Don't want Lakshmi Mittal in France,says Arnaud Montebourg, but the India-born magnate strikes back
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The showdown between global steel giant ArcelorMittal and France over its Florange plant hit new heights today as a minister said the company was no longer welcome in the country.
A source close to the matter said company chief Lakshmi Mittal was to meet President Francois Hollande tomorrow ahead of a deadline Saturday for France to find a buyer for two shuttered blast furnaces at the site in northeast of the country.
France says it has two offers, but only for the entire site, and Mittal has refused to sell the full operation.
Industrial Renewal Minister Arnaud Montebourg has raised the spectre of a temporary nationalisation of the plant, prompting Mittal to warn that would threaten its activities in France, where it employs 20,000 people.
Montebourg upped the stakes today, saying France did not want ArcelorMittal in the country anymore and is looking for an industrial partner to take over the group's operations at the plant.
"We do not want Mittal in France any longer because they do not respect France," Montebourg told the French financial daily Les Echos.
"Mittal's lies since 2006 are damning," the French minister said, adding that the company "has never honoured its commitments" to the country.
Newspaper Le Monde quoted members of the Mittal family as saying they were "extremely shocked" by Montebourg's remarks.
Montebourg told Les Echos he was working on a "transitory nationalisation" project for the site.
The newspaper said that "the idea would be to associate an industrial operator with a minority capital stake for as long as it takes to stabilise activity" at the plant.
The fate of the site has become a litmus test of Socialist President Francois Hollande's strategy for fighting rising unemployment and raising the flagging competitiveness of French industry.
The plant is based in the Lorraine region of eastern France, the traditional centre of France's steel industry.
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