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Local France
2 hours ago
- Local France
New budget flights launched between Brittany and UK
The twice-weekly service began on June 25th, with flights on Wednesdays and Sundays between Rennes and Manchester, with the service officially inaugurated on July 2nd. It is the first of three new easyJet routes to and from the Brittany capital – with services to Barcelona and Geneva to follow towards the end of October. From Rennes, the airline now serves two French cities, Nice and Toulouse, and two English destinations with the addition of Manchester to an existing service to London Gatwick. Advertisement "We are proud to announce the launch of a new route between Rennes and the United Kingdom, two years after opening the London Gatwick-Rennes route,' Reginald Otten, Deputy Managing Director of easyJet for France said when the new Manchester flights were announced in November. 'As the leading carrier between the United Kingdom and France, the opening of this route between Rennes and Manchester particularly underlines our commitment to actively participating in the development of tourism between France and its international partners.' Stephen Turner, Chief Commercial Officer at Manchester Airport, said in a statement: 'We are proud to connect people from across the North with the places they want to visit, so it's fantastic to see easyJet basing an additional aircraft at Manchester this summer and expanding its route network, offering passengers more choice than ever before.' READ ALSO : New flights to and from France in 2025✎


Local France
2 hours ago
- Local France
Audit of French payments firm after dubious payments
Director general Pierre-Antoine Vacheron told financial daily Les Echos the company would 'scan its entire portfolio of riskiest activities by the end of July'. Board chairman Wilfried Verstraete said the key findings of an external audit of merchants engaged in risky activities will be unveiled on July 30th, along with the presentation of the firm's half-year results. The company has entrusted the audit to financial consulting firm Accuracy. Another consulting firm, Oliver Wyman, has been brought in to evaluate Worldline's overall control system. Worldline, a key link in the global payments chain, earns commissions on the flow of payments made both to physical and online customers. Some clients, such as online casinos, crypto-asset platforms and porn sites, are considered high-risk. An investigation published last week by a media consortium accused Worldline of processing billions of euros in fraudulent transactions in such sectors, as well as with suspected money laundering networks. French new website Mediapart accused Worldline of having 'knowingly closed its eyes, in violation of its regulatory obligations, to fraudulent practices by 'high-risk' clients.' The media investigation presaged an investigation by the Brussels prosecutor's office into the group's Belgian subsidiary over potential money laundering. The firm is also under investigation by Germany's financial supervisor, BaFin. Advertisement As the story emerged, Worldline said it had beefed up its merchant risk management framework since 2023 to ensure full compliance with legal requirements. In a statement last Wednesday it added it had 'terminated commercial relationships deemed non-compliant'. 'The cleanup has been largely completed,' Vacheron told Les Echos , saying high-risk transactions represented some '1.5 percent of Worldline's acquisition volume out of approximately €500 billion in transactions in 2024.' He said the audit, 'should make it possible to verify there are no black sheep within this 1.5 percent'. Shares in Worldline, a former subsidiary of Atos but independent since 2019, slumped to a record low of 2.70 euros last Wednesday, a having peaked at 85 euros in 2021. They were trading Wednesday at 3.89 euros.


France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
The economic cost of heatwaves in Europe
05:29 From the show Report shows recent heatwaves across Europe could slow economic growth by half a percentage point in 2025. But first, US President Donald Trump announces a trade deal with Vietnam. Plus, a French court has sentenced three former Ubisoft executives to suspended jail terms for harassment at the company.