World War Two
Paris commemorates 80th anniversary of liberation from German occupation
Paris AFP – Paris has been commemorating the end of Nazi occupation 80 years ago with a week of festivities in and around the city to mark the surrender of German forces on 25 August, 1944.
Paris on Sunday celebrated the 80th anniversary of its liberation from German troops in World War II with tributes, military marches and the hoisting of a flag at the Eiffel Tower.
On August 25, 1944, the 2nd French Armoured Division entered the capital under the command of General Philippe Leclerc de Hautecloque, ending 1,500 days of German occupation.
Their triumphant arrival followed a tumultuous week of uprisings, strikes, combat at barricades and street battles between French Resistance fighters and occupying forces.
On Sunday a parade followed one of the itineraries of the French division from the south of the capital to its centre.
The parade featured vintage military vehicles, as surviving veterans of the 2nd Armoured Division looked on.
President Emmanuel Macron led the commemoration, also attended by Prime Minister Gabriel Attal, Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo and an audience with prominent cultural figures including American actor Jodie Foster.
“Beyond all divisions and contradictions, to be French is to be together,” Macron said in a speech. “Free, and true to the great things that have been achieved and determined to achieve more together.”
A torch for the Paris Paralympics, which open Wednesday, was lit, ahead of a flyover by the Patrouille de France, a unit of French air force fighter planes.
British athletes light Paralympic Flame in birthplace of Games near London
Earlier Sunday, the French flag was raised under the Eiffel Tower in memory of firefighters who at midday 80 years ago took down the Nazi flag that had been flying there for four years, and replaced it with the tricolour.
Sunday’s events were the culmination of a week of festivities in and around the capital, matching in length the week of fighting in 1944 before the Germans surrendered Paris.
On Saturday, there was a tribute to the 160 men of “La Nueve”, mostly made up of Spanish republican forces, who were the first to enter Paris on the evening of August 24.
Paris honours the forgotten Spanish fighters who liberated the French capital
On Saturday night, Paris city hall was the venue for a brass band performance, a concert and a dance.
(AFP)
Crime
Telegram chief Pavel Durov arrested at French airport
Telegram chief executive Pavel Durov is due to appear in court in the coming days after being arrested by French police at an airport near Paris for alleged offences related to his popular messaging app, sources told AFP.
The Franco-Russian billionaire, 39, was detained at Le Bourget airport north of the French capital on Saturday evening, one of the sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Durov had arrived from Baku, in Azerbaijan, on a private plane.
France’s OFMIN, an office tasked with preventing violence against minors, had issued an arrest warrant for Durov in a preliminary investigation into alleged offences including fraud, drug trafficking, cyberbullying, organised crime and promotion of terrorism, one of the sources said.
Durov is accused of failing to take action to curb the criminal use of his platform. If found guilty, he faces up to 20 years in jail.
“Enough of Telegram’s impunity,” said one of the investigators, adding they were surprised Durov came to Paris knowing he was a wanted man.
Durov: Mysterious and controversial Telegram founder
Refusal to cooperate
Russian authorities said they had demanded access to Durov but had had no response from France.
“We immediately asked French authorities to explain the reasons for this detention and demanded that his rights be protected and that consular access be granted. Up to now, the French side is refusing to cooperate on this question,” Russia’s embassy in Paris said in a statement reported by the Ria Novosti news agency.
Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said Moscow had asked for consular access to Durov, saying that as he also had French citizenship “France considers that it is his main nationality”.
Maria Butina, a lawmaker for the ruling United Russia party, said on Sunday that Durov’s arrest was part of a witch-hunt that means freedom of speech is now “dead” in Europe.
“Pavel Durov is a political prisoner – a victim of a witch-hunt by the West,” Butina told Reuters.
Butina said that she believed Durov had been arrested in an attempt by the West to gain control of Telegram, which is influential and widely used in Russia, Ukraine and the republics of the former Soviet Union.
“Now basically they have a hostage and they will try to blackmail Russia, they will try to blackmail all the users of Telegram and not only try to get control but also try to block the network here in Russia,” she said.
Platform of ‘privacy’
Telegram was founded by Durov and his brother in the wake of the Russian government’s crackdown after mass pro-democracy protests that rocked Moscow at the end of 2011 and 2012.
The encrypted messaging app, based in Dubai, has positioned itself as an alternative to US-owned platforms, which have been criticised for their commercial exploitation of users’ personal data.
Telegram has committed to never disclosing any information about its users.
In a rare interview given to right-wing talk show host Tucker Carlson in April, Durov said he got the idea to launch an encrypted messaging app after coming under pressure from the Russian government when working at VK, a social network he created before selling it and leaving Russia in 2014.
He said he then tried to settle in Berlin, London, Singapore and San Francisco before choosing Dubai, which he praised for its business environment and “neutrality”.
People “love the independence. They also love the privacy, the freedom, (there are) a lot of reasons why somebody would switch to Telegram,” Durov told Carlson.
He said at the time that the platform had more than 900 million active users.
Circuiting moderation laws
By basing itself in the United Arab Emirates, Telegram has been able to shield itself from moderation laws at a time when Western countries are pressuring large platforms to remove illegal content.
Telegram allows groups of up to 200,000 members, which has led to accusations that it makes it easier for false information to spread virally, as well as for users to disseminate neo-Nazi, paedophilic, conspiratorial and terrorist content.
Competitor messaging service WhatsApp introduced worldwide limits on message forwarding in 2019 after it was accused of enabling the spread of false information in India that led to lynchings.
(with newswires)
France
French police arrest man suspected of attack on synagogue
French police have arrested a man suspected of setting fires and causing an explosion at a synagogue in a southern resort on Saturday in what officials are treating as a terror attack, the country’s interior minister said.
“The alleged perpetrator of the arson attack at the synagogue has been arrested,” Interior Minister Gerard Darmanin said in a social media post on Saturday evening, adding that officers who made the arrest came under fire and had shown “great professionalism”.
French prosecutors said the suspect was arrested in the southern city of Nimes shortly before midnight Saturday.
He was shot and injured by police after he opened fire on officers during the arrest. His life was not in danger.
“He opened fire on the police intervention unit, which returned fire, injuring [the suspect] in the face,” the National Antiterrorism Prosecutor’s Office, tasked with investigating the incident, said in a statement Sunday.
Two other people linked to the suspect were also taken into custody, it added.
Police earlier said they were hunting for a man who, draped in a Palestinian flag, was believed to have set fires at the Beth Yaacov synagogue in the southern seaside resort of La Grande Motte, triggering an explosion that injured an officer.
French media reported that the suspect was a 33-year-old Algerian national, residing legally in France.
Tragedy narrowly avoided
Saturday’s explosion was caused when two cars outside the synagogue were set alight. One contained a gas canister which then likely exploded inside one of the vehicles, police said.
Two fires were also started at the entrance of the synagogue, damaging two doors, but were quickly put out.
Five people, including the rabbi, were in the synagogue at the time of the blast, which occured between 08:00 and 08:30 on Saturday morning, just half an hour before its Saturday service. None of them were injured.
Visiting the site of the attack, outgoing Prime Minister Gabriel Attal said: “We narrowly avoided an absolute tragedy.”
“Once more, French Jews have been targeted and attacked as a result of their beliefs,” Attal said.
“If the synagogue had been filled with worshippers… there probably would have been human victims.”
Images of an individual setting fire to the cars were picked up on CCTV.
In part of the footage, watched and authenticated by AFP, a man is seen with a Palestinian flag draped around his waist. His head, but not face, is covered by a red Palestinian keffiyeh.
The man carried two bottles filled with a yellowish liquid. The footage also seems to show the contours of a handgun.
Rise in antisemitism
“Exploding a gas bottle in a car in front of the Grande Motte synagogue at the expected time of arrival of the faithful: it’s not just attacking a place of worship, it’s an attempt to kill Jews,” said Yonathan Arfi, head of the CRIF – an umbrella organisation of French Jewish groups.
Police protection of synagogues and Jewish schools and shops is being stepped up across France following the attack.
France is home to Europe’s largest Jewish and Muslim population.
Local Jewish community leader Perla Danan denounced all the politicians and elected officials who’ve imported the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to France.
“You can’t do that with impunity. It’s put weapons into people’s hands,” she told RFI. “The incessant hate speech and constant stigmatisation of Jewish people has become impossible for French Jews.”
Paris university refuses to cut ties with Israel amid pro-Palestinian protests
Acts of antisemitism have increased sharply in France since the 7 October attack by Hamas on Israel which triggered the war in Gaza.
“We are outraged, revolted and scandalised by this, given that antisemitic acts have increased dramatically, even more so since 7 October,” Attal said.
Darmanin said this month that the government had counted 887 antisemitic acts in France in the first half of 2024, nearly three times as many as in the same period in 2023.
President Emmanuel Macron has called the synagogue attack “an act of terror”, adding on X: “The fight against antisemitism is a daily fight.”
(with newswires)
Photography
Australian photographer’s lament for lost landscapes comes to Brittany festival
Anne Zahalka’s multimedia works depicting Australian wildlife and landscapes are eye-catching, intriguing and sometimes unsettling. As one of the guests of honour at La Gacilly Photo Festival in Brittany, she presents her native land in a new light to help visitors understand the dangers it faces from climate change and human activity.
The leafy streets and gardens of the picturesque village of La Gacilly in western France are home to an annual outdoor photography festival that focuses on the environment and social issues.
This year Australia is the country of honour, with featured work from 11 Australian photographers, including Anne Zahalka.
In her exhibition “Fragments of Wild Life”, koalas cling to spindly eucalyptus trees as a fire rages below. Emus prowl in a desert lined with wind turbines and birds land on pebbly beaches to scoop up plastic lids that look suspiciously like tiny crabs.
Merging scientific research with art, Zahalka tackles disturbing environmental issues with subtlety and sometimes humour.
Many of the works on display in La Gacilly come from her project “Future Past Present Tense”, which draws attention to drastic changes in the environment and humankind’s role in its deterioration or conservation.
One of the images shows Macquarie Island, halfway between Australia and Antarctica, where spaceship-like pods have landed to shelter researchers.
Zahalka explains that great care has been taken by scientists to leave as little trace as possible. But the irony is that in the foreground, the beach is littered with bits of plastic.
“It continues to be very disturbing,” she tells RFI. “Birds are flying and eating these plastics. It is one of the environmental disasters that is unfolding and it’s really hard to prevent it. I mean, there is action but it’s too slow.”
Frozen in time
Zahalka’s work involves transforming photographs from historical archives, taking inspiration from dioramas.
Popular in museums in the late 19th century, these 3D habitat displays generally featured a panoramic painting as a backdrop, decorated with taxidermied animals, artificial plants and other objects in the foreground in an attempt to recreate an authentic scene.
“I reinvent them to depict a vision of the future that is simultaneously apocalyptic and utopian,” Zahalka says.
She also incorporates pictures of the scientists who created the original dioramas and digitally alters images to show how the environment has changed since their day.
What is tomorrow made of? Artists probe consumerist society and planetary crisis
Dioramas have fallen by the wayside now, she says, as people questioned the use of stuffed animals and the amount of time needed to make them.
“I think they were incredibly beautiful things and my work is a lament for both the lost landscapes, lost creatures and also a lost art,” she explains.
Positive ecology
Festival curator Cyril Drouhet says focusing on Australia was evident when it came to drawing the public’s attention to climate change.
“It’s a place often idealised for its pristine, unspoiled expanses,” he says in his introductory notes.
Australian photographer celebrates indigenous heritage at French festival
“But behind the clichés of exoticism surrounding this country in Oceania lies a reality that we are unaware of and that only artists can truly capture,” he goes on, pointing to Australia’s “unambitious climate policy” and the tragic record of droughts, fires and coral bleaching.
Despite the urgency of the message, Drouhet insists that the festival’s goal is to find beauty amid the world’s crises. “We are in favour of a positive ecology, not a punitive ecology,” he told RFI.
“We are not here to say that everything we do is wrong. We’re trying to make people understand.”
La Gacilly Photo Festival runs until 3 November 2024.
Press freedom
Mali suspends French news channel LCI for two months
Mali’s military-led government has suspended broadcasting by French private news channel LCI on its territory for two months, alleging “false accusations” were made on air against the army and its Russian allies.
“The services of LCI television are withdrawn from the bundles of all distributors of radio or television broadcasting services authorised in Mali for a period of two months” from 23 August, Mali’s media regulator (HAC) said in a statement on Saturday.
HAC objected to comments made by military specialist Colonel Michel Goya in a programme broadcast on LCI titled “Wagner Decimated in Mali: the Hand of Kyiv”.
At the end of July, the Malian army and its Russian allies suffered a heavy defeat in the north of the country, with Tuareg-led rebels claiming to have killed 84 Wagner fighters and 47 Malian soldiers.
Mali on 4 August severed diplomatic ties with Ukraine, accusing it of supporting rebel groups, charges Kyiv has firmly rejected.
The communications authority said the programme, broadcast on 27 July, contained “disparaging remarks, gratuitous assertions and false accusations of exactions against the Malian armed forces and their Russian partners”.
Clampdown on foreign media
Ruled by army leaders since a double coup in 2020 and 2021, Mali is battling both a jihadist insurgency and a separatist struggle in the north.
In 2022, the junta broke away from its long-standing alliance with former colonial ruler France, and began forging closer ties with Russia, with troops from the infamous Wagner mercenary corps deployed to the country.
Since then Mali’s junta has clamped down on foreign media.
It permanently suspended RFI and its sister television station France 24 in April 2022, and public TV broadcaster France 2 at the beginning of 2024.
RFI and France 24 contest ‘definitive’ broadcasting ban in Mali
Media have also come under pressure in neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger, also ruled by military leaders who came to power in coups.
Burkina Faso suspended LCI in June 2023 after a journalist’s comments on the jihadist violence-linked security situation were described as “false information”.
Military regimes have turned the Sahel into a ‘black hole’ of information
(with newswires)
World War Two
France remembers heroic liberation of Paris from Nazi occupation, 80 years ago
France commemorates on Sunday the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Paris from German Nazi occupation, nine months before the end of World War II. RFI looks at what’s being remembered and how.
On 25 August 1944, after a week of strikes, barricades and street battles, the capital welcomed General Charles de Gaulle, the leader of France’s provisional government in exile, after four years of Nazi occupation.
“Paris outraged! Paris broken! Paris martyred! But Paris liberated! Liberated by itself. Liberated by its people,” the leader of Free France said in an address outside city hall the following day.
He and other key military leaders strode down the Champs-Elysées in triumph.
Each 25 August since then, France remembers the bravery and sacrifice of both the armed forces, Resistance fighters and ordinary citizens who helped free the city from Nazi rule.
A week-long liberation
Taking back control of Paris didn’t happen overnight. It began a week earlier, on 19 August, when the communist chief of the French Forces of the Interior (FFI), Henri Rol-Tanguy, gave orders for a general uprising.
The faction behind de Gaulle, who was in exile in London, issued the same call the following day.
Six days of street clashes ensued, with fighters from the French Resistance, supported by workers, women and even priests, later joined by French and US soldiers.
On the evening of 24 August, a column of military vehicles led by Major-General Philippe Leclerc, commander of the French 2nd Armoured Division, began arriving in Paris.
The very first Allied vehicles to drive into the city belonged to the 9th Company known as La Nueve, made up mostly of Spanish Republican fighters.
Paris honours the forgotten Spanish fighters who liberated the French capital
While Hitler had instructed Germany’s commander in Paris, Lieutenant-General Dietrich von Choltitz, to flatten the city in the event of an Allied attack, the diplomatic intervention of the then Swedish ambassador Raoul Nordling led Choltitz to ignore orders.
It gave Resistance fighters some extra time to organise their defence.
Some 1,000 Resistance fighters, 600 civilians and 156 French soldiers were killed during the week-long liberation of Paris. The German death toll was 3,200.
Choltitz surrendered at 3.30 pm at the Hotel Meurice, though it would be another nine months before Germany finally admitted defeat, ending World War II in Europe in May 1945.
France’s Macron launches season of WWII commemorative events
Military parade and Paralympic torch
For the 80th anniversary, Sunday’s commemorations begin with mass at Saint-Germain l’Auxerrois church in Paris in memory of the 2nd Armoured Division, while a secular ceremony will be held at the Place de la Bataille de Stalingrad.
At midday, the Paris Fire Service will hoist France’s flag on the Champs-Elysées – just as they did on 25 August 1944 in declaring the city free of Nazi occupation.
A wreath will be laid in tribute to Jose Manuel Baron Carreño, a Spanish guerrilla fighter with the French Resistance shot dead by the Nazis on 19 August. He is buried at Patin cemetery in the east of Paris – the area from which the Germans had entered the capital in June 1940.
Ceremonies in the afternoon include one to mark Germany’s surrender at the former Montparnasse station – where Leclerc had established his command post – followed by a tribute to the 2nd Armoured Division in front of the General Leclerc monument.
The main ceremony, led by President Emmanuel Macron and Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo, begins at 4.15 pm with a military parade from Porte d’Orleans to Place du Denfert-Rochereau in the south of the city.
At the end, they will welcome the arrival of the Paralympic Flame in France ahead of the opening of the Paralympic Games on 28 August.
The flame will be carried by five torchbearers representing the five towns officially recognised as “Compagnons de la Libération“, members of the Order of the Liberation created by de Gaulle to honour those who contributed to France’s freedom.
The day’s commemorations draw to a close at 7.30 pm with church bells across the capital chiming in unison.
Liberation of Paris
How France’s diverse forces were ‘whitewashed’ during the liberation of Paris
As France commemorates the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Paris this weekend – a pivotal victory over Nazi forces – there’s a renewed focus on the long-forgotten colonial soldiers who were excluded from much of the liberation, the victory parade and the subsequent battles of 1944.
The liberation of Paris on 24-25 August 1944 was a key moment in World War II, marking the end of Nazi occupation in the French capital.
An uprising by the French Resistance on 19 August forced the hand of the Allies, who had initially not prioritised freeing Paris.
General Charles de Gaulle insisted on sending in the French 2nd Armoured Division, which entered Paris on the evening of 24 August, to prevent the city from being destroyed by retreating German forces.
While the liberation was celebrated with a grand parade on the Champs-Élysées on 26 August, not all who fought for the city’s freedom were honoured.
Diverse force
The French army in 1944 was a diverse force. Commanded by General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny, it included 84,000 white French settlers from Algeria, 12,000 Free French troops, and 12,000 Corsicans.
But it also had 130,000 soldiers from Algeria and Morocco, along with 12,000 members of the colonial army, including marksmen from Senegal and infantrymen from France’s territories in the Pacific and West Indies.
Historian Anthony Guyon, author of a book on African fighters in the French army, says that while these colonial soldiers were officially listed as volunteers, the reality was more complex, with some conscripted under duress.
It’s “difficult to measure” the extent of this coercion, he says, because “in the registers, all the soldiers were described as volunteers”.
These troops made up more than half of the French forces, with West Africans and other colonial conscripts forming the majority of the French Liberation Army.
- France commemorates its ‘forgotten’ African veterans
Africans ‘held back’
However, as the Allied forces advanced from the successful landing in Provence on 15 August 1944 – a crucial operation that opened up a southern front – African fighters began to be withdrawn from the ranks of the First Army.
They were replaced by French Interior Forces resistance fighters and Spanish Republican soldiers who had fled Franco’s regime.
This replacement marked the start of a systematic sidelining of colonial troops, who were excluded from the liberation of Paris and the celebrations that followed.
“When the resistance triumphantly marched into France, the Free French army held back its black African soldiers so that the official liberation of Paris would appear to be accomplished only by whites,” American author Ken Chen wrote in The Nation earlier this year.
Deliberately excluded
Among the black soldiers who landed in Provence was Frantz Fanon, the world-renowned psychiatrist and anti-colonial author, who joined the French army aged just 17.
Fanon, originally from Martinique, recounted the racism he encountered within the French army and in civilian life in his pioneering book Black Skin, White Masks, published in France in 1952.
He and other historians have described this systematic exclusion of black soldiers as an effort to “whiten the Free French Forces”.
Evidence shows the disengagement of some African riflemen was a premeditated decision.
General Joseph Magnan, who commanded a division of the colonial forces, first requested that the soldiers of the 6th Regiment of African Riflemen be relieved as early as May 1944.
Though initially rebuffed, the idea soon gained traction.
Allies implicated
In 2009, the BBC uncovered documents showing that the US and UK had also played roles in this “whitening” process.
Allied High Command agreed to de Gaulle’s plan to liberate Paris on the condition that the division sent to Paris did not include black soldiers. They insisted that black soldiers be replaced by white ones, even when it became clear that there were not enough white soldiers available, the BBC’s Mike Thompson reported.
Dwight D Eisenhower, the Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Forces in Europe, played a key role in this decision.
His chief of staff, Major General Walter Bedell Smith, wrote in a confidential memo: “It is more desirable that the division mentioned above consist of white personnel. This would indicate the Second Armoured Division, which with only one-fourth native personnel, is the only French division operationally available that could be made 100 percent white.”
British General Frederick Morgan also commented: “It is unfortunate that the only French formation that is 100 percent white is an armoured division in Morocco. Every other French division is only about 40 percent white.”
He requested that the French “produce a white infantry division”.
Tragic aftermath
The aftermath of the liberation was no less tragic for colonial soldiers.
Despite their vital contributions, historian Guyon says black fighters were progressively barred from military operations and celebrations.
Many were forced to return their uniforms and sent home under harsh conditions, with some having their pensions frozen until 1959.
In late November 1944, around 1,300 former Senegalese servicemen at the military camp of Thiaroye, near Dakar, began protesting their poor treatment and lack of pay.
Dozens were massacred by French troops, and some survivors were jailed for 10 years.
- France honours WWII colonial troops shot dead by French army in Senegal
It’s taken decades for France to fully recognise the vital role of non-white soldiers. Political leaders from north and sub-Saharan Africa were first invited to commemorate the landings only half a century after the war.
The long-overdue acknowledgment of these forgotten heroes remains a stark reminder of the racial injustices that have marred one of France’s proudest moments in history.
Culture
Inside the French art museum that used to be a swimming pool
Roubaix – Once a swimming pool and public baths, La Piscine in the northern town of Roubaix is today one of France’s most unusual art museums. Converted in 2001, the Art Deco complex still attracts some visitors who remember learning to swim there.
Roubaix’s swimming pool was designed by progressive architect Albert Baert and opened in 1932. It remains an emblematic place in the former textile town.
“There’s a real emotional bond with this place and people are very attached to it,” Karine Lacquemant, curator of La Piscine, told RFI.
As well as a sports centre, which it remained until the 1908s, the complex also served as a public bathhouse.
“It was also a place for hygiene, because [workers’ houses] were often unsanitary,” Lacquemant explained. “There were no bathrooms or showers. So here at the swimming pool, there were public baths.”
Public bathhouse returns to Paris suburb for first time in 20 years
The pool was unusual in that it drew people from all classes of society, “from the sons of workers who lived in courées [narrow courtyards] to the bosses who ran the textile factories”, said Lacquement.
Closed in 1985, the centre underwent work between 1998 and 2001 to convert it into a museum of art and industry.
Today, the old changing cubicles surrounding the pool are used as exhibition spaces in which photographs, drawings and textiles are displayed.
Photographer shows young French boxers ‘full of dreams and determined’
Growing military buildup in Azerbaijan and Armenia a concern for peace talks
Issued on:
Fears are rising that Azerbaijan and Armenia are entering an arms race, which could undermine US-backed peace talks and trigger a new conflict.
Azerbaijan showcased its military might in a grand parade in Baku last year to celebrate its victory in recapturing the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave from Armenian-backed forces.
Azerbaijan, buoyed by its oil wealth, is continuing its aggressive rearmament programme, heavily relying on Turkey for military support.
“The Turkish defence industry and Turkish military equipment will be providing further arms to protect Azerbaijan,” predicts Huseyin Bagci, a professor of international relations at Ankara’s Middle East Technical University.”
However, Bagci noted that Azerbaijan is also turning to another ally for advanced weaponry.
“Israel is much better in this respect. Azerbaijan buys the highest technology from Israel, and Israel is providing it.”
Turkish and Israeli arms played a crucial role in Azerbaijan’s recent military successes, overwhelming Armenian-backed forces that relied on outdated Russian equipment.
Armenia’s response
In response to its loss of Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia is also ramping up its military capabilities, with France leading the supply of new, sophisticated weaponry.
Paris argues that this support helps Armenia shift its focus away from Russian reliance and towards Western alliances.
Yerevan maintains that its rearmament is purely for self-defence.
“Right now, there is no military parity between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” says Eric Hacopian, a political consultant in Armenia.
“The goal is to create deterrents to make any aggression against Armenia more costly. In the medium term, we aim for equality, and in the long term, superiority.”
Stalled peace talks
The rearmament comes amid stalled peace talks, with Baku concerned that Yerevan’s military buildup might indicate ambitions to retake Nagorno Karabakh.
“The truth is our territory was under occupation, so we worry that in five, 10 years, Armenia will rearm its military, strengthen military capacities, and will come back,” warned Farid Shafiyev, chairman of the Baku-based Centre of Analysis of International Relations.
Yerevan maintains that its rearmament is purely for self-defence.
“Right now, there is no military parity between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The goal is to create deterrents in the short run to make any aggression against Armenia far more costly than it has been in the past,” says Eric Hacopian, a political consultant in Armenia.
“Two is to create equality in the middle term and in the long term superiority. You can’t have any other goal when your country is constantly under threat, or attack is the only way to respond to it.”
Hacopian also notes: “The moment Armenia can defend itself, then the game is up because Ilham Aliyev is not going to risk a war that he is not guaranteed to win; Armenia rearming means he is not guaranteed to win a war which he means he won’t launch one.”
However, Hacopian acknowledges that the coming year will be dangerous for the region as Yerevan seeks to close the military gap with Azerbaijan.
“Next year is the year of living dangerously because next year is the last year that they can do a major aggression against Armenia without having to face the consequences because the gap is closing. Once it closes, the game will be up,” he says.
Ongoing tensions
Earlier this month, Armenian and Azerbaijani forces exchanged fire in a border skirmish, underscoring the ongoing tensions between the two nations.
Both Baku and Yerevan insist their military enhancements are for defensive purposes.
However, Bagci warns that the arms race is turning the region into a potential flashpoint.
“Armenia and Azerbaijan are like two children; they play with fire, and the house is burning, and everybody is asking the big powers why the house is burning and who has done it. They have done it together,” he says.
Despite their rearmament, both Armenia and Azerbaijan claim to remain committed to the US-backed peace process.
Analysts, however, warn that the escalating arms race could deepen mutual suspicions and further complicate efforts to achieve lasting peace.
Paris Paralympics 2024
British athletes light Paralympic Flame in birthplace of Games near London
Four days before the Paris Paralympics begin, the torch was lit on Saturday next to the English hospital where the idea for the competition was born. The flame arrives in France on Sunday via the Channel tunnel.
Two British Paralympians, Helene Raynsford and Gregor Ewan, lit the famous torch on Saturday in the stadium close to Stoke Mandeville hospital, northwest of London.
Raynsford was the first Paralympic champion in Para rowing when the sport made its debut in Beijing in 2008. Ewan is a three-time Paralympian in wheelchair curling.
“It’s such an honour,” Raynsford said, “it’s the birthplace of the Paralympic movement.”
The ceremony was attended by Tony Estanguet, president of the Paris 2024 organising committee, and Andrew Parsons, president of the International Paralympic Committee.
German-British roots
The Paralympic movement dates back to 1948. After World War II ended, Ludwig Guttmann, a German neurologist at Stoke Mandeville hospital organised an archery tournament for injured veterans who were using wheelchairs.
The first Stoke Mandeville Games coincided with the 1948 London Olympics and were held on grounds next to the hospital.
They soon became an international competition and in 1960 the first ever official Paralympic Games were held in Rome, with 400 athletes competing from 23 countries.
Last year it was decided that the Paralympic Flame should leave from its “home” in Stoke Mandeville for each edition of the Games.
Paris Paralympics to showcase best of disability sport
The journey to Paris
On Sunday, the Flame will pass through the Channel Tunnel – 24 British torchbearers taking it halfway through before handing over to French Para torchbearers, who will take it to Calais.
Once in Paris, it will be used to light the Paralympic Cauldron in the Tuileries Gardens during next Wednesday’s opening ceremony.
Some 12 torches will also travel across France from Sunday to Wednesday with a thousand torchbearers taking turns in around 50 cities.
It’s the first time France has hosted the Paralympic Games. Despite a slow start, organisers say nearly two million of the 2.5 million available tickets have been sold and around a dozen sports are almost sold out.
Nearly two million Paris Paralympics tickets sold as excitement builds
Around 4,400 athletes will compete in 549 events on 18 competition sites, including 16 of those used in the Olympics such as the Grand Palais, the Chateau de Versailles and the Stade de France.
Environment
‘Bees starving’ in disastrous year for French honey
Saint-Ours (France) (AFP) – Beekeepers across France say it has been a disastrous year for honey, with bees starving to death and production plummeting by up to 80 percent.
Mickael Isambert, a beekeeper in Saint-Ours-les-Roches in central France, lost 70 percent of his honey and had to feed his colonies sugar to help them survive after a cold, rainy spring.
“It has been a catastrophic year,” said Isambert, 44, who looks after 450 hives.
A beehive typically produces 15 kilos of honey a year, but this time, Isambert said his farm had only produced between five and seven kilos.
When it rains, bees “don’t fly, they don’t go out, so they eat their own honey reserves,” said his co-manager and fellow beekeeper Marie Mior.
Low temperatures and heavy rainfall have prevented bees from gathering enough pollen, and flowers from producing nectar – which the insects collect to make honey.
‘Some died of hunger’
Bad weather has affected honey producers countrywide, with spring production dropping by 80 percent in some regions — figures that summer harvests will struggle to offset, said the French national beekeeping union (Unaf).
Rainfall rose by 45 percent on the yearly average, Unaf said in a letter to its local branches.
“With weather conditions that have been catastrophic in many regions with abundant rain… and low temperatures until late, many beekeepers’ viability is under threat,” said Unaf.
Temperatures stagnated below 18 degrees Celsius, the minimum temperature needed for flowers to produce nectar, said Jean-Luc Hascoet, a beekeeper in Brittany in western France who lost about 15 colonies.
“For some of my colleagues it was worse,” he said.
“In June, the bee population increases and the needs of the colonies grow but as nothing was coming in, some died of hunger,” said Hascoet.
French honey harvest halved in ‘worst year ever’ for beekeepers
‘Black year’
French beekeepers had already been reeling from dealing with several seasons of scorching heat and delayed frosts, according to Unaf president Christian Pons, making this “black year” even worse.
“Ten years ago, I made one and a half to two tons of honey per site, compared to 100 kilos today,” said Pons, a beekeeper in the southern Herault region.
Honeymakers earlier this year protested against “unfair competition” by foreign producers, which led to the government releasing five million euros ($5.6 million) in aid.
French consumers eat on average 45,000 tons of honey per year, about 20,000 tons of which is produced in France, according to the left-wing Peasants Confederation union.
Arson
Police open terror probe after explosion outside synagogue in southern France
French authorities have stepped up security at Jewish institutions and opened a terror investigation after a blazing car exploded outside a synagogue on Saturday in the southern town of La Grande-Motte, injuring a police officer.
Local media said two cars, one of which contained at least one gas bottle, had been set on fire outside the Beth Yaacov synagogue in La Grande-Motte, at about 8:30 a.m on Saturday.
Acting Prime Minister Gabriel Attal said France’s national anti-terror prosecutors (Pnat) had been tasked with probing the incident.
“La Grande Motte’s synagogue was the target of an attack this morning,” Attal said in a post on social media platform X. “An anti-semitic act. Once again, our Jewish fellow citizens are being targeted.”
Earlier, acting Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin called the incident “an obviously criminal act” and said police were looking for a suspect.
“I want to assure our fellow Jewish citizens and the municipality of all my support and say that at the request of the President of the Republic @EmmanuelMacron, all means are being mobilised to find the perpetrator [of the attack],” Darmanin said on X.
Darmanin and Attal are due to travel to the scene later on Saturday.
‘Attempt to kill Jews’
One police officer was injured in the explosion. William Maury, of police union Alliance Police Nationale, told BFM TV the officer’s life was not in danger.
The five people inside the synagogue at the time, including the rabbi, were not injured.
Stéphane Rossignol, the mayor of La Grande-Motte, told Le Figaro daily that surveillance cameras had shown an individual setting fire to vehicles in front of the synagogue.
Several politicians as well as Jewish organisations denounced the explosion as an antisemitic attack.
“Exploding a gas bottle in a car in front of the Grande Motte synagogue at the expected time of arrival of the faithful: it’s not just attacking a place of worship, it’s an attempt to kill Jews,” Yonathan Arfi, who leads the CRIF, an umbrella organisation of French Jewish groups, said on X.
In May, French police shot dead an armed man who was trying to set fire to a synagogue in the northern city of Rouen.
France, like other countries in Europe, has seen a surge in antisemitic incidents following the Hamas attacks on Israel on 7 October and Israel’s retaliatory assault on Gaza.
Anti-Semitism in France ‘quadrupled’ on back of Israel-Hamas war
(with newswires)
KENYA
Kenya to build first nuclear power plant by 2034 amid local opposition
Kenya’s first nuclear power plant is set to open in 2034 on the coast of the Indian Ocean, the government announced as it prepares to host a US-Africa summit on nuclear energy next week. The announcement has already raised objections from activists and local residents over safety and environmental concerns.
The construction of the 1,000-megawatt plant will begin in 2027, with the project expected to cost around 500 billion Kenyan shillings (about 3.5 billion euros), according to media reports.
Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi said a research reactor would be commissioned by the early 2030s.
“Kenya is committed to leading in clean energy. Kenya is focused on advancing nuclear technology as part of Kenya’s sustainable energy strategy,” said Mudavadi in a statement.
The project aims to increase Kenya’s energy capacity, reduce carbon emissions, and create new job opportunities.
Currently, Kenya generates about 90 percent of its energy from renewable sources, including geothermal, hydro-electric, wind and solar power.
President William Ruto, who has positioned himself at the forefront of African efforts to combat climate change, said the country could increase that figure to 100 percent by 2030.
Concerned locals
However, the prospect of a nuclear plant on the Indian Ocean coast has raised significant concerns, particularly among activists and local residents.
The Kenya Anti-Nuclear Alliance urged the government to focus on renewable energy sources instead.
“Instead of pursuing a nuclear programme that puts the lives and livelihoods of our people at risk, we urge the government to invest in renewable energy sources that are safer, cleaner, and more sustainable,” said the group earlier this year.
The proposed plant will be located in Kilifi County, a region known for its white sandy beaches, seafood, coral reefs, and dense mangrove forests, making it one of Kenya’s top tourist destinations.
Local residents are particularly worried about the environmental impact, as they are already battling plastic pollution in the area.
Growing trend
Kenya’s nuclear ambitions are part of a broader trend across Africa. South Africa remains the only African nation with a civil nuclear programme, operating two reactors for more than 30 years.
Rwanda has signed a deal with a Canadian-German startup to build an “experimental” nuclear reactor to reduce its reliance on fossil fuels.
Kenya’s interest in nuclear energy dates back to the 2000s, gaining momentum in 2018 when 10 other African countries expressed interest in nuclear energy.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) reports that more than a third of the countries applying for nuclear energy are African, encouraged by the continent’s large reserves of uranium.
Sudan crisis
Sudan talks close with progress on two safe aid routes but not on ceasefire
US-led mediators say they have secured guarantees from Sudan’s warring parties at talks in Switzerland to improve access for humanitarian aid, but the Sudanese army’s absence from the discussions has hindered progress on ending 16 months of war.
Over 10 days of talks in Geneva, a new group of mediators including Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates tried to negotiate more aid and protection for civilians facing famine, mass displacement and spreading disease after 16 months of war between the army and Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitaries.
At the end of talks on Friday, the mediators, calling themselves the Aligned for Advancing Lifesaving and Peace in Sudan (ALPS) Group, said they had “secured guarantees from both parties to the conflict to provide safe and unhindered humanitarian access through two key arteries – the Western border crossing in Darfur at Adre and the Dabbah Road with access through the north and west from Port Sudan”.
Aid trucks were driving towards the Zamzam displacement camp in Darfur, where famine has been declared, it added. The UN humanitarian agency OCHA said 15 trucks had made it over the border.
“These routes must remain open and safe so we can surge aid into Darfur and begin to turn the tide against famine. Food and starvation cannot be used as a weapon of war,” the group said in its concluding statement.
The mediators said they were also making progress on opening an access route through the Sennar junction in the southeast.
Famine and floods add to distress of Sudanese displaced by war
SAF no-show limits progress
The group acknowledged, however, that any progress fell far short of the response needed for one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises – one in five people have been forced to flee their homes and tens of thousands have died. More than half of the country’s 50 million population are facing acute hunger.
“We hope that this will be a source of momentum for much bigger steps and progress down the road,” US Sudan envoy Tom Perriello told a press conference in Geneva on Friday.
“The sad thing is, the crisis in Sudan is so severe that we could do four of these [negotiation rounds] and still be barely scratching the surface of what Sudanese people deserve.”
Sudan at ‘cataclysmic breaking point’ amid multiple crises, UN warns
In an illustration of the challenges, only a fraction of the aid available at Adre has been dispatched this week, as the army-aligned government imposed a halt to movements after the crossing opened for the first time in months.
Despite intense diplomatic lobbying, the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) were unhappy with the format and did not send a formal delegation to Switzerland, though they were in telephone contact with the mediators.
“Though we were in consistent communication with SAF virtually, we regret their decision not to be present, and we believe that limited our ability to make more substantial progress towards key issues, particularly a national cessation of hostilities,” ALPS said in its statement.
(with newswires)
INDIA – POLITICS
Indian Kashmir headed for polls after a decade of turmoil and direct rule
India will hold the first legislative elections in a decade in the restive region of Kashmir, which lost its semi-autonomy and came under direct federal rule in 2019.
The elections, scheduled in three stages starting on 18 September, will allow nine million voters to elect representatives to the 90-member state legislature. Results will be announced on 4 October, said chief election commissioner Rajiv Kumar.
“After a long gap, elections are due and will be held in Jammu and Kashmir,” Kumar said in Delhi.
The polls come after a prolonged period of uncertainty, following the region’s 2019 loss of statehood and the special privileges guaranteed under Article 370 of the Indian constitution.
The announcement of the elections has sparked a significant administrative reshuffle.
Approximately 200 officials, including Kashmir’s police and intelligence chiefs, were transferred after the election date was confirmed on 16 August.
Opposition parties allege the reshuffle could benefit India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the upcoming vote.
“We are writing to the Election Commission to investigate these transfers in Jammu and Kashmir,” said Omar Abdullah, a former state chief minister.
India’s Modi to visit Ukraine in bid to rebalance diplomatic ties
Court-mandated vote
The elections are being held after the Supreme Court set a 30 September deadline for the vote in Kashmir, where an insurgency has claimed around 80,000 lives since 1989.
Despite upholding the 2019 abrogation of Article 370, the court’s ruling has forced the BJP government to allow these elections.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi defended the 2019 decision, stating it removed “unjust” laws and paved the way for peace and progress in the troubled region.
He also noted that recent village and district-level elections have helped establish democracy in Kashmir.
Restoring statehood?
Peerzada Irshad Ahmad Shah, head of the political science faculty at Kashmir University, said many people hope the elections will restore statehood and autonomy.
“They are hopeful a popular government might give new hope to the people by asking the centre to grant us our statehood back,” Shah told RFI from Srinagar, the region’s capital.
“That is our dream.”
Shah also pointed to high unemployment in Kashmir, which reached 18.3 percent last year, and expressed hope that the new government might implement reforms to create jobs.
Former chief minister Omar Abdullah echoed this sentiment, saying one of the elected government’s main tasks would be to restore full statehood.
“Only as a state will we be able to start undoing some of the damage done to Jammu and Kashmir after 2019,” he said.
India offer jobs and perks worth billions in first budget after polls
Strategic importance
Lieutenant General Syed Ata Hasnain, a retired military commander of Kashmir, said the elections would bolster India’s regional influence.
“A successful assembly election actually conveys the message that the people of Kashmir are with us and want to be part of us,” he said.
Hasnain noted that insurgency in Kashmir has largely retreated to forested areas, with 36 people, including 19 soldiers, killed in attacks this year.
The region remains heavily militarised, with thousands of troops patrolling the 1,222-kilometre border with Pakistan, making it one of the world’s most militarised zones.
India administers two-thirds of Kashmir, while Pakistan occupies the northern tip. The two nuclear-armed rivals have fought three wars since their 1947 independence, two of which were over Kashmir.
As the elections approach, analyst Shah expects the BJP to seek local alliances in Kashmir.
“Local alliances might emerge, which would benefit the BJP, knowing it cannot win seats by itself in the Muslim-majority valley,” he said.
In 2015, the BJP formed a coalition with a regional Kashmiri party, but the alliance collapsed in 2018, leading to the imposition of direct federal rule.
The upcoming elections will be a critical test of whether Modi’s reforms have gained support in the region or if Kashmir’s electorate will push back against the changes.
US elections 2024
Riding high on DNC momentum, Kamala Harris faces a fierce fight to the finish
US presidential candidates Kamala Harris and Donald Trump have entered the final 10-week stretch to election day, with the Democrat surging after an electrifying speech accepting her party’s nomination at the Democratic National Convention (DNC). But with some voters on the left still unconvinced, a final victory is far from certain.
Less than three weeks before the 10 September presidential debate between the US vice president and the Republican ex-president, and only a month before early voting kicks off, polls show the race for the White House is neck and neck.
Former senator and prosecutor Harris leaves the DNC in Chicago with the wind in her sails, having erased the polling leads Trump was enjoying before she replaced President Joe Biden atop the Democratic ticket last month.
- Harris vows ‘new way forward’ for America as she accepts nomination
But in one of the many speeches at the DNC, Michelle Obama, wife of former president Barack Obama, struck a sober note. In spite of all the “enthusiasm and positivity” generated by the convention, she cautioned, the race for the White House will be an “uphill battle”.
One of the main challenges, believes Gretchen Pascalis, a spokesperson for Democrats Abroad France, may be low turnout. She is also concerned about voter suppression, pointing to Harris’s remarks on “protecting the right to vote”.
She is particularly worried about Trump’s recent, puzzling remark that his Christian supporters would never need to vote again if they elected him, a statement Pascalis calls “very dangerous and frightening”.
- Democratic convention catapults Harris into US presidential race
Show of unity
Overall, Pascalis thought that the DNC was a show of “new energy, of very democratic ideas, and of a real desire to improve the life of everyday, middle-class Americans”.
She was particularly impressed by the performance of television icon Oprah Winfrey (“What an energy she has!”), and says she supports Harris’s choice of Tim Walz as her vice-presidential running mate.
“He complements her in many ways. And he really represents rural America. And he can appeal to certain undecided voters,” she told RFI.
“Are the American people ready for a woman to lead them, a woman of colour? I say: ‘Absolutely yes!'”
REMARK by Gretchen Pascalis Democrats Abroad France
Contrasting the DNC to its rival, the Republican National Convention that was held in July, Pascalis noted: “Unlike the Republican convention, at the Democratic convention, all former living presidents actually spoke, except for Jimmy Carter, who’s unwell.”
Indeed, in the past week, former US presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama both took the stage to give speeches supporting Harris, as well as sitting president Biden.
But at the RNC, neither George Bush nor former Republican vice-president Dan Quale, nor party heavyweights Dick Cheney and Mitt Romney, showed up. Even Mike Pence, Trump’s vice president, did not make an appearance.
In spite of the show of unity and positivism at the Democratic convention, however, there were sharp controversies as well.
Palestinian question
Pro-Palestinian protesters who gathered outside the convention centre were supported by a group of 30 delegates inside, who are described as the “uncommitted” movement.
According to political magazine Mother Jones, they “represent the hundreds of thousands who voted uncommitted in lieu of supporting President Joe Biden’s primary campaign”.
During the four days of the convention, these delegates tried, in vain, to secure a slot on the main stage for either Ruwa Romman, the representative for the state of Georgia and the first ever Palestinian-American to be elected as a delegate to the DNC, or a doctor who has volunteered in Gaza.
Both requests were refused.
Members of the uncommitted movement point out that while Israeli parents Jon Polin and Rachel Goldberg were invited to make a moving speech from the main stage about their son Hersh Goldberg-Polin, who was taken hostage during Hamas’ attack on 7 October, Palestinian speakers were only offered speaking time on the sidelines of the main venue.
“It is quite disappointing to see that, even with our protest vote, we did not get a Palestinian speaker to be at the DNC,” says Ali Hallal, who canvassed for uncommitted candidates in Detroit.
‘Not guaranteed my vote’
“(Harris) does not have a guarantee of my vote at this point,” he told RFI. “You can’t expect an uncommitted voter to vote for Kamala without a level of guarantee of a policy change.”
Hallal points out that uncommitted voters make up a large portion in some swing states such as Michigan and Georgia.
But the prospect of people voting for a third candidate, such as the Green Party’s Jill Stein, or not voting at all, is not attractive either.
“We are dealing with the rising risk of another Trump presidency, which could drastically change the material conditions of the US at an accelerated rate for working-class people and people of colour,” Hallal says.
Pascalis, the Democrat Abroad, did not want to comment, but stressed that Harris “did talk about both protecting Israel and their right to exist” but also about “really trying to do everything to eliminate the suffering in Gaza”, and indicated that she is looking to secure a ceasefire as soon as possible.
Senegal
Senegal begins review of oil and gas contracts in bid to reclaim resources
Senegal has launched a major effort to reclaim control over its oil and gas resources, setting up a commission to review and renegotiate contracts with foreign companies that critics say have long favoured international interests over national ones.
Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko announced the move as part of the government’s broader push to ensure that Senegal’s newfound energy wealth benefits its people, fulfilling a key campaign promise made by President Bassirou Diomaye Faye and Sonko.
The commission, comprised of legal, tax and energy sector experts, was officially established on Monday.
It will scrutinise contracts in Senegal’s oil, gas, and mining sectors to identify areas where terms can be renegotiated in favour of the national interest. The commission has the authority to bring in additional expertise from abroad if necessary.
This move follows President Faye‘s landslide election victory, in which he promised to audit and, if needed, renegotiate contracts with foreign operators in strategic sectors.
While details of the audit and any specific renegotiation plans have not been disclosed, the establishment of this commission marks a significant step towards fulfilling that commitment.
Promises
Sonko emphasised the government’s dedication to honouring its pledge to the Senegalese people.
“As an opposition political party, we vigorously denounced the way in which agreements and conventions were concluded to the detriment, most of the time, of the strategic interests of Senegal and its people,” Sonko said.
Now in power, he promises to do better.
He said the commission will have sufficient resources to look into the contracts and hire experts from abroad if necessary.
- Senegal joins oil-producing nations with launch of first offshore field
The commission’s work comes at a pivotal time for Senegal, which became an oil producer for the first time earlier this year.
Australia’s Woodside Energy announced in June that its Sangomar oil and gas field had produced its first oil in Senegal.
Additionally, gas production is expected to begin by the end of the year at the Greater Tortue Ahmeyim (GTA) liquefied natural gas (LNG) project, operated by BP.
Despite the commission’s formation, Sonko did not specify how long the contract review process would take.
Challenges
Former Senegalese MP Oumar Sy praised the decision to renegotiate the contracts but cautioned that it could be a lengthy and challenging process.
“These types of contracts are very heavy and hard to change. It might take years to do so,” Sy told RFI in Dakar.
In addition to the contract review, Sonko also announced plans to develop a restructuring and reconfiguration plan for the Port of Dakar, further indicating the government’s focus on strengthening national control over key resources and infrastructure.
This latest move follows another milestone for Senegal: the launch of its first satellite from California last Friday.
The satellite launch makes Senegal one of 12 African nations with their own surveillance and telecommunications satellites in space, a development that Faye hailed as a major step towards the country’s “technological sovereignty”.
Promises, promises
Issued on:
This week on The Sound Kitchen you’ll hear the answer to the question about the National Rally’s campaign promises. We’ll re-visit the Olympic Games, there’s “The Listener’s Corner” with Paul Myers, and bushels of good music – all that and the new quiz and bonus questions too, so click on the “Play” button above and enjoy!
Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday – here on our website, or wherever you get your podcasts. You’ll hear the winner’s names announced and the week’s quiz question, along with all the other ingredients you’ve grown accustomed to: your letters and essays, “On This Day”, quirky facts and news, interviews, and great music … so be sure and listen every week.
Erwan and I are busy cooking up special shows with your music requests, so get them in! Send your music requests to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr Tell us why you like the piece of music, too – it makes it more interesting for us all!
The ePOP video competition is open!
The ePOP video competition is sponsored by the RFI department “Planète Radio”, whose mission is to give a voice to the voiceless. ePOP focuses on the environment and how climate change has affected “ordinary” people. You are to create a three-minute video about climate change, the environment, pollution – told by the people it affects.
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Go to the ePOP page to read about past competitions, watch past videos, and read the regulations for your entry. You can also write to us at thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr, and we’ll forward your mail to Planète Radio.
The competition closes 12 September. We expect to be bombarded with entries from the English speakers!
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Our website “Le Français facile avec rfi” has news broadcasts in slow, simple French, as well as bi-lingual radio dramas (with real actors!) and exercises to practice what you have heard.
Go to our website and get started! At the top of the page, click on “Test level”. According to your score, you’ll be counseled to the best-suited activities for your level.
Do not give up! As Lidwien van Dixhoorn, the head of “Le Français facile” service told me: “Bathe your ears in the sound of the language, and eventually, you’ll get it”. She should know – Lidwien is Dutch and came to France hardly able to say “bonjour” and now she heads this key RFI department – so stick with it!
Be sure you check out our wonderful podcasts!
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As you see, sound is still quite present in the RFI English service. Please keep checking our website for updates on the latest from our excellent staff of journalists. You never know what we’ll surprise you with!
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Another idea for your students: Br. Gerald Muller, my beloved music teacher from St. Edward’s University in Austin, Texas, has been writing books for young adults in his retirement – and they are free! There is a volume of biographies of painters and musicians called Gentle Giants, and an excellent biography of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., too. They are also a good way to help you improve your English – that’s how I worked on my French, reading books that were meant for young readers – and I guarantee you, it’s a good method for improving your language skills. To get Br. Gerald’s free books, click here.
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This week’s quiz: On 29 June, I asked you a question about France’s snap elections for the lower house of Parliament, the National Assembly. President Emmanuel Macron had just dissolved the Assembly after his party was rather severely trounced in the European Parliament elections by the far-right National Rally party.
The first round of voting was on 30 June, and the candidates were, as I noted then, promising the moon to voters … you were to listen to Sarah Elzas’ report on her Spotlight on France podcast, and send in the answer to this question: What did the National Rally party say they would do in July to decide what they can or cannot do, as far as their economic promises to the voters?
The answer is: As Romeric Godin told Sarah on the podcast: “Many of the spending proposals put forward by Bardella and the RN are predicated on an audit of the country’s finances, planned as of July, which would determine what can (and cannot) be done.
“That’s a traditional way to say ‘We can’t implement some promises we made before, because public finances are not in order’,” says Godin, skeptical that the RN will be able to deliver.
For Godin, the economic audit offers a way out: “They can say that if the report on France’s public finances is very bad, they will not do it in the autumn, or at all.”
The fiscal information is all there, no audit is necessary. France’s Cour des Comptes, the country’s independent and supreme audit institution, publishes a monthly report on the country’s finances. It’s not a secret document. It’s online, and everyone can read it.
In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question: “What do you remember about your first day at your first job?”, which was suggested by Mokles Uddin Mollahis from Bogura, Bangladesh.
Do you have a bonus question idea? Send it to us!
The winners are: RFI English listener Rafiq Khondaker, the president of the Source of Knowledge Club in Naogaon, Bangladesh. Congratulations, Riaz, on your double win.
Also on the list of lucky winners this week are Ferhat Bezazel, the president of the RFI Butterflies Club Ain Kechera in West Skikda, Algeria, and RFI Listeners Club member Hans Verner Lollike from Hedehusene, Denmark. Last but not least, there are RFI English listeners Liton Ahamed Mia, from Naogaon, Bangladesh, and Malik Muhammad Nawaz Khokhar from the Sungat Radio Listeners Club in Muzaffargarh, Pakistan.
Congratulations winners!
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s program: “Sous le ciel de Paris” by Hubert Giraud and Jean Dréjac, sung by the one and only Edith Piaf; the traditional valse-musette “A Happy Day in Paris” performed by AccordionMan; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer, and “Hymne à l’Amour” by Marguerite Monnot and Edith Piaf, sung by Céline Dion.
Do you have a music request? Send it to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
This week’s question … you must listen to the show to participate.
You have until 16 September to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 21 September podcast. When you enter be sure to send your postal address with your answer, and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.
Send your answers to:
english.service@rfi.fr
or
Susan Owensby
RFI – The Sound Kitchen
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or
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INDIA – UKRAINE
India stands ‘firmly for peace’ PM Modi tells Ukraine’s Zelensky
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said his country stood “firmly for peace” in the war between Ukraine and Russia during a Friday meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv.
“We were not neutral from day one, we have taken a side, and we stand firmly for peace,” Modi said.
Modi is paying the first visit to Ukraine by an Indian prime minister.
As he pushed for a way forward on ending the Ukraine war, Modi urged Zelensky to sit down for talks with Russia and offered to act as a “friend” to help bring peace.
The two leaders shook hands and exchanged a warm hug at the entrance of the Martyrologist Exposition at the Ukraine National Museum, before talks at the Mariinsky presidential palace.
“Conflict is particularly devastating for young children. My heart goes out to the families of children who lost their lives, and I pray that they find the strength to endure their grief, Modi wrote on X.
Zelensky plans to discuss a summit on peace in Ukraine with Modi and also called for strengthened trade and military cooperation with India.
Four agreements between India and Ukraine are planned to provide for cooperation in agriculture, medicine, culture and humanitarian assistance, Indian officials said.
- India’s Modi visits Ukraine in bid to rebalance diplomatic ties
Putin hug ‘disappointing’
Modi’s arrival in Kyiv – a day ahead of Ukraine’s independence day – follows his two-day trip to Poland.
It also comes on the back of his trip to Moscow in July, where he hugged Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Zelensky said of Modi’s trip to Russia: “It’s a huge disappointment and a devastating blow to peace efforts to see the leader of the world’s largest democracy hug the world’s most bloody criminal in Moscow on such a day.”
Friday’s talks come at a crossroads in the war, with Ukrainian forces launching an attack on Russia’s western Kursk region on 6 August.
Russian troops are also grinding out slow but steady advances in Ukraine’s east.
But it remains unclear if Modi could really become an effective dealmaker.
“No problem can be resolved on a battlefield,” Modi said in Poland on Wednesday before heading to Ukraine.
(with newswires)
French politics
Macron begins crisis talks with party leaders to get government up and running
President Emmanuel Macron kicked off negotiations with party leaders on Friday in a bid to resolve France’s political deadlock, which has persisted for more than six weeks since snap legislative elections left the country with a hung parliament.
The situation has left France in political limbo for 47 days, following the elections on 7 July, which failed to give any party a working majority.
Prime Minister Gabriel Attal, who resigned after the defeat of Macron’s Renaissance party, has continued to lead a caretaker government at Macron’s request to see through the Paris Olympics.
With the Games ending on 11 August, the so-called “Olympic truce” is over, and Macron now faces pressure to appoint a new prime minister capable of forming a stable government.
“Article 8 of the French Constitution states that the president names the prime minister, but it doesn’t fix a time frame,” said Arnaud Le Pillouer, a public law specialist at Paris Nanterre University.
Although theoretically France could remain without a premier for one or two years, Le Pillouer told RFI the constitution must be interpreted in light of democratic principles.
“He could name Brigitte Macron as PM, but would that be acceptable in terms of democracy? I doubt it.”
Macron must face political truths as Olympics euphoria wears off
Building a stable majority
The leftist New Popular Front (NFP) coalition, which united the Socialist, Communist, Green, and hard-left France Unbowed parties for the election, emerged as the largest faction, winning 193 of the 577 seats in the National Assembly.
The NFP is pushing for economist Lucie Castets to be appointed as the new prime minister.
Macron will meet with NFP leaders, including Castets, on Friday morning, followed by representatives from his own centrist Ensemble (Together) camp and the conservative Republicans.
Meetings with the far-right National Rally and its affiliates are scheduled for Monday.
Macron’s goal, as stated in July, is to build “the largest and most stable majority” before appointing a new premier.
What is the New Popular Front, surprise winner of France’s election?
Macron has ruled out including figures from France Unbowed or the National Rally in the government, preferring an alliance with the traditional right and parts of the centre-left.
Names circulating as potential prime ministers include former PM Edouard Philippe, Xavier Bertrand (head of the northern Hauts de France region), and Socialist former foreign minister Bernard Cazeneuve.
“The President is on the side of the French people, the guarantor of institutions and above all the expression of their vote on 7 July,” said the Elysée Palace on Thursday.
However, the NFP insists that the election results clearly went in their favour, with the France Unbowed faction even threatening to launch impeachment proceedings against Macron.
Meanwhile the presidential camp, the right and the National Rally have threatened a no-confidence motion if an NFP-led government included members from the hard left.
Paris politics heats up as left pushes for power and impeachment
Presidential discord
Friday’s talks follow apparent cracks within Macron’s centrist Renaissance party. Former PM Elisabeth Borne has announced her candidacy for the leadership of Renaissance, positioning herself as a unifying force.
Borne told Le Parisien on Wednesday that the party “was not meant to be a presidential stable” and stressed the need to focus on “in-depth reflection and mobilising its members”.
She added: “We need to give French people hope again, to develop a vision and a plan for the country.”
Her candidacy could tread on the toes of Gabriel Attal, who is head of the Renaissance group within the National Assembly and is looking to redefine his role after stepping down as prime minister.
Asked about Attal’s ambitions, Borne said: “Traditionally, it’s not customary to be group chairman at the same time as leading the party.”
Mpox outbreak
Mpox outbreak widens as different strains reach Côte d’Ivoire, Thailand
Côte d’Ivoire has reported cases of mpox Clade 2 for the first time since the start of the multi-country outbreak in 2022, while Thailand has confirmed Asia’s first known case of a new, deadlier strain of mpox in a patient who had travelled to the country from Africa.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Thursday that cases of mpox Clade 2 have been reported in Côte d’Ivoire.
According to national health officials, at least 28 cases of mpox and one death have been recorded in the West African country.
“The National Public Hygiene Institute [INHP] recorded 28 confirmed cases, including one death across the country as of Tuesday,” said INHP doctor Daouda Coulibaly.
He added that monitoring for mpox had been strengthened.
“We have to break the chains of transmission, identify the contacts of cases, isolate them and monitor them.”
Cases rise in Central Africa
The number of mpox cases continues to increase in Central Africa, notably in the Central African Republic (CAR), Democratic Republic of Congo and Burundi.
According to RFI’s correspondent in CAR, Rolf Steve Domia-Leu, nearly 100 suspected cases of monkeypox have been detected throughout the country over the past four weeks.
The main areas affected by the disease so far are Mbomou in the east, Kemo in the centre, Lobaye in the south-east and the capital, Bangui.
The disease is nonetheless under control, according to Valentin Nebanga, head of the health promotion department at the Ministry of Public Health.
“We have recorded 92 suspected cases, not only in Bangui, but in some provincial towns as well,” he said.
“Of the 92 suspected cases, samples were taken and nine cases came back positive,” he added.
“The positive patients were all hospitalised in dedicated treatment centres at the Bangui General Hospital, and the good news is that the nine patients have all been declared cured and have already been discharged from the hospital.”
France to donate 100,000 mpox vaccines as it prepares for outbreak at home
New strain reaches Asia
Meanwhile Thailand on Thursday confirmed Asia’s first known case of a new, deadlier strain of mpox, Clade 1b, in a patient who had travelled to the kingdom from Africa.
The patient landed in Bangkok on 14 August and was sent to hospital with mpox symptoms.
The Department of Disease Control said laboratory tests on the 66-year-old European confirmed he was infected with mpox Clade 1b.
“We have monitored 43 people who have been in close contact with the patient and so far they have shown no symptoms, but we must continue monitoring for a total of 21 days,” the department said in a statement, adding that the WHO would be informed of the development.
Anyone travelling to Thailand from 42 “risk countries” must register and undergo testing on arrival, the department said.
Dangerous variant
The WHO declared a global public health emergency over the new variant of mpox in mid-August, urging pharmaceutical companies and governments to work on increasing the current production of vaccines.
Mpox cases and deaths are surging in Africa, where outbreaks have been reported in the DRC, Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda and other countries since July.
More than 18,700 mpox cases detected in Africa since January
Cases were also reported in Sweden and Pakistan last week.
The disease is caused by a virus transmitted by infected animals and passed from human to human through close physical contact. It causes fever, muscular aches and large boil-like skin lesions.
Mpox has been known for decades, but the new strain known as Clade 1b is deadlier and more transmissible. It has driven the recent surge in cases.
Clade 1b causes death in about 3.6 percent of cases, with children more at risk, according to the WHO.
(with newswires)
Promises, promises
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This week on The Sound Kitchen you’ll hear the answer to the question about the National Rally’s campaign promises. We’ll re-visit the Olympic Games, there’s “The Listener’s Corner” with Paul Myers, and bushels of good music – all that and the new quiz and bonus questions too, so click on the “Play” button above and enjoy!
Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday – here on our website, or wherever you get your podcasts. You’ll hear the winner’s names announced and the week’s quiz question, along with all the other ingredients you’ve grown accustomed to: your letters and essays, “On This Day”, quirky facts and news, interviews, and great music … so be sure and listen every week.
Erwan and I are busy cooking up special shows with your music requests, so get them in! Send your music requests to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr Tell us why you like the piece of music, too – it makes it more interesting for us all!
The ePOP video competition is open!
The ePOP video competition is sponsored by the RFI department “Planète Radio”, whose mission is to give a voice to the voiceless. ePOP focuses on the environment and how climate change has affected “ordinary” people. You are to create a three-minute video about climate change, the environment, pollution – told by the people it affects.
You do not need expensive video equipment to enter the competition. Your phone is fine. And you do not need to be a member of the RFI Clubs to enter – everyone is welcome. And by the way – the prizes are incredibly generous!
Go to the ePOP page to read about past competitions, watch past videos, and read the regulations for your entry. You can also write to us at thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr, and we’ll forward your mail to Planète Radio.
The competition closes 12 September. We expect to be bombarded with entries from the English speakers!
Facebook: Be sure to send your photos to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr for the RFI English Listeners Forum banner!
More tech news: Did you know we have a YouTube channel? Just go to YouTube and write RFI English in the search bar, and there we are! Be sure to subscribe to see all our videos.
Would you like to learn French? RFI is here to help you!
Our website “Le Français facile avec rfi” has news broadcasts in slow, simple French, as well as bi-lingual radio dramas (with real actors!) and exercises to practice what you have heard.
Go to our website and get started! At the top of the page, click on “Test level”. According to your score, you’ll be counseled to the best-suited activities for your level.
Do not give up! As Lidwien van Dixhoorn, the head of “Le Français facile” service told me: “Bathe your ears in the sound of the language, and eventually, you’ll get it”. She should know – Lidwien is Dutch and came to France hardly able to say “bonjour” and now she heads this key RFI department – so stick with it!
Be sure you check out our wonderful podcasts!
In addition to the breaking news articles on our site, with in-depth analysis of current affairs in France and across the globe, we have several podcasts that will leave you hungry for more.
There’s Paris Perspective, Spotlight on France, Spotlight on Africa, and of course, The Sound Kitchen. We have an award-winning bilingual series – an old-time radio show, with actors (!) to help you learn French, called Les voisins du 12 bis. And there is the excellent International Report, too.
As you see, sound is still quite present in the RFI English service. Please keep checking our website for updates on the latest from our excellent staff of journalists. You never know what we’ll surprise you with!
To listen to our podcasts from your PC, go to our website; you’ll see “Podcasts” at the top of the page. You can either listen directly or subscribe and receive them directly on your mobile phone.
To listen to our podcasts from your mobile phone, slide through the tabs just under the lead article (the first tab is “Headline News”) until you see “Podcasts”, and choose your show.
Teachers take note! I save postcards and stamps from all over the world to send to you for your students. If you would like stamps and postcards for your students, just write and let me know. The address is english.service@rfi.fr If you would like to donate stamps and postcards, feel free! Our address is listed below.
Another idea for your students: Br. Gerald Muller, my beloved music teacher from St. Edward’s University in Austin, Texas, has been writing books for young adults in his retirement – and they are free! There is a volume of biographies of painters and musicians called Gentle Giants, and an excellent biography of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., too. They are also a good way to help you improve your English – that’s how I worked on my French, reading books that were meant for young readers – and I guarantee you, it’s a good method for improving your language skills. To get Br. Gerald’s free books, click here.
Independent RFI English Clubs: Be sure to always include Audrey Iattoni (audrey.iattoni@rfi.fr) from our Listener Relations department in your RFI Club correspondence. Remember to copy me (thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr) when you write to her so that I know what is going on, too. N.B.: You do not need to send her your quiz answers! Email overload!
This week’s quiz: On 29 June, I asked you a question about France’s snap elections for the lower house of Parliament, the National Assembly. President Emmanuel Macron had just dissolved the Assembly after his party was rather severely trounced in the European Parliament elections by the far-right National Rally party.
The first round of voting was on 30 June, and the candidates were, as I noted then, promising the moon to voters … you were to listen to Sarah Elzas’ report on her Spotlight on France podcast, and send in the answer to this question: What did the National Rally party say they would do in July to decide what they can or cannot do, as far as their economic promises to the voters?
The answer is: As Romeric Godin told Sarah on the podcast: “Many of the spending proposals put forward by Bardella and the RN are predicated on an audit of the country’s finances, planned as of July, which would determine what can (and cannot) be done.
“That’s a traditional way to say ‘We can’t implement some promises we made before, because public finances are not in order’,” says Godin, skeptical that the RN will be able to deliver.
For Godin, the economic audit offers a way out: “They can say that if the report on France’s public finances is very bad, they will not do it in the autumn, or at all.”
The fiscal information is all there, no audit is necessary. France’s Cour des Comptes, the country’s independent and supreme audit institution, publishes a monthly report on the country’s finances. It’s not a secret document. It’s online, and everyone can read it.
In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question: “What do you remember about your first day at your first job?”, which was suggested by Mokles Uddin Mollahis from Bogura, Bangladesh.
Do you have a bonus question idea? Send it to us!
The winners are: RFI English listener Rafiq Khondaker, the president of the Source of Knowledge Club in Naogaon, Bangladesh. Congratulations, Riaz, on your double win.
Also on the list of lucky winners this week are Ferhat Bezazel, the president of the RFI Butterflies Club Ain Kechera in West Skikda, Algeria, and RFI Listeners Club member Hans Verner Lollike from Hedehusene, Denmark. Last but not least, there are RFI English listeners Liton Ahamed Mia, from Naogaon, Bangladesh, and Malik Muhammad Nawaz Khokhar from the Sungat Radio Listeners Club in Muzaffargarh, Pakistan.
Congratulations winners!
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s program: “Sous le ciel de Paris” by Hubert Giraud and Jean Dréjac, sung by the one and only Edith Piaf; the traditional valse-musette “A Happy Day in Paris” performed by AccordionMan; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer, and “Hymne à l’Amour” by Marguerite Monnot and Edith Piaf, sung by Céline Dion.
Do you have a music request? Send it to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
This week’s question … you must listen to the show to participate.
You have until 16 September to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 21 September podcast. When you enter be sure to send your postal address with your answer, and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.
Send your answers to:
english.service@rfi.fr
or
Susan Owensby
RFI – The Sound Kitchen
80, rue Camille Desmoulins
92130 Issy-les-Moulineaux
France
or
By text … You can also send your quiz answers to The Sound Kitchen mobile phone. Dial your country’s international access code, or “ + ”, then 33 6 31 12 96 82. Don’t forget to include your mailing address in your text – and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.
Click here to learn how to win a special Sound Kitchen prize.
Click here to find out how you can become a member of the RFI Listeners Club, or form your own official RFI Club,
Decolonising Beauty campaign honours Africa’s diverse aesthetics
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Decolonising Beauty is a campaign designed by the production company Zikora Media to educate the public and celebrate the rich tapestry of indigenous and local beauty customs across Africa. This week we speak with its founder, Chika Oduah.
In a world increasingly dominated by Western beauty standards promoted through pop culture and the global beauty industry, the Decolonising Beauty campaign seeks to challenge narrow perceptions and showcase the multifaceted beauty traditions in Africa.
The campaign uses a multi-platform approach to reach a broad audience of English and French speakers in Africa and around the world.
A series of initiatives from the campaign will be announced until the end of the year involving photographers, artists, poets, media makers and content creators.
Zikora Media & Arts founder Chika Oduah tells us more.
- Read also: French lawmakers vote in favour of bill to ban hair discrimination
Episode mixed by Cécile Pompéani
Spotlight on Africa is a podcast from Radio France Internationale
Turkey seeks to reassert regional influence following Abbas visit
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In a bid to break out of increasing international isolation, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan this week hosted Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas in Ankara – positioning Turkey as a key player in the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas.
Abbas received a standing ovation in the Turkish Parliament on Thursday, where he addressed an extraordinary session. Deputies wore scarves adorned with Turkish and Palestinian flags as a show of solidarity.
With Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan watching from the balcony, Abbas praised Turkey’s unwavering support for the Palestinian cause.
“We highly appreciate Turkey’s pioneering role under the leadership of President Erdogan for its courageous and unwavering positions in defense of the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people to freedom and independence,” declared Abbas.
Increasing isolation
Erdogan is attempting to position himself at the forefront of international opposition to Israel’s war on Hamas in Gaza, even as Turkey finds itself increasingly sidelined from global efforts to resolve the conflict.
China’s recent hosting of Palestinian faction leaders highlights Erdogan’s diminishing influence.
“Erdogan was hoping to reconcile Palestinian factions, but China stole the spotlight and acted preemptively. China had more political clout over the parties,” Selin Nasi, a visiting fellow at the London School of Economics contemporary Turkish studies department, told RFI.
Abbas’s visit to Russia on Tuesday further underscores the growing importance of other nations in efforts to address the Gaza conflict.
Domestic message
Erdogan’s invitation to Abbas also serves as a way to reinforce his pro-Palestinian credentials with his domestic conservative base.
“He’s trying to keep his base intact domestically,” Sezin Oney, a commentator on Turkey’s Politikyol news portal, told RFI.
“Once upon a time, Erdogan resonated with the Arab public in general.
“The Arab Street, as it was called back then, and the Muslim population in general saw him as connected with international grassroots movements. But he doesn’t have that appeal anymore; he’s lost that appeal.”
Turkey a bridge?
Erdogan has long claimed to be a bridge between the Palestinian Authority and Hamas.
“This is an issue that Erdogan personally invested a lot of time and energy in,” said Selin Nasi.
However, Erdogan’s influence with Hamas has waned, particularly after the assassination of its leader Ismail Haniyeh last month, and his replacement by Yahya Sinwar, who is relatively unknown in Turkey.
“They cannot host [Sinwar], they cannot contact him, nor do they have the kind of relations that they had with Haniyeh. So they have to settle with Mahmoud Abbas at this point,” Oney said.
Abbas, however, appears to show little interest in Turkey’s playing a larger role in resolving the conflict, and Erdogan’s strong support of Hamas and his fiery rhetoric against Israel is increasingly isolating him from countries seeking to end the fighting.
This I Believe
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Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday. This week, you’ll hear what Rodrigo Hunrichse, your fellow RFI English listener, has found to be true in his life. Don’t miss it!
Hello everyone!
Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday. This week, you’ll hear what Rodrigo Hunrichse, your fellow RFI English listener, has found to be true in his life. Don’t miss it!
Here’s Rodrigo’s essay:
Seize the moment, cherish loved ones, make a good impression, avoid toxicity, plant seeds, harvest in time, write/ report regularly, study/ inform yourself, make good, love, find someone to love you back, question important things, rest regularly, good deeds should return, bad ones too, don’t judge until having good understanding of facts, don’t take their words for a fact: verify, don’t mind popular opinion, save for the uncertainty, remember good/bad people in your life so you’ll be remembered similarly, find a belief and a belonging so you have peers to support and be supported, no one is perfect especially you that know yourself, take care of yourself so to age with dignity, it’s never too late!
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s program: “People Are Strange”, by Jim Morrison and Robby Krieger, performed by The Doors.
The quiz will be back next Saturday, 24 August. Be sure and tune in!
China signs billion-dollar deal for car factory in Turkey
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China’s car giant BYD’s announcement to build a billion-dollar factory in Turkey represents a significant turnaround in bilateral relations. However, concerns persist regarding human rights issues and Turkey’s stance on the Chinese Muslim Uyghur community.
In a ceremony attended by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, China’s BYD car company signed an agreement to build a billion-dollar factory in Turkey.
The factory will produce 150,000 vehicles annually, mainly for the European Union market.
Analysts say the July deal marks a turning point in Turkish-Chinese relations.
“The significance of this deal is Turkey would be considered as a transition country between China and the EU,” Sibel Karabel, director of the Asia Pacific department of Istanbul’s Gedik University told RFI.
“This deal has the potential to reduce the trade imbalance, the trade deficit, which is a detriment to Turkey,” he adds, “Turkey also wants to reap the benefits of China’s cutting-edge technologies by collaborating with China.”
Sidestepping tariffs
China’s pivot towards Turkey, a NATO member, is also about Beijing’s increasing competition for global influence, especially with the United States.
Karabel says the planned BYD factory offers a way for China to avoid the EU’s new tariffs on vehicles.
Turkey is already a part of China’s global investment strategy through its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and Beijing has shown interest in Turkey becoming a trade route from China to Europe through Ankara’s Middle Corridor Intiative.
But until now, such collaborations have until been just empty words, claims Ceren Ergenc a China specialist at the Centre for European Policy Studies.
Turkey set on rebuilding bridges with China to improve trade
“When you look at the press statements after meetings, you don’t see Chinese investments in Turkey, and the reason for that is because China perceives Turkey as a high political risk country in the region,” Ergenc explains.
One of the main factors widely cited for Beijing’s reluctance to invest in Turkey is Ankara’s strong support of China’s Muslim Uyghur minority.
Ankara has been critical of Beijing’s crackdown on Uyghurs, offering refuge to many Uyghur dissidents. Their Turkish supporters fear Beijing’s billion-dollar investment in Turkey could be part of an extradition deal struck during Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan’s recent visit to China.
“There are rumors, of course, that the Chinese side is pressing for the ratification of this extradition agreement, that they would want Uyghurs in Turkey, some of them at least, to be returned to China to be tried in China,” warns Cagdas Ungor of Istanbul’s Marmara University, referring to people China considers to be dissidents or “terrorists”.
Common ground over Gaza
Elsewhere, Ankara and Beijing are finding increasing diplomatic common ground, including criticism of Israel’s war on Hamas.
“If you take, for instance, the Gaza issue right now, Turkey and China, and even without trying,” observes Ungor, “they see eye to eye on this issue. Their foreign policies align, overlap, and their policy becomes very much different from most of the other Western countries.”
Carmakers unhappy after EU hits China with tariffs on electric vehicles
For example, Ankara welcomed last month’s decision by Beijing to host Palestinian leaders amid an escalation of threats and bombardment by Israel.
Such a move can provide common ground, Ungor suggests, and this could be the basis for future cooperation.
“There are certain issues at a global level, at the regional level, that China seems to be a much better partner(to Turkey) than the Western countries,” he concludes.
There’s Music in the Kitchen No. 35
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This week on The Sound Kitchen, a special treat: RFI English listener’s musical requests. Just click on the “Play” button above and enjoy!
Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday. This week, you’ll hear musical requests from your fellow listeners Hossen Abed Ali, Karuna Kanta Pal, and Jayanta Chakrabarty.
Be sure you send in your music requests! Write to me at thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s program: “How Long”, written and performed by Jackson Browne; “Top of the World” by John Bettis and Richard Carpenter, performed by The Carpenters, and “Mademoiselle Chante le Blues” by Didier Barbelivien, sung by Patricia Kaas.
Be sure and tune in next week for a “This I Believe” essay written by RFI Listeners Club member Rodrigo Hunrichse.
Sponsored content
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Madhya Pradesh: the Heart of beautiful India
From 20 to 22 September 2022, the IFTM trade show in Paris, connected thousands of tourism professionals across the world. Sheo Shekhar Shukla, director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, talked about the significance of sustainable tourism.
Madhya Pradesh is often referred to as the Heart of India. Located right in the middle of the country, the Indian region shows everything India has to offer through its abundant diversity. The IFTM trade show, which took place in Paris at the end of September, presented the perfect opportunity for travel enthusiasts to discover the region.
Sheo Shekhar Shukla, Managing Director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, sat down to explain his approach to sustainable tourism.
“Post-covid the whole world has known a shift in their approach when it comes to tourism. And all those discerning travelers want to have different kinds of experiences: something offbeat, something new, something which has not been explored before.”
Through its UNESCO World Heritage Sites, Shukla wants to showcase the deep history Madhya Pradesh has to offer.
“UNESCO is very actively supporting us and three of our sites are already World Heritage Sites. Sanchi is a very famous buddhist spiritual destination, Bhimbetka is a place where prehistoric rock shelters are still preserved, and Khajuraho is home to thousand year old temples with magnificent architecture.”
All in all, Shukla believes that there’s only one way forward for the industry: “Travelers must take sustainable tourism as a paradigm in order to take tourism to the next level.”
In partnership with Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board.
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Exploring Malaysia’s natural and cultural diversity
The IFTM trade show took place from 20 to 22 September 2022, in Paris, and gathered thousands of travel professionals from all over the world. In an interview, Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia discussed the importance of sustainable tourism in our fast-changing world.
Also known as the Land of the Beautiful Islands, Malaysia’s landscape and cultural diversity is almost unmatched on the planet. Those qualities were all put on display at the Malaysian stand during the IFTM trade show.
Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia, explained the appeal of the country as well as the importance of promoting sustainable tourism today: “Sustainable travel is a major trend now, with the changes that are happening post-covid. People want to get close to nature, to get close to people. So Malaysia being a multicultural and diverse [country] with a lot of natural environments, we felt that it’s a good thing for us to promote Malaysia.”
Malaysia has also gained fame in recent years, through its numerous UNESCO World Heritage Sites, which include Kinabalu Park and the Archaeological Heritage of the Lenggong Valley.
Green mobility has also become an integral part of tourism in Malaysia, with an increasing number of people using bikes to discover the country: “If you are a little more adventurous, we have the mountain back trails where you can cut across gazetted trails to see the natural attractions and the wildlife that we have in Malaysia,” says Hanif. “If you are not that adventurous, you’ll be looking for relaxing cycling. We also have countryside spots, where you can see all the scenery in a relaxing session.”
With more than 25,000 visitors at this IFTM trade show this year, Malaysia’s tourism board got to showcase the best the country and its people have to offer.
In partnership with Malaysia Tourism Promotion Board. For more information about Malaysia, click here.