German Chancellor Angela Merkel travelled to Paris Wednesday to meet French President Francois Hollande after being re-elected for a third term, with the aim of "starting now a new step" in relations between the two countries.
The first foreign trip of her third term as chancellor emphasized "the special importance of Franco-German relations", Xinhua quoted Merkel as saying at a news conference in the Elysee Palace after meeting Hollande.
Germany and France have already "worked together very closely in recent months" and "we can start now a new step", she said, adding that the two countries will hold a summit in February next year to deepen bilateral relations.
"We all want to let Europe step forward and make it a strong continent of the world," she said ahead of a European Union (EU) summit due to take place Thursday and Friday in Brussels, where European leaders will discuss a planned banking union and France's military mission in Africa.
Hollande congratulated Merkel on her re-election and the formation of the new German government.
"We have a common horizon, which should become a common agenda," he said, "because Europe needs the relationship between France and Germany, a relationship of trust, a relationship strong and a relationship open".
On Tuesday, Merkel was re-elected in a vote in Germany's lower house of parliament for a third term. Her coalition government will lead the country for the next four years.