German
Chancellor Angela Merkel suffered her third public shaking spell in a
month
(AFP Photo/Tobias SCHWARZ)
|
Berlin (AFP) - German Chancellor Angela Merkel insisted she was "very well", despite suffering her third trembling spell in less than a month on Wednesday that has focused attention on her health.
Merkel
began shaking involuntarily as national anthems were being played at the
reception of Finnish Prime Minister Antti Rinne.
But she
attended a press conference as planned just around an hour later, telling
journalists that her health was no cause for concern.
"I
feel very well, there is no need to worry," she said, adding that she was
simply still in a phase of "processing" a previous shaking spell, but
that "there has been progress".
"I
will have to live with it for a while," added Merkel, who turns 65 next
week.
"Just
like how it has come, one day it will go away too," she said.
A source
close to the government had said the cause of the repeat shaking was now
psychological, with memories of the first incident provoking renewed trembling
at events with similar settings.
Episodes
played down
The shaking
on Wednesday was visible although less severe than during the first episode in
June.
On that
occasion she appeared unsteady and shook as she stood in the midday sun next to
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, whom she was welcoming with military
honours.
That first
bout of shaking was blamed on dehydration. But a second episode struck a week
later at the end of June, just hours before she was due to board a plane for a
G20 summit in Japan.
Officials
had sought to play down fears over her health then, saying that she was fine
and that she would not be cancelling any planned engagements.
Longtime
leader
Merkel has
been leader of Europe's biggest economy for almost 14 years.
Merkel's
latest shaking bout struck as she received the Finnish prime minister
in Berlin
(AFP Photo/Tobias SCHWARZ)
|
Frequently
called the European Union's most influential leader and the most powerful woman
in the world, Merkel has said she will leave politics at the end of her term,
in 2021.
But she has
struggled to stamp out repeated speculation that she may leave the political
stage earlier than planned.
The
coalition that she had forged with the centre-left Social Democratic Party was
fragile from the start, and has lurched from crisis to crisis.
The latest
health scare has prompted additional questions over the length of her reign.
There were
brief concerns about her well-being in 2014 when she was taken ill during a
television interview. The broadcast was interrupted when she experienced a drop
in blood pressure.
Merkel's
spokesman explained at the time that the leader did not feel well for a moment,
then ate and drank something and continued the interview.
Earlier
that same year, she fractured her pelvis while cross-country skiing in Switzerland
and was ordered to cut back her schedule dramatically and stay in bed as much
as possible for three weeks.
A keen
hiker too, Merkel herself once asserted she had a "camel-like"
ability to store energy for sleepless all-night summits.
German media,
which had largely refrained from speculating about Merkel's health during her
second spell of shaking, said they could not look away a third time.
"Angela
Merkel's health is now a political issue," said Germany's largest selling
daily Bild.
"If
signs of physical or psychological weaknesses appear often, the government
would have to rethink its stonewalling tactic. Otherwise, rumours will take on
a life of their own," warned the daily.
In case of
emergency, Merkel would be replaced by Vice Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who would
carry out her duties until parliament elected a new leader.
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