Hollande visits Berlin ahead of transfer of power
May 8, 2017"While we come from very different political families," German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Monday after Hollande's belated arrival in Berlin, "I have enjoyed working with Francois Hollande."
The French presidential plane was forced to turn back once after it was struck by lightning on its first attempt to leave Paris.
"We have built up mutual trust," she said, over over Hollande's five years in office.
In June 2014, Merkel - a German conservative - and Hollande - a French socialist - brought Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukraine's leader Petro Poroshenko together for talks on the sidelines of 70th anniversary commemorations for Operation Overlord, the World War II amphibious assault against Nazi-occupied France.
"There was a before and after" that summer's meetings in the Hollande-Merkel relationship, people close to the president told the French news agency AFP.
"Working on a subject that was neither bilateral nor linked to the EU changed the climate of their meetings and the extent to which they were partners, which went on to show itself during the Greece crisis and the migrant crisis," the source said.
One of the best-known images of their partnership came at a darker moment, as Merkel laid her head against Hollande's in a gesture of empathy after terrorist attacks against satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo and a Paris kosher supermarket in 2015.
A steady course into the next administration
Merkel on Monday praised Emmanuel Macron, the 39-year-old who will be France's next and youngest-ever president, for the "courageous pro-European campaign" he waged successfully against far-right nationalist Marine Le Pen.
"Emmanuel Macron bears the hopes of millions of French - and many people in Germany and all of Europe," Merkel said in Berlin.
On Monday morning, Macron took part in the ceremony to commemorate the victory over Nazi Germany alongside Hollande. On Sunday he will officially take office from Hollande; the incoming president's first journey abroad, like his predecessor's, will be to Germany.
German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel (SPD) said that Germany would have to invest much more strongly than before in Europe and do everything to ensure that Macron is successful.
jbh/kl (AFP, dpa)