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Last surviving signatory of Treaty of Rome dies
Undated picture shows French politician Maurice Faure (L). Faure, last survivor of the signatories of the 1957 Treaty of Rome, died on March 6, 2014 in his Cahors home, aged 92 AFP

CAHORS, March 6 — Former French minister Maurice Faure, the last surviving signatory of the Treaty of Rome that paved the way for European integration, died yesterday aged 92.

Faure, a former Resistance fighter during World War II, was deputy foreign minister when the pathbreaking 1957 treaty was signed.

The treaty gave birth to what was to become the six-nation European Economic Community, and later evolved into today’s 28-member European Union.

Faure died peacefully at his home in Cahors, southeastern France, the region where he was born. He served as mayor in the historic town for 25 years.

Faure set a record by becoming France’s youngest interior minister at the age of 36 although he only served for a few days in May 1958. He served later as justice minister.

As a veteran of World War II, he remained committed to the cause of a Europe united in a way that would make a rerun of that conflict’s horrors impossible. — AFP

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