Sarkozy confirmed that Carla Bruni-Sarkozy had personally delivered the news to Petrella. Sarkozy said that Petrella's hunger strike needed to be stopped and he thought that the news could put an end to it. "My wife was there for a very simple reason: I asked her to do it," Sarkozy told a news conference in Paris. "I asked her to go because Ms Petrella was in danger of dying." But Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi, the first lady's sister, said she had asked Bruni-Sarkozy to go to the president and urge him to block the extradition. Bruni-Tedeschi said she and her sister had together broken the news to Petrella last Wednesday. "I just felt that it would be a terrible thing for her to die," Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi reportedly told Europe 1 radio. Petrella had been convicted of plotting to murder a senior Rome police officer and to kidnap a judge. She had been living in France since 1993.
Sarkozy confirmed that Carla Bruni-Sarkozy had personally delivered the news to Petrella. Sarkozy said that Petrella's hunger strike needed to be stopped and he thought that the news could put an end to it.
"My wife was there for a very simple reason: I asked her to do it," Sarkozy told a news conference in Paris. "I asked her to go because Ms Petrella was in danger of dying."
But Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi, the first lady's sister, said she had asked Bruni-Sarkozy to go to the president and urge him to block the extradition. Bruni-Tedeschi said she and her sister had together broken the news to Petrella last Wednesday.
"I just felt that it would be a terrible thing for her to die," Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi reportedly told Europe 1 radio.
Petrella had been convicted of plotting to murder a senior Rome police officer and to kidnap a judge. She had been living in France since 1993.