DRC – M23
International NGOs report mass killings and sexual violence in eastern DRC
Two new reports from Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch reveal harrowing testimony of mass killings, sexual violence and forced displacement in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), underscoring the human cost of the conflict despite ongoing peace talks.
Armed violence in eastern DRC is continuing to impact the lives of civilians, as two new reports – one from Amnesty International and another from Human Rights Watch (HRW) – have painted a harrowing picture of widespread abuses by Rwanda-backed M23 rebels and other militia.
Despite ongoing peace talks, both NGOs argue that justice and accountability are urgently needed.
Amnesty’s investigation – based on more than 50 victim and witness testimonies – focuses heavily on sexual violence, forced disappearances and targeted attacks on civil society.
Survivors told of mass rapes carried out by fighters in uniforms resembling those of the M23, with many assailants speaking Kinyarwanda.
Women, Amnesty notes, face danger everywhere: in their homes, fields, or even displacement camps. The report also documents torture, abductions of journalists and lawyers, and at least five summary executions.
“The brutality of the belligerents knows no limits,” warned Tigere Chagutah, Amnesty’s regional director, adding that both Rwanda and the Congolese government must stop deflecting blame and bring perpetrators to account.
UN halts investigation into rights abuses in eastern DRC due to lack of funding
Focus on Virunga
HRW’s findings, while overlapping in their assessment of M23’s responsibility, shed light on large-scale killings near Virunga national park in July.
Drawing on 25 witness accounts and medical and UN sources, the group estimates that more than 140 people were killed, with the toll potentially surpassing 300. Victims were largely from the Hutu and Nande communities.
Survivors described being forced on marches, witnessing relatives butchered, and narrowly escaping execution. One woman recalled rebels ordering her group to sit by a riverbank before opening fire.
She survived by plunging into the water. Another man recounted watching helplessly as his wife and four children were slaughtered.
War crimes
Both Amnesty and HRW underline that these acts may amount to war crimes. They also highlight the regional dimension: M23’s resurgence since 2021 – reportedly with Rwandan backing – has destabilised the mineral-rich provinces of North and South Kivu, displacing more than two million people this year alone.
The group seized the regional capital Goma in January and the South Kivu town of Bukavu in February, while local militia aligned with Kinshasa have also been implicated in abuses.
Congo M23 rebels say they will withdraw from seized town to support peace push
The reports present a grim account that the violence is both systematic and widespread, targeting civilians indiscriminately through rape, execution and terror.
HRW has urged the UN Security Council, the EU and governments to expand sanctions and pursue prosecutions, while calling on Rwanda to allow independent forensic access to rebel-controlled areas.
Amnesty insists that neither Kigali nor Kinshasa can shirk responsibility, pressing them to hold perpetrators accountable and protect civilians.
As things stand, peace negotiations in Qatar and regional diplomatic efforts have been overshadowed by the mounting civilian toll.
MALI
Mali’s junta charges former prime minister Maiga with embezzlement
Choguel Maiga, the former prime minister of Mali, was taken into custody on Wednesday after he was charged with embezzlement.
Maiga, 67, took office after a second coup in Mali in 2021 and led the civilian wing of the country’s military junta until he was dismissed in November 2024.
The removal came days after he criticised the junta for postponing elections.
The charges follow a report from Mali’s auditor general on the management of public funds while Maiga was prime minister.
A statement from the public prosecutor’s office said the charges against Maiga involved money laundering equal to many billions of CFA francs, or several million euros.
No trial date has been set.
Maiga’s lawyer, Cheick Oumar Konare, told AFP news agency: “We believe in justice. We are calm while awaiting the trial.”
Earlier this month, another former prime minister, Moussa Mara, was jailed after writing on social media that he supported jailed critics of the junta.
Last week, authorities in Mali said that a French national had been arrested on suspicion of working for the French intelligence services. Authorities also accused foreign states of trying to destabilise the country as they announced that dozens of soldiers had been detained for allegedly seeking to overthrow the government.
Five years after the 2020 coup, where is Mali today?
‘Covered by diplomatic conventions’
France’s foreign ministry said the arrested employee was covered by the Vienna convention on consular relations, meaning he should be released.
The junta, led by President Assimi Goita, has turned away from Western partners, notably former colonial power France and other former allies and pivoted toward Russia.
In July, the country’s military-appointed legislative body granted Goita a five-year presidential mandate, renewable as many times as necessary and without election.
Under the 41-year-old, Mali has slid into a security quagmire.
How Moscow is reinventing its influence machine across Africa
The Malian army and its Russian allies have been tasked with fighting groups linked to Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group, along with local criminal gangs. However, official forces are regularly accused of abuses against civilians.
Alongside Burkina Faso and Niger, which are also led by military juntas, Mali quit the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) earlier this year, accusing the regional bloc of being subservient to colonial ruler France.
The trio set up their own confederation called the Alliance of Sahel States.
(With newswires)
FRANCE – ISRAEL
France rejects Netanyahu’s antisemitism claim over recognition of Palestine
France has defended its record on combating antisemitism after Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu accused Emmanuel Macron of emboldening hate attacks against Jews by pledging to recognise a Palestinian state.
France has hit back with unusual force after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused President Emmanuel Macron of stoking antisemitism, as Paris prepares to recognise a Palestinian state next month.
The row – already simmering since Macron’s announcement in July – burst into open confrontation on Tuesday when Netanyahu wrote to the French leader warning that antisemitism had “surged” in France since his decision.
He claimed that recognition of Palestinian statehood would “pour fuel on this antisemitic fire” and reward Hamas, while endangering France’s own Jewish community.
France to recognise Palestinian statehood, defying US-Israel backlash
Netanyahu’s accusations ‘erroneous’
The Élysée’s response was swift and sharp. Netanyahu’s charge, officials said, was “abject” and “erroneous”. In a statement, the presidency insisted: “This is a time for seriousness and responsibility, not for conflation and manipulation.”
Far from tolerating antisemitism, Paris underlined, France “protects and will always protect its Jewish citizens”.
Macron’s office pointed out that since the Hamas attacks of 7 October 2023, his government has ordered “the strongest action” against antisemitic crimes. Violence against French Jews, it added, is “intolerable”.
Macron’s minister for Europe, Benjamin Haddad, was equally forthright. “France has no lessons to learn in the fight against antisemitism,” he declared, warning against exploiting “an issue which is poisoning our European societies”.
Spike in antisemitic acts
France is home to Europe’s largest Jewish community, and the government has faced rising numbers of reported antisemitic acts in recent years – jumping from 436 in 2022 to 1,676 in 2023, before dipping slightly last year. Paris argues this makes its vigilance and record of action beyond question.
The latest diplomatic spat stems from Macron’s decision to recognise a Palestinian state at the UN in September.
France – a longstanding supporter of the two-state solution – says the step is meant to push back against Hamas and revive the prospects of peace.
More than 145 UN members have already recognised Palestinian statehood or plan to do so.
Why is France recognising Palestinian statehood and will it change anything?
Reaction from Ramallah
In Ramallah, the Palestinian Authority welcomed France’s stance and strongly condemned Netanyahu’s claims.
Its foreign ministry said his accusations were “unjustified and hostile to peace”, dismissing what it called the “old record” of conflating criticism of Israel with antisemitism. “No one is fooled,” the ministry added.
The row has unfolded against a wider backdrop of diplomatic tension. Netanyahu on Tuesday also turned his ire on Australia, branding Prime Minister Anthony Albanese “a weak politician who betrayed Israel and abandoned Australia’s Jews” after Canberra announced it too would recognise a Palestinian state.
That dispute has already seen tit-for-tat visa cancellations between the two countries.
For France, however, the priority is to ensure that its recognition of Palestinian statehood is not misconstrued as hostility towards Jews at home or abroad. Officials insist the move is in line with decades of French diplomacy, not a departure from it.
DIPLOMACY
Paris hosts quiet diplomacy as Syria and Israel discuss ceasefire and security
Syrian and Israeli ministers emerged from a meeting in Paris pledging to calm tensions between the countries and ease sectarian strains in southern Syria.
The talks between Syria’s Foreign Minister, Asaad al-Shaibani, and the Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister, Ron Dermer, focused on “de-escalation and non-interference in Syria’s internal affairs”, said Syria’s state news agency SANA.
The delegations came together a month after deadly sectarian clashes in the Druze-majority Sweida province.
The week of violence that began on 13 July initially pitted Druze fighters against Sunni Bedouin but quickly spiralled, drawing in Syrian government forces and prompting Israeli strikes.
Israel, home to its own Druze community, has argued its intervention was aimed at protecting the minority group and ensuring the demilitarisation of southern Syria.
SANA said the Paris meeting produced understandings that support stability in the region.
The discussions also touched on the Sweida ceasefire announced by the United States last month and how best to monitor it.
Syrian state television, citing a government source, said the country’s intelligence chief was also present.
Both sides reportedly reaffirmed their commitment to Syria’s territorial integrity, stressing that Sweida remains an integral part of the country.
“These talks are part of diplomatic efforts to enhance security and stability in Syria while safeguarding the unity of its territory,” SANA said.
France condemns reported atrocities against civilians in Syria’s Sweida
Despite technically remaining at war since 1948, Israel and Syria have engaged in back-channel discussions before.
After an Islamist-led offensive toppled Bashar al-Assad late last year, Israel moved troops into the UN-patrolled buffer zone on the Golan Heights, which has separated Israeli and Syrian forces since the 1973 armistice.
‘In two days, it all came crashing down’: A French-Syrian family torn apart
According to Syrian state television, the latest talks also explored the possibility of reactivating the 1974 disengagement agreement, alongside addressing humanitarian concerns in the south.
Both parties acknowledged “the need to step up assistance for the people of Sweida and the Bedouin communities”.
Meanwhile, tensions remain high on the ground.
On Saturday, hundreds of demonstrators took to the streets of Sweida, some demanding self-determination and accusing Damascus of imposing a blockade – claims the government has rejected, pointing instead to the arrival of several aid convoys.
The Paris encounter follows a similar meeting between Shaibani and Dermer last month, while other direct talks are believed to have taken place in Baku, Azerbaijan, according to diplomatic sources speaking to AFP.
This comes as US envoy for Syria Thomas Barrack said on social media on Tuesday night that he had met Israeli Druze spiritual leader Mowafaq Tarif to discuss Sweida “and how to bring together the interests of all parties, de-escalate tensions, and build understanding”.
EUROVISION 2026
Vienna to host Eurovision 2026 amid ongoing controversy over Israel’s inclusion
Vienna – Austria’s JJ won this year’s contest, held in Basel in Switzerland, meaning his home country will stage the 2026 event. Its capital, Vienna, was announced on Wednesday as the host city, beating out rival bidder Innsbruck.
JJ – otherwise known as Johannes Pietsch – gave Austria its first victory since bearded drag performer Conchita Wurst’s 2014 triumph.
Vienna, which hosted the contest in 1967 and 2015, edged out its competitor Innsbruck to stage next year’s contest, Austrian public broadcaster ORF announced.
The final of Eurovision’s 70th edition will be held on 16 May, 2026 at the Wiener Stadthalle, Austria’s largest indoor arena, with semi-finals set for May 12 and 14, Eurovision said.
Since its inaugural show in 1956, hosted by Switzerland, Eurovision has become the ultimate pop platform, catapulting Swedish icons ABBA to worldwide fame and launching the career of Celine Dion, who competed for Switzerland in 1988.
It is the world’s biggest annual live televised music event, and some 166 million viewers in 37 countries watched this year’s contest, with a record 60 percent of viewers aged 15 to 24 tuning in. The competition got even more views on Instagram and TikTok.
Israel controversy
Created to foster European unity in the wake of the Second World War, the show has nonetheless drawn controversy throughout its history.
Austria staged a protest over General Franco’s dictatorship in Spain in 1969 and Greece submitted a song in 1976 slamming Turkey over its invasion of Cyprus.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 dominated that year’s contest – which Ukraine won and from which Russia was (and still is) barred – while 2024 saw protests over Israel’s war in Gaza, after Eurovision allowed the former to continue to participate in the contest.
These continued this year, with pro-Palestinian protesters clashing with police in Basel.
Spain’s public broadcaster asked the European Broadcasting Union, which organises Eurovision, to open a “debate” on whether Israel should be allowed to take part, a move also backed by Iceland and Slovakia, while a protest took place outside the offices of Irish broadcaster RTE calling for it to withdraw from the contest in protest at Israel’s inclusion.
Last year’s winner Nemo also joined calls for Israel to be ejected, saying: “Israel’s actions are fundamentally at odds with the values that Eurovision claims to uphold – peace, unity, and respect for human rights.”
In response to the criticism, Eurovision director Martin Green said: “As a reminder, the EBU is an association of public service broadcasters, not governments.
“As part of its mission to secure a sustainable future for public service media, the EBU is supporting our Israeli Member KAN against the threat from being privatised or shut down by the Israeli government.”
Eurovision returns amid protests over Palestine, Pride flags and parody lyrics
Israel’s 2025 entrant Yuval Raphael survived the 7 October, 2023 attack on Israel that sparked the Gaza war, hiding beneath bodies as Hamas gunmen attacked a music festival.
As the televotes came in, Israel held the top spot until, right at the very end, the public votes for Austria clinched the win for JJ.
In an interview following his win, he called for Israel to be excluded from next year’s competition, sparking a storm of criticism in Austria, a staunch supporter of Israel.
“It is very disappointing to see that Israel continues to participate in the contest,” the 24-year-old told Spanish daily El Pais. “I would like next year’s Eurovision to take place in Vienna without Israel.”
The country’s public broadcaster ORF distanced itself from his remarks, saying they “reflected a personal opinion”.
The singer has since sought to defuse the controversy, saying via his record label Warner that he was “sorry if his comments had been misinterpreted”.
Israel has confirmed its intention to participate in next year’s event.
‘Europe, shall we dance?’
Under the slogan “Europe, shall we dance?”, Vienna, famed for its classical music heritage and the baroque splendour of its architecture, cited its experience in hosting big events in its push to win the bid.
The chosen venue, the Wiener Stadthalle, also hosted Eurovision in 2015. Located in central Vienna, it opened in 1958 and seats 16,000 people in its main hall.
The city also touted its “enormous” accommodation capacities, its “excellent” transport links, and its “cosmopolitanism”, with 2 million people living in the Austrian capital.
Thousands rally in Austria as far-right Freedom Party eyes power
Austria’s far-right Freedom Party, which topped elections for the first time last year but failed to form a government, has described Eurovision as a “queer, left-wing, woke spectacle” and criticised Vienna for wanting to stage it despite the high costs. Basel put up nearly $40 million to host the contest.
The last time the Austrian capital hosted Eurovision, the city installed traffic lights showing same-sex and heterosexual couples instead of a single figure – which proved so popular that the city authorities decided to keep them for good.
(with newswires)
Spain
Spanish farmers step in as first responders to fight remote wildfires
Spain is battling a wave of wildfires that have claimed four lives this summer. In the north-west, in regions renowned for their lush landscapes and picturesque villages, farmers and residents are trying to save homes and land that firefighters cannot reach.
A record 3,400 square kilometres – about the size of Moldova – has been destroyed by wildfires in Spain this year, the European Forest Fire Information System said.
Thousands of firefighters, backed by soldiers and water-bombing aircraft, have been battling more than 20 major blazes across the west of the country this week.
The fires, now in their second week, are concentrated in Castile and Leon, Galicia and Extremadura. Thousands of people have been forced to flee.
In some isolated villages, residents are defending their homes themselves. Surrounded by thick vegetation and perched on hillsides, these hamlets have been hit especially hard.
Summer of extremes as fires, floods and heatwaves grip the globe
Raquel Fernández, who lives in Montederramo, Galicia, told RFI: “Every day, new fires appear. The fires are so big that they end up merging together. It’s all mountains, and there aren’t enough resources [for firefighters] to be everywhere. The people who are saving us here are the local farmers with their tractors and water tanks.”
Across the region, farmers are trying to save the most isolated houses – including their own.
In Guimarei, south of Ourense, as the flames approach, Martín Pérez fills his water tank.
“My farm burned down two days ago, over there. A calf farm. And now I’m trying to save my house. Yesterday we saved my sister’s farm, and we’ve been there for days. It’s hell. It’s absolute hell. I’m devastated, absolutely devastated. But we have to keep fighting, that’s the way it is.”
Prosecutors examine arson link to France’s worst wildfire in 50 years
Anger with authorities
In Mogainza, Eloi Fernandez, a livestock farmer, has been battling the flames for a week.
He says he is angry with the authorities for not allowing farmers to clear the forests, which he believes could have slowed the spread of the fires.
“They ban everything. They ban making new paths, controlled burning, cutting wood for heating in winter… Everything, everything is banned. They call it a ‘nature network’. Nature network… what nature do we have left? How are they protecting it? It makes no sense, they don’t know what they’re doing.”
Other residents have voiced their anger at what they regard as poor preparation and limited resources.
“No one’s shown up here, nobody,” Patricia Vila told AFPTV in the village of Vilamartin de Valdeorras in Ourense. “Not a single damn helicopter, not one plane, has come to drop water and cool things down a bit.”
France, Italy, Slovakia and the Netherlands have sent firefighting aircraft to help, but the size and severity of the fires and the intensity of the smoke are making “airborne action difficult,” Spanish Defence Minister Margarita Robles told television channel TVE.
Heatwave continues to scorch France as fire risks and pollution rise
Fernandez is worried for the future of these hamlets, which are already suffering from depopulation.
“It’s all going to die out. We in the hamlets are doomed, they’re going to be abandoned,” he said. “There are only three or four young people left, and we’re taking a real beating.”
Despite the risks, locals continue to fight tirelessly against the fires, as the Spanish authorities announce that they will release aid for farmers who have lost everything.
(with newswires, and partially adapted from the this report n French.)
INVESTIGATION
How Moscow is reinventing its influence machine across Africa
Russian operatives are using new tactics to expand Moscow’s reach in Africa, two years after the death of Wagner boss Yevgeny Prigozhin. An investigation led by RFI and the monitoring group All Eyes on Wagner shows influence campaigns remain active from Angola to Chad.
The findings, published with All Eyes on Wagner, reveal how Russia is reshaping its methods while keeping a strong presence across the continent.
On 7 August, two Russian nationals were arrested in the Angolan capital Luanda after violent protests over soaring fuel prices. They face charges including criminal conspiracy, document forgery, terrorism and terror financing.
Angolan authorities said the pair had set up a network of propaganda and disinformation designed to stir unrest and bankroll the demonstrations.
The arrests shed light on Moscow’s evolving toolkit in Africa.
One of the men, Lev Lakshtanov, is accused of masterminding the operation, RFI journalist Carol Valade said.
Death toll rises in Angola after protests and looting over fuel hike
Operative in ‘cultural diplomacy’
At 64, Lakshtanov has a long track record in the world of Russian soft power. He founded Farol, a cultural NGO for Portuguese-speaking countries, backed by Rossotrudnichestvo – the state agency for cultural diplomacy created under former president Dmitry Medvedev.
Plans were under way to open a Russian cultural centre in Luanda this year.
After spending time in Brazil, Lakshtanov wound up his activities in Russia around the time of the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. He later appeared in the United Arab Emirates before quietly settling in Angola on a tourist visa.
With his associate Igor Racthin, he moved into Luanda’s Gamek district. The pair posed as journalists, sought contacts with opposition figures, and reached out to Buka Tanda, a Russian speaker and senior member of the youth wing of UNITA, Angola’s main opposition party.
They told Tanda they were preparing a documentary and wanted to set up a cultural centre. He introduced them to his cousin, a journalist at state TV.
Soon the group was running paid interviews with politicians and commissioning opinion polls on perceptions of Russia – until their arrest on charges of orchestrating fuel protests.
Former Wagner media operative lifts the lid on Russian disinformation in CAR
Echoes of Chad
The case mirrors events in Chad a year earlier. In September 2024, three Russians and a Belarusian were arrested in N’Djamena.
Among them were Maksim Shugaley and Samir Seyfan, both long linked to Wagner’s African influence operations.
The group posed as investors, rented property, cultivated political contacts and recruited Russian-speaking Chadians. Two presented themselves as journalists, offering training and funding to reporters – then asking them to publish pro-Russian articles for cash.
They were detained during the inauguration of a Russian cultural centre in the capital, also set up under Rossotrudnichestvo.
Wagner replaced in Mali by Africa Corps, another Russian military group
From Wagner to Africa Corps
These cases show how Moscow’s strategy has shifted. “They are now more discreet but busier than ever, expanding and becoming increasingly professional,” said Lou Osborn, of All Eyes on Wagner.
The operations now run under the umbrella of the African Initiative, closely linked to Africa Corps – the Kremlin’s new command structure bringing Wagner’s former military assets under state control.
A wider network of private actors and consultants, many tied to Wagner or Russian intelligence in the past, is also active. Angolan police and Western officials refer to this circle as “Africa Politology”.
The findings come five years after the 18 August 2020 coup in Mali, which ended decades of French influence and brought the country into Russia’s orbit.
Since then, Wagner’s troops in Mali have been replaced by Africa Corps, while Moscow has signed multiple trade and nuclear energy deals with Bamako.
Deforestation
Meet the NGOs striving to save the last forests of the Comoros
On the most mountainous and densely populated island in the Comoros, only the most remote forests have escaped decades of deforestation – ravages which several NGOs are now trying to repair.
Strips of bare land scar the lush and green mountainsides towering above Mutsamudu, the capital of the Indian Ocean island of Anjouan.
“We lost 80 percent of our natural forests between 1995 and 2014,” Abubakar Ben Mahmoud, environment minister of the country off northern Mozambique, told French news agency AFP in a recent interview.
The clearing of the forest for cultivation has compounded damage caused by the production of ylang-ylang essential oil, used in luxury perfumes, and the manufacture of traditional carved wooden doors for which the island is renowned.
With a high population density of more than 700 residents per square kilometre, “Deforestation has been intensified as farmers are looking for arable land for their activities,” the minister said.
The brown and barren patches on the slopes are starkly visible from the headquarters of Dahari, a leading organisation in the fight against deforestation, based in the hills of Mutsamudu.
Water guardians
The NGO last year launched a reforestation programme, working hand-in-hand with local farmers who are called “water guardians”.
Under a five-year conservation contract, the farmers commit to replanting their land or leaving it fallow in exchange for financial compensation, said one of the project’s managers, Misbahou Mohamed.
The first phase has included 30 farmers, with compensation paid out after inspection of the plots.
Another significant contributor to deforestation on Anjouan, the ylang-ylang essential oil industry, has in recent years heeded calls to limit its impact.
The Comoros is among the world’s top producers of the delicate and sweet-smelling yellow flower, prized for its supposed relaxing properties and widely used in perfumes like the famous Chanel No 5.
Protected areas offer hope for Africa’s vanishing forests and wildlife
The production of ylang-ylang, vanilla and cloves makes up a large part of the archipelago’s agricultural output, which represents a third of its GDP.
The country has around 10,000 ylang-ylang producers, most based on Anjouan, according to a report commissioned by the French Development Agency for a project to support Comoran agricultural exports.
Burning wood is the cheapest source of fuel for the distillation process, the report highlighted, with 250 kilogrammes (550 pounds) needed to produce one litre of essential oil.
Some producers are trying to limit their use of wood, such as Mohamed Mahamoud, 67, who said he halved consumption by upgrading his equipment.
“I now use third-generation stainless steel alembics, with an improved oven equipped with doors and chimneys,” said Mahamoud, who has grown and distilled ylang-ylang near the town of Bambao Mtsanga for nearly 45 years.
To avoid encroaching on the forest, most of his wood now comes from mango and breadfruit trees he grows himself.
Anger flares in Comoros as residents endure cost of living and energy crises
Rivers drying up
Some producers have in recent years switched to crude oil to fuel their stills.
But that costs twice as much wood, said one ylang-ylang exporter, who asked to remain anonymous.
And high electricity prices in Comoros mean that using electrical energy would cost 10 times more, “not to mention the long periods of power cuts”, he said.
Part of the drive to reduce wood consumption comes from an alarming observation: not only is deforestation stripping Anjouan’s mountains, it is also drying up its rivers.
Children’s tale takes root in West Africa’s fight to regrow its forests
Forests are essential for “the infiltration of water that feeds rivers and aquifers… like a sponge that retains water and releases it gradually”, said hydroclimatologist Abdoul Oubeidillah.
“In 1925, there were 50 rivers with a strong year-round flow of water,” said Bastoini Chaambani, from the environmental protection NGO Dayima. “Today, there are fewer than 10 rivers that flow continuously.”
The Comoros government has meanwhile announced it also intends to take part in reforestation efforts.
“We will do everything we can to save what little forest we have left,” said the environment minister.
(with AFP)
Mali
Five years after the 2020 coup, where is Mali today?
When Mali’s military staged a first coup on 18 August 2020, they said they were not planning on holding onto power and promised elections. But after a second coup that overthrew the transitional civilian government in 2021, the military is still in charge. Five years on, the country finds itself mired in criminal and sectarian violence and economic hardship.
Malians welcomed the coup that overthrew President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta on 18 August 2020.
General Assimi Goita promised to root out jihadists in the north of the country, which Mali had been unsuccessfully trying to do for nearly a decade with the support of the French military and a United Nations peacekeeping mission.
Then Mali experienced its second coup in 2021 and Goita, as interim president, promised “credible, fair and transparent elections” and a handover to civilian rule by June 2022.
But this never came to pass.
Instead, Mali shifted allegiances away from France – from which it severed ties in 2022 – to Russia, which sent mercenaries from its Wagner group to fight with the army.
Rights abuses
In 2023, the Malian army regained control of Kidal, a Tuareg separatist stronghold, but Wagner has been unable to help Mali take back full control of its territory.
Many Malian towns are still controlled by jihadists, and the army and its Russian allies are regularly accused of abuses against civilians.
Earlier this year, Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger quit Ecowas to form their own confederation, the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), dealing a blow to the credibility of the grouping.
The AES accuses Ecowas of being a tool for what it sees as former colonial ruler France’s neo-imperialist ambitions and has created a unified army that conducts joint anti-jihadist operations.
In July 2025, Mali’s military-appointed legislative body granted Goita a five-year presidential mandate, renewable “as many times as necessary” without election.
Mali’s promise of democracy fades as junta extends Assimi Goita’s rule
With the military still in power, the situation for civilians is getting worse, according to Alioune Tine a former UN expert on human rights in Mali and the founder of the Senegalese think tank Afrikajom Center.
“They came for security, but today security is deteriorating,” he told RFI. “Now, the most serious thing from my point of view is that the promises of an 18-month transition have not been kept,” he explains.
Furthermore, the junta announced in May the dissolution of all political parties and organisations, as well as a ban on meetings.
“We are witnessing a kind of authoritarian rule, with increasingly restricted civic space, making it virtually impossible for the press, civil society or the opposition to express themselves,” Tine says.
Destabilisation plot
On top of the ongoing security and economic issues, Malian authorities are searching for possible accomplices in what they say is a “foreign government-backed plot” to destabilise the country.
This follows the arrest of a French national suspected of working for French intelligence services along with over 50 Malian soldiers last week.
In a separate move, Mali’s civilian former prime minister Choguel Maiga and a number of his former colleagues were taken into custody as part of an investigation into claims of “misappropriation of public funds”.
UN mission in Mali officially ends after 10 years
Maiga, a former junta heavyweight, was appointed prime minister in 2021 before being dismissed at the end of last year after criticising the military government.
He had criticised being excluded from decisions about the continued leadership of the generals, who had initially promised to hand power back to elected civilians in March 2024.
No connection has been made between his arrest and those of the soldiers accused of wanting to overthrow the government.
Afghanistan
‘Collective heroism’: French film recounts evacuation amid Taliban takeover
Friday marks the fourth anniversary of the Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan following two decades of insurgency. France, like many countries, evacuated thousands of its citizens, alongside Afghans threatened by the re-emergence of the hardline Islamist regime. Based on eyewitness accounts, this period has been captured in a new French film, 13 jours, 13 nuits (13 days, 13 nights).
The images of chaos and panic when the Taliban swept back to power on 15 August, 2021 provoked shock and outrage around the world, as thousands rushed to Kabul airport, desperate to evacuate alongside citizens of Western nations.
Afghans raced across the tarmac, some clinging on to departing planes, others passing their young children over barbed wire fences, pleading to have them evacuated. Seven people were crushed to death in the stampede.
The Taliban had been forced from power when a United States-led coalition of forces invaded Afghanistan in 2001 to hunt down Osama Bin Laden, who was responsible for the 9/11 bombing of the World Trade Centre in 2001.
Bin Laden, a Saudi national, had been given shelter in Afghanistan.
But, after two decades of Western presence, with dwindling public support, former US president Joe Biden announced he would pull American troops out of the country by the end of August 2021.
Facing mounting attacks from militants, the US began evacuating its nationals, triggering similar moves among Western allies, including France.
The turn of events sent shockwaves throughout Afghanistan and threw into question the future of Western involvement there on logistical and diplomatic levels.
Vivid memories
The memory of the Taliban takeover and the sudden exit by Western countries is still vivid four years on, particularly for those involved in the dramatic evacuations at Kabul airport.
Their stories have been brought to the screen by French film director Martin Bourboulon in 13 jours, 13 nuits (“13 days, 13 nights”), which was screened as part of the official selection at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival.
The film is based on the book 13 jours, 13 nuits dans l’enfer de Kabul (“13 days, 13 nights in the hell of Kabul”), in which Mohamed Bida tells of his experience as the head of security, responsible for evacuating the French embassy.
As the last Western embassy to remain open in the country in August 2021, France was unprepared for the last-minute rush of people who arrived at its headquarters in Kabul, seeking refuge.
France, US have a ‘moral duty’ to help those in danger to leave Afghanistan
“The gate weighed 20 tonnes and we would only open it a little bit to let a few authorised individuals through, one at a time,” Bida recalls.
When a nearby explosion caused panic, he saw people – mainly women and children – at risk of getting trampled as they pushed at the gate.
“I phoned the ambassador to warn him a tragedy was about to unfold on our doorstep and he ordered me to open the gate to prevent it. About 500 people came in, and we sheltered them in our gymnasium.”
‘Moral responsibility’
Bida’s eyewitness account also tells of having to negotiate with the Taliban for the safe passage of a convoy of buses carrying civilians from the embassy to the airport.
He says he didn’t write the book to be seen as “the hero”, but rather as an ordinary man faced with an extraordinary situation.
Director Martin Bourboulon agreed that the film needed to be “rooted in reality,” without any exaggeration or invention around the events.
“The film’s main strength is that it’s a tale of collective heroism, diplomatic courage and moral responsibility,” he told RFI, adding that the film crew consulted hundreds of testimonials to recreate the scenes.
The French military evacuation, Operation Apagan, lasted for two weeks and saw nearly 3,000 people flown through Middle Eastern airbases.
More than 200,000 people were evacuated by the US, in what Biden described as “the largest, most difficult airlifts in history”.
Gender apartheid
Despite the Taliban’s assurances of a more tolerant and open brand of rule upon their return, many Afghans feared a repeat of their initial stint in power from 1996-2001, which was infamous for the treatment of girls and women, as well as a brutal justice system.
Over the past four years, women have become increasingly isolated – removed from public life by the Taliban authorities, who have banned them from universities, public parks and gyms, in what the United Nations has called a “gender apartheid“.
Since September 2021, girls in Afghanistan have been barred from education beyond primary level. Women have also been pushed out of public sector jobs and are forbidden to work with foreign NGOs and the UN.
In July 2023, the Taliban ordered that all hair and beauty salons – a source of income for many women – be closed down.
Women must cover themselves from head to toe outside their homes and are barred from raising their voices in public, and from travelling without a male relative. They are forbidden to look directly at men they are not related to.
A window into the hidden lives of Afghan women cut off from society
Forced returns
The UN says the human rights situation in 2025 is worse than ever, and has been compounded by a growing problem – that of forced returns of exiled Afghans.
Millions of Afghans who fled the country throughout decades of successive wars are now facing hardened immigration measures from neighbouring countries.
Pakistan renewed a deportation drive in April, after first launching it in 2023. It has rescinded hundreds of thousands of residence permits for Afghans, threatening to arrest anyone who did not leave.
The government has labelled Afghans “terrorists and criminals”, but analysts say the expulsions are designed to pressure Taliban authorities to control militancy in the border regions.
More than 2.1 million Afghans have returned from Pakistan and Iran so far this year, according to the UN refugee agency, and many more are expected.
Their return is adding pressure in an economy already brought to its knees due to foreign aid cuts, and many have faced reprisals by the Taliban authorities.
In a report published in July, based on interviews with victims, the UN said that Taliban authorities were committing human rights violations against Afghans returned from Pakistan and Iran, including torture and arbitrary detention.
France evacuates Afghan women over fears of becoming targets for Taliban
It said violations had been committed against Afghans “based on their specific profile”, including women, media workers and members of civil society, as well as those affiliated with the former foreign-backed government that fell in 2021.
The Taliban government rejected the findings, accusing the UN of spreading “propaganda”.
“The people cited in this report may have been inaccurate, may be opposed to the system, or may want to spread propaganda or rumours and are therefore using the UNAMA for this purpose,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told French news agency AFP.
ARMENIA – AZERBAIJAN
Armenians caught between hope and distrust after accord with Azerbaijan
Yerevan (AFP) – The streets were almost deserted in Yerevan Saturday because of the summer heat, but at shaded parks and fountains, Armenians struggled to make sense of what the accord signed a day earlier in Washington means for them.
The leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan, two Caucasian countries embroiled in a territorial conflict since the fall of the USSR, met Friday and signed a peace treaty under the watch of US President Donald Trump.
In Yerevan, however, few of the people asked by AFP were enthusiastic.
‘Acceptable’
“It’s a good thing that this document was signed because Armenia has no other choice,” said Asatur Srapyan, an 81-year-old retiree.
He believes Armenia hasn’t achieved much with this draft agreement, but it’s a step in the right direction.
“We are very few in number, we don’t have a powerful army, we don’t have a powerful ally behind us, unlike Azerbaijan,” he said. “This accord is a good opportunity for peace.”
Maro Huneyan, a 31-year-old aspiring diplomat, also considers the pact “acceptable”, provided it does not contradict her country’s constitution.
“If Azerbaijan respects all the agreements, it’s very important for us. But I’m not sure it will keep its promises and respect the points of the agreement,” she added.
Armenians warn ethnic cleansing risks being forgotten – again
‘Endless concessions’
But Anahit Eylasyan, 69, opposes the agreement and, more specifically, the plan to create a transit zone crossing Armenia to connect the Nakhchivan region to the rest of Azerbaijan.
“We are effectively losing control of our territory. It’s as if, in my own apartment, I had to ask a stranger if I could go from one room to another,” she explains.
She also hopes not to see Russia, an ally of Armenia despite recent tensions, expelled from the region.”
Anahit also criticises Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan for “making decisions for everyone” and for his “endless concessions to Azerbaijan”.
“We got nothing in exchange, not our prisoners, nor our occupied lands, nothing. It’s just a piece of paper to us,” she fumes.
Shavarsh Hovhannisyan, a 68-year-old construction engineer, agrees, saying the agreement “is just an administrative formality that brings nothing to Armenia.”
“We can’t trust Azerbaijan,” Hovhannisyan asserted, while accusing Pashinyan of having “turned his back” on Russia and Iran.
“It’s more of a surrender document than a peace treaty, while Trump only thinks about his image, the Nobel Prize.”
Azerbaijan flexes its muscles amid rising tensions with Russia
‘More stability… in the short term’
According to President Trump, Armenia and Azerbaijan have committed “to stop all fighting forever; open up commerce, travel and diplomatic relations; and respect each other’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.”
For Olesya Vartanyan, an independent researcher specialising in the Caucasus, the Washington agreement “certainly brings greater stability and more guarantees for the months, if not years, to come.”
But given the long-lasting tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan, “I fear that we will have to plan only for the very short term,” she said.
(AFP)
ISRAEL – HAMAS WAR
Hunger, disease and no escape: Gaza aid worker’s account of life under siege
With hunger and disease spreading across Gaza and hospitals short of crucial supplies, an aid worker in Gaza City has told RFI of life under siege – describing how families are packed into shrinking safe zones, queuing for water for hours and struggling to find food and medicine as the conflict pushes the territory to the brink.
The catastrophe in Gaza shows no sign of ending. Under relentless bombardment and gripped by hunger, the territory is close to collapse. Amid the devastation, humanitarian workers – most of them ordinary civilians – fight each day to stay alive.
RFI spoke with Riyad, a Palestinian from Gaza City and a member of the NGO Secours Islamique France (SIF), which provides emergency aid and long-term support in crisis zones.
RFI: What is the situation in Gaza City since Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that he was taking control?
Riyad: The little aid entering Gaza is nowhere near enough. Gaza City has nearly one million residents, most displaced to the west – crammed into just 10 to 15 percent of the city’s territory. The rest has been emptied, declared red zones, and is now under Israeli army control.
Since Netanyahu’s announcement, we have been bracing for a new evacuation order and another complete cut-off. We are looking for safe places, but even the Mawasi area (a narrow coastal strip in southern Gaza designated as a humanitarian zone) is already overcrowded. There is no more space. We hope for a solution, but we must prepare for the worst.
Macron warns Israel that Gaza occupation plan risks ‘war without end’
RFI: Tell us about the shortages of medicine, food and water?
Riyad: It is now harder to find medicine than food. Nothing reaches the hospitals, many of which have been destroyed. Medical centres are overwhelmed with the wounded and malnourished, from north to south. Doctors and nurses cannot treat everyone – there are shortages of medicines, equipment and even staff.
Food is also scarce since the closure of the truck crossings. The media talk about aid entering Gaza, but it is desperately insufficient. This is the worst humanitarian crisis in our history. Sometimes we go two days or more without eating. When aid does arrive, more than 90 percent is seized by desperate, hungry people. Many risk their lives to reach these deliveries, knowing they may never return.
My own family has never received aid. Food in markets is exorbitantly priced. Two weeks ago, I paid €50 for a kilo of flour. Sometimes we find tins of chickpeas – expensive, but better than nothing. People are dying from hunger and malnutrition: more than 200 so far, half of them children. There is no milk for babies, no vitamins, nothing that could save Gaza’s children.
Water is no better. The main supply line was bombed a month ago. Those with solar panels keep some neighbourhood wells running, but drinking water still comes from tanker trucks. Every day, we queue for over an hour with small tanks. This is our daily routine.
Israeli plan for Gaza takeover must be halted immediately: UN rights chief
RFI: Can SIF work on the ground in such conditions?
Riyad: Despite closures and soaring prices, our duty at SIF is to support the most vulnerable in Gaza, including the displaced. Fresh vegetables are scarce, but we try to harvest and distribute what we can. Two weeks ago, we managed to deliver nearly 5,000 parcels of vegetables and hot meals, plus a little rice – despite its high price. If more aid could enter, we would expand our work. We also sponsor almost 6,000 orphaned children across the Gaza Strip.
RFI: Are you free to do your work?
Riyad: The problems are constant – logistical, security and those imposed by the Israeli army. Some media do not report the reality. In the past two weeks, only 112 trucks entered Gaza, compared to 8,400 that were supposed to. Ninety percent of those were attacked and looted. None reached the official UNRWA or World Food Programme warehouses.
RFI: Do the people still have hope?
Riyad: Everyone here feels desperate because of the international silence. We appreciate speeches, but words are not enough. We need real pressure to end this war and this catastrophe. We are waiting for the international community to say stop to the massacre.
Netanyahu’s decision shows he does not want to stop. People will be pushed further south, then expelled to other countries. This will destroy the Palestinian cause – and the population.
I feel destroyed inside, but I try not to show it. We have to be strong for our families and our community. We are fighting against suffering and death. It is a fight for life.
“Before 7 October, SIF worked on food security, protection, water, hygiene, sanitation, access to education and an orphan sponsorship programme. We have supported Gaza for years under the blockade. Today, we continue with the team still on the ground. Some staff have left for Egypt; others stayed. Around 15 people are working as best they can, in the south – with local partners when movement is impossible – and in Gaza City in partnership with the British NGO Mentor Initiative.
In recent months, we have distributed fresh vegetables bought locally. During the ceasefire, we could bring aid from Egypt or Jordan, but now that is impossible. We rely on small farmers who have stayed despite the situation. In June and July, we delivered 15,000 parcels of vegetables, each weighing five kilos. Last month, these cost up to €85, and prices keep rising. Recently, we have struggled to find enough because farmers are leaving their land under evacuation orders.
We also prepare hot meals when possible. Famine is now a reality in Gaza.
For water, we use tanker trucks and work with partners. We negotiate with the few desalination units still running, but fuel shortages make this difficult. In northern Gaza, we are distributing 15,000 cubic metres of drinking water over two months – about six litres per person per day. In the south, we started distributions last month. Many people walk for hours just for a few drops.
We also manage solid waste in displaced camps and near some health centres. Our staff face the same hardships as everyone else; they are part of Gaza’s population. Our team in Egypt works constantly to identify suppliers. The moment there is an opening, we will move to bring in as much aid as possible.”
(Adaped from this interview in French by RFI’s Anne Bernas)
Turkey and Italy boost cooperation in bid to shape Libya’s political future
Issued on:
Turkey and Italy are working more closely on migration, energy and regional influence as they seek to shape Libya’s political future. Both see the North African country as a key shared interest and are moving to consolidate their positions in the conflict-torn but energy-rich eastern Mediterranean.
Earlier this month, the leaders of Italy, Turkey and Libya’s Government of National Accord (GNA) met in a tripartite summit – the latest sign of growing cooperation between the three Mediterranean nations.
“Turkey and Italy have both differing interests, but interests in Libya,” explains international relations professor Huseyin Bagcı of Ankara’s Middle East Technical University.
“Particularly, the migration issue and illegal human trafficking are big problems for Italy, and most of the people are coming from there [Libya], so they try to prevent the flow of migrants.
“But for Turkey, it’s more economic. And Libya is very much interested in keeping the relations with both countries.”
Turkey and Italy consider teaming up to seek new influence in Africa
Migration, legitimacy concerns
Turkey is the main backer of Libya’s GNA and still provides military assistance, which was decisive in defeating the rival eastern-based forces led by strongman Khalifa Haftar. An uneasy ceasefire holds between the two sides.
Libya security analyst Aya Burweilla said Turkey is seeking Italy’s support to legitimise the Tripoli government, as questions grow over its democratic record.
“What it means for the Tripoli regime is very positive. This is a regime that has dodged elections for years,” she says.
“Their job was to have democratic elections, and one of their ways to make sure they stay in power was to get foreign sponsors, like Turkey… Now, with this rubber stamp from Meloni in Italy, they can keep the status quo going at the expense of Libyans.”
Years of civil war and political chaos have turned Libya into a major hub for people smugglers. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, elected on a pledge to curb irregular migration, sees stability in Libya as key to that goal.
“The migration issue has become very, very urgent in general for Europe, but of course for Italy too,” says Alessia Chiriatti of the Institute of International Affairs, a think tank in Rome.
Trump and Erdogan grow closer as cooperation on Syria deepens
Mediterranean ambitions
Chiriatti said Meloni’s partnership with Turkey in Libya also reflects broader foreign policy goals.
“There is another dimension – I think it’s directly related to the fact that Italy and Meloni’s government want to play a different role in foreign policy in the Mediterranean space,” she says.
“Italy is starting to see Africa as a possible partner to invest in … But what is important is that Italy is starting to see itself as a new player, both in the Mediterranean space and in Africa, so in this sense, it could have important cooperation with Turkey.”
She points out that both Italy and Turkey share a colonial past in Libya. That legacy, combined with the lure of Libya’s vast energy reserves, continues to shape their diplomacy.
Ending the split between Libya’s rival governments is seen as vital for stability. Moscow’s reduced military support for Haftar, as it focuses on its war in Ukraine, is viewed in Ankara as an opening.
“Russia is nearly out, and what remains are Turkey and Italy,” says Bagcı.
He added that Ankara is making overtures to the eastern authorities through Haftar’s son Saddam, a senior figure in the Libyan military.
“The son of Haftar is coming very often to Ankara, making talks. It’s an indication of potential changes… But how the deal will look like I don’t know, we will see later. But it’s an indication of potential cooperation, definitely.”
Turkey steps into EU defence plans as bloc eyes independence from US
Shifting alliances
Libya was discussed when Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan met Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi in Cairo on Saturday.
Sisi backs Haftar’s eastern government. Libya had been a source of tension between Turkey and Egypt, but with relations thawing, both say they will work together on the country’s future.
Turkey’s position in Libya is strengthening, says Burweilla.
“Saddam is pro-Turkey – there is a huge difference between son and father – and the younger generation is pro-Turkey,” she says.
Such support, Burweilla said, stems from Ankara allowing Libyans to seek sanctuary in Turkey from fighting in 2011, when NATO forces led by France and the United Kingdom militarily intervened against Muammar Gaddafi’s regime.
“I think the Europeans underestimated the political capital that gave Turkey. Turkey is winning the game in Libya,” Burweilla says.
She adds that Ankara’s rising influence is also due to a shift in tactics towards the east.
“What they [Ankara] realised was that you can’t conquer the east of Libya by force; they tried and they failed. And the Turkish regime is very much motivated by business… They don’t care about anything else, and they’ve realised they want to make a business,” Burweilla says.
They’ve reached out more to the east, and the east, in turn, has realised that if they don’t want to be attacked by Turkey and its mercenaries, they need to make peace with Turkey as well.”
Ukraine crisis
Macron calls Putin a ‘predator’ while backing new push for Ukraine peace talks
French President Emmanuel Macron, in Washington for talks on long-term security guarantees for Ukraine, said France and Britain would hold a meeting on Tuesday with Kyiv’s allies. But he warned against trusting Russian President Vladimir Putin, whom he called “an ogre at our gates”.
Ukraine’s allies gathered on Tuesday to review the outcome of fast-moving talks aimed at ending the war, amid signs that Volodymyr Zelensky could meet Putin at a future peace summit.
Hopes of a breakthrough rose when the Ukrainian president and European leaders met US President Donald Trump in Washington on Monday, who said he had also spoken by phone with his Russian counterpart.
The Ukraine war, which has killed tens of thousands of people, has ground to a virtual stalemate despite a few recent Russian advances, defying Trump’s push to end it.
A face-to-face meeting between Zelensky and Putin would be their first since Russia’s brutal invasion nearly three-and-a-half years ago.
Macron said France and Britain would hold a virtual meeting on Tuesday of the so-called “coalition of the willing”, to “keep them up to date on what was decided” at the talks in Washington and the “next steps” for Ukraine.
“Right after that, we’ll start concrete work with the Americans,” Macron told French news channel LCI.
Zelensky-Putin peace talks on the table after Washington summit
With regards to a Putin-Zelensky meeting, Macron suggested Geneva could host the talks, but said it was “up to Ukraine” to decide whether to make concessions on territory, including parts of the eastern Donbas region still under its control.
Switzerland said on Tuesday it would grant Putin immunity if he came to the country for peace talks on Ukraine, despite the International Criminal Court’s arrest warrant.
Last year, the Swiss government defined “the rules for granting immunity to a person under an international arrest warrant. If this person comes for a peace conference – not if they come for private reasons”, Swiss Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis told a press conference.
The last time there were bilateral talks, they were held in Istanbul he pointed out, referring to the three rounds of lower-level negotiations between Russia and Ukraine held in Turkey between May and July.
Pandora’s box
On the topic of concessions, Macron said Ukraine will do what “it deems just and right”, but stressed “let’s be very careful when we talk about legal recognition.
“If countries… can say, ‘we can take territory by force’, (that) opens a Pandora’s box.”
The French leader accused Putin of “rarely honoured his commitments,” and called the Russian leader a “predator, who for his own survival, needs to keep eating” – comments that underscored wider European wariness.
Putin “has constantly been a force for destabilisation. He has sought to redraw borders to increase his power,” Macron said, adding he did not believe that Russia would “return to peace and a democratic system from one day to the next”.
This did not mean that France would “come under attack tomorrow”, Macron said, “but of course this is a threat to Europe (…) let’s not be naive.”
Trump-Putin summit ends without Ukraine deal
Trump – whose summit with Putin in Alaska last Friday failed to produce any ceasefire – wrote on his Truth Social network after Monday’s meetings that “everyone is very happy about the possibility of PEACE for Russia/Ukraine”.
“At the conclusion of the meetings, I called President Putin, and began the arrangements for a meeting, at a location to be determined, between President Putin and President Zelensky,” he added.
Trump said he would then hold a three-way summit with the Ukrainian and Russian leaders.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who was part of the European delegation, said Putin had agreed to the bilateral meeting within the next two weeks.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Tuesday any peace deal on Ukraine must ensure Russia’s security.
“Without respect for Russia’s security interests, without full respect for the rights of Russians and Russian-speaking people who live in Ukraine, there can be no talk of any long-term agreements,” Lavrov told state TV channel Rossiya 24.
(with AFP)
UN – LEBANON
France leads European pushback against move to end UN Lebanon mission
France and its European partners are resisting Washington’s push to end the UN peacekeeping mission in Lebanon – UNIFIL – arguing its presence remains essential for stability along Israel’s northern border.
The United Nations Security Council began to debate Monday a resolution drafted by France to extend the UN peacekeeping force in south Lebanon for a year with the ultimate aim to withdraw it.
The future of UNIFIL has become the latest flashpoint between Washington and its European allies.
While the Trump administration has been pressing to draw down and shut the operation within months, France and its European partners are rallying behind it, arguing its continued presence is vital for stability in the region.
Created in 1978 and expanded after the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah, UNIFIL has long served as a buffer force in southern Lebanon.
Its 10,000-strong contingent of international troops patrols a volatile border and supports the Lebanese army as it works to consolidate authority. For many in Europe, the mission is imperfect but indispensable.
Macron hosts Lebanon’s president, reiterating French support for ‘sovereignty’
‘Expensive failure’
The White House, however, has made no secret of its desire to curtail the operation.
Senior officials, echoing longstanding Israeli frustrations, see UNIFIL as an expensive failure that has done little to weaken Hezbollah’s grip in the south of the country.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently endorsed a plan to wind down the mission over six months, part of a broader retreat from multilateral commitments and UN spending.
But France – backed by Italy and Britain – has mounted a determined diplomatic campaign to resist an abrupt end.
European envoys argue that cutting short UNIFIL’s work would create a dangerous security vacuum.
France has pointed to the example of Mali, where a premature UN withdrawal left government forces overstretched and paved the way for extremist groups to expand.
As one French diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity, warned: “If you leave too soon, others will rush to fill the space – and not the kind of actors anyone wants.”
France’s defence minister calls on Gulf states to aid Lebanese forces
France secures UNIFIL extension
After a series of negotiations last week, France and its allies secured provisional US agreement to a one-year extension of the mandate, buying time to keep the mission alive.
Israel, though long hostile to the peacekeepers, reluctantly accepted the compromise. What happens beyond next year, however, remains the subject of debate.
The French draft resolution, circulated in New York ahead of an upcoming Security Council vote on 25 August, deliberately avoids setting a fixed withdrawal date.
Instead, it extends UNIFIL’s mandate for a year while signalling the Council’s “intention to work on a withdrawal”.
For Paris, keeping the mission’s closure open-ended is crucial to avoid emboldening Hezbollah or undermining the Lebanese army before it is ready to assume full responsibility.
France, contributing states condemn Israeli attacks on peacekeepers in Lebanon
Disarming Hezbollah
Lebanon’s government is itself deeply wary of any rapid pullback. With only 6,000 troops currently deployed in the south, Beirut says it needs time and resources to scale up to the planned 10,000.
Retired general Khalil Helou has warned that without UNIFIL, the army would have to divert soldiers from the Syrian border or other critical posts, risking wider instability. “For Lebanon, their presence is important,” he said.
Even Washington’s own representatives have softened their tone. Tom Barrack, the US envoy to Lebanon, this week called on Israel to fully honour its ceasefire commitments, including withdrawal from five Lebanese border points it still occupies.
He praised Beirut for taking steps to disarm Hezbollah and urged an “economic plan for prosperity, restoration and renovation” in the country.
Meanwhile, UN officials, have continued to underline the mission’s contribution. Peacekeepers have uncovered weapons caches and rocket launchers in recent weeks, sharing intelligence with the Lebanese army.
“UNIFIL remains critical to regional stability,” spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.
Financial constraints may still force adjustments. With UN budgets under strain, diplomats acknowledge that troop numbers could be reduced, offset by the greater use of surveillance technology.
(with newswires)
2025 US Open
US Open mixed doubles defending champions advance to semis of revamped event
Defending champions Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori moved into Wednesday’s semi-finals of the US Open’s new look mixed doubles event after winning their last-16 and quarter-final matches without dropping a set.
They dispatched the second seeds Elena Rybakina and Taylor Fritz 4-2, 4-2 and then beat Karolina Muchova and Andrey Rublev 4-1, 5-4 on Tuesday at the Billie Jean King Tennis Centre in New York.
Errani and Vavassori won the 2024 title after battling their way through five ties against specialist doubles pairs to lift a prize that has been awarded at the US Open since 1887.
Last February, executives at the United States Tennis Association, who organise the US Open, declared a revamp of the tournament.
They cut the field from 32 to 16 teams, placed it during the week when the qualifiers for the men’s and women’s singles draws are played and said they wanted more star singles players to compete.
The rules were also tweaked. Out went sets of six or seven games. In came sets of four games.
Organisers also scrapped the “advantage point” in a game whereby if both teams are at deuce (three points) the game can only be won from “advantage”.
Revamped million-dollar mixed doubles tournament launches at US Open
Reconfiguration at US Open
The reconfiguration irked traditionalists and incurred the wrath of doubles specialists including Errani and Vavassori who condemned the change for reducing the mixed doubles tournament to virtually a series of exhibition knocks.
“I think it was great,” Vavassori said after reaching the last four on Tuesday evening. “It’s always nice to play with Sara for the energy. We always try to put our maximum energy on the court.
“The stadium was packed in the second match,” added the 30-year-old. “So, it was also great to see a lot of people.
“It’s nice for mixed doubles to be seen on a big stage. I think the best thing we can take from this week is that more people will get to know mixed doubles.”
For a place in Wednesday night’s final, Errani and Vavassori will play the all-American duo of Danielle Collins and Christian Harrison who saw off Alexander Zverev and Belinda Bencic in the last-16.
They then disposed of their fellow Americans Taylor Townsend and Ben Shelton in the quarter-final.
The other semi-final will pit Iga Swiatek and Casper Ruud against Jessica Pegula and Jack Draper.
Last year, Errani and Vavassori each took home $100,000 for their efforts. Should they emerge victorious this year after four matches, they will pocket $500,000 each.
Ukraine crisis
Zelensky-Putin peace talks on the table after Washington summit
Ukrainian and Russian presidents Volodymyr Zelensky and Vladimir Putin looked set for a peace summit after fast-moving talks Monday between US President Donald Trump and European leaders that focused on the key issue of long-term security guarantees for Kyiv.
Hopes of a breakthrough rose after Trump said he had spoken by phone with Russian counterpart Putin – whom he met in Alaska last week – following a “very good” meeting with the Europeans and the Ukrainian president at the White House.
It would be the first meeting between the Russian and Ukrainian leaders since Moscow’s brutal invasion nearly three and a half years ago, and comes as Trump tries to live up to his promise to quickly end the war.
Trump, 79, wrote on his Truth Social network that “everyone is very happy about the possibility of PEACE for Russia/Ukraine.”
“At the conclusion of the meetings, I called President Putin, and began the arrangements for a meeting, at a location to be determined, between President Putin and President Zelensky,” Trump said.
European support
Zelensky said he was ready for what would be his first face-to-face with Putin.
“I confirmed – and all European leaders supported me – that we are ready for a bilateral meeting with Putin,” Zelensky said following the summit.
Zelensky has come under increasing pressure to cede territory to end the grinding war, as Russia makes a series of advances.
Ahead of the White House meeting, Trump had pushed Ukraine to give up Crimea and abandon its goal of joining NATO – both key demands made by Putin.
Macron, other European leaders to join Zelensky in US for White House meeting with Trump
But Zelensky stressed he had been able to present a clearer picture of the battlelines to Trump, who he met in a one-on-one in the Oval Office.
“This was the best of our meetings,” Zelensky said, according to a statement put out by his office. “I was able to show many things, even on the map, to all American colleagues regarding the situation on the battlefield.”
Rather than concessions from Ukraine, the summit focused on arranging security guarantees in the event of a peace deal, French President Emmanuel Macron told reporters afterwards.
But he called for stepping up sanctions against Russia if Putin does not move forward on peace with Ukraine.
Trump said the guarantees “would be provided by the various European Countries (in) coordination with the United States of America.”
Successful meeting
NATO chief Mark Rutte told reporters at the White House it was a “very successful meeting” with “the president [Trump] really breaking the deadlock.”
“Today was really about security guarantees, the US getting more involved there, and all the details to be hammered out over the coming days,” he said.
The Financial Times, citing a document seen by the newspaper, said Ukraine had undertaken to buy $100 billion of US weapons financed by Europe in return for US guarantees for its security.
Zelensky later spoke to reporters about a $90 billion package, and said Ukraine and its allies would formalise the terms of the security guarantees within 10 days.
The presence of the European leaders however also underscored continuing nervousness about whether Trump will pivot towards Putin as he has on a number of occasions.
EU approves new sanctions package targeting Russia’s ‘shadow fleet’
Finnish President Alex Stubb said Putin was not “to be trusted.”
Germany’s Merz meanwhile said Ukraine should not be forced to surrender its Donbas region to Russia in talks.
“The Russian demand that Kyiv give up the free parts of Donbas corresponds, to put it bluntly, to a proposal for the United States to have to give up Florida,” Merz told reporters.
(with AFP)
FRANCE – Mayotte
Schools in Mayotte set to reopen as unions warn cyclone recovery still lags
Middle and high schools in Mayotte will reopen next week, eight months after cyclone Chido killed at least 50 people and wrecked classrooms across the French overseas department. Education Minister Elisabeth Borne, visiting the Indian Ocean archipelago, promised lessons would resume “in the same conditions as before the cyclone.”
Borne toured several schools on Monday and spoke of “significant progress” in repairing buildings.
The French overseas department was ravaged by cyclone Chido which swept through in December 2024, killing at least 50 people and causing considerable material damage.
At Younoussa-Bamana High School in Mamoudzou, 57 of 66 classrooms are now operational. “We will welcome students in the same conditions as before the cyclone,” Borne said during her visit.
Construction manager Bruno Ulrich said he hoped to finish all repairs by 26 August, but admitted “there’s still a lot to do” because of shortages of materials.
In the meantime, modular classrooms have been set up near unfinished blocks. At Majicavo-Lamir kindergarten in the north east of Grande-Terre island, eight prefabricated buildings are being used to host pupils from a neighbouring primary school destroyed by the storm.
The mayor of Majicavo-Lamir, Assani Saindou Bamcolo, said rebuilding had been slowed by a lack of funding.
Borne said that “90 percent of students will be able to attend a normal schedule of 24 hours of classes per week.” The remaining 10 percent would start with 10 hours a week before gradually returning to full schedules.
At M’gombani Middle School in Mamoudzou, Borne met students taking part in the “Learning Holidays” programme, a week of preparatory lessons “to get the best possible start to the year”.
France approves €4bn plan to rebuild Mayotte and tighten migration rules
Unions, parents disappointed
Parents’ groups and teachers’ unions disputed the minister’s optimism.
The FCPE 976 parents’ organisation refused to attend the visit, saying schools “are not ready.” In a letter to Borne, the group said 15,000 children – one in four – were still unable to attend classes.
“What our children are experience is not a fleeting problem. It’s a national shame,” the signatories wrote.
SNES-FSU teachers’ union general secretary Sophie Vénétitay also voiced concern. “There are still colleagues who have not received the exceptional Chido bonus (…) And little has been done regarding attractiveness,” she told French news agency AFP.
How overseas Mayotte became ‘a department apart’ within France
Many in Mayotte have long felt neglected by France’s central government, and the devastation caused by cyclone Chido has deepened those frustrations.
Chronic underinvestment in infrastructure and public services has exacerbated the crisis.
Currently 77 percent of people live below the national poverty line and payments such as the minimum income benefit RSA remain half as high as in the rest of France.
In July, France’s Senate approved a bill to rebuild Mayotte, which includes €4 billion in public investment over six years.
It also aims to increase social benefits in Mayotte to match mainland France by 2031.
The Constitutional Council cleared the bill earlier this month despite objections from Socialist, far-left and Green MPs. The law also tightens immigration rules and targets informal housing.
(with AFP)
Armenia and Azerbaijan peace deal raises hopes of Turkish border reopening
Issued on:
The signing of a peace deal between Armenia and Azerbaijan in Washington has raised hopes of ending decades of conflict and reopening Turkey’s border with Armenia.
The deal, brokered by US President Donald Trump, commits both countries to respect each other’s territorial integrity – the issue at the centre of bloody wars.
The agreement is seen as paving the way for Turkey to restore diplomatic ties with Armenia.
“Ankara has been promising that once there is a peace agreement, it will open the border,” says Asli Aydintasbas, of the Washington-based Brookings Institution.
“There was a brief period in the post-Soviet era when it [the border] was opened, but that was quickly shut again due to the Armenian-Azeri tensions.”
Aydintasbas says reopening the border could have wide-reaching consequences.
“Armenia and Turkey opening their border and starting trade would be a historical moment in terms of reconciliation between these two nations, which have very bitter historic memories,” she adds.
“But beyond that, it would help Armenia economically because it’s a landlocked country entirely dependent on Russia for its protection and its economy.”
Turning point
In June, Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan met Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Istanbul. The meeting was seen as a turning point in relations long overshadowed by the memory of the 1915 Armenian Genocide, which Ankara still officially denies.
“There’s now a degree of personal chemistry between the Armenian prime minister and Erdogan. This was seen in a June historic meeting, the first ever bilateral contact, a face-to-face meeting,” says Richard Giragosian, director of the Regional Studies Centre, a think tank in Yerevan.
Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 after ethnic Armenians in Azerbaijan seized the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.
The enclave was retaken by Azerbaijani forces in 2022. Giragosian says the peace deal, along with warmer ties between Pashinyan and Erdogan, could now help Yerevan reach a long-sought goal.
“In the longer perspective for Turkey and Armenia, this is about going beyond the South Caucasus. It’s about Central Asia. It’s about European markets, potentially a new Iran in the future,” he says.
Erdogan congratulated Pashinyan on Monday over the deal, but made no official pledge on reopening the border. That decision may lie with Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliyev.
“They [Ankara] will be looking to Baku. Baku is basically able to tell Turkey not to move on normalisation with Armenia, not to open the border,” says Aydintasbas.
“Part of the reason is that Turkey has developed an economic dependency on Azerbaijan, which is the top investor in Turkey. In other words, little brother is calling the shots, and I think that Ankara, to an extent, does not like it, but has come to appreciate the economic benefits of its relationship with Azerbaijan.”
Azerbaijani demands on Armenia
Azerbaijan is also pushing for changes to Armenia’s constitution, which it claims makes territorial claims on Nagorno-Karabakh.
“The Armenian constitution refers to the Declaration of Independence of Armenia, which has a clear clause on the unification with Armenia, with Nagorno-Karabakh,” says Farid Shafiyev of the Centre for Analysis of International Relations, a Baku-based think tank.
Shafiyev warned that without reform, the peace deal could unravel.
“Let’s say, imagine Pashinyan losing elections, a new person says: ‘You know, everything which was signed was against the Armenian constitution.’ For us, it is important that the Armenian people vote for the change of the constitution,” Shafiyev says.
Analysts note that changing the constitution would require a referendum with more than 50 percent turnout – a difficult and time-consuming process.
Time, however, may be running short. Russia is seen as the biggest loser from lasting peace in the Caucasus. For decades Moscow exploited the conflict to play Armenia and Azerbaijan against each other.
Pashinyan is now seeking to move away from Russian dominance and closer to Europe.
Giragosian warned that Armenia’s window of opportunity is limited.
“There is a closing window of opportunity – that is Russia’s distraction with everything in Ukraine. We do expect a storm on the horizon, with an angry, vengeful Putin reasserting or attempting to regain Russia’s lost power and influence in the region.”
Weakening Russia’s grip remains key, he adds. “Armenia, after all, is still a member of the Eurasian Economic Union, the Russian-dominated trade bloc.
“But it’s also a country that has a Russian military base. Russia still manages the Armenian railway network, for example. This is why, for Armenia, the real key here is going to be Turkey and normalising relations with Turkey.”
At present, Armenia’s only open land borders are with Georgia and Iran – both close to Russia. Opening the Turkish border would give Armenia a vital new route, while also benefiting Turkey’s economically depressed border region.
But for now, Azerbaijan may seek further concessions before allowing any breakthrough.
HUMAN RIGHTS
UN says a record 383 aid workers were killed in 2024
Geneva (AFP) – A record 383 aid workers were killed in 2024, the United Nations said Tuesday, branding the figures and lack of accountability a “shameful indictment” of international apathy – and warned this year’s toll was equally disturbing.
The 2024 figure was up 31 percent on the year before, the UN said on World Humanitarian Day, “driven by the relentless conflicts in Gaza, where 181 humanitarian workers were killed, and in Sudan, where 60 lost their lives”.
It said state actors were the most common perpetrators of the killings in 2024.
The UN said most of those killed were local staff, and were either attacked in the line of duty or in their homes.
Besides those killed, 308 aid workers were wounded, 125 kidnapped and 45 detained last year.
“Even one attack against a humanitarian colleague is an attack on all of us and on the people we serve,” said UN aid chief Tom Fletcher.
“Attacks on this scale, with zero accountability, are a shameful indictment of international inaction and apathy.
“As the humanitarian community, we demand – again – that those with power and influence act for humanity, protect civilians and aid workers and hold perpetrators to account.”
Starvation spreads from camps to besieged Sudanese city of El-Fasher
Provisional figures from the Aid Worker Security Database show that 265 aid workers have been killed this year, as of August 14.
The UN reiterated that attacks on aid workers and operations violate international humanitarian law and damage the lifelines sustaining millions of people trapped in war and disaster zones.
“Violence against aid workers is not inevitable. It must end,” said Fletcher, the UN emergency relief coordinator and under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs.
Meanwhile the UN’s World Health Organization said it had verified more than 800 attacks on health care in 16 territories so far this year, with more than 1,110 health workers and patients killed and hundreds injured.
“Each attack inflicts lasting harm, deprives entire communities of life-saving care when they need it the most, endangers health care providers, and weakens already strained health systems,” the WHO said.
World Humanitarian Day marks the day in 2003 when UN rights chief Sergio Vieira de Mello and 21 other humanitarians were killed in the bombing of the UN headquarters in Baghdad.
2025 US Open
Swiatek and Alcaraz warm up for US Open with crowns in Cincinnati
Iga Swiatek and Carlos Alcaraz underlined their hard court credentials ahead of the US Open with victories over Jasmine Paolini and Jannik Sinner respectively in the women’s and men’s singles tournaments at the Cincinnati Open.
Swiatek beat Paolini for the sixth consecutive time on the WTA tour to win her second trophy of the season following her success at Wimbledon in July.
In a see-saw first set, Paolini raced into a 3-0 lead before Swiatek surged back to give herself the chance to serve for the set at 5-3.
But she fluffed her lines to claim the opener and Paolini eventually levelled at 5-5.
Swiatek pushed again to take the set 7-5 after 56 minutes. The 24-year-old Pole edged the second set 6-4 to brandish her 24th career singles title a day before she pairs up Casper Ruud for the mixed doubles event at the US Open on Tuesday.
Sinner’s participation in the mixed doubles was uncertain on Tuesday after he retired from his final with Alcaraz due to illness.
Alcaraz, who lost to Sinner in the Wimbledon final in July a few weeks after beating him in an epic showdown at the French Open in Paris, swept into a 5-0 lead against a visibly compromised opponent.
During the trophy ceremony on centre court at the Lindner Family Tennis Centre, Sinner turned to the spectators and said: “Usually I start with the opponent but I have to start with you guys.
“I’m super super sorry to disappoint you. From yesterday I didn’t feel great. I thought I would improve during the night. It came up worse.”
Victory in 23 minutes
Alcaraz’s victory in 23 minutes furnished the 23-year-old Spaniard with his first title at the Cincinnati Masters and his third success in 2025 at a Masters 1000 event which are considered the most prestigious crowns on the international tennis circuit after the four Grand Slam tournaments in Melbourne, Paris, London and New York.
“I know and understand how you can feel right now,” said Alcaraz to Sinner. “I can’t say anything you don’t know already, but as I say many times you are truly a champion.
“I’m pretty sure from this situation you’re going to come back stronger. You always do. That’s what true champions do. You really are one. Sorry and come back stronger.”
Later Sinner confirmed he would appear at the US Open for the men’s singles which start on Sunday to defend his title – though he declined to comment on whether he would play with Katerina Siniakova in the mixed doubles tournament, which begins on Tuesday.
“I love Grand Slams a lot. They are the main tournaments for my season and my career,” Sinner said in a statement.
“The US Open is going to be a tough tournament, but in the same time, I’m looking forward to it if I’m ready, physically and mentally.
“I will be ready to push … now a couple of days of recovery, and then we get again back to work, and hopefully we’ll be ready.”
PRESS FREEDOM
France ‘dismayed’ over Russia’s ban on Reporters Without Borders
The French government has condemned Moscow’s latest move against independent voices after Russia banned Reporters Without Borders, adding the press freedom NGO to its list of “undesirable organisations”.
France has voiced its “dismay” at Russia’s decision to outlaw the press freedom NGO Reporters Without Borders (RSF).
The French Foreign Ministry said on Monday that the move formed part of a broader campaign of repression against critical voices, carried out in “flagrant disregard for freedom of expression and press freedom.”
Paris also renewed its call for the “immediate and unconditional release of all those prosecuted for political reasons” and urged Russia to honour its international commitments on the right to information and free access to news.
Russian journalist exiled in Paris has ‘no regrets’ over criticising Ukraine war
‘Undesirable organisations’
On 14 August, Russia’s Ministry of Justice announced that RSF had been added to its list of so-called undesirable organisations.
The designation effectively bans the group’s activities inside Russia, placing staff, supporters and funders at risk of prosecution and possible prison sentences.
The Paris-based NGO, campaigns globally for press freedom, documenting violations and providing practical support to journalists working in hostile environments.
In Russia, the group has consistently denounced attacks on independent reporting, censorship, and the targeting of reporters who investigate sensitive topics such as corruption, abuses of power and the war in Ukraine.
Global decline in freedom of expression over last decade, watchdog warns
Decade-long clampdown
This is not the first time Moscow has sought to muzzle international organisations. Over the past decade, Russian authorities have tightened restrictions on foreign NGOs through laws branding them as “foreign agents” or “undesirable.”
Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and Memorial – one of Russia’s most prominent human rights groups – have all faced severe curbs or outright bans.
Such measures typically criminalise normal organisational activity, exposing staff and even supporters to fines or prison terms, and are widely seen as part of a strategy to isolate Russian society from international scrutiny.
The clampdown has grown sharper since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
RSF has pledged to continue its work despite the ban, insisting that it will not abandon the Russian journalists it supports.
Batteries
EU push for economic sovereinty as rules on recycling batteries come into force
All batteries in Europe, whatever their size, must now be recycled, as a European regulation comes into force requiring companies to cover the cost of their products’ entire life-cycles.
The regulation, adopted in 2023 as a key pillar of the European Green Deal, is part of the European Union’s drive to reduce imports of critical raw materials, such as lithium and cobalt and instead use its own, whether from new mines or recuperated from old devices.
Implemented in stages, the regulation requires as of Monday manufacturers to finance the recycling of electric batteries, which will ensure that their critical metals can be reused.
Until now, only small batteries up to 5kg were covered by the rules; now all batteries are concerned – from tiny watch batteries, to those in smartphones, electric scooters and electric cars and buses.
Beyond the costs to companies required to finance the recycling, the impact will be felt by battery recycling companies, which will see a massive increase in the amount of material to be treated – from about 30,000 tonnes to 600,000 tonnes
Every year, one and a half billion new batteries are placed on the European market. Recycling them is an environmental issue, but also one of economic sovereignty.
Will lithium become the oil of the 21st century?
Europe lagging
“There is a desire to keep strategic metals in France and Europe,” Emmanuel Toussaint Dauvergne, director of Batribox, a French organisation that collects used batteries, told RFI.
“If the French government wants to promote batteries, it must be able to produce them or have them produced in Europe. To do this, it must be able to own the metals essential to their design. It is important that there be coordination of the flow so that they remain on European territory and can be used by battery manufacturers.”
European legislation requires a quarter of critical metals to come from recycled materials in Europe by 2030.
And yet, Europe lags behind the rest of the world in battery manufacturing, so most critical metals are currently being sent mainly to China for processing.
But there is time for the system to catch up, as recently-imported batteries will only be recyclable in ten or fifteen years’ time, giving time to adjust.
NEW CALEDONIA
Valls heads to New Caledonia in wake of collapse of independence deal
Political tensions in New Caledonia have flared, as its main pro-independence coalition FLNKS voted against a deal that would have given the French overseas territory some sovereign powers – but no independence referendum, a key demand for activists. France’s Overseas Minister Manuel Valls is now heading to the archipelago, in what will be a decisive week for its future.
New Caledonia is once again at a political turning point.
The Kanak Socialist National Liberation Front (FLNKS) voted on 9 August to reject outright the Bougival agreement – a French plan signed last month to give the territory its own nationality and some powers, but no new independence referendum, which had been hailed as a potential breakthrough.
The FLNKS is calling instead for a new “Kanaky agreement” and elections this November.
Valls will fly to the Pacific archipelago this week, tasked with navigating a fraught political landscape and seeking an opportunity to restart dialogue.
The agreement, signed in mid-July in the Bougival suburb of Paris, had been presented as a historic step for the Pacific territory.
It proposed the creation of a New Caledonian nationality and envisaged the transfer of key sovereign powers to the territory, including over currency, justice and policing.
New Caledonia independence bloc rejects deal giving powers but no referendum
It was also the first concrete move towards a fresh constitutional settlement after years of tension following the 1998 Nouméa Accord.
Under that deal, France had pledged to steadily hand more political power to New Caledonia and its indigenous Kanak people, setting the stage for two decades of greater self-government.
But after an internal review, the FLNKS rejected the Bougival deal, with Dominique Fochi, secretary-general of the Caledonian Union, saying it clashed with the “foundations and achievements” of their struggle for independence.
FLNKS president Christian Tein described the accord as rushed and “humiliating” for the Kanak people, claiming the negotiators in Paris had no proper mandate.
This rejection has left the Bougival text in limbo, as no settlement is possible without the FLNKS on board.
‘The door remains open’
Valls had already announced plans to visit New Caledonia during the week of 18 August prior to the FLNKS’s formal withdrawal from the deal.
In a social media post, he called the Bougival accord “an extraordinary and historic opportunity” but stressed that his “door remains open” in terms of understanding the reasons behind its rejection.
The challenge for Valls will be to break a political deadlock.
Relations between pro and anti-independence camps had shown tentative improvement in recent months – evidenced by a rare handshake between Loyalist MP Nicolas Metzdorf and independence leader Emmanuel Tjibaou in Bougival – but that goodwill has now all but evaporated.
Independence party walks away from French deal on New Caledonia
Election demands
The independence movement has made its conditions for talks clear.
It wants provincial elections to be held in November 2025, arguing that fresh mandates are needed to establish the legitimacy of both camps.
These elections were originally scheduled for May 2024, but were postponed twice due to last year’s deadly riots.
The Bougival agreement would have delayed them further, to mid-2026 – a move Valls and New Caledonia’s loyalists support, but which the FLNKS rejects outright.
The independence coalition is also demanding a new “Kanaky agreement”, to be signed on New Caledonia Day this year – 24 September. This agreement which would set a roadmap for New Caledonia to achieve “full sovereignty” before France’s 2027 presidential election.
It also insists that talks be held under the supervision of Tein, despite his ongoing legal troubles related to his arrest in 2024, when he was accused of instigating violence during the riots.
While the FLNKS has not published a full draft, the proposed Kanaky agreement appears to go further than the Bougival accord in transferring powers from Paris to Nouméa. Where Bougival left room for gradual, negotiated change, Kanaky would set a fixed timetable towards independence, with sovereignty – including foreign affairs, defence, currency and justice – transferred ahead of 2027.
It would likely include provisions for:
-
Recognition of a Caledonian/Kanaky nationality as the basis for citizenship rights.
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Full control over internal governance, including policing and judicial systems.
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Economic self-management, potentially including currency creation or control.
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International recognition, paving the way for United Nations membership.
The FLNKS vision is for this agreement to be signed on New Caledonia Day – 24 September – a symbolic nod to the territory’s complex colonial history.
Loyalist counter-measures
The Loyalists – the coalition against independence – meanwhile, are working to keep the Bougival process alive, even without the FLNKS.
They’ve proposed an editorial committee to draft a legal framework for the accord, as well as an ad-hoc technical group including any independence supporters still on board.
The aim is to maintain momentum and isolate FLNKS hardliners.
Metzdorf has highlighted that two moderate independence parties – Palika and the Progressive Union of Melanesia – have already left the FLNKS, reducing its breadth of representation.
The pro-French bloc argues that the Bougival agreement remains the best way to secure political stability, warning that FLNKS demands amount to “blackmail” and could trigger more violence.
French deal on New Caledonia ‘state’ hits early criticism
Legal backdrop
The Nouméa Accord – the 1998 deal governing New Caledonia’s gradual decolonisation – states that until a new agreement is reached, its provisions remain in place.
It states that provincial elections must be held every five years, with November 2025 the next deadline. This could bring the election timetable closer to the FLNKS’s preference, but without their preferred early sovereignty clause.
Macron meets New Caledonian leaders to discuss future after riots
The scars of the 2024 riots, sparked by changes to the electoral roll, remain on both sides.
Loyalists fear a repeat if talks collapse again, particularly if hardliners ramp up street pressure.
While for their part, independence supporters argue that the Bougival agreement’s delays and partial transfer of power risk entrenching the status quo indefinitely.
Ukraine war
Macron says Russia does not want peace, stresses security for Ukraine
Ahead of Monday’s meeting between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and US president Donald Trump, French President Emmanuel Macron stressed the necessity of security guarantees for Ukraine in any peace agreement with Russia, adding that Russia did not want peace but rather Ukraine’s “capitulation”.
“Do I think President Putin wants peace? If you want my honest opinion, no. He wants the capitulation of Ukraine, that’s what he proposed,” Macron said about Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, who met with Trump in Anchorage, Alaska, on Friday.
Following a videoconference meeting with other European leaders Sunday to coordinate their position before the meeting in Washington Monday, Macron said that a “robust, lasting peace” would respect Ukraine’s “sovereignty and territorial integrity”, while Trump appears to be seeking just an end to fighting between Russia and Ukraine.
Any possible peace agreement must include security guarantees for Ukraine Macron said, to deter Russia from attacking again, and pushing farther into Europe.
“The security of Europeans and France is at stake,” he said, speaking from his summer residence at Fort de Brégançon in south-east France.
Macron and other leaders will accompany Zelensky to “present a united front between Europeans and Ukrainians”, he said, and ask the United States “to what extent” they are prepared to contribute to the security guarantees for Ukraine.
Macron was cautious about a suggestion that the US could contribute to a security guarantee that resembles Nato’s defence mandate
Sunday evening, Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff told US broadcaster CNN that the US “is potentially prepared to be able to give Article 5 security guarantees, but not from Nato – directly from the United States and other European countries.”
“I believe that a theoretical article is not enough,” said Macron. “The question is one of substance.”
(with AFP)
Israel – Hamas war
Israelis rally nationwide calling for end to Gaza war, hostage deal
Demonstrators across Israel called on Sunday for an end to the Gaza war and a deal to release hostages still held by militants, a push lambasted by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his allies.
The protests come more than a week after Israel’s security cabinet approved plans to capture Gaza City, following 22 months of war that have created dire humanitarian conditions in the Palestinian territory.
The war was triggered by Palestinian militant group Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack on Israel, during which 251 people were taken hostage.
Forty-nine captives remain in Gaza, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead.
A huge Israeli flag covered with portraits of the remaining captives was unfurled in Tel Aviv’s so-called Hostage Square — which has long been a focal point for protests throughout the war.
Demonstrators also blocked roads, including the highway connecting Tel Aviv and Jerusalem where they set tires on fire, according to local media footage.
Israeli police said more than 30 protesters were arrested for disturbing public order.
Organisers also called for a general strike on Sunday — the first day of the week in Israel.
France condemns israel’s west bank settlement plan as serious breach of international law
“I think it’s time to end the war. It’s time to release all of the hostages. And it’s time to help Israel recover and move towards a more stable Middle East,” said Doron Wilfand, a 54-year-old tour guide, at a rally in Jerusalem.
Nentanyahu slammed the protesters, saying their actions “not only harden Hamas’s position and draw out the release of our hostages, but also ensure that the horrors of 7 October will reoccur”.
‘Shut down the country’
The Hostages and Missing Families Forum campaign group said in a statement that protesters would “shut down the country today (Sunday) with one clear call: Bring back the 50 hostages, end the war”.
Their toll includes a soldier killed in a 2014 war whose remains are held by Hamas.
Recent videos released by Hamas and its ally Islamic Jihad showing two weak and emaciated captives have heightened concern for the fate of the hostages.
“If we don’t bring them back now — we will lose them forever,” the forum said.
Egypt said in recent days mediators were leading a renewed push to secure a 60-day truce that would include hostage release, after the last round of talks in Qatar had ended without a breakthrough.
Some Israeli government members who oppose any deal with Hamas slammed Sunday’s demonstrations.
Israel’s far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich decried “a perverse and harmful campaign that plays into the hands of Hamas” and calls for “surrender”.
Culture Minister Miki Zohar, of Netanyahu’s Likud party, said on X that blocking roads and disrupting daily life was “a reward to the enemy”.
Benny Gantz, an opposition leader, condemned the government “attacking the families of the hostages” while “bearing responsibility for the captivity of their children by Hamas for nearly two years”.
AFPTV footage showed protesters at a rally in Beeri, a kibbutz near the Gaza border that was one of the hardest-hit communities in the Hamas attack, and Israeli media reported protests in numerous locations across the country.
Famine warnings
The Israeli plans to expand the war into Gaza City and nearby refugee camps have sparked an international outcry as well as domestic opposition.
Israel’s Army Radio reported on Sunday that military chief Eyal Zamir was due to review the “plans to conquer Gaza City” in a meeting later in the day.
Defining famine: the complex process behind Gaza’s hunger crisis
According to the report, residents would be evacuated before troops encircle the city and finally seize it, beginning “in the coming weeks”.
Tens of thousands of reserve soldiers would be called up for the mission, the report added.
Israel on Saturday said it was preparing “to move the population from combat zones to the southern Gaza Strip for their protection”.
UN-backed experts have warned of widespread famine unfolding in the territory, where Israel has drastically curtailed the amount of humanitarian aid it allows in.
Gaza’s civil defence agency said Israeli fire on Sunday killed at least seven Palestinians waiting to collect food aid near two sites.
Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Israel’s offensive has killed more than 61,944 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza which the United Nations considers reliable.
(With newswires)
Parasports
Paris glow lost as French team prepares for Para athletics world championships
Just over a month away from the start of the Para athletics world championships in New Delhi, concern is rising in France over proposed reductions to the sports budget since the 2024 Paris Paralympics and the damage the cuts could have on the performances of Para competitors.
During the Paralympic Games last August and September, French Para athletes won 75 medals including 19 golds to register the best haul at the Paralympics since the 86 prizes harvested at the 2000 Paralympics in Sydney.
A delegation of Para athletes will go to the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium aiming to emulate that flourish of medals gathered in front of adoring partisans at venues around Paris.
However, at the Handisport Open de Paris (HOP) in June, one of the last major meetings before New Delhi, Timothée Adolphe, a silver medallist in Paris in the 100m T11 for visually impaired athletes, sounded a warning.
Though the 35-year-old won the race in 11.30 seconds, a problem with the starting block at the Stade Charléty in southern Paris, caused his guide, Charles Renard, to slip.
“Eight months ago, we had the Paralympic Games and everything was new for the Games,” Adolphe told RFI. “But now we’re back to amateurism.
“We could have set a great time,” Adolphe rued after registering his best performance of the season.
“Frankly, I’m disgusted. The blocks on the warm-up track are almost better than those on the competition track.”
Disappointment since Paralympics
The lament resounds into the nooks and crannies of the French sporting landscape. In January, the Prime Minister, François Bayrou, announced that the sport budget would be slashed from €1.7 billion to €1.4bn, as part of general cutbacks in public spending.
As France’s sports budget faces cuts, are Olympic promises being broken?
A petition signed by 400 leading athletes hit out at the plans. In a statement to sports newspaper L’Equipe President Emmanuel Macron said that he agreed with the athletes.
“Since 2017, I have ensured that the sports budget has increased every year,” he added. ‘We must keep our commitments and provide the necessary resources for our athletes so that the legacy of the Games benefits everyone.”
Change of tack
In June, the government came under further attack when it announced changes to the Pass Sport scheme, established in 2021 under Macron’s aegis to help children from low-income families join sports clubs.
Nearly 1.7 million youngsters between six and 17 were benefitting from the €50 payment when Sports Minister Marie Barsacq outlined the amendments.
Under the new system, which is set to start in September, only young people aged 14 to 17 whose families receive the means-tested ARS back-to-school allowance, will receive €70.
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Children and teenagers between six and 19 with disabilities, whose guardians get the AEEH disabled child education allowance will also be able eligible for the €70, as will young people aged 16 to 30 who receive the AAH disabled adult allowance.
Students under the age of 28 who receive CROUS university scholarships and bursaries will also be allowed to claim the cash.
“At the age of 14, nearly one in five secondary school students does not participate in regular sports activities, mainly due to cost constraints,” said Barsacq. “Pass Sport is an essential tool for overcoming this obstacle.”
All levels feel pinch
Cost is also hitting athletes at the higher level, said veteran long jumper Dimitri Pavadé.
The 35-year-old, who has been competing for France for nearly a decade, said that it is becoming increasingly difficult to benefit from training camps.
“I’ve never experienced anything like this before,” the 2020 Paralympics silver medallist told RFI.
“There are young people coming in who are forced to pay the full price for their training camp even though they don’t necessarily have any financial support, they’re students and are just starting to work. It’s very complicated.”
But with less money coming in from the government and firms cutting back on their marketing and sponsorship budgets, sports administrators face a battle to support talented individuals.
Arnaud Litou, Paralympic performance manager at the National Sports Agency, told RFI: “For athletes with medal potential, we are committed to ensuring a minimum annual income of €40,000 gross per year, which requires us to seek out partners or use state funds to ensure that this threshold is reached.
“That’s the whole process we have to go through to get there, where we have to support athletes according to their level of practice and their needs as well.””
Paralympics legacy spurs push for inclusive sports in Paris
The private sector has to play its part too, Gaël Rivière, boss of the French Handisport Federation told RFI.
“They will find it worth their while,” added the 35-year-old who took over last December from Guislaine Westelynck after featuring in the squad that won gold in the blind football at the 2024 Paralympics.
“What we say in general terms is that Para sport conveys values and messages. There are many wonderful stories to tell and support.
“We continue to appeal to our partners, telling them: ‘Don’t stop the efforts, thinking that you can come back a year or two before the Games.
“If we want to reap the rewards of our work tomorrow, we have to start now.”
Armenia and Azerbaijan peace deal raises hopes of Turkish border reopening
Issued on:
The signing of a peace deal between Armenia and Azerbaijan in Washington has raised hopes of ending decades of conflict and reopening Turkey’s border with Armenia.
The deal, brokered by US President Donald Trump, commits both countries to respect each other’s territorial integrity – the issue at the centre of bloody wars.
The agreement is seen as paving the way for Turkey to restore diplomatic ties with Armenia.
“Ankara has been promising that once there is a peace agreement, it will open the border,” says Asli Aydintasbas, of the Washington-based Brookings Institution.
“There was a brief period in the post-Soviet era when it [the border] was opened, but that was quickly shut again due to the Armenian-Azeri tensions.”
Aydintasbas says reopening the border could have wide-reaching consequences.
“Armenia and Turkey opening their border and starting trade would be a historical moment in terms of reconciliation between these two nations, which have very bitter historic memories,” she adds.
“But beyond that, it would help Armenia economically because it’s a landlocked country entirely dependent on Russia for its protection and its economy.”
Turning point
In June, Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan met Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Istanbul. The meeting was seen as a turning point in relations long overshadowed by the memory of the 1915 Armenian Genocide, which Ankara still officially denies.
“There’s now a degree of personal chemistry between the Armenian prime minister and Erdogan. This was seen in a June historic meeting, the first ever bilateral contact, a face-to-face meeting,” says Richard Giragosian, director of the Regional Studies Centre, a think tank in Yerevan.
Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 after ethnic Armenians in Azerbaijan seized the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.
The enclave was retaken by Azerbaijani forces in 2022. Giragosian says the peace deal, along with warmer ties between Pashinyan and Erdogan, could now help Yerevan reach a long-sought goal.
“In the longer perspective for Turkey and Armenia, this is about going beyond the South Caucasus. It’s about Central Asia. It’s about European markets, potentially a new Iran in the future,” he says.
Erdogan congratulated Pashinyan on Monday over the deal, but made no official pledge on reopening the border. That decision may lie with Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliyev.
“They [Ankara] will be looking to Baku. Baku is basically able to tell Turkey not to move on normalisation with Armenia, not to open the border,” says Aydintasbas.
“Part of the reason is that Turkey has developed an economic dependency on Azerbaijan, which is the top investor in Turkey. In other words, little brother is calling the shots, and I think that Ankara, to an extent, does not like it, but has come to appreciate the economic benefits of its relationship with Azerbaijan.”
Azerbaijani demands on Armenia
Azerbaijan is also pushing for changes to Armenia’s constitution, which it claims makes territorial claims on Nagorno-Karabakh.
“The Armenian constitution refers to the Declaration of Independence of Armenia, which has a clear clause on the unification with Armenia, with Nagorno-Karabakh,” says Farid Shafiyev of the Centre for Analysis of International Relations, a Baku-based think tank.
Shafiyev warned that without reform, the peace deal could unravel.
“Let’s say, imagine Pashinyan losing elections, a new person says: ‘You know, everything which was signed was against the Armenian constitution.’ For us, it is important that the Armenian people vote for the change of the constitution,” Shafiyev says.
Analysts note that changing the constitution would require a referendum with more than 50 percent turnout – a difficult and time-consuming process.
Time, however, may be running short. Russia is seen as the biggest loser from lasting peace in the Caucasus. For decades Moscow exploited the conflict to play Armenia and Azerbaijan against each other.
Pashinyan is now seeking to move away from Russian dominance and closer to Europe.
Giragosian warned that Armenia’s window of opportunity is limited.
“There is a closing window of opportunity – that is Russia’s distraction with everything in Ukraine. We do expect a storm on the horizon, with an angry, vengeful Putin reasserting or attempting to regain Russia’s lost power and influence in the region.”
Weakening Russia’s grip remains key, he adds. “Armenia, after all, is still a member of the Eurasian Economic Union, the Russian-dominated trade bloc.
“But it’s also a country that has a Russian military base. Russia still manages the Armenian railway network, for example. This is why, for Armenia, the real key here is going to be Turkey and normalising relations with Turkey.”
At present, Armenia’s only open land borders are with Georgia and Iran – both close to Russia. Opening the Turkish border would give Armenia a vital new route, while also benefiting Turkey’s economically depressed border region.
But for now, Azerbaijan may seek further concessions before allowing any breakthrough.
There’s Music in the Kitchen, No 38
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 three different versions of a song requested by Jayanta Chakrabarty from New Delhi, India.
Be sure you send in your music requests! Write to me at thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s program: “You’ve Made Me So Very Happy” by Brenda Holloway, Patrice Holloway, Frank Wilson, Berry Gordy, in three versions: Brenda Holloway, Blood, Sweat & Tears, and Alton Ellis.
The ePOP video competition is open!
The ePOP video competition is sponsored by the RFI department “Planète Radio”, whose mission is to give a voice to the voiceless. ePOP focuses on the environment and how climate change has affected “ordinary” people.
The ePOP contest is your space to ensure these voices are heard.
How do you do it?
With a three-minute ePOP video. It should be pure testimony, captured by your lens: the spoken word reigns supreme. No tricks, no music, no text on the screen. Just the raw authenticity of an encounter, in horizontal format (16:9). An ePOP film is a razor-sharp look at humanity that challenges, moves, and enlightens.
From June 12 to September 12, 2025, ePOP invites you to reach out, open your eyes, and create a unique bridge between a person and the world.
Join the ePOP community and make reality vibrate!
Click here for all the information you need.
We expect to be overwhelmed with entries from the English speakers!
Turkey and Italy boost cooperation in bid to shape Libya’s political future
Issued on:
Turkey and Italy are working more closely on migration, energy and regional influence as they seek to shape Libya’s political future. Both see the North African country as a key shared interest and are moving to consolidate their positions in the conflict-torn but energy-rich eastern Mediterranean.
Earlier this month, the leaders of Italy, Turkey and Libya’s Government of National Accord (GNA) met in a tripartite summit – the latest sign of growing cooperation between the three Mediterranean nations.
“Turkey and Italy have both differing interests, but interests in Libya,” explains international relations professor Huseyin Bagcı of Ankara’s Middle East Technical University.
“Particularly, the migration issue and illegal human trafficking are big problems for Italy, and most of the people are coming from there [Libya], so they try to prevent the flow of migrants.
“But for Turkey, it’s more economic. And Libya is very much interested in keeping the relations with both countries.”
Turkey and Italy consider teaming up to seek new influence in Africa
Migration, legitimacy concerns
Turkey is the main backer of Libya’s GNA and still provides military assistance, which was decisive in defeating the rival eastern-based forces led by strongman Khalifa Haftar. An uneasy ceasefire holds between the two sides.
Libya security analyst Aya Burweilla said Turkey is seeking Italy’s support to legitimise the Tripoli government, as questions grow over its democratic record.
“What it means for the Tripoli regime is very positive. This is a regime that has dodged elections for years,” she says.
“Their job was to have democratic elections, and one of their ways to make sure they stay in power was to get foreign sponsors, like Turkey… Now, with this rubber stamp from Meloni in Italy, they can keep the status quo going at the expense of Libyans.”
Years of civil war and political chaos have turned Libya into a major hub for people smugglers. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, elected on a pledge to curb irregular migration, sees stability in Libya as key to that goal.
“The migration issue has become very, very urgent in general for Europe, but of course for Italy too,” says Alessia Chiriatti of the Institute of International Affairs, a think tank in Rome.
Trump and Erdogan grow closer as cooperation on Syria deepens
Mediterranean ambitions
Chiriatti said Meloni’s partnership with Turkey in Libya also reflects broader foreign policy goals.
“There is another dimension – I think it’s directly related to the fact that Italy and Meloni’s government want to play a different role in foreign policy in the Mediterranean space,” she says.
“Italy is starting to see Africa as a possible partner to invest in … But what is important is that Italy is starting to see itself as a new player, both in the Mediterranean space and in Africa, so in this sense, it could have important cooperation with Turkey.”
She points out that both Italy and Turkey share a colonial past in Libya. That legacy, combined with the lure of Libya’s vast energy reserves, continues to shape their diplomacy.
Ending the split between Libya’s rival governments is seen as vital for stability. Moscow’s reduced military support for Haftar, as it focuses on its war in Ukraine, is viewed in Ankara as an opening.
“Russia is nearly out, and what remains are Turkey and Italy,” says Bagcı.
He added that Ankara is making overtures to the eastern authorities through Haftar’s son Saddam, a senior figure in the Libyan military.
“The son of Haftar is coming very often to Ankara, making talks. It’s an indication of potential changes… But how the deal will look like I don’t know, we will see later. But it’s an indication of potential cooperation, definitely.”
Turkey steps into EU defence plans as bloc eyes independence from US
Shifting alliances
Libya was discussed when Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan met Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi in Cairo on Saturday.
Sisi backs Haftar’s eastern government. Libya had been a source of tension between Turkey and Egypt, but with relations thawing, both say they will work together on the country’s future.
Turkey’s position in Libya is strengthening, says Burweilla.
“Saddam is pro-Turkey – there is a huge difference between son and father – and the younger generation is pro-Turkey,” she says.
Such support, Burweilla said, stems from Ankara allowing Libyans to seek sanctuary in Turkey from fighting in 2011, when NATO forces led by France and the United Kingdom militarily intervened against Muammar Gaddafi’s regime.
“I think the Europeans underestimated the political capital that gave Turkey. Turkey is winning the game in Libya,” Burweilla says.
She adds that Ankara’s rising influence is also due to a shift in tactics towards the east.
“What they [Ankara] realised was that you can’t conquer the east of Libya by force; they tried and they failed. And the Turkish regime is very much motivated by business… They don’t care about anything else, and they’ve realised they want to make a business,” Burweilla says.
They’ve reached out more to the east, and the east, in turn, has realised that if they don’t want to be attacked by Turkey and its mercenaries, they need to make peace with Turkey as well.”
There’s Music in the Kitchen, No 37
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 Hossen Abed Ali from Rangpur, Bangladesh and a composition written by SB Leprof from Winneba, Ghana.
Be sure you send in your music requests! Write to me at thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s program: “Epitaph” by Robert Fripp, Ian McDonald, Greg Lake and Michael Giles, to lyrics by Peter Sinfield, performed by King Crimson, and “Ginger Milk” by SB Leprof.
The ePOP video competition is open!
The ePOP video competition is sponsored by the RFI department “Planète Radio”, whose mission is to give a voice to the voiceless. ePOP focuses on the environment and how climate change has affected “ordinary” people.
The ePOP contest is your space to ensure these voices are heard.
How do you do it?
With a three-minute ePOP video. It should be pure testimony, captured by your lens: the spoken word reigns supreme. No tricks, no music, no text on the screen. Just the raw authenticity of an encounter, in horizontal format (16:9). An ePOP film is a razor-sharp look at humanity that challenges, moves, and enlightens.
From June 12 to September 12, 2025, ePOP invites you to reach out, open your eyes, and create a unique bridge between a person and the world.
Join the ePOP community and make reality vibrate!
Click here for all the information you need.
We expect to be overwhelmed with entries from the English speakers!
Turkey walks a tightrope as Trump threatens sanctions over Russian trade
Issued on:
Ankara is aiming to dodge President Donald Trump’s threat of sanctions against countries that trade with Russia. While Turkey is the third largest importer of Russian goods, it has largely escaped international sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine. However, with Trump vowing to get tough with Moscow if it fails to make peace with Kyiv, that could change.
“I am going to make a new deadline of about 10 or 12 days from today,” Trump declared at a press conference on 28 July during his visit to Scotland.
“There is no reason to wait 50 days. I wanted to be generous, but we don’t see any progress being made.”
The American president admitted his efforts to end the Ukraine war had failed and that his patience with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, was at an end.
Turkish President Erdogan ready to rekindle friendship with Trump
Trump later confirmed 8 August as the date for the new measures. With US-Russian trade down 90 percent since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Trump warned that other countries importing Russian goods would also be hit by secondary sanctions.
“If you take his [Trump] promises at face value, then he should look at all countries that import any Russian commodities that is of primary importance to the Russian budget – this includes, of course, crude oil, and here you have China and India mostly,” explained George Voloshin of Acams, a global organisation dedicated to anti-financial crime, training and education.
Voloshin also claims that Turkey could be a target as well. “In terms of petroleum products, Turkey is one of the big importers. It also refines Russian petroleum in its own refineries,” Voloshin added.
“Turkey imports lots of Russian gas through the TurkStream pipeline. Turkey is very much dependent on Russian gas and Russian petroleum products.”
Turkey’s rivalry with Iran shifts as US threats create unlikely common ground
Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Ankara insists it is only bound by United Nations sanctions.
Last year, Turkey was Russia’s third-largest export market, with Russian natural gas accounting for more than 40 percent of its energy needs.
Putin has used Turkey’s lack of meaningful domestic energy reserves and dependence on Russian gas to develop a close relationship with his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
“Putin knows that no matter what Trump wants, Turkey is not going to act in any military or sanctions capacity against Russia and Iran. You know, these are Turkey’s red lines. We can’t do it,” said analyst Atilla Yeşilada of Global Source Partners.
“Trump is 10,000 miles away. These people are our neighbours,” added Yeşilada. “So Putin doesn’t think of Turkey as a threat, but as an economic opportunity, and perhaps as a way to do things with the West that he doesn’t want to do directly.”
Ankara is performing a delicate balancing act. While maintaining trading ties with Russia, Erdoğan remains a strong supporter of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
Turkey is a major arms seller to Ukraine, while at the same time, Erdoğan continues to try and broker peace between the warring parties.
Last month, Istanbul was the venue for Russian–Ukrainian talks for the second time in as many months. Such efforts drew the praise of Trump.
Trump and Erdogan grow closer as cooperation on Syria deepens
Trump’s pressure mounts on energy and trade
The American president has made no secret of his liking for Erdoğan, even calling him a friend. Such close ties, along with Turkey’s regional importance to Washington, analysts say, is a factor in Ankara’s Western allies turning a blind eye to its ongoing trade with Russia.
“I think Turkey has got a pass on several levels from Russian sanctions,” observed regional expert Sinan Ciddi of the Washington-based think tank the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
However, Ciddi cautions that Trump remains unpredictable and that previous actions are no guarantee for the future.
“Past experience is not an indicator of future happenings. We just don’t know what Trump will demand. This is not a fully predictive administration in Washington,” Ciddi said.
“We do know right now that he [Trump] is very unhappy with Putin. He blames Putin for prolonging the Ukraine war,” added Ciddi.
Change of stance
“And if he feels sufficiently upset, there is a possibility that no waivers will be granted to any country. Turkey will be up against a very, very unappetising and unenviable set of choices to make.”
Trump has successfully lobbied the European Union to increase its purchases of American liquefied natural gas (LNG), replacing Russian imports. Similar demands could put Ankara in a difficult position.
“If Trump pressures Turkey not to buy Russian natural gas, that would definitely be a huge shock,” warned Yeşilada.
“Trump might say, for instance: ‘Buy energy from me or whatever.’ But I don’t think we’re there yet. There is no way Turkey can replace Russian gas.”
However, Trump could point to Turkey’s recent expansion of its LNG facilities, which now include five terminals and have excess capacity to cover Russian imports, although storage facilities remain a challenge.
Turkey’s energy infrastructure is also built around receiving Russian energy, and any shift to American energy would likely be hugely disruptive and expensive, at a time when the Turkish economy is in crisis.
Putin retains another energy card over Erdoğan. A Russian company is building a huge nuclear power plant in Turkey, which could account for 20 percent of the country’s energy needs.
Ciddi argues Erdoğan is now paying the price of over-relying on Russia.
Turkey’s Erdogan sees new Trump presidency as opportunity
“There is no need to have resorted to making Ankara this dependent on natural gas, nuclear energy, or for that matter bilateral trade. This was a choice by Erdoğan,” said Ciddi.
“The fact it is so dependent on so many levels in an almost unique way is something that Turkey will have to rethink.”
But for now, Erdoğan will likely be relying on his expertise in diplomatic balancing acts, along with his close ties to Trump and Turkey’s importance to Washington’s regional goals, to once again escape the worst of any sanctions over Russian trade – although Trump may yet extract a price for such a concession.
France bans smoking on beaches
Issued on:
This week on The Sound Kitchen, you’ll hear the answer to the question about cigarette butts and microplastics. There’s The Sound Kitchen mailbag, “The Listener’s Corner” with Paul Myers, Ollia Horton’s “Happy Moment”, and a tribute to Ozzy Osbourne created by Vincent Pora Dallongeville. 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.
The ePOP video competition is open!
The ePOP video competition is sponsored by the RFI department “Planète Radio”, whose mission is to give a voice to the voiceless. ePOP focuses on the environment and how climate change has affected “ordinary” people.
The ePOP contest is your space to ensure these voices are heard.
How do you do it?
With a three-minute ePOP video. It should be pure testimony, captured by your lens: the spoken word reigns supreme. No tricks, no music, no text on the screen. Just the raw authenticity of an encounter, in horizontal format (16:9). An ePOP film is a razor-sharp look at humanity that challenges, moves, and enlightens.
From June 12 to September 12, 2025, ePOP invites you to reach out, open your eyes, and create that unique bridge between a person and the world.
Join the ePOP community and make reality vibrate!
Click here for all the information you need.
We expect to be overwhelmed with entries from the English speakers!
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.
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 5 July, I asked you a question about an article written by RFI English journalist Amanda Morrow: “Ocean campaigners hail French move to snuff out cigarette butt pollution”. In her article, we learned that cigarette ends, or butts, are filled with microplastics and that when they break apart, they leach chemicals into soil and water.
France has banned smoking on beaches, in public parks, and at bus stops, as well as near schools, libraries, swimming pools, and sports grounds.
You were to re-read Amanda’s article and send in the answer to this question: How many liters of water can a single cigarette butt contaminate?
The answer is, to quote Amanda’s article: “According to the French Ministry of Ecological Transition, a single cigarette butt can contaminate up to 500 liters of water.”
In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question, suggested by long-time RFI Listeners Club member Nasyr Muhammad from Katsina State, Nigeria: “What is your favorite prize you’ve received from RFI, and why?”
Do you have a bonus question idea? Send it to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
The winners are: RFI Listeners Club member Kanwar Sandhu from British Columbia in Canada, who is also this week’s bonus question winner. Congratulations on your double win, Kanwar.
Also on the list of lucky winners this week are Karobi Hazarika, a member of the United RFI Listeners Club in Assam, India, and RFI Listeners Club member Mahfuzur Rahman from Cumilla, Bangladesh. Last but not least, there are two RFI English listeners from Bangladesh: Laila Shantu Akhter from Naogaon and Labanna Lata from Munshiganj.
Congratulations, winners!
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: The piano sonata in B flat, K.529, by Domenico Scarlatti, played by Ivo Pogorelich; the “Trout” Quintet in A major, D. 667, by Franz Schubert, performed by the Endes Quartet with pianist Rolf Reinhardt; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer; “Happy” by Pharrell Williams, and a medley in honor of Ozzy Osbourne, arranged by Vincent Pora Dallongeville:
“Paranoid”, by Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler, and Bill Ward;
“Crazy Train” by Ozzy Osbourne, Randy Rhoads, and Bob Daisley;
“No More Tears” by Ozzy Osbourne, Zak Wylde, Randy Castillo, Mike Inez, and John Purdell;
“Bark at the Moon” by Ozzy Osbourne, Jake E. Lee, and Bob Daisley.
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 “UN gathers to advance two-state solution to Israel-Palestine conflict”, which will help you with the answer.
You have until 6 October to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 11 October 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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