The +: Receive every morning the Press Review of France 24 on your iPhone or any other mobile. And also always on your PC by becoming a fan on Facebook ...

One of the press, the reactions to the meeting, between the French and Russian presidents, Emmanuel Macron and Vladimir Putin, yesterday at Fort Brégançon.

Presented as a meeting intended to clear the files that angry, the appointment would have given rise to a dialogue "courteous but without concessions": Le Figaro evokes "a relaunch of relations that would not (however) have erased the differences", especially on Syria and human rights. "Hot and cold in Brégançon": The Parisian also reports that the leaders have certainly "assaulted amabilités", but offered "a lively pass on the yellow jackets." A rather mixed record, therefore, according to the French press, whose analysis is also shared by the Russian dailies. If Kommersant politely marvels at the beauty of Fort Brégançon, "a powerful fortress", which would have "found a second wind", and mentions the charms of the Côte d'Azur, The Moscow Times , title on the pike of Vladimir Putin, who justified the repression of pro-democracy demonstrators in Moscow, explaining that he did not "want" a "situation" similar to that of "yellow vests" in France. A friendliness to which Emmanuel Macron replied that "in France the protesters run for election". Replica, also, this morning, from Willem to Vladimir Putin, in Liberation , with a drawing where the Russian president stands alongside the Chinese president, in full repression of protesters. "Democracy, what a joke," says Vladimir Putin. "People are laughing," says Xi Jinping.

Vladimir Putin, who will not participate in the G7 summit, this weekend in Biarritz, southern France. Four days before the summit, the Basque country is organizing, and the local daily Sud-Ouest announces "a preparation for the summit", but also the counter-summit organized by opponents of the G7 - alterglobalists, environmentalists, and vests yellow. Citizens who intend to "invite themselves to the table of the powerful", according to L'Humanité , who presents the G7 as "a closed session of decision-makers invited at great expense to perpetuate their ideological blindness", that is to say " policies of liberalization and drastic decline in public spending ", without awareness of" the environmental emergency ". The daily newspaper L'Opinion is rather alarmed, it, the lack of cohesion and low margins of maneuver of members of the G7, facing the risk of recession. A G7 amid dissension - as evidenced by the drawing of Kak, which shows the US President Donald Trump throwing his nettles chistera, the glove with which one plays Basque pelota, and taking out his bat baseball. "It's too complicated your thing, I'll play with me," he told Emmanuel Macron and Angela Merkel.

The French President and the German Chancellor, whom British Prime Minister Boris Johnson will meet before the G7 summit. During these tete-a-tete, Boris Johnson will undoubtedly repeat his threats of a Brexit without agreement, to convince them to abandon the Irish "safety net" - a "no deal Brexit" that will imply the "immediate" end according to him, the free movement of people. In any case, that's what he assured yesterday. Such a measure would affect "the millions of European citizens currently living in the UK," according to The I. Boris Johnson hardens his tone, but his threats "do not convince the European Union," according to The Guardian . The British daily quotes "sources within the EU", which warn that "there is no question of going back to the Irish safety net" - on which negotiators worked for two and a half years. According to Blower, EU members are waiting for Boris Johnson. "Hello Mr. Prime Minister, I asked our friends to join us," announces Emmanuel Macron, alongside Angela Merkel, but also the boss of the British Labor, Jeremy Corbyn, who promises, from now on, to oppose a Brexit without agreement. A drawing found on Twitter .

In the press, too, France, victim of its tourist success, and PSG victim ... of itself. Libération has addressed the problems posed by mass tourism in France, the world's leading tourist destination. "If tourism is a major income for France, it is also a source of thorny problems" for the French, who suffer "nuisance and rising costs," says the newspaper. And it is not The Mona Lisa who will say the opposite. According to La Croix , the affluence to the Louvre to see it is such that the museum, which welcomes each year more than 10 million visitors, was forced to make reservations mandatory. If the Mona Lisa is a victim of its success, the PSG, he has already conceded his first defeat of the season, Sunday night, against Rennes - a loupé which L'Equipe assigns the responsibility to his coach. "Questionable tactical choices, loose links with the locker room": Thomas Tuchel would struggle to "reconnect with the recipes that made his success in the first leg last year", and would be even "disoriented", according to him the newspaper.

Find every morning on France 24 the Press Review (Monday to Friday, 7:20 and 9:20 Paris time). Also follow all weekends by multicasting the Weekly Review.