Sarkozy slams Royal over "riot" warning
By Jon Boyle
PARIS (Reuters) - Voting began overseas in French presidential elections on Saturday and front-runner Nicolas Sarkozy condemned "warlike" remarks by his rival Segolene Royal, who said his election on Sunday could trigger riots.
Polling stations opened in French Guiana, the Caribbean islands of Martinique and Guadeloupe and the tiny overseas territory of St. Pierre and Miquelon off Canada's east coast, as voting got under way a day before polls open in mainland France.
About 1 million French nationals outside France can cast their ballot a day early, a move intended to boost turnout. The rest of France's 44.5 million electors vote on Sunday.
In an interview released by the French daily Le Parisien on its Web site late on Friday, right-winger Sarkozy said his Socialist rival's warning there might be violence if she lost the election was a sign of desperation.
"This warlike language is the negation of basic democratic rules," said Sarkozy, adding it was an unprecedented attack.
"No doubt it's because she's demoralised," he added. Royal trailed by 10 points in the last polls published on Friday ahead of a pre-vote embargo.
The full interview could not be published in Saturday's print edition of Le Parisien because of an election ban on opinion surveys and campaigning on the eve of polling, to ensure voters a "day of reflection" before the ballot.
On Friday, Royal told RTL radio Sarkozy "would be a dangerous choice", acknowledging that she was breaking a taboo by raising the prospect of violence. Continued...




