chirac promised a “CNN à la française” in the 2002 election campaign and is committed to a station that will “spread the values of France and its global vision throughout the world.”
It was always known that part of the channel’s output would be in English and Arabic but champions of the French language were appalled at suggestions that its output in the language be less than four hours a day.
The satirical weekly Le Canard Enchaine quoted Jean-Pierre Paoli, righthand man to CII’s head, as saying: “It could be half in English, half in French or a different proportion.”
But it added that CII executives told counterparts at the state-owned France Televisions, a partner with the private TF1 network in the venture, that French-language transmissions would be limited to three hours each morning. The rest, Le Canard Enchaine said, would be “in the language of Shakespeare.”
Mr. Paoli was reported to have defended the proposal on the grounds that English was a universal language, adding: “We are hardly committing an act of high treason.”
Marc Favre d’Echallens, of the Association for the Defense of the French Language, expressed outrage that a station designed to give a “French vision” would contain so little in French.
“After celebrating Trafalgar with the English and making light of our own great victory of Austerlitz, it probably follows that a publicly-funded French television channel should end up broadcasting in English,” he said.

