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Arnold Making
Surprise Trip to Austria? And London?!
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger will
make a surprise visit to his Austrian hometown
on Sunday, returning for the first time since he
severed official ties with the city two years
ago following a flap over his position on the
death penalty.
Schwarzenegger
left California on Saturday — a day earlier than
expected — for a trip to Paris and London to
meet with French President Nicolas Sarkozy and
outgoing British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
Schwarzenegger
also decided to fly to Graz, Austria, to visit
friends, said Aaron McLear, the governor's press
secretary.
It was unclear
whether Schwarzenegger would make any public
appearances in Graz.
In 2005, Graz
authorities stripped Schwarzenegger's name from
the city's soccer stadium after he refused to
block the execution of convicted California gang
founder, Stan 'Tookie' Williams.
Capital
punishment is illegal throughout the European
Union, and many in Schwarzenegger's hometown —
the official slogan of which is the "City of
Human Rights" — considered Schwarzenegger's
actions barbaric.
Schwarzenegger
actually ordered his name be removed from the
stadium, a pre-emptive move before city leaders
held a scheduled vote to do so. He also returned
Graz's highest award, its ring of honor, which
was given to him by city officials in 1999. In a
letter to the city two years ago, Schwarzenegger
said the ring had "lost its meaning and value to
me."
Graz officials
also removed all references to Schwarzenegger
from the city's Web site.
Schwarzenegger
was born in 1947 in the village of Thal, just
outside Graz, where he began his bodybuilding
career. He emigrated to the United States in
1968 and became a naturalized U.S. citizen in
1984, but has retained his Austrian citizenship.
After leaving
Austria, Schwarzenegger will meet with Sarkozy
on Monday in Paris.
Following the
meeting with Sarkozy, Schwarzenegger is
scheduled to travel to London and hold a private
meeting on Tuesday with Blair on his last full
day in office.
Blair will
step down as prime minister on June 27 and be
replaced by British Treasury chief Gordon Brown.
Global Arnold Staff
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