rfi 2025-03-13 00:16:28



democracy

French MPs unanimously vote to publish Yellow Vests’ 2019 public grievance log books

France’s parliament – the National Assembly – on Tuesday voted unanimously on a resolution calling for the publication of the public complaints log books that were compiled in response to the “Yellow Vest” protests in 2018-2019.

The proposal, initiated by Marie Pochon, a Green Party MP for Drôme, was adopted unanimously by French politicians on Tuesday.

The process of public grievance registers started informally six years ago during the Yellow Vests protest movement (Gilets jaunes).

In the fall of 2018, men and women wearing yellow safety vests gathered on the roundabouts across France, first to denounce a fuel tax, then more broadly over the difficulties of making ends meet and the actions of political leaders.

They began to note down their complaints in mostly handwritten logs under the name “cahier de doléances” in reference to complaints compiled during the French revolution.

Inspired by the idea, French President Emmanuel Macron launched a broad citizen consultation – known as the Great National Debate – between 15 January and 15 March 15, 2019.

5 ways Yellow Vests protests shook up Paris and France

The unprecedented democratic process resulted in the collection of over “19,000 citizens’ notebooks,” a “national treasure,” according to Pochon.

The documents, contain “anger, hopes, life stories, concerns and proposals from our fellow citizens” she said.

Redistribution of wealth, tax justice

At the time, the government paid €2.5 million to private companies to photocopy and scan the thousands of registers which were then analysed based on keywords.

Many of the complaints focused on purchasing power, social inequalities, democracy and even taxation.

Romain Benoit-Lévy, a doctoral student in history at Rennes 2 University told Franceinfo that the running of the country was also a concern.

“Tax justice, wealth redistribution, and the resources allocated to public services are the most common topics,” he says of the notebooks he saw from the Somme region, which he studied with a group of researchers.

‘Macron forced me to become more political’: a tale of two Yellow Vests

Researcher Magali Della Sudda, looking at documents in the Bordeaux area that thousands reiterated the theme of poverty and concerns over social security. Others wrote they were angry “votes blancs” or empty ballots, were not counted in elections.

However, the files are languishing in archive centres or municipal offices across France, and while the public was technically allowed to consult some of them at the centres, only a handful of people have done so.

Tuesday’s resolution calls on the government to “make these grievances public on an online platform open to all.”

MPs want the state to finalise and finance “the digitization of each book of grievances” and also “their anonymization.”

Under existing law, these archives cannot be made public until fifty years after their deposit in order to protect the contributors’ privacy.

New technology needed

The Minister for Relations with Parliament, Patrick Mignola, told MPs that the government was committed to seeking “new technical solutions” and an exemption would be made to facilitate access for researchers.

He notably mentioned “tests” to treat already digitised content using artificial intelligence, and promised to involve a committee made up of parliamentarians, local elected officials and the Economic, Social and Environmental Council (CESE) in its management.

Prime Minister François Bayrou called for the publication of the document in his address to MPs in January as his precdecessor Michel Barnier.

While the resolution gained cross-party support, there were a number of reactions from the opposition.

Far-right National Rally MP Edwige Diaz said the resolution was  “ironically co-signed by all those responsible for the Yellow Vest crisis” and that the measures since 2018 show continue to show disdain for those who bear the brunt. 

Transparency report warns of rising corruption, France slips in rankings

For far-right France Unbowed party (LFI) MP Arnaud Le Gall, said the publication of the notebooks would be “a step in the fight” to rehabilitate “the dignity” of the yellow vests leaders “who have been widely defamed and whose main slogans have been obscured.”

Pochon said she hoped the government would “engage in constructive and transparent work” and recommended that MPs “remain vigilant and mobilised until this resolution is fully implemented.”

The last time such a step was taken was in 1903, the year when “Jean Jaurès initiated a research and publication of the grievances of the French Revolution, and presented it to the National Assembly,” according to Pochon.

“Today, we will have the opportunity to do so in less than a century.”


Health

Spike in measles cases has French health authorities on high alert

Faced with a recent increase in the number of measles cases in mainland France, the French Health Ministry is calling on doctors early childhood professionals to be “increasingly vigilant.” The agency is particular concerned about “imported” cases coming from places like Morocco.

The Directorate General of Health (DGS) issued a message to professionals dated 7 March, stating that given the extreme contagiousness of the disease, they could expect to see more cases spread across the country “in the coming weeks”.

The agency insisted on a “high vaccination coverage among the population of all ages, including healthcare professionals and those working with children, to limit viral circulation and protect the most vulnerable”.

A highly contagious disease, measles spreads through respiratory droplets and lingering in the air for up to two hours after an infected person leaves an area.

It causes fever, respiratory symptoms, and a rash. It can also lead to serious complications, including pneumonia, brain inflammation, and death.

Actively circulating in France

“It is one of the most contagious viruses on the planet,” François Dubos, head of the pediatric emergency department at Lille University Hospital, explained to France 2 television.

“An infected person can infect 15 to 20 people around them who are not immune.”

The virus is actively circulating in mainland France, with reports issued by seven regional health agencies (ARS) for around 100 cases.

The number of cases had declined significantly during the Covid-19 lockdown, with only 16 and 15 cases recorded in 2021 and 2022.

The virus was present in 2023 (117 cases), but then increased in the first quarter of 2024, when the number of infections was already higher than in the entire previous year.

Many children in Europe still die unnecessarily before age of five: WHO report

Historic level of measles in Morocco

Aside from the seasonal occurrence of the virus, health authorities are concerned about new cases that are being imported.

According to Public Health France (SpF), 13 cases have been imported by people who have stayed in Morocco since the beginning of the year in several regions of France, compared to 26 cases for the whole of 2024.

The cases concerned children under 5 and young adults, who required hospitalisation, with 11 admissions in January alone.

Morocco has been experiencing an epidemic of “historic level” and France has urged travellers to check their vaccination status before visiting the kingdom.

Since late 2023, the North African country has reported more than 25,000 measles cases, 6,300 confirmed cases and 120 deaths, according to the National Centre for Public Health Emergencies.

Even though vaccination remains the best protection against the disease, immunisation rates have fallen in recent years.

The vaccine hesitancy is driven by misinformation, which has lingered since the Covid-19 pandemic.

Moroccan authorities have scaled up vaccination against measles in recent months in a bid to control the outbreak.

Five years on from the Covid-19 pandemic, what legacy has the virus left?

Rise in cases in the US

Elsewhere, in the southwestern United States, a measles outbreak has killed two people and infected nearly 230, according to the latest figures released Friday.

In February, an unvaccinated child died of measles in Texas, and last week, an adult from New Mexico – which neighbours Texas – also died from the disease.

In France, vaccination for measles has been mandatory since1 January, 2018, with a first dose at 12 months and the second between 16 and 18 months.

Vaccination can prevent the onset of the disease after contact with a case, provided it is administered within 72 hours.

The incubation period for the disease lasts ten to twelve days, and the average time for the rash to appear is 14 days. The leading cause of death is pneumonia in children and acute encephalitis in adults.

(With newswires)


Ukraine crisis

France hails ‘progress’ of Ukraine ceasefire deal, says onus is now on Russia

French President Emmanuel Macron hailed the “progress” made in peace talks in Saudi Arabia between Ukraine and the United States and said it was now up to Russia to ensure the proposed 30-day ceasefire is signed.

Ukrainian officials endorsed an American proposal for a 30-day ceasefire and agreed to immediate negotiations with Russia at pivotal talks in Jeddah on Tuesday, opening the possibility to ending three years of war.

Macron posted on X that “the ball is now clearly in Russia’s court”. He hailed the “progress” made in the Jeddah talks but insisted that Kyiv needs “robust” security guarantees in any ceasefire.

“Today we made an offer that the Ukrainians have accepted, which is to enter into a ceasefire and into immediate negotiations,” US Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters after around nine hours of talks.

“We’ll take this offer now to the Russians and we hope they’ll say yes to peace. The ball is now in their court.

“If they say no then we’ll, unfortunately, know what the impediment is to peace here,” Rubio said of Russia, which launched a full-scale invasion of its smaller neighbour in February 2022.

End the ‘meat-grinder of people’

Mike Waltz, Trump’s national security advisor, who said he would speak in the coming days with his Russian counterpart, credited the Ukrainians with agreeing on the need to “end the killing, to end the tragic meat-grinder of people and national treasure”.

Rubio said the United States would immediately resume military assistance and intelligence sharing it had cut off to pressure its wartime partner.

Top Zelensky aide Andriy Yermak said that Ukraine had made clear that its desire is peace.

“Russia needs to say, very clearly, they want peace or not, they want to end this war, which they started, or no,” Yermak told reporters.

From Ukraine, Zelensky thanked Trump for the “positive” ceasefire proposal and said the United States must now work to persuade Russia.

 “The American side understands our arguments, perceives our proposals, and I want to thank President Trump for the constructive conversation between our teams,” Zelensky said in his evening address.

In a joint statement, Ukraine and the United States said they would conclude “as soon as possible” a deal securing US access to Ukraine’s mineral wealth, which Trump demanded as compensation for billions of dollars in US weapons under his predecessor Joe Biden.

European allies rally behind Ukraine after White House clash

European leaders welcomed the outcome of the talks in Jeddah.

Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer called the deal a “remarkable breakthrough” while Italy’s Giorgia Meloni said now the ceasefire “decision is up to Russia”.

In Poland, a top supporter of Ukraine and where historical memories of Russia run deep, Prime Minister Donald Tusk praised the “important step towards peace” by the United States and Ukraine.

Trump’s abrupt shift on Ukraine following Biden’s strong support has rattled European allies, with France and Germany increasingly speaking of developing common European defence if the United States no longer offers its security guarantees through NATO.

Macron, who has mulled European forces in Ukraine as part of any future deal, hosted a separate closed-door meeting in Paris on Tuesday.

European defence meetings

Representatives from 34 countries were present – most of them from Europe and NATO, but also from Australia, New Zealand and Japan.

There was no representative from the United States, which is the leading member of NATO.

According to the president’s office, the military chiefs of staff agreed that the security guarantees “should not be separated from NATO and its capabilities”.

Macron hosts European military chiefs to discuss Ukraine security guarantees

“This is the moment when Europe must throw its full weight behind Ukraine, and itself,” Macron told the meeting, the president’s office said.

“In view of the acceleration of peace negotiations,” it was necessary to start planning to “define credible security guarantees” to make a lasting peace in Ukraine a reality”.

Ahead of the meeting, French Defence Minister Sebastien Lecornu said: “We will reject any form of demilitarisation of Ukraine.”

Defence ministers from Europe’s five main military powers – France, Britain, Germany, Italy and Poland – are to meet in the French capital on Wednesday. EU and NATO representatives and the Ukrainian defence minister will also take part.

(with AFP)


Migration

EU migration reform raises prospect of controversial return hubs

The EU on Tuesday opened the way for member states to set up migrant return centres outside the bloc, in a highly contentious move following pressure from governments to facilitate deportations. 

With data showing less than 20 percent of people ordered to leave the EU currently do so, the European Commission unveiled a planned reform of the bloc’s return system, including making it easier to lock up undocumented migrants.

“We are creating the scope for member states to explore new solutions for return,” Magnus Brunner, the EU commissioner for migration, told a press conference in Strasbourg on Tuesday afternoon.

A souring of public opinion on migration has fuelled hard-right electoral gains in several EU countries, upping pressure on governments to harden their stance.

Migrant centre in Germany feels the heat from rising far right

Led by Sweden, Italy, Denmark and the Netherlands, EU leaders called in October for urgent new legislation to increase and speed up returns and for the commission to assess “innovative” ways to counter irregular migration.

‘Innovative’ measures

Most controversial is the creation of “return hubs” outside the European Union, where failed asylum seekers could be sent pending transfer home.

This is not possible at present as under EU rules migrants can be transferred only to their country of origin or a country they transited from, unless they agree otherwise.

The proposed regulation would allow EU countries to strike deals with other nations to set up such centres.

Agreements will be possible only with countries where human rights “are respected”, and minors and families with children will be exempt, according to the text.

“We are creating the legal frame, we’re not creating the content,” Brunner said of the hubs.

Fraught with legal and ethical concerns, some experts say return hubs are an expensive and impractical idea that is unlikely to see large-scale uptake any time soon despite the commission’s proposal.

The text also envisages an expansion of the conditions under which undocumented migrants can be detained – previously a last resort.

EU leaders embrace foreign ‘return centres’ to counter illegal migration

Authorities will be authorised to hold those considered at risk of absconding or who pose a security risk for up to 24 months, as well as those who do not cooperate with return procedures.

Detention would also be an option used while measures were taken “to determine or verify” someone’s identity or nationality, according to the plan, which needs backing from parliament and member states to become law.

Such measures were “essential” to ensure that the system was not abused and migrants ordered to leave did not move from one member state to another, Brunner said.

“This will give people back the feeling that we have control over what happens in Europe,” he added.

“We want to put in place a truly European system for returns, preventing absconding, and facilitating the return of third-country nationals with no right to stay,” commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said at the weekend.

France calls for robust EU cooperation on immigration, deportations

‘Lives in limbo’

The UK recently abandoned a similar scheme to deport illegal migrants to Rwanda. Meanwhile, Italian-run facilities to process migrants in Albania – at an estimated cost of €160 million ($175 million) a year – are currently bogged down in the courts.

Return hubs will conceivably face a similar slew of legal challenges if they are set up, said Olivia Sundberg Diez of Amnesty International.

“We can expect drawn out litigation, probably costly centres sitting empty and lives in limbo in the meantime,” she said.

Amnesty International points out that the Commission itself discarded the concept of return hubs in 2018.

“It is well aware that these proposals will lead to human rights violations, waste millions of euros and alienate allies – at a time when the EU needs friends” the organisation said.  

Eve Geddie, director of Amnesty International’s European Institutions Office called the proposals “a new low” for Europe.

 

France and UK find common ground on tackling illegal Channel crossings

Yet proponents say there are few viable alternatives.

“If we are not going to do the return hubs, what will we do instead is my question? We have tried other systems for many years, it doesn’t work,” Johan Forssell, Sweden’s migration minister, told AFP.

Irregular border crossings into the EU were down 38 percent to 239,000 last year after an almost 10-year peak in 2023, according to EU border agency Frontex.

(with AFP)


European security

EU Commission chief calls for defence ‘surge’ in address to EU parliament

EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has urged the European parliament to ramp up defence spending, as leaders mobilise to find common ground on the military future of the continent.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has called for a “surge” in European defence spending, urging the continent to take greater responsibility for its security.

Tuesday’s remarks at the European parliament in Strasbourg coincide with French President Emmanuel Macron’s gathering of military chiefs from 30 European and NATO countries in Paris to discuss Ukraine and wider security challenges.

“Europe’s security order is being shaken,” von der Leyen warned, stressing that the continent can no longer assume “America’s full protection”.

“The time of illusions is now over. Europe must step up and take charge of its own defence,” she declared. “We need a surge in European defence. And we need it now”.

Macron hosts European military chiefs to discuss Ukraine security guarantees

Strengthening deterrence

Von der Leyen’s call comes as US President Donald Trump’s commitment to Ukraine and NATO has faltered, raising fears that Washington may scale back its security role.

Meanwhile, his openness to negotiating with Russia over Ukraine has sparked concerns that Kyiv could be pressured into an unfavourable deal.

“Putin cannot be trusted – he can only be deterred,” von der Leyen asserted, noting that Russia is outspending all of Europe combined on defence.

However, she expressed confidence in Europe’s ability to rise to the challenge: “We all wish for peace. But if we unleash our industrial power, we can restore deterrence against those who seek to do us harm,” she added.

Europe at a crossroads: can the EU unite amid shifting US ties?

Next steps for European defence

Thursday’s address comes as the European Commission has proposed redirecting cohesion funds – normally earmarked for poorer EU regions – towards defence and easing restrictions on military investments by the European Investment Bank.

With defence high on the agenda, EU leaders will meet at a summit in Brussels next week to further develop a common strategy.

Ahead of this, the Commission will publish a white paper outlining options to “substantially boost financing for European defence.”

“The European Council will continue to drive this work forward – to build our deterrence and strengthen security,” according to European Council President Antonio Costa.

Some in the EU Parliament are calling for joint borrowing, similar to measures taken during the Covid-19 crisis, however opposition remains from member states like Germany.


DRC crisis

Angola pushes for direct talks between Kinshasa and M23 in DRC crisis

As Angola continues to act as a mediator in the crisis in eastern DRC, President Lourenço is working on bringing about direct negotiations between Kinshasa and the M23.

The conflict in eastern DRC was the focus of a new meeting between Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi and his Angolan counterpart, João Lourenço, mediator of the crisis tearing apart the region, in Luanda on Tuesday.

According to the two presidents, discussions could begin between Kinshasa and the M23 armed group.

After Tshisekedi, and Lourenço had a one-on-one meeting, Angola‘s presidency explained on social networks that it would “establish contacts with the M23, so that the delegations of the DRC and the M23 conduct direct negotiations in Luanda in the coming days, with a view to negotiating a definitive peace in this brother country.”

The Southern African country has been trying to mediate a lasting ceasefire and de-escalate tensions between Congo and neighbouring Rwanda, which has been accused of backing the Tutsi-led rebel group.

Authorities in Kigali still deny providing arms and troops to M23 rebels, and say Rwandan forces are acting in self defence against the Congolese army and militias hostile to Rwandans, especially Tutsi.

M23 rebels have seized multiple cities in eastern Congo, including the two biggest cities and provincial capitals of North and South Kivu, since January.

This brings an escalation to a long-running conflict rooted in the spillover into Congo of Rwanda’s 1994 genocide and the struggle for control of Congo’s vast mineral resources.

Listen to our podcast: The crisis in the DRC and the African Union response

Towards direct negotiations?

In Kinshasa, the presidency has since the beginning of the conflict refused direct discussions with the M23 armed group.

President Tshisekedi considers that any negotiations should take place directly with Rwanda, which he described as the “master” of the M23 at the end of February.

But the Congolese authorities now assure that they are “taking note” after the meeting in Luanda, and waiting to see “the implementation of this Angolan approach.”

Tina Salama, the spokesperson for the Congolese presidency, pointed out that a framework for negotiations already exists in the so-called Nairobi process.

A summit of the Southern African region bloc (SADC) devoted to the DRC is now taking place this Wednesday.

The crisis will also be discussed at the 8th EU-South Africa summit, which will take place on 13 March in Cape Town.

And a new meeting of the United Nations Security Council will be devoted to the conflict in the east of the DRC, on 4 April.

(With newswires)


Confederation of African Football

Motsepe wins second term as head of Confederation of African Football

Billionaire businessman Patrice Motsepe was confirmed on Wednesday as African football’s top administrator for four years.

 

The 63-year-old South African was re-elected in Cairo at the 14th general assembly of the Confederation of African Football (Caf) which organises 13 competitions on the continent  including the Champions League, the women’s Africa Cup of Nations and the men’s Cup of Nations.

Motsepe, who amassed his fortune in mining in South Africa, was first anointed to lead the 54 continental football federations in March 2021.

During his initial term in office, he made Caf’s finances his priority. The deficit has been cut from 37 to 24 million euros.

Over the next four years, Motsepe is expected to continue work on reducing the debt via new sponsorship deals.

He will also aim to appease African administrators over the organisation of the confederation’s most prestigious competitions.

The 2024 African Nations Championships – which should have been held last summer in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania – was rescheduled in January 2025 for August 2025.

The 35th Africa Cup of Nations, tabled for July and August 2025 in Morocco, was moved to December 2025 and January 2026, in order to avoid a clash with the newly expanded Fifa Club World Cup in the United States in June and July.

Just before the end of the 34th Africa Cup of Nations in Cote d’Ivoire in February 2024, Motsepe hinted that the Morocco event might not be in July 2025.

“There’s a lot of competing events at the same time,” he said a day after meeting Gianni Infantino, the head of world football’s governing body Fifa.

Changes

In June 2024, Motsepe outlined the dates for the 2025 edition. “I am confident that the Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco will be extremely successful and the best in the history of this competition,” he said after a meeting of the executive committee at the Caf headquarters in Cairo.

It was the third consecutive reconfiguration of an event that started in 1957.

The 2023 tournament was due to be held in June 2022 but the Ivorian rainy season put paid to that just as similar meteorological verities forced a delay until January 2022 of Cameroon’s scheduled dates of June and July 2021.

During the assembly on Wednesday, Samuel Eto’o, the former Cameroon international, won a place on the Caf executive committee.

His election as a representative for the central African region comes less than a week after he won an appeal to stand for the post.

In July 2024, Caf said the 44-year-old had seriously violated the principles of ethics, integrity and sportsmanship by becoming a brand ambassador for a betting organisation. He was excluded by Caf’s governance committee in January from seeking a post on the executive committee. But he took his case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, who ruled in his favour.

Last September, Fifa banned Eto’o from attending Cameroon’s matches for six months for violating disciplinary regulations, after allegedly verbally abusing match officials at the under-20 women’s World Cup in Colombia.

Fifa found Eto’o guilty of offensive behaviour, violation of the principles of fair play and misconduct of players and officials.

Migrant centre in Germany feels the heat from rising far right

Germany is home to the largest number of asylum seekers among the EU member states. But a growing political shift to the right has put increasing pressure on these new arrivals – and those who provide services for them. RFI spoke to Nicolay Büttner, head of political work and advocacy at the Berlin-based Zentrum Überleben, which provides services to new arrivals and refugees.

Réunion Island company revives ancient fermentation technique to boost health

Pot en Ciel Kreol is an artisanal cannery based on Reunion Island. Combining local agriculture with the ancient technique of lacto-fermentation, the company aims to preserve the island’s rich biodiversity and promote better health for its inhabitants.

Coe on Olympics in Africa

Double Olympic gold medallist Sebastian Coe declared an Olympic Games in Africa will be be one of his top objectives should he be elected as the 10th president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC).


Culture

All-female exhibition aims to restore women’s voices in art history

Poitiers – French artist Eugénie Dubreuil has collected more than 500 works by female artists, beginning in 1999. Last year she donated her collection to the Sainte-Croix Museum in Poitiers, which is now putting them on display in an exhibition that aims to restore the forgotten voices of women in art.

“Women artists have long been marginalised in art history courses and by museums and galleries,” Manon Lecaplainn, director of the Sainte-Croix Museum, told RFI. “For decades, art history has been written without women. Why should our exclusively female exhibition be shocking?”

“Our aim is not to exclude men from art history,” she explains. “The goal is to make people think.”

The Sainte-Croix Museum has been known in France for its proactive policy of promoting women artists since the 1980s.

In this new exhibition, Lecaplain and her co-curator Camille Belvèze are showcasing nearly 300 works from the 18th century to the present day, divided into three sections: the collection of Eugénie Dubreuil, the hierarchy of genres in art history, and the social role of the museum.

Spotlight on Africa: celebrating female empowerment for Women’s History Month

This exhibition is the first step in a five-year project to promote Dubreuil’s collection – entitled La Musée – and relies on a financial grant of €150,000.

“Why not an initiative like this on a larger scale in France, Europe, the world?” asks Dubreuil.


La Musée runs until 18 May, 2025 at the Sainte-Croix Museum in Poitiers.


Gender inequality

Why do women in France still earn less than men?

France’s gender equality legislation has helped narrow the pay gap by a third over the last 30 years. But women in the private sector still earn an average of 22 percent less than their male counterparts. RFI looks at what’s behind the gap and what could be done to close it.

France co-founded the United Nations International Labour Organisation in 1919, championing “equal pay for equal work”, and in 1972, the agency wrote the principle of pay equality into its labour code.

In 1983, France’s Roudy law mandated equal opportunities in the workplace, requiring companies to publish annual reports comparing the situation of its male and female employees and introducing a tool to help human resources managers identify and measure pay differences.

In 2018, the country launched an index to monitor the performance of large companies in the field of gender equality.

But this battery of legal measures has still not enabled France to close its gender pay gap.

Data published this week by the French National Statistics Institute (Insee) showed that in 2023 women’s average annual salary was €21,340 net compared to €27,430 for men – a difference of more than 22 percent.

While there has been progress, the pace is slow, with the gap narrowing at a rate of 1 percent per year over the last five years.

The primary reasons behind the gender pay gap are hours worked and type of jobs held. Women work on average 9 percent less than men and they’re also more likely to work part-time. But even when working hours are identical, their average salary is 14.2 percent lower than men’s, Insee found.

What’s more, working part-time is not necessarily a life choice says Anne Eydoux, an economist specialising in employment and gender issues.

“It’s a choice made under constraint, and some of the constraints refer to the gender divide of family roles where women take [more] parental responsibility,” she tells RFI. “But it’s also the result of occupational segregation.” Women are over-represented in for example supermarket and cleaning jobs, where split shifts are common.

Sexism and workplace inequality is rife in most areas of French life, research shows

Gendered occupations

Women are also far more likely to work in low-paying sectors such as health, care and education.

According to Insee, more than 95 percent of secretaries are women, with an average full-time net salary of €2,044 per month.

Meanwhile, only a quarter of engineers and IT executives – professions in which average monthly net salaries are close to €4,000 – are women.

“Women are over-represented in the care sector, where their skills are under-recognised,” Eydoux said. “And this is a fact for many female-dominated occupations, as the Covid crisis showed.”

Women also have less access to the highest-paying jobs. In 2023, they accounted for 42 percent of full-time equivalent positions in the private sector, and yet just 24 percent of the top 1 percent of high-paying jobs. The glass ceiling is still there, as Eydoux noted.

France works towards gender equality in top jobs while UK women are still struggling

Cultural attitudes

Working less and in lower-paid sectors does not, however, fully explain the 22 percent wage gap. Women doing the same job as men in the same company are still paid 3.8 percent less.

There are historical and cultural reasons for this according to Marie Donzel, an expert in social innovation and author of  “Justified inequalities: how to pay women less with a clear conscience”.

Until 1945, France had a “female wage”. Based on the assumption that a woman’s pay was intended merely to supplement her husband’s income, “women could be paid 10 to 15 percent less just because of their gender,” Donzel told RFI

This has helped foster gendered attitudes towards salaries. “Women tend to see [their pay] in terms of how much they need to live, and men see it in terms of ‘how much my job is worth’,” she said.

Donzel also points to a cultural prevailing negative image of women who take an interest in money. “We have a gendered socialisation in France that teaches us to be modest. When we talk about money, there’s still the spectre of venality.”

Gender pay gap means French women are ‘working for free’ until end of year

‘I thought negotiating was vulgar’

Women themselves are not always aware that they’re being discriminated against. It took Nathalie, a regional director for a multinational company, 15 years to find out.

“While chatting with my male counterparts, I realised that I was earning about €1,000 less per month than they were,” she told Franceinfo. “I’d lost €150,000 over 15 years.”

After comparing pay slips with colleagues, she realised that “every time, the women had significantly more experience in the role, more qualifications, we checked all the boxes. And yet, we were paid less. And the higher you climb in the hierarchy, the bigger the gap becomes”.

Nathalie took her case to court and won, securing a raise for herself and her colleagues. She questions whether women “negotiate their salaries enough”.

The question of negotiating pay “is as taboo as sex,” says lawyer Insaff El Hassini.

She set up a training and coaching company called Ma Juste Valeur – meaning “My True Worth” – to help women overcome that barrier and negotiate their pay, after facing gender discrimination in the workplace herself.

“I found out my male colleague earned €5,000 a year more than me,” she told RFI.  “When I voiced my concerns I was told, ‘Well you’re already well paid, you should have negotiated your starting salary when you joined’. No one had told me you had to negotiate. I thought it was vulgar.”

Gender gap at work far wider than expected, women’s pay remains static, UN says

Closing the gap

This year France will implement the EU’s 2023 Pay Transparency Directive, obliging companies to provide employees with pay scales for equivalent posts. Both Eydoux and Donzel welcome this transparency measure.

Eydoux also points to economic measures such as increasing both the minimum wage and income tax on very high wages, which together would narrow the pay gap. But the French government, which is trying to reduce the country’s huge deficit and keep high-earners and businesses on board, is not currently in favour of either.

Donzel insists that salaries in the female-dominated education and care sectors must be raised, given the contribution they make to society. “Whether it’s taking care of children, the elderly or in caring professions, this is obviously what’s most valuable, yet the economy has reversed the value system and that’s what we pay the least for.”

Eydoux would also like to see France’s gender quota policy, which has proven “very efficient” in breaking the glass ceiling by imposing gender-balance on executive boards, extended to other sectors.

Growing ‘masculinist’ culture in France slows down fight against sexism

For the moment, however, she says there aren’t many signs of improvement: “I don’t see much political will to focus on the gender pay gap and reduce it.”

Resistance to gender equality is nothing new, she added, and while younger women in particular are “more conscious of the gender pay gap and more willing to improve the situation”, they are now facing new forms of resistance.  

“More and more young men are defending masculinist positions and ideologies,” she said, with some claiming the 22 percent gender pay gap is “fake news”.


HISTORY

Visual retelling of Thiaroye massacre sheds new light on French colonial atrocity

Twenty years ago, French photographer Yves Monteil was driving in Senegal when he passed a military cemetery in Thiaroye, in the suburbs of Dakar. Friends told him it was the burial site of Senegalese soldiers massacred by the French army during the Second World War, shot for demanding unpaid wages. The story stuck with Monteil, and in 2020 he picked up his camera and began digging into the archives. 

The massacre at Thiaroye took place on 1 December, 1944, when French colonial troops opened fire on West African soldiers who had just returned from Europe, where they had been fighting for France. 

The tirailleurs sénégalais (Senegalese riflemen), as they were known, had been promised the same pay and pensions as their French counterparts. 

When they assembled peacefully to demand their rightful compensation, they were met with gunfire. The exact death toll remains disputed: official French accounts initially claimed only 35 casualties, while other estimates suggest more than 300 were killed. 

Before turning his lens on Thiaroye, Monteil had examined policing methods in France. He observed parallels between contemporary law enforcement tactics and the operations once carried out in Africa

“During my research, I made the connection between modern law enforcement and its colonial heritage,” he told RFI. 

Documenting Thiaroye through images became the natural next step for the photographer, in tribute to the Senegalese soldiers whose story has been largely forgotten. 

France honours WWII colonial troops shot dead by French army in Senegal

Recreating the past

The result is the book Fecci Worma, which means “High Treason” in the Wolof language.  

Over three years, Monteil travelled between France and Senegal, retracing the events. He visited Morlaix, on the Brittany coast, where the discharged Senegalese soldiers had boarded a ship home, and Thiaroye, where they were killed. 

Monteil timed his photographs to recreate the past – shooting in the early morning in Morlaix to mirror the soft light when the soldiers departed. 

He also shot portraits of descendants of the soldiers, as well as the historians and artists who have studied the massacre, and the caretaker of Thiaroye’s military cemetery. 

Alongside his photographs, Monteil has used infographics and maps to bring complex historical data to life. Using French military archives, he also reconstructed the layout of the Thiaroye transit camp, which served as a temporary home to demobilised soldiers following their service.  

By overlaying contemporary aerial images on historical maps, he revealed a geography that had been buried by time.  

“A black circle surrounded the site of the massacre, on military reports from that time,” he explained. His maps highlight where the soldiers’ barracks stood and where the French army entered the camp. 

Senegal mourns Thiaroye war heroes slain by French troops 80 years ago

These visual reconstructions could prove useful for archaeologists. In February, the Senegalese government announced plans for excavations, in order to determine the true number of soldiers killed.  

A hidden history

In a single, striking image, one of Monteil’s infographics lays bare the conflicting figures reported over the past 60 years. 

His research draws on diverse sources: French public archives, newspaper clippings, the work of Senegalese filmmaker Mansour Kébé from the 1980s, as well as testimonies from military personnel, historians and the children of the soldiers. 

French historian Armelle Mabon, a specialist in the Thiaroye massacre, provided access to her own archives, which expose contradictions and omissions in the French state’s version of events.

“She is a historian, a detective, a researcher. She brings a different sensitivity and vision of things – a book was missing,” Monteil says of Mabon. 

For both the photographer and the historian, uncovering the truth about Thiaroye remains an unfinished mission – and a crucial one because the official record still contains significant gaps, 80 years on.

“There are still obstructions from the French state and we clearly show them in this book,” Monteil says.  

Among the grey areas is the list of repatriated soldiers, the exact mapping of where the soldiers are buried and archives that appear deliberately truncated. 

Monteil notes with frustration that a French parliamentary commission, established to investigate the massacre, ultimately produced no findings. 

For his book project, he bypassed traditional publishing houses in favour of crowdfunding, a choice he says ensured complete editorial independence. “The Thiaroye massacre would not have interested many publishers.”


This story has been adapted from the original version in French by Juliette Dubois


Paris Agricultural Show

The female-led Senegalese company producing organic shea butter

Each year African countries are invited to exhibit at the Paris International Agricultural Show, with Morocco taking centre stage at the 2025 edition as guest of honour. Among the African producers manning stands this year is Diongoma, a company behind one of Senegal’s flagship products: shea butter.

Shea butter is widely used in the cosmetics industry, as well as by chocolatiers as a substitute for cocoa butter.

Diongoma was founded by Mariama Sylla in 2007. Located in Salemata, in the southeast of the country, its product has been certified “organic” by the Ecocert organisation since 2016.

This certification was hard-won, as according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, the marketing of organic products in Senegal faces a number of constraints, including the high cost of certification processes.

From harvest to production, Sylla currently works with 3,000 women. She has enabled more favourable valuation of shea, which is a source of income for up to a third of households in Senegal.

RFI went to the Paris Agricultural Show to meet Diongoma to find out more.

Spray it to say it: graffiti group sees women make their mark in Paris

A vacant lot in southeastern Paris has become a hub for graffiti artists from France and the world thanks to an initiative by community group Spot 13. It prides itself on promoting female graffiti artists and is holding an event to mark International Women’s Day on 8 March. Read more here: https://rfi.my/BTe9 


Health

Réunion Island company revives ancient fermentation technique to boost health

Pot en Ciel Kreol is an artisanal cannery based on France’s Réunion Island. Combining local agriculture with the ancient technique of lacto-fermentation, the company aims to preserve the island’s rich biodiversity and promote better health for its inhabitants.

Sylviane Boyer founded Pot en Ciel Kreol in 2023, in Cambaie in the north of Réunion, a French department in the Indian Ocean. She had taken over her family farm, which grew numerous vegetables native to the island.

“On Réunion Island, we have exotic vegetables, which have lots of antioxidants. We’re protected here on this little volcanic island, in terms of all the produce we have,” Boyer told RFI. “There are vegetables that can’t be found in mainland France… papaya, chayote, watercress that grow in our mountains. And chillies.”

Over the years, Boyer began to notice a rise in cases of diabetes, Crohn’s disease and high cholesterol. It was at this point that she became interested in micronutrition – the practice of optimising the diet to include vitamins and minerals the body needs – and discovered lacto-fermentation.

“We have lots of health problems because we eat too much fat and sugar. This led me to study lacto-fermentation a bit and I found that, scientifically speaking, a lot has been proven about it, which brought me back to it.”

Why do France’s overseas territories have a diabetes problem?

This technique is very common in several Africa countries, where access to electricity can be limited, making food preservation a challenge.

“In Africa, babies’ first meals are made using lacto-fermentation. It’s a natural process to follow,” says Boyer.

This ancient food preservation technique involves immersing food in salted water to encourage the growth of lactic acid bacteria.

“We use large vats where we put local fruits and vegetables from Réunion, along with water and natural, unrefined salt from Saint Leu. This process helps us pre-digest the food and release its full bioavailability,” explains Mégane Mardemoutou, sales manager at Pot en Ciel Kreol.

“This process develops probiotics and prebiotics, multiplies vitamin C, vitamin K – which is very important for the heart – and various B vitamins like B2 and B6.”

One local vegetable the company works with is bitter melon. “It’s a fruit that grows on vines, somewhat like cucumbers. It’s an old local vegetable with a thousand benefits because it aids detoxification, improves heart circulation and provides all the essential vitamins we need,” says Mardemoutou.

Over half of all adults will be overweight or obese by 2050, study shows

The company is now working with hospitals, the Regional Health Agency and local organisations to spread awareness of the health benefits of lacto-fermentation.


Defence

Macron hosts European military chiefs to discuss Ukraine security guarantees

French President Emmanuel Macron is hosting a crucial meeting in Paris on Tuesday with military chiefs from 30 European and NATO countries – including the United Kingdom and Turkey – to discuss security guarantees for Ukraine should a peace agreement with Russia emerge.

President Emmanuel Macron is to address Tuesday’s meeting, which he has said is being held in tight coordination with NATO military command.

More than three years since Russia invaded neighbouring Ukraine, Europe is scrambling to boost its defences and break free from dependence on the United States.

This comes as US President Donald Trump announced a halt to military aid and intelligence-sharing with Ukraine, forcing European nations to reassess their strategy.

Trump has also renewed communication with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin and criticised Ukraine‘s President Volodymyr Zelensky, raising fears in Kyiv and among European allies that the US leader may try to force Ukraine to accept a settlement favouring Russia.

Ukraine on Tuesday, in talks with US officials in Saudi Arabia, was to propose an aerial and naval ceasefire with Russia, according to a Ukrainian official.

 

Macron sounds alarm on US-Russia shift, urges Europe to stand firm

Coalition of the willing

Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer have been leading efforts to form a so-called “coalition of the willing” to enforce an eventual ceasefire in Ukraine.

Macron last week said any European troops in Ukraine would only be deployed “once a peace deal is signed, to guarantee it is fully respected”.

Defence ministers from Europe’s five main military powers – France, Britain, Germany, Italy and Poland – are to meet in the French capital on Wednesday.

Those talks will centre on the “necessary rearmament of Europe” and military support to Ukraine, one of the French defence minister’s aides has said.

Starmer will, in turn, host virtual talks on Saturday with leaders of the nations willing to help support the ceasefire, his office has said.

‘Europe must do the heavy lifting’ in Ukraine, needs ‘US backing’: UK’s Starmer

Shifting geopolitical landscape

Macron’s decision to hold Tuesday’s gathering falls in line with his long-held vision of a stronger, independent European defence strategy.

In a recent address, Macron stressed the need for Europe to be ready to act alone if necessary, given the shifting geopolitical landscape and uncertainties surrounding external support.

Macron affirmed that France must be prepared to step up if the United States is no longer willing or able to provide support.

France’s commitment is reinforced by the European Union’s ambitious plans to ramp up defence spending.

At an emergency summit in Brussels last week, EU leaders agreed to a historic boost in defence budgets, focused on enhancing the continent’s military capabilities.

EU leaders vow to boost defence as US announces new talks with Kyiv

 

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen proposed a fund of up to €800 billion, including €150 billion in loans for joint procurement of European defence equipment.

 

Meanwhile, Macron has extended France’s nuclear deterrent offer to the rest of Europe, with the aim of securing cooperation by mid-2025.

Clément Beaune – the newly appointed High Commissioner for Planning in France and former Minister for Europe – spoke to RFI on Monday, emphasising that while Europeans are committed to rearming, “a lot of time has been lost on European defence”.

He told RFI that France must invest more in its armed forces “without breaking its social model”.

Defending his role as High Commissioner for Planning – a position previously held by Prime Minister François Bayrou – Beaune insisted that “thinking about the long term is not a luxury but a necessity”.

 

 


Greenland election

Surprise win for Greenland’s opposition in election dominated by Trump threats

Greenland’s parliamentary election of 11 March took place under intense scrutiny, in the wake of Donald Trump’s aggressive interest in the Danish island territory, and with independence the key issue for voters. The centre-right opposition won a surprise victory, with support also surging for the pro-independence Naleraq party.

The Democratic party – which describes itself as “social liberal” and has also called for independence, but in the longer term – more than tripled its score from the 2021 election to win 29.9 percent of votes, official results showed.

The Naleraq party, the most ardently pro-independence of the parties, more than doubled its showing to 24.5 percent.

Never before has an election in Greenland garnered as much international interest, following Trump’s recently stated ambitions to take control of the vast resource-rich territory.

In his State of the Union address of 4 March, Trump was, again, ambiguous on the subject of Greenland.

He began by saying: “We strongly support your right to determine your own future, and, if you choose, we welcome you into the United States of America.” But followed this message with the declaration: “We need Greenland for national security and even international security, and we’re working with everybody involved to try and get it.  But we need it, really, for international world security.  And I think we’re going to get it.  One way or the other, we’re going to get it.”

In the face of this threat, on the eve of the election Greenland’s outgoing prime minister Mute Egede declared in an interview on Danish television channel DR: “We don’t want to be either Americans or Danes.”

Egede added that at a time when “the world order is shaking on many fronts,” the president of Greenland’s neighbour was proving to be “very unpredictable” which was “worrying people”.

Timeline for independence

“We respect the election result,” Egede, who leads the left-green Inuit Ataqatigiit (IA) party, told public broadcaster KNR, while the leader of IA’s coalition partner Siumut party conceded defeat.

The two parties came in third and fourth place, respectively. As none of the parties won a majority of the 31 seats in parliament, negotiations to form a coalition will be held in the coming days.

The future government is expected to map out a timeline for independence, which is backed by a large majority of Greenland’s 57,000 inhabitants.

Greenland’s road to independence, explained

“The Democrats are open to talks with all parties and are seeking unity. Especially with what is going on in the world,” said the party’s 33-year-old leader Jens-Frederik Nielsen.

All of Greenland’s main political parties back independence but disagree on the timeframe.

The island’s inhabitants – almost 90 percent of whom are Inuits – say they are tired of being treated like second-class citizens by their former colonial power Denmark, which they accuse of having historically suppressed their culture, carried out forced sterilisations and removed children from their families.

The Trump effect

Trump, who has said he is determined to get the vast Arctic island “one way or the other”, tried until the last minute to influence the vote. On Sunday, hours before the election, Trump again invited Greenlanders “to be a part of the greatest nation anywhere in the world, the United States of America”.

Possibly signalling a Trump effect, turnout in Tuesday’s election was higher than usual, election officials said.

In an opinion poll conducted following Trump’s first threat of annexation on 7 January, 85 percent of Greenlanders polled said they had no intention of becoming part of the US.

Kira, a 25-year-old student recently interviewed by RFI’s correspondent in the Greenlandic capital Nuuk, is one of them. “All this makes us laugh, but we’re not objects. We don’t want to be colonised twice. We want to be ourselves, and the time has come.”

Greenland’s Inuits rediscover their national pride

Under Danish rule for centuries, it is not out of the question that Greenlanders may be called upon to vote again this year – in a referendum on independence. And that Trump’s comments may have brought issues under that banner to a head.

“This interest in Greenland is like a moment of great awareness,” said Qupanuk Olsen, 40, a candidate under the Naleraq banner. “Greenlanders are really starting to realise that they are much more valuable than they thought. I see that as a very, very positive thing.”

Mineral resources

Under normal circumstances, these elections might have passed completely under the radar. But this time, they are under very close surveillance from Denmark and the entire European Union.

In addition to Greenland’s geographical position as a strategic crossroads in the Arctic, its subsoil – infinitely rich in minerals coveted by industry, particularly rare earths – makes it a coveted territory.

According to the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (Geus), the Far North island is home to 36.1 million tonnes of rare earth resources. And according to the latest report from the US Geological Survey (USGS), reserves, which correspond to economically and technically recoverable resources, are in the region of 1.5 million tonnes. Australian, Chinese and Canadian companies are prospecting in Greenland.

Minerals, mines, hydrocarbons: Greenland’s key but limited resources

Washington first proposed buying Greenland in 1867. A few years after a second attempt, during the First World War in 1917, the US bought the Virgin Islands from Copenhagen.

During the Second World War, the US took control of the island territory, before handing it back at the end of the conflict, while subsequently reinforcing its military infrastructure there under a specific agreement.

Naleraq says the current US president’s remarks have given Greenland leverage ahead of independence negotiations with Denmark.

But Trump’s words have also chilled some independence supporters, making continued ties with Copenhagen more attractive to them, at least for now.

“Staying with Denmark is more important than ever right now because I think Denmark has mostly been good to us,” said one voter who identified himself only as Ittukusuk. “If we become independent, then Trump might get too aggressive and that’s what scares me.”

(With AFP)

This article has been adapted from the original version in French.


Champions League

Donnarumma eclipses Alisson as PSG oust Liverpool in Champions League

Gigi Donnarumma saved two penalties in the shoot-out on Tuesday night at Anfield to help Paris Saint-Germain into the quarter-finals of the Champions League at the expense of Liverpool.

During the first leg, the Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson produced a string of saves to keep PSG at bay. The 32-year-old Brazil international described the game as the performance of a lifetime.

But six days later, his PSG counterpart shone. The 26-year-old Italy international repelled efforts from Darwin Nunez and Curtis Jones while Gonçalo Ramos and Ousmane Dembélé converted their attempts for PSG.

Their accuracy and Donnarumma’s heroics set up Désiré Doué with the chance to take PSG into the next round and the 19-year-old swept the ball confidently into the right hand side of Alisson’s goal.

“It does not matter if we deserve the win,” said the PSG boss Luis Enrique after the tie.

“I think both of the teams deserved to go through. We were better in Paris and they were better here. My team showed great personality and character at Anfield. The atmosphere was great and it was tough.”

Change

During the first leg at the Parc des Princes on 5 March, PSG pulverized Liverpool but Harvey Elliott scored late to give the English Premier League leaders the advantage.

That was erased 12 minutes into the second leg when Dembélé profited from a mix-up between Alisson and Ibrahima Konaté to tap home.

“It was the best game of football I have ever been involved in,” said Liverpool manager Arne Slot said. “It was an incredible performance, especially if you compare it with last week. We were creating chances and then we were 1-0 down. We ran out of luck after last week.”

Elsewhere in the competition, Harry Kane and Alphonso Davies were on target for Bayern Munich who completed a 5-0 aggregate victory over Bayer Leverkusen.

Barcelona won their second leg 3-1 against Benfica to move into the last eight 4-1 on aggregate and Inter Milan’s 2-1 success at the San Siro over Feyenoord enabled them to progress to the quarter-finals where they will play Bayern.


FRANCE – MOLDOVA

France strengthens support for Moldova as Russian destabilisation efforts persist

As Russia intensifies efforts to destabilise Moldova, France has stepped up its support, reinforcing bilateral ties and backing Chisinau’s push for resilience against foreign interference during a bilateral meeting in Paris.

French President Emmanuel Macron has reaffirmed France’s unwavering support for Moldova in the face of increasing Russian attempts to destabilise the Eastern European country.

During a visit by Moldovan President Maia Sandu to Paris on Monday, both leaders signed agreements to strengthen cooperation, particularly in countering disinformation and improving Moldova’s energy resilience.

Macron condemned what he described as “increasingly uninhibited Russian attempts at destabilisation,” highlighting the pressures Moldova has faced since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Sandu, who was sworn in for a second term in December, has been vocal about Russian interference in Moldovan elections, warning that Moscow seeks to undermine Moldova’s sovereignty and use it as a tool against Ukraine.

France says it will support Moldova amid fears of Russian destabilisation

Strengthening bilateral ties against disinformation

A key outcome of Sandu’s visit was the signing of an agreement between Moldova and France to enhance cooperation in detecting and combating digital disinformation.

The partnership involves collaboration between the French government agency Viginum and Moldova’s Strategic Communication Centre to protect Moldova’s electoral processes from foreign interference.

Both leaders emphasised the critical role of truth in safeguarding democracy.

Sandu underscored that in today’s geopolitical landscape, “truth is as vital as security,” highlighting the strategic importance of countering Russian propaganda.

The move comes in response to multiple reports of Russian-backed efforts to manipulate Moldova’s 2024 elections, including cyberattacks, vote buying, and misinformation campaigns.

European leaders meet in Moldova in show of unity against Russia

Energy resilience and economic cooperation

Another significant development from Sandu’s visit was the signing of a €30 million agreement with the French Development Agency to improve Moldova’s energy efficiency.

With Moldova striving to reduce its reliance on Russian energy, the deal will help lower costs and reinforce the country’s energy independence.

Moldova has accused Russia of engineering an artificial energy crisis to destabilise the nation ahead of the recent elections.

The suspension of gas exports to Moldova’s separatist Transnistria region by Gazprom has further intensified tensions.

France’s investment in improving Moldova’s energy infrastructure is a key step towards mitigating the economic and political leverage Russia holds over the country.

EU members look to support Moldova, send muntions to Ukraine to offset Russian expansionism

Moldova’s diplomatic position

Diplomatic relations between Moldova and Russia remain tense, with the Kremlin recently accusing Chisinau of violating diplomatic conventions by refusing to formally accept the credentials of Russia’s ambassador.

Moldova’s Foreign Ministry rejected Moscow’s claims, asserting that its decision aligns with international norms under the Vienna Convention on diplomatic relations.

Sandu justified the decision, pointing to Moscow’s repeated disrespect towards Moldova’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.

The Kremlin had summoned Moldova’s ambassador to protest the move, but Chisinau has remained firm in its stance, arguing that Russia’s actions – including its military presence in Transnistria and interference in Moldova’s internal affairs – justify Moldova’s cautious approach to diplomatic engagement.

As Moldova pushes forward with its EU membership ambitions, Sandu reiterated the need for strong support from European allies.

She warned that Moscow’s strategy is to exploit Moldova’s vulnerabilities and subvert its democracy.

Given Moldova’s proximity to the war in neighbouring Ukraine and its history of Russian influence, the country remains a key geopolitical battleground.

(With newswires)


Defence

France remains world’s second largest arms exporter behind US

The United States maintains its position as world’s number one arms exporter, followed by France, according to a report released by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute on Monday. It also showed that Ukraine became the world’s largest importer in the period 2020-2024.

The findings by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri) coincide with an announcement by European Union states that they intend to strengthen the continent’s defence capabilities.

This comes after US President Donald Trump said Europe should become less dependent on the US. 

The report published on Monday found that the United States strengthened its position as the world’s top weapons exporter with some 43 percent of global exports and France confirmed a distant second place with 9.6 percent.

“France has now cemented its place as the second largest exporter vis-a-vis Russia, which was at that position some time ago,” Mathew George, director of Sipri’s Arms Transfer Programme told RFI.

France is also “making those inroads into different areas with exports to Asia and the Middle East,” he says. “So it’s really growing.”

Arms embargoes 

According to Sipri’s report which covers 2020 – 2024, Ukraine became the world’s largest arms importer with a growth of “9.627 percent more than the previous period”, which is “mind-boggling,” George says.

Russia accounted for only 0.5 percent of global arms imports between 2020 and 2024, but mainly “because Russia has mostly relied on domestic arms production to meet its demand,” George explains.

In that period, Russia did import missiles with a range of 100 kilometres or more and one-way attack drones from Iran and artillery and missiles with a range of 450 kilometres from North Korea.

But figures are hard to come by due to arms embargoes on the three countries, George explains.

“We make conservative estimates. Unfortunately we don’t have that much transparency in those transfers.”

 

Warring states’ exports down

Exports coming from Russia and Ukraine went substantially down over the 2020-2024 period, Sipri’s report shows.

Ukraine became the 20th largest exporter down from the 12th, with a a reduction of 72 percent less exports, while Russian exports declined by 64 percent. 

George points out that this decline already started before the 2022 invasion, “most likely related to Russia’s decision to prioritise the production of its major arms for its own armed forces over those for export”.

This was aggravated by further effects caused by multilateral trade sanctions imposed on Russia and increased pressure from the US and its allies on other states not to buy Russian arms.

Russian arms exports remained at around the same levels of 2023, which was some 47 percent lower than 2022.

Arms imports by European NATO members more than doubled their arms imports in comparison to the period 2015-2020, which preceded the Russian invasion of Ukraine. 

According to Sipri’s database, 64 percent of Europe’s arms imports come from the US, followed by France, South Korea, Germany and Israel.

Last week, EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced that the union’s spending on weapon procurement will be increased to €800 billion.

Windfall for European arms makers as Brussels ramps up defence spending

George isn’t sure how this will impact current weapon transfers in the long term.

“We’ll have to see what and where that is translated into. There has to be a lot of mobilisation in what the industry will need to do to support the requirements of Europe.” 

“We’ll have to wait and see where that 800 billion gets invested into, whether that means that countries will again focus on their own industry to buy more European.

“Some of these decisions are not so much about what’s available for us, but also to improve relationships and long-term relationships for a shared strategic objective.” George says. 

Ukraine has become the largest importer of arms. Percentage wise it is 9,627 percent. That’s mindboggling.

00:52

REMARK Mathew George SIPRI

Jan van der Made


cybercrime

France recorded significant rise in cyberattacks linked to Paris Olympics

France’s National Agency for the Security of Information Systems (Anssi) reported 4,386 “security events” on computer systems in 2024, an increase of 15 percent from the previous year, according to data revealed on Tuesday.

During the Paris Olympic Games and the rest of the year, 2024 was marked by a “large number of destabilisation attacks”, noted Anssi in its report entitled Panorama de la cybermenace (Panorama of Cyberthreats), published on Tuesday.

Anssi‘s director Vincent Strubel, told France Inter radio that for example, a pro-Russian group “threatened to attack sewage treatment plants, to pollute the Seine during the Olympic Games”.

He said that these actions were mainly carried out by pro-Russian and pro-Palestinian hacktivist groups, some of which may be affiliated with States,” he said.

Anssi refers to “hacktivist groups with a low level of technicality” but “a strong capacity to publicise their activities.”

In the report Anssi names operators like Cyber ​​Army of Russia Reborn (CARR) and Lulzsec Muslims, who “managed to access management interfaces exposed on the Internet.”

Hackers target Grand Palais Olympics venue and other Paris museums

Strubel says the actions put in place by French authorities to deter the wave of attacks was a success and “no computer attack disrupted the smooth running” of Olympic sporting events.

Anssi says that 4,386 security incidents were reported in 2024, representing 15 percent more than in 2023. 

Of the total, 3,004 concerned abnormal or unexpected behavior on computer systems and 1,361 were labelled as security events where Anssi confirmed that a cyberattack had been detected.

Make an impression

Although a peak was reached in July, the incidents did not all concern the Olympics.

With regards to the other attacks carried out throughout the year, their aim was “to disrupt the functioning of different infrastructures, to make an impression,” Strubel told French news agency AFP.

According to Anssi, these attacks targeted renewable energy production sites, the State Interministerial Network (RIE) and telecom infrastructures.

In its analysis, Anssi noted an increase in attacks targeting IT security tools such as firewalls or VPNs.

France deploys crisis cell to deal with fallout of major cyberattack

“When these devices have vulnerabilities, it’s pretty quickly catastrophic,” Strubel says. “It’s a little troubling to think that we’re buying security equipment that ends up being the gateway for attackers, but beyond that, the reality of the threat and the ability of attackers to seize it is something that concerns us.”

At the same time, ransomware attacks, capable of blocking access to a computer system in exchange for the payment of a ransom, have continued to flourish.

Small and medium-sized companies continue to be the preferred targets: in 2024, they represented 37 percent of ransomware victims, compared to 34 percent the previous year.

Universities and higher education institutions represent 12 percent of these types of ransomware attacks, Anssi reported.

Over the past few years, French President Emmanuel Macron has addressed the issue of cyber security and promised to inject significant funds into readying the country to tackle new threats.

(with newswires)


Covid-19

Five years on from the Covid-19 pandemic, what legacy has the virus left?

11 March marks five years since the World Health Organization declared the spread of Covid-19 a pandemic. The virus caused 7 million deaths, according to the UN body.

Hospitals were quickly overwhelmed, unprecedented lockdowns were introduced around the world and the global economy suffered its worst crisis in more than a century. In 2023, the maximum alert level was lifted, but while the virus is now far less deadly, it has not disappeared.

Covid-19 monitoring is far less rigorous now, making it difficult to obtain figures that reflect the reality of the reach of the virus today. However, 11,000 cases of Covid-19 in a single week were recently reported to the WHO by around 50 countries, along with 500 deaths per week.

In France, where precise monitoring is now only carried out in winter, 5,600 deaths associated with the virus were recorded for the 2023-2024 season.

Covid-19 is still killing people, but in far smaller numbers. This is because a huge proportion of the world’s population is now immune, protected from severe forms of the disease by vaccination and/or previous infections.

Five years on, WHO repeats call for China to share Covid data

The variant that has been circulating since the end of 2021, Omicron, and its sub-lineages, may also be less virulent than previous variants, according to some experts. But Covid-19 remains a dangerous illness for the elderly and those with weakened immune systems.

The vaccine gap

Reflecting this, vaccination is still strongly recommended for vulnerable people – those over 65, people with chronic illnesses and those with immunodeficiency. In France, these groups are still encouraged to take up a booster vaccine every year.

Probe into French government’s handling of Covid ends with no indictments

Such campaigns, previously aimed at the entire population, changed the course of the pandemic. Highly effective vaccines were developed in record time, including those using innovative technology based on messenger RNA. According to one study by Imperial College London, 20 million lives were saved in 2021 thanks to vaccines.

But this figure would have been higher had access to vaccines in low-income countries not been delayed and limited. As such, the pandemic threw a harsh light on global health inequality.

The threat of misinformation

The pandemic also gave rise to a flood of fake news and scientific misinformation – a phenomenon that would represent a danger to public health in the event of another pandemic.

“For me, the most important thing is that a certain number of people were talking nonsense, for example saying that it was a flu, that there wouldn’t be a second wave… These people are criminals. We still haven’t completely solved the problem.

“Not enough people have been prosecuted for this. Because we have to realise that these people are responsible for some of the deaths from Covid-19,” said Stéphane Gaudry, professor of intensive care medicine at Avicenne Hospital, north of Paris, and vice-dean of the faculty of medicine at Sorbonne Paris Nord University.

RFK Jr, vaccine critic turned US health secretary, hints at overhaul

He continued: “When we see on social networks that this is persisting and that it is likely to grow – because in the United States now, with the new American minister of health, untruths are considered to be truths – I think that’s what’s most worrying. We all know very well that quackery and conspiracy theories could get us into trouble if they come back.”

This article was adapted from the original version in French.


South Sudan

Uganda army chief says troops deployed to South Sudan’s capital

Ugandan special forces have been deployed to South Sudan’s capital Juba, the Ugandan army chief said Tuesday, after rising tensions threatened a fragile peace agreement between President Salva Kiir and Vice President Riek Machar.

Impoverished South Sudan has long been plagued by political instability and insecurity, but concerns have risen sharply in the past week after clashes between forces allied to the country’s leaders in the northeast.

“As of 2 days ago, our Special Forces units entered Juba to secure it,” Ugandan army chief Muhoozi Kainerugaba said on X.

“We shall protect the entire territory of South Sudan like it was our own,” the son of Ugandan leader Yoweri Museveni and infamous for his incendiary X posts, added.

Ugandan army spokesman Felix Kulayigye confirmed that troops had been deployed in the capital “to protect the government”.

“We had instructions to deploy and we deployed the troops there,” he told French news agency AFP.

Fragile power-sharing deal

Uganda sent troops to South Sudan in 2013 at the onset of a five-year civil war to support now President Salva Kiir, before officially withdrawing at the end of 2015.

A fragile power-sharing agreement between Kiir and First Vice President Riek Machar ended that conflict in 2018, but the deal has been threatened by the recent clashes in Upper Nile State.

Tensions flared last Friday after a UN helicopter was attacked during a failed rescue mission.

The UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) said its team was attempting to extract members of the South Sudanese army from the area when their helicopter came under fire.

A South Sudanese army general and other officers were killed, UNMISS said in a statement, saying the incident may constitute a war crime.

Alarming regression

Kiir urged citizens to remain calm, stating: “I have said it time and again that our country will not go back to war. Let no one take law into their hands.”

“The government which I lead will handle this crisis. We will remain steadfast in the path of peace,” he added.

Kiir’s allies have accused Machar’s forces of fomenting unrest in the region, in league with the so-called White Army, a loose band of armed youths from the same ethnic Nuer community as the vice-president.

Late Friday local media reported a statement from Machar’s office which condemned the helicopter attack as “barbaric”.

Efforts to “restore peace in the region remain a top priority,” the statement added, with Machar “continuing to engage all stakeholders to prevent further violence.”

UN Security Council extends South Sudan arms embargo

The rising unrest has sparked international concern, with the United Nations Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan warning the country was seeing an “alarming regression” that threatened to undo years of progress.

The International Crisis Group think tank has warned that “South Sudan is slipping rapidly toward full-blown war”.

Its Horn of Africa director Alan Boswell urged the UN to prepare peacekeepers to save civilian lives, adding: “We fear large scale ethnic massacres if the situation is not soon contained.”

(with AFP)


Champions League

PSG coach Enrique calls for belief in Champions Leage comeback at Liverpool

Paris Saint-Germain coach Luis Enrique urged his squad to shrug off the disappointment of last week’s home leg loss against Liverpool and believe they can win the return leg on Tuesday night to progress to the last eight of the Champions League.

PSG outplayed Liverpool at the Parc des Princes on 5 March but lost 1-0.

They face the daunting task of overturning the deficit at one of the most iconic stadiums in world football.

“We all know that Anfield is a legendary stadium with a huge history behind it,” said Enrique on the eve of the clash.

“We are fully motivated as individuals and as a team to put in a good performance against a very good Liverpool side at their stadium.”

Enrique admitted his experience as a coach could help his players to believe that a comeback is possible.

When he was steering Barcelona in 2017, he oversaw the 6-1 victory at the Camp Nou which eliminated PSG in the last-16 of the Champions League. And in last season’s quarter-finals in the Champions League, Enrique was at the helm of the PSG team which came from from 4-2 down to beat Barcelona 6-4 on aggregate.

“Back in 2017, It would have been better if PSG had not beaten Barcelona 4-0 in the first leg,” Enrique quipped.

“In my career, even when tings go badly, I have believed that there will be situations that can be managed. There is no problem for me facing these challenges directly.”

Preparation

PSG prepared for the tie at Anfield with a 4-1 win on Saturday afternoon at Rennes, which sent them 16 points clear at the top of Ligue 1 following the loss of second-placed Marseille on Saturday night.

Liverpool too are virtually assured of their domestic top flight crown. They beat Southampton 3-1 on Saturday and sit 15 points ahead of Arsenal who have played one game less.

“We haven’t changed the way we prepare for a game,” Enrique added. “What is true is that as things stand we’re going out. So we have only one option and that is to go out to win which is exactly what we would have done even if we had got a different result in the first leg.”

Immediately after last week’s game, the Liverpool boss Arne Slot admitted the better side had lost.

Just before the second leg, he warned his players that they would have to operate at a higher level.

“Before we played the game in Paris, I watched many PSG games and I was really impressed with the intensity they play at, the team cohesion, the rotations in midfield,” said Slot.

“They are such a complete team, such a well-managed team. Some people said we played poorly. I don’t agree. I think PSG played tremendously well. I don’t think we’ve faced this season a team that combined that much quality with that much intensity.

“But I do think we can do better. I am not saying we played poorly or not well at all, but we are a better team than we were last week and that’s something we have to prove.”


International law

Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire strengthen ties with joint maritime patrols

Accra – Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire have reached an agreement to conduct regular joint inspections along their shared international maritime boundary, in compliance with the ruling of the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS).

This initiative seeks to regulate offshore oil exploration, preventing unauthorised activities in the high seas of both nations, while mitigating potential future territorial disputes.

The collaboration also aims to protect marine resources and safeguard the economic interests of both countries.

The ITLOS Ruling

The International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) delivered a landmark ruling on 23rd September 2017, settling the maritime boundary dispute between Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire.

The Special Chamber of ITLOS in Hamburg, Germany, adjudicated the case, which concerned competing claims over offshore areas rich in oil and gas within the Gulf of Guinea.

Desperate journeys: Ghanian youth risk death for a future in Europe

Ghana had been actively exploring and developing oil fields in the contested region, including the Jubilee Field. Côte d’Ivoire asserted that Ghana had violated its maritime rights.

However, ITLOS dismissed this claim and ruled that the maritime boundary should follow the equidistance method, aligning with Ghana’s position. Both nations accepted the ruling peacefully, preserving their strong bilateral relations.

Joint maritime inspections

The Ghana Boundary Commission and the Côte d’Ivoire Boundary Commission (CNFCI), with support from the German Development Agency (GIZ), the African Union Border Programme (AUBP), and the West African Economic and Monetary Union (UEMOA), convened a meeting in Accra.

This gathering, attended by 36 selected participants from both countries, established a framework for implementing the ITLOS ruling on their international boundary dispute.

Key discussions focused on establishing a joint border patrol to ensure the integrity of the maritime boundary and formulating strategies to complete the boundary reaffirmation exercise by 2025. The Ghana Boundary Commission (GhBC) and CNFCI will facilitate the joint maritime inspection exercise.

At the conclusion of the discussions in Accra, Major General Emmanuel Kotia, the Director-General of GhBC, confirmed that regular joint inspections would be conducted along the international maritime boundary.

Traders reeling as fire destroys Ghana’s largest clothes market

Previously, Ghana carried out inspections independently, but Côte d’Ivoire has now agreed to collaborate. Both nations’ navies will work together, with facilitation from their respective boundary commissions.

Major General Kotia further stated that both parties had committed to continuing the reaffirmation exercise along their land boundary.

“Once we have validated this framework agreement, which will be signed by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, we can collaborate strategically and operationally regarding both land and maritime borders,” he explained.

Konate Diakalidia, the Executive Secretary of CNFCI, reaffirmed Côte d’Ivoire’s commitment to working with Ghana to safeguard their respective territories.

Ghana’s illegal mining crisis: environmental destruction, clashes, and calls for action

“This meeting has successfully expedited the reaffirmation exercise and enabled us to devise strategies for the full implementation of the ITLOS ruling, ensuring that neither country trespasses,” he stated.

Both parties agreed that the heads of their respective boundary commissions would lead delegations to submit official maps, reflecting the ITLOS ruling on the international maritime boundary line, to the United Nations (UN) Division for Ocean Affairs and the Law of the Sea (DOALOS) on 27th April 2025.


Ukraine crisis

France unlocks €200m in miltary aid for Ukraine drawn from frozen Russian assets

France is to allocate nearly €200 million in military aid to Ukraine, funded by interest from frozen Russian assets, as part of its ongoing support for Kyiv against the Russian invasion.

France is preparing a new military aid package for Ukraine worth almost €200 million from the interest earned on frozen Russian assets, the defence minister said in an interview published on Sunday.

In the interview with the Tribune Dimanche newspaper, Sebastien Lecornu described the suspension of US weapons deliveries to Ukraine as a “heavy blow” to Kyiv’s fight against the Russian invasion.

“This year we will mobilise, thanks to the interests of frozen Russian assets, a new package of 195 million euros” for Ukraine, Lecornu said.

This will enable the delivery of 155-millimetre shells as well as AASM air to surface weapons that arm the French Mirage 2000 fighter jets that Paris has delivered to Ukraine for the war.

Posting on social media platform X, Lecornu said: “We are not at war; we want to guarantee peace on our continent. Without naivety or excitement. We must re-establish our defence effort to face the period of disruption we are going through”.

EU chief unveils €800bn plan to ‘rearm’ Europe and support Ukraine

Russia targeting democracy, economy

Lecornu did not make any comment on whether France would consider using the frozen Russian assets themselves to help Kyiv, a potentially far more significant move supported by its ally the UK but over which Paris as so far been wary.

But he warned that away from the battlefield, the “Russians are reinventing war, that is their great strength” by targeting “our democracy and our economy”.

France’s 2027 presidential elections “could be the subject of massive manipulation, as was the case in Romania” where the first round was topped by a far-right outsider, only for the results to be annulled by the constitutional court, he said.

Lecornu also sought to play down any rupture in transatlantic relations after Donald Trump won the US presidency and changed Washington’s policy on Ukraine, saying: “For my part, I still consider them as allies, despite their great unpredictability”.

Windfall for European arms makers as Brussels ramps up defence spending

Turning to the “heavy blow” of the US suspension of weapons deliveries to Ukraine, he said: “They [Ukraine] can hold out for a while, but this suspension must not last”.

Lecornu said that French intelligence had no indication that Russia was planning to attack a NATO member in the next five years but did say there is a “temptation to destabilise Moldova” through its breakaway region of Transnistria.

With President Emmanuel Macron and others urging EU states to ramp up defence spending as the US wavers, Lecornu pointed to ammunition and electronic warfare as the most urgent issues for France’s military in the years to come. 

“Second priority, is the drone-isation and robot-isation of armies,” he added, also noting the roles of artificial intelligence and space.


climate change

France rolls out plan to prepare for 4C temperature rise by end of century

The French government on Monday unveiled its long-awaited third national climate adaptation plan, outlining 52 measures aimed at preparing the country for temperature rises that could reach 4C by the end of the century. 

Presented by Ecological Transition Minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher, the plan follows two years of preparatory work and a public consultation that gathered nearly 6,000 contributions. 

“There is a very strong expectation from local elected officials, particularly in coastal, mountain or forest communities, but also from healthcare professionals and nursing home residents, who are already experiencing the effects of global warming,” Pannier-Runacher told French daily Le Monde

The plan establishes a reference trajectory for climate adaptation (TRACC) based on scientific projections from the national weather agency Météo-France, preparing the country for temperature increases of 2C by 2030, 2.7C by 2050, and 4C by 2100 compared to pre-industrial levels. 

Adapting all sectors

To distribute resources effectively, it targets five main areas: protecting people, ensuring resilience of territories and essential services, adapting human activities, protecting natural and cultural heritage, and mobilising national resources.

Specific measures include creating a national map of exposure to natural risks, maintaining affordable insurance offerings even in high-risk areas, and improving housing to remain comfortable despite rising temperatures.

“Adapting is not giving up,” Pannier-Runacher added.

“The idea is not to abandon efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but to accept facing reality and actively prepare for a rise in global warming whose impacts are increasingly felt in France.”

France has already warmed by 1.8C above pre-industrial levels, and some scientists consider the government’s projections to be optimistic given the weakness of international commitments to reduce emissions. 

How bolder targets, treaties and talks will steer a defining year for climate

Major investments 

Nearly €600 million will be allocated to adaptation measures, the government has said, including €300 million from the Barnier Fund – set up for the prevention of major natural hazards – €30 million for clay soil shrinkage-swelling prevention, and €260 million from the Green Fund for local authorities. 

An additional €1 billion from water agencies’ budgets will be directed toward this issue between 2025 and 2030, “with nearly 40 percent for nature-based solution interventions”, according to the plan’s presentation document. 

However, these amounts fall significantly short of what experts have said is necessary.

France Assureurs, the country’s insurance industry association, has already deemed the Barnier Fund allocation insufficient.

According to the Institute for Climate Economics, between €1 billion and €2.5 billion should be invested annually just in new buildings, €4.4 billion for housing renovation, and at least €1.5 billion per year for agriculture.

Implementation worries

While environmental advocates welcome the plan, they express doubts about its implementation.  

Nicolas Richard, vice-president of France Nature Environnement, told French news agency AFP the plan presents “a certain number of good intentions” but faces uncertainty about “whether they are funded and how they are managed”. 

The High Council for Climate previously judged the country’s efforts inadequate, calling for a “change of scale in adaptation”.  

Natural disaster prevention fund takes centre stage in French budget debate

The Court of Auditors had also urged public authorities to “become aware” of the urgency of tackling this project, which it says requires a “wall of investments”. 

To ensure the plan’s implementation, Pannier-Runacher said she would work on specific roadmaps for four priority areas: forests, coastal erosion, mountains and agriculture.  

The National Council for Ecological Transition will be responsible for monitoring indicators across sectors and providing annual progress reports. 

“It is now necessary to implement and territorialise it, in full consultation with local elected officials,” a ministry spokesperson said. 

International report

Turkey eyes opportunities in Africa as France withdraws its military presence

Issued on:

France’s recent military withdrawals from the Sahel and West Africa are leaving a void that Turkey is keen to exploit, experts told RFI. But while Turkey is profiting from its position as a NATO member and experienced arms exporter, it needs to be careful not to overstretch itself in terms of resources on the continent.

France’s handover of its sole base in Côte d’Ivoire and a pullout in January from Chad are part of a broader reduction of the French army’s presence across the region.

“What we are living in now is a transformational age,” international relations expert Federico Donelli of Trieste University told RFI.

“Many traditional players like France, for example, in that region of Africa are downgrading their own engagement in this area. Not because they have some economic or political constraint but because the local states want them to leave the region.”

Donelli believes the door is now open to new players, such as Turkey.

“Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has invested heavily in Africa, quadrupling Turkey’s embassy presence across Africa in the past two decades. Erdogan, a devout Muslim, also plays the Muslim card and reminds his African audiences of France’s colonial past,” he says.

Insurgent threats

However, Eylem Tepeciklioglu of Ankara’s Social Sciences University believes the breakthrough for Turkey came with the French military failing to deal with insurgent threats in the Sahel and broader West Africa.

“The image of France is in tatters because the regional countries criticise French missions for failing to help them fight with terrorist groups and for bringing more harm than good,” explains Tepecikoglu.

Tepeciklioglu claims Erdogan’s Africa policy caught the regional zeitgeist.

“Together with rising anti-French sentiments, this brings opportunities for other countries to step in, and Turkey has several defense or mutual cooperation agreements with Sahelian countries. And according to some sources, Turkey has deployed military advisers and drones at the Abéché base in Chad,” adds Tepeciklioglu.

Macron’s Africa ‘reset’ stumbles as leaders call out colonial overtones

Deepening Senegalese and Turkish military ties was on the agenda at an Istanbul meeting in October. Shortly after the high-profile gathering, Senegal called for the removal of French forces.

Turkey’s vibrant arms industry selling battle-proven weapons invariably cheaper than its Western competitors, as well as having few, if any, restrictions on use, is complementing Ankara’s traditional diplomatic tools in its bid to broaden its influence.

“Turkish defense products are now very popular in African markets. So this also applies to Sahelian countries,” explains Tepeciklioglu, “For example, Nigeria, Mali, Burkina Faso, and Chad acquired Turkish drones. While other Sahelian countries acquired other Turkish military equipment.”

Overstretch

Turkey remains a relatively small player against the giants of Russia, China, and the United States in the battle to secure economic and diplomatic influence. 

But the growing competition between Western and Eastern powers could be to Turkey’s advantage, says Donelli.

 “So, for an African state, establishing a security agreement with Turkey is less costly in political terms in comparison with relations with Russia because that doesn’t mean ‘I break with the West, but I’m doing something with a NATO member’. This is really important,” adds Donelli.

Turkey and Italy consider teaming up to seek new influence in Africa

But Turkey’s rapid expansion into Africa does not come cheap what with diplomatic representations across the continent, growing military presence, such as army and naval bases in Libya and Africa.

“Turkey is expanding too much. This is called overstretch in diplomatic language,” warns International relations professor Huseyin Bagci of Ankara Middle East Technical University.

“So, Turkey’s military and economic capabilities are actually limited. The more you expand, the more you have to pay,” he says, adding that such a strategy would not be sustainable.

With the Turkish economy mired in crisis and Erdogan looking to improve ties with Europe, including France, analysts say Turkey could be ready for cooperation rather than rivalry in Africa.


CHAD

Chad extends detention of RFI journalist, as lawyers denounce ‘crackdown’

An RFI correspondent and a national TV journalist have been detained in Chad in a move condemned by press freedom advocates as part of a broader crackdown on dissent.

Following a further interrogation at the offices of the criminal investigation department on Saturday, journalist Olivier Monodji’s custody has been extended until at least this Monday, when he will be brought before the public prosecutor of N’djamena.

Monodji, a correspondent for Radio France Internationale and publication director of the newspaper Le Pays, has been detained in the Chadian capital, since Wednesday, 5 March.

His lawyer, Allatha Amos, has slammed the arrest as baseless, stating: “The criminal investigation police were unable to tell us what offence my client is accused of. We are therefore waiting impatiently for Monday to find out. It is really absurd that journalists are still being arrested in the 21st century: it is truly from another age!”

Alongside Monodji, Mahamat Saleh Alhissein, a journalist with the national television station Tele Chad, was also arrested.

Russian translation

The exact reasons for Monodji’s detention remain unclear, but sources indicated to French news agency AFP that it may be linked to an article he wrote in September 2023 about the inauguration of the Russian House in N’Djamena.

Alhissein, on the other hand, is accused of translating documents containing information on Russia’s proxy forces and the Sahel’s economic situation, according to Tele Chad.

The Union of Chadian Journalists (UJT) has denounced the detentions as arbitrary, labelling them a “serious attack on the freedom of the press” and calling for the unconditional release of both journalists as well as the return of Monodji’s work equipment.

Ruling party wins majority in Chad’s legislative election as opposition boycott polls

‘Broader crackdown’

Monodji was reportedly interrogated for four hours on Saturday, by three criminal investigation officers, after which his custody was extended.

His lawyer has criticised this extension, emphasising that Monodji presents sufficient guarantees of representation.

“From now on, [the public prosecutor] alone can explain why he is being held at the premises of the criminal investigation department,” Amos stated.

The recent arrests of journalists in Chad have sparked widespread condemnation from press freedom advocates, who say they fit into a broader crackdown on opposition figures in Chad, as military leader Mahamat Idriss Deby tightens his grip on power.

France launches embezzlement inquiry into Chad’s President Mahamat Idriss Déby

Since August 2024, at least three journalists have been arbitrarily detained, according to the Chad Online Media Association.

In September 2024, the World Organisation Against Torture condemned the Chadian intelligence service for increasingly using arrests and detentions without due process.

Deby, who took power after his father’s death three years ago, has distanced Chad from its former colonial ruler, France, and fostered stronger ties with Russia.

Moscow has expanded its influence in Africa through mercenary groups like Wagner, which operate in neighbouring Mali and the Central African Republic.

International report

Turkey eyes opportunities in Africa as France withdraws its military presence

Issued on:

France’s recent military withdrawals from the Sahel and West Africa are leaving a void that Turkey is keen to exploit, experts told RFI. But while Turkey is profiting from its position as a NATO member and experienced arms exporter, it needs to be careful not to overstretch itself in terms of resources on the continent.

France’s handover of its sole base in Côte d’Ivoire and a pullout in January from Chad are part of a broader reduction of the French army’s presence across the region.

“What we are living in now is a transformational age,” international relations expert Federico Donelli of Trieste University told RFI.

“Many traditional players like France, for example, in that region of Africa are downgrading their own engagement in this area. Not because they have some economic or political constraint but because the local states want them to leave the region.”

Donelli believes the door is now open to new players, such as Turkey.

“Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has invested heavily in Africa, quadrupling Turkey’s embassy presence across Africa in the past two decades. Erdogan, a devout Muslim, also plays the Muslim card and reminds his African audiences of France’s colonial past,” he says.

Insurgent threats

However, Eylem Tepeciklioglu of Ankara’s Social Sciences University believes the breakthrough for Turkey came with the French military failing to deal with insurgent threats in the Sahel and broader West Africa.

“The image of France is in tatters because the regional countries criticise French missions for failing to help them fight with terrorist groups and for bringing more harm than good,” explains Tepecikoglu.

Tepeciklioglu claims Erdogan’s Africa policy caught the regional zeitgeist.

“Together with rising anti-French sentiments, this brings opportunities for other countries to step in, and Turkey has several defense or mutual cooperation agreements with Sahelian countries. And according to some sources, Turkey has deployed military advisers and drones at the Abéché base in Chad,” adds Tepeciklioglu.

Macron’s Africa ‘reset’ stumbles as leaders call out colonial overtones

Deepening Senegalese and Turkish military ties was on the agenda at an Istanbul meeting in October. Shortly after the high-profile gathering, Senegal called for the removal of French forces.

Turkey’s vibrant arms industry selling battle-proven weapons invariably cheaper than its Western competitors, as well as having few, if any, restrictions on use, is complementing Ankara’s traditional diplomatic tools in its bid to broaden its influence.

“Turkish defense products are now very popular in African markets. So this also applies to Sahelian countries,” explains Tepeciklioglu, “For example, Nigeria, Mali, Burkina Faso, and Chad acquired Turkish drones. While other Sahelian countries acquired other Turkish military equipment.”

Overstretch

Turkey remains a relatively small player against the giants of Russia, China, and the United States in the battle to secure economic and diplomatic influence. 

But the growing competition between Western and Eastern powers could be to Turkey’s advantage, says Donelli.

 “So, for an African state, establishing a security agreement with Turkey is less costly in political terms in comparison with relations with Russia because that doesn’t mean ‘I break with the West, but I’m doing something with a NATO member’. This is really important,” adds Donelli.

Turkey and Italy consider teaming up to seek new influence in Africa

But Turkey’s rapid expansion into Africa does not come cheap what with diplomatic representations across the continent, growing military presence, such as army and naval bases in Libya and Africa.

“Turkey is expanding too much. This is called overstretch in diplomatic language,” warns International relations professor Huseyin Bagci of Ankara Middle East Technical University.

“So, Turkey’s military and economic capabilities are actually limited. The more you expand, the more you have to pay,” he says, adding that such a strategy would not be sustainable.

With the Turkish economy mired in crisis and Erdogan looking to improve ties with Europe, including France, analysts say Turkey could be ready for cooperation rather than rivalry in Africa.

The Sound Kitchen

Shine, sisters!

Issued on:

This week on The Sound Kitchen we’ll celebrate International Women’s Day. You’ll hear the answer to the question about the French Socialist party and the no-confidence vote, “The Listener’s Corner” with Paul Myers, and Erwan Rome’s “Music from Erwan” – all that, as well as the new quiz and bonus questions, so click 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!

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 bilingual 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 counselled 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 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 Spotlight on France, Spotlight on Africa, The International Report, and of course, The Sound Kitchen. We also have an award-winning bilingual series – an old-time radio show, with actors (!) to help you learn French, called Les voisins du 12 bis

Remember, podcasts are radio, 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 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 8 February, I asked you a question about our article “French PM pushes through budget, faces second no-confidence vote”. That’s because French Prime Minister François Bayrou used Article 49.3 – a special executive power – to push the budget through. The Parliament does not take kindly to Article 49.3, because the executive branch can use it to bypass their votes.

After it went through, a no-confidence motion was immediately brought forward by the hard-left France Unbowed party. At that time, it was not thought the no-confidence motion would pass, because the Socialists said they would vote against it. My question to you was: Why did France’s Socialist party say they would vote against the no-confidence motion brought by the France Unbowed party? 

The answer is, to quote our article: “The Socialist Party said in a press release that it did not want to see France in an extended period of financial limbo and would therefore, ‘in a spirit of responsibility’, not back the no-confidence vote.”

They held to their word: The Socialist party did not back the no-confidence vote – France has a budget now, and the same prime minister, François Bayrou. 

In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question: “Is the favorite child the worst child?”

Do you have a bonus question idea? Send it to us!

The winners are: RFI English Listeners Club member Nasyr Muhammad from Katsina State, Nigeria. Nasyr is also this week’s bonus question winner. Congratulations, Nasyr, on your double win !

Also on the winner’s list this week are: Reepa Bain, the secretary of the RFI Pariwer Bandhu SWL Club in Chhattisgarh, India; Mukta Banu, a member of the Shetu RFI Listeners Club in Naogaon, Bangladesh; RFI English Listeners Club member Dipita Chakrabarty from New Delhi, India, and last but not least, RFI English listener Murshida Parvin Lata, the vice – president of the Sonali Badhan Female Listeners Club in Bogura, Bangladesh.

Congratulations, winners!

Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: “One Woman” by Beth Blatt, Graham Lyle, and Fahan Hassan, performed by the United Nation Women Singers; “Toy Symphony” by Leopold Mozart; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer, and “Nubian Lady” by Kenny Barron, performed by Bobbi Humphrey and her orchestra.  

Do you have a music request? Send it to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr

This week’s question … you must listen to the show to participate. After you’ve listened to the show, take another listen to the first story on Alison Hird and Sarah Elzas’ Spotlight on France podcast number 124, which will help you with the answer.

You have until 31 March to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 5 April 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

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.   

International report

Europe’s defence vulnerabilities exposed as US shifts on Ukraine

Issued on:

With war at Europe’s doorstep and US support uncertain, the continent must focus on military readiness and strategic autonomy. RFI’s David Coffey speaks with Serge Stroobants of the Institute for Economics and Peace on whether Europe can defend itself and at what cost.

The sharp decline in US-Ukraine relations has raised doubts about American support for Europe, as the continent assesses its ability to defend itself against a threat from Russia.

Donald Trump’s decision to cut military aid to Ukraine this week signals a  shift in US foreign policy and raises questions about America’s commitment to Europe’s security.

From shortages in the number of tanks and the availablity of artillery, to the debate over a unified European army, leaders must decide whether to bolster national forces or embrace deeper military cooperation.

As France and the UK guard their nuclear arsenals and Russia tests Europe’s resolve, can the EU build a credible deterrent, or will it continue to rely on America?

The Director for Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa at the Institute for Economics and Peace, Serge Stroobants, explained to RFI that Europe lacks the capacity to react quickly to security threats, with defence procurement bogged down by fragmentation and slow production timelines.

As early as 2016, Germany’s defence industry acknowledged that no major projects would reach completion for at least six to eight years. Today the projections are even worse.

“If you want to invest quickly in the military – into defence, into new equipment and weapon systems – these need to be bought off the shelf outside of Europe,” with the US, Turkey, and South Korea as key suppliers, he says.

Defence neglected

Beyond military upgrades, Europe faces a broader challenge as its entire economic and state system must adapt to meet modern security demands.

EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s recent pledge to cut red tape for defence procurement is a step in the right direction, Stroobants says, but it comes too late and under pressure from events rather than forward planning.

“The problem is – as is so often with the EU – we are doing this under the pressure of the events. We’re not doing this in advance. We’re not planning. We don’t have a strategy.”

Despite being a continent of 500 million people – and the world’s third-largest economic and military power – Europe remains unable to ensure its own security due to a longstanding lack of strategic foresight and neglect of defence spending.

As it stands, a unified EU defence force remains a challenge due to Europe’s struggle to coordinate military policy alongside foreign diplomacy and development.

Stroobants explains that peace and security are based on three pillars – diplomacy, development and defence. “When you look at the EU, this has been done for almost 75 years, but if you are not able to integrate foreign policy and foreign development…and have common influence outside of European borders? Well, it doesn’t really help to only unify just one of those three pillars,” he said.

While the EU has made progress in development and soft power, true strategic influence for the bloc requires the full integration of defence and diplomacy to establish an undivided foreign policy and a stronger global presence.

‘Europe must do the heavy lifting’ in Ukraine, needs ‘US backing’: UK’s Starmer

Reshaping Europe

“For 30 to 35 years now, we have been divesting from defence, but it’s much more than defence. It’s the entire society that has lived with the idea that we would live eternally in peace,” Stroobants says.

He argues that to independently deter Russian aggression, European nations must go beyond bolstering their military capabilities – they need to rethink their entire strategic approach.

“If you want to be ready, you need to invest in defence…but you also need to reshape your society and your infrastructure,” he adds.

He also points out that with France and the UK as Europe’s only nuclear powers, their cooperation on a nuclear umbrella remains uncertain. France insists its deterrent will stay national but may engage allies without losing autonomy. Both nations favour a “coalition of the willing” over an EU or NATO-led approach, prioritising national security.

“You can have 20,000 nuclear warheads, but if you have nobody who is strong enough to use them, they are not going to be a deterrent”

17:17

Standing alone: Europe’s defence exposed as US ‘drops’ Ukraine

David Coffey

‘Deterrance and power’

While Moscow takes America’s military threat seriously and views European states as weak, Stroobants added,  Europe must take concrete steps to change this perception and restore credible deterrence.

European security hinges on two key concepts: deterrence and power. Deterrence relies not just on military capability but on the will to use it – because, as Stroobants puts it, “you can have 20,000 nuclear warheads, but if you have nobody who is strong enough to use them, they are not going to be a deterrent.

“And that’s exactly what’s happening with the EU at the moment”.

True power – accroding to Stroobants – is essentially a combination of military, economic, and diplomatic strength,comboined with a clear strategy and the political will to act.

Britain holds back as France pushes for truce between Russia and Ukraine

While Europe possesses significant resources, it lacks a unified vision on how to confront Putin’s Russia and define its role in an increasingly aggressive global order – leaving it strategically adrift and unable to deter adversaries effectively.

The absence of key nations – including the Baltic states – from a recent high-level security meeting in London only underscores the challenge of consolidating a unified European deterrent.

“After having lived in the military for 30 years, in Europe and under the NATO umbrella, not incorporating all the allies or member states [at high level meetings] is really strange,” he said.

For Stroobants, Europe now is facing the disintegration of alliances that have taken over seven decades to build.

Spotlight on Africa

Spotlight on Africa: celebrating female empowerment for Women’s History Month

Issued on:

This week, Spotlight on Africa highlights women’s empowerment across the continent, as March marks the beginning of Women’s History Month, and International Women’s Day on 8 March.

Officially recognised by the United Nations in 1977, International Women’s Day (IWD) originated from the labour movements of the early twentieth century.

On 8 March, women around the world – and throughout the month in some countries – are celebrated and recognised for their social, cultural, economic and political achievements.

The day also serves as a call to action to accelerate progress towards gender parity.

In 2025, the United Nations will mark International Women’s Day under the theme: For All Women and Girls: Rights. Equality. Empowerment.”

While the situation for women in parts of Africa is undeniably influenced by conflicts, disasters, and insecurity, this episode focuses on progress and empowerment.

Empowering

Spotlight on Africa’s first guest is Magalie Lebreton Traoré, an expert in digital transitions across the African continent at the United Nation’s Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco).

As Unesco leads training for women in AI across Africa’s five regions, Magalie joins us to discuss how women are taking the lead in shaping high-tech industries, particularly artificial intelligence. This technological leap presents significant opportunities for women’s leadership and innovation.

Moreover, a study published in Nature revealed that 79 percent of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) could be improved or achieved through AI.

To tackle gender and geographical inequalities in AI, Unesco has made these issues a priority in its Recommendation on the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence – the first global standard-setting framework in this field, unanimously adopted by Unesco Member States in November 2021.

Celebrating

And to broaden the conversation, we also talk to a curator and two artists from Johannesburg in South Africa, who are organising a special exhibition to highlight the work of artist-mothers and women artists caring for families.

Lara Koseff is a curator at INCCA, the Independent Network for Contemporary Culture & Art in Johannesburg. She has established the second edition of ‘Art After Baby‘, with the support of the National Arts Council South Africa.

These female artists and mothers have been selected to receive support and mentorship in order to complete and exhibit a body of work in solo exhibitions at Victoria Yards in Johannesburg until the end of March.

Lara Koseff, Siviwe James and Phumelele Kunene join us on the line from South Africa.

 


Episode mixed by Erwan Rome.

Spotlight on Africa is produced by Radio France Internationale’s English language service.

International report

Kurdish leader Ocalan calls for PKK disarmament, paving way for peace

Issued on:

The imprisoned leader of the Kurdistan Workers Party, the PKK, Abdullah Ocalan, has called for an end to the fight against the Turkish state. This may open the door to ending four decades of conflict that has claimed over 40,000 lives. RFI’s correspondent in Istanbul looks at the implications for the wider region.

In a packed conference hall in an Istanbul hotel, Ahmet Turk, a leading member of Turkey’s pro-Kurdish Dem Party, read a statement by Ocalan calling for the organization, which he founded, to disarm and dissolve itself, declaring an end to the decades-long conflict.

 The PKK, designated as a terrorist organization by the European Union and the United States, has been fighting for autonomy and Kurdish minority rights in Turkey since the 1980s.

Ocalan, imprisoned in a Turkish jail since 1999, made his disarmament call after the PKK suffered significant military setbacks in recent years.

 “The PKK is almost finished within the borders of Turkey,” explained Mesut Yegen, a political scientist at the Istanbul-based Reform Institute.

However, Yegen claims with the PKK now primarily based in northern Iraq on Turkey’s frontier, while its affiliate in Syria, the SDF, controls a large swathe of territory bordering Turkey all sides still have an interest in peace.

“We know that the Turkish state needs a peace process because it’s worried about the future development in the region in Syria and Iraq,” added Yegen.

Turkey looks for regional help in its battle against Kurdish rebels in Iraq

 

Cautious response

The Turkish government gave a cautious response to Ocalan’s statement, saying it’s waiting for the PKK to disarm. The PKK leadership based in Iraq, ahead of Ocalan’s statement, declared it is looking for gestures from the government before any disarmament.

“The peace process in Turkey will largely depend on what emerges, what kind of a deal emerges inside Syria,” Asli Aydintasbas, a visiting senior fellow with the Brookings Institution in Washington, said.

“So we’re also seeing Turkey be more cautious. That doesn’t mean, you know, Turkey won’t reverse course if it feels there’s no room to go with Syrian Kurds or inside the peace process in Turkey.”

Turkish armed forces are massed on the Syrian border with Ankara, demanding the SDF merge with the Syrian army under the control of Syria’s new rulers, with whom the Turkish government has close ties.

For now, the SDF leader Mazloum Abdi declared his force is not bound by Ocalan’s disarmament call while demanding Ankara end its ongoing attacks on its troops.

Turkey’s Saturday Mothers keep up vigil for lost relatives

Scepticism

Analyst Mesut Yegen adds that ending the PKK conflict will come at a price for Ankara.  “They’re (PKK) expecting that in return for that, the state promises that at least a kind of autonomy or status for Syrian Kurds is going to be recognised by the Syrian regime, the new regime, and that the Turkish state also supports this kind of solution.

“In addition to this, of course, the expectation is that some reforms will be implemented in Turkey with regards to the Kurdish question.”

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has distanced himself from the current efforts to end the conflict, other than saying a historic opportunity exists for Kurds and Turks to live in peace but offering no concessions.

For months, a crackdown on Turkey’s legal Kurdish movement continues, with the removal of elected mayors and arrests of journalists and human rights activists. 

Trial of alleged PKK figures accused of financing terror begins in France

Turkish commentator on Turkey’s Politikyol news portal, Sezin Oney, warns unless the causes of the conflict are addressed, there’s little hope of a permanent peace.

 “Probably, any disarmament or any disbanding of PKK would be a gimmick,” warns Oney.

“It wouldn’t be a real actual disbanding, and it might just appear in a year under a different name. Because they would still have the pretext to argue that armed struggle is necessary because the Kurds in Turkey don’t have their democratic rights.”

With previous peace efforts failing, opinion polls indicate that the public remains sceptical of this latest effort. But for 75-year-old Ocalan, analysts warn it may be his last chance of any hope of freedom.

The Sound Kitchen

Lighting up homes in 12 African countries

Issued on:

This week on The Sound Kitchen you’ll hear the answer to the question about the “Mission 300” plan. You’ll hear about the island Yap, and hear your fellow listener’s thoughts on “The Listener’s Corner” with Paul Myers. There’s Ollia Horton’s “Happy Moment”, and Erwan Rome’s “Music from Erwan”, too – all that, as well as the new quiz and bonus questions, so click 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.

The RFI English team is pleased to announce that Saleem Akhtar Chadhar, the president of the RFI Seven Stars Listening Club in District Chiniot, Pakistan, won the RFI / Planète Radio ePOP video contest, in the RFI Clubs category. Bravo Saleem! Mubarak ho!

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!

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 bilingual 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 counselled 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 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 Spotlight on France, Spotlight on Africa, The International Report, and of course, The Sound Kitchen. We also have an award-winning bilingual series – an old-time radio show, with actors (!) to help you learn French, called Les voisins du 12 bis

Remember, podcasts are radio, 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 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 1 February, I asked you a question about our article “African nations set to light up the homes of 300 million people by 2030”.

Nearly 600 million Africans live without access to electricity, which is higher than any other continent. The World Bank and the African Development Bank have a plan: Dubbed “Mission 300”, it’s meant to connect half of those homes to power by 2030.

You were to send in the names of four African countries that have committed to reform their electricity utility companies, push renewable energy integration, and raise targets to improve access to national electricity. The World Bank grant will only be available to countries once these reforms have been carried out.

The answer is, to quote our article: “In Nigeria, an estimated 90 million people, 40 percent of the population, don’t have access to electricity. The country, along with Senegal, Zambia and Tanzania is one of a dozen that committed as part of the Mission 300 Plan.”

The other countries are Chad, Côte d’Ivoire, Mauritania, DRC, Niger, Liberia, Madagascar, and Malawi. 

In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question: “What item have you held on to as a remembrance of something?”

Do you have a bonus question idea? Send it to us!

The winners are: RFI English listener Radhakrishna Pillai from Kerala State, India. Radhakrishna is also this week’s bonus question winner. Congratulations, Radhakrishna, on your double win !

Also on the list of lucky winners this week are Ahsan Ejaz, a member of the RFI Fans Club in Sheikhupura, Pakistan, and Sharmin Sultana, a member of the Shetu RFI Listeners Club in Naogaon, Bangladesh. Rounding out the list are two RFI English listeners: Subhas Paul, a member of the RFI Students Radio Club in West Bengal, India, and Christian Ghibaudo from Tende, France.

Congratulations, winners!

Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: The “Vivace” from Serenade for Small Orchestra by Jean Françaix, performed by the Cleveland Orchestra conducted by Louis Lane; “Djourou”, performed by Ballaké Sissoko and Sona Jobarteh; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer; “Happy” by Pharrell Williams, and “Baul Song” by Lalan, performed by Torap Ali Shah.

Do you have a music request? Send it to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr

This week’s question … you must listen to the show to participate. After you’ve listened to the show, re-read our article “French president Macron set to brief EU leaders over details of Trump talks”, which will help you with the answer.

You have until 24 March to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 29 March 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

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.   


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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.

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