rfi 2025-09-24 00:08:47



Middle East

Macron recognises Palestinian state at UN defying Israel and US

French President Emmanuel Macron officially recognised a Palestinian state at the United Nations on Monday, spurring a wave of Western moves to defy Israel in making the landmark – if symbolic – move.

Macron, speaking at a summit that Israel and its chief backer the United States did not attend, called for an end to the war in Gaza.

“The time for peace has come, as we are just moments away from no longer being able to seize it,” Macron said in an address to the UN General Assembly.

“The time has come to free the 48 hostages held by Hamas. The time has come to stop the war, the bombings of Gaza, the massacres and the displacement.”

Macron, however, said France would not open an embassy to a Palestinian state until a ceasefire is in place in Gaza and all hostages released.

France spearheads UN drive to recognise Palestinian statehood

The Palestinian Authority hailed France’s “historic and courageous” decision and its delegation gave him a standing ovation.

Australia, Britain, Canada and Portugal also recognized a Palestinian state, piling pressure on Israel as it intensifies its war in Gaza.

Monaco, Belgium, Andorra, Malta and Luxembourg then all recognized from the General Assembly podium, bringing the total number of recognitions to three-quarters of UN membership.

Spain, Ireland and Norway already recognized a Palestinian state in May, and Sweden did so in 2014.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed not to allow a Palestinian state and far-right members of his cabinet have threatened to annex the West Bank to make statehood impossible.

Israel’s UN ambassador Danny Danon said Israel “will take action.”

“They are not promoting peace. They are supporting terrorism,” he said.

US President Donald Trump “believes [recognising] is a reward to Hamas,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said.

Defiant French mayors keep Palestinian flags flying despite court rulings

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told AFP ahead of the summit: “We should not feel intimidated by the risk of retaliation.”

Palestinian Authority presses Hamas

The war was unleashed when Hamas attacked Israel from Gaza on 7 October, 2023, resulting in a relentless counterattack by Israel.

An independent state would be centered around the Palestinian Authority, which exerts limited control in the West Bank, and is the rival of Gaza-based Hamas.

Israel has sought to minimise the distinction between the two, and Washington, in an unusual step, refused to allow Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas to attend.

The 89-year-old veteran Palestinian leader, forced to address the summit virtually, called on Hamas to surrender its weapons to his Palestinian Authority.

“We also condemn the killing and detention of civilians, including Hamas actions on October 7, 2023,” he said.

France co-hosted the summit with Saudi Arabia, which has flirted with normalisation with Israel, a top goal for Netanyahu.

The Saudi foreign minister, Prince Faisal bin Farhan, told the summit that concluded late on Monday that all countries should follow suit and recognise a Palestinian state.

Limited practical effect

Germany, Italy and Japan, while all critical of Israel’s actions in Gaza, are among major US allies that declined to recognise a Palestinian state.

“A negotiated two-state solution is the path that can allow Israelis and Palestinians to live in peace, security and dignity,” German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said.

Britain, which backed a Jewish homeland in 1917, said it would back off recognising a Palestinian state if Israel agreed to a Gaza ceasefire.

Instead, Israel launched a massive new campaign aimed at seizing Gaza City.

But recognition, while historic, is unlikely to change facts on the ground.

Macron warns on Israeli TV that Gaza war is ‘destroying Israel’s credibility’

“Unless backed up by concrete measures, recognising Palestine as a state risks becoming a distraction from the reality, which is an accelerating erasure of Palestinian life in their homeland,” said the International Crisis Group’s Israel-Palestine project director, Max Rodenbeck.

The 7 October, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,219 Israelis, mostly civilians, according to official data.

Israeli military operations since then have killed 65,344 Palestinians, mostly civilians, according to the Hamas-run health ministry – figures the UN considers reliable.

(with newswires)

US president Trump set to meet Ukraine’s Zelensky ahead of UN address

US President Donald Trump is due to meet his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky today, Tuesday, before attending a United Nations summit in New York in which he is expected to outline his vision for the world.

It will be the second meeting with Zelensky since Trump invited the Russian President Vladimir Putin on 15 August.

The talks broke Moscow’s isolation in the West but yielded no breakthrough on Ukraine.

Russia has not only kept up its attacks on Ukraine in the past month but has raised fears in the West with drone or air incursions in NATO members Poland, Estonia and Romania.

Mike Waltz, the US ambassador to the UN, voiced solidarity over the airspace violations.

“The United States and our allies will defend every inch of NATO territory,” said Waltz.

On the campaign trail to become president for a second time, Trump boasted that he could end the Ukraine war within one day of becoming president and vaunted his personal chemistry with Putin.

But during a state visit to Britain, Trump said Putin had not engaged with proposals to end the conflict.

“I thought this war would be one of the easiest to solve because of my relationship with Putin,” said Trump who was flanked by the British Prime Minister Keir Starmer during a press conference.

 “But he has really let me down. I mean, frankly, Russian soldiers are being killed at a higher rate than the Ukrainian soldiers. But, yeah, he’s let me down.”

Ramaphosa, Macron step up talks on Ukraine as South Africa joins push for peace

Zelensky is expected to press Trump to take a harder line and impose new sanctions on Russia.

 But US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, last week previewing the talks with Zelensky, said that Trump was not ready to pressure Putin, saying that without him, “there’s no one left in the world that could possibly mediate” on Ukraine.

Zelensky is expected to tread carefully with Trump. Along with Vice President JD Vance, he berated him openly during a meeting in February at the White House and called him ungrateful after receiving billions of dollars in US military assistance.

Macron says 26 countries pledge troops as a ‘reassurance force’ for Ukraine

Attacking ‘globalist’ institutions 

Trump, a native New Yorker, is spending barely a day in town for the week-long summit.

One of his few other one-on-one meetings will be with Argentina’s President Javier Milei, an ideological ally to whose government the US is considering offering an economic lifeline.

 White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said that Trump would discuss the renewal of American strength around the world.

“The president will also touch upon how globalist institutions have significantly decayed the world order, and he will articulate his straightforward and constructive vision for the world,” she told reporters in Washington.

Trump in his second term has moved more aggressively in his “America First” vision of curbing cooperation with the rest of the world.

He has moved to pull the US out of the World Health Organization and the UN climate body, severely curtailed US development assistance and wielded sanctions against foreign judges over rulings he sees as violating sovereignty.

Russia hits seat of Ukraine government in war’s biggest air attack

‘Use of influence’

“Instead of inflaming global crises and fueling chaos and inequality, he should use his power and influence to work with the global community to provide meaningful solutions,” said Abby Maxman, president and CEO of Oxfam America.

Trump’s appearance will take place a day after French President Emmanuel Macron led a group of Western allies of the United States in recognising a Palestinian state, a historic but largely symbolic step opposed by Israel.

“The time for peace has come, as we are just moments away from no longer being able to seize it,” Macron said in his address in the General Assembly.

“The time has come to free the 48 hostages held by Hamas. The time has come to stop the war, the bombings of Gaza, the massacres and the displacement.”

Macron, however, said France would not open an embassy for Palestinian state until a ceasefire is in place in Gaza and all the remaining hostages taken on 7 October 2023 have been released.

The Palestinian Authority hailed France’s “historic and courageous” decision and its delegation gave him a standing ovation.

Representatives for the US and Israel were absent during Marcon’s speech.


Israel – Hamas war

Franco-Israelis hit out at Macron’s recognition of Palestinian state

French President Emmanuel Macron’s decision to formally recognise a Palestinian state has drawn the wrath of Franco-Israelis.

“I led Macron’s campaign in Israel and today we are truly ashamed and angry,” said Nitay Kimron, 40, who moved to Israel 21 years ago.

He said Macron’s move at the United Nations General Assembly on Monday would have been welcome at another time and under different circumstances.

He said that Hamas’s attack on 7 October, 2023 – which resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people and the capture of 250 hostages – had been a turning point.

“After October 2023 and under the current circumstances, to us it seems like a reward for terrorism,” he told French news agency AFP.

Since then, Israel’s retaliatory military offensive has killed at least 65,344 people in Gaza, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry, figures which the UN considers reliable.

Violence has meanwhile soared in the occupied West Bank, where Israel has expanded settlements which are considered illegal under international law.

Announcing his decision, Macron said France recognised a Palestinian state in the interest of peace.

“The time for peace has come, as we are just moments away from no longer being able to seize it,” Macron said in his address to the General Assembly.

“The time has come to free the 48 hostages held by Hamas. The time has come to stop the war, the bombings of Gaza, the massacres and the displacement.”

Macron, however, said France would not open an embassy to a Palestinian state until a ceasefire is in place in Gaza and all hostages are released.

The Palestinian Authority hailed France’s “historic and courageous” decision and its delegation gave him a standing ovation.

UK, Australia, and Canada recognise Palestinian state, angering Israel

‘Domestic considerations’ 

Speaking ahead of Macron’s announcement, Kimron said: “It’s not logical and it seems like clientelism.”

“Since he has lost all his support in France, he’s going to try to win back votes from the left, which is very pro-Palestine. So it’s very political and not really smart.”

Chaim, who preferred not to use his last name, also said he felt the decision was linked to domestic considerations in France and the United Kingdom, which was among several Western countries to formally recognise a Palestinian state on Sunday.

“I think it’s a disaster,” said the 61-year-old, who works in the space sector.

“You have people who think in the very, very short term and don’t understand the meaning of what they are doing,” he added.

Israel has come under international pressure over its war in Gaza, which has sparked a dire humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian territory.

Of the 251 hostages seized during Hamas’s 2023 attack, Palestinian militants still hold 47 in Gaza, including 25 the Israeli military says are dead.

Macron warns on Israeli TV that Gaza war is ‘destroying Israel’s credibility’

Recognition of Palestine 

Isaac, a 32-year-old civil engineer, told AFP that he did not understand the reasoning behind France’s move to recognise a Palestinian state.

“It’s not going to free any hostages, it’s not going to improve the situation, it’s not going to stop the war. It just gives a prize for terror,” he said ahead of the formal announcement.

“Hamas hails this kind of gesture. So basically, they’ll say, ‘Oh, that’s great, we kill Jews and we get things in return’. So it’s just going to encourage even more murder, bloodshed, hatred and that’s it,” he added.

Recognition of a Palestinian state does not change the current situation, experts say, but it is still a significant decision because it revives the long-dormant push for a two-state solution and could open a pathway for Palestinians to chart a course to statehood.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has denounced the push for recognition as “absurd”, claiming it would endanger Israel’s existence.

He has vowed not to allow a Palestinian state, and far-right members of his cabinet have threatened to annex the West Bank to make statehood impossible.

Israel’s UN ambassador Danny Danon said Israel will take action. “They are not promoting peace. They are supporting terrorism,” he said of the countries who have formally recognised the state of Palestine.

Of the US stance, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said: “President Donald Trump believes [recognising the state of Palestine] is a reward to Hamas.”

(with newswires)


IRAN – NUCLEAR

Iran and Europe in last-ditch push to avert UN sanctions showdown

Iran and Europe’s leading powers are racing on the sidelines of the the UN General Assembly to strike a deal on Tehran’s nuclear programme before a 27 September deadline triggers the return of sanctions.

As the UN General Assembly gets into full swing in New York, Iran and Europe’s so-called E3 – Britain, France and Germany – are engaged in frantic back-room diplomacy aimed at stopping the reimposition of UN sanctions on Tehran over uranium enrichment.

Foreign ministers from the four sides, joined by the EU’s new foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas, are meeting on Tuesday in what is being billed as a final attempt to salvage some space for negotiation.

It follows weeks of rising tension over Iran’s nuclear programme, which Western capitals say breaches the 2015 nuclear deal designed to block Tehran from developing an atomic weapon.

The E3 triggered a 30-day “snapback” process on 28 August, accusing Iran of falling short of its commitments and threatening to restore sanctions unless Tehran acts fast.

The deadline looms large, as if no agreement is reached by 27 September, all UN sanctions will automatically snap back into place, tightening the economic screws on a country already struggling with years of restrictions and domestic discontent.

Iran and Europe hold Geneva nuclear talks as sanctions deadline looms

‘Cooperation or confrontation’

Iran insists its nuclear activities are purely peaceful, but European diplomats argue that the stockpile of enriched uranium, patchy access for international inspectors, and lack of progress on fresh negotiations with the United States are cause for alarm.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi struck a defiant but still conciliatory note on Monday, telling Iranian state TV: “They have tested Iran repeatedly and know we do not respond to the language of pressure and threat. I hope we can find a diplomatic solution in the coming days, otherwise Tehran will take appropriate measures.”

He confirmed that Tehran has been in contact with E3 and EU officials, as well as the International Atomic Energy Agency’s director general Rafael Grossi, in search of a breakthrough. “I am in New York to use these remaining days for diplomatic consultations that might lead to a solution,” he said.

Iran nuclear sites suffered ‘enormous damage’, IAEA chief tells RFI

Room for talks

To buy more time, Britain, France and Germany have presented an offer – suspend the sanctions trigger for up to six months if Iran restores full access for UN inspectors, reins in its enriched uranium reserves, and reopens channels with Washington.

But European diplomats – speaking to reporters on condition of anonymity – have said the outlook is bleak. “The ball is in Iran’s camp. It is up to it to quickly take the concrete steps in the coming days to avert snapback. If not, then sanctions will be reimposed,” said one. Another admitted bluntly that “chances are slim”.

At best, they suggest, Iran could present a special report or allow inspectors token access to a handful of sites – but even that may not be enough, particularly with Washington poised to wield its veto.

Iran retaliates after Israeli strikes targeting its nuclear programme and military

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian has tried to project confidence, declaring at the weekend that the Islamic Republic will weather any reimposed sanctions.

However, public frustration with a battered economy is mounting, leaving Iran’s leaders under pressure.

The mood in Tehran is further complicated by US and Israeli strikes on nuclear facilities in June, which prompted Iran’s parliament to suspend cooperation with the IAEA.

A fragile compromise was reached on 9 September to allow inspections to resume, but any fresh sanctions risk derailing that progress.

With the clock ticking towards 27 September, Araqchi insists Iran is ready to talk, while the E3 maintain the terms are clear.

The outcome of the New York neogotiations could, however, set the course not just for Iran’s nuclear future, but for broader stability in the Middle East.

(with newswires)


Sahel

Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger jointly announce withdrawal from the ICC

The three member states of the Alliance of Sahel States have announced their immediate withdrawal from the Rome Statute and the International Criminal Court, accusing the ICC of practising “selective justice”. The declaration was made simultaneously on Monday in the capitals of Bamako, Niamey and Ouagadougou.

The withdrawal of Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso from the International Criminal Court (ICC) is a “sovereign decision,” the official statement said, according to news agencies AP, AFP and Reuters, as well as our RFI regional correspondent.

The three countries, led by coup leaders, have a string of grievances against the international court, responsible for trying those accused of genocide and serious crimes. 

The joint statement states that “over time,” the ICC has transformed itself “into an instrument of neocolonial repression in the hands of imperialism, thus becoming a global example of selective justice”.

Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso accuse the ICC of “double standards”.

Expected move

The ICC, based in The Hague, is the world’s permanent global tribunal for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.

The withdrawal was not unexpected, as the junta leaders were brought to power after military coups in the three Sahelian countries.

Since these coups in 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023, the three countries’ military leaders have abandoned longtime partners, including Europe and the West Africa regional bloc, Ecowas.

Three Sahel nations exit West African bloc as regional politics shift

They have instead established new alliances, mainly with Russia, whose President Vladimir Putin faces an arrest warrant from the ICC over Russia’s war in Ukraine.

The withdrawal process from the ICC takes at least a year to complete.

Earlier this year, Hungary also announced its withdrawal.

In March, following a meeting of Malian, Nigerien and Burkinabe ministers, the three juntas announced the upcoming creation of a Criminal and Human Rights Court of the Alliance of Sahel States.

At the same meeting, discussions were launched on the construction of a high-security regional prison to strengthen the fight against terrorism and serious crimes in the Sahel region.

Potential ICC cases

The three countries have been facing deadly violence from jihadist groups linked to Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State for years, but the juntas’ armies are also accused of crimes against civilians.

Tuareg associations in Mali and Burkina Faso notably filed a complaint in June with the ICC against their nations’ armies and the Russian paramilitary group, Africa Corps.

Tuaregs in Mali and Burkina file ICC complaint against armies, Russian allies

The complaint targets the Malian Armed Forces (FAMA), the Burkinabe Forces, and Russian mercenaries from the Africa Corps, which recently replaced the Wagner group in Africa.

The charities Imouhagh International, Kel Akal, Diaspora of the United States and the Azawad Solidarity Association accuse them of crimes against humanity and war crimes.

The groups say the crimes against humanity and war crimes reported to the prosecutor of the ICC have been committed in Mali and Burkina Faso since 2022.

They point to the use of mercenaries from Africa Corps – the replacement for the former Wagner Group – in the repressive operations carried out by the armies of both countries.

Human Rights Watch and other groups have also accused Islamist militants, as well as the militaries and partner forces of Burkina Faso and Mali, of possible atrocity crimes.

In April, United Nations experts said the alleged summary execution of several dozen civilians by Malian forces may amount to war crimes.

The ICC has had an investigation open in Mali since 2013, over alleged war crimes committed primarily in the northern regions of Gao, Timbuktu and Kidal, which had fallen under militant control. 

The investigation was opened following a referral from the government at the time.

 (with newswires)


2025 Ballon d’Or

Dembélé and Bonmati win Ballon d’Or as PSG take team and coach prizes

Barcelona’s Aitana Bonmati claimed the women’s Ballon d’Or for the third year on the trot on Monday night as Paris Saint-Germain’s Ousmane Dembélé took the men’s award for his starring role in his side’s glory-drenched ride to four trophies.

Dembélé becomes the sixth Frenchman to win the men’s prize since supremos at France Football.magazine established the award in 1956 to salute the best player in Europe.

Bonmati and her fellow Spaniard, Alexia Putellas, have harvested five of the seven women’s awards since its inception in 2018.

“It’s exceptional what I’ve been living through,” said Dembélé after receiving the award from the Brazilian former player Ronaldinho.

“It has been a great year with PSG and to win this trophy and collect it from Ronaldinho – one of the legends of our sport – is a moment of great pride for me.”

Choking back the tears, Dembélé praised coaches at his first club Rennes as well as those at Borussia Dortmund and Barcelona where he played before signing for PSG in 2023.

“Thank you to all the staff at PSG,” he added. And after singling out PSG coach Luis Enrique as a father figure, Dembélé said: “Thank you to all my teammates. You kept my spirits up in the good moments and the bad moments. Even if I’m picking up an individual trophy, it’s the collective that is ultimately winning.”

Benzema’s Ballon d’Or triumph gains presidential seal of approval

Dembélé leads the PSG pack

Dembélé was among eight PSG players who were vying for the men’s award. Gigi Donnarumma, who moved to Manchester City this month, was nominated for the accolade for his exploits as goalkeeper for the team. 

The 26-year-old finished in ninth place in the voting but did not leave the gala ceremony empty handed.

The Italy skipper won the Trophée Yachine for his feats with PSG who were anointed team of the year.

Dembélé was at the ceremony at the Théâtre du Châtelet in central Paris with fellow PSG nominees Désiré Doué and Joao Neves who missed the club’s trip for the Ligue 1 clash at Marseille due to injury.

The France international was hailed for his performances during an all-conquering 2024/2025 season.

He scored eight times and set up six goals in 15 matches during a Champions League campaign that culminated in a 5-0 annihilation of Inter Milan in the final in Munich on 31 May.

He also played a key role in PSG’s second successive domestic treble – French Super Cup, Ligue 1 title and Coupe de France.

Enrique won the Trophée Cryuff for male coach of the year award for steering the team to the triumphs.

Since taking over from Christophe Galtier in July 2023, the 55-year-old Spaniard has led his charges to successive domestic trebles and orchestrated the Champions League triumph.

Though there was a surprise loss to Chelsea in the final of the Club World Cup in the United States, PSG recovered to win the Uefa Super Cup just before the start of the Ligue 1 season in August.

Joy of six: Yet another Messi night at the Ballon d’or

 

Strikers honoured with Gerd Müller Trophy

In other awards, Viktor Gyokeres received the Gerd Müller Trophy to honour the striker of the year. Playing for Sporting Lisbon and Sweden, he netted 54 goals in 52 matches to top the scoring charts across the continent.

The strikes helped Sporting win the Primeira Liga and Taca de Portugal.

Ewa Pajo at Barcelona lifted the women’s award while Arsenal’s women were handed the club of the year prize for their surge to the women’s Champions League crown in May.

“I’m proud to come from a club that started its women’s team in 1987,” said Arsenal coach Renée Slegers.

“Thank you to our owners and our supporters. They drive us with the sold-out crowds at the Emirates. Invest in women. Invest in women’s sport. When we do that, all of us benefit,” she added.

Ligue 1 returns in shadow of PSG brandishing more silverware

Lamal wins young player of the year

Barcelona’s Lamine Yamal, who came second in the polling for the Ballon d’Or, won the Trophée Kopa for the best young male player under 21 for the second year on the trot.

The 18-year-old saw off the PSG duo of Doué and Neves as well as Lille’s Ayyoub Bouaddi. 

“I’d like to thank everyone at the club and all my teammates and all my family,” said Lamal. “It’s important to keep working hard to be able to win more trophies.”

Barcelona striker Vicky Lopez won the Trophée Kopa for female players under 21. 

In a double success for England, Sarina Wiegman was given the Trophée Cruyff as best female coach and the Chelsea and England goalkeeper Hannah Hampton took the inaugural Trophée Yachine for the best female goalkeeper.

Wiegman, 55, was hailed for leading the England national team to a second women’s European championships.

The Lionesses beat Spain following a penalty shoot-out at St Jakob-Park in Basel in July to retain the crown they won in 2022 at Wembley at the expense of Germany.

Hampton, 24, was saluted for a 2024/2025 season in which she kept 13 clean sheets in 22 league appearances for Chelsea.

The west Londoners won the English WSL as the first team to go unbeaten in a 22-game season.

She capped her season with crucial stops in England’s run to the European crown including two saves in the penalty shoot-out in the final.


Tourism

Does Paris’s most picturesque neighbourhood need protecting from overtourism?

As the neighbourhood of Montmartre groans under the weight of more than 11 million annual visitors, some of its residents are battling to reclaim their cobbled streets from social media-fuelled tourism. But does overtourism need fixing and if so, how? 

Ten in the morning on a Tuesday in early September and tourists are already queueing up in front of Le Mur des je t’aime (the Wall of Love) – a 40-square-metre mural tucked behind Abbesses Metro station in Montmartre.

They each strike a pose against the hundreds of enamelled tiles proclaiming “I love you” in 311 languages, phones raised, capturing a slice of Parisian romance for posterity, and probably social media.

The wall, created in 2000 by two French artists, has gained worldwide renown since it featured in an early episode of the cult Netflix series Emily in Paris.

“This is the stupidest thing you can see,” rages Béatrice Dunner, a translator who has lived in Montmartre since 1979, pointing to the wall and the crowds that are sometimes “so big they block access to the park altogether”.

Up in the hilltop of Butte Montmartre, home to the Sacré-Cœur Basilica, tour guides now make an additional stop at the statue of French-Italian singer Dalida to allow tourists to caress her bosom, in what has to rival for stupidest tourist must-see of the moment. 

For Dunner, scenes like this show tourism at its worst.

“Montmartre is just a whole succession of obligatory spots for tourists. You have a vintage photo booth not far from here. There’s nothing special about it, but it’s on TikTok, so people queue.”

Photogenic Montmartre – with its spectacular hilltop views, cobbled streets, windmills, ivy-clad cafés and erstwhile bohemian Place du Tertre – has become a focal point in the battle against overtourism.

Eleven million visitors flocked to the basilica last year – more than to the Eiffel Tower – while the local population is no more than 30,000 and in the area around the Butte, they’re only 12,000 or so.

“It gives you an idea of the shock,” says Dunner, who heads the Association for the Defence of Montmartre. “It’s getting complicated to live here.”

Listen to a report on overtourism in Montmartre in the Spotlight on France podcast:

Daily life under the microscope

Dunner describes having to wait for “gaps” in tourist crowds just to exit her building near the funicular railway. Shopping has turned into a laborious piece of theatre with tourists “busy buying and busy taking pictures of what they’re buying”. 

Food tours, where guides explain to tourists how and what the French eat, are “very unpleasant”, she says. “You feel like a chimp in the zoo.”

Could Mona Lisa move into a private suite at Le Louvre?

“I think it’s fair to talk of overtourism in Montmartre,” says geographer Rémy Knafou, author of a book on the subject.

The top of Montmartre has always been a magnet for tourists. But the combined effect of the 2001 film Amélie, the surge in tourism worldwide after Covid travel restrictions were lifted, the success of the series Emily in Paris, and the 2024 Paris Games which brought the road bike race to Montmartre, have drawn tourists further down the hill, into the area of Abbesses and Rue Lepic. Knafou calls that a “noticeable change”.

In July, the Tour de France made a detour via Montmartre, drawing in not only thousands of extra spectators, but bringing those famed cobbled streets to millions of new eyes.

The Instagram effect

Meanwhile social media influencers continue to turn previously quiet corners into must-see destinations.

“Montmartre is a victim of the Instagram effect,” local deputy-mayor Jean-Philippe Daviaud told RFI’s Brazilian service.

There’s not much anyone can do about it.

Macy, an American influencer from Boston, is one of many young women striking a pose in front of the early-20th-century La Maison Rose café – a haunt for writers and artists like Picasso, Camus and Utrillo, and more recently Emily.

“I saw this on Instagram, I know it’s an important landmark in Paris,” she says, checking it on her phone. “I’m taking my followers with me around Montmartre, trying to identify hidden gems.”

I put it to her they won’t be hidden for long. “If it’s done well, it should be OK,” she says, smiling, before hurrying off to her next discovery. 

France mulls charging tourists to enter Notre-Dame cathedral

Some visitors are well aware of the potential discomfort for local residents. American couple Bre Figone and Dorian Nguyen, fresh from a vintage Citroën tour they discovered on TikTok, say they’re “trying to be as attentive as possible”.

“This is a neighbourhood where people live, work, and die,” says Nguyen, a home health worker. “It’s easy to buy an Eiffel Tower made in China, but if we see locally made art we’ll try and buy French-made stuff instead.”

French court blocks Nice’s ban on cruise ships to fight pollution, overtourism

Adapt or close

While the influx of tourists is a boost to the local economy, it’s also changing its nature, as butchers and grocers give way to more tourist-friendly creperies, cafés, takeaway joints and souvenir stands.

“There’s only one fish shop, two butchers,” says Dunner. “Most shops are luxury shops, chocolate sellers, ice cream sellers, souvenirs. There aren’t many shops that locals use.”

Some international brands have set up shop in the neighbourhood – not necessarily to sell things, but to have a shop window with the Montmartre Paris logo, says Stéphane Cachelin, a local restaurant owner and vice-president of the Abbesses-Lepic shopkeepers’ association. 

“These big luxury brands sell mainly on the internet but at least they’ll have an address in Montmartre that glorifies them a bit.” 

In contrast, tourism in Montmartre has become more “low cost”, he says. “Before Covid we also had business tourism, but we’ve lost that because Montmartre has become a bit too much of a mass tourist destination.

“Now, tourists don’t stay long or spend much, they just come to see what Montmartre is all about.”

However, Cachelin insists local retailers are adapting to the changing market. “We used to have a pork butcher and now he makes takeaway crepes. Frankly shopkeepers are not unhappy, especially those who want to give up or retire and are selling their businesses to chains. I often walk round the neighbourhood and don’t see many vacant shopfronts.”

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Priced out of the market

Property prices in the area near Sacré-Coeur are now some of the highest in the capital – “between 12,000 to 15,000 euros a square metre”, says local estate agent Brice Moyse.

Unhappy residents say several school classes have been forced to close as families, in need of larger flats, can no longer afford to stay and new families are priced out.

“Montmartre has always been overrun with tourists,” says Moyse, who’s worked in the neighbourhood for 35 years and also serves as president of the local shopkeepers’ association. “When people bought in Montmartre, they knew exactly where they were buying.”

He dismisses the claim that mass tourism is responsible for inflating property prices, but admits it has changed the market as owners eye bigger returns through short-term tourist rentals and Airbnb.

“Airbnb kills neighbourhoods,” Moyse says. “We’ve lost a huge number of long-term rental properties to Airbnb – perhaps 20 percent of flats in the area have been removed from the market.”

While Paris city hall has capped the maximum number of nights Airbnbs can be let at 90 per year, Moyse says there “aren’t sufficient controls”. 

As rents rise in Marseille, anti-Airbnb activists take matters into own hands

Pressuring politicians

The issue of overtourism in Montmartre has now become political, with some residents hanging banners from apartment buildings with slogans such as “Forgotten residents!” and “Let the Montmartrois live!”

Dunner’s association is drafting a white paper to present to candidates in the city’s municipal elections next March, “to convince decision-makers to make things less easy for tourists”.

Proposals include higher tourist taxes, pre-empting commercial leases to stop them being turned into even more souvenir shops, restricting tour group sizes, and reclaiming public pavements that have been overtaken by café tables – “the privatisation of public space”, as Dunner puts it.

They’re taking inspiration from cities like Amsterdam, which has forbidden the building of new hotels unless one is closed down, reduced incoming flights, and enforced strict regulations on all short-term tourist rentals.

For geographer Knafou, Montmartre illustrates what can happen “when authorities fail to anticipate the impact of mass tourism”.

In 2021, Montmartre was selected as part of the Embellir votre quartier (“Beautify your neighbourhood”) project, which has culminated in the recent pedestrianisation of a number of streets in La Butte. Aimed at improving quality of life and reducing noise and air pollution, it’s met with stiff opposition from residents’ associations like the Defence of Montmartre.

“Urban beautification policies, such as pedestrianisation, are driven by very good intentions, but by making a city more beautiful they also make it more attractive to tourists,” Knafou says. “Removing parking spaces on the Butte is seen by locals as a punishment,” he notes, particularly by elderly people who are more reliant on cars. 

While the city of Amsterdam acted in time and has had some success in regulating mass tourism, Knafou says Montmartre faces unique challenges as a district within a major city rather than a standalone destination.

He advocates more modest steps such as better noise control, limits on the use of tour guides with microphones, and involving residents more in decision-making.

‘Unbridled capitalism’

Local authorities acknowledge the challenges.

“Paris’s position is clear: we’re against Airbnb,” deputy-mayor Daviaud said, citing the reduction in annual rental limits from 120 to 90 nights, and equivalent taxes for both short- and long-term rentals.

The municipality has also banned or restricted film shoots in the pedestrianised Butte district. 

But he views current visitor numbers as a return to normal rather than a crisis. “Today we’re not seeing an explosion of tourism, but rather a return to pre-lockdown levels.”

Ultimately, the battle reflects the tourism industry’s huge economic clout. France welcomed over 100 million international visitors last year, generating around €70 billion – with nearly half coming to Paris.

Tourism nowadays is the human activity where unbridled capitalism is really ferocious,” says Dunner. “It brings in so much money, struggling against it is very difficult.”

Restaurant owner Cachelin, however, says “we can’t afford to wall ourselves in”.

Dunner insists the battle isn’t just about her neighbourhood and personal comfort, but part of a bigger discussion on urban life itself.

“Should cities disappear and just be film sets, or should they still exist and be full of life and full of events?” she asks.

“We want to preserve life in Montmartre. At least we’re trying.”


France – Middle East

Why is France recognising Palestinian statehood and will it change anything?

French President Emmanuel Macron has announced he will officially recognise Palestinian statehood before the UN General Assembly in September. While the move has been denounced by Israel and the US and welcomed by Palestinians and Arab countries, the reaction in France has been mixed.

In a letter sent to Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas Thursday, Macron confirmed France’s intention to press ahead with recognition and work to convince other partners to do the same. 

To date, about 144 of the 193 UN member states have recognised a Palestinian state, including most of the global south as well as Russia, China and India. Only a handful of the 27 EU countries do so, mostly former Communist countries as well as Sweden and Cyprus.

Spain, Ireland, Norway and Slovenia did so last year.

If Macron keeps his promise, France – a permanent member of the UN Security Council – will become the largest Western power and the first G7 country to recognise Palestinian statehood. 

The decision is mostly symbolic, with Israel occupying the territories where the Palestinians have long sought to establish such a state in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, with East Jerusalem as its capital.

But it makes Israel appear more isolated on the international stage over the war in Gaza, where Israel has been fighting Hamas militants since the 7 October 2023 terror attack.

Why now?

Macron’s announcement on Thursday has been fuelled by the rising global outcry over starvation and devastation in Gaza.

According to the World Health Organization and a number of international aid organisations, Israeli restrictions on humanitarian aid delivery have led to mass starvation in the enclave, though Israel blames Hamas for the suffering.

Macron had been leaning towards recognising Palestine for months as part of a bid to keep the idea of a two-state solution – traditionally defended by France – alive. But he has speeded up the timetable.

Emmanuel Macron has realised that, in reality, he cannot, unfortunately, expect French diplomacy to have a knock-on effect,” says Middle East specialist Frédéric Encel. “A few months ago, he had hoped that Saudi Arabia, or at least one Arab state, would recognise Israel as a price for France’s recognition of Palestine. That’s obviously not the case,” he told RFI.

Faced with Washington’s huge influence in the region and France’s diminishing influence there, Macron “decided to take the bull by the horns closer to the date of the annual meeting of the UN General Assembly at the beginning of September”. 

As co-host alongside Saudi Arabia of next week’s UN conference in New York aimed at promoting the two-state solution, France was also under pressure to clarify its stance.

“It’s difficult for France to chair a coalition in favour of a two-state solution if France itself does not recognise one of the two states,” says Hasni Abidi, director of the Geneva-based Centre for Studies and Research on the Arab and Mediterranean World (CERMAM).

Israel’s war and settlements a strategy to block Palestinian state: legal expert

France still counts

Palestinian authorities in both Gaza and the occupied West Bank have largely welcomed France’s decision.

“At last, France is aligning itself with international law – a system that was invented and built in Europe,” says Anwar Abu Eisheh, the PA’s former culture minister.

“France, like Germany and the United Kingdom, is a major global player with considerable influence,” Eisheh told RFI. “And France is also a permanent member of the UN Security Council – that carries weight. This could help accelerate a genuine state-building process.”

Given that Palestinians have lost faith in the West, after lots of talk about values and human rights but little evidence on the ground, “this could at least help limit the damage”, he argues.

“More than 148 states have recognised a Palestinian state,” Abidi notes. “France can only be part of this march of history. What is happening today in Gaza is the result of international resignation and the lack of interest in the Palestinian question and the Palestinian state. And that, in my opinion, is an important factor that led President Macron to anticipate this decision.”

Jean-Paul Chagnollaud, a Middle East expert and co-author of the Atlas du Moyen-Orient, agrees. “It’s a crucial move. It reasserts the principles of international law and the UN Security Council resolutions calling for a two-state solution. France’s recognition of Palestine is a step in that direction.”

Going it alone

Encel, however, plays down the importance of Macron’s contribution.

“It won’t be a decisive contribution. Firstly, because it will change absolutely nothing on the ground. Secondly, because without the knock-on effect France will lose credibility.”

Macron’s announcement has indeed opened the door for other major G7 nations such as Britain, Germany and Canada to possibly jump on board.

Chagnollaud says that the announcement was initially scheduled to coincide with a conference in New York in June, which was postponed due to hostilities between Israel and Iran. “At that time, French diplomacy was actively seeking support from other players – Canada and the UK in particular. It was clear that France hoped to bring others on board, not just within Europe, but globally.”

In the immediate term, Malta and Belgium have indicated they could be the next EU countries to recognise a Palestinian state but whether bigger international players will follow is far from sure.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Friday that his government would recognise a Palestinian state only as part of a negotiated peace deal, disappointing many in his Labour Party who want him to follow France.

After discussing with Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz ways to pressure Israel to end its war in Gaza, Starmer said he was focused on the “practical solutions” that he thought would make a real difference to ending the war.

Earlier on Friday, a German government spokesperson said it was not planning to recognise a Palestinian state in the short term and that its priority was to make “long-overdue progress” towards a two-state solution.

Chagnollaud says Germany “remains paralysed by the historical weight of its responsibility for the Holocaust

And without Germany, Encel insists EU pressure on Israel will be minimal.

“As long as Germany, which is Israel’s economic heavyweight and main economic partner within the European Union, does not take this kind of step, the Israeli government will not take the French position into account.”

Does Macron’s pledge on Palestine signal a return to France’s ‘Arab policy’?

‘Rewarding terrorism’

“Despite the announcement, many Palestinians criticise France for remaining close to Israel, so I wouldn’t call it a breath of fresh air,” Encel says. “As for the Israeli government, it will make little difference –  they’re a far-right coalition that couldn’t care less what France or most European states do.”

Israel has reacted angrily, accusing France of “rewarding terrorism” in reference to Hamas.

In a statement, Hamas welcomed Macron’s decision as a “positive step” towards justice and self-determination for the Palestinian people.

Israel argues French recognition of Palestine will encourage Hamas to hold a harder line in ceasefire negotiations but France insists the announcement – which also called for Hamas to be demilitarised – was not about rewarding Hamas but rather “proving it wrong”.

“Hamas has always rejected the two-state solution. By recognising Palestine, France is proving this terrorist movement wrong. It is proving the peace camp right against the war camp,” Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot wrote on X.

Israel slams French plan to recognise Palestinian state as a ‘prize for terror’

Domestic differences

France is home to Europe’s largest Jewish and Muslim populations so any decisions relating to Israel and the Palestinians can have an impact on the domestic front.

Announcing his decision, Macron said “the French people want peace in the Middle East”.

However, a poll last month found that only 22 per cent were in favour of immediate and unconditional recognition while 47 per cent would accept recognition once Hamas had laid down its arms and released all the Israeli hostages.

Opinion among France’s political class is also divided. Jean-Luc Mélénchon, figurehead of the hard-left France Unbowed (LFI) party, which has long defended Palestinian rights, described Macron’s decision as a “moral victory”. Socialist MP Arthur Delaporte said that faced with famine and ongoing massacres “the priority is to stop the violence,” adding that recognition of Palestine, while not enough, is a step in the right direction.

The conservative Republicans party (LR) said that while it had “always been favourable” to recognising a Palestinian state, the conditions were not met.

“At present it would give victory to Hamas – a terrorist organisation – while the [Israeli] hostages have still not been freed”, it wrote in a statement. 

The far-right National Rally (RN) party, closely aligned to Israel’s right-wing Likud, said Macron’s decision was “precipitated”.  RN lawmaker Julien Odoul went further saying it legitimised Hamas.

“Be as violent as possible and you’ll be handed a state on a silver platter. The signal this sends to the world, especially from France, is appalling.”

Macron’s supporters within the government back the move as both a principled and strategic step.


Moldova elections 2025

Moldova will keep pro-EU course despite Russian threat, Popescu tells RFI

Under mounting pressure from Russian interference, Moldova faces a critical test of its democracy with parliamentary elections on 28 September. RFI spoke to Nicu Popescu, the country’s former deputy prime minister and foreign minister, who is running for parliament on the list of the pro-European Action and Solidarity Party.

Popescu served as foreign minister in 2019, then as deputy prime minister and minister for foreign affairs between 2021 and 2024, when he resigned citing personal reasons.

He is now co-director of the European Security Programme and distinguished policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, as well as an associate professor at Sciences Po Paris.

In July, he announced that he would be re-joining the Action and Solidarity Party (PAS) and standing in the election in September, which he called “the most important in the recent history of the Republic of Moldova”.

Despite the shadow of Moscow looming large and the economic shock of the war in Ukraine, Popescu tells RFI he remains confident that Moldova will uphold stability and maintain its pro-European direction.

RFI: How stable is Moldova’s democracy at the moment?

Nicu Popescu: Moldova has had an uninterrupted democratic track record since its independence in 1991. That’s 34 years of orderly, calm, democratic changes of government. So, Moldova has a good record.

But it is also true that in recent years, in the context of Russian aggression against Ukraine, the shocks and pressures on Moldova have increased dramatically. Moldova has nevertheless maintained peace, stability, and its democratic process.

In recent years, presidential elections were complicated, but nonetheless reconfirmed Moldova’s democratic functioning. I am sure the same will happen this time.

So, yes, the pressures are there. There is a lot of Russian interference through illegal party financing. Russia switched off gas supplies a few years ago. But Moldova has found solutions to stay the course, to preserve stability and to remain democratic until now. And I am sure it will continue to do so.

RFI: What could the Moldovan government do better to counter Russian disinformation?

NP: Disinformation is a large-scale attempt to influence and sway voters in many countries. It mostly comes through digital tools and digital means, and we have seen Russian interference in France, the UK, Central Europe, Romania – and many others.

That is also happening in Moldova. There are large-scale operations on TikTok and other social media which are essentially strengthening and amplifying the messaging of pro-Russian political players.

‘Unprecedented interference’: how Russia is attempting to shape Moldova’s future

 

Besides that, there is a lot of non-digital interference. The Russians have been trying to buy votes on a large scale. Last year, roughly 140,000 people from Moldova – representing around 10 percent of the normal electorate – received Russian bank cards, and many of them were paid through these cards in order to vote as instructed by Russia.

There have been multiple instances of large amounts of cash being seized from pro-Russian political activists. In just one day in April 2024, for example, at Chisinau airport, police detained people trying to bring in roughly €1 million in cash.

So there are many attempts to buy votes and to finance political operatives, journalists, and influencers with vast amounts of completely illegal money. This is a wide spectrum of activities that Russia has been undertaking – and they are completely illegal, going well beyond the digital sphere.

RFI: Moldova received European Union candidate status on 22 June. What progress has been made since then?

NP: In 2023, the European Commission assessed that Moldova had demonstrated very good progress on eight of the 35 chapters, which at the time placed Moldova among the EU candidate countries with the fastest rate of adoption of the Acquis Communautaire

Moldova has made significant progress towards energy independence and the green transition. Throughout most of the summer, about a third of Moldova’s energy came from renewable sources – wind and solar power. On some days, Moldova even covered 100 percent of its electricity needs from renewables, which is a good rate by European standards.

There has also been significant progress in infrastructure development, including road building in villages. Many villages still need better access to drinking water, and there have been hundreds of projects with concrete benefits for the population, upgrading Moldova’s infrastructure [to be] closer to EU standards.

RFI: When Ukraine wanted to sign a trade deal with the EU in 2013, Russia was fiercely against it. How do you think Russia will react if Moldova joins the EU?

NP: Russian hostility towards Moldova is nothing new. Russia has opposed Moldovan sovereignty and independence since the late Soviet period, from the late 1980s.

Since independence in 1991, Russia has supported separatism in Moldova, maintained an illegal presence in Transnistria, and imposed blockades on dairy products, fruit and vegetables, while using energy as a tool of pressure. With the aggression against Ukraine, the risks have certainly grown.

There have been multiple incidents of Russian drones and missiles transiting Moldovan airspace. Moscow’s energy blackmail has grown. Gas supplies were cut off two years ago, which shocked domestic prices.

But each time Russia sought to pressure Moldova, the country managed to soften the blow by finding alternative markets – with the support of European partners as well as the US, UK, Canada and Japan.

RFI: How does Moldova assess the Russian presence of some 5,000 military “peacekeepers” in Transnistria?

NP: It is clearly important to overcome this separatist conflict. It is also clear that Russia has maintained this illegal military presence since the 1990s, despite having previously committed to withdrawing the troops and weapons by the end of 2002. Moscow has not respected its obligation to withdraw, which is a problem.

At the same time, Moldova has managed to preserve peace, calm and stability around the separatist region. There have not been significant security incidents. The country is at peace. That region is not currently in a tense security situation. Differences with the separatist area are managed through talks, negotiations and peaceful means.

Moldovans living on both banks of the River Dniester have made a real effort since the full-scale Russian aggression against Ukraine three and a half years ago not to import war into Moldovan territory, but instead to resolve their differences peacefully. This must continue.

RFI: To what extent does the Transnistria situation affect the EU accession talks?

NP: It is much better to join the EU without a separatist conflict. At the same time, the EU would not be facing such a situation for the first time. Germany, a founding member of the European Coal and Steel Community, was divided for more than three decades but still co-founded the European project. Later on, there was the case of Cyprus.

Of course, separatist areas always pose problems. But Europe’s history shows there are ways to minimise the impact on the rest of the Union. In the case of Moldova, the hope is that by joining the EU, reintegration of the country will in fact be made easier and more sustainable.

French support, Russian meddling and the fight for Europe’s frontier in Moldova

RFI: French President Emmanuel Macron has been very vocal in supporting Moldova’s EU accession. How significant has the French backing been?

NP: France, together with other partners, has played an extremely important role. The Moldova Support Platform, launched by Romania, France and Germany, has been fundamental in keeping Moldova stable economically and in security terms. France’s investment and commitment to Moldova’s peace are deeply appreciated.

Just recently, on Independence Day, 27 August, the Weimar Triangle leaders – the president of France, the chancellor of Germany and the president of Poland – came to Chisinau and spoke to 100,000 people in the city’s main square. President Macron and Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk addressed the crowd in Romanian, a gesture of respect warmly received by the Moldovan people.

RFI: Are you worried about US foreign policy, given President Donald Trump’s softer line towards Russian President Vladimir Putin?

NP: We have seen many statements, but we have also seen NATO remain strongly committed, with allied states continuing to invest seriously in security and defence. I believe the EU, NATO and the US are now on track to strengthen their shared security capacity and maintain peace in Europe.

It is very clear that Washington wants peace in Europe to be underpinned by greater European investment in defence, which would also allow the US to reposition some of its forces. That is a legitimate and longstanding demand – it predates President Trump. I think the alliance is on track to meet it.

And as long as NATO remains united and militarily modern, it will continue to act as a strong factor for peace in Europe.


Fishing

Landmark WTO deal shifts course in global effort to curb overfishing

A global deal to protect fish stocks that billions of people rely on for food and jobs came into force this week after more than 20 years of talks. Governments have agreed to stop giving subsidies to boats that break rules against overfishing – but the agreement does not yet cover subsidies that build ever larger fleets.

Under negotiation since 2001, the World Trade Organisation (WTO) Agreement on Fisheries Subsidies was adopted in June 2022, and enough countries ratified it for it to officially come into force on Monday, 15 September.

Subsidies to fishing fleets are a key factor in the depletion of fish stocks around the world. Critics have long argued that they incentivise boats to catch fish faster than stocks can replenish.

Around 35 percent of global fish stocks are overfished, compared to just 10 percent in 1974, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation, and almost all stocks are fished at their maximum sustainable level.

‘Game changer’

The WTO deal, the first to address an environmental issue, is a “game changer”, according to Tristan Irschlinger, an expert on the issue at the International Institute for Sustainable Development, a Canada-based think tank.

“States will no longer implement their subsidy policies in a legal vacuum – they will need to keep sustainability in mind,” he told RFI.

In 2018, states granted fisheries €30.1 billion ($35.4 billion) in public subsidies, according to one study, with China, the European Union, the United States, South Korea and Japan in the lead.

Of that sum, “governments spend around €18.7 billion ($22 billion) on harmful subsidies that contribute to overfishing and the depletion of marine resources”, said WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

The new rules aim to address both environmental concerns and the well-being of fishing communities.

“No one has an interest in financially supporting illegal fishing, or harvesting of already overfished stocks,” Irschlinger said. But there needed to be a mechanism for countries to stop doing so, he suggested, “without losing face in front of other states”.

France defends tuna policy as critics warn of overfishing in the Indian Ocean

Rooting out illegal fishing

The first part of the WTO agreement, called Fish 1, targets illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing practices, whether carried out deliberately or not.

“The agreement specifically targets industrial fishing activities that profit illegally because they know the risks are generally quite low,” explains Irschlinger.

IUU practices include vessels operating without authorisation or in violation of the law, such as fishing in protected waters, catching protected species, or using banned gear like dynamite.

Quantifying the effects of IUU fishing is difficult.

2009 study determined the practice accounted for between 11 and 19 percent of all fish caught globally in the 2000s — between 11 and 26 million tonnes of fish. The numbers are almost certainly much higher today.

Beyond its environmental impact and the effects on food security, IUU fishing also intersects with crime, according to French ocean conservation organisation Fondation de la Mer.

IUU is “linked to corruption, mafia practices, modern slavery and organised crime”, it said in a report on the practice last year.

Help for developing countries

The WTO agreement prohibits states from granting subsidies to vessels and operators in three cases: when fishing activities are illegal; when fish stocks are overexploited; or when fishing takes place on the high seas, which are not regulated by any single state.

The UN’s High Seas Treaty, which is expected to come into force next week, will reinforce the WTO agreement, particularly through the creation of marine protected areas where some or all forms of fishing would be banned.

French Polynesia unveils world’s largest marine protected zone

Developing countries are given a two-year grace period to comply with the agreement, and 17 members have pledged more than €15 million ($18 million) to a fund to help fisheries transition to more sustainable practices.

In theory the agreement would be enforced through the WTO’s Dispute Settlement Body, which resolves conflicts between states – but because the United States has blocked the appointment of judges, it has remained unable to handle new cases since 2019.

The agreement also does not specify the kinds of sanctions that could be imposed.

Aiming to avoid the need for penalties, a fisheries subsidies committee will be tasked with monitoring implementation, while states are also expected to scrutinise each other.

Looking ahead to Fish 2

There is hope that the first part of the agreement will build momentum for the second part, Fish 2, currently under negotiation, to be finalised within four years.

Fish 2 focuses specifically on fishing fleets themselves, which Irschlinger says is “the root of the problem”.

The Fondation de la Mer says that even when fishing fleets are not fishing illegally, or when stocks are not yet overfished, subsidies can still be harmful: “They often promote the development of oversized fishing fleets and encourage excessive fishing pressure, which can ultimately lead to overexploitation or even stock collapse.”

The second part of the agreement sets out a general list of prohibited subsidies, and removes the need to detect illegal fishing or assess fish stocks in order to enforce the rules. Instead it is up to states to prove that they have put management measures in place.

Fish 2 depends on ratification by the United States, which ratified Fish 1 under the previous administration.

The new administration is taking a more ambitious and hardline stance in negotiations, aligned with India and Indonesia, which argue that the text is not strict enough on states that subsidise the most.

Negotiations will likely restart in earnest in March of next year at a WTO meeting in Yaoundé, Cameroon.


This article was adapted from the original version in French by RFI’s Géraud Bosman-Delzons.


Côte d’Ivoire election 2025

Why Côte d’Ivoire’s election could be more complex than it seems

Côte d’Ivoire’s presidential election campaign is taking shape, with four challengers hoping to defeat longtime incumbent Alassane Ouattara in the 25 October vote – but no candidates from the country’s two main opposition parties. While analysts say the run-up has so far been peaceful, some fear that young voters in particular are disengaging from politics, in response to previous election violence.

Ouattara, 83, has been in power since 2011 and changed the constitution in 2016 to remove presidential term limits. 

Four candidates are standing against him, having been ruled eligible by the country’s constitutional court: former ministers Jean-Louis Billon, Ahoua Don Mello and Henriette Lagou, and Simone Gbagbo, who is a former first lady.

Neither of the main opposition parties are in the race, after the court disqualified several other candidates including former president Laurent Gbagbo – Simone’s ex-husband – and Tidjane Thiam, a businessman and former minister of development.

Excluded candidates have denounced the ruling as unfair and several are considering contesting it.

Meanwhile thousands of people took to the streets last month to protest the ban.

Thousands in Côte d’Ivoire protest exclusion of opposition leaders from election

Relative calm

Previous elections in Côte d’Ivoire have been fraught with unrest and clashes. When Ouattara stood for a third term in 2020, several people were killed in election violence.

Rinaldo Depagne, West Africa director at the International Crisis Group (ICG), says the situation remains remarkably calm compared to earlier campaigns.

“If you compare with what happened in 2020, mid September, the country already had a death toll of more than 15 people killed during violent protests. So this time, it is quite reassuring,” he told RFI.

“We don’t have any notable violence reported. The only incident was in August, an attack on a bus in Yopougon [a suburb of Abidjan].”

Several members of Laurent Gbagbo’s African People’s Party – Côte d’Ivoire were arrested after a public bus was set alight last month. They denied all involvement and the party slammed the arrests as politically motivated.

Human rights issues

Meanwhile, on 15 September Amnesty International launched a manifesto setting out six key priorities for the next administration. 

“Over the next five years, the president should address violations of the rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly,” Marceau Sivieude, Amnesty International‘s regional director for West and Central Africa, wrote.

“They should end forced evictions and support affected people, ensure respect for the right to truth, justice and reparation for victims of electoral violence, protect the rights of women and children and the right to a healthy environment.”

The recommendations aim to provide the future president with a human rights roadmap.

“These elections offer an opportunity to strengthen respect for human rights in Côte d’Ivoire. We call on all candidates to commit to this,” Sivieude added.

Switching off

Regarding participation, Depagne says the main parties have shown “a certain sense of responsibility” in not calling for violence, yet the calm may also be a sign that voters are switching off from politics.

“Young people don’t expect much from politics; they don’t want to be killed or harmed for a result that won’t give them a job or a better life,” he said.

“So on the one hand, this is reassuring because we have so far had quite a peaceful pre-campaign… But on the other hand, people are not really involved in political life.”

No presidential election since 1995 has resulted in a peaceful change of power, ICG notes in its latest report on Côte d’Ivoire.

One of the issues, according to the think tank, is that the candidates are well-known politicians who have been on the scene since the 1990s.

“In a way, I’m not sure that many Ivorians believe in them anymore,” Depagne says. “The turnout could be low.”

Ouattara confirms fourth term run as Ivorian opposition cries foul

Furthermore, the violence surrounding previous elections means that “politics for many people is something dangerous”, according to Depagne. 

“For many people, going in the street to demonstrate could be dangerous,” he told RFI. “This is also why you don’t see massive protests, I think.”

The Ivorian government should hold formal talks with the opposition as soon as possible, the ICG recommends, while parties whose candidates have been disqualified should resist the temptation to boycott.

The election campaign officially kicks off on 10 October and will end on 23 October, two days before voting begins.


ENVIRONMENT – ART

Photoclimat: Paris streets a canvas for stories of a planet in peril

Giant portraits of forest guardians stare down from Paris’s city squares. Images of threatened landscapes line the riverbanks, while wooden yurts have been turned into pop-up pavilions. Photoclimat, a grassroots photo biennale, has transformed the French capital into an open-air gallery where photography and activism collide.

Now in its third edition, Photoclimat brings together 47 artists from around the world. Their installations trace the work of non-profit groups tackling climate change, protecting biodiversity and defending communities on the frontlines.

The Biennale was created in 2021 by French photographer Nicolas Henry, a member of Le tour d’un monde (A Journey Around a World), a cultural association that develops artistic projects with a social focus.

He says the idea is to use art as a bridge to the work of NGOs.

“The idea of this project is to combine the strength of artistic talent together with the stories of the work done by NGOs. We want to really wake people up – raise awareness,” he told RFI.

He hopes visitors will go further – learning more about the organisations, volunteering or donating.

“But it’s also all about giving meaning to what we do, bringing joy and a good mood that can transform people’s lives. It gives us a sense of direction and a sense of community,” he says.

A powerful tool

Henry believes photography, along with art and design, can open the door to difficult issues, especially for younger audiences. 

“It’s a way to introduce these NGOs to the younger generation who may not have heard of them – encouraging them to become ‘actors of society’ when it comes to ecology and social progress,” he says.

One of the headline works sits at Place de la Concorde. It is “Les Voix des Fôrets” (Voices of the Forest), a series by young Filipino photographer Gab Mejia. His black-and-white portraits are displayed on a circular wooden pavilion that doubles as a meeting space for artists.

France’s photojournalism festival opens with focus on war and climate crisis

Mejia worked with Laure d’Astorg from the French NGO Alliance pour la Préservation des Fôrets (Alliance for Forest Preservation) to find a way to celebrate the people behind the mammoth task of saving the world’s endangered forests.

“I wanted the work to share their messages and to transmit a call to action of what we can do to preserve the forests all across the world,” Mejia told RFI.

He says the Philippines, one of the world’s most biodiverse countries, has vast primary forests under threat. “It’s part of our identity; we have indigenous communities and local communities who really rely on the forest in the Philippines and the islands.”

Among his subjects was Hernando Chindoy, a Colombian leader working with the Alliance to fight deforestation. Mejia combined photography with digitally rendered sketches to portray the activists.

For d’Astorg, there’s the public message battle, and then there’s the legal one behind the scenes.

Her organisation strives to make sure raw materials derived from the forests, like wood, coffee, cacao are sustainably sourced.

“Forests are in danger, forests in Europe, but also in Amazonia and Basin of Congo and Southeast Asia,” she says.

“The planet is burning and we really need to bring this message and this fight can only be won together with the businesses and the NGOs. We really need to work together to stop deforestation.”

Beauty and the blight: a photographer’s quest to expose an ecological disaster

Elsewhere at Photoclimat, visitors can see British photographer Tim Flach’s portraits of animals, the bold colours of Ghanaian artist Prince Gyasi and the abstract work of Dutch photographer Sanja Marusic.

On the banks of the Seine, other installations focus on oceans and rivers, underscoring the efforts of people and organisations working to protect them.

For Nicolas Henry, Photoclimat is just the beginning of a conversation: a wake-up call he hopes will transform awareness into meaningful action.


Photoclimat runs until 12 October – spanning 6 locations in central Paris and several locations in the Paris suburbs.


Kenya

The karate grannies of Korogocho, fighting back at any age

In the heart of Korogocho, a Nairobi slum where corrugated metal homes lean wearily against each other, a group of elderly women gathers every morning in a small community hall. Some use canes, others steady themselves on their friends’ arms, but all share the same determined focus. They’re not here to gossip or pray, they’re here to learn how to fight.

A makeshift punching bag stuffed with rags hangs from the rafters. The women form a circle around it, colourful khangas wrapped tight, bare feet planted firmly on the earthen floor.

Beatrice Nyariara, who is in her seventies, calls out: “Remember, grandmothers, defend yourselves!”

For years, elderly women in Korogocho were targeted for rape and robbery, made vulnerable by a deadly myth that older women were “safer” victims less likely to carry HIV.

With few local police officers and slow response times, help rarely arrived when needed.

The violence seemed unstoppable until 2007, when Beatrice and the others began learning martial arts from visiting instructors.

The techniques they use blend karate, kung fu and taekwondo, stripped down to the essentials: quick strikes, joint locks, targeted kicks. They don’t aim for flashy moves, but for practical techniques that create escape opportunities.

The women named their group Shosho Jiking  – meaning “Grandmother, defend yourself”.

‘Beauty exists everywhere’: Ballet builds hope for future in Nairobi slum

‘He thought I was helpless’

The women practise palm strikes to the nose, precise blows to the collarbone and swift kicks to the groin. Every move ends with a fierce chorus: “No! No! No!” – to stun attackers and alert neighbours.

At first, many of the women questioned whether their ageing bodies could handle the strain. Joints ached. Muscles protested. But week after week they returned, growing stronger in body and spirit.

Gradually, attacks on elderly women in the neighbourhood declined. Word spread: these grandmothers knew how to fight back.

After a brutal assault left Jane Waithiegeni HIV-positive, she withdrew from community life for years, trapped in isolation and shame.

Finding the karate group marked a turning point. Today, she instructs women of all ages through the Ujamaa Karate programme, teaching them that their bodies are worth defending.

Hannah Nyakio smiles when she recalls the night an intruder broke into her home. “He thought I was helpless,” she says. A quick kick to his nose and a knee to his groin gave her time to escape and raise the alarm.

Then there’s Rebecca Wambui, who at nearly 100 years old walks to training with her cane but delivers sharp, accurate strikes. Her presence alone reminds the group that strength is about more than muscle.

The women carrying the burden of Kenya’s rural healthcare on their backs

Beyond self-defence

The karate lessons too have evolved into something much bigger. The women have formed a chama – a traditional savings club where small contributions help cover medical bills, funeral costs or expenses for the grandchildren that many are raising alone, after they were left orphaned by AIDS.

In a community where poverty and crime frequently tear families apart, the karate grannies have created their own safety net, protecting the children from abuse and gang recruitment.

The Kenyan company turning trash into cash

The sessions also help maintain their mental health, as well as the physical. Between drills they joke with each other and share news and recipes. What began as survival training has become a source of joy, wellness and sisterhood.

They also challenge assumptions about gender and age. In a society where older women are often dismissed as powerless, these grandmothers prove that vulnerability isn’t an inevitable part of ageing.


Kenya

The karate grannies of Korogocho, fighting back at any age

In the heart of Korogocho, a Nairobi slum where corrugated metal homes lean wearily against each other, a group of elderly women gathers every morning in a small community hall. Some use canes, others steady themselves on their friends’ arms, but all share the same determined focus. They’re not here to gossip or pray, they’re here to learn how to fight.

A makeshift punching bag stuffed with rags hangs from the rafters. The women form a circle around it, colourful khangas wrapped tight, bare feet planted firmly on the earthen floor.

Beatrice Nyariara, who is in her seventies, calls out: “Remember, grandmothers, defend yourselves!”

For years, elderly women in Korogocho were targeted for rape and robbery, made vulnerable by a deadly myth that older women were “safer” victims less likely to carry HIV.

With few local police officers and slow response times, help rarely arrived when needed.

The violence seemed unstoppable until 2007, when Beatrice and the others began learning martial arts from visiting instructors.

The techniques they use blend karate, kung fu and taekwondo, stripped down to the essentials: quick strikes, joint locks, targeted kicks. They don’t aim for flashy moves, but for practical techniques that create escape opportunities.

The women named their group Shosho Jiking  – meaning “Grandmother, defend yourself”.

‘Beauty exists everywhere’: Ballet builds hope for future in Nairobi slum

‘He thought I was helpless’

The women practise palm strikes to the nose, precise blows to the collarbone and swift kicks to the groin. Every move ends with a fierce chorus: “No! No! No!” – to stun attackers and alert neighbours.

At first, many of the women questioned whether their ageing bodies could handle the strain. Joints ached. Muscles protested. But week after week they returned, growing stronger in body and spirit.

Gradually, attacks on elderly women in the neighbourhood declined. Word spread: these grandmothers knew how to fight back.

After a brutal assault left Jane Waithiegeni HIV-positive, she withdrew from community life for years, trapped in isolation and shame.

Finding the karate group marked a turning point. Today, she instructs women of all ages through the Ujamaa Karate programme, teaching them that their bodies are worth defending.

Hannah Nyakio smiles when she recalls the night an intruder broke into her home. “He thought I was helpless,” she says. A quick kick to his nose and a knee to his groin gave her time to escape and raise the alarm.

Then there’s Rebecca Wambui, who at nearly 100 years old walks to training with her cane but delivers sharp, accurate strikes. Her presence alone reminds the group that strength is about more than muscle.

The women carrying the burden of Kenya’s rural healthcare on their backs

Beyond self-defence

The karate lessons too have evolved into something much bigger. The women have formed a chama – a traditional savings club where small contributions help cover medical bills, funeral costs or expenses for the grandchildren that many are raising alone, after they were left orphaned by AIDS.

In a community where poverty and crime frequently tear families apart, the karate grannies have created their own safety net, protecting the children from abuse and gang recruitment.

The Kenyan company turning trash into cash

The sessions also help maintain their mental health, as well as the physical. Between drills they joke with each other and share news and recipes. What began as survival training has become a source of joy, wellness and sisterhood.

They also challenge assumptions about gender and age. In a society where older women are often dismissed as powerless, these grandmothers prove that vulnerability isn’t an inevitable part of ageing.


FRANCE – PALESTINE

Defiant French mayors keep Palestinian flags flying despite court rulings

Over 50 town halls in France were flying the Palestinian flag Monday in defiance of an interior ministry warning not to do so ahead of the recognition of a Palestinian state by President Emmanuel Macron.

As France prepares to recognise Palestine at the UN, town halls across the country are caught up in a row over whether or not to raise the Palestinian flag in solidarity.

Macron is due to recognise a Palestinian state on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, following up on a pledge he made in the summer that angered Israel.

Many mayors are sticking to their plan to hoist the flag in spite of stern warnings from the France’s Interior Ministry and early rulings from administrative courts.

Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau, who is also leader of the right-wing Republicans Party, last week instructed police prefects to enforce the principle of political neutrality in public services.

“The principle of neutrality in public service prohibits such displays,” the Interior Ministry said, adding that any decisions by mayors to fly the Palestinian flag should be referred to courts.

In Malakoff, just south of Paris, Communist mayor Jacqueline Belhomme has said the flag will stay put “until Tuesday” – despite an order from the local administrative court to take it down after a complaint from the Hauts-de-Seine department’s police prefecture.

Double standard

The police prefect has already gone back to court, this time seeking a financial penalty. An administrative court on Monday announced this would be a sum of €150 per day. 

“I symbolically placed a flag on the town hall facade in solidarity with the Palestinian people, whose state will finally be recognised on Monday at the UN by the President of the Republic,” Belhomme told RFI.

“This is absolutely not a provocation. The law does not forbid it.”

Belhomme underlined that when Malakoff had put a Ukrainian flag on its town hall after the Russian invasion, “there was no controversy at the time”.

“I think there’s a double standard,” she said.

France’s Interior Ministry clamps down on public display of Palestinian flags

‘Symbolic choice’

The black, white, red and green banner is also expected to fly over other town halls in the Paris suburbs, including Nanterre, Bagneux, Gennevilliers, Ivry-sur-Seine and Corbeil-Essonnes.

For Mathieu Hanotin, Socialist mayor of the suburb of Saint-Denis, north of Paris, the gesture is deliberately time-limited rather than a permanent statement: “It’s not an act of long-term militancy,” he told French news agency AFP, but a symbolic choice timed to coincide with President Emmanuel Macron’s announcement at the UN General Assembly confirming France’s recognition of the State of Palestine.

Socialist Party leader Olivier Faure attended a flag-raising ceremony in Saint-Denis, saying he opposed Retailleau’s order and said he had written to Macron asking the president to rescind it.

“This flag is not the flag of Hamas, it is the flag of women and men who also have the right to freedom and self-determination,” Faure said.

Karim Bouamrane, mayor of nearby Saint-Ouen is following the same line, with Bouamrane even planning to raise both Palestinian and Israeli flags.

The mayors of Lyon, Lille, Rennes and Nantes are also taking part.

France spearheads UN drive to recognise Palestinian statehood

Directive from Interior Ministry

Elsewhere, however, some are retreating under pressure. In Mauléon-Licharre, a small town of 3,000 in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department, the Communist mayor who had raised the Palestinian flag on Friday removed it the following day after a court challenge by the local prefect.

That line was echoed in the Cergy-Pontoise court’s decision and underlined by Interior Ministry secretary general Hugues Moutouh: “The state not only does not ask for flag displays, it explicitly asks for non-displays.”

Centrists, conservatives and the far right are backing the ministry’s stance.

But the issue is splitting the left. In the Créteil suburb of Paris, Socialist mayor Laurent Cathala has refused to raise the flag, arguing that his priority must be to preserve social cohesion in his community.

Other mayors are finding creative workarounds. In Brest, the city hall – which has flown the Ukrainian flag since 2022 – will instead light up its façade in the colours of Palestine.

In Marseille, mayor Benoît Payan promised a “strong gesture”, saying he wanted to go further than to raise a flag.

On Monday afternoon, he announced a sister-city link between Marseille and Bethlehem, in the West Bank, a project he launched some months ago.

The flags of both Israel and Palestine, as well as peace images of a dove and olive branch, were displayed late Sunday at the Eiffel Tower, which was illuminated in celebration of the recognition of the Palestinian state.

“Paris reaffirms its commitment to peace, which more than ever requires a two-state solution,” Socialist Mayor Anne Hidalgo wrote on Bluesky.

Acknowledging the impassioned responses caused by his decision, which have included anger from within France’s Jewish community, Macron posted a video on X on Sunday saying France wanted “peace, an immediate ceasefire and the release, without delay” of the Israeli hostages held by Hamas.

(With AFP)


UN – PALESTINE

France spearheads UN drive to recognise Palestinian statehood

The United Nations General Assembly opens this week, with Palestinian statehood set to dominate the agenda. France, alongside Saudi Arabia, will lead discussions in the most significant diplomatic push in years to breathe life back into a two-state solution.

The stage was set on 12 September when the UN General Assembly adopted the so-called New York Declaration, a text designed to give fresh impetus to the peace process – with one crucial caveat: the exclusion of Hamas.

With 142 votes in favour and 10 against – including Israel and the United States – plus 12 abstentions, the resolution demands Hamas lays down its arms.

French foreign minister Jean-Noël Barrot hailed the adoption as the “definitive international isolation of Hamas” – a moment he argued would give political cover to countries preparing to recognise the Palestinian state at the 2025 General Assembly.

President Emmanuel Macron has already pledged that France will make that recognition official on 22 September.

UN gathers to advance two-state solution to Israel-Palestine conflict

France’s ‘crucial role’

On Sunday, Britain, Australia, Canada and Portugal recognised a Palestinian state in a coordinated, historic shift in decades of Western foreign policy, triggering swift anger from Israel.

Belgium and Canada are preparing similar announcements this Monday, but according to Richard Gowan, director of UN and multilateral diplomacy at the International Crisis Group, Paris’s stance on Palestine has been a game-changer.

“France has played a really crucial role bringing a group of countries together to recognise Palestine at the same time,” he told RFI.

“If President Macron had not announced France’s intention back in July, no one else would have done so. France really has been the orchestrator of this process.”

However, he also notes that France has drawn strength from the United Kingdom’s stance.

“Having both Britain and France – two veto powers from the Security Council – working in parallel reassures other countries that they can take the step. There’s safety in numbers. States that felt nervous about recognising Palestine alone due to likely blowback from the US feel more confident doing it in a coordinated fashion.”

Why is France recognising Palestinian statehood and will it change anything?

What’s on the table

The New York Declaration calls explicitly for an end to the war in Gaza, nearly two years on from the 7 October, 2023 attacks on Israel by Hamas that triggered it.

It also calls for a “just, peaceful and durable settlement” based on two states, with Israel and Palestine living side by side.

Crucially, the text envisages a handover of authority in Gaza from Hamas to the Palestinian Authority, supported by the international community.

The declaration aims to guarantee a sovereign, independent State of Palestine, with credible institutions and security guarantees both for Palestinians and for Israel.

Looking ahead to a possible ceasefire, the resolution floats the deployment of a temporary international stabilisation mission under a UN Security Council mandate. Such a force would be tasked with protecting civilians, helping to build up Palestinian state structures and providing security assurances on both sides.

Gowan, however, is sceptical over how realistic such proposals are.

“The idea of a stabilisation force in Gaza only makes sense if there is a ceasefire. Ceasefire has to come first. There is absolutely no way the Security Council would authorise a military intervention without a really credible ceasefire beforehand,” he said.

He added that while Arab states may be pressed to provide troops,”if I were an Egyptian or Saudi general, I would be nervous about the risks involved in going into Gaza”.

“The French have done quite a good job in persuading the Arab group of states to finally condemn Hamas, and the General Assembly endorsed the demand that Hamas should leave power in Gaza this month,” Gowan said, adding that this was a deliberate move.

By condemning Hamas directly, the text allows governments to argue that recognising Palestine does not equate to condoning Hamas but rather signals support for an internationally backed state under the Palestinian Authority.

France rejects Netanyahu’s antisemitism claim over recognition of Palestine

Israel pushes back

Israel has reacted with fury, with its Foreign Ministry spokesman Oren Marmorstein calling the General Assembly’s decision “shameful” and accusing the UN of being a “political circus detached from reality”.

Israel argues that the resolution ignores Hamas’s refusal to disarm and to release Israeli hostages, and claims it only encourages further violence. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared on 11 September: “There will be no Palestinian state

According to Gowan, this rejection was inevitable. “No one expected Israel to welcome these recognitions,” he said.

“The original French plan had actually been to do some diplomatic magic and have Saudi Arabia offering formal recognition of Israel alongside the recognition of Palestine. But that idea has fallen by the wayside, because there’s no way the Saudis can politically recognise Israel while the war in Gaza continues.”

The bigger risk however, he warns, is escalation.

Netanyahu is expected to speak later in the UNGA week. “He could announce more settlements in the West Bank, or he could really escalate and announce that Israel will formally annex parts of the West Bank or Gaza,” Gowan said.

“Diplomats and UN officials have been very nervous about an Israeli annexation declaration for much of the last year.”

France condemns Israel’s west bank settlement plan as serious breach of international law

Palestinian expectations

Palestinian leaders have hailed the vote as a historic step. Hussein al-Sheikh, vice-president of the Palestinian Authority, called it “an important stage towards ending the occupation” and realising a Palestinian state on the 1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital.

But Gowan cautions against assuming Hamas can simply be written out of the equation.

“The idea of simply obliterating Hamas is not realistic,” he told RFI. “The declaration is more about offering those Palestinians who want to see a peaceful pathway to statehood some encouragement – a political horizon. But the details of what post-war Gaza will look like and how it will be ruled still need a lot of thought.”

Macron warns on Israeli TV that Gaza war is ‘destroying Israel’s credibility’

Roughly three-quarters of UN member states already recognise Palestine. What makes this September session different is the role of Western powers. “Leaders from the Global South will look at this event and say: what took you so long?” said Gowan.

“France and other countries are just catching up with the views of the global majority. But it is important that some really significant Western powers and US allies are finally stepping up.”

Recognition at the UN will not make Palestine a full member state – Washington’s veto at the Security Council rules that out – but, Gowan said: “This is really an example of the UN being a useful platform for states to send strong signals about their views.”

He concludes that: “Even states that on many issues desperately want to avoid offending the US feel that the situation in Gaza has now gone so far that they have to take at least symbolic action.”


2025 road world championships

Teenagers take centre stage at road world championships in Kigali

Cycling’s next generations were set to take centre stage on Tuesday in the individual time trials (ITT) at the road world championships in Kigali.

The women’s junior ITT featuring 17 and 18-year-olds will start the day’s action over 18.3km between the BK Arena in Kigali and the Kigali Convention Centre.

In a nod to the first world championships to be held in Africa, Yvonne Masengesho from Rwanda will launch the race. She will be followed by Divine Ogbe from Nigeria and Rosemarie Thiel from Namibia.

In all, 47 cyclists will compete for the coveted rainbow vest.

The competition will be followed by the male teenagers who will ride over 22.6km between the same venues.

On Monday, Sweden’s Jakob Söderqvist claimed the men’s under 23 ITT.

The 22-year-old Lidl-Trek Future Racing cyclist completed the 31.2 km course in 38 minutes, 24.43 seconds. He posed  an average speed of 48.741 km/h between the BK Arena in Kigali and the Kigali Convention Centre.

“This is the one thing in the U23 category that I care about the most,” he said after his triumph. “So there have been preparations all year round to just make this one as good as possible.” 

Nate Pringle from New Zealand was second just over a minute behind. France’s Maxime Decomble claimed bronze.

In the women’s under 23 ITT, Zoe Backstedt took top prize. She completed the 22.6km sprint in 30 minutes, 56.16 seconds.

Viktoria Chladonova from Slovakia was second nearly two minutes behind the 20-year-old Briton and the Italian Federica Venturelli was third.


FRANCE – RUSSIA

French endurance cyclist appeals detention in Russia after border arrest

French cyclist Sofiane Sehili has challenged a Russian court order keeping him in detention following his arrest at Russia’s border with China.

French long-distance cyclist Sofiane Sehili, who has been held in Russia since early September after allegedly crossing the border illegally, has lodged an appeal against his detention. 

The 44-year-old rider was stopped in Russia’s Far East, at what should have been the final leg of his record attempt to pedal across Eurasia.

Sehili set out from Lisbon in July, aiming to cover 17 countries and finish in Vladivostok by early September – a journey of more than 60 days and many thousands of kilometres.

But his record-breaking ride ran into bureaucratic trouble at the Russian border with China.

According to officials, Sehili first attempted to enter at a checkpoint restricted to Russian and Chinese nationals.

He then tried another crossing, only to find that the rules required travellers to enter by train or bus – a move that would have disqualified his world record attempt.

Determined to stick to his bike, he presented himself to border guards in the hope they would wave him through. Instead, he was detained.

French cyclist arrested in Russia to be detained until October

Pre-trial detention appeal

On Monday, Russian lawyer, Alla Kouchnir, told French news agency AFP that she had appealed his arrest with the regional court in Primorye, based in Vladivostok.

“I have spoken with investigators. In general, the investigation is already complete, and it’s unlikely that new details will appear,” she said.

Kouchnir has requested that Sehili’s pre-trial detention be replaced with a less restrictive measure that does not involve isolation.

For now, Russian courts have ordered that the Frenchman remain in custody until at least 4 October.

State news agency Ria Novosti reported that the appeal specifically challenges this provisional detention.

Despite the setback, supporters say Sehili is in good spirits.

A Russian prison monitoring official, Vladimir Naidin, reported that he had visited the cyclist in jail and found him in good health.

French researcher imprisoned in Russia faces new charges of espionage

‘Ultra-cyclist’ challenge

Back in France, his partner, Fanny Bensussan, told regional channel France 3 Occitanie that his only focus had been on the athletic feat itself.

“He thought only about his sporting achievement,” she said, explaining that he believed the border guards would make an exception.

Sehili is no stranger to gruelling challenges. A former archivist at cultural magazine Télérama, he reinvented himself as an “ultra-cyclist”, specialising in rides stretching hundreds or even thousands of kilometres.

His Eurasia crossing was to be his most ambitious undertaking yet.

His arrest, however, comes against a fraught backdrop – since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, several Western nationals have been detained in the country, amid continuing tensions between Moscow and Paris.

(With AFP)


FRENCH POLITICS

Former French PM on course for comeback as Paris by-election frontrunner

Former French prime minister Michel Barnier has sailed through the first round of a high-profile by-election in Paris, emerging as the clear frontrunner to retake a long-time conservative stronghold.

Standing for the centre-right Les Républicains (LR), Michel Barnier claimed more than 45 percent of the vote on Sunday in the capital’s second constituency – a seat traditionally considered safe for the right.

He will face Socialist candidate Frédérique Bredin in next weekend’s run-off.

Turnout, however, has been exceptionally low, with almost three in four voters staying away from the ballot box, with abstention close to 75 percent.

Barnier himself admitted it reflected “worry, frustration and fatigue” with France’s national political climate.

The result puts the 74-year-old, who briefly held the premiership last year before being toppled by a budgetary censure motion, on course to become Les Républicains only MP in Paris.

Since 2022, the capital’s 18 parliamentary seats have been split between President Emmanuel Macron’s centrists and the left.

French PM meets Macron to resign after no-confidence vote

Duel between left and right

Bredin – a former minister under socialist president François Mitterrand – secured about 32 percent of the vote.

She was the sole left-wing standard-bearer in a crowded field of 17 candidates.

The far-right National Rally’s Thierry Mariani trailed far behind in third place.

Barnier sought to frame the choice ahead as a straightforward duel: “On the one hand, our united candidacy of the right and centre; on the other, the left’s candidate, backed by Jean-Luc Mélenchon and France Unbowed,” he told supporters.

Bredin hit back, calling Barnier’s performance “a historic failure for the right, with less than 50 percent in this constituency”, which spans Paris’ upmarket 5th, 6th and 7th district on the Left Bank – long considered bastions of conservatism.

Who could be on the ballot for the 2027 French presidential election?

‘Shotgun’ by-election

The by-election was triggered in July when Macronist deputy Jean Laussucq’s victory was annulled by the Constitutional Council over irregularities in his campaign accounts.

The tight campaign calendar frustrated Bredin, who unsuccessfully demanded a postponement, calling the timetable “scandalously short”.

Barnier’s path to the ballot was not without turbulence, as his candidacy was initially threatened by Rachida Dati – outgoing culture minister and combative mayor of the 7th district – who suspected Barnier of eyeing the office of Paris mayor.

Dati pulled out only at the last minute, after securing LR’s official nomination for next year’s municipal elections.

Barnier’s ‘Paris credentials’

Though know internationally as the EU’s chief negotiator during Brexit, Barnier is best known in France for representing Savoie for decades – as MP, senator and local council chief.

Throughout his campaign, the former prime minister has been shoring up his Paris credentials, saying he has lived in the constituency for the past 12 years.

Eyebrows were raised, however, when it emerged he had to cast his ballot by proxy, as he is not registered on Paris’s electoral rolls.

Next Sunday’s duel now promises a symbolic showdown, with Barnier bidding to replant Les Républicain’s flag in the capital, while Bredin hopes to pull off an upset for the left in one of Paris’s most traditionally conservative constituencies.


Cameroon

Cameroon: Amnesty calls for release of 36 activists, five years after crackdown

Cameroon on Monday is marking ​​five years since protests organised by the Cameroon Renaissance Movement (MRC) were violently repressed by the authorities. More than 500 people were arbitrarily arrested, 36 of whom remain in jail. As the country gears up for presidential elections, human rights group Amnesty International is calling for their release.

On 22 September 2020, the opposition party had called for peaceful demonstrations to promote national dialogue, reform of the electoral system, and an end to the conflict in the English-speaking regions.

However, 36 opposition supporters remain in detention in Kondengui prison in Yaoundé, after being sentenced by a military court to between five and seven years’ imprisonment.

They were found guilty of “rebellion” or “attempted insurrection” against the state.

Some of those arrested are now nearing the end of their sentences, while others will have to wait several more years, such as Alain Fogué, treasurer of the MRC, or Olivier Bibou Nissack, spokesperson for the opposition leader Maurice Kamto.

Amnesty International has condemned these arbitrary detentions. Fabien Offner, researcher at Amnesty International’s regional office for West and Central Africa, calls for their release. 

“Unfortunately, there has been no change in recent years with regard to respect for fundamental rights,” Offner told RFI.

“This is despite calls from the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and an alarming report from the Committee Against Torture on what is happening in prisons, police stations and gendarmeries in Cameroon.”

Arbitrary arrests

“The Cameroonian authorities must immediately release 36 opposition supporters arbitrarily detained for five years for exercising their right to peaceful assembly and put an end to arbitrary detention in the country,” Amnesty said on the fifth anniversary of their arrest.

They “have committed no crime other than to express their opinion,” Marceau Sivieude, Amnesty International’s Regional Director for West and Central Africa said.

The NGO also pointed about that trying civilians in military courts is “incompatible with the right to a fair trial and therefore in violation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights.”

Fears over divided opposition and instability, as Cameroon heads to the polls

Among the 36, one has suffered three strokes but has not been released on medical grounds despite requests, according to the lawyer Hippolyte Meli Tiakouang, coordinator of a collective defending detained opposition supporters.

Thirty-six appeals have been lodged since 2022 with the Supreme Court of Cameroon, which has not yet ruled on any of them.

“The delays are unreasonable,” said lawyer Tiakouang. “One might think that the judiciary drags things out so that the sentences handed down will be carried out.”

On 4 November 2022, the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention published a report which found that the detention of 15 of the MRC leaders and activists was arbitrary.  

“We are deeply disappointed that the authorities have failed to recognise the arbitrary nature of the ongoing detention of these protesters,” Sivieude said.

Rising fears ahead of election

The presidential election will take place in Cameroon on 12 October, with President Paul Biya running for an eighth term.

Biya, 92, has been in power in Cameroon for nearly 43 years, will face 11 other candidates, as the opposition didn’t manage to present a united front.

In July, Cameroon’s electoral commission barred Kamto because he was running under the banner of the MANIDEM party, which also supported a second candidate.

At the start of this month, the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) voiced concern at restrictions on Cameroon’s “civic space” as the election nears and also expressed fears about the voters’ ability to freely express their choice.

Cameroon’s forgotten crisis displaces nearly a million people

On 4 August, at least 54 MRC supporters were arrested next to the Constitutional Council in Yaoundé during pre-election dispute hearings, according to Tiakouang. All of them are now on bail.

Twenty-three are facing prosecution for allegedly inciting revolt and disturbing public order, and if convicted face several years in prison.

Amnesty’s Marceau Sivieude says the arrests point to “an alarming crackdown on freedom of expression and peaceful assembly in Cameroon” and that the charges should be dropped. 

He says the alarming trend is only likely to intensify as the elections get closer.

“In recent years, anyone who dares criticise the authorities, whether a human rights defender, a journalist, a political activist or a protester, runs the risk of being arbitrarily arrested and detained, tortured or otherwise ill-treated, and tried by military courts. Unfortunately, this trend increases as the presidential election approaches. This travesty of justice must end,” he says.


FRANCE – CULTURE

Pompidou Centre in Paris closes until 2030 for extensive renovations

One of Paris’s most iconic landmarks – and home to Europe’s largest modern art collection – is about to draw its shutters for a five-year makeover. However, the masterpieces will continue to be exhibited across France and abroad through temporary shows and loans.

The Pompidou Centre, with its brightly coloured pipes, external escalators and unmistakably futuristic silhouette, will close its doors to the public on Monday 22 September for a €460 million overhaul that promises to reimagine the building from top to bottom.

Since opening in 1977, the Pompidou has become as famous for its radical architecture as for the treasures inside.

Conceived by Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers, the building flipped convention on its head, with structural guts and service ducts proudly displayed on the outside.

It earned a number of nicknames over the years including “Notre-Dame des Tuyaux” or “Our Lady of the Pipes”, the “Gasworks” and “The Shack”.

Its boldness – named in tribute to former French president Georges Pompidou, who died in office three years before the centre’s inauguration – was initially divisive.

But over the years it has cemented its place in Parisian life, drawing millions annually who come to marvel at masterpieces by the likes of Francis Bacon, Frida Kahlo, Niki de Saint Phalle and Marcel Duchamp, or simply to ride the snaking escalators for panoramic city views.

The permanent collection has already been off-limits since March, as specialists began carefully removing priceless works for safekeeping.

Temporary exhibitions have kept the spirit alive, but the final curtain will fall on Monday evening with a closing-night retrospective of German photographer Wolfgang Tillmans.

To soften the blow, the centre will stay open until 11pm, with free entry for all.

And while the building itself will fall silent for years, the Pompidou Centre has set up the “Constellations” programme, establishing key partnerships to ensure its collections remain accessible during the renovation work over the years to come.

One of those partners is the Grand Palais in Paris, which will host all of the Pompidou Centre’s temporary exhibitions until 2030.

A new branch of the Pompidou Centre is set to welcome visitors at the end of 2026 in Massy, in the greater Paris region. Its aim is to attract a wide range of visitors to a new site half an hour from Paris, where there’s enough space to restore artworks and to stage exhibitions and events.

Paris reopens playful Stravinsky Fountain, back in motion after major facelift

The state of Paris’ museums

The Pompidou’s renovation comes as Paris takes a hard look at its cultural heavyweights.

Earlier this year, the Louvre’s director issued a stark warning about leaks, queues and creeping neglect at the world’s most-visited museum.

President Emmanuel Macron quickly weighed in with promises of a sweeping renovation programme there too – price tag: up to €800 million.

For the Pompidou Centre, the to-do list is equally ambitious. Asbestos removal, accessibility upgrades, tighter security and a complete interior rethink are all part of the plan.

Paris to close iconic Pompidou Centre for five-year facelift

Who’s footing the bill?

The centre’s president, Laurent Le Bon, says the changes will also tackle climate concerns, with new waterproofing and insulation expected to slash energy bills by 40 percent.

“We’re keeping the exterior framework, but from the basement to the top floor, we’re changing everything,” he told reporters, hinting at a panoramic terrace on the seventh floor with knockout views across Paris. “We hope that visitors will feel a bit of the same shock as when the Centre opened in 1977.”

The French state is covering the lion’s share, with €280 million pledged.

A further €100 million has already been secured from other sources, including a sizeable €50 million contribution from Saudi Arabia, leaving around €80 million still to raise over the next five years.

If all goes to plan, the Pompidou Centre will reopen in 2030 – refreshed, revitalised and ready to wow a new generation.


Middle-East

UK, Australia, and Canada recognise Palestinian state, angering Israel

The UK, Australia, and Canada on Sunday recognised a Palestinian state in a coordinated, historic shift in decades of Western foreign policy, triggering swift anger from Israel

Portugal was also set to recognise Palestinian statehood later Sunday, with other countries, including France, due to follow Monday at the annual UN General Assembly opening in New York.

Israel has come under huge international pressure over its war against Hamas in Gaza launched in the wake of the October 7, 2023 militant attack, which has sparked a dire humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian territory.

Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu denounced the statehood moves and vowed “it will not happen. No Palestinian state will be established west of the Jordan River.”

He slammed the move as “absurd” and said it would “endanger” Israel’s existence, later vowing to expand Jewish settlements in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Belgium to join France and other countries to recognise Palestinian state

Netanyahu spoke after UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Britain was formally recognising the State of Palestine “to revive the hope of peace for the Palestinians and Israelis, and a two-state solution”.

The UK and Canada became the first members of the Group of Seven advanced economies to take the step, with Australia following suit.

Three-quarters of UN members now recognise Palestinian statehood, with at least 144 of the 193 member countries having taken the step, according to an AFP tally.

Canada “offers our partnership in building the promise of a peaceful future”, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney wrote on X.

Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the move “recognises the legitimate and long held aspirations of the people of Palestine to a state of their own”.

Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas hailed the recognitions as “an important and necessary step toward achieving a just and lasting peace”.

It is a watershed moment for Palestinians and their ambitions for statehood, with the most powerful Western nations having long argued it should only come as part of a negotiated peace deal with Israel.

Although a largely symbolic move, it puts those countries at odds with the United States and Israel.

France’s Macron repeats warning on Netanyahu’s military plan for Gaza

US President Donald Trump said last week after talks with Starmer during a state visit to the UK that “one of our few disagreements” was over Palestinian statehood.

And French President Emmanuel Macron insisted in an interview with a US television network that releasing the hostages captured in 2023 would be “a requirement very clearly before opening, for instance, an embassy in Palestine”.

‘Special burden’

A growing number of longtime Israeli allies have shifted their long-held positions as Israel has intensified its Gaza offensive, which began almost two years ago with Hamas’s 2023 attack.

The Gaza Strip has suffered vast destruction, with a growing international outcry over the besieged coastal territory’s spiralling death toll and a UN-declared famine.

The UK government has come under increasing public pressure to act, with thousands of people rallying every month on the streets. A poll released by YouGov on Friday showed two-thirds of British people aged 18-25 supported Palestinian statehood.

Macron warns on Israeli TV that Gaza war is ‘destroying Israel’s credibility’

Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy had said at the United Nations in July that “Britain bears a special burden of responsibility to support the two-state solution”.

 The UK was pivotal in laying the groundwork for the creation of the State of Israel through the 1917 Balfour Declaration.

Starmer said on Sunday that Britain was acting “in the face of the growing horror in the Middle East”.

He renewed calls for a ceasefire and again demanded Hamas release its remaining hostages.

Branding Hamas a “brutal terror organisation”, Starmer also confirmed plans to bolster sanctions on the militants, denying recognition was a “reward”.

(with newswires)


FRANCE – PALESTINE

Macron says embassy in Palestine will open only after release of hostages

France’s planned recognition of a Palestinian state will not include the opening of an embassy until Hamas frees the hostages it is holding in Gaza, President Emmanuel Macron said in an interview that aired on Sunday in the United States.

“It will be, for us, a requirement very clearly before opening, for instance, an embassy in Palestine,” Macron told CBS News in an interview that was recorded on Thursday.

The comments emerged as leaders of Britain, Australia and Canada announced they would formally recognise a Palestinian state at the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on social media: “Today, to revive the hope of peace for the Palestinians and Israelis, and a two-state solution, the United Kingdom formally recognises the State of Palestine.”

Mark Carney, the Canadian premier, said: “Canada recognises the State of Palestine and offers our partnership in building the promise of a peaceful future.”

His Australian counterpart, Anthony Albanese, said Canberra’s move “recognises the legitimate and long held aspirations of the people of Palestine to a state of their own”.

Portugal was also set to recognise Palestinian statehood.

British PM Starmer says UK to recognise Palestinian state at UN General Assembly

Displacement plans

Macron also spoke out against any plans to displace Palestinians from Gaza – which they want to be part of a future sovereign state – when rebuilding the territory.

“But if the precondition of such a plan is to push them out, this is just a craziness,” Macron said on “Face the Nation.”

“We should not be – for the credibility of the United States, for the credibility of France – we cannot be implicitly or explicitly complacent with such a project.”

Mahmud Mardaw, a senior Hamas official, hailed the move to recognise a Palestinian state.

“These developments represent a victory for Palestinian rights and the justice of our cause,” he told the French news agency AFP.

“And it sends a clear message: no matter how far the occupation goes in its crimes, it will never be able to erase our national rights.

In a communique issued on Sunday, Hamas said the recognition must be accompanied by “practical measures”.

These, it said, should include an immediate halt to “the genocidal war being waged against our people in the Gaza Strip and confronting the ongoing annexation and judaisation projects in the West Bank and Jerusalem.” 

Macron warns on Israeli TV that Gaza war is ‘destroying Israel’s credibility’

Israeli reaction

The roster of countries stating their intention to recognise a Palestinian state brought an angry response from Israeli politicians.

Isaac Herzog, Israel’s president, said the acknowledgement would be detrimental ntal to those seeking peace between Israelis and Palestinians.

“It will not help one Palestinian, it won’t help free one hostage,” said Herzog in a statement. “And it will not help us reach any settlement between Israelis and Palestinians.

“It will only embolden the forces of darkness. This is a sad day for those who seek true peace.”

In a message addressed to Starmer, Albanese and Carney, the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said there would be no Palestinian state.

 “I have a clear message for those leaders who recognise a Palestinian state after the horrific massacre on October 7: you are granting a huge reward to terror,” he said.

“And I have another message for you: it will not happen. No Palestinian state will be established west of the Jordan River.”

Flotilla bound for Gaza finally sets sail amid escalating Israeli strikes

‘One-sided recognition’

Before Netanyahu’s statement, Israel’s foreign ministry rejected what it called the “one-sided” recognition of a Palestinian state.

“This declaration does not promote peace, but on the contrary further destabilises the region and undermines the chances of achieving a peaceful solution in the future,” it added.

“Instead, if the countries that signed this declaration truly wish to stabilise the region, they should focus on pressuring Hamas to release the hostages and to disarm immediately.

“The declaration not only rewards the biggest massacre of Jews since the Holocaust by a terror organisation that is calling and acting for the annihilation of Israel, but also solidifies the support Hamas enjoys.

 “This move goes against all logic of negotiation and reaching a compromise between two sides, and it will push the desired peace further away,” the ministry said.

“In any case, Israel will not accept any detached and imaginary text that attempts to force it to accept indefensible borders,” it added.

In an effort to seize Gaza City, the territory’s largest urban centre, the Israeli military has recently intensified its air assaults and launched a major ground offensive.

RSF says journalists ‘targeted’ in Israeli strike on Gaza hospital

Efforts to flee Gaza City

So far more than 550,000 people have fled the city and moved southward, the military said on Sunday.

On Sunday, at least 32 people were killed in Gaza City in Israeli strikes, according to the territory’s civil defence agency, a rescue force operating under Hamas authority.

Mohammed Abu Khousa, a resident of Deir el-Balah, told AFP that he hoped that other countries would also follow the lead of Britain, Canada and Australia in recognising a Palestinian state.

“It chips away at Israel’s legitimacy and gives our cause a new spark of hope,” he said. “This could push more countries to recognise us, and hopefully bring an end to the war.”

The war in Gaza was sparked by Hamas’s attack on Israel on 7 October 2023.

 The assault resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people on the Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

During the raid, Palestinian militants also took 251 hostages, of which 47 still remain in Gaza, including 25 the Israeli military says are dead.

Israel’s retaliatory military response has left at least 65,000 people dead in Gaza, ccording to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry, figures which the United Nations finds reliable.


2025 road world championsiips

Reusser and Evenepoel take first titles at world cycling championships in Kigali

Switzerland’s Marlen Reusser and Remco Evenepoel from Belgium won the first titles at the 2025 world road race championships in Kigali with victories respecitvely in the elite womne’s and men’s individual time trials (ITT).

Reusser completed the 31.2 kilometre course between the BK Arena in Kigali and the Kigali Convention Centre in 43 minutes and nine seconds.

Anna van der Breggen from the Netherlands was second – 52 seconds behind – and her Dutch compatriot Demi Vollering was third.

Although she has won golds in team events, Reusser, who turned 34 on Saturday, had never brandished an ITT.

“I can almost not believe it,” she said. “I know it’s real and it happened but I tried so many times and it didn’t work out. And now I made it and it’s really special, but it was such an effort.”

The world title caps an impressive season for Reusser who joined the Movistar team last winter. She won the Tour of Burgos in May and in June claimed the Tour of Switzerland for the second time.

“I went really hard on the climbs,” she said. “Then the final climb, maybe even I went too hard in the beginning, so I was full of lactic acid but I think it was the right way to pace it and I think also I have an advantage, I’m quite a heavy rider, so without a lot of effort, I still go down pretty fast, and then I can put all my effort in the climb. So I did this, and it was super hard. It was so hard. But yeah, I made it.”

Kigali hosts historic first road world cycling championships in Africa

First championships in Africa

In a salute to the first staging of the road world championships in Africa, Rwanda’s Xaverine Nirere was the first of 44 competitors to start the course from inside the BK Arena.

She finished 27th, almost seven minutes behind Reusser.

For the third consecutive year, Evenepoel won the men’s event.

The 25-year-old dominated at 40.6-kilometre stretch between the same venues as the women’s race in 49 minutes, 46.03 seconds.

Jay Vine from Australia was second, 74 seconds off the pace and Ilan van Wilder from Belgium was third.

At last year’s Olympics in Paris, Evenepoel became the first rider to win the time trial and the road race at the same Games.

He will be seeking to reproduce such pyrotechnics when he competes in next Sunday’s 267km road race, where defending champion Tadej Pogacar is the hot favourite.

“I was on great form today,” beamed Evenepoel. “I hope I feel like this again next Sunday.”

The victory in Kigali, following last year’s triumph in Zurich and glory in Glasgow in 2023, allows him to emulate Tony Martin, Fabian Cancellara and Michael Rogers as the only riders to have brandished the world championships ITT crown at least three times.


WORLD ALZHEIMER’S DAY

World Alzheimer’s Day: Is France’s once world-renowned care falling behind?

France was once a pioneer of Alzheimer’s care, but as the number of sufferers continues to rise and budgets are cut, the country is now struggling to tackle what is one of the world’s most pressing public health crises.

Approximately 1.4 million people in France are affected by Alzheimer’s disease and related disorders – amounting to 8 percent of people over 65.

Around 225,000 new cases are diagnosed each year, with the disease representing 70 percent of all age-related neurocognitive disorders.

By 2050, an estimated 2.2 million people in the country are expected to be living with the disease, out of a population of 68 million.

“Cognitive disorders are now the leading cause of loss of autonomy in France,” said Lorène Gilly from France Alzheimer, the country’s leading patient advocacy organisation for the disease. “We must be able to respond to this major public health challenge.”

Budget cuts

France established itself as a global leader in Alzheimer’s policy through groundbreaking national plans launched in the early 2000s.

The 2008-2012 Alzheimer Plan, featuring 46 measures and a €1.6 billion budget, was “recognised worldwide and is still cited as an example internationally,” according to Gilly.

The plan created specialised Alzheimer teams and established a comprehensive network of Centres de mémoires (memory centres) and expert centres.

But momentum has slipped. The 2014-2019 neurodegenerative diseases plan contained “more than double the measures of the Alzheimer plan for a third of its budget,” explained Gilly.

Insufficient resources have also slowed down access to the system, she says. “You have to wait between six and 12 months now to get on to the pathway to care. That’s too long for a neurodegenerative disease.” 

Progress in treatment and diagnosis

Early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s is key to slowing its progression. Progress in that regard has been made thanks to biomarkers – proteins in spinal fluid – and PET scans showing amyloid plaques, both of which enable earlier, more accurate diagnosis. 

Specialist centres such as the ICM in Paris and others in Montpellier, Bordeaux, Toulouse, Strasbourg and Lille are particularly strong in this field, said Dr Rémy Genthon, head of research at the Alzheimer Research Foundation.

This breakthrough has revolutionised clinical trials. “We can now make studies a bit more interesting because we conduct clinical studies on patients that we know have the right amyloid target,” said Genthon.

Freedom, dignity in French Alzheimer’s ‘village’

There is still no cure for Alzheimer’s, but hopes are high for new treatments – namely the drugs Leqembi and Donanemab, the first disease-modifying drugs for Alzheimer’s disease.

Rather than merely treating symptoms, they target the underlying amyloid plaques believed to cause the disease, offering a 30 percent reduction in disease progression for patients treated early, said Genthon.

“Imagine someone who is 70 years old starting the disease. If you remove 30 percent of its progression, they might gain two or three years of being better, of being able to talk to their grandchildren… be a real grandfather rather than a mummy in a chair.”

Already approved in the United States and by the European Union’s European Medicines Agency, Germany and Austria have recently given Leqembi the green light, but France declined to.

Earlier this month the country’s High Authority for Health (HAS) refused early access to Leqembi, citing “very insufficient benefits” against “significant side effects,” including risks of brain haemorrhages and oedema.

“It’s tragic, a catastrophe for the entire medical community,” said Genthon.

He acknowledges the gravity of potential side effects but maintains that they remain rare. For him the decision contradicts European approval and relegates France to a “little Gallic village saying no” whilst other countries move forward.

He also points to a culture of “Alzheimer-denial”, where some still see the disease as basically dementia and therefore “not worth making a fuss about”.

France’s law to ensure people ‘age well’ falls short of expectations

Budget crisis

Research into Alzheimer’s disease remains severely underfunded. Cancer research receives 100 times more funding, according to Genthon.

It’s a situation that is unlikely to improve given France’s huge budget deficit, and the resulting need to find €44 billion in savings for next year.

Genthon fears the decision to refuse authorising Leqembi was driven by cost concerns rather than clinical merit. The country’s “dramatic economic situation” has made authorities “even more cautious” about such expensive treatments, he said.

He raised the prospect of a two-tier system, in which private clinics in France would import the drug from Germany and provide it to their fee-paying patients.

Gilly, meanwhile, points to chronic underfunding of the healthcare system as a whole, which is resulting in stark geographical inequalities. Rural areas are particularly underserved, creating additional burdens for family carers.

“You’re better off having the disease diagnosed in one territory rather than another,” she said, adding that France Alzheimer’s network of 102 departmental organisations sees these disparities first-hand.

The organisation’s goal is for all of France’s nursing homes to be equipped with a specialised Alzheimer’s unit – currently, only 26 percent are.

Abuse of elderly and disabled in France has increased during Covid-19 pandemic: Report

International pressure

Specialised units are particularly critical for younger Alzheimer’s sufferers. When you’ve been diagnosed at the age of 42, Gilly says, “it’s troubling to be told that the only solution is to go to a nursing home”.

While France had built excellent foundations, she added, it “left them aside for far too long” as patient numbers increased. This has resulted in “very big problems at every stage of the care pathway”.

Alzheimer France’s volunteers support families who are left to do the caring when there is no available place in a specialised unit, but Gilly warns the system is under great strain. “We can no longer consider carers as the moving part in a public policy struggling to respond to this challenge.”

As France prepares to host the 37th International Alzheimer’s Disease Conference in Lyon next April, advocates hope international pressure will galvanise politicians.

The new 2025-2030 Alzheimer’s strategy has ambitious goals, including making France “the world leader in terms of innovation and research”.

For Gilly’s part, she says: “We’re going to be very watchful regarding its deployment, the timeline, and the budget dedicated to implementing each measure.”


France

French economist Zucman and billionaire Arnault trade barbs over wealth tax plan

A French economist behind a wealth tax plan on Sunday hit back at the country’s richest person who claimed the academic wanted to destroy the French economy.

With France under pressure to reduce its €44 billion debt pile and budget deficit, Gabriel Zucman has suggested that the ultra-rich pay at least a 2 percent tax on their fortune.

“This is clearly not a technical or economic debate, but rather a clearly stated desire to destroy the French economy,” said Bernard Arnault in a statement to the British newspaper The Sunday Times.

 Arnault, whose family fortune is estimated at $157 billion by Forbes, described Zucman as “first and foremost a far-left activist … who puts at the service of his ideology … a pseudo-academic competence that is itself widely debated”.

Zucman says his plan could raise around €20 billion euros per year from 1,800 households.

“We can have fundamental disagreements, and Arnault is entitled, like all citizens, to his opinions. But this debate must take place with respect for the truth and the facts,” Zucman told the French news agency AFP.

Attac activists give black marks to LVMH and other ‘shameless billionaires’

International posts   

 Zucman, who has held academic posts in London, the United States and Paris, said: “Mr Arnault is wrong to question my professional qualifications by referring to me as having ‘pseudo-academic competence.'”

He compared such statements to the language used by President Donald Trump and his allies in the US where concern is growing over academic freedoms.

“With the rise of Trumpism, I have seen this rhetoric flourish, denigrating knowledge and research in the United States,” warned Zucman.

Zucman, a professor at France’s École Normale Supérieure and the University of California, Berkeley, rejected the accusations of political partisanship.

“I’ve never been an activist for any movement or party,” he said on social media, adding his work was grounded in research, not ideology.

 

No business like shoe business: LVMH-backed tycoon buys Birkenstock

Political support

The 38-year-old received support from left-wing leaders who expressed shock at the comments from 76-year-old Arnault whose LVMH conglomerate includes brands such as Louis Vuitton, Dior and Moet Hennessy. 

Socialist Party leader Olivier Faure wrote on social media: “What destroys our economy and even more so our society is the absence of any form of patriotism on the part of the ultra-rich who beg for help from the state but refuse to submit to any form of solidarity.”

Greens leader, Marine Tondelier, said: “We’re close to the goal and he’s getting nervous.”

But Zucman came under fire from the right where politicians fear that such a scheme would drive the wealthy to flee France.

“Zucman’s tax idea is intellectually very weak,” said Jean-Philippe Tanguy, an MP for the Rassemblement National during an interview on Sunday  with France Inter and franceinfo TV.

“When you look at the work that has been done on tax justice and the increase in income and wealth inequality since the opening of the capital markets in the 1980s and 1990s and the unfortunate globalisation, to say that the outcome of this reflection is to target the richest – those with more than €100 million in assets – and impose a 2 percent tax, seems to me to be a very simplistic solution, a bit like a slogan.” 

(With newswires)


GUINEA – REFERENDUM

Guinea votes on new constitution as junta leader eyes presidency

A long-awaited constitutional referendum gets under way in Guinea on Sunday, and is set to test whether the country is moving towards democracy or further entrenching military rule.

Four years after a coup upended Guinea’s fragile democracy, the country is heading to the polls.

On Sunday, more than 6.7 million registered voters will have their say on a draft constitution which promises to clear the way for long-awaited elections – but also opens the door for the country’s strongman, General Mamady Doumbouya, to run for president.

For many Guineans, this referendum is about more than constitutional clauses and legal frameworks.

It will be the first nationwide ballot since 2021, when Doumbouya toppled elected president Alpha Condé and installed himself at the helm of the resource-rich but poverty-stricken nation.

Hopes of a return to civilian rule soon faded as the junta banned protests, silenced its critics and suspended opposition parties.

Guinea’s junta sets September vote on new constitution after missed deadline

‘A dynamic of change’

The draft text, containing 199 articles, carries the title A New Constitution – a Constitution that Reflects Us and Unites Us.

It posits that a High Court of Justice would be set up to try presidents and ministers, plus a Senate to balance the power of the National Assembly, and suggests a mandatory quota of 30 percent women in decision-making posts to boost gender parity.

Prime Minister Amadou Oury Bah is keen to present the charter as a vehicle for national renewal. “Guinea aspires to a dynamic of change and unity,” he told reporters, adding that the reforms address decades of civic and political demands.

But there are some provisions that critics say are tilted firmly in Doumbouya’s favour, notably the absence of the transition charter stipulation barring junta leaders from contesting elections.

The main opposition coalition, Forces Vives de Guinée, has denounced this as a direct violation of Article 46 of the Transitional Charter.

In addition, the age and residency rules which state that candidates must be aged between 40 and 80 and living in Guinea effectively bar Condé, now 87 and living in exile in Istanbul, and 73-year-old former prime minister Cellou Dalein Diallo, who is also living abroad, from taking part.

When he first seized power, Doumbouya promised he would not cling to it. However, posters of the general dominate Conakry’s streets, football matches have been organised in his honour, and ministers have fanned out across the country to campaign for a “yes” vote.

Asked directly whether Doumbouya would run for the presidency, Prime Minister Bah replied: “Why not? Any citizen who meets the minimum criteria can stand.” 

Avoidance tactic

The referendum comes amid mounting international pressure from Western powers and the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) for a return to civilian rule.

Guinea’s junta failed to meet a transition deadline set for the end of 2024, which had been agreed with Ecowas.

While no new sanctions have been announced since those imposed by Ecowas in 2022 were lifted in 2024, the West African bloc is among the international organisations that have repeatedly raised concerns about Guinea’s failure to meet transition deadlines, and its clampdowns on opposition figures.

According to Franklin Nossiter of the International Crisis Group, the junta’s pushing through of a constitutional vote before announcing a timeline for elections “looks like movement, but it’s really a way of avoiding the hard deadline of elections”.

He added: “Although when he took power Mamady Doumbouya was very clear that he was not going to hold on to power… it seems pretty clear [a run for office is] the direction where things are going.”

Bah insists presidential and legislative elections will happen before the end of 2025, although no dates have been set.

Guinea opposition groups challenge military rule after missed deadline

A silenced opposition

The opposition is calling for a boycott of the referendum, branding the exercise a power grab in disguise. On Monday, exiled opposition leader Diallo urged Guineans to abstain from voting in what he called a “masquerade”.

The opposition’s campaign, however, is barely visible. Demonstrations have been banned since 2022, and three of the country’s main opposition parties were suspended in August. Several prominent figures are either behind bars, in exile or have simply disappeared.

Human rights groups say Guinea is living under a blanket of silence, with journalists harassed and media outlets shut down. According to Reporters Without Borders, the banning of broadcasters “has created a media vacuum, silencing dissenting voices in Guinea”.

Bah has brushed off such concerns, telling French news agency AFP that some opponents are trying to destabilise the country and that the government is acting in a “fragile context” to maintain “national security” and protect the “major interests of the country”.

Bah added that he did “not deny” the disappearance of opposition figures, but said he hopes those missing are “alive and well”.

(with AFP)

International report

Turkey opposition faces wave of arrests and court fight over leadership

Issued on:

The legal noose is tightening around Turkey’s main opposition party, with waves of arrests targeting mayors and local officials. But the troubles of the Republican People’s Party (CHP) could deepen further, as a court case threatens the removal of its leadership.

“We are fighting for the future of Turkey‘s democracy,” said party leader Ozgur Ozel to tens of thousands of supporters at a rally in Ankara on Saturday.

Ozel has been travelling the country since March, when Istanbul mayor Ekrem Imamoglu was arrested on graft charges. The case marked the start of a legal assault on the CHP. Ozel now speaks at rallies twice a week, despite his often hoarse voice.

The party is also defending itself in court over alleged voting irregularities at a congress two years ago that elected Ozel as leader. If the court rules against them, Ozel and the rest of the party leadership could be removed and replaced by state-appointed trustees.

“It’s unprecedented,” said political analyst Sezin Oney of the Politics news portal. “There has not been such a purge, such a massive crackdown on the opposition, and there is no end in sight, that’s the issue.”

Macron and Erdogan find fragile common ground amid battle for influence

Arrests and polls

On Wednesday, another CHP mayor in Istanbul was jailed, bringing the total to 16 detained mayors and more than 300 other officials. Most face corruption charges.

The arrests come as the CHP’s new leadership is stepping up its challenge to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Recent opinion polls give Imamoglu and other CHP figures double-digit leads over the president.

Oney said the prosecutions are part of Erdogan’s wider strategy.

“He’s trying to complete the transformation, the metamorphosis as I call it, of Turkey to become a full authoritarian country,” she said.

“There is an opposition but the opposition is a grotesque opposition, that can never have the power actually to be in government. But they give the perception as if the country is democratic because there are elections.”

Armenia and Azerbaijan peace deal raises hopes of Turkish border reopening

‘Multi-front attack’

Ilhan Uzgel, the CHP’s foreign affairs coordinator, said the party is under siege.

“We are under a multi-front attack from all directions at almost every level, running from one court case to another,” he said.

He argued that Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) is using fear to force defections. “Sixteen of our mayors are in jail right now, and they threaten our mayors. You either join our party or you face a jail term,” Uzgel said.

Erdogan rejects any suggestion of coercion and insists the judiciary is independent. Since he came to power more than 20 years ago, however, not a single AKP mayor has been convicted on graft charges – though on Friday at least two local mayors from the ruling party were detained as part of a corruption investigation.

Turkey warns Kurdish-led fighters in Syria to join new regime or face attack

Political risks

Despite appearing dominant, Erdogan may face a backlash. Atilla Yesilada, a political analyst with Global Source Partners, said the crackdown is fuelling public anger.

“You look at recent polls, the first complaint remains economic conditions, but justice rose to number two. These things don’t escape people’s notice; that’s what I mean when I say Erdogan took a huge political risk with his career,” he said.

Erdogan currently trails behind several potential challengers, but elections are still more than two years away.

Yesilada said much depends on the stance of Erdogan’s ally Devlet Bahceli, leader of the Nationalist Movement Party.

“It’s quite possible at some point, Bahceli will say enough is enough, you are destroying the country, and may also end the coalition,” he said.

Bahceli formed an informal alliance with Erdogan in 2018, when Turkey switched to a presidential system. Erdogan relies on Bahceli’s parliamentary deputies to pass constitutional reforms needed to secure another term.

Bahceli has voiced concern about the pressure on the CHP, which has been trying to win his support. But with the court expected to rule next month on the party’s leadership, the CHP says it will keep fighting.

“The only thing that we can do is rely on our people, our electorate, and the democratic forces in the country. We are not going to give up,” said Uzgel.

The Sound Kitchen

There’s Music in the Kitchen, No 42

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This week on The Sound Kitchen, a special treat: Musical choices from The Sound Kitchen team!  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 Erwan, Paul, and me.

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: “Picadillo de Soya” by José Luis Cortés, performed by José Luis Cortés and NG La Banda; “Electricity” by Paul Humphreys and Andrew McCluskey, performed by Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, and “One Life to Live” from Lady in the Dark by Kurt Weill and Ira Gershwin, performed by Teresa Stratas with the Y Chamber Symphony conducted by Gerard Schwarz.

The quiz will be back next Saturday, the 27th of September. Be sure and tune in! 

Spotlight on Africa

Spotlight on Africa: Cameroon votes, Niger Delta oil pollution, South Africa – US ties

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In this episode of Spotlight in Africa, we discuss the forthcoming presidential election in Cameroon, before turning our attention to Nigeria. We also explore ways to strengthen relations between South Africa and the United States, with a particular focus on improving conditions for seasonal migrant workers.

Cameroonians are set to go to the polls for the presidential election on 12 October, but the opposition remains fragmented, despite efforts to unite behind a single candidate to challenge President Paul Biya, who, at 92, is seeking an eighth term.

In the first week of September, the United Nations raised concerns over whether rising tensions in the country could jeopardise the possibility of free and fair elections.

According to Enrica Picco, Central Africa director for the International Crisis Group (ICG), this lack of unity, combined with the perception of an absent or weak opposition, could lead to low voter turnout. The ICG also warns that ongoing instability in the country may further depress participation.

On Saturday, Issa Tchiroma Bakary was named the opposition’s “consensus candidate” for the October vote. But will this be enough to galvanise voters?

The 10 other opposition candidates, who remain officially in the race, have yet to comment on Tchiroma Bakary’s appointment.

We have Enrica Picco on the line to discuss the potential flashpoints and the ICG’s recommendations ahead of the election.

Fears over divided opposition and instability, as Cameroon heads to the polls

 Oil pollution in Nigeria

In Nigeria, major oil companies are facing allegations that they have abandoned decades of pollution in the Niger Delta without addressing the environmental damage.

A UN-appointed panel of experts has written to Shell, Eni, ExxonMobil and TotalEnergies, warning that the firms cannot simply sell off their assets to evade their responsibilities to local communities.

We’ll hear the reaction of community member Celestine AkpoBari, an Ogoni-born activist who coordinates the Ogoni Solidarity Forum and leads the Miideekor Environmental Development Initiative (MEDI).

Oil giants accused of dodging Niger Delta clean-up as UN panel intervenes

South Africa and the US

Finally, in South Africa, since Donald Trump assumed office in the United States, companies, business leaders and diplomats have been working behind the scenes to strengthen relations, particularly for the hundreds of South African seasonal farmers who spend a few months each year in the US to supplement their income.

One prominent advocate for these farmers is Neil Diamond, president of the South African Chamber of Commerce in the US, based in Atlanta.

We discuss the importance of these work opportunities in the US for South Africans, as well as the final three months of South Africa’s G20 presidency — a historic first for an African nation.


Episode mixed by Melissa Chemam and Erwan Rome.

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

The Sound Kitchen

There’s Music in the Kitchen, No 41

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 Ali Shahzad, Jocelyne D’Errico, and a composition by B. Trappy.  

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: “Love is Stronger”, written and performed by B. Trappy; “Coups et Blessures” written by Adrien Gallo and performed by BB Brunes, and “Misty”, by Erroll Garner and Johnny Burke, performed by Sarah Vaughan with Quincy Jones and His Orchestra.

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!

International report

Macron and Erdogan find fragile common ground amid battle for influence

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Following years of tension, the presidents of Turkey and France are finding new areas of cooperation. Ukraine is at the centre of this shift, but the Palestinian territories, the Caucasus and Africa are also emerging as shared priorities. However, analysts warn that serious differences remain, making for an uneasy partnership.

French President Emmanuel Macron is pushing for the creation of a military force to secure any peace deal made between Russia and Ukraine.

Turkey, which boasts NATO’s second-largest army, is seen as a key player in any such move – especially given that Washington has ruled out sending US troops.

For its part, Ankara has said it is open to joining a peacekeeping mission.

“Macron finally came to terms [with the fact] that Turkey is an important player, with or without the peace deal. Turkey will have an important role to play in the Black Sea and in the Caucasus,” said Serhat Guvenc, professor of international relations at Istanbul’s Kadir Has University.

Macron last month held a lengthy phone call with his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, focused on the Ukraine conflict, and thanked him for his diplomatic efforts to end the war.

Turkey eyes Ukraine peacekeeping role but mistrust clouds Western ties

Turning point

For Professor Federico Donelli of Trieste University, this marks a dramatic turnaround. Previously, the two leaders have frequently exchanged sharp words, especially over Turkey’s rising influence in West Africa and the Sahel.

“In Paris, public opinion and the press criticised this move by Turkey a lot,” said Donelli. “At the same time, the rhetoric of some Turkish officers, including President Erdogan, was strongly anti-French. They were talking a lot about the neocolonialism of France and so on.”

Donelli added that cooperation over Ukraine has pushed France to reconsider its Africa stance.

“As a consequence of Ukraine, the position of France has changed, and they are now more open to cooperating with Turkey. And they [understand] that in some areas, like the Western Sahel, Turkey is better than Russia, better than China,” he said.

Analysts also see new openings in the Caucasus. A peace agreement signed in August between Azerbaijan, which was backed by Turkey, and Armenia, which was supported by France, could provide further common ground.

Macron last month reportedly pressed Erdogan to reopen Turkey’s border with Armenia, which has been closed since 1993. Turkish and Armenian officials met on the countries’ border on Thursday to discuss the normalisation of relations.

Turkey walks a tightrope as Trump threatens sanctions over Russian trade

‘Pragmatic cooperation’

But clear differences remain, especially when it comes to Syria. The rise to power of Turkish-backed President Ahmed al-Sharaa is seen as undermining any French role there.

“For Erdogan, the victory of al-Sharaa in Damascus on 24 December is the revenge of the Ottoman Empire, and Ankara doesn’t want to see the French come back to Syria,” said Fabrice Balanche, a professor of international relations at Lyon University.

Balanche argued that France is losing ground to Turkey across the region.

“It’s not just in Syria, but also in Lebanon – the Turks are very involved, and in Iraq, too. We [the French] are in competition with the Turks. They want to expel France from the Near East,” he said.

Despite this rivalry, Guvenc predicted cooperation will continue where interests align.

“In functional terms, Turkey’s contributions are discussed, and they will do business, but it’s going to be transactional and pragmatic cooperation, nothing beyond that,” he said.

One such area could be the Palestinian territories. Both Macron and Erdogan support recognition of a Palestinian state and are expected to raise the issue at this month’s United Nations General Assembly.

For now, shared interests are likely to outweigh differences – even if only temporarily.

Spotlight on France

Podcast: PM woes, tourists ‘overtake’ Montmartre, when Martinique became French

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As France gets its fifth prime minister in three years, demonstrators who responded to a call to block the country talk about feeling ignored by the government. Residents and business owners in Paris’ picturesque Montmartre neighbourhood hit out at overtourism. And the brutal history of France’s colonisation of the Caribbean island of Martinique, one of five French overseas departments.

For many critics of French President Emmanuel Macron, his nomination of close ally Sebastien Lecornu to replace François Bayrou as prime minister is a slap in the face, and further proof that the government is ignoring people’s wishes.  Participants in a movement to shut down the country on Wednesday talk about feeling unheard, and draw comparisons with the anti-government Yellow Vest movement from 2018-2019. (Listen @0′)

Tourists have long been drawn to the “village” of Montmartre, with its famed Sacre Cœur basilica, artists’ square, winding cobbled streets, vineyards and pastel-shaded houses. But the rise of influencers and instagrammers who post picture-postcard decors, as featured in hit films and Netflix series, have turned it into a must-see destination. With tourists now outnumbering residents by around 430 to one, the cohabitation is under strain. Béatrice Dunner, of the Association for the Defence of Montmartre, is calling on local authorities to follow the example of Amsterdam and tackle overtourism before it’s too late. (Listen @13′)

On 15 September 1635, a group of French colonists claimed the Caribbean island of Martinique, establishing a plantation economy reliant on slavery. Its economic and cultural legacy continues to shape the island today as an overseas department. (Listen @6’35”)

Episode mixed by Cécile Pompeani

Spotlight on France is a podcast from Radio France International. Find us on rfienglish.com, Apple podcasts (link here), Spotify (link here) or your favourite podcast app (pod.link/1573769878).


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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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