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After Talks With Putin, Macron Accuses Russian State Media Of Spreading 'Propaganda'


Putin Welcomed By New French President At Versailles
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WATCH: Putin Welcomed By New French President At Versailles

French President Emmanuel Macron accused Russian state news outlets of spreading "fake news" and "propaganda" against him during May's presidential election, after holding talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Versailles Palace outside Paris.

The meeting on May 29 was the first between the two men since Macron's decisive May 7 victory over right-wing rival Marine Le Pen, a Putin admirer whom the Kremlin and its surrogates appeared to favor, and came amid bilateral ties that remain strained.

Speaking at a joint news conference with Putin, Macron said RT and Sputnik were "organs of influence and propaganda" and "behaved like structures of the government."

Macron's team alleged that Russian hacking and disinformation efforts aimed to derail his campaign.

Putin denied that Moscow meddled in France's presidential election and said that by meeting Le Pen in Moscow in March the Kremlin had not tried to influence the vote.

Macron, 39, said the two leaders had a "frank exchange" over their "differences" on a number of issues, including the Ukraine standoff and Russia’s support for President Bashar al-Assad in Syria's civil war.

Macron has said he supports the continuation of Western sanctions targeting Russia over its 2014 seizure of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula and backing of armed separatists in eastern Ukraine, whose war with Kyiv's forces has killed almost 10,000 people.

He said last week that he wanted to bring together the "Normandy format," which groups the leaders of Russia, Germany, France, and Ukraine and which met first in Normandy, France.

On May 29, Macron said he and Putin agreed the time was right for a new round of peace talks on Ukraine, adding that the talks should take place "in days or weeks."

Putin, 64, said sanctions imposed by Western countries on Russia over its activities in Ukraine would not help stabilize the situation in the east of the country, where it borders Russia.

Macron also said that Putin had promised "the whole truth" about an alleged campaign of abuse, including murder, targeting gay men in Chechnya, a mainly Muslim region in Russia’s south ruled by Kremlin-backed strongman Ramzan Kadyrov.

"President Putin told me... he had undertaken several initiatives on the subject of LGBT people in Chechnya with measures aimed at establishing the whole truth about the activities of local authorities," Macron said, adding he would be "vigilant" on the issue.

Macron said France and Russia can work together on Syria and that he wants to forge a reinforced partnership against the Islamic State (IS) extremist group.

He also said the use of chemical weapons in Syria was a "red line" for France and said the use of such weapons would lead to "reprisals," without specifying exactly what form they would take.

With reporting by AFP, Reuters, and dpa

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