French Parliament approves Notre Dame restoration bill
July 17, 2019France's Parliament voted on Tuesday in favor of a law to restore the damaged roof of Notre Dame Cathedral, after a fire destroyed its spire in April.
At issue for lawmakers was the decision on the appearance of the new spire. The destroyed spire was designed by 19th-century restorer Eugene Viollet le Duc, after the medieval original was demolished in the 18th century.
Tuesday's vote was not without controversy, as politicians had squabbled for months over the details of the restoration project.
French President Emmanuel Macron's and his centrist Party, En Marche, supported the construction of a modern spire, to make a "contemporary architectural statement."
His political opponents, however, favored an exact replica and as a result, the opposition-controlled Senate, the parliament's upper house, rejected the law.
The National Assembly, the country's lower house, controlled by En Marche, overruled the Senate to ultimately pass the bill. But the final text did not directly address the architectural form of the reconstruction and left the spire design undetermined.
The "aim is to give Notre-Dame a restoration appropriate for the place it has in the hearts of the French people and in the entire world," Culture Minister Franck Riester said.
In an opinion poll published in April, most respondents said they wanted the cathedral rebuilt as it was before the fire.
Read more: Future of Notre Dame Cathedral wide open
Five-year project
The approved bill will dispense the €850 million ($954 million) in donations that individual, corporate and private donors made after the blaze.
Macron has insisted that the reconstruction project should be completed within five years. But the deadline has been criticized by experts as too ambitious.
The president's political opponents agreed, accusing Macron of rushing the project to ensure reconstruction was completed for the 2024 Olympic Games, which Paris will host.
Read more: Opinion: Notre Dame will rise again
"Imposing a deadline of five years from on high makes no sense," Brigitte Kuster of the opposition Republicans said.
The sudden fire at the Notre Dame Cathedral, an iconic UNESCO world heritage site on the banks of the River Seine, seized the world's attention.
Paris prosecutors are investigating the causes of the blaze, and have said that either a poorly stubbed-out cigarette or an electrical fault could have started the fire.
jcg/bw (dpa, AFP)