Poland elections 2025
Poland’s Trzaskowski on course for tight presidential election win
Liberal Warsaw Mayor Rafal Trzaskowski appeared set to narrowly win Poland’s presidential election on Sunday, according to an exit poll, in a vote seen as a test of the nation’s support for a pro-European course versus Donald Trump-style nationalism.
An exit poll by Ipsos for broadcasters TVN, TVP and Polsat showed Rafal Trzaskowski of the ruling centrists Civic Coalition (KO) winning 50.3 percent of ballots, while his rival, a nationalist historian and amateur boxer, Karol Nawrocki, backed by nationalists Law and Justice (PiS), was at 49.7 percent.
Official results were expected on Monday, although a late poll that mixes some results with exit surveys was expected to be published overnight.
Trzaskowski, 53, campaigned on a promise to help the government of Prime Minister Donald Tusk complete its democratic reforms, which they both say aim to repair an erosion of checks and balances under the previous nationalist government that lost power in 2023.
Parliament holds most of the power in Poland, but the president can veto legislation, so the vote is being watched closely in neighbouring Ukraine, as well as in Russia, the US and across the European Union.
Both candidates agreed on the need to spend heavily on defence, as US President Donald Trump is demanding from Europe, and to continue supporting Ukraine in its fight against Russia’s three-year-old invasion.
But while Trzaskowski sees Ukraine’s future membership of NATO as essential for Poland’s security, Nawrocki said recently that if he were president he would not ratify it because of the danger of the alliance being drawn into war with Russia.
Social issues were also at stake in the election.
Trzaskowski has said he wanted to see Poland’s near total ban on abortion eased, something that outgoing nationalist President Andrzej Duda strongly opposed.
(Reuters)
Champions League
French president Macron hails PSG’s Champions League triumph at Elysée reception
French President Emmanuel Macron on Sunday hailed Paris Saint-Germain’s Champions League-winning squad during a lavish reception at the Elysée Palace in Paris.
“You’ve not only stirred and thrilled Parisians during the victory but the entire country over the past few weeks,” said Macron.
“You’ve also fired the dreams of thousands of youngsters who have been looking up to you.”
PSG claimed European club football’s most prestigious trophy for the first time after a 5-0 annihilation of Inter Milan at the Allianz Arena in Munich.
Désiré Doué set up Achraf Hakimi for the opener in the 12th minute and the 19-year-old extended PSG’s advantage eight minutes later.
Midway through the second-half, Doué effectively killed off the final with a sumptuous finish past the Inter goalkeeper Yann Sommer into the bottom right hand corner.
Surge
Khvicha Kvaratskhelia made it 4-0 after 73 minutes and academy graduate Senny Mayulu thrashed home the the fifth in the closing stages to give PSG a record win in the final in the 70-year history of the competition.
“The only thing I’d wish for is to be able to welcome you again next year with a second victory,” said Macron. “I know it is possible and that you have this hunger and desire for success.”
The party at the presidential palace followed a parade along a Champs-Elysées lined by an estimated 110,000 people.
The team headed to the procession directly from Roissy airport after flying in from Munich.
To the cheers and adulation of the serried ranks of fans, the players, all wearing shirts with ’25’ on it, brandished the Champions League trophy and addressed the supporters as they drove along the route.
“Lets’ all sing together,” shouted the PSG skipper Marquinhos.
After Macron’s reception, the squad travelled to the Parc des Princes where around 40,000 fans awaited the presentation of the trophy.
“The objective now is to win again,” said PSG president Nasser al-Khelaifi. “It has taken 14 years of hard work but we are building something for the future.”
Violence
In the aftermath of victory, police made nearly 600 arrests across France, the interior ministry said on Sunday. More than 200 cars were torched across the country and police clashed with youths.
In Dax in south-western France, a 17-year-old boy died after being stabbed in the chest. A 23-year-old man riding a scooter in central Paris also died after being hit by a vehicle.
A policeman was put in an induced coma after being injured by a firework.
Macron and PSG condemned the violence.
“These isolated acts are contrary to the club’s values and in no way represent the vast majority of our supporters, whose exemplary behaviour throughout the season deserves to be commended,” a PSG spokesperson added.
Champions League
Jubilant PSG parade Champions League trophy in Paris
Paris (AFP) – An estimated 100,000 fans packed the Champs-Elysees on Sunday to cheer the Paris Saint-Germain players and staff as they paraded the Champions League trophy in the French capital.
The team came by bus directly from Roissy airport after touching down from Munich, where they beat Inter Milan in Saturday’s final. They were greeted along the route by jubilant supporters.
Some had flags or flares, all wanted to savour their club winning the biggest prize in European club football for the first time in their history.
The players, all wearing shirts with ’25’ on it, brandished the trophy and addressed the crowd as they drove.
“Lets’ all sing together,” shouted their emblematic captain Marquinhos.
Coach Luis Enrique and his team, including Desire Doue, the 19-year-old who lit up the final by scoring twice in the dazzling 5-0 win over Inter, later went to a reception at the Elysee palace hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron.
Police were on high alert to prevent any repetition of the scenes that scarred the victory celebrations in the capital after the final whistle on Saturday night.
An estimated 11.8 million viewers watched the game on French television which sparked a long night of wild celebrations. Fans thronged the streets of the capital, letting off flares and fireworks as decades of pent-up frustration were released.
Police made nearly 600 arrests across France, the interior ministry said, after more than 200 cars were torched and police clashed with youths.
In the southwest town of Dax, a 17-year-old boy died after being stabbed in the chest.
A 23-year-old man riding a scooter in central Paris also died after being hit by a vehicle.
A policeman was put in an induced coma after being injured by a firework.
President Macron on Sunday called the violence “unacceptable” while PSG also condemned it.
“These isolated acts are contrary to the club’s values and in no way represent the vast majority of our supporters, whose exemplary behaviour throughout the season deserves to be commended,” PSG said.
The violence paled against an incident last Monday when a Premier League victory parade by Liverpool Football Club in the English city ended in horrific scenes after a car ploughed into the crowd, leaving 79 injured.
‘Win again’
After Saturday’s final, Macron hailed PSG’s victory on social media as a “day of glory.”
“Bravo, we are all proud,” he wrote. “Paris is the capital of Europe tonight.”
The margin of victory was the greatest in a final in the history of the Champions League or the European Cup that preceded it.
Qatar Sports Investments pumped hundreds of millions of euros pumped into PSG since buying an ailing club in 2011, but over the last couple of have seasons turned their back on their former policy of signing stars such as Neymar and Lionel Messi and focussed instead spent their money on young French talent.
Doue cemented his status as a rising star in world football. Senny Mayulu, another 19-year-old, came on as a substitute towards the end and scored the fifth goal.
“I still can’t believe it, I think it will only seem real tomorrow,” Mayulu said after the game. “In the dressing room, everyone broke down in their own way, you could see it in their eyes, people were filled with joy and pride.”
PSG had lost their only other appearance in the final five years ago was the result but after Saturday’s triumph, said they planned to win more.
“The objective now is to win again,” PSG president Nasser al-Khelaifi said. “It has taken 14 years of hard work but we are building something for the future.”
Champions League
Doué bags a brace as PSG annihilate Inter Milan to claim Champions League
Désiré Doué scored twice and set up another goal as Paris Saint-Germain destroyed Inter Milan 5-0 on Saturday night in Munich to lift the Champions League trophy for the first time.
PSG exploded into the game and dominated possession.
Twelve minutes in, Vitinha pushed the ball behind the Inter defence for Doué’s dart into the penalty area. He rolled it across for the unmarked Achraf Hakimi to stab into the net.
Eight minutes later, Doué, over on the right wing, collected Ousmane Dembélé’s pass from the left, drove into the penalty area and his strike took a deflection off Federico Dimarco to wrong-foot the Inter goalkeeper Yann Sommer and loop into the net.
Midway through the second-half, the 19-year-old effectively ended the contest.
Vitinha, receiving a slick back heel pass from Dembélé, cushioned the ball into Doué’s path and he guided his shot elegantly into the right hand corner past Sommer.
The midfielder was booked for removing his shirt in his celebration. And soon taken out of the fray.
But his departure brought no respite for Inter.
Dembélé remained and the France international set up Khvicha Kvaratskhelia for the fourth after 73 minutes.
Doué’s replacement, Bradley Barcola, fed fellow substitute Senny Mayulu for the fifth in the closing stages to give PSG a record win in the final in the 70-year history of European club football’s most prestigious competition.
“It is wonderful, it is magical, we are rewriting the history of this club and French football,” said Doué who moved to PSG from Rennes last August.
Prize
“It’s exceptional,” Dembélé added. “It’s especially good since we did it in style. We went to Liverpool, to Aston Villa, and played great games. We deserve it and so do the fans.”
The victory furnished PSG with a clean sweep of trophies.
In January, the club claimed the French Super Cup and the Ligue 1 championship followed in April.
Last Saturday, Barcola bagged a brace as PSG overpowered Reims to win the Coupe de France for a record 16th time in its 108-year history.
PSG boss Luis Enrique, who led Barcelona to the 2015 Champions League, became the seventh coach to win the trophy with two different teams, in the footsteps of Carlo Ancelotti, Pep Guardiola and Jose Mourinho.
“We are ambitious, we are going to continue to conquer the football world,” Enrique added.
Inter, who lost the 2023 Champions League final in Istanbul against Manchester City, had been seeking redemption in Munich.
Last Friday, Napoli pipped them to the Serie A title by a point. And city rivals AC Milan eliminated them from the Coppa Italia last month.
“We are extremely disappointed,” said coach Simone Inzaghi said. “Defeats can make you stronger. This defeat hurts a lot just like in Istanbul.”
France
Changing France’s approach to volunteering, one hour at a time
With its strong social safety net, France has not traditionally been a country with a strong culture of volunteerism. But that may be changing, with a new initiative to encourage people to give an hour of their time each month to help their neighbours.
“There are 65 million people in France. If each gives one hour, imagine what we could do? We can change the world,” says Atanase Périfan.
He is behind L’Heure civique (the Civic Hour), a project that recruits people to volunteer an hour of their time each month to do tasks in their communities – tending to someone’s garden, helping with grocery shopping or giving homework help, for example.
Surveys show that about a quarter of the French population takes part in some volunteer activity, but in an organised way, through an organisation.
Filling the gap
“In France, the state is very present – maybe too much – but it cannot do everything,” Périfan said, reflecting on France’s social model and pointing out that volunteers fill in the gap between what families do for each other and institutional support from the state.
“When the three levels – family, state and neighbours – work together, it makes everything better.”
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The Civic Hour aims to get neighbours involved with helping each other.
Neighbourhoods are a particular focus for Périfan, who is at the origin of the now annual Fête des voisins – “neighbours’ party” – which sees apartment buildings or neighbourhoods organise an event to get to know each other.
The first was a gathering of Périfan’s own neighbours in Paris’s 17th arrondissement. He organised it after being horrified to learn that an elderly woman in his neighbourhood had died and her body had not been found for four months.
Listen to the history of the Fête des voisins in the spotlight on France podcast, here:
After a successful gathering, Périfan decided to try and spread the concept.
A local councillor in the arrondissement at the time – he is a now a deputy mayor, charged with social issues – he was no stranger to organising and picked up the phone to call round his colleagues to get them on board.
By the following year he had recruited 20 cities. Now, 25 years later, 5,000 cities across France officially endorse the Fête des voisins, with millions of people organising the gatherings each year.
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‘Helping others brings happiness’
Périfan’s association, Voisins solidaires (“Neighbours Together”), launched the Civic Hour initiative in 2021, in the depths of the Covid-19 pandemic, when people began helping each other out during lockdowns.
As he did with the neighbours’ party, he began at home in his Paris neighbourhood. He then tested the idea in the Charente-Maritime department where he has a second home, before taking it to four other departments.
Today, more than 200 cities are taking part, with nearly 20,000 volunteers signed up – most of them young retirees, who had hesitated to get involved in an association.
Volunteering has dropped in recent years among older people, while it is on the rise with younger people. But the Civic Hour, with fewer constraints than other commitments, is appealing.
“Helping others brings a lot of happiness,” Périfan says. “Happiness is not just about having money – happiness comes from relationships, helping others.”
Chlordecone scandal
Chlordecone victims in French West Indies demand justice as state denies liability
The French state continues to deny responsibility in the chlordecone scandal, after authorising the use of the pesticide for years in banana plantations in Martinique and Guadeloupe. RFI met with several victims who are calling those responsible to account and seeking compensation.
The French state has recently filed an appeal against the decision of a Paris court of 11 March, which ruled that the state should compensate people who have been exposed to chlordecone.
The move has angered victims in the French overseas departments of Martinique and Guadeloupe.
“I used to make boxes to pack bananas and stick the labels on,” said one woman, who has always lived among the banana plantations in Martinique, a few steps from the warehouse where she worked.
5 questions about chlordecone pesticide use in French Antilles
Every day she handled bananas treated with chlordecone by the hundreds, she told RFI.
“My fingers swelled up, my fingers and thumbs became deformed. It was after the occupational doctor came and I showed him my hands. He told me I couldn’t continue working.”
She continued: “And then one day, when I was going shopping with my children, I said to my daughter ‘I can’t see anything at all’. And the doctor said I needed immediate surgery.”
An emergency operation prevented the damage from spreading to her brain, but she lost her sight. Today, she is demanding accountability from those responsible and asking for further treatment.
“I want to get my eyes back and for justice to know that it was the chlordecone that did this to me,” she said.
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Workers say no one spoke to them about the dangers of chlordecone.
Another woman remembers her years working in the banana plantations. She says that workers were given a bucket to spread fertiliser and pesticides by hand, without any protection or explanation.
“One day, I arrived in the middle of the fields, and I felt something was really wrong. Dizziness, weakness, trembling. And I collapsed with the bucket,” she recalled.
“They need to admit that they poisoned us. When I call all my friends, all my aunts, all my cousins, everyone is dying because of that poison they used. I’m asking for justice.”
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“I carry all the rage of the people from Martinique, and this rage is directed at the state and at the poisoners… because they did this intentionally, they already knew,” said Yvan Sérénus, president of the group of agricultural workers poisoned by pesticides.
Chlordecone has been classified as a carcinogen by the World Health Organization since 1979 and was banned in the United States in 1977.
In the French Caribbean, it continued to be used until 1993, despite being officially banned in 1990 in mainland France.
Today, more than 90 percent of the adult population in Guadeloupe and Martinique has been contaminated by chlordecone, according to France’s public health body.
This report was adapted from RFI’s podcast Reportage France, produced by Jeanne Richard.
BRETON LANGUAGE
Will young people be the saviours of France’s endangered Breton language?
Brittany – Half of France’s regional languages are considered ‘seriously endangered’ according to Unesco, but in the west of the country, where the decline in Breton speakers has accelerated in recent years, a network of schools is fighting the decline.
“Demat!” Greetings echo through the corridors of the Diwan secondary school in Vannes. In the entrance hall, Gabriella and her classmates are filling a whiteboard with words of farewell and thanks – “kenavo” and “trugarez” – for someone who is leaving.
Here, with the exception of French and the foreign languages taught, the 145 secondary school pupils and 45 high school students take all their lessons in Breton, and the use of the language is strongly encouraged during breaks, at lunch and in activities.
Diwan – meaning “seed” in Breton, which is a Celtic language – is a network of Breton language immersion schools, founded in 1977.
Gabriella, who is in her last year of middle school, is looking forward to continuing her studies in the high school here next year. “I’m so happy, it’s a big family,” she says.
She loves the fact that she can “talk in the street with her friends without others being able to understand” – although her parents do speak Breton.
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But while the mood in school on the eve of the spring holidays may be light, the atmosphere in the wider Breton-speaking community is a little heavier.
According to the results of a survey by the TMO research institute, published on 20 January, there are now just 107,000 Breton speakers left – or 2.7 percent of the population of the five départements concerned. The last survey in 2018 put the figure at 200,000.
“It’s a culture, an identity that’s in danger of disappearing,” said Mathilde Lahogue, director of the Diwan network.
Fulup Jakez, director of the Public Office for the Breton Language (OPLB), responsible for developing and promoting the use of the language, agreed, and added that the results were not surprising. “It’s demographics – the last generations raised in the Breton language until after the Second World War are dying out.”
A very French linguistic history
Like half of France’s regional languages, Breton is considered to be “seriously endangered” by the United Nations’ cultural arm Unesco.
Rozenn Milin, a historian and journalist, and author of La honte et le châtiment – Imposer le français: Bretagne, France, Afrique et autres territoires (“Shame and Punishment – Imposing French: Brittany, France, Africa and other territories”) says this is the result of the country consistently encouraging the use of French as the sole language, to the detriment of local languages.
“At the time of the Reign of Terror [a period of violence and repression during the French Revolution in which those perceived as enemies of the revolution were arrested and executed en masse, from September 1793 to July 1794] it was decided that everyone had to learn French and that dialects and idioms – as they were called – which were considered to be linked to the clergy and counter-revolutionary ideas, had to be wiped out,” she explained.
With the arrival of compulsory education in 1882, French became the language of schools, and the use of local languages was banned.
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“In Brittany, children who used Breton words were given a sabot [a wooden clog] to wear around their necks. At the end of the day, the last one to be wearing the sabot was punished,” Milin explained.
“So even though it was still the family language, they were gradually made to feel ashamed of speaking Breton. As a result, in the 1950s and 1960s, Breton stopped being passed down.”
It wasn’t until a handful of activists set up the Diwan network in 1977, followed by bilingual courses in state and Catholic education, that Breton began to be reclaimed. But the break had caused irreparable damage, and today, the Breton-speaking population is shrinking.
But it is also getting younger. The number of speakers is rising in the 25-39 age group. “This shows that long-term teaching policies are bearing fruit,” said Jakez.
The future of Breton today indeed depends essentially on education, with only 16 percent of current speakers having learnt the language at home, while 78 percent have learnt it at school.
But for the time being, this trend is far from offsetting the decline.
At the start of the school year in September 2024, 20,280 pupils were enrolled in Breton-French bilingual streams (across public, private Catholic and private Diwan schools), according to figures from the OPLB – representing less than 7 percent of children in the Rennes education authority.
‘Diwan is not a factory for political activists’
“We’re developing media, there are texts and books published in Breton, we’re working on voice recognition, but we need to develop teaching more generally,” said Paul Molac, MP for Morbihan, a department of Brittany.
Molac proposed the law that was passed in 2021 to allow instruction in France’s regional languages in the country’s state schools. It was passed by 247 votes to 76, however the provision on immersive learning included in the law was censured by the Constitutional Council, on the grounds that the Republic is one and indivisible and that this could be seen as calling into question the teaching of French.
France allows immersive teaching of regional languages in schools
This decision has prevented the consolidation of the teaching method offered by Diwan, which is now “financially and legally fragile” according to the director of the network, even though it has proved its worth.
“The State is much more opposed to regional languages than it is in other European countries,’ points out Milin, citing the examples of Switzerland and the United Kingdom: “[In France] they confuse a common language with a single language.”
“Diwan is not a factory for political activists,” insists Diwan president Marc-Yver Le Duic, adding that Breton education is “secular, free and open to all” and comparing the Diwan schools to French lycées abroad, a network of French secondary schools around the world which adhere to the French national curriculum, where French is the primary teaching language.
Responding to another oft-cited fear, he added: “Breton does not make our pupils bad French speakers. This is borne out by the good overall results achieved by our students in national exams.”
Florian Voyenne, headmaster of the Vannes Diwan school and a former classics teacher who grew up learning Breton, points to the success of the education system in Wales.
The teaching of Welsh has been made compulsory from the first to the fourth year of secondary school – a model that has helped to increase the number of Welsh speakers. According to the 2021 census, there are 538,300 in the country, almost 18 per cent of the population.
‘We don’t force it’
“I think that in the next 10 to 20 years, we’ll hit rock bottom at around 50,000 speakers,” predicted Milin. Jakez, however, remains optimistic: he sees the future of the language revolving around “a minority of speakers but who, unlike their ancestors who were not literate, will have access to reading and writing in the Breton language”.
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Elouan is in his final year of secondary school, having done all his schooling at Diwan. His parents don’t speak Breton, although they did try a few lessons.
For Elouan, who wants to study history, “speaking a language from our regions is important, to know where we come from and who we are”. He would like to “link his future to Breton, to keep Breton alive” – maybe as a teacher.
According to the latest research, 19 percent of Breton-speakers are aged between 15 and 39 – amounting to around 20,000 people. How many of them will pass on the language?
“We just want them to enjoy speaking Breton. We don’t force it,” says David Le Gal, who teaches Breton and music, and whose wife and five children are all Breton speakers too. He’s part of the generation that reappropriated the language later in life, when his parents had written it off.
“If two out of 10 of them pass on the language, that’ll be good. For me, Breton opens doors to the world. It’s just one more way of enjoying life.”
This piece has been adapted from the original version in French.
Romania’s past fuels today’s nationalism
Issued on: Modified:
Romania, that just came out of crucial elections, still grapples with a complex mix of nostalgia and disillusionment regarding its communist past, particularly the legacy of Ceausescu’s regime. While older generations remember the hardships many younger Romanians, who never experienced communism directly. Far right right groups explore this to fuel nationalist and anti-European Union sentiment. Will Romania still be able to learn from its past?
French photo festival goes ‘so British’ this summer
Issued on: Modified:
For its 22nd edition, La Gacilly International Photo festival in western France is featuring 10 outdoor exhibitions in honour of big names in British photography including Martin Parr, Terry O’Neill and Don McCullin. Spread across the town’s picturesque parks, nine other exhibitions display environmental themes, with a special focus on the “year of the sea”. From 1 June to 5 October, 2025.
Neighbours getting to know neighbours
Issued on:
When Antanase Perifan held the very ferist Neighbours party in his flat in 1999, it did not start out very well. Today, the Neighbours party is supported by 5,000 cities and millions of people across France get together on the last Friday of May to get to know their neighbours. More in the Spotlight on France podcast, episode 129, listen here: https://rfi.my/Bh18.y
Health in Kenya
The women carrying the burden of Kenya’s rural healthcare on their backs
East Kenya – In the dim light of early morning in eastern Kenya, Lucia ties a shawl around her head, hauls a red backpack on to her shoulders and sets out on foot. The bag contains only a few essential medicines, but for the families in this remote village, it may as well contain miracles.
For more than 10 years, Lucia has been the closest thing to a doctor many here have seen.
She is a Community Health Worker, or CHW – part of a vast but often overlooked network of women who quietly sustain Kenya’s rural healthcare system.
Every day before sunrise, she walks up to 20 kilometres on dusty paths and rocky hills to visit people in their homes – checking on pregnant mothers, tending to sick children and referring emergency cases to distant health centres.
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In places where clinics are scarce and roads barely exist, CHWs like Lucia are a lifeline. People know her, and they trust her – some owe their lives to her.
“I’ve been doing this for a long time,” Lucia says. “I’m not paid much, but I do it because these are my people. They have no one else to rely on.”
A life-changing gift
Lucia used to spend hours walking between homes, which meant fewer visits and longer days. Then she received a gift that changed everything: a bicycle.
It was given to her by World Bicycle Relief, a global charity working to empower remote communities through mobility. It has distributed more than 24,000 bicycles across Kenya to support health workers, schoolchildren and displaced individuals.
With her new bike, the time Lucia once spent trekking between appointments could now be spent reaching more patients, and getting to them faster.
“This bike is a lifesaver,” she says. “Before, I could visit maybe five homes a day. Now I can reach 15, sometimes 20. Every minute counts.”
“A good quality bicycle means a health worker can serve more patients, and it requires almost no maintenance,” Maureen Kolenyo, regional director of World Bicycle Relief in East Africa, told RFI.
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Government support in Kenya is often lacking, leaving organisations such as World Bicycle Relief to step in and fill the gaps.
Esther Mwangi, a county health official, knows how crucial such interventions are. “People often underestimate how transformative a bicycle can be, especially in developing regions where the infrastructure supports it,” she said.
“We’re working closely with Kenya’s Ministry of Health to identify high-need areas. The pressing question now is: who will invest, and help scale up the solution?” Kolenyo added.
‘I carry my people’
Lucia’s relationship with her community is intimate, born of countless hours spent listening, checking and comforting.
“We can always count on her. She saved my baby,” Nthenya, a mother of four, said
An elderly man who receives weekly check-ups calls her “more reliable than the dispensary”, while one young woman in her final trimester of pregnancy said she sees Lucia as “a second mother”.
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At the end of another long day, she mounts her bicycle and begins the steep, uneven ride home. The light is fading and the road is rough, but she is still smiling.
“Before, my legs would be shaking by now,” she says. “But this bicycle – it’s like my partner. It carries me, and I carry my people.”
End of life
How 184 random citizens helped shape France’s debate on assisted dying
French MPs will on Tuesday vote on two landmark bills on palliative care and assisted dying. They’re the result of months of debate shaped by a rare democratic experiment that brought together 184 randomly selected citizens to grapple with one of society’s most intimate and divisive questions: how should we die?
Marc-Olivier Strauss-Kahn was on a high-speed train in November 2022 when his phone rang. The 71-year-old retired economist had no idea he was about to join what he would later describe as “the best social experience of my life”.
The caller invited him to join France’s citizens’ convention on end-of-life care – President Emmanuel Macron’s bid to involve the public in a national conversation about assisted dying.
France’s current 2016 law allows for “deep and continuous sedation” for terminally ill patients, but assisted suicide – where a patient takes a lethal drug themselves – and euthanasia – where a third party administers it – remain illegal.
The convention was asked to answer one question: “Is the way we accompany those approaching the end of life adapted to the different situations which emerge, or do we need to introduce changes?”
Strauss-Kahn was curious to explore a topic that concerns everyone. “We’re all going to die at some stage,” he says.
He was also intrigued by the novel format. “How can you make so many people work together when they don’t know each other and they have so many different backgrounds?”
What followed was an intensive four-month process spanning 27 days of deliberation across nine weekends – backed up by online chats and virtual meetings. The participants – diverse in age, gender, region, and education level – were united by their willingness to engage.
“I met people that I might never have met or talked to before,” the retired economist and senior civil servant explains. He sat alongside people who “had difficulties understanding all the words” and needed help with some concepts.
Rather than creating division, the range of backgrounds became a strength. “The importance, the intimacy of the topic helped us to respect the views of the other, because there is no right or wrong,” he says.
Listen to a conversation with Marc-Olivier Strauss-Kahn in the Spotlight on France podcast
France begins citizens’ debate on end-of-life care
For and against
Another participant was 35-year-old Soline Castel, who runs a day centre for people with mental disabilities in rural Sarthe. Unlike Strauss-Kahn, who came in broadly in favour of assisted dying, Castel’s family background meant she leaned more towards opposing it.
Still, she was determined not to make up her mind in advance. “I let myself be guided by the convention to form an opinion,” she says.
Over the four months, the 184 participants sat through 60 hearings with health professionals, philosophers, lawyers and religious figures. They also heard from terminally ill patients and workers in palliative care.
By the end, their positions had crystallised in opposite directions. Strauss-Kahn became more supportive of assisted dying, calling it “the ultimate freedom”.
His conviction was strengthened by discovering the “many obstacles to be overcome”, including a lack of medicine, knowledge and information, and poor training for healthcare professionals.
“I have to confess that several times I cried,” Strauss-Kahn admits, reflecting on the testimonies he heard.
He remembers a particularly striking moment during a hearing with religious leaders from six different faiths, who all referred to the commandments “you shall not kill” and “you shall not steal”.
“A philosopher said in response: ‘When it’s your own money, you are not robbing yourself; when it’s your own life you’re not killing. It’s your own liberty to decide what you want.’ That helped me understand better the differences of views.”
‘My life, my death’: French woman battles for right to die with dignity
Castel, however, emerged “firmly opposed to any form of active assistance in dying”, believing it would be impossible to guarantee protection for vulnerable people.
“It’s extremely difficult to put sufficient safeguards in place to guarantee the safety of my fellow citizens, especially those who may be vulnerable,” she explains. “I work in the field of disability, and I’m also thinking of the elderly.”
Castel was raised a Catholic, though she does not believe faith should influence a country’s laws. However, she said the testimonies raised serious concerns about subtle pressure on elderly people from their families. They may have been influenced, she says, “but no one will know”.
Despite the 2016 law, 19 of France’s 101 administrative departments still do not have palliative care units, according to a health ministry report. Castel argues that if the existing law were properly applied, most cases would be resolved.
“Studies have shown that people who ask for help dying often do so because they are alone or in pain,” Castel says. These two factors can be resolved, she adds, while conceding there are also rare cases where no pain relief is possible.
Macron’s euthanasia bill prompts anger from health workers, church
Respecting diversity of opinion
The convention’s final recommendations reflected the range of views in the room.
A large majority – 95 percent – backed expanded palliative care. Some 76 percent supported medical assistance in dying, but only as a last resort and in strictly defined cases. Those in the 23 percent minority who opposed any form of assisted dying were given equal time to speak – a courtesy that stood in stark contrast to debates in parliament.
“At the same time, the so-called representative democracy, our elected members in parliament, were shouting and the contrast made us very proud of our respect for each other,” Strauss-Kahn notes.
He says the convention has already had an impact. A 10-year strategy for palliative care is being implemented, bringing total investment in the sector to around €6 billion by 2034. Arguments from the citizen panel – both for and against assisted dying – are now often cited by MPs and in the media.
Breathing life into death: a filmmaker’s tribute to palliative care
In a country like France, where political compromise is rare, the convention showed that deliberative democracy can handle divisive issues with nuance and respect.
Rather than seeking false consensus, the participants focused on clearly stating the arguments on both sides.
“We realised it was better to clarify any consensus, express the arguments for and against and assess how many were in favour,” Strauss-Kahn says. “We’re living through a crisis of representative democracy and the idea is not to replace representative democracy by deliberative democracy, but just to involve the citizens more as a complementary approach.”
Castel says of her minority stance: “I really felt I’d been heard. The arguments of those who were against were said, reiterated and written down.”
French citizens group in favour of allowing euthanasia, assisted suicide
Life after the assembly
Strauss-Kahn and Castel are now part of a broader group known as “The 184”, created after the convention to promote deliberative democracy and better end-of-life care. Although they disagree on assisted dying, they continue to work together to ensure the convention’s work stays part of the national debate.
The idea was also to ensure a life after the assembly. “I like to say that we thought about end of life but not the end of life of the convention,” Strauss-Kahn says. “For some people it really was a form of social inclusion.”
They are also advising the next citizens’ assembly – which will focus on school hours and children’s wellbeing – on what could be improved.
Strauss-Kahn says they are trying to improve ties with parliament, since some MPs viewed the convention as a threat. He also warns about the need to fight misinformation.
“Some were saying that up to a million people would be able to access assisted dying, this is false. We encourage the new convention to do fact-checking from the very beginning.”
Citizen panels ‘still useful’ despite disappointment after climate convention
Whether France’s lawmakers follow the convention’s recommendations or not remains to be seen, but both Strauss-Kahn and Castel are convinced the process was important.
Strauss-Kahn encourages anyone who can to take part.
“If there’s a phone call that is not clearly a commercial, take it and try to participate because it’s a unique chance in your life,” he says.
METRIC SYSTEM
The Metre Convention: a milestone that’s changed modern life immeasurably
France – and the majority of the rest of the world – is marking 150 years since the Metre Convention first united them in a shared language of measurement, laying the foundations for international scientific cooperation.
There aren’t many 136-year-old metal cylinders tucked away in Paris basements that can claim global fame.
Yet “Prototype 35” – a shimmering iridium-platinum artefact – quietly changed the course of modern life.
At just 39 millimetres high and wide, this unassuming 1 kilogram weight helped anchor the world’s understanding of mass – and with it, the uniformity of measurement that underpins everything from baking a cake to building a bridge.
This week marked the 150th anniversary of the Metre Convention, signed in Paris on 20 May, 1875 by 17 nations eager to bring order to a chaotic patchwork of global measurements.
The treaty established a universal system of units – ushering in consistency, accuracy, and international cooperation in science, industry and daily life.
As the French national metrology institute posted in celebration on X: “This international convention laid the foundations for scientific cooperation to harmonise measurements across the world”.
Revolutionary beginnings
Before the Convention, the world was a confusing place.
A pound of wheat in Marseille didn’t weigh the same as one in Brest, and a yard in one city might be a foot in another.
The French Revolution, with its rallying cry for equality, prompted scientists to invent the metric system, based not on arbitrary traditions but on nature itself, with the metre originally defined as a fraction of Earth’s meridian.
Louis de Broglie’s quantum leap that changed physics forever
What began as a revolutionary idea soon gained traction beyond France. The 1875 Convention established the International Bureau of Weights and Measures and marked the beginning of a truly global system.
Today, more than 150 countries use the International System of Units, which comprises seven base measurements: the metre, kilogram, second, kelvin, candela, ampere and mole.
Far from being stuck in the past, this system is constantly evolving.
Gone are the days of relying on physical objects such as Prototype 35 as ultimate standards. Instead, modern definitions rest on fundamental constants of nature. The metre, for example, is now linked to the speed of light and the kilogram to Planck’s constant, a cornerstone of quantum physics.
International cooperation
These definitions require practical application, and that’s where national metrology institutes such as France’s LNE come in.
At its laboratory in Paris, scientists including Florian Beaudoux meticulously calibrate masses, lasers and gauge blocks, ensuring precision across industries. “Even a microscopic miscalculation can affect everything from engineering to medicine,” he explained to French news agency AFP.
Their work ensures that a litre of petrol in Lyon matches one in Lagos, that an aircraft part built in Toulouse fits seamlessly with another from Hamburg, and that a blood test result is identical whether processed in Tokyo or Toronto.
Towering Scientists: Foucault’s pendulum and Earth’s rotation
International cooperation is at the heart of what they do. As Maguelonne Chambon, director of research at LNE, said: “We need to compare ourselves, understand differences and agree on how to resolve them.”
With climate, altitude and even gravity varying across the globe, collaboration is not a luxury but a necessity.
(with newswires)
Cannes Film Festival 2025
Postcard from Cannes #5: Zooming in on talented cinematographers
While the Cannes Film Festival is the place to discover new films and talent, it’s also an important moment in the industry calendar to recognise the hard work of the people behind the scenes. This is the case with the Prix Angénieux, awarded on Friday in Cannes to cinematographers from Australia and South Korea.
The annual Prix Angénieux prize, now in its 12th year, was established to bring image experts – without whom cinema would not exist – into focus.
Many films released recently have benefited from the high-quality lenses made by the French company, named after Pierre Angénieux, who founded it 90 years ago.
These include the 2024 Palme d’Or winner Anora by Sean Baker, and Jury Prize Emilia Perez by Jacques Audiard, among many others.
The 2025 recipients are Australia’s Dion Beebe, who won the Prix Angénieux tribute award and South Korea’s Eunsoo Cho, who won the Prix Angénieux Encouragement Award.
They were invited to the Cannes Film Festival to attend an award ceremony and a gala dinner on Friday.
Known for stylised, highly saturated colour palettes and an experimental approach to high-speed digital video, Beebe has collaborated with top names in Hollywood from Jane Campion (Holy Smoke) to Michael Mann (Collateral and Miami Vice).
One of his key artistic partnerships over the years has been with American director Rob Marshall, who he credits with having “taught” him so much about camera work and the “language of movement”.
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Their first project together was the film musical Chicago, released in 2002.
It was the first musical in 34 years to win the Academy Award for Best Movie, along with awards for Best Supporting Actress (Catherine Zeta-Jones) and four technical Academy awards.
“Rob is an amazing storyteller and has a wonderful sense showmanship and spectacle,” Beebe tells RFI in Cannes.
Language of movement
“Every time an actor walks in a room and the camera is in the room with them, there’s choreography. The movement for him is crucial. When actors pick something up, he looks at the height of that table they pick it up from, because that affects movement.”
When asked about how he works with actors, he said that is an important part of the cinematographer’s work.
“Protecting and looking after the actors is really such an important part of the cinematographer’s role. There really has to be a lot of trust,” Beebe told RFI.
He recounts the rumours about working with a “difficult” Christian Bale, with whom he worked on Equilibrium by Kurt Wimmer (2002).
Compassion
He says that more compassion is needed on set to help the actor get to “a vulnerable place” in order to be convincing in their role.
“The truth is for an actor in a role, it’s incredibly tough to create this sort of belief that you’re in their world. Everything we see, of course, as the viewer, as the cinematographer is the perfect view of this movie, but what the actor sees is just a mess. It’s not as immersive as we might think for the actor.”
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Winner of numerous awards over the past thirty years; he received the Academy Award for Best Cinematography and a BAFTA in the same category for his work on Rob Marshall’s Memoirs of a Geisha in 2006.
He is currently finishing a film with Antoine Fuqua, Michael, a biopic about Michael Jackson.
Eunsoo Cho is a graduate of the Korean National University of Arts and the University Of Southern California School Of Cinematic Arts.
She has shot numerous fiction and documentary shorts in Africa, Asia, and North America.
Inspired by Tim Burton growing up – she says she decided to be a cinematographer because she wanted to “have the director’s ear”.
“I didn’t know what they really did besides standing behind the cameras. Later on, I gradually learned what it is and it was even more fascinating,” she told RFI.
Postcard from Cannes #5: Indian cinematographer bags coveted prize
Although animal documentaries were her first preference, she has loved filming people and helping them tell their stories, such as her most recent project – The Last of the Sea Women – by Sue Kim (2024). It profiles the Haenyeo, a community of female divers on South Korea’s Jeju Island who have harvested seafood without oxygen tanks for centuries.
Her work beside acclaimed documentary cinematographer Iris Ng for this film won the Best Cinematography award at the 9th Critics’ Choice Documentary Awards.
‘Art of emptiness’
For her, cinematographers are the “shadows that complete the existence” of a film – always present but never seen.
She says that her Korean cultural heritage has guided her in her filmmaking approach, particularly when it comes to using space.
“I’m not sure I can speak for Koreans or Korean culture in general but I think we naturally try to do less. We don’t try to fill every corner and every space,” Cho says, adding this is concept comes from Korean paintings.
“I try to do less. I try not to use many lights. I try not to use many objects in the frame. I try to concentrate on a few and emphasise them.”
Cho’s encouragement prize includes a special endowment allowing her to use optimal Angénieux technologies to capture the images of her next project, which is about to be signed off – but for now – Mum’s the word.
FRANCE – IMMIGRATION
France sees immigration shift as more educated Africans arrive than Europeans
More immigrants coming to France have degrees – and most now come from Africa rather than the rest of Europe, new figures from the country’s statistics bureau show.
Insee, France’s national statistics agency, examined migration trends between 2006 and 2023. The number of people moving to France rose steadily in that period – from 234,000 in 2006 to 347,000 in 2023.
The research also found that for the first time, Africa has overtaken Europe as the main region of origin for people immigrating to France – with 45 percent of new arrivals in 2023 coming from African countries.
Half of those were from the Maghreb – North African countries such as Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia. The rest were mostly from the Comoros, Côte d’Ivoire and Senegal.
European immigration, once dominant, has fallen sharply.
Insee data shows that in 2006, 44 percent of immigrants came from Europe. By 2023, that number had dropped to 28 percent.
There has also been a slight shift in the gender balance, with Insee finding that women made up 53 percent of new arrivals in 2006. In 2023, they made up 51 percent.
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More diplomas
The biggest change observed was in education levels. Among immigrants aged 25 and over, 52 percent had a diploma in 2023 – up from 41 percent in 2006.
The share of those arriving without any qualifications also fell, dropping from 30 percent in 2003 to 22 percent in 2023. Insee included the 2003 figure to provide a longer-term comparison beyond the 2006 baseline used elsewhere in the study.
The strongest gains were seen among African immigrants.
In 2006, fewer than one in three held a higher education diploma. By 2023, that figure had risen to one in two.
One in three immigrants was able to find work within a year of arriving in France. Europeans were the most likely to enter the workforce quickly, with more than half employed within 12 months of arrival.
This article was adapted from the original version in French.
LOST LANGUAGE
The last word: why half of the world’s languages could vanish this century
There are around 7,000 languages spoken in the world, but that number is shrinking. Unesco estimates that half could disappear by the end of the century. So how are languages lost, and what does that mean for the people who speak them?
Despite the thousands of languages, just 20 or so dominate the global linguistic landscape. Mandarin, Spanish, English, Hindi, Arabic, Portuguese, Bengali, Russian, Japanese, Javanese, German, Wu, Korean, French, Telugu, Marathi, Turkish, Tamil, Vietnamese and Urdu are the mother tongues of more than 3 billion people.
The vast majority of languages on Earth – 95 percent – are actually spoken by just 5 percent of the world’s population. And these are the ones that are in danger – threatened with extinction because they are often based solely on oral tradition and struggle to spread or survive beyond their region or ethnic group of origin.
The most alarming studies say that a language disappears every fortnight, while others, more measured, estimate it to be one every three months.
Unesco, the UN agency for culture and education, estimates that if nothing is done, half of all languages could vanish by 2100.
This warning comes from its World Atlas of Languages. The atlas is based on data from national governments, universities and language communities. It shows the type, structure, situation and usage of every known language.
The scale of the problem
Unesco considers a language to be “endangered” when it is “no longer taught to children as a mother tongue at home” and the youngest speakers are their parents.
It is “seriously endangered” when it is only spoken by grandparents, and parents understand it “but no longer use it with their children or among themselves”.
The last stage before extinction – what Unesco calls the “critical situation” stage – is when “the last speakers are from the great-grandparents’ generation” and the language is “not used in everyday life”.
The research centre for linguistic intelligence, Ethnologue, uses another tool in its research – the Expanded Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scale, which uses 13 stages to determine the status of a language.
But its conclusions are similar to those of Unesco: 3,170 languages (44 percent of those in use) are currently endangered. It says a language is under threat as soon as “users begin to transmit a more dominant language to the children of the community”.
The Asia-Pacific region is the most affected, with Indonesian and New Guinean languages at the top of the list, followed by Aboriginal languages in Australia. The Americas too rank high, with many indigenous languages in danger of extinction in the United States, Canada, Mexico and Brazil.
Africa is the third most affected continent, particularly Nigeria and Cameroon. But Europe is not immune to the phenomenon, with Russia notably affected.
Hundreds take to the streets to protest in support of French regional languages
Linguistic domination
European colonisation is one of the major factors that explains the trend, having “led to the deaths of millions of indigenous people, disrupting the transmission of languages from one generation to the next,” says linguist Evangelia Adamou, senior researcher at the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS).
Massacres and epidemics led to the disappearance of entire peoples, and colonial policies added insult to injury by “devaluing indigenous languages” and “forcing children to move away from their families”, she continued.
The residential schools set up by colonisers – such as those in Canada, the United States and Australia – were designed to separate indigenous children from their parents and cut them off from their mother tongue.
Local languages found it very difficult to withstand the pressure from colonial languages and racist and discriminatory policies.
The formation of nation states has also contributed significantly to these disappearances. The idea of a single people speaking the same language, united under the same flag and the same values, has led in many countries “to monolingual mass education, usually in the national language,” said Adamou, leading to “the linguistic displacement of minority languages towards the dominant languages”.
This is how Breton, Basque and many of the languages of New Caledonia and French Guiana have come close to disappearing.
In France and elsewhere, the lack of recognition of traditional languages has led and continues to lead to their abandonment in favour of languages considered more “prestigious” – synonymous with academic and professional success.
Climate change
The other major factor, according to Adamou, is any period of crisis which “profoundly disrupts the use and transmission of languages”. During conflicts, pandemics and natural disasters, “people are fighting for their survival, so the traditional organisation of their society suffers greatly”, she explained.
Climate change is having a major impact in this regard. Untenable living conditions are pushing people to leave their home regions, often to move to urban areas where they are forced to integrate, losing their traditions and language in the process.
The issue of climate change is all the more important because its consequences are felt most acutely in the regions of the world where there is the greatest linguistic diversity.
Indonesia and Papua New Guinea are under threat from rising sea levels. The Amazon is increasingly affected by deforestation. Nigeria, with its 500 languages, is facing rising temperatures, pollution and coastal erosion. All of these factors are leading to the displacement of populations and threatening the survival of local languages.
Senegal launches English lessons in nursery and primary schools
‘A major impact on health’
This loss has far-reaching consequences. With every language that disappears, cultural identity and traditional knowledge are extinguished.
“A language, through its words, etymology and syntax, conveys a philosophy. Toponyms [place names derived from a topographical feature] carry the characteristics of the region. And cosmology – how the universe was conceived – is conveyed through myths in the ancestral language,” said Adamou.
The extinction of a language takes this heritage with it, impoverishing the heritage of humanity. But it also has very real consequences for the speakers.
Being cut off from one’s language means a reorientation of one’s relationship with the world, losing one’s bearings. This can lead to difficulties functioning in mainstream society, isolation, depression and alcoholism, often compounded by racism and social pressure.
“Studies show that not speaking one’s own language has a major impact on health. People need this traditional framework to be healthy, both physically and mentally,” Adamou explained.
Alsatian dialect taught in French state schools for the first time
Reclaiming identity
Several initiatives are attempting to preserve languages in danger of disappearing, as awareness of the issue and its consequences grows. Unesco has proclaimed 2022-2032 the International Decade of Indigenous Languages, in order to promote preservation and rehabilitation programmes.
Institutions are making available archives of information on endangered languages – such as the CNRS’s Pangloss website and the catalogue of the Endangered Language Project. This is material that is invaluable for local communities embarking on language revitalisation projects.
“There is currently a real movement to reclaim one’s culture and identity, often driven by young indigenous people, who are stepping up their efforts and attempts to revitalise their language all over the world,” said Adamou. These young people, she says, are railing against the pessimism engendered by statistics and the use of expressions such as “the last speakers”.
“We can act before it’s too late and, even when a language is no longer spoken, there is always hope,” Amadou insists. She feels it is more accurate to talk about “dormant” languages rather than “dead” ones – after all, languages can be revived.
This phenomenon has been witnessed, for example with Wampanoag in the United States and Livonian in Latvia. But the most striking example is undoubtedly Hebrew. After disappearing for centuries, it is now the official language of a state and the mother tongue of several million people. We haven’t necessarily heard the last of those languages in danger now.
This article was adapted from the original version in French.
Photography
Keep calm and say cheese! French photo festival goes ‘so British’ this summer
For its 22nd edition, the La Gacilly Photo Festival in western France is honouring big names in British photography including Martin Parr, Terry O’Neill and Don McCullin.
“The British don’t do anything like anybody else,” La Gacilly Photo Festival’s curator Cyril Drouhet told journalists at a press conference in Paris, as he unveiled the So British theme of this year’s programme.
“They drive on the left, they have their own currency, they play darts, they believe in ghosts and still have a monarchy. And that’s probably why we love them.”
Beyond the quirky humour and eccentricity seen in many of the photographs selected for the festival, there is also a keen observation of contemporary society with all its contradictions.
For Drouhet, the British “know how to cleverly capture a soul: the soul of an era, the soul of a country, the human soul.”
So near, yet so far
In a thousand-year history made up of “misunderstandings” (read: wars), “hostility” (rivalry), “admiration” (marriages) and “respect” (alliances), Drouhet says that despite all this, France and the United Kingdom have an unbreakable bond.
The British ambassador to Paris Menna Rawlings told journalists: “British photography has always pushed the limits. Photographs are more than just technical images – they are a reflection of global issues, social issues [and] have the power to tell stories.”
Sebastião Salgado’s 40-year journey in photographs celebrated in Deauville exhibition
Among the exhibits is a poignant link to photographic history, with a tribute to Anna Atkins (1799-1871), a pioneer in the technique of “cyanotypes” used by botanists.
In 1843, Atkins published Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions, considered the first book of its kind and a major reference for scientists as well as an inspiration for contemporary photographers and artists.
The award-winning war reporter Don McCullin has been invited as one of the big names at the festival, with an exhibition entitled “Life and Death, and what’s left behind”.
Putting aside his images from war zones, the veteran photographer, born in 1935, has since turned his lens to the landscapes of Somerset, where he now lives.
A British perspective
For Mélina Le Blaye, the festival’s director, photography “invites us to open our horizons, and transform ourselves”.
“In this world where images are omnipresent but often ephemeral, we want to take the time to contemplate and to put things into perspective,” she said.
From Martin Parr’s beachside snapshots to Mary Turner’s unassuming portraits of quiet, run-down mining towns and marginalised communities, it is clear there is no one, single Britain. The social and environmental terrain is uneven and complex, both beautiful and gritty.
Beauty and the blight: a photographer’s quest to expose an ecological disaster
The UK is also synonymous with music that defined generations. The exhibition of work by Terry O’Neill (1938-2019) takes the viewer behind the scenes of the music business with surprising portraits of the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, David Bowie and Elton John, to name a few.
The Year of the Sea
Organisers have also reserved a major part of the festival for nine exhibitions on environmental themes, with a particular focus on what France has designated “The Year of the Sea”.
The opening of the festival on 1 June comes a week ahead of a key United Nations Oceans Conference, to be held in Nice from 9 to 13 June.
Stunning images of sea life mix with those from coastal locations facing the effects of climate change, by photographers including France’s Laurent Ballesta and India’s Supratim Bhattacharjee.
Guided tours of Africa
The environment-themed exhibits also include photo reports from Africa, such as those from French photographer Frédéric Noy, who takes viewers to Tanzania to discover nature sanctuaries in need of protection – such as Udzungwa Mountains National Park, where monkey populations are threatened by urbanisation.
His work explores the difficult choices of local people, aware of the need for preservation, but under pressure to survive – the park’s forest being a source of food and firewood.
Noy says it is difficult for locals to accept outsiders when they are distrustful of the West’s discourse of “saving the planet”, given these same wealthy countries profit from Africa’s resources.
By photographing their plight, Noy is asking the public to see both sides of the story, with “humility and patience”.
How exiled photographer Ernest Cole captured apartheid’s human toll
Françoise Huguier’s work offers a guided tour of her years spent on the African continent – including in Burkina Faso, South Africa, Benin and Ethiopia – as seen in the “Africa and Me” collection.
She became particularly attached to Mali, where she founded the Photographic Encounters of Bamako event in 1994, helping discover artists such as Seydou Keïta and Malik Sidibé – now known around the world.
La Gacilly Photo Festival is outdoors and free to the public from 1 June to 5 October, 2025.
Roland Garros 2025
Roland Garros: Five things we learned on Day 7: Larks and a Sinner
Jannik Sinner said he was on a time-saving mission as Daria Kasatkina let us in on the intricacies of portraying fun and games on the women’s circuit.
Sinner so swift
Top seed Jannik Sinner obliterated Jiri Lehecka 6-0, 6-1, 6-2 to proceed to a fourth round rendez-vous with the 17th seed Andrey Rublev. The slaughter of the world number 34 was all over in 94 minutes. Sinner claimed the first 11 games of the match on Court Suzanne Lenglen before his fellow 23-year-old got on the board. Sinner won their previous meetings on the senior tour last year in Beijing and Indian Wells in straight sets but with nothing like the savagery of their encounter at the French Open. “I think in early stages of Grand Slam tournaments it is good that you don’t spend so much time, if you have the chance, on court,” said Sinner. “So I’m happy to do that.” As succinct as his match against Lehecka.
Draper caper
Fifth seed Jack Draper marched into the last-16 at the French Open for the first time with a 6-2, 6-4, 6-2 victory over the Brazilian wunderkind Joao Fonseca. Draper, who has featured at 12 Grand Slam tournaments in Melbourne, Paris, London and New York, said his experiences at the events had made the difference during the tie against the 18-year-old who was playing for the first time at such a tournament where the men play the best of five sets. “I played good,” the 23-year-old Briton told on-court interviewer Alizé Cornet. “The first set was really key. I got on top of him and used my forehand really well. I knew it was going to be a really tough match, Joao has caught the attention of everyone on tour, the players, the fans.” Fonseca will be back.
I’ll be back
On the subject of returns … a stress facture to the L5 in his lower back terminated the tournament of the French number one Arthur Fils. The 14th seed was scheduled to play the 17th seed Andrey Rublev on Day 7 but towards the end of Day 6 he announced he wouldn’t be able to participate. “I decided with the team it was better to stop now, because if I stop now, it might be only four to six weeks,” the 20-year-old explained. “If I push myself too much, I would probably have to stop for a couple of months. This is not what we are trying to do, so yeah, had to make a choice.” A shame. Fils went into the 2025 tournament as his country’s top player for the first time and he made hay. After failing to win a match in his appearances in 2023 and 2024, he negotiated a tricky opening round clash against the experienced Chilean Nicolas Jarry. In the second round, he came through a five-set thriller against the Spaniard Jaume Munar. “I need to undergo the right treatment,” Fils added. “And then I’ll be back. I still have 10, 12 French Opens ahead of me to play so it’s a pity, because I actually had a wonderful match against Munar.”
Representation
There will be a French presence in the second week at the French Open. Local lass Lois Boisson reached the last-16 after beating her compatriot Elsa Jacquemot in three sets. Boisson, 22, was given an invitation by the French Tennis Federation to be in the main draw. And she has lapped up the chance. The world number 361 will take on the third seed Jessica Pegula on Day 9. Could get Sinnerish.
Editing and horsing
The 2022 semi-finalist Daria Kasatkina got past 10th seed Paula Badosa to set up a fourth round clash with the sixth seed Mirra Andreeva who is her accomplice for a vlog about the japes and jollities on the WTA tour. “She has to improve her interviewing skills,” said Andreeva when asked about Kasatkina’s budding journalism following her straight sets win over Yulia Putintseva. “Well, she is not the one to talk,” snorted Kasatkina when chatting to reporters after her match. “She had an opportunity to interview players in our Rome vlog, so she took the camera, and she went to talk with someone in the restaurant. It was terrible. Also, the filming skills were not on point, so she needs to learn.” Artistic differences? No, no. It’s all knockabout banter. “This is the way we communicate,” Kasatkina smiled. The women are actually on very cordial terms. “We were having an ice bath together a couple of hours ago after our matches.” These sisters are chilled.
Champions League
PSG fans gather at their local in Paris to enjoy waltz to Champions League glory
It was a happy half-time at Le Taylor in the 10th arrondissement in central Paris. Around 50 people had spilled out of the bar screening the Champions League final onto Rue Taylor to savour Paris Saint-Germain’s 2-0 advantage over Inter Milan with alcohol or nicotine.
“It’s been an incredible 45 minutes,” said Stéphane Aupetit as he stood nursing a drink waiting for his wife Martine to join him and their 17-year-old daughter Lili.
“It’s a good PSG team with the way everyone attacks and defends. I like it a lot.”
Cheers and chatter recounting the goals from Achraf Hakimi and Désiré Doué as well as the absence of Inter Milan in the game at the Allianz Arena in Munich filtered along the quiet street situated an old school goal kick away from the Canal Saint-Martin.
Describing himself as a mildly interested supporter, Aupetit travelled from Porte d’Asnières, north-western Paris, to watch the match at the local of his friend Stanley Weber.
Freshly returned from a three-month shoot in Corsica, the 48-year-old camera operator, joked: “It’s lucky I got back yesterday. I don’t think a bar in Ajaccio would have been the place to be supporting PSG.”
With Martine finally present, the family Aupetit transferred to the throng and throb inside for the second-half.
“It’s started well, but it’s not over yet,” quipped one wag as Inter injected urgency and a tad more vitality to their quest for a second Champions League title to add to their 2010 crown.
Changes
When the competition was called the European Cup and open only to the winners of the continent’s domestic champions, Inter claimed the trophy in 1964 and 1965.
In 1992, the European Cup morphed into the Champions League and the exclusivity was jettisoned. Another revamp has brought a tournament featuring 36 teams playing eight games over four months.
Inter breezed through the league stage between September 2024 and January 2025 to advance automatically to the last-16.
The opponents mastering them in Germany had stuttered and required a two-game play-off to progress to the knockout stages.
PSG’s wintry misfortunes seemed a distant memory as they imperiously absorbed Inter’s early second-half aggression of a balmy Saturday evening.
And just after the hour mark, the showdown, as it was known or understood, was over.
PSG broke out of defence and Ousmane Dembélé’s canny back heel set Vitinha off towards the Inter goal.
Style
The Portugal international cushioned a pass to Doué that complimented Dembélé’s flair and Doué’s finish past the Inter goalkeeper Yann Sommer honoured the preceding panache.
As Doué ripped off his shirt, Le Taylor’s finest melodiously belted out: “Et un, et deux et trois zero.”
When Khvicha Kvaratskhelia added the fourth in the 73rd minute, they didn’t bother to count. They just crowed.
They bellowed some more songs from terraces of the PSG’s home ground. And they roared when the cameras zoomed in on the PSG skipper Marquinhos welling up as the achievement of leading the team to its first Champions League trophy and transcendance drew near.
After Senny Mayulu thrashed in the fifth, it was unalloyed joy on the field in Munich as the entire bench ran to celebrate with the 19-year-old PSG academy graduate whose strike had catapulted the club into legend for the biggest win in a final in the competition’s 70-year-history.
“It takes PSG’s owners nearly 15 years to realise that it’s a team that wins and not stars,” said Fred Thomas who watched the match with a group of friends including Christian Berg.
Dominance
“It was one way traffic,” added Berg who had travelled from Montreuil in eastern Paris to the 10th arrondissement to watch the game at his old local with his football match buddies.
“I moved away from the area six years ago,” added the 44-year-old teacher. “But I came back tonight to be with everyone. There really was nowhere else to be.”
Apart from Munich.
Nearly five years after featuring in the PSG team that lost in the Champions League final to Bayern Munich, Marquinhos lifted the coveted cup to more cheers, more beers and a few tears in Le Taylor.
“5-0,” smiled Thomas. “Extraordinary.”
Nigeria
Rescue operations underway after Nigeria flooding kills at least 150
Flash flooding earlier this week in central Nigeria killed more than 150 people, a local disaster response spokesman told AFP on Saturday, while displacing 3,000, levelling more than 250 homes and washing away two bridges.
The sharp jump from the previous death toll of 115 came as bodies were recovered nearly 10 kilometres away from the town of Mokwa, the epicentre of the floods, Ibrahim Audu Husseini, a spokesman for the Niger State Emergency Management Agency, told AFP.
As Husseini warned that the toll could still rise, with bodies being swept away down the powerful Niger River, President Bola Tinubu said that search-and-rescue operations were underway, with the disaster response being aided by security forces.
Tinubu, in an overnight post on social media, added that “relief materials and temporary shelter assistance are being deployed without delay” in Mokwa, which was hit by torrential rains late on Wednesday through to early on Thursday.
Buildings collapsed and roads were inundated in the town, which is located more than 350 kilometres by road from the capital Abuja, an AFP journalist in Mokwa observed on Friday.
Emergency services and residents searched through the rubble as floodwaters flowed alongside.
“Some bodies were recovered from the debris of collapsed homes,” Husseini said, adding that his teams would need excavators to retrieve corpses.
He said many were still missing, citing a family of 12 where only four members had been accounted for as of Friday.
Mohammed Tanko, 29, a civil servant, pointed to a house he grew up in, telling reporters: “We lost at least 15 from this house. The property (is) gone. We lost everything.”
The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) said that the Nigerian Red Cross, local volunteers, the military and police were all helping in the response.
According to the figures shared by Husseini, 151 people were killed, 3,018 were displaced, 265 houses were “completely destroyed” and two bridges were washed away in the busy, rural market town.
Changing climate
Nigeria‘s rainy season, which usually lasts six months, is just getting started for the year.
Flooding, usually caused by heavy rains and poor infrastructure, wreaks havoc every year, killing hundreds of people across the west African country.
Scientists have also warned that climate change is fuelling more extreme weather patterns.
In Nigeria, the floods are exacerbated by inadequate drainage, the construction of homes on waterways and the dumping of waste in drains and water channels.
“This tragic incident serves as a timely reminder of the dangers associated with building on waterways and the critical importance of keeping drainage channels and river paths clear,” NEMA said in a statement.
According to the Daily Trust newspaper, thousands of people have been displaced and more than 50 children in an Islamic school were reported missing.
Severe flooding in northeast Nigeria impacts one million, sparks disease, food shortage fears
Warning sounded
The Nigerian Meteorological Agency had warned of possible flash floods in 15 of Nigeria’s 36 states, including Niger state, between Wednesday and Friday.
In 2024, more than 1,200 people were killed and 1.2 million displaced in at least 31 out of Nigeria’s 36 states, making it one of the country’s worst flood seasons in decades, according to NEMA.
Displaced children played in the flood waters on Friday, heightening the possibility of exposure to water-borne diseases, with at least two bodies lying nearby covered in banana leaves and printed ankara cloth.
Describing how she escaped the raging waters, Sabuwar Bala, a 50-year-old yam vendor, told reporters: “I was only wearing my underwear, someone loaned me all I’m wearing now. I couldn’t even save my flip-flops.”
“I can’t locate where my home stood because of the destruction,” she said.
(AFP)
Defence
France pumps money into eastern air base to handle nuclear-armed bombers
In a sign of the growing security nerves in Europe, France has embarked on a $1.7 billion (€1.5 billion) renovation of an air base in remote hills in the east of the country so it can handle nuclear-armed bombers.
The work will take a decade but from 2035 the Luxeuil-Saint Sauveur base will be twice the size it is now and it will house new generation hypersonic missiles carried by 50 of France’s Rafale fighter jets.
President Emmanuel Macron announced at the base in March – on the day that US President Donald Trump and Russia’s President Vladimir Putin discussed the Ukraine war – that it was to become the first to welcome the latest Rafale jets and France’s ASN4G nuclear-capable air-to-ground missiles.
Luxeuil will become the fourth, but most modern, base in France capable of storing nuclear weapons.
The base currently has about 20 Mirage-2000 jets, which are no longer in production.
Its triangle shaped hangars date from 1952, according to base commander, Colonel Emmanuel Roux. They have been “well used”, according to Roux who said he had seen pictures of President Charles de Gaulle there in 1962. “It was the same,” he joked.
‘Like building a cathedral’
The hangars will go as the Rafales will not fit in them. “We will have to redo everything for the infrastructure,” the colonel said.
The Rafale is also heavier than the Mirage so Luxeuil’s runway will also have to be made longer and tougher.
As nuclear bases are given extra protection, “we will have to increase security measures and the entire infrastructure to get up to speed,” the colonel said, likening his work to “building a cathedral”.
“We have 10 years to build the best base in France with planes that do not exist (yet), a nuclear weapon that does not exist and technicians who are not yet in school,” said Roux.
Luxeuil will be closed between 2029 and 2032 for the key works and the arrival of the first Rafales.
France’s Dassault says stepping up Rafale warplane output
There will be four times as many pilots as now as the Rafale has two crew. The 300 technicians currently at the base will expand to 1,000 by the time the new base is fully operational.
“Logistics wins the war,” said Roux who highlighted the importance of speed in preparing jets for faster rotations between flights. A Rafale engine can be changed in one hour and an ejector seat in 15 minutes, he said.
Weapon of ‘last resort’
Pilots at the base, who cannot be named, also said they were ready to carry nuclear weapons. “It’s the weapon of last resort, but I think we’re all ready to use it to protect our loved ones and our nation,” said one.
Luxeuil is close to France’s border with Germany, Switzerland, Luxembourg and Belgium and the position could also prove strategic.
EU ministers push for joint defence fund to secure a more self-reliant Europe
Macron has also said that with the Russian invasion of Ukraine raging and heightening worries in the rest of Europe, France is ready to start discussing with other European countries the possible deployment of French nuclear-armed jets.
“I will define the framework in a very specific way in the weeks and months to come,” Macron said in a television interview this month.
Russia has already condemned his comments. “The proliferation of nuclear weapons on the European continent is something that will not add security, predictability or stability to the European continent,” said Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.
(with AFP)
Tanzania
Tanzanian politician’s lawyers ask UN to declare his detention arbitrary
Lawyers for Tanzania’s jailed opposition leader Tundu Lissu filed a complaint on Friday to the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention in a bid to ramp up international pressure for his release.
Lissu, chairman of Tanzania’s main opposition party and runner-up in the 2020 presidential election, was arrested last month and charged with treason, a capital offence, over comments he is alleged to have made calling on supporters to prevent national elections in October from going ahead.
Tanzania‘s government spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
While President Samia Suluhu Hassan has won plaudits for easing political repression, she has faced questions about unexplained abductions of government critics in recent months.
Hassan, who will stand for re-election in October, has said her government respects human rights and ordered an investigation into the reported abductions.
Lissu’s international lawyer, Robert Amsterdam, said the confidential complaint to the UN working group, which issues opinions but has no enforcement power, was part of a wider pressure campaign.
The European Parliament this month adopted a resolution denouncing Lissu’s arrest as politically motivated, and Amsterdam said he would petition the US State Department to impose sanctions.
“Right down to prosecutors, judges, police – all the people that are involved in this false show trial had better be aware that they should protect their US assets,” Amsterdam told Reuters.
In response to the European Parliament resolution, Tanzania’s foreign ministry said outside criticisms about the case were based on “incomplete or partisan information”.
The US State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Tanzania’s top opposition party barred from upcoming election
Lissu, who was shot 16 times in a 2017 attack for which no one has ever been charged, will appear in court on Monday.
Before he appeared in court last week, authorities detained a Kenyan and a Ugandan rights activist who had come to attend the hearing.
They were abandoned several days later near the borders of their home countries, and the Kenyan activist, Boniface Mwangi, said both were badly tortured while in custody.
Tanzanian officials have not responded to requests for comment about the allegation. Hassan has warned outsiders against “invading and interfering in our affairs”.
(Reuters)
Anti-Semitism in France
Paris Holocaust memorial, synagogues hit with paint
France’s Holocaust memorial, two synagogues and a restaurant in central Paris were vandalised with green paint overnight, according to police sources on Saturday, prompting condemnation from government and city officials.
“I am deeply disgusted by these heinous acts targeting the Jewish community,” said French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau said on X.
No arrests have been made.
Retailleau last week called for “visible and dissuasive” security measures at Jewish-linked sites amid concerns over possible anti-Semitic acts.
In a separate message seen by AFP, the interior minister on Friday had again ordered heightened surveillance ahead of the upcoming Jewish Shavuot holiday.
The French Jewish community, one of the largest in the world, has for months been on edge in the face of a growing number of attacks and desecrations of memorials since the Gaza war erupted on 7 October 2023.
“Anti-Semitic acts account for more than 60 percent of anti-religious acts, and the Jewish community is particularly vulnerable,” Retailleau said in the message seen by AFP.
Paris authorities would be lodging a complaint over the paint incident, said the city’s mayor, Anne Hidalgo.
“I condemn these acts of intimidation in the strongest possible terms. Anti-Semitism has no place in our city or in our Republic,” she said.
In May 2024, red hand graffiti was painted beneath the wall at the memorial in central Paris honouring individuals who saved Jews from persecution during the 1940-44 Nazi occupation of France.
(AFP)
Obituary
Abortion pill inventor Etienne-Emile Baulieu dies aged 98
French scientist Etienne-Emile Baulieu, the inventor of the abortion pill, died at the age of 98 at his home in Paris on Friday, his wife told AFP.
The doctor and researcher, who achieved worldwide renown for his work that led to the pill, had an eventful life that included fighting in the French resistance and becoming friends with artists such as Andy Warhol.
“His research was guided by his commitment to the progress made possible by science, his dedication to women’s freedom, and his desire to enable everyone to live better, longer lives,” Baulieu’s wife Simone Harari Baulieu said in a statement.
French President Emmanuel Macron paid tribute to his life, calling him “a beacon of courage” and “a progressive mind who enabled women to win their freedom”.
“Few French people have changed the world to such an extent,” he added in a post on X.
Baulieu’s most famous discovery helped create the oral drug RU-486, also known as mifepristone, which provided a safe and inexpensive alternative to surgical abortion to millions of women across the world.
For decades, he pushed governments to authorise the drug, facing fierce criticism and sometimes threats from opponents of abortion.
When Wyoming became the first US state to outlaw the abortion pill in 2023, Baulieu told AFP it was “scandalous”.
Then aged 96, Baulieu said he had dedicated a large part of his life to “increasing the freedom of women,” and such bans were a step in the wrong direction.
On news of his death, French Equality Minister Aurore Bergé passed on her condolences to Baulieu’s family, saying on X he was “guided throughout his life by one requirement: human dignity.”
‘Fascinated by artists’
Born on 12 December, 1926 in Strasbourg to Jewish parents, Etienne Blum was raised by his feminist mother after his father, a doctor, died.
He changed his name to Emile Baulieu when he joined the French resistance against Nazi occupation at the age of 15, then later adding Etienne.
After the war, he became a self-described “doctor who does science,” specialising in the field of steroid hormones.
Invited to work in the United States, Baulieu was noticed in 1961 by Gregory Pincus, known as the father of the contraceptive pill, who convinced him to focus on sex hormones.
Back in France, Baulieu designed a way to block the effect of the hormone progesterone, which is essential for the egg to implant in the uterus after fertilisation.
This led to the development of mifepristone in 1982.
Dragged before the courts and demonised by US anti-abortion groups who accused him of inventing a “death pill”, Baulieu refused to back down.
“Adversity slides off him like water off a duck’s back,” Simone Harari Baulieu told AFP.
“You, a Jew and a resistance fighter, you were overwhelmed with the most atrocious insults and even compared to Nazi scientists,” Macron said as he presented Baulieu with France’s top honour in 2023.
“But you held on, for the love of freedom and science.”
In the 1960s, literature fan Baulieu became friends with artists such as Andy Warhol.
He said he was “fascinated by artists who claim to have access to the human soul, something that will forever remain beyond the reach of scientists.
Alzheimer’s, depression research
Baulieu kept going into his Parisian office well into his mid-90s.
“I would be bored if I did not work anymore,” he said in 2023.
His recent research has included trying to find a way to prevent the development of Alzheimer’s disease, as well as a treatment for severe depression, for which clinical trials are currently underway across the world.
“There is no reason we cannot find treatments” for both illnesses, he said.
Baulieu was also the first to describe how the hormone DHEA secreted from adrenal glands in 1963.
He was convinced of the hormone’s anti-ageing abilities, but drugs using it only had limited effects, such as in skin-firming creams.
In the United States, Baulieu was also awarded the prestigious Lasker prize in 1989.
After his wife Yolande Compagnon died, Baulieu married Simone Harari in 2016.
He leaves behind three children, eight grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren, according to the statement released by his family.
(AFP)
Smoking
Calls for France to follow UK with generational tobacco ban
France recently banned single-use vapes and nicotine pouches as part of its plan to foster a tobacco-free generation. But, as the world marks the annual World No Tobacco Day on Saturday, a group of public health advocates and MPs want to go further – by introducing a generational tobacco ban similar to the UK’s.
Smoking is no longer as fashionable in France as it was in the days of Serge Gainsbourg chain-smoking Gitanes on TV. Yet it remains the country’s leading cause of preventable death, killing around 75,000 people a year.
It is also linked to heart disease, strokes, type 2 diabetes, asthma, dementia and fertility issues.
Over the past 30 years, France has cracked down on smoking – banning advertising of tobacco products in 1991, smoking in public places in 2007 and sales to under-18s in 2009, and introducing plain packaging in 2017.
These efforts have paid off. According to the French Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (OFDT), the number of regular smokers fell from 40 percent of adults in the mid-2010s to 23 percent in 2023 – although this is still above the EU average.
France becomes second European country to ban disposable e-cigarettes
Only 16 percent of 17-year-olds say they now smoke daily, down from 25 percent in 2017.
Vaping, however, is on the rise, especially among teens, with around 6 percent using e-cigarettes daily.
The recent bans on single-use vapes – known as “puffs” – and nicotine pouches are part of France’s National Tobacco Control Plan for 2023-2027, which aims to reduce the adult smoking population to 20 percent by 2027, and teen smokers to 10 percent by 2028.
The ultimate goal: a tobacco-free generation by 2032, with only 5 percent of under-18s smoking.
France to ban smoking outdoors in most places to protect children
Severing the link
The best way to reach that goal is to prevent young people from starting smoking, says Professsor Loic Josseran, head of the Alliance Against Tobacco (ACT).
“We know that 90 percent of smokers begin under the age of 18,” he said. “The ban on sales to minors simply isn’t enforced, there are no penalties and no controls.”
Losseren is calling for a UK-style generational tobacco ban, which would prohibit sales of tobacco products to anyone born after 1 January, 2009 – effectively raising the smoking age by one year each year until it applies to the whole population.
The law, passed by the UK Parliament in March, is expected to take effect in January 2027.
Earlier this week, ACT and France’s public health agency (SPF) met with MPs to begin working on a similar initiative.
Their proposal would make it illegal to sell tobacco – including cigarettes, cigarillos and rolling tobacco – to anyone born in 2014 or later, throughout their lives.
“This measure, which may seem radical, is in fact an extension of the ban on sales to minors,” Josseren argues.
ACT says 7 out of 10 French people support the idea of a tobacco-free generation.
It aims to place youngsters in a non-smoking, non-consuming environment – severing contact with tobacco.
“Since they won’t have started smoking, they won’t want to buy tobacco… We’re not depriving them of anything, we’re just offering them better health.” He stressed that the measure targets sales, not consumption, and adult smokers will still be able to buy and consume tobacco.
New Zealand was the first country to pass such a law in 2022, although it was scrapped by a subsequent coalition government in February 2024 to help fund tax cuts.
Denmark, Malaysia and the American state of Nevada are also debating introducing similar legislation.
‘Political courage’
The UK law, initially proposed by the then-Conservative government and picked up by its Labour successor, earned broad cross-party backing, despite a few MPs on the right branding it an attack on personal freedom.
In France, however, Josseran says gaining support “will need real political courage”.
So far, two MPs – Nicolas Thierry from the Greens and Michel Lauzzana from the centre-right Ensemble coalition – support the idea. Both were involved in the recent ban on puffs.
But many remain hesitant. “A few are interested, but many are more concerned with the tobacco industry’s arguments,” Josseren says, noting that every MP has tobacconists in their constituency. “They fear they’ll say: ‘Be careful, if you bother me I’ll tell everyone not to vote for you’.”
French tobacconists protest at anti-smoking law
He acknowledges that a generational tobacco ban would eventually force tobacconists out of business.
Meanwhile, he claims the industry is lobbying hard, pouring “several million euros into the National Assembly each year” to block public health laws.
The industry is also diversifying. “We’re seeing the creation of a nicotine market in which young people can choose between nicotine gum, beads, cigarettes, heated tobacco, chicha, vape…”
He added: “It took us two years to ban puffs and already manufacturers are marketing new ways of delivering nicotine. That’s why we need an umbrella law to prevent all these new forms coming on to the market.”
Environmental focus
The tobacco industry defends its role in the French economy, citing job creation and tax revenues. Seventy-five percent of the price of a packet of cigarettes is tax – an important source of income for the government, at a time when the state coffers are empty.
Yet the OFDT says the financial equation weighs heavily against the state. While tobacco brings in around €13 billion per year, healthcare costs and losses in productivity due to early death or illness amount to €20 billion.
The total cost of tobacco to French society in 2019 was estimated at €156 billion, including environmental damage and social impact.
Cigarette butts, the plastic pollution that’s hiding in plain sight
Each of the 30 billion cigarette butts discarded annually in France pollutes up to 500 litres of water.
Josseren calls it an “environmental horror” – involving deforestation, land-grabbing, child labour and pesticide use.
“It’s an industry that plunders and crushes life everywhere it goes,” he says. “The only thing it grows is profits.”
Anti-smoking campaigns now increasingly focus on tobacco’s environmental footprint, which resonates more with young people than health warnings.
“Saying that smoking isn’t good, that we’re going to die from smoking in 40 years’ time, doesn’t interest young people. I can’t blame them,” he said.
“We have to explain that the environment is the real lever – protecting the environment, respecting others. That can lead them to turn away from these products. That’s our approach.”
POLAND ELECTION
LGBT+ rights in Poland: ‘We are patient, but our patience has its limits’
Warsaw – As Poland prepares to go to the polls in the second round of the presidential election on Sunday, filmmaker and activist Bartosz Staszewski, a leading figure in the country’s LGBT+ movement, looks back on difficult years under the previous right-wing government, but says that change is under way in Polish society.
RFI: Since you started campaigning for LGBT+ rights, how have you seen things evolve in Poland?
Bartosz Staszewski: I think one of the most visible signs of change is that liberal candidates no longer hesitate to make LGBT+ rights a topic of discussion during the presidential election period. Most of them support the introduction of a civil union, and even the rights of trans people. This is a real change.
During the last presidential elections, these subjects were taboo, nobody mentioned them. But during the eight years that the right-wing Law and Justice (PiS) party was in power, the more the government tried to oppress us, the more we fought back – with, for example, Pride marches, which were never as numerous in Poland as they were at that time. In a way, this spurred us on and pushed the community to act, to get organised and show solidarity.
Toxic climate blamed for rise in LGBTQI+ attacks in France
What were those eight years (2015-2023) under the PiS like for the LGBT+ community?
It was a difficult period. All public funding for progressive NGOs was cut. From 2019 onwards, there started to be visible propaganda against us and LGBT+ people became scapegoats. This propaganda was particularly dehumanising, with commentators on prime time TV at 7pm publicly saying that we were Poland’s enemies.
This was also the period when the so-called “LGBT-free zones” came into being. Nearly 48 municipalities signed an “anti-LGBT ideology” resolution. After a long battle, the courts gradually declared these zones illegal, and the last of them was abolished last week.
How has becoming a public figure in the fight for LGBT+ rights in Poland affected your own life?
The last eight years have been very hard for me, I’ve been constantly fighting for the LGBT+ cause. I was prepared for something bad to happen to me. I regularly received death threats, some of them quite serious, and when I reported them to the police they did nothing.
A year and a half ago, when Donald Tusk’s Civic Coalition won the election, I said to myself, what do we do now? I wasn’t really mentally prepared for that, but it was still a relief.
Ghana’s Supreme Court paves way for repressive anti-LGBTQ law
The election of Tusk in 2023 raised a lot of hopes, including for a law to establish civil unions in Poland, but since then nothing concrete has really changed. Is the LGBT+ community frustrated by this?
We are patient, but our patience has its limits. At the moment, the government cannot pass progressive legislation because of the right of veto held by President Andrzej Duda, who is part of the PiS party.
But if the Civic Coalition candidate, Rafal Trzaskowski, is elected [as the new president], passing laws that the PiS rejects shouldn’t be a problem. It’s time to turn the page on PiS.
Today, would you say that a gay couple can walk hand in hand down the street in complete safety in Poland?
In the big cities, it’s a lot safer than it was 10 years ago – progress has been made. Personally, I’m part of that “lost generation” who will probably never really feel safe after experiencing being attacked by hooligans in the street. But nowadays, from time to time, I see young people who are not afraid and who walk hand in hand in big cities like Warsaw, Krakow or Gdansk.
I think the Pride marches have been very useful, because they have helped to normalise the existence of gay people within the population – and that’s also thanks to the activists who are doing a fantastic job.
Pride to prejudice as Hungary’s constitutional clampdown targets LGBTQ+ communities
So do you feel that attitudes are changing in Poland?
Yes, I do. And I think that’s the way forward. That’s also why politicians are increasingly open to supporting this cause. They can see that society is changing. It’s still difficult to be gay in Poland, because we have very few rights: there’s no civil union, no marriage equality, no law to protect us from hate speech – and it’s even worse for trans people. But on the other hand, polls also show that Poles are increasingly tolerant.
This article was adapted from the original version in French.
Poland elections 2025
Poland braces for knife-edge presidential run-off in wide open election
Poland faces a razor-thin presidential run-off, with polls showing just a one to two per cent gap between the leading candidates: nationalist candidate Karol Nawrocki and liberal Warsaw Mayor Rafal Trzaskowski, with a margin of error that leaves the outcome wide open. RFI spoke to veteran political observer Marcin Swiecicki, a former mayor of Warsaw.
“The decisive second round has become unpredictable,” Swiecicki told RFI, as the campaign is increasingly dominated by personal attacks and controversies rather than substantive policy debate.
A significant factor in the run-off is the influence of ultra-conservative voters, whose candidate secured about 20 per cent in the first round.
Their support has pushed the mainstream conservative contender further to the right, as he agreed to a series of hardline demands — including opposition to European treaties, the euro, and Ukraine’s NATO membership, as well as maintaining strict abortion laws — in exchange for their backing.
“The conservative candidate agreed to all these ultra-conservative demands, so somehow he moved towards more ultra-conservative positions than he, and even his party, previously held,” Swiecicki says.
He added, however, that this shift “may not guarantee” the support of all ultra-conservative voters, many of whom are young and may find the conservative candidate “not very attractive, boring sometimes,” in contrast to the more dynamic, pro-European Mayor of Warsaw, Rafal Trzaskowski.
It a pity somehow that these ultra-conservative candidates are a decisive factor.
REMARK by former Warsaw mayor Marcin Swiecicki
For Prime Minister Donald Tusk, a pro-EU reformer, Sunday’s vote is crucial: it will either empower him with a presidential ally who can advance his rule-of-law agenda, or saddle him with a rival who could veto legislation and block government initiatives.
The second round of Poland’s elections takes place two weeks after elections in Romania, where centrist former Mayor of Bucharest Nicusor Dan defeated the far-right candidate George Simion.
Divided Romania faces uncertain future despite rejecting the far right
‘Public disappointment’
In Poland, which for years was governed by an ultra-conservative administration and only last year saw a change with the election of Donald Tusk’s centrist Civic Platform, the battle is far from over.
Despite a year under the new pro-European government, Swiecicki observed a “sense of public disappointment,” citing limited achievements and ongoing political deadlock. The conservative president’s power to veto legislation—overridable only by a 60 per cent parliamentary majority, which the current coalition does not possess—has obstructed reform efforts.
This political duality has left key issues unresolved, including judicial reforms and ambassadorial appointments. “To put order into this, you need close cooperation between the parliamentary majority and the president,” Swiecicki said.
On social policy, Swiecicki noted little difference between the two candidates, who both “support social allowances, maintaining the current retirement age, and benefits for families with children.” However, he warned that the dominance of right-wing forces has curtailed debate on more contentious issues such as abortion, European integration, and LGBTQ+ rights.
The conservative PiS party is known for endorsing declarations from over 90 conservative regions and municipalities that have proclaimed themselves “LGBT Ideology-Free Zones” or signed “Family Charters” aimed at protecting children from what they describe as immoral influences—implicitly targeting LGBTQ+ people and denying rights to same-sex couples.
Meanwhile, Civic Platform and its candidate Trzaskowski have signed a 12-point LGBT declaration aimed at improving support and protection for LGBTQ+ individuals. The declaration proposes measures such as providing shelter for LGBTQ+ teenagers rejected by their families, establishing local crisis helplines, and introducing anti-discrimination policies and sex education in city schools.
Consensus remains on foreign policy, particularly with regard to Ukraine, with broad support for aiding Kyiv and keeping Russian forces at bay. The only recent divergence has been the conservative candidate’s pledge—made under pressure from ultra-conservatives—not to support Ukraine’s NATO membership, a move Swiecicki described as tactical rather than ideological.
Polish nationalists stage anti-immigration demonstration ahead of polls
Poland and Ukraine
Meanwhile, as the current holder of the European Council presidency, Poland has made incremental progress on EU security and defence coordination, Swiecicki said, particularly in supporting Ukraine and in joint armaments procurement.
Swiecicki underscores Poland’s strategic interest in seeing Ukraine join both the EU and NATO, despite lingering historical disputes over Second World War-era massacres and the exhumation of victims, which periodically resurface and risk jeopardising the broader relationship.
The “Volhynia massacres” were carried out over a two-year period during the Second World War in German-occupied Poland by the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), with the support of segments of the local Ukrainian population. Up to 100,000 members of the Polish community—a minority living in Volhynia, in what is now western Ukraine—were killed.
Since the beginning of this century, a slow process of reconciliation has begun, marked by mutual visits and commemorations. However, the issue of exhuming the bodies remains unresolved.
Only in January did Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk reach an agreement to permit the unearthing of the victims’ remains, though no concrete dates have yet been set. Poland’s Deputy Prime Minister, Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz , told broadcaster Polsat that failing to fully resolve the Volhynia issue would impact Poland’s support for Ukraine’s bid to join the EU.
But Swiecicki is more optimistic. “It is Poland’s strategic interest to have Ukraine in the European Union and in NATO. So these disputes over exhumation cannot really kill the idea of having Ukraine with us, rather than leaving it to the Russians, to the Kremlin,” he says.
Foreign interference
Meanwhile, US President Donald J. Trump met with Nawrocki earlier this month at the White House and sent his Homeland Security Secretary, Kristi Noem, to a meeting of the conservative pressure group CPAC in Poland, where she delivered a strong endorsement.
Noem even suggested closer US-Polish military ties in the event of a Nawrocki victory, with the implied warning that a Trzaskowski win could jeopardise Poland’s security.
Hungary’s “illiberal” Prime Minister, Viktor Orban – who maintains close ties with the Kremlin – also offered his support to Nawrocki at a CPAC meeting in Budapest on Thursday.
Israel-Hamas conflict
France threatens tougher stance on Israel as US proposes new Gaza ceasefire plan
President Emmanuel Macron has warned France could harden its position against Israel, including potential sanctions on Israeli settlers, if humanitarian aid to Gaza remains blocked. His comments come as a new US-backed ceasefire proposal emerged to end the devastating 20-month conflict.
“The humanitarian blockade is creating an untenable situation on the ground,” Macron said on Friday in Singapore, on the last day of an official visit to southeast Asia.
“If there is no response that meets the humanitarian situation in the coming hours and days, obviously, we will have to toughen our collective position,” Macron said, adding that France may consider applying sanctions against Israeli settlers.
On Thursday, Israel announced it would create 22 new settlements in the occupied West Bank accelerating its ongoing expansion into the Palestinian territory. The settlements are considered illegal under international law.
Macron said he still hoped Israel would “change its stance and that we will finally have a humanitarian response”.
Israel partially ended an 11-week long aid blockade on Gaza 10 days ago. It has allowed a limited amount of relief to be delivered via two avenues – the United Nations or the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
France pressures Israel to resume full humanitarian aid to Gaza
New ceasefire proposal
Meanwhile, a US ceasefire proposal reviewed by Reuters on Friday outlines a potential breakthrough in stalled negotiations.
The plan, guaranteed by President Donald Trump and mediators Egypt and Qatar, proposes a 60-day ceasefire with the release of 28 Israeli hostages – both alive and dead – in the first week, in exchange for 1,236 Palestinian prisoners and remains of 180 dead Palestinians.
Humanitarian aid would flow immediately through the UN, Red Crescent and other channels.
The White House announced Thursday that Israel had accepted the proposal.
Hamas told Reuters it was reviewing the plan and would respond by Saturday.
Israel approved Trump’s Gaza truce plan: White House
Two-state solution
Macron also reiterated France‘s committment to working towards a political solution and support for a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict.
The French leader is leaning towards recognising a Palestinian state, diplomats and experts say – a move that could infuriate Israel and deepen Western splits.
French officials are weighing up the move ahead of a United Nations conference, which France and Saudi Arabia are co-hosting between June 17-20, to lay out the parameters for a roadmap to a Palestinian state, while ensuring Israel’s security.
France ‘determined’ to recognise Palestinian state
Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to a Hamas attack on 7 October, 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others taken hostage.
At least 54,000 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to Palestinian health authorities figures deemed credible by the UN.
(with newswires)
Education
French international students rattled by Trump’s US visa suspensions
President Donald Trump’s administration’s decision to suspend foreign student visa applications has French students preparing to study at American institutions reassessing their options.
United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio on 27 May ordered embassies and consulates to pause scheduling appointments for foreign student visas, pending new guidelines on vetting applicants’ social media activity – to be issued in the “coming days”.
Rubio has also revoked visas from students who led demonstrations critical of Israel’s offensive in Gaza, under a law that allows the removal of individuals deemed to go against US foreign policy interests.
These moves come as part of a wider slew of unprecedented actions by Trump over the past few months against international students, which experts warn are likely to decrease enrolment in US institutions and could trigger a brain drain.
They also come despite Trump’s proposals on the campaign trail last year to automatically give US residency cards to international students when they earn their diplomas, bemoaning that these graduates were leaving the US to build successful companies in China and India.
‘I have an opinion on things’
“What worries me most is not so much not having my visa, but that it will be revoked during the year,” Hadrien Coccoluto-Roussel, a second-year student at Sciences Po Paris, who is due to study in Washington next year, told French news agency AFP.
“We’ve seen students and researchers arrested and expelled… without any real reason, without any real access to the rights of defence,” said the 19-year-old, who has previously participated in pro-Palestinian demonstrations.
He says that if he had anticipated a political offensive in the US against foreign students, he would not have requested it as the destination for his academic year abroad – a mandatory part of his course.
French pro-Palestine student protests not just a mirror of US
Martin, a student at Essec Business School, near Paris, has been accepted to a master’s programme at the Ivy League school Columbia University, in New York.
Although he would find it hard to give up his “American dream,” recent events have prompted him to ask himself whether he should.
“I’m still politicised, I have an opinion on things,” he said, adding that the idea of living in a country that “muzzles freedom of expression” worries him a lot.
Sciences Po, one of France’s most prestigious high education institutes, which specialises in social and political sciences, told AFP that its management is working “on all possible scenarios based on the status of the students concerned”.
In 2023, 8,543 French students went to study in the US – up 24 percent compared to 1999 – according to the Open Doors report by the US-based Institute of International Education (IIE).
Harvard in the firing line
Over the past week, the Trump administration has sought to bar all foreign students from Harvard University.
The court filing gave Harvard 30 days to produce evidence showing why it should not be blocked from hosting and enrolling foreign students – who made up 27 percent of its student body in the 2024-25 academic year.
Trump’s first 100 days: Trade, diplomacy and walking the transatlantic tightrope
The White House has also stripped Harvard, among other elite institutions, of federal funding for research.
Harvard is the wealthiest university in the US, with an endowment valued at $53.2 billion (€46.7 billion) in 2024.
Trump has claimed the university is a hotbed of anti-Semitism and “woke” liberal ideology.
China ‘agressively’ targeted
On 28 May, Rubio heaped pressure on China, saying Washington will “aggressively revoke visas” for Chinese students, including those with connections to the Chinese Communist Party or studying in critical fields.
Beijing reacted in fury at the announcement, describing Trump’s crackdown on international scholars as “political and discriminatory”.
Young Chinese people have long been crucial to US universities, which rely on international students paying full tuition.
China sent 277,398 students to the US in the 2023-24 academic year – although for the first time more Chinese students went to India than the US, according to a State Department-backed report of the IIE.
Foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning said Beijing had lodged its opposition with Washington.
Contingency plans
In light of the uncertainty, international schools and organisations have begun preparing contingency plans.
Jean-Bernard Adrey, director of TJ Global Services, an international education consulting agency which establishes partnerships between European and American universities, urged his contacts “not to panic” for the time being.
He said there is plenty of time left before the start of the next academic year in the US and that he hoped the problem will be resolved by then.
He added, however, that these “anxiety-inducing” decisions for students and their families risk tarnishing the reputation of American universities in the longer term and encouraging young people to turn to other destinations, such as the United Kingdom or Canada.
First US ‘refugee scientists’ to arrive in France in weeks, university says
The French Minister of Higher Education Philippe Baptiste also sought to reassure French and European students, promising “fallback solutions” for those who had planned to study in the United States next year and were unable to obtain a visa.
Meanwhile, US State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce encouraged prospective students to continue seeking visa appointments and said: “I would not be recommending that if this was going to be weeks or months.”
On the legal front, US judge Allison Burroughs said on 30 May that she would issue a preliminary injunction that “gives some protection” to international students, while the legality of Trump’s decision is debated.
(with newswires)
GERMANY – DEFENCE
Germany redefines defence role as Merz backs missile production in Ukraine
Berlin is charting a new course in its European defence strategy as Chancellor Friedrich Merz pledges direct support for Ukraine’s independent long-range missile development, in a break from Germany’s post-war policy of non-intervention.
In a marked departure from Germany’s stance on defence, Merz this week announced that Berlin will help Ukraine develop its own long-range missile systems – free from the restrictions that have limited Western-supplied weaponry.
Speaking alongside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Berlin, Merz declared that Germany would “strive to equip the Ukrainian army with all the capabilities that truly enable it to successfully defend the country”.
This includes boosting domestic Ukrainian missile production – without the constraints on range and targeting that have dogged Western weapons shipments.
A turning point
Until now, many of the advanced systems delivered to Ukraine have come with caveats, reflecting fears that strikes deep inside Russian territory could provoke direct retaliation and potentially pull NATO into open conflict.
Merz’s pledge marks a significant turning point. By backing Ukraine’s independent missile development, Germany is not only bolstering Kyiv’s self-reliance – it’s also the first time a German leader has so directly supported the development of Ukrainian weapons with no operational strings attached, and marks a sharp escalation in German military support.
“Ukraine will be able to fully defend itself, including against military targets outside its own territory,” Merz said.
France and Germany to launch new security council amid Ukraine war
However, Berlin’s continued refusal to supply Kyiv with its powerful Taurus long-range cruise missiles remains a sore point.
The Taurus system has long been on Ukraine’s wish list, and Merz’s own party colleagues – including senior CDU member Roderich Kiesewetter – voiced disappointment at the lack of clarity.
Posting on X (formerly Twitter), Kiesewetter wrote: “There is no sign of Germany finally delivering Taurus cruise missiles, because I still see no unity in the coalition and no political will to respond appropriately and with strength and consistency to Russia’s massive escalation … Such statements are therefore not helpful overall because they highlight Europe’s weakness to Russia.”
Still, Merz’s initiative may offer a strategic workaround: if Ukraine can build its own systems with German backing, the issue of direct exports may become less urgent, as the focus shifts from short-term shipments to long-term defence capacity – exactly what Zelensky has been asking for.
Europe tightens sanctions on Russia as pressure builds on Washington
Germany is already Europe’s biggest individual supplier of military aid to Ukraine, second globally only to the United States.
Merz’s move aligns Germany more closely with the stance taken by Washington, especially after last year’s decision by then-President Joe Biden to allow limited Ukrainian strikes into Russia using US-supplied ATACMS missiles.
This comes as the Trump administration notified Congress of a planned $50 million arms sale to Ukraine following a new US-Ukraine minerals deal, signed at the end of April.
Russia slams missile pledge
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov criticised Germany’s missile production pledge as a threat to peace negotiations. He was quoted by Russian news agency Interfax as saying: “These potential decisions, if indeed such decisions have taken place, are absolutely contrary to our aspirations to reach a political settlement.”
At the same time, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has extended an invitation for direct peace talks in Istanbul on 2 June – an offer Ukraine says is undermined by Moscow’s continued military escalation and the lack of a concrete negotiating framework.
On 29 May, Zelensky accused Russia of stalling peace talks by failing to deliver a promised negotiations memorandum ahead of the proposed meeting in Istanbul.
While diplomatic manoeuvres continue, however, the war on the ground is intensifying.
Last weekend, Russia launched its largest drone attack to date, while Ukraine’s own growing drone fleet continues to strike deep into Russian territory.
Zelensky has repeatedly emphasised the need for sustained defence investment, urging European nations to help build up Ukraine’s domestic capabilities – from drones to cruise missiles and beyond.
There’s Music in the Kitchen, No 36
Issued on:
This week on The Sound Kitchen, a special treat: RFI English listener’s musical requests. Just click on the “Play” button above and enjoy!
Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday. This week, you’ll hear musical requests from your fellow listeners Jayanta Chakrabarty from New Delhi, India, Alan Holder from Isle of Wight, England, and Karuna Kanta Pal from West Bengal, India.
Be sure you send in your music requests! Write to me at thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr Tell us why you like the piece of music, too – it makes it more interesting for us all.
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: “A Million Roses” by Raymond Pauls and Leon Briedis, performed by L’Orchestre Dominique Moisan; “Anak” by Freddie Aguilar, performed by Aguilar and his orchestra, and “Hips Don’t Lie” by Shakira, Wyclef Jean and Archie Pena, performed by Shakira and Wyclef Jean.
The quiz will be back next Saturday, 7 June. Be sure and tune in!
Romania’s new president Nicușor Dan pledges to counter Russian influence
Issued on:
In this week’s International Report, RFI’s Jan van der Made takes a closer look at the recent Romanian elections, in which centrist candidate Nicușor Dan secured a decisive victory over his far-right rival, George Simion.
On 26 May, pro-EU centrist Nicușor Dan was sworn in as President of Romania, having vowed to oppose “isolationism and Russian influence.”
Earlier, Dan had emerged victorious in a closely contested election rerun, widely viewed as pivotal for the future direction of the NATO and EU member state of 19 million people, which shares a border with war-torn Ukraine.
The vote followed a dramatic decision by Romania’s Constitutional Court five months prior to annul a presidential election, citing allegations of Russian interference and the extensive social media promotion of the far-right frontrunner—who was subsequently barred from standing again.
Although nationalist and EU-sceptic George Simion had secured a commanding lead in the first round, Dan ultimately prevailed in the second-round run-off.
RFI speaks with Claudiu Năsui, former Minister of Economy and member of the Save Romania Union, about the pressing challenges facing the country—from economic reform and political polarisation to the broader implications of the election for Romania’s future, including its critical role in supporting Ukraine amid ongoing regional tensions.
Ramaphosa in Washington: can South Africa – US ties be saved?
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As relations between South Africa and the US hit their lowest point since apartheid’s end, President Cyril Ramaphosa heads to Washington to mend fences after years of frosty ties and dwindling aid under Trump-era policies. In this week’s Spotlight on Africa we unpack what’s at stake – and what was said behind closed doors.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa met with Donald Trump in Washington last Wednesday.
The meeting took place amid tensions over several issues, including the United States’ resettlement of white Afrikaners – whom President Trump has controversially described as victims of “genocide” – and South Africa’s ongoing land reform.
South Africa’s Ramaphosa to meet Trump on high-stakes White House visit
However, the US President defied all expectations of diplomacy by repeating allegations against Ramaphosa and accusing South Africa of the alleged killing of white farmers.
President Ramaphosa remained composed, however, and the visit continued the following day with further discussions on bilateral relations and trade.
To discuss, the recent evolution of the relations between the two countries, Spotlight on Africa has two guests this week:
- Cameron Hudson, senior fellow at the Africa Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, in Washington DC
- Ivor Ichikowitz, founding director of the Ichikowitz Family Foundation and keen observer of South Africa’s foreign affairs.
We also visit the Paris Noir exhibition, currently on display at the Pompidou Centre in central Paris. It showcases the largest collection ever assembled of works by Black artists who created art in the French capital from the 1950s onwards.
Paris Noir is at the Pompidou Centre in Paris until 30 June, 2025.
‘Paris Noir’ exhibition showcases work made in French capital by black artists
Finally, we go on a tour with the black British photographer, writer and broadcaster Johny Pitts, who has himself documented the black and Afropean communities all over Europe for over ten years.
Episode mixed by Erwan Rome.
Spotlight on Africa is produced by Radio France Internationale’s English language service.
Trump and Erdogan grow closer as cooperation on Syria deepens
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Turkey and the United States are stepping up their cooperation in Syria, strengthening a partnership that has grown despite tensions with Israel. The two countries say they are working more closely on security and stability in the region, reflecting a broader reset in their relationship.
The pledge was made during a meeting of the US-Turkey Working Group in Washington, where diplomats committed to “increasing cooperation and coordination on the security and stability of Syria”.
Ozgur Unluhisarcikli, who heads the German Marshall Fund office in Ankara, said this signals progress.
“I think it shows us that Turkey and the US can get on the same page when it comes to Syria,” he said. “Disagreements in Syria were part of the problem between Turkey and the United States. There are other issues, but this one was one of the core issues.”
Unluhisarcikli believes the good chemistry between Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Donald Trump is playing a role.
“I think it’s significant President Erdogan is one of the leaders that President Trump likes working with and trusts. But of course, this is the case until it’s not,” he said.
Macron urges Syrian leader to protect minorities after deadly clashes
Israeli pushback
The move comes despite a warning from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who told Trump during his February visit to Washington that Turkey was a security threat in Syria.
Both countries have troops in Syria and see each other as rivals.
Trump appeared to dismiss Netanyahu’s concerns, speaking to the international media from the Oval Office with the Israeli leader at his side.
“I told the Prime Minister: Bibi, if you have a problem with Turkey, I really think I can be able to work it out,” Trump said. “I have a really great relationship with Turkey and its leader.”
Erdogan, along with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, is credited with helping persuade Trump to lift sanctions on Syria. Israeli foreign policy analyst Gallia Lindenstrauss said the decision went against Israel’s position.
She explained that Israel wanted any easing of sanctions to be linked to concessions by Damascus.
“I think the fact the US ambassador to Turkey has been appointed as the envoy to Syria also means the Turkish position will get more attention from the US side,” Lindenstrauss said.
“That in itself makes some concern in Israel. Because here Israel has its priorities with regards to Syria, it wants someone pushing Turkey to be more flexible and not, of course, to build bases throughout Syria. That would be a very threatening scenario regarding Israel.”
Turkey’s rivalry with Iran shifts as US threats create unlikely common ground
Turkish airbases
Israeli warplanes recently destroyed a Syrian airbase that Turkish forces were preparing to take over. Turkey says its growing military presence, including control of airbases, is aimed at helping Syria’s new rulers fight insurgent groups like the Islamic State.
“For Turkey, Syria’s security and stability are of the utmost importance, and Turkey is devoting resources to keep Syria stable because Syria’s stability is so important for Turkey’s security, and that’s what Israel should understand,” Unluhisarcikli said.
But Turkish airbases equipped with missile defences would restrict Israel’s freedom to operate in Syrian airspace.
“Israel has just found an opportunity, an air corridor towards Iran (via Syrian airspace), which it can use without asking for permission from any third party,” Unluhisarcikli said. “If Turkey takes over the bases, then Israel would need to get permission from Turkey, which it doesn’t want to, and I think that’s understandable.”
Azerbaijan has been mediating talks between Israel and Turkey to reduce tensions. The two sides have reportedly set up deconfliction systems, including a hotline.
“There has been progress between Israel and Turkey over Syria. There have been at least three announced talks in Azerbaijan which is positive,” Lindenstrauss said.
PKK ends 40-year fight but doubts remain about the next steps
Iran and the F-35s
Iran’s nuclear programme is another source of friction between Israel and Turkey.
Unluhisarcikli said Trump seems to be leaning more towards Erdogan’s view than Netanyahu’s.
“For Turkey, military conflict with Iran is a very bad scenario. I am not entirely sure that’s how Trump feels, but for him, any conflict should be just a second choice because conflict is not good for business,” Unluhisarcikli said.
“It seems Israel has made the judgment that it is time for military action, the time for talking is over. There should be military action. Trump disagrees. He thinks he does have a chance of negotiating.”
US and Iranian negotiators met in Rome on Friday for the fifth round of talks. Erdogan supports the talks and has also claimed that Trump is open to lifting the US embargo on selling F-35 fighter jets to Turkey. That would remove Israel’s technical advantage in the air.
Trump’s increasingly close relationship with Erdogan comes amid reports that he is uneasy about Israel’s war in Gaza. But Lindenstrauss warned that Israel is counting on Trump’s unpredictability.
“We know that Trump has a basic favourable view towards Erdogan. This was already in his first term, and it is continuing now. But we also know that Trump can be tough towards Turkey, and he did implement sanctions against Turkey in his first term,” she said.
“So this good relationship depends on whether Turkey is in line with US interests. But of course, Israel is watching.”
However, with Israel’s war in Gaza showing little signs of ending, threatening further diplomatic isolation, Erdogan for now appears to have Trump’s ear, with the two leaders sharing similar agendas.
Trump’s aid cuts prompt African leaders to embrace self-reliance
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Some African leaders regard United States President Donald Trump’s decision to halt aid to the continent as an opportunity to foster self-reliance. They have already initiated plans to mobilise the necessary resources to reshape Africa’s aid landscape.
“Trade, not aid, is now the pillar of our policy in Africa,” said United States ambassador Troy Fitrell, from the Bureau of African Affairs, in a speech on 14 May at business summit in Abidjan.
The declaration settles any doubts over the Trump administration’s position on aid towards Africa. The US – the world single largest aid donor in the world, according to the United Nations – no longer wants to disburse billions in foreign aid, despite the fact that it represents a small percentage of its entire budget.
In 2023, the US spent $71.9 billion in foreign aid, which amounts to 1.2 percent of its entire budget for that fiscal year.
President Donald Trump repeatedly stated that aid is a waste. For years, Africa has been the region receiving more funding from the United States than any other.
Across the African continent, Trump’s executive orders were initially met with shock, anger, and despair — but also with a renewed determination to change course and place African resources at the heart of African healthcare.
In February, at an African Union summit, Rwandan President Paul Kagame announced that the AU’s health institutions, including the Centres for Disease Control, would take the lead in seeking alternatives to US funding.
“Africa now finds itself at a crossroads. The health financing landscape has shifted dramatically.
“I propose that, over the next year, we work together to define new mechanisms for concrete collaboration on healthcare among governments, businesses, and philanthropies,” he told African leaders.
“The work of building our continent, including our healthcare systems, cannot be outsourced to anyone else.”
To untangle what is going on, for this edition of Interntional Report, RFI interviewed Eric Olander, editor-in-chief of the China-Global South Project; Chris Milligan, former foreign service officer at USAID, in Washington; Mark Heywood, human rights and social justice activist in South Africa, co-founder of the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC); Onikepe Owolabi, vice president of International research at the Guttmacher institute in New York; Monica Oguttu, founding executive director of KMET, Kisumu Medical and Education Trust, in Kenya.
A diverse cardinal elector college
Issued on:
This week on The Sound Kitchen, you’ll hear the answer to the question about the Vatican’s cardinal electors. There’s The Sound Kitchen mailbag and a salute to mothers, the “The Listener’s Corner”, 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.
Erwan and I are busy cooking up special shows with your music requests, so get them in! Send your music requests to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr Tell us why you like the piece of music, too – it makes it more interesting for us all!
Facebook: Be sure to send your photos to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr for the RFI English Listeners Forum banner!
More tech news: Did you know we have a YouTube channel? Just go to YouTube and write “RFI English” in the search bar, and there we are! Be sure to subscribe to see all our videos.
Would you like to learn French? RFI is here to help you!
Our website “Le Français facile avec RFI” has news broadcasts in slow, simple French, as well as bilingual radio dramas (with real actors!) and exercises to practice what you have heard.
Go to our website and get started! At the top of the page, click on “Test level” and you’ll be counselled to the best-suited activities for your level.
Do not give up! As Lidwien van Dixhoorn, the head of “Le Français facile” service, told me: “Bathe your ears in the sound of the language, and eventually, you’ll get it.” She should know – Lidwien is Dutch and came to France hardly able to say “bonjour” and now she heads this key RFI department – so stick with it!
Be sure you check out our wonderful podcasts!
In addition to the news articles on our site, with in-depth analysis of current affairs in France and across the globe, we have several podcasts that will leave you hungry for more.
There’s Spotlight on France, Spotlight on Africa, The International Report, and of course, The Sound Kitchen. We also have an award-winning bilingual series – an old-time radio show, with actors (!) to help you learn French, called Les voisins du 12 bis.
Remember, podcasts are radio, too! As you see, sound is still quite present in the RFI English service. Please keep checking our website for updates on the latest from our journalists. You never know what we’ll surprise you with!
To listen to our podcasts from your PC, go to our website; you’ll see “Podcasts” at the top of the page. You can either listen directly or subscribe and receive them directly on your mobile phone.
To listen to our podcasts from your mobile phone, slide through the tabs just under the lead article (the first tab is “Headline News”) until you see “Podcasts”, and choose your show.
Teachers take note! I save postcards and stamps from all over the world to send to you for your students. If you would like stamps and postcards for your students, just write and let me know. The address is english.service@rfi.fr If you would like to donate stamps and postcards, feel free! Our address is listed below.
Another idea for your students: Brother 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 Brother Gerald’s free books, click here.
Independent RFI English Clubs: Be sure to always include Audrey Iattoni (audrey.iattoni@rfi.fr) from our Listener Relations department in your RFI Club correspondence. Remember to copy me (thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr) when you write to her so that I know what is going on, too. N.B.: You do not need to send her your quiz answers! Email overload!
This week’s quiz: On 26 April, I asked you a question about the late Pope Francis, who’d died earlier that week. As the Vatican prepared to elect a new pope, we published an article about the men who were responsible for electing the next head of the Roman Catholic Church.
You were to re-read our article “What happens now after the death of Pope Francis?” and send in the answer to this question: What are the nationalities of the 135 cardinal electors who will elect the next pope?
The answer is, to quote our article: “Currently there are 135 so-called cardinal electors, 108 of whom were appointed by Francis. Of these, 53 are from Europe, 20 are from North America, 18 are from Africa, 23 from Asia, four from Oceania, and 17 from South America.”
As you know, the cardinals elected Robert Francis Prevost, the first American to hold the post. He took the name Leo XIV as his papal name, and he was formally inaugurated to serve the world’s 1.4 billion Roman Catholics on 18 May.
In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question, which was inspired by the long-running BBC program “Desert Island Discs”. You were to write in with the names of the three records, or audio recordings, that you would take with you to an uninhabited island.
Do you have a bonus question idea? Send it to us!
The winners are: RFI Listeners Club member Christian Ghibaudo from Tende, France. Christian is also the winner of this week’s bonus question. Congratulations, Christian,on your double win.
Also on the list of lucky winners this week are A. K. M. Nuruzzaman, the president of the RFI Amour Fan Club in Rajshahi, Bangladesh, and Paresh Hazarika, a member of the United RFI Listeners Club in Assam, India, as well as RFI Listeners Club members Shadman Hosen Ayon from Kishoreganj, Bangladesh, and Hans Verner Lollike from Hedehusen, Denmark.
Congratulations, winners!
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: “Mother” by Roger Waters, performed by Pink Floyd; “A Mighty Fortress is our God” by Martin Luther, played by Kaleb Brasee; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer, and Buenos Aires Symphony in Three Movements by Astor Piazolla, performed by the Radio France Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Leonardo Garcia Alarcon.
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 “EU and UK reunite in London for talks on diplomacy and defence”, which will help you with the answer.
You have until 23 June to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 28 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.
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Madhya Pradesh: the Heart of beautiful India
From 20 to 22 September 2022, the IFTM trade show in Paris, connected thousands of tourism professionals across the world. Sheo Shekhar Shukla, director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, talked about the significance of sustainable tourism.
Madhya Pradesh is often referred to as the Heart of India. Located right in the middle of the country, the Indian region shows everything India has to offer through its abundant diversity. The IFTM trade show, which took place in Paris at the end of September, presented the perfect opportunity for travel enthusiasts to discover the region.
Sheo Shekhar Shukla, Managing Director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, sat down to explain his approach to sustainable tourism.
“Post-covid the whole world has known a shift in their approach when it comes to tourism. And all those discerning travelers want to have different kinds of experiences: something offbeat, something new, something which has not been explored before.”
Through its UNESCO World Heritage Sites, Shukla wants to showcase the deep history Madhya Pradesh has to offer.
“UNESCO is very actively supporting us and three of our sites are already World Heritage Sites. Sanchi is a very famous buddhist spiritual destination, Bhimbetka is a place where prehistoric rock shelters are still preserved, and Khajuraho is home to thousand year old temples with magnificent architecture.”
All in all, Shukla believes that there’s only one way forward for the industry: “Travelers must take sustainable tourism as a paradigm in order to take tourism to the next level.”
In partnership with Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board.
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Exploring Malaysia’s natural and cultural diversity
The IFTM trade show took place from 20 to 22 September 2022, in Paris, and gathered thousands of travel professionals from all over the world. In an interview, Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia discussed the importance of sustainable tourism in our fast-changing world.
Also known as the Land of the Beautiful Islands, Malaysia’s landscape and cultural diversity is almost unmatched on the planet. Those qualities were all put on display at the Malaysian stand during the IFTM trade show.
Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia, explained the appeal of the country as well as the importance of promoting sustainable tourism today: “Sustainable travel is a major trend now, with the changes that are happening post-covid. People want to get close to nature, to get close to people. So Malaysia being a multicultural and diverse [country] with a lot of natural environments, we felt that it’s a good thing for us to promote Malaysia.”
Malaysia has also gained fame in recent years, through its numerous UNESCO World Heritage Sites, which include Kinabalu Park and the Archaeological Heritage of the Lenggong Valley.
Green mobility has also become an integral part of tourism in Malaysia, with an increasing number of people using bikes to discover the country: “If you are a little more adventurous, we have the mountain back trails where you can cut across gazetted trails to see the natural attractions and the wildlife that we have in Malaysia,” says Hanif. “If you are not that adventurous, you’ll be looking for relaxing cycling. We also have countryside spots, where you can see all the scenery in a relaxing session.”
With more than 25,000 visitors at this IFTM trade show this year, Malaysia’s tourism board got to showcase the best the country and its people have to offer.
In partnership with Malaysia Tourism Promotion Board. For more information about Malaysia, click here.
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