RELIGION
Secret oaths and blacked-out windows: what happens inside the papal conclave?
The conclave that begins in Vatican City on Wednesday is the process of electing the next leader of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics. Shrouded in mystery, with all those involved sworn to secrecy on threat of ex-communication, what do we know about what goes on behind the sealed doors of the Sistine Chapel?
At stake with the election of a new pope is the direction of the Catholic Church, a 2,000-year-old institution with huge global influence but which is battling to adapt to the modern world, and to recover its reputation after the scandal of child sexual abuse by priests.
The process of this election – the conclave – however, is one element not in line for modernisation. Shrouded in secrecy, its name is derived from the Latin cum (with) and clavis (key) – meaning a “room that can be locked”.
This secrecy has seen the conclave enshrined in the popular imagination. The film Conclave, based on the bestselling novel by British author Robert Harris, picked up an Oscar, four BAFTAs and a Golden Globe during this year’s awards season.
‘Princes of the Church’
The 133 cardinals – the so-called “Princes of the Church” – who will vote will gather on Wednesday afternoon under the frescoed splendour of the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican.
A cardinal (from the Latin cardinalis or principal) is a high dignitary of the Catholic Church chosen by the pope to assist him in his government. They form the top echelon of the Catholic Church, with their scarlet robes representing the blood of Christ.
The creation of cardinals reflects the political views of the pontiff, who normally uses this power to shape the selection of his own successor. The current College of Cardinals is a diverse group, thanks to Pope Francis appointing figures from far-flung diocese, some gaining a cardinal for the first time – such as Brunei, Mongolia and South Sudan.
This diversity means some observers are predicting a protracted process. Vatican affairs specialist Marco Politi told French news agency AFP that, given the unknowns, this conclave could be “the most spectacular in 50 years”.
Oath of secrecy
During the conclave, the cardinals are forbidden from contacting the outside world. They will stay at the Santa Marta guesthouse – although prior to 1996 they slept on camp beds in the Apostolic Palace, which is connected to the Sistine Chapel.
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All windows in the conclave zone are darkened to guarantee privacy. Ahead of the vote, technicians deactivate all technological devices installed in recent years in the Sistine Chapel and sweep for secret recording devices.
The day before the conclave they will install “approximately 80 lead seals at all entrances to the perimeter”.
The extreme secrecy required extends to these technicians too, and all support staff – cleaners, cooks, doctors and nurses, drivers and elevator operators. All took an oath of secrecy on Monday. The punishment for breaking it? Automatic ex-communication.
Twelve technicians and maintenance craftspeople will remain inside the Sistine Chapel for the duration of the conclave, maintaining temperature, lighting and electrical systems, and assisting with ceremonial logistics such as operating the famous stove – which is now activated by remote control.
The vote
On Wednesday, the day the conclave begins, the cardinal electors take part in a morning mass in St Peter’s Basilica. They will then gather in the Pauline Chapel of the Apostolic Palace at 4:15pm and invoke the assistance of the Holy Spirit in making their choice.
They proceed at 4:30pm to the Sistine Chapel, where the election will be held, and take an oath vowing secrecy and promising that, if elected, they will conduct the role faithfully.
The master of ceremonies gives the order extra omnes (“everybody out”) and all those not permitted to vote leave the chapel.
The masters of ceremonies then distribute ballots to the electors. Lots are drawn to select three to serve as “scrutineers”, three infirmarii to collect the votes of cardinals who fall ill and three “revisers” who check the ballot counting by the scrutineers.
Cardinals are given rectangular ballots inscribed with the words Eligo in Summum Pontificem (“I elect as supreme pontiff”), with a blank space underneath. They write down the name of their choice for future pope, preferably in handwriting which cannot be identified, and fold the ballot paper twice.
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Each cardinal takes turns to walk to the altar, carrying his vote in the air so that it can be clearly seen, and says aloud the following oath: “I call as my witness Christ the Lord, who will be my judge, that my vote is given to the one who before God I think should be elected.”
The electors place their folded paper on a plate, which is used to tip the ballots into a silver urn on the altar, in front of scrutineers. They then bow and return to their seats.
Once all ballots are collected, scrutineers shake the urn to mix the votes up, transfer them into a second container to check there are the same number of ballots as electors and begin counting them.
Two scrutineers note down the names while a third reads them aloud, piercing the ballots with a needle through the word Eligo and stringing them together. The revisers then double-check that the scrutineers have not made any mistakes.
If no one has secured two-thirds of the votes, there is no winner and the electors move straight on to a second round. There are two pairs of votes per day, morning and afternoon, until a new pope has been elected.
The ballots and any handwritten notes made by the cardinals are then destroyed, burnt in a stove in the chapel. It emits black smoke if no pope has been elected and white smoke if there is a new pontiff.
The smoke is turned black or white through the addition of chemicals – potassium perchlorate, anthracene (a component of coal tar) and sulfur to produce black smoke, or potassium chlorate, lactose and chloroform resin to produce the white smoke.
If voting continues for three days without a winner, there is a day of prayer, reflection and dialogue. If after another seven ballots there is no winner, there is another day of pause.
If the cardinals reach a fourth pause with no result, they can agree to vote only on the two most popular candidates, with the winner requiring a clear majority.
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In 2013, the conclave lasted 27 hours, and in 2005 it was 26 hours. The shortest on record took place in 1503, when it took cardinals just 10 hours to elect Pope Pius III.
As for the longest, in the 13th century it took almost three years, beginning n 1268 – 1,006 days to be exact – to choose Pope Clement IV’s successor.
From late 1269 the cardinals allowed themselves to be locked in to try to reach a decision.
When they still hadn’t managed this by June 1270, frustrated locals tore the roof off in a bid to speed things along – inspired by a quip by an English cardinal that without the roof, the Holy Spirit could descend unhindered.
When a cardinal is elected pope, the masters of ceremonies and other non-electors are brought back into the Sistine Chapel and the cardinal dean asks the winner: “Do you accept your canonical election as Supreme Pontiff?”
As soon as he gives his consent, he becomes pope – and is free to celebrate, as John Paul II did in 1978, reportedly walking around pouring Champagne for the cardinals and singing Polish folk songs.
Controversies
Conclaves have seen their share of controversy over the centuries. This year, United States President Donald Trump last week posted an AI-generated image of himself dressed as the pope on his Truth Social platform, after joking that he would be his own first choice for the next pontiff, drawing the ire of the Church.
The New York State Catholic Conference wrote in a post on X: “There is nothing clever or funny about this image, Mr President. We just buried our beloved Pope Francis and the cardinals are about to enter a solemn conclave to elect a new successor of St Peter. Do not mock us.”
Last week, France’s President Emmanuel Macron was accused by Italian media of attempted interference in the conclave, after he held a series of meetings with cardinals and Church officials while in Rome for Pope Francis’s funeral.
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In 2013, so convinced were they of his success, upon sight of the famous white smoke signal the Italian bishops’ conference sent out a press release congratulating Italian Cardinal Angelo Scola – when Pope Francis had just been elected.
In the days leading up the conclave, Italian newspapers openly promoted Scola as the next pope, appearing to have missed the warning contained in a traditional Italian saying that front-runners at a papal conclave are often disappointed: “He who enters a conclave as a pope, leaves it as a cardinal.”
In 1241, when the conclave was dragging on, the head of Rome’s government locked the cardinals into a dilapidated building and refused to clean the lavatories or provide doctors for those who fell ill.
According to Frederic Baumgartner in his Behind Locked Doors: A History of the Papal Elections, the cardinals only reached a decision – electing Celestine IV – after one of them died and the Romans threatened to exhume his corpse and have it make decisions.
(with newswires)
Diplomacy
France to host Syrian president on first European visit
French President Emmanuel Macron will host Syrian counterpart Ahmed al-Sharaa on Wednesday for the former Islamist rebel’s first European visit, despite growing doubts about Syria’s ruling Islamist coalition and protests from France’s far right.
Since the fall of longtime Syrian ruler Bashar al-Assad in December following fourteen years of devastating war, the international community has been pressing the new authorities, who have roots in the Al-Qaeda jihadist network, to respect personal freedoms, protect minorities and include all components of society in the country’s transition.
Many countries say they will monitor the new authorities’ conduct before fully lifting Assad-era sanctions.
“This meeting is part of France’s historic commitment to the Syrian people who aspire to peace and democracy,” the Elysee Palace said on Tuesday.
Macron will “reiterate France’s support for the construction of a new Syria, a free, stable, sovereign Syria that respects all components of Syrian society”, it added.
Influence
During the meeting, Macron will emphasise “his demands on the Syrian government, primarily the stabilisation of the region, including Lebanon, and the fight against terrorism,” the presidency said.
President Sharaa is still subject to a UN travel ban. France most likely had to request an exemption from the United Nations, as was the case for his recent trips to Turkey and Saudi Arabia, according to a source familiar with the matter.
France, a former colonial ruler of Syria, is eyeing an opportunity to increase its influence in the country after years of Russian presence.
In February, France organised a conference in Paris on the reconstruction of Syria, in the hope of steering the fragile transition. The country has been devastated by years of civil war, with over 90 percent of the population living below the poverty line.
Macron had first invited Syria’s new interim leader to visit France in February after Islamist-led forces toppled longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad late last year.
Macron calls Syrian leader to discuss transition, terrorism, sanctions
In March, he repeated the invitation but made it conditional on the formation of an inclusive Syrian government representing “all components of civil society”, describing his initial negotiations with the interim leaders as “positive”.
Far-right critical of visit
The French far right criticised the upcoming talks on Wednesday.
Far-right leader Marine Le Pen accused Macron of hosting talks with “a jihadist” who has been involved with the Islamic State group and Al-Qaeda, adding such a meeting would be “provocative and irresponsible”.
“Shock and dismay,” Le Pen said on X.
“Once again, Emmanuel Macron is damaging France’s image and discrediting its commitment, particularly among its allies, in the fight against Islamism.”
Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot, who met with the Syrian leader on a visit to Damascus in January, defended the talks.
“The safety of French people is at stake in Syria,” Barrot told broadcaster RTL, adding it was important to fight terrorism and drug trafficking in the conflict-riven country as well as control migration.
Not engaging the leaders of Syria and Lebanon would amount to “rolling out the red carpet for Daesh,” he said, referring to the Islamic State jihadists.
French companies are meanwhile eyeing a role in Syria’s reconstruction.
Last week, French logistics giant CMA CGM signed a 30-year contract to develop and operate the port of Latakia, at an event attended by Sharaa.
Sectarian clashes
Syria‘s new Islamist authorities have vowed inclusive rule in the multi-confessional, multi-ethnic country.
But sectarian clashes in March in which more than 1,700 people, mostly Alawites, were killed in coastal areas sparked widespread condemnation.
More recent clashes involving Druze fighters, as well as reports of abuses from NGOs, have also raised doubts about the interim government’s ability to control extremists in its ranks.
French and German Foreign Ministers call for ‘an inclusive Syria’
Since Assad’s overthrow, Israel has also launched hundreds of strikes on Syria, including one near the presidential palace in Damascus on Friday.
Israel has repeatedly said its forces stand ready to protect the Druze minority and said the strike near the presidential palace was intended to send a “clear message” to Syria’s new rulers.
But the interim government described the strike as a “dangerous escalation”, while the United Nations on Saturday urged Israel to halt its attacks on Syria “at once”.
Israeli foe Iran, which propped up the now ousted Assad government, condemned the strikes, accusing Israel of seeking to “destroy and annihilate the defence, economic and infrastructure capabilities of Syria as an independent country”.
Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah group, also an Assad ally, said that the attacks were “a clear attempt to undermine” and weaken Syria.
(with AFP)
Russian journalist who criticised Ukraine war escaped to France with NGO’s help
A Russian reporter critical of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine said on Monday she had fled to France after Reporters Without Borders (RSF) helped coordinate her escape. The NGO hailed her resilience and said her story was a “message of hope” for other journalists.
Since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, Moscow has launched an unprecedented crackdown on media freedoms, making it illegal to criticise the army and its war against Ukraine.
Journalist and film critic Ekaterina Barabash was arrested in February on allegations of spreading “false information” about the Russian armed forces in several posts she made on social media.
She was detained soon after attending the Berlinale film festival in February and fled house arrest in April.
Speaking in an interview with French news agency AFP at the media watchdog’s headquarters in Paris on Monday, Barabash, 64, said she even considered suicide to avoid going to prison.
“I began looking for some poison,” said Barabash, who faces up to 10 years in prison for criticising Moscow’s military action in Ukraine.
“Russian prison, it’s not a life. It is worse than death.”
Speaking to reporters at the news conference, Barabash said her journey to France was “difficult” and took around two-and-a-half weeks.
Reporters Without Borders, known by its French acronym RSF, helped bring her to safety.
Resilience
The journalist, whose only son lives in Ukraine, had written for several news outlets, including the Russian service of Radio France Internationale (RFI).
Her 96-year-old mother stayed behind in Moscow.
Barabash said “many” people were involved in her escape, including Leonid Nevzlin, an ally of self-exiled Kremlin critic Mikhail Khodorkovsky, who “financed” her evacuation.
“I crossed all borders by myself,” said Barabash, who was born in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv when it was still part of the Soviet Union.
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RSF earlier helped the escape of former Russian state television journalist Marina Ovsyannikova, who protested against the Ukraine conflict during a live broadcast in 2022.
Barabash said she removed her electronic bracelet when she fled house arrest.
“It’s somewhere in the Russian forest,” she said.
She said she hid “for two weeks” during her escape and crossed the border on her birthday on 26 April.
RSF director Thibaut Bruttin praised her resilience.
“Several times, we thought she had been arrested or was in danger of being arrested. Several times, the plan changed. Once, we thought she was dead.”
Bruttin said it had become more difficult to help journalists escape Russia after the media watchdog smuggled out Ovsyannikova.
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Message of hope
He also said Barabash’s escape was a “message of hope” for Russian reporters.
“There are forces that are willing to help you in your difficult situation,” he said.
“There is no despair, there is no inevitability and RSF stands with all those who embody independent journalism.”
Both RSF and Barabash said they could not disclose all the details of her escape.
RSF said Barabash’s stay in France is being “monitored” by the French authorities, “using “a protocol that allows us to ensure her safety,” Bruttin said.
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“I am going to ask for political asylum,” Barabash said, adding that she hoped to continue working for RFI.
Barabash has been an outspoken critic of Moscow’s military offensive against Ukraine.
In 2022, she wrote on Facebook that Russia had “bombed the country” and “razed whole cities to the ground”.
Days before her arrest, she wrote of her “hatred, hatred, hatred for those who started all this”.
“So many lives have been destroyed, so many families torn apart,” she said on Facebook.
Barabash said on Monday she was optimistic, even though she would have to start a new life in a foreign country from scratch.
“I don’t know a single person who has died of starvation in exile,” she said.
(with AFP)
German elections 2025
Merz elected as German Chancellor after failing in first round
The German parliament on Tuesday elected Friedrich Merz as Chancellor in a second round of voting. Merz failed in a first round of voting earlier in the day, triggering franctic hours of lobbying to gain support for a second vote that would back him.
The CDU politician received 325 yes votes in the second round of voting, nine more than he needed for election. 289 MPs voted against him. He needed a minimum of 316 votes in the 630 strong parliament.
According to the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ,) there was one abstention and three invalid votes.
Compared to the first round, 15 more parliamentarians supported Merz, but he still fell three votes short of the result that would have been expected if all members of the CDU/CSU and SPD had voted for him.
During the first vote on Tuesday, Merz obtained just 310 yes-votes, while 307 parliamentarians voted against him.
Reacting to the initial defeat, Alternative for Germany (AfD) co-leader Alice Weidel said that “Merz should step aside and the way should be cleared for a general election,” but after recess the AfD agreed to a second vote.
Embarrassment
The second round became possible after the coalition between Merz’s CDU/CSU and the Social Demcrat SPD came to an agreement with the Greens and Die Linke, creating a two-thirds majority needed for a follow-up vote.
Merz’s initial failure to win backing at the first attempt is a first for post-war Germany and an embarrassment for a man who has promised to restore German leadership on the world stage.
The two parties have vowed to revive growth in an economy facing its third year of downturn amid a global trade war sparked by US President Donald Trump’s sweeping import tariffs.
They have also promised to dramatically boost defence spending as the US commitment to the NATO alliance weakens.
But both have lost support since their already dismal performances in February – especially the conservatives, due in part to frustration with Merz’s decision to loosen borrowing limits, despite campaign promises of fiscal rectitude.
(With Newswires)
Romania elections 2025
Romania names interim premier as pre-election turmoil deepens
Romania’s Presidency announced on Tuesday that it appointed minister of the interior Catalin Predoiu as interim premier, a day after the prime minister’s resignation deepened political tumult. The shift takes place between two rounds of Presidential elections.
Romania’s pro-EU Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu stepped down on Monday after a far-right candidate topped the first round of a tense presidential vote rerun.
With over 40 percent of the votes, far-right EU critic George Simion topped Sunday’s election first round, while the ruling coalition’s candidate narrowly lost out to Bucharest’s mayor for the second spot.
Ciolacu’s resignation comes just two weeks ahead of the presidential vote runoff on May 18 in the EU and NATO member, which has gained in strategic importance since Russia invaded Ukraine, neighbouring Romania.
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Ciolacu said his Social Democrats (PSD) party would leave the ruling coalition but they are expected to remain in the government on an interim basis until after the election run-off.
Predoiu, 56, is a former justice minister who already served as interim premier in 2012.
Predoiu, who practiced as a lawyer in the past, is also the current interim president of the liberals (PNL.)
Predoiu told reporters on Monday that the liberals have “sworn-in ministers in the government, they will carry out their duties”.
“As long as these mandates are in office, the PNL does its duty,” he said.
Closely watched rerun
In Sunday’s first round, Simion, who leads the nationalist AUR party, got twice as much votes as the pro-EU Mayor Nicusor Dan, an independent.
A far-right victory in the second round, closely watched by Brussels and Washington, could mark a shift in the country’s foreign policy.
The president represents Romania at EU and NATO summits and can veto EU votes. He also appoints the premier and other government posts.
Campaigning on a vow to “put Romania first,” Simion, a fan of US President Donald Trump, has criticised “Brussels’ unelected bureaucrats”, accusing them of having “meddled in the Romanian elections,” a claim repeated by US Vice-President JD Vance during his speech at the Munich Security Conference.
In December, Romania’s constitutional court in a shock move scrapped the presidential ballot after far-right politician Calin Georgescu unexpectedly won the first round.
The annulment followed allegations of Russian interference and a massive TikTok campaign that emerged in favour of Georgescu.
Simion has called the annulment “a coup d’etat”. Georgescu was barred from the rerun but two major far-right parties decided to back Simion instead.
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(With newswires)
Justice
Court finds seven guilty of bullying Paris Olympics choreographer
A French court has found seven people guilty of bullying the chief choreographer of last year’s Paris Olympics opening ceremony online, handing down fines and suspended prison terms.
The seven accused, of whom only one was present in court, were found guilty of sending hate messages, and even a death threat, to Thomas Jolly, 43, over a controversial scene in the ceremony.
Jolly filed a legal complaint over the cyberbullying shortly after the open-air spectacular on the Seine that drew mostly praise.
However, some Christians and far-right groups took offence at one of its scenes incorporating LGBTQ performers that they claimed mocked Christian values.
In his complaint Jolly, who is openly gay, said he was being targeted “by threatening and insulting messages” that he said criticised his sexual orientation and “wrongly assumed Israeli origins”, according to prosecutors.
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Ceremony organisers said they were portraying feasting Olympian gods in a nod to classical paintings, with a blue-painted French pop star and actor, Philippe Katerine, playing Dionysus (also referred to as Bacchus), the father of Sequana, the goddess of the River Seine.
But some interpreted it as a disrespectful parody of the Last Supper, the final meal between Jesus and his apostles.
US President Donald Trump called the ceremony “a disgrace”.
Proud moment
But Jolly received the full support of French President Emmanuel Macron who said he was “outraged” by the cyberbullying, adding that “the French were very proud of this ceremony”.
Jolly went on to win an honorary Molière trophy for his contribution to the Paris Olympics ceremonies, at the 36th annual theatre awards on 28 April.
The fines in Monday’s sentencing went up to €3,000 and the suspended sentences up to four months.
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All seven of those found guilty were also ordered to pay a symbolic euro to Jolly, and undergo a five-day civic training programme.
Investigators have also been looking into similar complaints from Barbara Butch, a French DJ and lesbian activist who starred in the controversial scene.
Her lawyer said she had been “threatened with death, torture and rape”.
Five people are to stand trial in that case in September, prosecutors told French news agency AFP in March.
(with AFP)
France diplomacy
Macron courts Turkmenistan’s leader in rare Elysee talks over gas reserves
French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday hosted the de facto leader of Turkmenistan for rare talks at the Elysee Palace, with Paris showing interest in the vast gas reserves of the reclusive Central Asian state.
Known in Turkmenistan as “Arkadag” (“protector”) and president since 2006, Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov remains the number one in the ex-Soviet Caspian nation despite handing over the presidency to his son Serdar in 2022.
The trip to Paris is a highly unusual visit abroad by Berdymukhamedov, who is the subject of a cult of personality at home and has penned numerous books including, most recently, one honouring his own achievements.
New York-based Human Rights Watch says in its 2024 World Report that Turkmenistan “made no improvements to its dire human rights record…authorities continue to suppress fundamental rights and freedoms, including freedoms of religion, movement, expression, and association. Recent political reforms have only deepened authoritarian rule.”
The French media watchdog Reporters Without Borders ranks Turkmenistan as the third least press-friendly country in the world, just ahead of North Korea and Eritrea.
Gas reserves
France and the EU are eyeing gas reserves in the region as Europe moves to end its reliance on Russian gas in the wake of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
Turkmenistan, meanwhile, is seeking to shift more of its exports westwards and reduce its dependence on China as its main export partner.
The landlocked state has the fourth-largest gas reserves in the world but is vulnerable to fluctuations in Beijing’s economy.
How to deliver any gas to Europe from Turkmenistan, which has borders with Iran and Afghanistan, remains a logistical issue.
‘Open a new page’
The official Turkmenistans TDH News Agency reported that “our heroic friend” Berdymukhamedov had a “conversation with the representative of France,” hoping that his visit will “give a powerful impetus to the development of bilateral cooperation” and “open a new page in the history of relations” between Ashgabat and Paris.
Several agreements were signed at the Elysee but they did not mention cooperation on energy.
France’s Thales Alenia Space Group signed a framework agreement for the supply of a second telecommunications satellite to the former Soviet republic.
The two governments also agreed to cooperate in the field of sustainable urban development while concluding a roadmap for educational and academic cooperation and the extension of a joint archaeological mission in Turkmenistan.
Berdymukhamedov, who emphasises neutrality as the cornerstone of Turkmenistan’s foreign policy, last visited France in 2010, when Nicolas Sarkozy was president. He also met with German chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin in 2016.
(With newswires)
Is Trump’s interest in Greenland boosting the island’s independence movement?
Issued on: Modified:
It’s been 100 days since Donald Trump made his return to the White House, and among his many plans for his second term, the US president has set his sights on Greenland. The Arctic is home to vast reserves of oil, natural gas and rare minerals, which would make it a highly strategic acquisition. As for Greenlanders, they’ve said they don’t want to be annexed or bought. That said, some of them believe the US interest also presents an opportunity…
Agnès Varda’s photographic career
Issued on: Modified:
The Carnavalet Museum in Paris has delved into filmmaker Agnès Varda’s family archives for a new exhibition highlighting her parallel career as a photographer, a practice she maintained fervently until her death in 2019. RFI spoke to one of the curators, Anne de Mondenard and Varda’s daughter Rosalie about preparing this comprehensive exhibition on until 24 August, 2025. Read more here: https://rfi.my/Bdgu
Plastic Odyssey in Madagascar to tackle plastic waste
Issued on: Modified:
The Plastic Odyssey left France two years ago with the objective of finding ways to reduce marine plastic pollution in the 30 countries most affected. The boat is currently in the Indian Ocean, exploring islands including Réunion, Mauritius and Madagascar from 29 April. Read more here ▶️ https://rfi.my/BcXo.y
Plastic pollution
Plastic Odyssey on sea-faring mission to target plastic waste in Madagascar
The Plastic Odyssey left France two years ago with the objective of finding ways to reduce marine plastic pollution in the 30 countries most affected. The vessel is currently in the Indian Ocean, exploring islands including Réunion and Mauritius. It is due to arrive in Madagascar on Tuesday.
The three-year expedition will take Plastic Odyssey around Africa, South East Asia and South America.
Its current four-month mission in the Indian Ocean is part of a partnership programme led by the Indian Ocean Commission (COI) – an intergovernmental project involving France, Madagascar, the Seychelles, Comoros and Mauritius, with support from France’s development agency, the AFD.
“The main goal is to empower more local entrepreneurs and accelerate their plastic waste recycling programme,” Alaric de Beaudrap, stopover coordinator for Plastic Odyssey, told RFI.
For this, the Plastic Odyssey crew – mostly made up of engineers – holds an intensive three-day training session called “On-board laboratory”.
More than 25 Malagasy entrepreneurs have already applied for the programme, beginning on 30 April in the Tamatave harbour, 300 kilometres away from the capital Antananarivo.
Local engagement
One company Plastic Odyssey is in touch with is Andao, which makes school tables from recycled plastic bottle caps.
“There is a huge problem of school furniture in Madagascar. They’re doing it locally at their own level. They would love to produce more of those recycled plastic tables for schools,” explains de Beaudrap.
Plastic Odyssey is a 40-metre vessel equipped with low-tech machines used to recycle plastic waste.
Once collected and processed, this recycled plastic can be used for building structures, irrigation for agriculture, flooring and furniture.
The idea is to create local jobs with machines that can be built on-site. “All those machines are easy to operate and to maintain, and can be easily replicated,” explains de Beaudrap.
“We have been in more than 30 countries so far, where we stopped with the boat and we can exchange knowledge and good practices.”
Plastic Odyssey sets off on round-the-world mission to fight marine pollution
Plastic Odyssey also runs an education programme, with children aged between eight and 15 invited on board for a lesson on plastic pollution. “The main goal is to promote a plastic-free world to young people,” says de Beaudrap.
Waste mismanagement
According to a report published in 2020 by the COI, “it seems that 92 percent of waste is mismanaged in Madagascar,” says de Beaudrap, “and less than half of this plastic waste is collected”.
There are several illegal dumping sites on the Indian Ocean island, most of them near residential areas.
“We are not yet talking about recycling in Madagascar, only collecting,” he added. “There is an urgent need to prevent this waste from reaching the rivers and the sea because, in the end, this waste will pollute the Malagasy coastlines and ecosystems.”
Global plastic recycling rates ‘stagnant’ at under 10%: study
The second major component of the stopover in Madagascar is a five-day mission around the Sainte-Marie coastal area, during which the vessel will be made available to scientists from the oceanographic institution Ifremer and the French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development, as well as universities of the Comoros and Madagascar.
“Our vessel will allow them to carry out surveys and observations of micro and macro plastics off the coast, and also to study the drift of these plastics, and what we call the link between plastics and megafauna,” explained de Beaudrap.
“This scientific approach will provide a foundation for policymakers and research centres to better identify and understand the role of plastic pollution on ecosystems – as well as its sources.”
After Madagascar, Plastic Odyssey will sail to Seychelles and the Comoro Islands, reaching Kenya in August, before its expected return to France in April 2026.
ENVIRONMENT – POLITICS
Global talks seek to curb e-waste dumping as Africa bears the brunt
The world is drowning in discarded electronics – from broken phones and laptops to old refrigerators and medical equipment – and only a tiny fraction is being recycled. Now, as electronic waste surges to record levels, more than 180 countries have gathered in Geneva to confront the growing crisis.
The talks, which opened on Monday and will run until 9 May, are being held under the Basel Convention, which controls the movement and disposal of hazardous waste. They will also cover chemical pollution under the Rotterdam and Stockholm conventions.
Africa, one of the regions hardest hit by toxic dumping, is expected to feature prominently.
In 2022, the world produced 62 million tonnes of electronic waste – enough to fill a line of trucks around the equator. That figure is expected to rise to 82 million tonnes by 2030. Yet only 22 percent is properly recycled, according to the United Nations Global E-waste Monitor.
Most of the rest ends up dumped or burned, releasing dangerous toxins into soil, water and air.
Africa bears the brunt
A large share of this waste is sent to Africa, with shipments often labelled as second-hand goods – even when the equipment is broken or near the end of its life.
In many cases, this discarded equipment ends up being recycled informally, using dangerous methods such as open burning or acid baths that release toxic chemicals into the environment.
“Many Western countries continue to export hazardous waste by presenting defective equipment as second-hand appliances,” Edem d’Almeida, founder of the Togo-based Africa Global Recycling, told RFI.
These exports have been banned since the Basel Convention came into force in 1992, yet the practice continues through loopholes and lack of enforcement.
D’Almeida warned that the true volume of waste on the continent is “largely underestimated” because much of it moves through informal channels. “It’s up to states to monitor what enters their territories, so that Africa doesn’t become the planet’s dumping ground,” he said.
AI boom risks flooding planet with ‘millions of tonnes of e-waste’
Children, mothers most exposed
The impact of informal recycling is especially dangerous for vulnerable groups.
The World Health Organization (WHO) says children and pregnant women face the greatest risks. Toxins such as lead, mercury and dioxins are released when waste is burned, stripped or soaked in acid baths. These chemicals can damage the brain, lungs and nervous system.
“E-waste recycling activities may release up to 1,000 different chemical substances,” the WHO warned in a 2021 report on e-waste and child health. Children, it said, are often directly involved in dismantling electronics at dumpsites, exposing them to serious health risks.
The damage from e-waste does not stop at human health. It can pollute water sources, harm crops and put extra strain on land in regions that are already vulnerable.
“Hazardous materials in electronic scrap can contaminate soil and water, affecting the environment and food security,” said Oleg Zaitsev, who runs an e-waste recycling company in Kazakhstan that works on projects supported by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP).
‘Forever chemicals’ and plastic
In Geneva, delegates are debating whether to restrict several long-lasting chemicals under the Stockholm Convention, including PFAS – or “forever chemicals” – found in food packaging and cosmetics.
Listing PFAS would be “a useful first step”, said Giulia Carlini, a lawyer with the Centre for International Environmental Law (CIEL), an NGO participating as an observer in the Geneva talks.
“But what’s really needed is full prohibition,” she told RFI.
She added that many of the same delegates will soon return to Geneva to negotiate a global plastics treaty, making these discussions a chance to examine wider links between different forms of waste.
Progress could be slow, with every country holding an effective veto under the rules and strong lobbying from industry groups.
Obsolete electronics pile up as e-waste outstrips recycling efforts, UN warns
Strengthening African defences
Several African nations are introducing measures to address the growing burden of e-waste.
Nigeria has set up a system where electronics importers and manufacturers contribute to recycling costs. Ghana has imposed a levy on imports of used and end-of-life electronics. Rwanda has partnered with private companies to build a national e-waste recycling centre.
UN experts say that if global collection and recycling rates reached 60 percent by 2030, the benefits would outweigh the costs by more than $38 billion – improving health, protecting ecosystems and creating jobs.
But today, less than 1 percent of Africa’s e-waste is formally recycled.
“Chemicals are an integral part of the modern world,” said Jacqueline Alvarez, head of chemicals and health at UNEP. “But too often, exposure to harmful chemicals through food, consumer products, and the environment can have severe consequences for people and the planet.”
History
From Saigon to the Paris suburbs: French-Vietnamese reflect on the legacy of war
Fifty years after the fall of Saigon, the Vietnam War continues to shape lives far beyond Southeast Asia. In Bussy-Saint-Georges near Paris, three generations of Vietnamese immigrants reflect on the conflict that forced their families into exile.
On 30 April, 1975, the fall of Saigon – the capital of Southern Vietnam – to the Communist-controlled North brought an end to the Vietnam War. A crushing defeat for the United States, it sealed the country’s reunification with a Communist regime that remains in power to this day.
In the late 1970s, many Vietnamese people fled this new regime by sea. Around 120,000 of these so-called “boat people” found refuge in France. There are now an estimated 400,000 people either born in Vietnam or with Vietnamese heritage living in the country.
A large number settled in the town of Bussy-Saint-Georges, east of Paris, where French Vietnamese people from three generations spoke to RFI.
“April 30, 1975 is a day I will never forget,” says Anh Linh Tran, a former officer in the South Vietnamese army, now in his seventies. Faced with dwindling food and ammuntion supplies, he and the 100 men under his command had no choice but to surrender.
“We were very sad, but there was nothing else we could do,” he said. He spent the next three years in prison.
Vietnam marks 70th anniversary of Dien Bien Phu victory over France
Telling ‘almost’ everything
In 1979, he fled Vietnam by boat, carrying the trauma of war with him. He reached Malaysia, then France, where his children were born and raised.
“When they were young, I promised to take them to Vietnam, where I was born,” he recalled. “I said it without thinking much, but they remembered and brought it up years later. As the trip approached, I told them I still wasn’t ready. I can’t stand the regime in place.”
He eventually returned to Vietnam in 2019, 40 years after leaving. That visit inspired his book Goodbye Vietnam, written for his children.
“I describe my time in the army, in prison, and our arrival in France. I tell them almost everything,” he said, admitting that some memories are too painful to share.
French court blocks activist’s quest to sue companies over Agent Orange
Children ‘think like the French’
Fifty-something Tran Phung Vu Nguyen was a child when he arrived in France, and has told his own children less than Anh Linh Tran.
“I don’t tell them about the sadness I experienced,” he said. “I don’t want to impose it on them. It’s not their story.”
He was only nine years old when he left Vietnam. “We escaped on a small boat with about 20 people. A pirate vessel sank us.”
They were eventually rescued by Malaysian sailors and brought to shore. Like many others, he ended up in France, and is now president of the local Vietnamese association.
His children know little about his past, but then “they don’t ask much” either.
“They were born in France, they think like the French,” he says. “Vietnamis more of a tourist destination for them. When I take them to Vietnam, it’s mainly for the scenery.”
As for the memories: “We talk about them here, in France, among ourselves.”
Writing their own story
Eighteen-year-old Minh Quan Vo, a law student in Paris who is second-generation French-Vietnamese, confirms this generational shift. He rarely questions his elders – partly out of fear of reopening old wounds, but also through a desire to write his own story.
“I studied geopolitics in high school, so I understand the importance of memory,” he notes. “But I try not to define myself by my past or my origins. I define myself by my actions.”
War, peace and progress: why 2025 will be a standout year of remembrance
While acknowledging that the past is important, he insists it shouldn’t dictate the future.
Vo says he will nonetheless take part in commemorations on 4 May in Bussy-Saint-Georges, where a monument pays homage to Vietnamese immigrants.
This article was adapted from the original in French
Cannes film festival 2025
‘I want a loud death’: Cannes Film Festival to honour slain Gaza journalist
Cannes Film Festival organisers said the screening of a documentary about Gaza photojournalist Fatima Hassouna at the event next month would honour her work, after the “horror” of her death in an Israeli air strike.
Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk by Iranian director Sepideh Farsi is to be shown at ACID Cannes, which runs parallel to the main competition, at this year’s festival from 13 to 24 May.
The film features conversations between Farsi and Hassouna, as the 25-year-old photographer documented the impact of the devastating war between Israel and Hamas on the Palestinian territory.
Hassouna was killed along with 10 of her relatives in an air strike on her family home in northern Gaza last Wednesday, the day after the documentary was announced as part of the ACID Cannes selection.
The Israeli military, which media freedom group Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has accused of carrying out a “massacre” of Palestinian journalists, claimed it had targeted a Hamas member.
“The Cannes Film Festival wishes to express its horror and deep sorrow at this tragedy, which has moved and shocked the entire world,” the festival said, in a statement on Hassouna’s death sent to French news agency AFP.
“While a film is little in the face of such a tragedy, its screening at the ACID section in Cannes on 15 May will be, in addition to the message of the film itself, a way of honouring the memory of the young woman, a victim like so many others of the war,” it added.
French journalists’ collective appeals for solidarity with colleagues in Gaza
‘She was such a light’
Just before her death, Hassouna wrote on social media: “If I die, I want a loud death. I don’t want to be just breaking news, or a number in a group.”
“She was such a light, so talented. When you see the film you’ll understand,” Farsi told Hollywood news website Deadline after her death. “I had talked to her a few hours before to tell her that the film was in Cannes and to invite her.”
The ACID festival said her “life force seemed like a miracle” in a statement released after her death.
RSF also denounced her death. “Her name joins those of nearly 200 journalists killed in 18 months. This carnage must stop,” it wrote on the Bluesky social media platform.
Also at Cannes, Palestinian twins Tarzan and Arab Nasser will showcase their latest film Once Upon a Time In Gaza, a tale of murder and friendship set in the war-torn territory, in the secondary Un Certain Regard section.
The Gaza Project: The Palestinian journalist paralysed by a bullet to the neck
Late additions
Cannes Festival organisers also this week announced two new films in its main competition that will compete for its coveted Palme d’Or award.
American filmmaker Lynne Ramsay (We Need To Talk About Kevin) has been selected for the main competition with her thriller Die My Love, starring Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson.
Of the 21 films in the main competition this year, seven have been made by women directors, the joint highest total.
Cannes Film Festival unveils diverse line-up of veteran stars and fresh talent
Iran’s Saeed Roustaee is also set to compete for the main prize with his latest feature, Mother and Child, three years after showing Leila’s Brothers in Cannes – which led to him being sentenced to six months in prison in Iran.
The festival has also secured the world premiere of the first film directed by former Twilight star Kristen Stewart – The Chronology of Water – which will screen in the Un Certain Regard competition.
She will be up against fellow American actress-turned-director Scarlett Johansson whose director debut Eleanor the Great has been selected in the same section.
(with AFP)
Trump’s first 100 days: Revolution or destruction? The view from France
Issued on:
Donald Trump’s second term in office has already sent shockwaves far beyond Washington, not only reshaping American politics but challenging global alliances and foreign economies. How do Democrats and Republicans in France view Trump’s first 100 days?
When Donald Trump was inaugurated for his second term on 20 January, he returned to the helm of the world’s most powerful nation pledging to Make America Great Again – again.
He vowed to shake things up with lightning speed and, on that front, he has delivered in spades, turning the political status quo on its head, at home and abroad.
For his detractors, Trump has been a whirlwind of destruction: eroding civil liberties, disregarding court authority, censoring university libraries accused of leftist bias, empowering tech oligarchs, disenfranchising minorities and throwing global markets into uproar with harsh new tariffs.
For his supporters, he’s a force of nature: fulfilling promises, unpicking the entrenched “deep state”, challenging intellectual elites and forging a path towards peace.
EU readies response to new US tariffs, France braces for fallout
‘He’s not wasting time’
Speaking to Nicolas Conquer, the president of Republicans Overseas France, it is clear that Trump’s dynamism has thrilled his supporters.
“I’ve seen it first-hand,” Conquer said. “He campaigned on a platform, and promises made are promises kept. Ever since day one, and now as we reach the 100-day mark, he’s been literally flooding the zone – making fast decisions and driving through much-needed reforms. Whether it’s government efficiency or the culture wars, he’s not wasting time.”
Trump’s flurry of executive orders – from immigration reforms to tariffs – has left no doubt about his intention to move fast and make changes.
Conquer suggests that Trump’s second-term energy stems from knowing he has just four years left to leave his mark: “He knows it’s now or never.”
However, criticism has been fierce – particularly of what many see as an authoritarian drift. Trump is accused of trampling on the courts, cracking down on dissent in education and bolstering oligarchic power structures.
Conquer, however, does not agree. “Looking at the political lawfare in the States,” he said, “there’s been massive obstruction by district judges interfering in executive branch policies. Historically, over the last 100 years, about 200 presidential decisions have been blocked by judges. Half of them concern Donald Trump. That’s a staggering number.”
He points to cases such as Harvard University’s reluctance to implement Trump’s executive orders targeting “wokeism” and anti-Semitism on campus, while still receiving considerable federal funding.
“You can’t have it both ways,” Conquer argued. “You can’t demand taxpayer money without adhering to government policies.”
French scientists join US protests in face of Trump administration’s ‘sabotage’
Legal resistance
Bob Valier of Democrats Abroad France paints a very different picture. For him, Trump’s victory was less about a failure of Democratic Party messaging and more about a broader systemic problem: voter apathy.
“We had the second highest turnout of my lifetime,” Valier said, “but we still lost. Not because our message wasn’t right, but because about 38 percent of eligible voters stayed home. If we bear any responsibility, it’s that we couldn’t motivate them to get out and vote.”
Valier acknowledges that Trump’s “shock and awe” approach has made coherent Democratic opposition harder. “It’s exhausting trying to fight back,” he admitted. “But that doesn’t mean we’re not doing it.”
Valier highlights the quiet, but significant, legal battles being waged. “From day one, lawsuits have been filed against executive orders. Courts move slowly, but many are finding in favour of the Democrats and placing restraining orders on Trump’s initiatives.”
Valier concedes that the Democrats have struggled to adapt to the new media landscape, where traditional platforms such as television no longer dominate.
“Young people are getting their news from podcasts, Discord servers and niche platforms,” he said. “The Democrats have largely been absent from these spaces. Kamala Harris, for example, turned down an appearance on Joe Rogan’s podcast – the most listened-to podcast in the country at the time. That was a huge missed opportunity.”
However, figures such as Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez are drawing mammoth crowds with their focus on working-class issues – healthcare, housing and the soaring cost of basics such as eggs.
‘Free Le Pen’: US conservatives rally behind French far-right leader
Trumpism abroad
When it comes to the potential for Trump-esque politics to reshape European politics, Conquer believes this is entirely possible, but with a caveat.
“It’s not about copy-pasting Trumpism into Europe. Each country has its own institutions, cultures and political dynamics. We need to localise it. What works in America might not work as quickly or in the same way elsewhere.”
In France, for example, while anti-elitist sentiment and nationalism are on the rise, the political landscape is distinct enough that any Trump-style movement would need a tailored approach.
Bardella ready to lead National Rally if Le Pen barred from 2027 elections
Looking ahead to 2028, according to Valier the next Democratic star will likely come from the party’s left wing.
“The message Bernie Sanders is delivering – about the working class, about economic inequality – that’s the message the party must embrace. People are hurting, and they want leaders who recognise that. It’s not just about identity politics anymore. It’s about whether ordinary Americans can afford eggs, healthcare, housing.”
Whether the Democrats can unite under the banner of addressing these issues remains to be seen. But if Trump’s first 100 days have demonstrated anything, it’s to expect the unexpected.
French history
How French women won, and used, their right to vote in 1945
Eighty years ago French women went to the polls for the first time, during municipal elections on 29 April 1945 – turning a centuries-long battle for equality into an historic reality.
Women in France secured the right to vote on 21 April 1944 through a wartime decree issued by the provisional government under General de Gaulle.
“Women are voters and eligible [for election] under the same conditions as men,” it read.
But it took another year for women to be able to fully exercise that right for the first time, during municipal elections on 29 April and 13 May.
“I was happy and proud to vote,” recalls Marcelle Abadie, now 105 years old. “For the first time, people were asking for my opinion. It really stayed with me,” she told France’s AFP news agency.
At polling stations, however, some men “looked at us as if we didn’t belong there. At that time, women were still seen primarily as housekeepers,” she said.
The long road towards gender equality
“The right to vote was the result of a very long struggle,” said historian Françoise Thébaud, a specialist in feminist movements.
The fight began with the Declaration of the Rights of Woman and of the Female Citizen, written by Olympe de Gouges in 1791. Women demanded suffrage again during the revolutions of 1830 and 1848, though these were “individual demands or those of small groups,” Thébaud notes.
Women such as Eugénie Niboyet, who founded France’s first feminist daily newspaper, La Voix des Femmes (“The Women’s Voice”) and fellow campaigner Jeanne Deroin – who became the first woman to run for parliament in France – were key figures in moving things forward. In 1876 Hubertine Auclert founded the first French group dedicated to campaigning for women’s suffrage.
“In France, as elsewhere, the organised suffragist movement only truly emerged in the 20th century,” Thébaud notes.
New Zealand was the pioneer, granting women the right to vote in 1893, followed by Australia (1901), Finland (1906), Denmark (1915), Uruguay (1917), Germany (1918), the United States (1920), and the United Kingdom (1928).
Women’s long battle to vote in France and the generations who fought it
Calm and serious
Before the municipal elections of April 1945, there was no national public campaign aimed at women, though the press provided practical advice on how to register on electoral rolls and how to vote, explains historian Anne-Sarah Bouglé-Moalic.
“Everything took place calmly and very seriously.”
Turnout was high with around 9 million of the 13 million registered voters going to the polls. Many women saw the vote as a civic duty, even if they were not particularly interested in politics, Moalic adds.
Some, however, were already active and a few even ran for office and became mayors in towns like Les Sables-d’Olonne, Ouessant, Villetaneuse and Saint-Omer.
Studies show women’s voting patterns were based more on social background than religious beliefs and that most couples voted for the same party. “Voting patterns were quite homogeneous within families, largely determined by social class, and this remains true to some extent today,” notes Moalic.
Marcelle Abadie, then 25, married and working for an insurance company, was determined to form her own opinion. “I did my homework. I asked friends and listened to the radio,” she said.
France’s foreign ministry unveils two-year gender equality strategy
Fundamental but not revolutionary
Women’s suffrage was a landmark moment in French politics, but didn’t usher in a revolution.
While election data wasn’t officially collected until 1959, “several women” were elected mayors during those 1945 municipal elections and in 1947 there were 250 (the equivalent of less than 1 percent) according to the Senate website. Currently, just over 40 percent of local officials are women, but they make up only 20 percent of mayors.
In legislative elections held on 21 October, 1945, just 33 of the 586 lawmakers elected to the National Assembly were women. In 1958 there were eight. Now, just over 36 percent of MPs are women.
Drop in the number of female MPs shows ongoing battle for gender parity in French politics
“Of course, it was a fundamental reform, but it didn’t immediately make women equal to men,” Thébaud points out. Civil rights inequalities persisted – it wasn’t until 1965 that a law allowed married women to work and open a bank account without their husband’s consent.
Women’s emancipation came gradually. “The 1970s marked a major turning point with the emergence of a new feminist wave that secured women’s control over reproduction – a true revolution,” says Thébaud.
Contraception was legalised in 1967, abortion was decriminalised in 1975, and in 2024, the right to abortion was enshrined in the French Constitution.
(with AFP)
Israel – Hamas conflict
France blasts Israel’s Gaza offensive, condemns civilian displacement ‘very strongly’
France’s foreign minister said on Tuesday that Paris “very strongly” condemns Israel’s new military campaign in the Gaza Strip. His comments come a day after Israel’s military said expanded operations in Gaza would include displacing “most” of its residents.
On Monday Israel’s security cabinet approved the military’s plan for expanded operations, which an Israeli official said would entail “the conquest of the Gaza Strip and the holding of the territories”.
“It’s unacceptable,” French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said in an interview with RTL radio, adding the Israeli government was “in violation of humanitarian law.”
Israeli military spokesman Effie Defrin said the planned offensive will include “moving most of the population of the Gaza Strip… to protect them”.
The decision by the security cabinet, which includes Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and several ministers, came after the army called up tens of thousands of reservists.
Israel’s decision comes as the United Nations and aid organisations have repeatedly warned of the humanitarian catastrophe on the ground, with famine again looming after more than two months of a total Israeli blockade.
UN spokesman said Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was “alarmed” by the Israeli plan that “will inevitably lead to countless more civilians killed and the further destruction of Gaza”.
The European Union also voiced concern and urged restraint from Israel.
French medics continue hunger strike as Gaza humanitarian crisis worsens
Nearly all of the Gaza Strip’s 2.4 million people have been displaced at least once during the war, sparked by Hamas militants’ October 2023 attack on Israel.
Israel resumed major operations across Gaza on 18 March amid deadlock over how to proceed with a two-month ceasefire that had largely halted the war with Hamas.
Israeli officials have said that the renewed fighting was aimed at defeating Hamas and securing the return of hostages held by militants since the 2023 attack.
‘Hunger war’
But a senior Hamas official said Tuesday the group was no longer interested in truce talks with Israel and urged the international community to halt Israel’s “hunger war” against Gaza.
“There is no sense in engaging in talks or considering new ceasefire proposals as long as the hunger war and extermination war continue in the Gaza Strip,” Basem Naim told French news agency AFP.
He said the world must pressure the Netanyahu government to end the “crimes of hunger, thirst, and killings” in Gaza.
Israeli officials said that the security cabinet had approved the “possibility of humanitarian distribution, if necessary” in Gaza, “to prevent Hamas from taking control of the supplies and to destroy its governance capabilities”.
Israel has accused Hamas of diverting humanitarian aid – which Hamas denies – and said its blockade was necessary to pressure the militant group to release Israeli hostages.
Macron slams Trump’s Gaza relocation plan as ‘unviable and unlawful’
A grouping of UN agencies and aid groups in the Palestinian territory has said Israel sought to “shut down the existing aid distribution system… and have us agree to deliver supplies through Israeli hubs under conditions set by the Israeli military”.
The plan “contravenes fundamental humanitarian principles and appears designed to reinforce control over life-sustaining items as a pressure tactic”, the bodies said in a statement.
“Humanitarian aid should not be politicised. The level of need among civilians in Gaza right now is overwhelming, and aid needs to be let in immediately,” International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) spokesman Christian Cardon told AFP in Geneva.
“Our deliveries into Gaza are conducted in full transparency with all relevant authorities. We recognise safety concerns but given the immense need for humanitarian assistance we urgently insist that the authorities speed up the process to deliver life-saving aid to the people in Gaza and help facilitate a safe environment for delivery.”
Hamas said the proposed aid framework amounted to “political blackmail”.
(with AFP)
Health
French health experts oppose bill that could reintroduce banned pesticides
More than a thousand doctors, scientists, and healthcare professionals have signed an open letter denouncing a proposed French law that could weaken the authority of the country’s independent health regulator and allow the return of long-banned pesticides.
Over 1,000 researchers, doctors, and healthcare professionals published an open letter on Monday addressed to France’s Ministers of Health, Agriculture, Labour, and the Environment — the four government bodies overseeing the French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health & Safety (Anses).
The letter, according to French public broadcaster France Inter, strongly criticises a proposed law by Senator Laurent Duplomb. The signatories warn that the bill could significantly weaken Anses’ authority and jeopardise public health by paving the way for the reintroduction of long-banned pesticides.
Supported by organisations such as Médecins du Monde and Alerte des Médecins sur les Pesticides, the letter is being circulated as lawmakers begin debating Duplomb’s bill.
The legislation, which is scheduled for review by the National Assembly on Tuesday, includes controversial measures such as the creation of an agricultural advisory board with powers to prioritise certain pesticides — even without safer alternatives.
Under the bill, the Agriculture Ministry could bypass Anses’ evaluations, effectively sidelining the agency’s independent scientific oversight. This has raised alarm bells among public health experts.
Anses Director General Benoît Vallet warned during a parliamentary hearing on 25 March that he would resign if the law passes in its current form.
‘Step backward for public health’
The signatories argue this represents “a fundamental threat to the role of scientific expertise in pesticide approval processes” and stress that since 2015, it has been Anses — not the Agriculture Ministry — charged with overseeing these assessments under strict ethical and scientific standards.
They say that establishing this new advisory body would be “a step backward for public health,” particularly if it leads to the reintroduction of harmful substances such as neonicotinoids — insecticides banned in France since 2016 due to their devastating impact on bee populations and broader ecological risks.
“We oppose the creation of an agricultural advisory council that would strip Anses of part of its scientific oversight and responsibility,” the letter states.
The bill is expected to be debated at the end of May.
(with newswires)
Justice
International Court of Justice throws out Sudan genocide case against UAE
The top United Nations court on Monday threw out Sudan’s case against the United Arab Emirates over alleged complicity in genocide during the brutal Sudanese civil war.
Sudan had taken the UAE to the International Court of Justice, saying its alleged support for the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) was contributing to a genocide – accusations strongly denied by the Emiratis.
But the ICJ said it “manifestly lacked” jurisdiction to rule on the case and threw out it out.
A UAE official hailed the judges’ ruling.
“This decision is a clear and decisive affirmation of the fact that this case was utterly baseless,” Reem Ketait, Deputy Assistant Minister for Political Affairs at the UAE foreign ministry, said in a statement sent to French news agency AFP.
Before the ruling, Ketait had accused Sudan of lodging the case in a “cynical attempt to divert attention from their own brutal record of atrocities against Sudanese civilians”.
Sudan files case against UAE at UN court over ‘complicity in genocide’
When the UAE signed up to the UN’s Genocide Convention in 2005, it entered a “reservation” to a key clause that allows countries to sue others at the ICJ over disputes.
Since April 2023, Sudan has been torn apart by a power struggle between army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the commander of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), Mohamed Hamdan Daglo.
The war has triggered what aid agencies describe as the world’s largest displacement, and hunger crises. Famine has officially hit five areas across Sudan, according to a UN-backed assessment.
Human tragedy
The North Darfur region has been a particular battleground, with at least 542 civilians killed in the past three weeks, according to the United Nations.
The ICJ said it was “deeply concerned about the unfolding human tragedy in Sudan that forms the backdrop to the present dispute”.
“The violent conflict has a devastating effect, resulting in untold loss of life and suffering, in particular in West Darfur,” the court added.
Sudan war is world’s ‘worst humanitarian crisis’, the African Union says
As the court found that it lacked jurisdiction to go forward with Sudan’s legal action, it did not rule on the fundamental merits of the case.
The court noted that: “Whether or not states have accepted the jurisdiction of the court… they are required to comply with their obligations (to the Genocide Convention).”
Countries also “remain responsible for acts attributable to them which are contrary to their international obligations”.
A handful of pro-Sudan protesters staged a demonstration outside the Peace Palace, the seat of the ICJ in The Hague, shouting and brandishing banners including one that read “UAE kills Sudan”;
“We feel completely disappointed…. We only ask for justice,” said one protester, Hisham Fadl Akasha, a 57-year-old engineer.
Demand for reparations
During hearings on the case last month, Sudan’s acting justice minister Muawia Osman told the court the “ongoing genocide would not be possible without UAE complicity, including the shipment of arms to the RSF”.
“The direct logistical and other support that the UAE has provided and continues to provide to the RSF has been and continues to be the primary driving force behind the genocide now taking place, including killing, rape, forced displacement and looting,” said Osman.
Khartoum had urged the ICJ judges to force the UAE to stop its alleged support for the RSF and make “full reparations”, including compensation to victims of the war.
While the ICJ has rejected Sudan’s case, the bloody conflict in Sudan shows no sign of easing.
On Sunday, the RSF struck Port Sudan, the army said, in the first attack on the seat of the army-aligned government during the country’s two-year war.
(with AFP)
Immigration
Rwanda in ‘initial’ talks to receive migrants deported from the US
Rwanda is in the early stages of talks to receive immigrants deported from the United States, Rwandan Foreign Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe said.
“We are in discussions with the United States,” Nduhungirehe said in an interview with the state broadcaster Rwanda TV, late on Sunday.
“It has not yet reached a stage where we can say exactly how things will proceed, but the talks are ongoing…still in the early stages.”
US President Donald Trump launched a sweeping crackdown on immigration and attempted to freeze the US refugee resettlement program after the start of his second term in January.
Rwanda has in recent years positioned itself as a destination country for migrants that Western countries would like to remove, despite concerns by rights groups that Kigali does not respect some of the most fundamental human rights.
Kigali notably signed an agreement with Britain in 2022 to take in thousands of asylum seekers from the UK before the deal was scrapped last year by then newly-elected Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
UK uses funds from scrapped Rwanda deportation plan to boost border security
US plans for migrants
During his electoral campaign, Trump had promised to carry out the “largest deportation operation” in US history.
His administration has now pushed aggressively to deport immigrants who are in the country illegally and other non-citizens since coming to power in January.
Many have already been deported to El Salvador and elsewhere, with ongoing legal action questioning the legality of some ICE arrests, detentions and removals.
UN rights chief deeply worried about ‘fundamental shift’ in direction in US
The Great Lakes nation in Africa is often viewed as an island of stability in a turbulent region, but the United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR) warned there was a risk some migrants sent to Rwanda could be returned to countries from which they had fled. Kigali accused UNHCR of lying, denying the allegations.
Last month, the US already deported to Rwanda a resettled Iraqi refugee whom it had long tried to extradite in response to Iraqi government claims that he worked for the Islamic State, according to a US official and an internal email.
The US Supreme Court in April temporarily blocked Trump’s administration – which has invoked a rarely used wartime law – from deporting a group of Venezuelan migrants it accused of being gang members.
Unfinished deal
Rwanda’s Foreign minister Nduhungirehe confirmed that the two nations were engaged in “ongoing” talks, he said “they are not yet conclusive to determine the direction this will take”.
“I would say the discussions are in their initial stages, but we continue to talk about this problem of migrants,” he said, without giving further details.
Global aid in chaos as Trump proposes to slash funds and dismantle USAID
When contacted by news agencies about the talks he said: “You will be informed when the discussions will be finalised.”
The African nation of roughly 13 million people has been criticised by rights groups over its human rights record and increasingly diminished freedom of speech.
Rwanda has also faced mounting pressure over its involvement in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), as the east of the country has been re-engulfed in conflict after a lightning strike by the Rwandan-backed military group M23.
(with newswires)
Science
France hosts summit to lure scientists threatened by US budget cuts
French President Emmanuel Macron and EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced major funding packages at a conference in Paris on Monday, as Europe seeks to attract US researchers ready to relocate because of President Donald Trump’s policies and funding cuts.
Paris’s Sorbonne university hosted the conference, called “Choose Europe for Science“, bringing together EU commissioners, scientists and ministers for research from member countries to discuss, among other things, financial incentives at the gathering to lure disgruntled American scientists across the Atlantic.
In her remarks, von der Leyen announced a multi-million EU package.
“Science is an investment – and we need to offer the right incentives. This is why I can announce that we will put forward a new €500 million package for 2025-2027 to make Europe a magnet for researchers,” she said in her speech.
“We are choosing to put research and innovation, science and technology, at the heart of our economy. We are choosing to be the continent where universities are pillars of our societies and our way of life,” she added.
She also said she wanted EU-member states to invest 3 percent of gross domestic product in research and development by 2030.
‘Diktat’
When Macron took to the podium, he doubled up on the European message: “If you love freedom, come and do you research here.”
He announced that the French state will invest an “additional” €100 million to attract foreign researchers to France, specifying that this amount would be financed by the France 2030 public investment program.
Macron referred to the Trump administration’s US science policy a “diktat” and an “error”.
“Nobody could have imagined that this great global democracy whose economic model depends so heavily on free science… was going to commit such an error,” he said. “We refuse a diktat consisting of any government being able to say you cannot research this or that,” he said.
Federal funding cuts
Under Trump, universities and research facilities in the United States have come under increasing political and financial pressure, including from threats of massive federal funding cuts.
Research programmes face closure, tens of thousands of federal workers have been fired, while foreign students fear possible deportation for their political views.
The European Union hopes to offer an alternative for researchers and, by the same token, “defend our strategic interests and promote a universalist vision”, an official in Macron’s office told French news agency AFP.
The French president had already last month appealed to foreign, notably US, researchers to “choose France” and unveiled plans for a funding programme to help universities and other research bodies cover the cost of bringing foreign scientists to France.
French university opens doors to US scientists fleeing Trump’s research cuts
Shortly before, Aix Marseille University in the south of the country said its “Safe Place for Science” scheme received a flood of applicants after announcing in March it would open its doors to US scientists threatened by cuts.
Last week, France’s flagship scientific research centre CNRS launched a new initiative aimed at attracting foreign researchers whose work is threatened and French researchers working abroad, some of whom “don’t want to live and raise their children in Trump’s United States”, according to CNRS President Antoine Petit.
An official in Macron’s office said Monday’s conference comes “at a time when academic freedoms are retreating and under threat in a number of cases and Europe is a continent of attractiveness”.
Pay gap
Experts say, however, that while EU countries can offer competitive research infrastructure and a high quality of life, research funding and researchers’ remuneration both lag far behind US levels.
But CNRS’s Petit said last week he hoped that the pay gap will seem less significant once the lower cost of education and health, and more generous social benefits are taken into account.
Macron’s office said France and the EU are targeting researchers in a number of specific sectors, including health, climate, biodiversity, artificial intelligence and space.
(with AFP)
Uganda
Ugandan opposition denounces brutal crackdown ahead of 2026 elections
With less than a year until Uganda’s presidential election, the political climate is increasingly tense. The main opposition party NUP has condemned the brutal crackdown on activists, saying 2,000 kidnappings have taken place since the last elections in 2021. But the government accuses the opposition of staging the abductions for political gain.
Uganda is set to hold a general election in January, with President Yoweri Museveni looking to extend his 40-year rule.
The last election in 2021 was marred by widespread reports of irregularities and severe violence from the security forces, which Museveni blamed on “indiscipline” and “laziness”.
The US-based Holocaust Memorial Museum recently warned of possible “mass atrocities” around the 2026 election.
Last Friday, Bobi Wine, leader of the opposition National Unity Platform (NUP) said the army had raided his party’s headquarters in the capital Kampala.
The opposition was planning to use the HQ to launch a campaign to urge Ugandans to vote against the government in the general election and demonstrate to protect their democratic rights.
Wine said his bodgyguard Edward Sebuufu (also referred to as Mutwe) had been “violently abducted” by armed men wearing uniforms associated with the Special Forces Command, an elite unit of Uganda’s army.
‘Rogue regime’
The NUP’s secretary-general David Lewis Rubongoya told RFI that the police at first denied any responsibility for Sebuufu’s abduction.
However, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, Uganda’s military chief and the son of the President confirmed later on Friday that Sebuufu was indeed in his custody.
In a series of posts on social media late on Thursday, Kainerugaba said Sebuufu had been captured “like a grasshopper”, next to a photo of the bodyguard, shirtless with a shaved head.
“He is in my basement… You are next,” Kainerugaba, known for his notorious posts on X, warned Wine.
News agencies were not immediately able to independently verify the photograph, but the NUP party later re-used it on their X handle in a post seeking support for Sebuufu.
Wine told French news agency AFP it was “a reminder to the world as to how law and order has broken down in Uganda”.
“For Muhoozi to confirm the abduction and illegal detention of Eddie Mutwe and sharing his photos half naked signals to the level of impunity the rogue regime has reached,” he added.
Military courts
NGOs and opposition politicians have long accused the Museveni government of using the military courts to prosecute opposition leaders and supporters on politically motivated charges – accusations the government denies.
Museveni, 80, has been president of the Republic of Uganda since 1986. Under his regime, opponents have suffered repression for decades, including the former presidential candidates Kizza Besigye, and Wine, whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi.
Wine was arrested several times after campaigning for the presidency, first in 2021 then in 2023 and 2024.
Besigye, a veteran political rival of Museveni’s, has been in detention for nearly five months on treason charges – which his lawyers say are politically motivated.
The opposition has denounced a series of kidnappings in the country, more than 2,000 activists since 2021 – 18 of whom remain unaccounted for, according to the NUP.
Uganda: the quiet power in the eastern DRC conflict
Self-kidnappings?
But the Ugandan authorities take a different view, citing NUP gatherings as “illegal” as they pose a threat to public safety.
Enoch Barata, a senior member of the ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM) says the government has to support the police intervention.
For him, “the NUP has become accustomed to provoking violence, blocking roads, and sowing chaos among the population,” he told RFI. “At some point, a distinction must be made between civil and political rights and pure criminality.”
The government has accused the NUP of exploiting the situation to portray itself as the victim.
“Once again, we see the NUP denouncing kidnappings, only to later find out that they were self-kidnappings for political gain,” Barata said. “This case must be resolved.”
NUP’s Rubongoya told RFI that his party’s activities “are always peaceful until the police arrive and start shooting to block our political actions”.
Uganda plans law to bring back military trials for civilians
The ruling NRM is holding its internal elections this spring. More than two million officials are to be elected on 6 May, ahead of the candidate selection process for next year’s general election.
The country is also due to hold Youth Council elections across the country on 12 June, part of the broader roadmap for the 2025–2026 general elections as outlined by the Electoral Commission of Uganda.
These are designed to elect representatives at various administrative levels, providing young Ugandans with a platform to participate in governance.
Reporting by RFI’s Christina Okello with Reuters
Romania
Far right candidate takes the lead in Romania’s presidential race
Romania’s far-right candidate George Simion took a comfortable lead in Sunday’s first round of presidential elections, near-final results for the rerun of last year’s annulled ballot showed.
The closely watched rerun could potentially herald a foreign policy shift in the EU country of 19 million, which has become a key pillar of NATO since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
With 99 percent of ballots counted, nationalist AUR party leader Simion – a fan of US President Donald Trump – was leading with 40.5 percent of the vote.
He will face off against pro-EU Bucharest mayor Nicusor Dan in the 18 May run-off, who surged to second place at 20.9 percent, narrowly booting out governing coalition candidate Crin Antonescu at 20.3.
“Together we made history today,” said Simion in a video message broadcast at his party’s headquarters as euphoric supporters chanted “Out with the thieves, let patriots come”.
Political science professor Sergiu Miscoiu told French news agency AFP that Simion now faced the uphill task of converting his lead into a win in the run-off, predicting that it would be a close race.
Other experts however have pointed to divisions within the pro-EU camp after a campaign marked by virulent accusations and dirty tricks.
Bring ‘justice to Romania’
In all, 11 presidential hopefuls were vying for the post which, while largely ceremonial carries some influence in foreign policy.
The rerun follows the cancellation of last year’s vote won by NATO critic Calin Georgescu.
He was barred from the rerun vote after authorities noted a massive TikTok campaign and issued claims of Russian interference, sparking sometimes violent protests.
Georgescu was replaced by 38-year-old Simion, who often dons a cap with the US president’s slogan “Make America Great Again”. He said he hoped to become Romania’s “MAGA president”.
“It’s time to take our country back,” said the barred Georgescu after casting his ballot alongside Simion in Mogosoaia, on the outskirts of Bucharest.
Romania votes again after annulled election caused political disarray
“We are here with a single mission: to return to democracy – and bring justice to Romania,” said Simion, who campaigned on a promise to put Romania first.
Many voters clearly wanted change on Sunday. Robert Teodoroiu told AFP he hoped that this time his ballot would count after last year’s vote was annulled.
“I’m trying my luck again,” said the 37-year-old driver in Bucharest.
Voter turnout stood at about 53 percent when polls closed.
Simion has largely campaigned online, partly in a bid to woo Romania’s influential overseas voters. While describing himself as “more moderate” than Georgescu, he shares his aversion to what he calls “Brussels’ unelected bureaucrats”.
Simion accuses EU officials of having meddled in Romania’s elections and has vowed to restore his country’s “dignity” within the bloc.
While frequently denouncing Russia, he opposes sending military aid to Ukraine and wants Romania to reduce support for Ukrainian refugees.
Manipulation, interference
His campaign found favour with 67-year-old Stela Ivan, who hopes a far-right president would bring “change” to Romania after decades dominated by the same political parties since the end of Communism.
Another voter, 52-year-old nurse Silvia Tomescu, said she hoped for a “better life, higher wages and a president” who “will not side with Russia”.
Pro-European coalition candidate Crin Antonescu campaigned on a promise to offer stability, while Bucharest mayor Nicusor Dan vowed to fight the “corrupt” and “arrogant” political elite.
Simion promised on Sunday that if he became president, he would get Georgescu into power, citing three ways he might achieve that: “a referendum, early elections or forming a coalition in parliament that would appoint him Prime Minister”.
Romania’s top court annuls presidential vote amid Russia interference fears
Following the ballot’s shock annulment – a rare move in the EU – the rerun was held under close scrutiny.
Thousands in Romania have protested in recent months against the annulled vote, denouncing it as a “coup”. US Vice President JD Vance also condemned the decision.
Authorities have stepped up preventive measures as well as cooperation with TikTok, saying they are committed to “fair and transparent” elections.
While the far right alleged “multiple signs of fraud”, the government pointed to various disinformation campaigns it said were “new attempts at manipulation and interference by state actors”.
(with AFP)
FRANCE – STRIKES
French rail unions call for nationwide strike from Monday
Train drivers and controllers are planning to strike between 5 May and 11 May – a period that includes a holiday weekend. Rail workers are protesting over wages and scheduling issues.
Train controllers at France’s national rail company, SNCF, are planning to strike on 9, 10 and 11 May, following a call from Sud-Rail union, while drivers will strike from 7 May. The CGT-Cheminots, SNCF’s largest union, has urged workers to mobilise starting on Monday, 5 May.
Drivers and train controllers are protesting the implementation of new scheduling software, which, according to Sud Rail, “constantly changes, without prior notice, at the last minute” the working weeks of staff.
In response, SNCF has promised to provide six months’ advance notice for rest days, but unions are demanding more clarity on daily work schedules as well.
Foreign doctors in France stage hunger strike over job insecurity
Unions also argue that wage increases offered by SNCF – averaging 2.2 percent for 2025 – fall short. The company refutes this, saying “it fulfilled its obligations in recent negotiations”.
The train controllers are demanding a €100 increase per month in the work bonus and the securing of this bonus.
Industrial action at SNCF has repeatedly disrupted travel during school holidays.
In February last year, train controllers went on strike during a holiday weekend, leaving 150,000 people stranded. A Christmas strike in December 2022 affected some 200,000 travellers.
Competition
Ticket cancellations for 8 May have surged to 50 percent above average, according to booking platform Kombo. Many passengers have switched to alternative travel options in case of train cancellations, such as carpooling or buses.
Italian rail operator Trenitalia is also emerging as a key beneficiary. Competing with SNCF on the Paris–Lyon journey, it has seen a 20 percent increase in ticket sales for 8 May.
Eurostar named Europe’s worst rail service while Italy’s Trenitalia leads the way
Trenitalia is also launching four daily high-speed trains between Paris and Marseille from mid-June, with second-class fares beginning at €27 – directly targeting SNCF’s low-cost company, Ouigo.
(with newswires)
France Budget 2025
France’s PM Bayrou mulls referendum on sweeping deficit-reduction plan
French Prime Minister François Bayrou has raised the possibility of holding a national referendum on a comprehensive plan to reduce France’s debt and bring the public deficit below 3 percent of GDP, a threshold set by European fiscal rules.
In an interview with the Journal du Dimanche published Saturday, Bayrou said the gravity of the issue and its consequences for the nation’s future warranted a direct consultation with citizens.
“I believe the question is serious enough, with far-reaching consequences for the country’s future, that it should be put directly to the people. I do not rule out any possibility,” he said.
Bayrou emphasized that the plan would require efforts from everyone and could only succeed with broad public support.
“It’s a comprehensive plan I want to submit. It will demand efforts from everybody, and given its scale, it cannot succeed unless the French people support it. Without that approval, it will not hold,” he said.
President decides
Under France’s constitution, only the president can call a referendum, but Bayrou said the government could propose the idea.
“The government proposes, the president decides. But the key issue is whether the French support the reforms,” he noted.
Bayrou criticised the piecemeal approach to previous budgets, likening it to “removing a leaf here, adding one there,” and called for a clear, unified strategy.
He reaffirmed the government’s target of reducing the deficit below 3 percent, after it ballooned to around 7 percent under President Emmanuel Macron.
The proposal comes as the government seeks €40 billion in savings for the 2026 budget, primarily through spending cuts. Bayrou insisted the solution does not lie in new taxes, but in greater efficiency and simplification of public spending.
The Élysée Palace has not commented on the proposal, which remains at the discussion stage. President Macron had previously mentioned the possibility of referendums on major issues in his New Year’s address, but no specific topics have yet been announced.
France braces for economic judgment amid political turmoil and record debt
(With newswires)
FRANCE – Culture
Filmmaker Agnès Varda’s photographic legacy emerges from family archives
The Carnavalet Museum in Paris has delved into filmmaker Agnès Varda’s family archives for an extensive exhibition highlighting her parallel career as a photographer, a practice she maintained fervently until her death in 2019.
The Carnavalet Museum – dedicated to the history of Paris and its people – is hosting a new exhibition dedicated to Varda’s long and diverse artistic career, thanks to archives carefully preserved by her family.
Her daughter Rosalie gave the museum’s curators access to Varda’s 27,000 photo negatives, prints, notebooks, diaries and unfinished cinema projects, some of which have never been shown in public before.
For Rosalie, the exhibition is a way of putting Varda “back on the map” as a photographer in her own right. It also highlights the fact that her mother’s photographic work constantly informed her cinematic work, and vice versa.
“It’s true that she wasn’t recognised during her lifetime as a photographer,” Rosalie – a costume designer, author and head of the family production company Ciné-Tamaris, founded by her mother in 1954 – told RFI.
“People knew she took photographs but it wasn’t considered part of her work. But I think from the beginning, photography gave her a lot of structure and helped her to adapt very easily from still images to moving images.”
Seeing the funny side
For curator Anne de Mondenard – who spent two years preparing the exhibition “Agnès Varda’s Paris from here to there” – it has been extremely satisfying to share lesser-known facts about her life and work.
“It is important to promote her work as a photographer…to show the consistency and quality of her work. I’m very happy to be able to show the links between her photography and her cinema,” she told RFI.
All-female exhibition aims to restore women’s voices in art history
Instantly recognisable in her later years thanks to her impish two-tone page boy haircut, Agnès Varda’s other trademark was her quirky sense of humour. With her keen eye for detail, she was always on the lookout for the whimsical in everyday life.
“We can sense her strong personality, her quest for freedom,” said de Mondenard. “She has a way of taking a step back and looking for the surprising, comical side of certain situations.”
A woman behind the lens
However, she took her work extremely seriously. Her determination is clear in her 1956 self-portrait in her studio, nestled off a quiet street named rue Daguerre in Paris’s 14th arrondissement – aptly named after one of the inventors of modern photographic techniques.
The fact that she is not smiling speaks volumes at a time when women were either assistants or pretty actresses – and not generally the ones behind the camera.
Born Arlette Varda in Belgium in 1928, she lived in the south of France and then moved to Paris where she attended the prestigious Ecole du Louvre art school. She changed her name to Agnès in 1950, the year she registered her trade as a photographer.
She spent a number of years working with the Théâtre National de Paris taking portraits of actors, directors and employees, capturing their work on stage and behind the scenes.
This work helped her get jobs reporting for agencies and various publications as well as more portraiture work.
Spray it to say it: graffiti group sees women make their mark in Paris
A very modern view
As de Mondenard points out, Varda was never one to go for an easy shot. She purposefully sought out the hidden beauty of Paris, the details that others either would not see or would gloss over.
At times leaning towards a documentary feel, her photography was especially sensitive to capturing those on the margins, in down at heel areas of Paris.
For both de Mondenard and Rosalie, Varda’s dedication to the feminist cause through her art is also notable.
“Her work calls for deeper thoughtfulness,” says Rosalie, recalling the portraits of nude women her mother captured in the early 1950s. “She saw the human body as architecture, not just portraits of languid naked women. I find that to be very modern.”
France’s famous yet forgotten couturier makes a comeback, 100 years on
De Mondenard points to Varda’s films Cléo de 5 à 7 (Cléo from 5-7) and L’une chante, l’autre pas (One sings, the other doesn’t), both made in the 1960s, both with strong female protagonists.
Her pioneering work in making women’s voices heard in the film industry earned her an honorary Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film in 2015, an award she dedicated to “resistance and endurance”.
When it comes to the breadth of her work, it is Agnès herself who sums it up best. In the documentary Varda par Agnès (Varda by Agnès), she declared: “It’s natural for me to go here and there, to say one thing and then the opposite, and to feel less trapped because I don’t choose just one version of things.”
Le Paris d’Agnès Varda, de-ci, de-là is at the Musée Carnavalet in Paris until 24 August, 2025.
Ballet
‘Beauty exists everywhere’: Ballet builds hope for future in Nairobi slum
Nairobi, Kenya – Kibera, Nairobi’s largest informal settlement, is often reduced to images of poverty – rusted tin rooftops, open sewers and overcrowded homes. But a community project is using ballet as a means to build the confidence of the children living there.
Hidden within Kibera’s maze of alleyways and makeshift homes is a modest studio space, where a group of children don second-hand leotards and ballet shoes to rehearse with the quiet discipline of dancers preparing for the stage.
This is Project Elimu, a community-based initiative using classical ballet to build confidence and open up opportunities for the children living in one of Africa’s most challenging urban environments.
Founded in 2014 by Mike Wamaya, a former professional dancer, the project offers free ballet lessons. Beginning with 10 students, it has grown into a weekly programme training more than 100.
Helping eradicate poverty through civic education in Nairobi’s slums
But the project’s ambitions stretch far beyond the barre. In addition to dance, it provides academic support and digital literacy training, addressing the broader structural challenges that young people in Kibera face.
“People often say ballet is for the elite,” says Wamaya. “But beauty exists everywhere. Why not here?”
‘Allowed to dream’
For many participants, the programme has had a transformative effect. Twelve-year-old Zawadi, tying the frayed ribbons of her ballet shoes, says: “I used to be shy. I never raised my hand in class. Now, I’m confident.”
Alongside learning to dance, she is learning to believe in herself.
Project Elimu promotes values such as discipline, teamwork and leadership – skills that students carry into school and everyday life. Parents have reported notable changes in their children’s behaviour and focus, while local teachers speak of improved academic performance and classroom engagement.
From Dakar to Paris, stories of struggle and joy told by modern African dance
“These children carry heavy burdens,” explains Wamaya. “Some are caregivers, others deal with hunger or domestic challenges. In this studio, they are simply children – allowed to dream.”
The programme’s success has not come without struggle. Ballet gear is prohibitively expensive, and funding remains sporadic. Space is limited, often forcing the programme to turn away new applicants due to a lack of shoes or room to practise.
“The demand is heartbreaking, but it also shows we are doing something that matters,” says Wamaya.
Sowing the seeds
To date, more than 200 students from Project Elimu have secured secondary school scholarships – a significant achievement in a community where access to quality education is often limited.
Elizabeth Njoki, a teacher at a nearby primary school, describes the initiative as “a game-changer”.
According to her, the programme fills critical gaps left by the formal education system, which is often under-resourced and overcrowded. “At Project Elimu, the children are seen. They are nurtured. They are given hope.”
A day in the life of a worker at Dandora, Nairobi’s main dumping ground
Njoki notes that the programme has also contributed to shifting social attitudes, particularly regarding girls. “We’ve lost many to early pregnancies,” she says. “But in ballet class, they are protected. They are just girls, free to be children again.”
Despite the challenges, Wamaya remains clear-eyed about the project’s true purpose. It is not about producing prima ballerinas for international stages, but about sowing seeds of possibility.
“Even if they never dance professionally,” he says, “they’ll carry the lessons with them. That’s success.”
Crime
France charges 21 prison attack suspects
Prosecutors said Saturday that 21 suspects in a series of coordinated attacks on French prisons had been charged, including two teenagers.
Investigators believe the attacks were carried out by drug traffickers, with at least one suspect thought to have ties to a notorious cartel.
Attackers in April struck at several jails and other facilities across France, torching cars, spraying the entrance of one prison with automatic gunfire and leaving mysterious inscriptions.
A total of 30 people, including four minors, were arrested this week in police raids across France. Seven of them were released without charge.
Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau told reporters Saturday that 19 of the suspects were being held in pre-trial custody, while the two adolescents had been placed in a detention facility for minors.
They are accused of instigating the operations, acting as go-betweens, recruiting accomplices or carrying out the attacks, she said.
Prisons targeted with arson, gunfire as France cracks down on drug crime
The suspects, aged between 15 and 37 and including two women, had targeted prison staff “with extreme, uninhibited and premeditated violence” in both their professional and private lives, she said.
Some of the suspects were believed to belong to organised crime groups, while other were “completely unknown” to police, Beccuau said.
The assaults have embarrassed the right-leaning government whose tough-talking ministers of justice, Gerald Darmanin, and interior, Bruno Retailleau, have vowed to intensify the fight against narcotics and drug-related crime.
President Emmanuel Macron has promised the attackers would be “found, tried and punished.”
“Rights for French Prisoners”
French anti-terror prosecutors were initially put in charge of the case due to the coordinated nature of the attacks but the office for the fight against organised crime, known by its acronym JUNALCO, has since taken over.
More than 300 investigators have been involved in the case.
Several of the arrests took place inside prisons, with suspected leaders of the attacks believed to have directed them from inside.
Attackers left the inscription “DDPF,” standing for “Rights of French Prisoners,” at nearly all the crime scenes.
The modus operandi of the assaults bore the hallmarks of organised crime, with perpetrators recruited online and promised “significant remuneration” in exchange for carrying out attacks, according to investigators.
On Tuesday, lawmakers approved a major new bill to combat drug-related crime, with some of France’s most dangerous drug traffickers facing being locked up in high-security units in prison in the coming months.
(With newswires)
Media
DOJ says VOA can resume broadcasting: Reporters Without Borders
The US Justice Department has informed Voice of America its staff can resume programming next week after the broadcaster was shuttered by President Donald Trump in March, according to Paris-based media watchdog Reporters Without borders and a VOA employee said Saturday.
The US government-run news service for international audiences has been off the air since Trump ordered the dismantling of the US Agency for Global Media (USAGM), which oversees VOA and other broadcasters including Radio Free Asia and distributes federal funding for their operations.
“A Justice Department attorney has sent an email to our lawyer, David Seide, informing him that USAGM expects VOA staff to begin a ‘phased return’ to work and programming to resume next week,” the service’s chief national correspondent Steve Herman posted on X.
Two VOA employees said Saturday that work email accounts which were frozen have been unblocked, although they had yet to receive any formal notice telling them they can return to work.
Non-profit group Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said in a statement that its lawyers along with those of VOA had received word from the Justice Department that the broadcaster’s employees were being allowed to return to work.
“We understand that earlier today USAGM… activated the accounts of 1,406 USAGM and VOA employees and contractors,” the DOJ email read, according to RSF.
“USAGM currently expects staff to begin to return to the office next week, as security, building space, and equipment issues require a phased return,” it said, adding: “USAGM anticipates VOA programming to resume next week.”
VOA’s revival marks a defeat of sorts for Trump.
The president has questioned why the broadcaster that reaches millions of weekly listeners and viewers worldwide is not promoting his administration’s viewpoint, bristling at the editorial “firewall” that let the service operate independently.
In an April letter to lawmakers, several former directors of VOA, nominated across party lines over the decades, pressed Congress to intervene to restore the broadcaster, after a judge said Trump’s shutdown violated the law.
May 3 is World Press Freedom Day, which celebrates the role of a free press and highlights the challenges for journalism around the globe.
Trump freezes US-funded media outlets including Voice of America
NATURE
Nature’s sister act sees female bonobos outranking stronger males
Female bonobos, one of the closest living relatives to humans, have a rare kind of power – they dominate males, even though they are smaller and physically weaker. Scientists say this is because they form alliances, helping them win most fights against their male counterparts.
Female bonobos in the Democratic Republic of Congo won 85 percent of conflicts with males over a period of 30 years, a study published this week in the journal Nature Communications Biology found.
American and German scientists studied six bonobo communities in the DRC, the only country where these great apes live in the wild.
Coalition power
Female bonobos form quick, coordinated alliances – called coalitions – that give them an edge in conflicts with males.
“We have found what everybody already knows – that when you work together, you’re more successful and you gain power,” Martin Surbeck, lead author of the study and a behavioural ecologist at Harvard University, told National Geographic magazine.
This is very different from chimpanzees, the sister species of bonobos, where males dominate all females once they reach adulthood.
Protected areas offer hope for Africa’s vanishing forests and wildlife
“In bonobo communities, females have a lot to say. And that’s very different from chimpanzee communities where all adult males outrank all females in the group, and where sexually attractive females receive a lot of aggression by the males,” Surbeck added.
The study also found that these female alliances tend to form quickly, especially in response to male aggression.
Barbara Fruth, a behavioural ecologist at Germany’s Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior and co-author of the study, said the coalitions are a powerful way for females to assert themselves.
“It’s a ferocious way to assert power. You know why these males don’t try to overstep boundaries,” Fruth said.
Group variations
Female dominance was not the same in every group or at every point in time. While females often had the upper hand, this varied depending on the community and the year.
In 1998, females in the Eyengo group never lost a fight to a male. In Kokolopori in 2020, they won 98.4 percent of conflicts. But in Ekalakala in 2016, females won just 18.2 percent of the time.
“There is substantial variation in this trait of female power within groups, and we found that coalition formation in females seems to explain a lot of the variation,” said Surbeck.
These coalitions allow females to control important parts of life – they choose their sexual partners, decide when to reproduce, and get first access to food like fruit.
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Zanna Clay, a primatologist at Durham University who was not involved in the study, told National Geographic: “The degree of group variation in female coalitions and female power between bonobo communities was one of the most fascinating findings from this study. This challenges the ‘one-size-fits-all’ view of our closest cousins.”
The researchers tested three possible reasons for female dominance – self-organisation, control over reproduction, and coalition building.
The study confirmed that coalitions were the key.
Looking to our past
The behaviour of bonobos offers clues about how early humans might have lived.
“These data also provide support for the idea that humans and our ancestors have likely used coalitions to build and maintain power for millions of years,” said Laura Simone Lewis, a biological anthropologist at the University of California, Berkeley, who was not involved in the research.
Surbeck agreed. “It tells us that male dominance and patriarchy is not evolutionarily inevitable,” he said.
The researchers say their findings show that cooperation – not just strength – can shape social power, even in species as closely linked to us as bonobos.
Marine Le Pen’s penal sentence
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This week on The Sound Kitchen you’ll hear the answer to the question about Marine Le Pen’s full embezzlement sentence. There’s “The Listener’s Corner” with Paul Myers, Ollia Horton’s “Happy Moment”, and Erwan Rome’s “Music from Erwan” – all that, and the new quiz and bonus questions too, 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 winners’ 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.
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Another idea for your students: Br. Gerald Muller, my beloved music teacher from St. Edward’s University in Austin, Texas, has been writing books for young adults in his retirement – and they are free! There is a volume of biographies of painters and musicians called Gentle Giants, and an excellent biography of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., too. They are also a good way to help you improve your English – that’s how I worked on my French, reading books that were meant for young readers – and I guarantee you, it’s a good method for improving your language skills. To get Br. Gerald’s free books, click here.
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This week’s quiz: On 3 April I asked you a question about Marine Le Pen, the president of the far-right French party the National Rally (RN). She, along with eight other RN Parliament members, was judged guilty of embezzling 4.4 million euros in European Union funds to pay France-based RN party staff who worked only for the RN and not on EU issues.
Le Pen and her fellow lawmakers have been banned from running for office for five years. This ban, which had previously been a rare sentence, has become commonplace since the Sapin 2 law was adopted in 2016, which made it the standard sentence for cases involving the embezzlement of public funds and was roundly supported by RN lawmakers – until now.
You were to re-read our article “RN leader Le Pen battles for political future after embezzlement conviction”, and send in the answer to this question: Aside from the ban on running for office, what else was included in Le Pen’s sentence?
The answer is, to quote our article: “Le Pen was also sentenced to four years’ imprisonment, two of which will be served under an electronic bracelet, and a fine of 100,000 euros.”
In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question, suggested by the late Muhammad Shamim who lived in Kerala State, India: “Would you rather be rich but not famous, or famous but not rich?”
Do you have a bonus question idea? Send it to us!
The winners are: RFI English listener Lata Akhter Jahan, the co-president of the Sonali Badhan Female Listeners Club in Bogura, Bangladesh. Lata is also the winner of this week’s bonus question. Congratulations, Lata, on your double win.
Also on the list of lucky winners this week are RFI Listeners Club members Shaira Hosen Mo from Kishoreganj, Bangladesh; Nasyr Muhammad from Katsina State, Nigeria; John Yemi Sanday Turay from Freetown, Sierra Leone, and last but not least, Saleha, who is also a member of the International Radio Fan and Youth Club in Khanewal, Pakistan.
Congratulations, winners!
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: “Les Jardins de L’Alhambra” by Gérard Torikian; “Stacatto” by René Aubry; “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 “Aýa döndi” by Nuri Halmamedov and Mahtumkuli, performed by baritone Atageldi Garýagdyýew.
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 “How French women won, and used, their right to vote in 1945”, which will help you with the answer.
You have until 2 June to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 5 June 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.
Trump’s first 100 days: Tariffs war shakes trade and investment in Africa
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During the first 100 days of his second term in office, US President Donald Trump has issued a series of executive orders that have unsettled the commodities market and prompted investors to hold off from making new investments in African economies.
In the last three months, Trump has presented the world with “a ding-dong of measures and counter-measures,” as Nigerian finance analyst Gbolahan Olojede put it.
With such measures including increased tariffs on US imports from African nations (as elsewhere), this new regime has effectively called into question the future validity of preferential trade agreements with African states – such as the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), which allows duty-free access, under strict conditions, to the US market for African goods.
“The reciprocal tariffs effectively nullify the preferences that sub-Saharan Africa countries enjoy under AGOA,” South Africa’s foreign and trade ministers said in a joint statement on 4 April.
Jon Marks, editorial director of energy consultancy and news service African Energy, echoed this climate of uncertainty: “With the Trump presidency lurching from policy to policy, no one knows where they are. And it’s very difficult to actually see order within this chaos.”
Africa braces for economic hit as Trump’s tariffs end US trade perks
He told RFI he expects long periods of stasis, in which nothing actually happens, when people have been expecting immediate action.
“That’s going to be, I think, devastating for markets, devastating for investment. The outlook really is grim,” he added.
Commodities
In 2024, US exports to Africa were worth $32.1 billion. The US imported $39.5 billion worth of goods from Africa, the bulk of these being commodities such as oil and gas, as well as rare minerals including lithium, copper and cobalt.
“The focus of the Trump administration is on critical minerals now, particularly in the [Democratic Republic of Congo], which is the Saudi Arabia of cobalt,” said Eric Olander, editor-in-chief of the China Global South Project news site.
The US is aiming to build non-Chinese supply chains for its military technology.
“The F-35s, supersonic fighter jets, need cobalt. When they look at critical minerals, they’re not looking at that for renewable energy. They’re looking at it specifically for weapons and for their defence infrastructure,” Olander explained.
Collateral damage
On 2 April, President Trump unveiled sweeping tariffs on US imports worldwide, declaring that the US “has been looted, pillaged, raped and plundered by nations near and far” and calling this date a “Liberation Day” which will make “America wealthy again”.
Stock markets immediately plummeted as a result of his announcement.
On 9 April, Trump announced a 90-day pause – until mid-July – on these tariffs. Instead, a flat 10 percent rate will be applied on exports to the US.
The exception was China, whose goods face even higher tariffs – 145 percent on most Chinese goods. Beijing retaliated with 125 percent levies on US imports.
According to Olander, most African nations have so far been “insulated from the harsh impact of these tariffs” and from the consequences of what is, in effect, a trade war between two economic giants – China and the US.
“South Africa, which accounts for a considerable amount of Africa’s trade with the United States, is much more exposed to the effects of these tariffs than the rest of the continent,” he said.
Africa First
But what if Trump’s “America First” agenda was to be copied, asks Kelvin Lewis, editor of the Awoko newspaper in Sierra Leone.
“Just like Trump is saying America First, we should think Sierra Leone First,” he told RFI. “He is teaching everyone how to be patriotic. We have no reason to depend on other people, to go cap in hand begging, because we have enough natural resources to feed and house all 9 million of us Sierra Leoneans.”
He added: “If Africa says we close shop and we use our own resources for our benefit like Trump is telling Americans, I think the rest of the world would stand up and take notice.”
Meanwhile, Trump believes his imposition of these increased tariffs has succeeded in bringing countries to the negotiating table.
“I’m telling you, these countries are calling us up, kissing my ass. They are dying to make a deal. Please, please sir, make a deal. I’ll do anything. I’ll do anything, sir,” Trump said on 8 April at a Republican Congress committee dinner in Washington.
New markets
Olander believes that the trade war instigated by Trump has resulted in more risks than opportunities for Africa’s vulnerable countries.
“But, there is a lot more activity now diplomatically between African countries and other non-US countries,” he added.
“Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed from Ethiopia was in Vietnam, as was Burundi’s president. There’s more engagement between Uganda and Indonesia, more trade activity and discussions between Brazil and Africa.”
Foreign ministers from the BRICS group (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) met in Rio de Janeiro on 28 April to coordinate their response to Trump’s trade policy.
However, securing markets for non-US exports is a challenging task. It took Kenya 10 years “of steady diplomacy” to get China to fund the extension of the Standard Gauge Railway to the Ugandan border, according to Olander.
Kenyan president visits China as country pivots away from the US
“Whether it’s in China, Indonesia, Brazil or elsewhere, it takes time. Exporting into developed G7 markets means facing an enormous number of hurdles, like agricultural restrictions,” he continued. “Then, in the global south, Angola is not going to sell bananas to Brazil, right?”
“Trump’s trade policies have actually been to depress the oil price,” said Marks. “The price has been under the psychologically low threshold of $70 a barrel.
He explains it is because of the demand destruction Trump’s policies have placed on global trading.
Demand destruction means that people are not investing, “ Marks said. “It’s really a period of wait-and-see.”
“This will affect prices very profoundly. One of the ironies is that although a lower dollar means that African economies should be able to export their goods for more money, a declining dollar amidst market uncertainties means that investors are not going to be rushing to come into Africa.”
Trump’s first 100 days: Trade, diplomacy and walking the transatlantic tightrope
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Donald Trump’s return to the White House has brought with it a seismic shift in transatlantic dynamics, with rising trade tensions, reduced diplomatic engagement and growing uncertainty over the future of Western alliances. So what has been the early impact of his second term on EU–US relations and how is Europe responding?
With Trump’s administration wasting no time in rekindling the “America First” doctrine, this time with fewer diplomatic niceties, tensions over trade, diplomacy and the long-term stability of the transatlantic alliance quickly arose.
From the imposition of sweeping tariffs on EU goods – 20 percent across the board, covering all exports from France and other member states – to a reduction in support for Ukraine, Trump’s early moves have sent a clear message: Washington’s priorities have shifted – and not in Europe’s favour.
Brussels’ response, while restrained, has been firm, and the sense that Europe can no longer rely fully on Washington is taking root.
Trump’s tariffs come into force, upending economic ties with Europe
Retreat, rather than reform
One of the most striking aspects of Trump’s second term so far is his rapid dismantling of traditional US diplomatic structures.
Former US diplomat William Jordan warns that the institutional capacity of American diplomacy is being hollowed out. “The notion of America First risks turning into America Alone,” he said.
“Everything that’s been happening since 20 January has largely demoralised and damaged the State Department.”
There has been an exodus of seasoned diplomats, alongside a wave of politically motivated “loyalty tests” handed out to charities, NGOs and United Nations agencies as part of the State Department’s review of foreign aid – asking them to declare whether they have worked with “entities associated with communist, socialist, or totalitarian parties, or any parties that espouses anti-American beliefs”.
European allies rally behind Ukraine after White House clash
The cumulative effect of this threat to the impartiality of America’s foreign service, Jordan notes, is a profound erosion of trust – not just within US institutions but among global partners.
“There are worries in the intelligence community that longstanding partners can no longer share sensitive information with the United States,” he added, raising concerns about the durability of intelligence alliances such as Five Eyes, comprising the US, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
Trump’s decision to scale back overseas missions and USAID funding has also left vast vacuums of influence – particularly in Africa, where both China and Russia are stepping in to fill the void.
“It’s not just that it’s being done – it’s how it’s being done. Brutally. Recklessly. Slashing and burning institutions that have taken decades to build,” Jordan told RFI.
Amid this weakening of America’s traditional soft power influence, however, Jordan also cautions that the country’s soft power strategies have not always been effective, pointing to congressional inertia and overlapping funding mandates which have dulled strategic impact.
Still, he maintains, a haphazard retreat does more harm than reform.
A dressing-down in Munich
Europe’s discomfort was visible in February at the Munich Security Conference, where US Vice President JD Vance delivered a remarkable rebuke to European leaders, accusing them of wavering on democratic values.
The message was harsh, and the delivery even more so – an unprecedented public dressing-down in a diplomatic forum. The reaction in Munich embodied Europe’s growing unease.
European fears mount at Munich conference as US signals shift on Ukraine
“Certainly the language was something that you wouldn’t expect,” Mairéad McGuinness, the former EU Commissioner for Financial Stability told RFI.
“This is somebody coming to our house and telling us they don’t like how we run it. It’s not what you expect between friends and allies. Was it a surprise? Maybe not,” she added. “But it’s not normal.”
The incident underscored an increasingly assertive US posture under Trump 2.0, and the deepening fissures within the Western alliance, reflected in the new administration’s willingness to publicly challenge long-standing relationships.
European allies rally behind Ukraine after White House clash
‘Confidence in the US is eroding’
The EU has responded with a measured approach – “how the European Union tends to do its business,” according to McGuinness.
“What is problematic is trying to understand exactly what the US side wants,” she continued. “We’re hearing not just about tariffs, but also about food safety, financial regulation – areas where Europe leads globally.”
Rather than caving to pressure, the EU is showing signs of a more confident and coordinated strategic posture – in a similar vein to its response during the Covid-19 crisis and its rapid support for Ukraine following Russia’s 2022 invasion.
One consequence of these shifting diplomatic sands has been a rise in investment in European defence, following the US decision to suspend military aid to Ukraine.
EU Commission chief calls for defence ‘surge’ in address to EU parliament
With EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announcing that, under the Rearm Europe plan announced by on 6 March, EU member states can boost defence spending, European arms manufacturers are seizing the opportunity to compete against their US rivals.
While not a wholesale pivot away from the US, it signals a broader awareness that over-reliance on any single partner carries risks.
William Jordan put it bluntly: “Confidence in the US as a reliable partner is eroding, and not just in Europe.”
For him, this moment could present an opportunity for Europe to build a more independent and robust security architecture – one less vulnerable to the whims of any one American president.
How Donald Trump shaped a new world in just 100 days and what to do about it
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US President Donald Trump’s first 100 days in office have been marked by unprecedented volatility and deep divisions across the country.
Praised by supporters for his pledges to “restore faith in government” and “secure borders,” his tenure has also provoked widespread concern among Democrats and political analysts, who criticise his erratic style and sweeping executive orders that have disrupted established institutions and international alliances.
Trump’s first 100 days: Revolution or destruction? The view from France
The Trump administration has issued over 130 executive orders, including mass dismissals, aggressive immigration enforcement, and withdrawal from climate accords—measures that have had profound social and economic consequences.
Critics warn that such actions erode democratic norms and due process, while grassroots protests and public demonstrations have surged across the country in response to policies widely viewed as damaging to communities and public services.
Trump’s first 100 days: Grassroots pick up Democratic slack as ‘chaos’ unfolds
In this international report, we look ahead to the 2026 midterm elections, with experts suggesting that Trump’s confrontational approach and divisive policies could ultimately backfire on the Republican Party—potentially costing it crucial support.
Trump’s first 100 days: Revolution or destruction? The view from France
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Donald Trump’s second term in office has already sent shockwaves far beyond Washington, not only reshaping American politics but challenging global alliances and foreign economies. How do Democrats and Republicans in France view Trump’s first 100 days?
When Donald Trump was inaugurated for his second term on 20 January, he returned to the helm of the world’s most powerful nation pledging to Make America Great Again – again.
He vowed to shake things up with lightning speed and, on that front, he has delivered in spades, turning the political status quo on its head, at home and abroad.
For his detractors, Trump has been a whirlwind of destruction: eroding civil liberties, disregarding court authority, censoring university libraries accused of leftist bias, empowering tech oligarchs, disenfranchising minorities and throwing global markets into uproar with harsh new tariffs.
For his supporters, he’s a force of nature: fulfilling promises, unpicking the entrenched “deep state”, challenging intellectual elites and forging a path towards peace.
EU readies response to new US tariffs, France braces for fallout
‘He’s not wasting time’
Speaking to Nicolas Conquer, the president of Republicans Overseas France, it is clear that Trump’s dynamism has thrilled his supporters.
“I’ve seen it first-hand,” Conquer said. “He campaigned on a platform, and promises made are promises kept. Ever since day one, and now as we reach the 100-day mark, he’s been literally flooding the zone – making fast decisions and driving through much-needed reforms. Whether it’s government efficiency or the culture wars, he’s not wasting time.”
Trump’s flurry of executive orders – from immigration reforms to tariffs – has left no doubt about his intention to move fast and make changes.
Conquer suggests that Trump’s second-term energy stems from knowing he has just four years left to leave his mark: “He knows it’s now or never.”
However, criticism has been fierce – particularly of what many see as an authoritarian drift. Trump is accused of trampling on the courts, cracking down on dissent in education and bolstering oligarchic power structures.
Conquer, however, does not agree. “Looking at the political lawfare in the States,” he said, “there’s been massive obstruction by district judges interfering in executive branch policies. Historically, over the last 100 years, about 200 presidential decisions have been blocked by judges. Half of them concern Donald Trump. That’s a staggering number.”
He points to cases such as Harvard University’s reluctance to implement Trump’s executive orders targeting “wokeism” and anti-Semitism on campus, while still receiving considerable federal funding.
“You can’t have it both ways,” Conquer argued. “You can’t demand taxpayer money without adhering to government policies.”
French scientists join US protests in face of Trump administration’s ‘sabotage’
Legal resistance
Bob Valier of Democrats Abroad France paints a very different picture. For him, Trump’s victory was less about a failure of Democratic Party messaging and more about a broader systemic problem: voter apathy.
“We had the second highest turnout of my lifetime,” Valier said, “but we still lost. Not because our message wasn’t right, but because about 38 percent of eligible voters stayed home. If we bear any responsibility, it’s that we couldn’t motivate them to get out and vote.”
Valier acknowledges that Trump’s “shock and awe” approach has made coherent Democratic opposition harder. “It’s exhausting trying to fight back,” he admitted. “But that doesn’t mean we’re not doing it.”
Valier highlights the quiet, but significant, legal battles being waged. “From day one, lawsuits have been filed against executive orders. Courts move slowly, but many are finding in favour of the Democrats and placing restraining orders on Trump’s initiatives.”
Valier concedes that the Democrats have struggled to adapt to the new media landscape, where traditional platforms such as television no longer dominate.
“Young people are getting their news from podcasts, Discord servers and niche platforms,” he said. “The Democrats have largely been absent from these spaces. Kamala Harris, for example, turned down an appearance on Joe Rogan’s podcast – the most listened-to podcast in the country at the time. That was a huge missed opportunity.”
However, figures such as Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez are drawing mammoth crowds with their focus on working-class issues – healthcare, housing and the soaring cost of basics such as eggs.
‘Free Le Pen’: US conservatives rally behind French far-right leader
Trumpism abroad
When it comes to the potential for Trump-esque politics to reshape European politics, Conquer believes this is entirely possible, but with a caveat.
“It’s not about copy-pasting Trumpism into Europe. Each country has its own institutions, cultures and political dynamics. We need to localise it. What works in America might not work as quickly or in the same way elsewhere.”
In France, for example, while anti-elitist sentiment and nationalism are on the rise, the political landscape is distinct enough that any Trump-style movement would need a tailored approach.
Bardella ready to lead National Rally if Le Pen barred from 2027 elections
Looking ahead to 2028, according to Valier the next Democratic star will likely come from the party’s left wing.
“The message Bernie Sanders is delivering – about the working class, about economic inequality – that’s the message the party must embrace. People are hurting, and they want leaders who recognise that. It’s not just about identity politics anymore. It’s about whether ordinary Americans can afford eggs, healthcare, housing.”
Whether the Democrats can unite under the banner of addressing these issues remains to be seen. But if Trump’s first 100 days have demonstrated anything, it’s to expect the unexpected.
Two years of devastation: Sudan’s war claims thousands and displaces millions
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Since April 2023, Sudan has been gripped by a devastating war between the army, led by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, commanded by his former deputy, Mohamed Hamdan Daglo—known as Hemedti. In just two years, the conflict has claimed tens of thousands of lives, displaced over 13 million people, and sparked what many are calling the biggest humanitarian crisis ever recorded.
The two rivals were once allies, having jointly overthrown Sudan’s long-time ruler Omar al-Bashir in 2019 after nearly 30 years in power. However, their alliance fractured in 2021 amid growing tensions over how to transition the country towards civilian-led democratic rule.
Most recently, on 25 March, the Sudanese armed forces announced the recapture of the capital, Khartoum. But fighting continues south and west of the capital, where pockets dominated by the RSF remain.
‘No one else will’: Sudan’s journalists risk all to report the war
This week, Spotlight on Africa’s first guest is Assadullah Nasrullah, spokesperson and communications officer for the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) in Sudan. He had been working in the country for two years prior to the outbreak of war and now focuses on supporting those displaced within Sudan by the ongoing conflict.
Meanwhile, Philippe Dam, European Union director at Human Rights Watch, outlines for Spotlight on Africa how the EU could exert influence on multiple levels in the conflict — and why it must act.
Episode mixed by Erwan Rome.
Spotlight on Africa is produced by Radio France Internationale’s English language service.
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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.