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Will India welcome France's unwed first lady?

Taking over from a supermodel should not be a problem for Valerie Trierweiler, who has plenty of glamour of her own, but making state visits abroad as France’s first unmarried first lady just might.

There is some speculation as to whether Trierweiler, whose partner Francois Hollande was elected Socialist president on early Monday morning IST, will marry her man before he gets the keys to the Elysee Palace on 15 May.

If she does not, certain host countries may face some embarrassment as to the proper protocol to receive an unmarried head of state turning up with an unwed woman on his arm.

Trierweiler, a twice-divorced 47-year-old journalist and mother of three teenagers, who says she plans to continue her media career and combine it with her first lady role, recently dismissed the issue. ‘I’m not sure it will come up all that much. Maybe on a visit to the pope? Frankly, it really is not an aspect that bothers me. This question of marriage is above all a part of our private life,’ the first lady-designate said.

Apart from the Vatican, conservative countries that might view her unmarried status as a diplomatic dilemma include the Arab Gulf states, where Islamic traditions apply, and in conservative societies like India.

When President Nicolas Sarkozy, the right-winger who lost the vote, made his first trip to the Gulf in January 2008, he had to travel without ex-supermodel Carla Bruni, whom he was dating but had not yet married.

Islam forbids cohabitation outside marriage and arch-conservative Muslim kingdoms, such as Saudi Arabia, might look very unfavourably on a foreign leader turning up with his partner. India is another country where Sarkozy – who married Bruni in February 2008 just a few months after divorcing his second wife – caused diplomatic uncertainty.

Indian and French officials engaged in deep talks over how Bruni would be treated during her husband’s state visit, which came before their marriage and was to include a trip to the Taj Mahal.

The press in India was abuzz over whether the couple would share a hotel suite and if Bruni would sit at a formal banquet.

In the end, Bruni did not join Sarkozy in India, but the couple did return after their wedding to visit the Taj Mahal.

The status of Trierweiler – who was revealed as Hollande’s lover when he separated from the mother of his four children, Segolene Royal, who in 2007 lost to Sarkozy in a presidential election – could also pose questions. With no easy answers.
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