rfi 2025-10-05 00:07:35



Oceans

Why Africa’s oceans bear brunt of planet’s environmental crisis

The world’s oceans are bearing the brunt of a triple environmental crisis, according to the European Union’s Earth monitors: global warming, pollution and declining biodiversity. The EU Copernicus programme warns that Africa’s coasts, buffeted by marine heatwaves and rising sea levels, are especially vulnerable.

“The ocean is changing rapidly, with record extremes and worsening impacts,” said Karina von Schuckmann, lead author of the programme’s latest Ocean State Report, which was released this week. 

“This knowledge is not just a warning signal – it is a roadmap for restoring balance between humanity and the ocean.”

The world’s oceans are facing numerous threats: warming waters, rising sea levels and pollution, all of which are contributing to a decline in marine biodiversity.

Surrounded by oceans on two sides, the African continent is particularly affected, explains Simon van Gennip, an oceanographer at French research centre Mercator Ocean International, which contributed to the Copernicus report.

“Like South America, Africa is exposed to different climatic stressors depending on its western and eastern fronts,” he told RFI.

To the north, the Mediterranean is overheating. Between May 2022 and January 2023, surface temperatures rose by up to 4.3 degrees Celsius.

It is experiencing an increase in marine heatwaves – periods of above-average temperatures lasting more than five days in a row.

Stronger, longer heatwaves

In the North Atlantic, which is warming twice as fast as the global average, the waters off Morocco and Mauritania accumulated 300 days of marine heatwaves in 2023.

Mercator counted 250 days of marine heatwaves off the coasts of Senegal and Nigeria.

“We have never seen heatwaves of such intensity, duration and extent,” said van Gennip. “There is no part of the North Atlantic that was not affected by a heatwave in 2023. It is truly extraordinary.”

The phenomenon continued in 2024 and 2025, he noted, adding that new monitoring tools had allowed scientists to form a clearer picture of warming waters.

“We looked beneath the surface and also observed this phenomenon at depths of 50 and 100 metres,” he said.

Warmest oceans in history drive mass bleaching of world’s corals

Researchers are still trying to understand the causes. One suggestion is a dip in vast dust clouds from the Sahara, which can help cool the ocean by reflecting the Sun’s radiation.

“What worries me most is that these marine heatwave episodes are becoming more and more recurrent, stronger and longer. This trend is unsustainable and there is an urgent need for action,” warned van Gennip.

For marine organisms, prolonged thermal stress can lead to problems with growth and reproduction, or even death, he explained.

“Ecosystems are declining or fragmenting as species migrate to more favourable waters. This has consequences for the maritime economy, tourism, fisheries and aquaculture.”

Shrinking habitats

Researchers also investigated changing conditions for micronekton – small organisms that are able to swim independently of ocean currents, such as crustaceans, squid and jellyfish.

These species, ranging in size from 2 to 20 centimetres, are an essential link in the food chain. They feed on smaller zooplankton and in turn form prey for larger predators including tuna, marlins and sharks.

Researchers studied micronekton habitats across the world’s oceans, dividing them into “provinces” with comparable temperature patterns and richness in phytoplankton, the microalgae that constitute the first link in the food chain.

French scientists map plankton, the ocean’s mysterious oxygen factories

Like the Pacific coast of South America, the west coast of Africa is rich in phytoplankton because it is subject to “upwelling”, the rise of cold water that brings nutrients to the surface.

As water temperatures increase, the concentration of phytoplankton decreases, scientists found. African coasts are among the most affected, along with parts of South America.

“We observed, across all oceans, that the most productive provinces – characterised by significant production of phytoplankton and micronekton, such as upwelling regions – decreased in size between 1998 and 2023,” said researcher Sarah Albernhe. 

The regions off the coast of Africa decreased by 20 to 25 percent.

Conversely, warmer habitats that are unfavourable to micronekton have expanded over the past 26 years, Albernhe said. Some have increased by more than 25 percent of their initial size.

At the same time, remaining productive zones are moving towards the poles, where cooler waters can still be found.

The province off the coast of Mauritania – which has shrunk by about 20 percent – has shifted about 2.5 degrees northward, or the equivalent of about 300 kilometres.

Carbon exporters

Over time, these trends could lead to “either the relocation of micronekton populations that follow their preferred habitat to new latitudes, or the extinction of species that can no longer find the habitat that suits them”, Albernhe warned.

“This will have consequences for the food chains that depend on this phytoplankton, and potentially for the structure of the ecosystem.”

Fishing would be affected as boats travel ever further to fish more intensively in smaller areas.

How Europe’s appetite for farmed fish is gutting Gambia’s coastal villages

Micronekton is also a powerful carbon pump. It stores at least 15 to 30 percent of the carbon captured by the ocean, making it the largest CO2 sink on the planet. 

It helps bury carbon deeper in the ocean as organisms swim from the surface, where they feed on smaller prey at night, down to the depths during the day to hide from predators.

As they descend, they deposit excrement, scales or other carbon-laden parts of themselves. “They are responsible for a very high export of carbon to the depths. They really help us regulate the climate,” said Albernhe.

Rising sea levels, acidic oceans

Global warming has also left Africa’s coasts buffeted by fast rising waters.

Due to the Earth’s rotation, “it’s the western edges of the oceans that are generally affected by rising sea levels”, explained oceanographer van Gennip.

“In the case of the African continent, it’s the east coast of Africa – Kenya, Tanzania and Mozambique – that is experiencing a much faster-than-average rise in sea levels.

“The global increase is 3.7mm per year, and in these regions, we see values ​​around 5mm per year.”

The acidity level of oceans has also increased by 30 to 40 percent in the past 150 years, according to the Copernicus report.

In Africa, this trend is especially noticeable in the Indian Ocean, particularly the area south of Madagascar and South Africa, van Gennip said. But waters off Morocco and Mauritania are also registering significant declines in pH.

More acidic waters have direct consequences for corals, havens of vital biodiversity: all African reefs, located mainly around Madagascar and as far as South Africa, are in danger or vulnerable.


This article was adapted from the original in French by Géraud Bosman-Delzons.


INTERVIEW

‘It’s time for this to end’: Israeli mother’s two-year quest to free her son

Nearly 50 people remain hostages of Hamas since being kidnapped in the group’s attacks on Israel in October 2023. With an agreement to free the captives tantalisingly close, RFI spoke to the mother of one of the captives, Viki Cohen, about her nearly two-year crusade to bring her son home.

Cohen’s son Nimrod was 19 years old and performing his military service when he was kidnapped from an Israeli tank on 7 October 2023. 

His mother has become a full-time advocate for him and the other 47 hostages still in Gaza. Her priority is convincing the Israeli authorities to reach a peace agreement and allow the captives to return home.

Speaking to RFI before Hamas said it was prepared to release the hostages under a ceasefire plan drawn up by US President Donald Trump, Cohen described why she believes it’s time for Israel to end the war. 

RFI: There is talk of a US peace plan backed by Donald Trump. Are you optimistic?

Vicky Cohen: Nimrod could already be home if our government had agreed to respect the second phase of the February agreement. But it decided to restart the war. It has been almost two years now and there are still 48 hostages. My son Nimrod is one of them.

We hope that with international pressure, the time has come to end the war. It’s time for our government to agree. Our prime minister must decide whether to listen to what Donald Trump is telling him to do or to follow the extremist members of his coalition and continue to torpedo the agreement. Eighty-four percent of the Israeli population wants the war to end and the hostages to come home.

War isn’t good for anyone. It has caused losses on both sides. It’s not right. It’s better to resolve problems through diplomacy. I think it’s time for this to end. This war serves no purpose.

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How are the authorities supporting you?

Members of the government? None of them contact us! We are the ones who constantly ask to meet with them.

There is a department dedicated to relations with the families of the hostages and people killed. They occasionally send us messages on WhatsApp. The last one arrived when the prime minister decided to attack the Hamas leaders in Doha. So we received a message saying that the prime minister had decided on this strike “because the Hamas leaders are the ones refusing to reach an agreement”. We don’t believe it.

What’s more, I was angry, frustrated, upset, worried. It wasn’t a personal message, just a WhatsApp. It’s a very cold way to communicate.

What are the last images you have of your son?

We received a video in March. It was released by Hamas and we saw Nimrod. His face wasn’t visible, but we recognised him by the tattoo on his arm. We knew immediately that it was him, even before the intelligence services contacted us.

How did you feel at that moment?

It was the first visual sign of life we had received, so I was very excited: to see him standing, to see him moving. I was also very worried about him. I don’t know what his living conditions are like, I just know that he is alive. That’s the only information we have.

Israeli ambassador slams French recognition of Palestine as ‘historic mistake’ on RFI

Where do you stand politically? Before October 7 2023, did you support Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu?

I didn’t support him before, so I don’t support him now. But today it’s different because his decisions have a direct impact on what is most precious to me: my son.

I miss him so much. We will do everything we can to bring him back. I hope he knows that. I will do everything. I will protest, persuade, talk to anyone who can help. I will do everything.

You know, a large part of the population wants the hostages back, but another part thinks it is acceptable to keep the hostages captive until Hamas is defeated. They think it is acceptable to pay the price of those who will be killed. But the majority knows that without the hostages at home, we will have no future as a society sustained by values.

Some sanctify land over life. The most extremist members of the coalition, such as [Minister of National Security] Itamar Ben Gvir, dream of conquering Gaza and rebuilding settlements there. It’s a messianic dream. Is it normal for people to be killed for this dream?

My son is a soldier. He was sent to the border by the government, by the army. He wasn’t there to have fun. He was only protecting. He wasn’t attacking. He was protecting the border and the citizens who live in the kibbutzim near the border. The government has an obligation to bring him home.


This interview was adapted from the original in French by RFI’s Frédérique Misslin. 

International report

Turkey and Egypt’s joint naval drill signals shifting Eastern Med alliances

Issued on:

As efforts continue to resolve Israel’s war in Gaza, the conflict is threatening to destabilise the wider region. A rare joint naval exercise between once-rivals Turkey and Egypt is being seen as a warning to Israel, as long-standing alliances shift and new rival partnerships take shape across the Eastern Mediterranean.

After a 13-year break, Turkish and Egyptian warships last week carried out a major naval drill in the Eastern Mediterranean.

The exercise is the latest step in repairing ties after years of tension that began when Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi ousted Mohamed Morsi, a close ally of Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“It marks the consolidation of the improvement in relations,” said Serhat Guvenc, professor of international relations at Kadir Has University in Istanbul, adding the drill sent “a powerful message to Israel of a new alignment”.

Guvenc said naval drills in the eastern Mediterranean have typically involved Cyprus, Greece and Israel, but this time Egypt broke with those countries, signalling it was no longer part of the anti-Turkey camp in the region.

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Shift in alliances

The Turkish-Egyptian exercise follows years in which Cairo built strong ties with Ankara’s rivals in the region. The shift has not gone unnoticed in Israel.

“Definitely, this is a major event that Turkey and Egypt have conducted a naval exercise after so many years,” said Gallia Lindenstrauss, an Israeli foreign policy specialist at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv.

The joint drill comes as Ankara has expanded and modernised its navy in recent years. Lindenstrauss said this has unsettled some of Turkey’s neighbours, giving Israel common ground with Greece and Cyprus.

“Some of them also have quite big disputes with Turkey, such as Cyprus and Greece,” she said. “Greece and Cyprus relations with Israel have been developing since 2010. We’ve seen a lot of military drills together. We saw weapons procurements between the three actors, and this has been going on for some time. So Israel is not alone.”

Turkey has long-standing territorial disputes with Greece and the Greek Cypriot government in the Aegean and the Mediterranean.

Guvenc said Israel has gained the upper hand over Turkey in their rivalry centred on Cyprus.

“The Greek Cypriots acquired a very important air defence system from Israel and activated it. They made life far more difficult for the Turkish military, in particular for the Turkish Air Force,” he said.

“This gives you an idea about the shifting balance of power in the Eastern Mediterranean as a result of Israel taking sides with Cyprus and Greece.”

Macron and Erdogan find fragile common ground amid battle for influence

Tensions over Gaza

Despite those rivalries, Turkey and Egypt are finding common ground in their opposition to Israel’s war in Gaza and in wider concerns over Israel’s growing regional power.

In September, Sisi reportedly called Israel an enemy.

“There is competition over who is the most dominant and important actor in the Middle East, in the Muslim world in general,” said Lindenstrauss.

“I really can’t imagine a unified Turkish and Egyptian action against Israel. I can imagine them cooperating to pressure Israel to change its position, which is what is happening now.”

Cairo and Ankara remain at odds over Libya, where they back rival governments. But analysts warn that the fallout from the Gaza conflict is increasingly shaping the region’s power calculations.

Guvenc said the outcome of peace efforts could determine the future balance in the Mediterranean.

“We see an alignment of Greece, Greek Cypriots and Israel. But once the Gaza issue is tackled, from an Israeli perspective, Turkey is strategically more important than these two countries,” he said.

“But if the strategic makeup of the region may not secure a solution, we may see deterioration in the general situation. Then outside actors will be invited by one side or the other, such as Russia, China or even India, to further complicate the issue.”


Social isolation

Artists help break the silence around France’s rising scourge of loneliness

Loneliness is a fact of daily life for millions of people in France, with record numbers cut off from friends, family and neighbours. At the Photoclimat Biennale in Paris, organisations working to combat isolation have joined forces with artists to explore the intimate reality of an overlooked problem.

An estimated 750,000 people over 60 are living out what French charity Petits Frères des Pauvres (Little Brothers of the Poor) calls a “social death” – rarely or never seeing a friend, relative, neighbour or community worker.

The figure has soared by 42 percent in the past four years. Previous surveys put it at 530,000 in 2021 and 300,000 in 2017.

The organisation’s president, Anne Géneau, says loneliness and isolation has become far more widespread, affecting all aspects of social life.

In its latest report, published on Tuesday, the charity found that 2.5 million older people feel lonely daily and nearly 6 million say they don’t have anyone to talk to about their feelings.

Beyond family and friends, interactions with local businesses and home professionals such as caregivers or cleaners have also broken down, with 30 percent of seniors reporting less than one exchange per month.

Lasting loneliness

“We thought the worsening observed in 2021 was an accident linked to Covid, which made people withdraw into themselves,” Géneau says, referring to social distancing and lockdowns during the pandemic.

“But that is not the case. We are not back to pre-crisis levels.”

The charity points to a number of other factors behind the figures. Poverty is the main one, affecting 9 percent of those interviewed for the 2025 poll.

There are also a growing number of seniors without children, grandchildren or great-grandchildren.

The impact of lockdown on young people in France, five years after Covid crisis

Augmented reality

Often overlooked, isolation is a striking theme at the Photoclimat Biennale in Paris, an open-air festival that brings together artists and NGOs working to address social issues.

French photographer Sacha Goldberger spent time interviewing seniors who receive help from Petits Frères des Pauvres for his exhibition “Augmented Solitude”. Some of them hadn’t left their apartments in months or even years, he says.

Based on their conversations, he used artificial intelligence to splice together portraits of his subjects with images of someone they’d like to meet or keep them company. Spectators use their smartphones to view the augmented-reality photographs and learn the backstory.

Goldberger says that while the series exploits AI, it also shows that retreating into a virtual universe can be dangerous. “It highlights the vital necessity of human relationships in the digital age to combat isolation,” he says.

Digital isolation

The internet can also be a powerful tool against solitude, for those who can access it.

Despite declining sharply during the Covid crisis, digital isolation – being cut off from online services – is contributing to the loss of social contact.

“While the pandemic may have encouraged and sometimes even ‘forced’ the use of digital tools among elders, the rate of elderly people who never use the internet has risen from 20 percent in 2021 to 27 percent today,” said Quentin Llewellyn of the CSA institute, which carried out the poll.

Some people are sacrificing their internet subscription for financial reasons or fears over cyber security, the CSA observed.

At Photoclimat, painter Bertrand de Miollis focuses on the internet’s power to bring people together.

In collaboration with the Afnic Foundation, which strives to expand access to the internet for all, he created works that celebrate examples of people using technology to find community, stay in touch, learn new skills or explore their creativity.

Zoom on optimism

People living at the intersection of poverty and isolation are particularly in need of help, according to French charity Entourage.

“For the 5 million people who are in precarious situations and the 330,000 people without homes, the chances of getting out of their situation are almost zero,” the NGO says. “These numbers are only increasing.”

It works to promote connections between people who might not necessarily cross paths, in a bid to change the way society sees poverty and social isolation.

Intergenerational living helps relieve isolation for seniors and students

The charity invited Dutch-Croatian photographer Sanja Marusic to take portraits of both volunteers and beneficiaries involved in its social outreach programmes.

She says it was important to inject a touch of fun and colour to the project – to draw out the optimism which can help people feel empowered to make a difference.

“The most important part for me is that there’s no hierarchy [in the photos],” she told RFI. “I love that you don’t really see who is helping who. It can go both ways.”


Photoclimat Biennale is a free, outdoor exhibition in Paris and surrounding suburbs that runs until 12 October.


War in Ukraine

French photojournalist Antoni Lallican killed in Ukraine drone attack

Antoni Lallican, an award-winning French photographer on assignment in Ukraine, died in a drone attack in the eastern Donbas region on Friday, press groups have announced. It is the first time a journalist has been killed by a drone in Ukraine in more than three years of war with Russia.

Lallican, 37, was embedded with a Ukrainian brigade near the front line in Donbas when he was killed in a drone attack on the area, the Ukrainian military said. They attributed the strike to Russia.

A Ukrainian photographer, Georgiy Ivanchenko, was wounded in the same attack. His condition is reported to be stable.

Both were wearing protective equipment marked “Press”, according to the International and European Federations of Journalists, which denounced their deaths as a “war crime”. 

Antoine Chuzeville of the French journalists’ union SNJ called for international measures to protect reporters working in Ukraine.

“This is becoming extremely serious for freedom of information,” he told RFI. “It is absolutely urgent that measures be taken at the level of international law.”

France calls for protection for journalists covering Ukraine conflict

Lallican is the 14th journalist to die while covering the war in Ukraine, Reporters Without Borders said, though some estimates put the number as high as 22.

Three others were also French nationals: Arman Soldin, a video journalist for news agency AFP; Frédéric Leclerc-Imhoff, a reporter for news channel BFMTV; and Pierre Zakrzewski, a cameraman for Fox News.

Sergiy Tomilenko, president of the National Union of Journalists of Ukraine, accused the Russian army of “deliberately hunting those trying to document war crimes”.

Seasoned reporter

French President Emmanuel Macron expressed his “profound sadness” at Lallican’s death in a post on X.

Based in Paris, Lallican reported from countries including Sudan, Haiti, Syria, Lebanon and Israel. 

He travelled to Ukraine regularly and knew the terrain well, according to the Hans Lucas photography agency, for which he was working at the time of his death.

His work appeared in several French and international publications. In 2024, he was awarded the Victor Hugo Prize for Committed Photography for a series on the war in Ukraine titled “Suddenly, the sky darkened”. 


Chad

Chad’s parliament speeds through plan to drop presidential term limits

Lawmakers in Chad have fast-tracked a proposal to allow the president to serve an unlimited number of terms, in a move that the opposition warns opens the door to authoritarianism.

Both houses of parliament passed the reform on Friday, 10 days earlier than originally planned.

The vote means that Chad‘s constitution will be amended to extend the president’s term from five to seven years, renewable without limit. 

The reform was proposed by the ruling Patriotic Salvation Movement (MPS) of President Mahamat Idriss Déby, who seized power in 2021 after the death of his father, long-serving president Idriss Déby Itno

The party used its large majority in parliament to pass the amendment by 236 to 257, a result that it said reflected “an unprecedented political and social consensus”.

Some 21 members of the opposition walked out of the vote in protest. 

Albert Pahimi Padacké, a former prime minister and leading opposition figure, complained that the ballot – initially pencilled for 13 October – had been moved forward at the last minute, a change he said was designed to “bypass legislators and present them with a fait accompli”.

Chad’s move to drop presidential term limits slammed as ‘burial of democracy’

Dynastic rule?

Robert Gam, head of the opposition Socialist Party Without Borders (PSF), claimed the government’s intention “was simply to move toward a dynasty”.

Gam, who now lives in France after being detained for eight months without charge until June of this year, told RFI that the ruling party’s MPs “are there to do the bidding of a dynasty. They simply support the ruling power, which comes as no surprise to us.”

Among other fundamental reforms that will now be signed into law are longer terms for members of parliament, who will now serve six years instead of four, and a new post of deputy prime minister.

Members of the government will also have their immunity from prosecution withdrawn. 

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

The opposition has argued that constitutional amendments should be submitted to a referendum, giving the public a chance to vote as well as lawmakers.

Gam insisted that, after four years of military rule followed by disputed elections that returned Déby and his party to power, popular dissent was mounting. 

“The people of Chad are beginning to wake up,” he said. “They are mobilised. We will fight with every means at our disposal to ensure that Chad can experience an era of true democracy.”


INTERVIEW

Jane Goodall: ‘Every one of us makes a difference – it’s up to us what kind’

Jane Goodall, who died on Wednesday aged 91 in California, transformed how the world sees animals – and helped redefine humanity’s place in nature. RFI’s Alison Hird spoke with Goodall in 2018, when a documentary about her early years in the forest was drawing new attention to her research.

Beginning in 1960, Goodall lived for long periods in what is now Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania, watching wild chimpanzees at close range. She described how they used tools and hunted and their social behaviour, drawing into question the line people drew between humans and other animals.

Goodall went on to become a leading voice for conservation. She founded the Jane Goodall Institute in 1977 to support science and protect great apes and their habitats, then launched Roots & Shoots, a youth programme now active in some 100 countries.

This interview with RFI was recorded around the release of Jane, a documentary directed by Brett Morgen. It shows the young researcher in the forest and reflects on a life built from a childhood dream.

RFI: There have been many documentaries about you. What do you think this one adds to what we know about your work with chimpanzees?

Jane Goodall: It’s completely different to any other documentary in that it’s much more honest. So it basically shows things as they were. I think that Brett Morgen, the director, the way that he’s interspersed interviews with me today with that early footage is amazing. And one of the things that strikes people again and again is there’s a whole long section of Jane on her own in the forest.

And most people don’t even think, well, obviously she wasn’t on her own, she’s being filmed. And yet there’s such an immediacy about it. And even I when I’m watching it, I think yes, that’s how it was. I was alone like that. That’s exactly how it was.

Jane Goodall, pioneering primatologist and voice for wildlife, dies aged 91

RFI: This was in 1960, in Gombe National Park in Tanzania, very close to the border with Burundi. Probably quite a dangerous place to be, so close to chimpanzees. You were a 26-year-old white female. Were you aware of the dangers?

JG: I don’t think it was dangerous at all. First of all, people have said, well, being a woman must have been a disadvantage. Well actually, no, because Tanzania was becoming independent. White males were considered a sort of threat. But a young girl – innocent, defenceless – they wanted to help.

So I had a lot of help from the local people and from the government as well, once it became independent. And the dangers in the field… not really, you know.

I could have been charged by buffalo. I was, in fact, once. Chimpanzees – they’re not dangerous out in the field. They could be, but they’re not. So I didn’t consider it dangerous. And looking back on it, I don’t think it was dangerous. It became more dangerous once the Congo erupted and we got the people escaping, all the Belgians coming over the lake.

Then things became different. Then you got the genocide in Burundi and Rwanda. It became politically much less stable.

RFI: Just remind us, what made you want to go to Africa in the first place?

JG: When I was eight years old I was reading Doctor Dolittle, and there’s a story where he rescues circus animals and takes them back to Africa. I loved that particular book. And then when I was 10, I read Tarzan and Tarzan of the Apes, and that was it.

So from 10 onwards, that’s all I wanted to do. Go to Africa, live with animals and write books about them.

RFI: In the film we see you saying it was like a dream come true, I felt that this is where I belonged. So really, you felt that was your natural habitat?

JG: Yes. Once I got used to it, it was like my backyard. I knew all the little shortcuts through the forest. I got to know the different animals and the sounds. It was just what I dreamed of all my life.

RFI: Do you prefer animals to humans?

JG: I prefer some animals to some humans, and some humans to some animals. We’re animals too, remember.

Zoologist Jane Goodall warns: ‘The world is a mess’ ahead of COP16

RFI: You’ve moved from being a primatologist to more of an animal activist. You founded an educational NGO, Roots & Shoots. It’s now present in around 100 countries.

JG: Roots & Shoots began in Tanzania in 1991 with high school students. The great thing was that these students weren’t animal rights people – they were worried about poaching in the national parks and asked why the government wasn’t doing anything about it.

They were also concerned about the treatment of animals in markets, about street children sniffing glue and about illegal dynamite fishing.

I sent them back to their schools to gather friends who cared about these problems. From the start, Roots & Shoots was different from other environmental organisations. Its message was that every one of us makes a difference every day – and we choose what sort of difference we make.

We knew from the rainforest that everything is interconnected and each species has a role. So groups often focused on three areas: improving life for people, for animals and for the environment. Sometimes one group worked on all three, sometimes they divided tasks but shared results.

The programme grew naturally. It broke down barriers between people of different nations, religions and cultures – and between us and the natural world. People sometimes say they don’t understand the name, but if you picture a seed sending out little white roots and a green shoot that can grow into a mighty tree, you understand why it’s called Roots & Shoots.

RFI: Can you give us an example of something that a Roots & Shoots project has achieved?

JG: In Tanzania, we’ve got Roots & Shoots in every single part of the country because it began there, and they’re proud of it. They’ve planted between them so many hundreds of thousands of trees. They’ve really worked to improve the lives of animals. They’ve taught their parents about what’s going on with the dynamite fishing. They’ve made a huge difference in clearing trash, beach clean-ups and so forth.

In China, it’s changed the attitude of a whole generation towards animals and the environment – and the number of Chinese adults who’ve come up to me and said, well, of course I care about the environment, I was in your Roots & Shoots programme in primary school, and they showed us the documentaries about the chimpanzees.

So I’ve seen the attitude in China change, and it’s only recently I’ve realised the major role that Roots & Shoots has played in creating this change.

RFI: You travel around 300 days a year. You’re still a very active woman, even in your eighties. And you travel with this little creature called Ratty. He’s a toy, I must add, a stuffed rat. Just tell me, why Ratty?

JG: Ratty was actually given to me. He’s the symbol for a wonderful group called Doctors Against Animal Experimentation, showing that we don’t need to use animals – the rat being the most commonly used.

But I use Ratty not only to talk about the amazing intelligence of the ordinary rat, but the giant forest rat of Africa has been taught to detect landmines from the scent, even if they’re deep buried under the ground.

And they’ve helped to defuse tens of thousands of landmines in Mozambique, Angola and different African countries, and now moving into the eastern world as well.

They can identify the very earliest stages of TB before the hospital instruments, but now some of them have been taught to sniff out ivory, some rhino horn, some leopard skin, some pangolin scales so they can go up among the crates where people and dogs can’t go. And they have managed to find a whole lot of illegally smuggled products of this sort.

RFI: Just another reminder of how intelligent animals can be. Thank you for talking to us, Jane Goodall.


GLOBAL PROTESTS

How Gen Z is taking the fight for their rights from TikTok to the streets

After sweeping away the Nepalese government in early September and shaking up the Philippines, a wave of protests initiated by Generation Z has now spread to Madagascar and Morocco. In each case, the demands are similar, with a sense of injustice informed by images on social media.

A surge of rebellion led by young people born between 1997 and 2012 is rewriting the rules of protest, with the smartphone the new megaphone.

Over the past three years, the pace at which these movements are changing the status quo has accelerated.

In 2022, it took five months for Sri Lankan students and activists to topple the Rajapaksa dynasty, which had clung to power for nearly two decades. In 2024, Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was ousted in just six weeks. In Nepal last month , it took a mere 48 hours for protests to bring down the government of Khadga Prasad Sharma Oli.

The profile of these movements is strikingly consistent, with the crowds overwhelmingly young and hyper-connected. They are members of Generation Z – the first cohort to grow up entirely in the digital age, with social media seen not as an accessory but the lens through which they interpret the world.

France accused of restricting protests and eroding democracy

‘They see everything’

If the grievances vary by country – from corruption to education to basic services – the underlying themes are universal: anger at injustice, impatience with inequality and frustration at hypocrisy.

“These young people today are acting on demands that go beyond the purely political. They have a radical need for consistency, a need for authenticity,” says Elodie Gentina, a professor at the IESEG School of Management and a specialist in Gen Z.

“They want to compare everything, they judge everything, they see everything, because they have constant access to social media. They are also very aware of the contradictions between the promises made by leaders promises and their actions. They detest institutional hypocrisy – as seen in Nepal, where leaders talked a lot about modernity but at the same time blocked access to 26 social networks.”

Anger that had been building online over the privileged offspring of the political elite flaunting their wealth on Instagram, in a country where 20 percent of 15 to 25-year-olds are unemployed, spilled over on to the streets. 

Morocco rocked by fourth day of Gen Z-led protests over public services

The ‘amplifier’ effect

“Social media plays the role of emotional and political amplifier. It allows the sharing of images that can be inspiring, but also shocking. Gen Z are constantly comparing themselves to others, and that creates emulation. The viral logic of social networks transforms isolated frustrations into collective movements that become extremely powerful,” Gentina told RFI

In Indonesia, student protests earlier this year adopted an unlikely banner: the pirate flag from One Piece, a manga series in which the hero, Luffy, fights a corrupt and tyrannical world government.

A pop culture reference quickly became a unifying symbol, with the same imagery being adopted in Madagascar and Morocco.

In Madagascar, the triggers for the unrest were blackouts, water shortages and demands for basic freedoms. In Morocco, a collective calling itself “Gen Z 212” emerged online, calling for education and healthcare reform, and questioning the billions poured into hosting the 2030 World Cup while everyday needs go unmet.

“These are purely social demands,” says Souad Brahma, president of the Moroccan Association for Human Rights, speaking to RFI. “The right to a dignified life – that means education, healthcare, decent housing. And through certain slogans, they also call for an end to corruption.”

Madagascar’s president dismisses cabinet as blackout protests turn deadly

Demographic weight

“More than against [individual] governments, Generation Z is rebelling against a model of governance that no longer works for them,” explains Gentina.

“They deem it too top-down, too opaque, too slow. These young people demand transparency and concrete results. They can no longer tolerate inconsistency between words and actions.”

With more than a third of the world’s population belonging to Gen Z, demographics are on their side. In parts of Asia, they account for half the population, making their voices impossible to ignore.

As for where they might rise up next, all eyes are on India. The world’s most populous nation also has the largest Gen Z population on the Asian continent, and those hundreds of millions of young people have not been spared by the mass unemployment, inequality and corruption that plague the country.


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


African media

Introducing ZOA, a digital news channel by and for young Africans

France Médias Monde – parent company to RFI and TV station France 24 – has launched  a new digital news channel: ZOA. Focused on feature-style stories, the platform targets a young African audience, and was built by young African journalists. Meet RFI’s new little sister.

The fledgling newsroom’s open-plan office sits within the new France Médias Monde (FMM) hub in the Senegalese capital of Dakar. An image of Blessing-Bili, a young singer from Congo-Brazzaville, looms large on one of its walls.

Cécile Goudou, ZOA’s deputy editor, is scrutinising subtitles, hunting for the slightest flaw. “I sometimes watch a video up to 10 times,” she laughs.

Although ZOA has only been posting content for a fortnight, its most popular videos have already racked up more than 800,000 views.

Joseph Kahongo Amutake is about to publish that day’s sports debate: “How does African cycling measure up internationally?” Several African commentators weigh in on the continent’s poor results at the World Cycling Championships.

“What I enjoy most is the dynamism we’re trying to bring to news,” says the 30-year-old Congolese journalist. “And being online, because that’s the platform young people prefer.”

Teenagers take centre stage at road world championships in Kigali

Bridge between generations

Amina Diop, a recent graduate of CESTI, one of Senegal’s top journalism schools, handles the Citizen Initiatives section.

She has just finished a feature on a young Beninese engineer who designed and built an electric scooter. “If another young person sees this story, they’ll think it’s possible to invent and innovate,” she says.

That’s why she joined ZOA – “to convey the positivity flowing through the continent and highlight the many initiatives that exist”.

For her, this means moving away from what she calls “misery journalism”. Her next story is on a Togolese fashion designer.

The channel’s mission is resolutely youthful and optimistic – but not naïve.

“ZOA tells Africa’s story from its roots, valuing those who built it, those who’re shaping it today and those imagining it tomorrow,” reads the colourful flyer announcing its launch.

Its mission: to amplify the voices of young Francophone Africans through fact-based reporting, grounded in human experience.

ZOA’s editor-in-chief, Kaourou Magassa, a journalist passionate about African cultures, likes to quote filmmaker Oumar Bayo Fall: We are not the future, we are the present. We are also the bridge between our elders and the generations that will come after us.”

Combatting ‘fake’ news in Africa

Inspiring figures

ZOA’s first videos introduced audiences to a range of inspiring people: Aya Gueye, a former Miss Ziguinchor, who uses fashion to promote her culture and motivate young people; Ruffine Sonon, a 15-year-old Beninese athlete, who won the country’s first gold medal in the 800m at the African School Games, and Tening Faye, a young Senegalese taekwondo prodigy who has already won a world medal.

The channel also explores everyday topics… Could ataya tea – a staple of friendly gatherings – pose a health risk? How can families spot the signs of Alzheimer’s in ageing relatives? What are the real effects of sugar on health?

“The Health section is designed to produce explanatory videos on common and rare conditions,” explains Dikorou Cheick, the team’s health specialist.

“Our strength is that we inform with a relaxed tone. The idea is to provide preventative advice without frightening people, because once you’re aware of a condition, prevention becomes easy – and can even encourage recovery. Beyond that, we also want to showcase the progress made in healthcare across the continent.”

ZOA’s videos focus on daily life on the continent.

“For me, ZOA is a new approach, a new perspective,” says reporter Ibrahima Dramé. “We give the floor to ordinary Africans – people whose lives are not widely known, yet who are doing extraordinary things. That’s what makes my work here so important.

“With my mic and camera, I go everywhere: from Madina Ndiathbé in northern Senegal’s Fouta region, to Thiobon in Casamance in the south; from Pikine on Dakar’s outskirts to Koussanar in Tambacounda. I hand the mic to Senegalese voices that are rarely heard, even though they have a lot to say.”

From Goma to Cape Town, the young Congolese athlete pedalling for peace

No politics

ZOA distributes its content on all major social platforms – WhatsApp, TikTok, Facebook, YouTube and Instagram – in the form of videos, photos and infographics.

“ZOA will cover practically everything: health, sports, society, culture, entrepreneurship – except politics,” says Goudou. “We believe there’s already enough coverage of politics.”

Instead, the content is resolutely “magazine”. There are features such as When I was 20, which sees elders share life lessons with younger generations; What’s your daily life? in which ordinary people talk about their routines, and Citizen Initiatives, showcasing young people working for their communities.

There is also a Heritage strand, which highlights Africa’s cultural and historical legacy. “Maybe a young Ivorian doesn’t know the history of Dakar’s Monument of the Renaissance,” notes Goudou. “Through this section, those are the kinds of stories we want to tell.”

Young Senegalese forced abroad by dual economic and political crises

Editorial independence

While ZOA is based alongside RFI’s Mandenkan and Fulfulde services in FMM’s Dakar hub, the new channel has its own distinctive style.

“RFI and France 24 provide us with technical and financial support, but editorially we’re independent,” says Magassa. “We have our own productions, our own editorial meetings and we choose our topics entirely on our own.”

The Dakar newsroom is home to 10 journalists from five African countries, with an equal number of men and women.

“The average age is 28,” notes Magassa. “So yes, we too are young Africans. This isn’t just about talking to young Africans – we are young ourselves, and we want to tell our own stories.”

The team works with a network of correspondents in 11 countries, because, as the editor-in-chief notes: “It’s vital to be as close as possible to the people – and to their stories.”


This article was adapted from the original in French.


ENVIRONMENT

Europe’s climate progress overshadowed by worsening loss of nature

Europe has made big strides in cutting pollution that drives climate change – but its natural world is in deep trouble, the EU’s environment watchdog has warned.

The warning comes in the European Environment Agency’s Europe’s Environment 2025 report, a flagship assessment published only once every five years.

Drawing on data from 38 countries, it offers the clearest picture yet of how climate change and damage to nature are threatening Europe’s future well-being and prosperity.

“Significant progress has been made in reducing greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution, but the overall state of Europe’s environment is not good,” the report said.

Nature under strain

The EEA says Europe has cut greenhouse gas emissions by 37 percent since 1990 and more than doubled the share of renewable energy since 2005. Cleaner air has saved lives – deaths linked to fine pollution particles have fallen by nearly half since 2005.

But nature is still being degraded. More than four out of five protected habitats are in poor condition. Much of the soil is exhausted, and only about a third of rivers and lakes are healthy.

One in three Europeans lives in areas where water is under serious stress.

Europe is also warming faster than any other continent, making heatwaves, droughts, wildfires and floods more frequent and more destructive.

In 2022 extreme heat was linked to more than 70,000 deaths. Floods in Slovenia in 2023 caused damage equal to 16 percent of that country’s economy.

Air pollution continues to cause about 239,000 premature deaths a year across the EU, and traffic noise contributes to another 66,000 deaths.

“This report is a stark reminder that Europe must stay the course and even accelerate our climate and environmental ambitions,” said Teresa Ribera, the EU executive vice-president for clean transition.

Indigenous knowledge steers new protections for the high seas

She warned that recent extreme weather had shown how fragile Europe’s prosperity and security become when nature is damaged and the climate crisis intensifies.

“Protecting nature is not a cost. It is an investment in competitiveness, resilience and the well-being of our citizens.”

Others in Brussels echoed similar concerns.

EU climate commissioner Wopke Hoekstra said the wildfires and floods of recent years showed that “the costs of inaction are enormous, and climate change poses a direct threat to our competitiveness”.

Meanwhile environment commissioner Jessika Roswall said Europe’s economy ultimately depends on healthy ecosystems.

“Healthy nature is the basis for a healthy society, a competitive economy and a resilient world, which is why the EU is committed to stay the course on our environmental commitments,” she said.

France’s green challenge

The country profiles underscores the mixed picture in individual member states.

France has cut its greenhouse gas emissions by 35 percent since 1990, including an 8 percent drop between 2022 and 2023. It now protects nearly a third of its land, and water quality has improved.

But France still relies heavily on fossil fuels. Renewables supplied just 22 percent of its energy use in 2023 – well short of the 33 percent target for 2030. Only about one in 10 French farms is organic, far below the goal of nearly one in five by 2027.

Recycling and reuse of materials also lag behind.

A national water plan launched in 2023 set 53 steps to safeguard supplies as droughts become more common. The EEA says Europe as a whole could save up to 40 percent of its water in farming, energy and daily use with better management and modern technology.

Economy at risk

The report warns that the loss of healthy ecosystems threatens Europe’s economy.

Nearly three-quarters of businesses in the eurozone depend on natural systems such as pollination and clean water. Most bank loans go to companies that rely on these resources.

“Human survival depends on high-quality nature, particularly when it comes to adaptation to climate change,” said Catherine Ganzleben, head of the EEA’s Sustainable and Fair Transitions unit.

“Sustainability is not a choice, it is a question of when we do it. Do we do it in the short term and start now, or do we park it, in which case it is going to be harder and the costs of inaction will be higher?”

Could peatlands protect Europe’s eastern borders from a Russian invasion?

Environmental groups have urged the EU not to weaken its laws.

“Delaying the EU Deforestation Regulation or weakening our nature and water laws would be historic and irreversible mistakes,” said Ester Asin, head of WWF’s European policy office.

Her call for strong rules was echoed by the European Environment Agency itself.

“We cannot afford to lower our climate, environment and sustainability ambitions. What we do today will shape our future,” said EEA director Leena Ylä-Mononen.

The agency says reaching climate-neutrality by 2050 will require faster cuts in emissions from transport and farming, much greater recycling and the large-scale repair of damaged natural areas.


WAR IN GAZA

Growing calls for France to lift ‘collective punishment’ ban on visas for Gazans

France’s recognition of Palestinian statehood at the United Nations this week has led to calls for it to reinstate evacuations from Gaza, which were halted on 1 August following antisemitic posts by a Gazan student at Lille University. The suspension has left scientists, artists and students who were due to arrive in France on special visas in limbo.

Of the hundreds of people evacuated from Gaza to France since the conflict in the enclave broke out in October 2023, 73 have come as part of a partly state-funded humanitarian programme known as Pause.

Run by the prestigious Collège de France research institute, Pause provides special one-year visas to artists and scientists in danger.  

Since 2017, it has supported more than 700 people from more than 40 countries, including Ukraine, Syria and Afghanistan. For Palestinians in Gaza, it represents one of the few pathways to safety. 

‘A life jacket’

“The Pause programme was literally a life jacket for us,” says Abu Joury, a well-known Gazan rapper who arrived in the town of Angers in western France in January, with his wife and three children.

Sponsored by a local organisation, Al Khamanjati, he has been able to provide financial stability and security for his family – something he says has become impossible in Gaza.

But that life jacket is no longer available.

On 1 August, Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot announced that “no evacuation of any kind” would take place until further notice.

The trigger was a Palestinian student at Sciences Po Lille who was accused of sharing antisemitic statements in 2023, and was subsequently expelled to Qatar. 

The student was not part of the Pause programme, but the decision to halt all evacuations has left more than 120 people – 25 approved candidates and their families – stranded in what the UN has described as genocidal conditions. 

France halts Gaza evacuations over antisemitic posts by Palestinian student

“They’ve been waiting for months and are sending us constant messages calling for help,” says Marion Gués Lucchini, head of international diplomacy for the Pause programme. “They’re saying: ‘why are we being condemned for comments made by just one person? Why have we been abandoned?'”

The decision is unprecedented, Gués Lucchini says. “Because of a single person, all the others are condemned to remain in Gaza.

“We’ve been around for eight years. We’ve had people from all over the world, including countries where there may be sensitivities – Russia, Iran and so on. We’ve never had a security problem, we’ve never had anyone who was supposedly close to a terrorist group. Never.” 

She adds that all Pause candidates are subject to rigorous screening by four different ministries, including security checks by the Interior Ministry.

Listen to an audio report featuring Abu Joury and Mathieu Yon on the Spotlight of France podcast:

‘Collective punishment’ 

After President Emmanuel Macron recognised Palestinian statehood at the UN on Monday, the French government now faces mounting pressure to reinstate evacuations.  

A collective of Palestinian and migrant rights groups has filed a case with the Conseil d’Etat – France’s top court – claiming the suspension of evacuations for Gazans is in breach of the constitution.

Last week, some 20 acclaimed writers, including French Nobel laureates Annie Ernaux and J.M.G. Le Clézio, called on Macron to “restore this lifeline” as soon as possible. 

“This suspension of evacuation programmes on the basis of one case of a racist social media post is a form of collective punishment at a time when all signatories to the Genocide Convention should be doing their utmost to save Palestinians from annihilation and should refuse to be complicit in crimes against humanity,” they wrote in an open letter.

While evacuating only writers, artists and researchers was “inadequate and even cruel in the context of the killings and destruction in Gaza”, they underlined that “today this programme is one of the only ways by which a few people in Gaza can be saved from genocide, a part of which is scholasticide”.

The authors called on France to “follow through on its proclaimed humanist values”.

Israeli ambassador slams French recognition of Palestine as ‘historic mistake’ on RFI

‘I fear for my friend’

Mathieu Yon, a 48-year-old fruit farmer from southern France, has become an unlikely advocate for Palestinian evacuation rights.

On Wednesday he took up position on a bench in front of the Foreign Ministry holding a sign addressed to Barrot: “Monsieur le ministre, resume the reception of Gazans.”

Around six months ago, Yon struck up a friendship with Gazan poet Alaa al-Qatrawi after reading her poem “I’m not well”, about losing her four children in an Israeli bombing in December 2023.

“She lost her four children and yet she’s still full of love and without any anger or aggression,” he says. “I fear for my dear friend.”

He, his wife and two friends have raised the necessary €48,000 to cover al-Qatrawi’s year-long residency.

They have work and accommodation lined up for her in their home town of Dieulefit, north of Avignon. “Everything is in place,” Yon said, hoping that his protest will see her file, handed in on 26 August, treated as a matter of urgency.

As Gaza aid flotilla comes under attack, NGOs urge Europe to act

From a refugee camp in Gaza, al-Qatrawi describes the constant danger: “Every Palestinian living now in Gaza is at risk of being killed at any second and in any place you can think of. You are exposed to assassination attempts throughout the day. And if you survive, you think about how you are going to survive the next day.” 

Her four children – Orchid, Kenan, Yamen and Carmel – were killed on 13 December, 2023. “There was a cordon around the area. The occupation [by the Israeli army] prevented ambulances from arriving,” she told RFI’s sister radio station MCD. 

The Ma’an collective, which helps Pause applicants, reports receiving increasingly desperate messages from Gaza.

“These are no longer calls for help, but testaments and farewells,” it said in a statement. One read: “I am writing to you, and maybe my last words. We are starving and losing everything around us.” 

Ahmed Shamia, an architect who had been accepted by the Pause programme, was killed in bombardments on 1 May this year, just days before he was due to be evacuated.

“It was very difficult for us all,” says Gués Lucchini. “It was the first time [someone selected for] the programme had died.”

Conflating Gazans with terrorists

Gués Lucchini laments that a programme offering a lifeline to scientists and artists has become a target for the far right, with Pause dealing with online attacks.

“These accounts created the controversy surrounding the student [in Lille], which led to the suspension of the evacuations. Since then there have been other smear campaigns against [people selected for] the Pause programme. It’s clear there is a desire to confuse aid and support for Gazans – scientists, artists and others – with support for a terrorist group.”

The French Sunday newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche, which has a controversial far-right editor, recently accused Pause of “opening the door to Hamas”.

Yon, who has Jewish ancestry and whose great-uncle was deported to Auschwitz, rejects any suggestion that Gazans pose an inherent security risk. “There are antisemitic people in Gaza. But I think there are in France, too. There are in all countries, not especially in Gaza.”

He added: “This is a collective punishment without any kind of justice. In France we have the principle of presumption of innocence, but this is presumption of guilt.”

France’s Foreign Ministry has not commented publicly on when evacuations of Gazans will resume. But a diplomatic source told RFI: “Since the Israeli authorities have suspended evacuations, no operation is possible at this stage.”

French services are effectively dependent on local authorities, in this case Israel, who grant or deny exit permits based on lists submitted by the French authorities.

Macron on Gaza and Ukraine: diplomacy, hostages and European security at stake

Race against time 

For those still waiting, time is running out. “Every day that passes is another day that we take the risk that someone supported by a French national programme will die,” Gués Lucchini warns. 

Joury could be considered one of the lucky ones. But despite finding safety and a “very warm welcome” in France,  he remains haunted by those left behind – especially his mother and brother, who didn’t manage to reach Egypt before Israel closed the Rafah crossing.

“I’m physically out. But my mind is still in Gaza. My mother and my brother, I’m thinking of them all the time. My soul is still in Gaza,” he said.

As Yon continues his vigil outside the Foreign Ministry, he reflects on how hard it was to tell al-Qatrawi evacuations had been halted.

“She said, ‘even if it doesn’t happen, this relationship, this poetry exists. Even if the result is sad for our life, all of this poetry, all of this love, all of this kindness is real’.  

“This relationship has a value in itself,” Yon concludes. A lifeline of friendship – but no life jacket.


ENVIRONMENT

Indigenous knowledge steers new protections for the high seas

For centuries prior to modern conservation efforts, indigenous communities cared for the oceans with a fundamentally different philosophy – treating marine environments as family rather than a commodity. With the UN High Seas Treaty set to come into force in January, their knowledge is being formally recognised in the governance of international waters for the first time.

Sixty ratifications pushed the treaty over the line, with Morocco’s kick-starting the 120-day countdown to 17 January.

The treaty offers a tool for nations to create marine protected areas (MPAs) – central to the goal of safeguarding 30 percent of the ocean by 2030.

It also recognises indigenous knowledge, and requires “free, prior and informed consent” – in other words, clear permission in advance – for the use of marine resources linked to that knowledge.

From the sacred waters of Papahanaumokuakea in Hawaii to the hand-built islands of the Solomons, indigenous communities say culture and conservation work hand in hand.

Niue, the tiny island selling the sea to save it from destruction

Culture steers conservation

Stretching northwest from Kauai across roughly 1,500 kilometres of ocean – about the same distance from Paris to Rome – Papahanaumokuakea is one of the world’s largest fully protected MPAs.

It covers around 1.51 million square kilometres, larger than all the national parks in the United States combined, and shelters more than 7,000 marine species, many found nowhere else on earth.

The area is vital for endangered Hawaiian monk seals, green turtles and millions of seabirds.

For native Hawaiians it is also a sacred realm – a place tied to creation stories and ancestral routes at sea.

“I’ve been involved for more than half my life in protecting a place that we now call Papahanaumokuakea,” Aulani Wilhelm, a native Hawaiian conservationist who played a central role in creating the marine monument, told RFI.

“It was a movement started by native Hawaiian fishermen who partnered with conservationists to protect the coral reefs and endangered species.”

Wilhelm, who also heads the non-profit organisation Nia Terosaid elders had pushed for a refuge rooted in local principles and direct community engagement.

In her words, “not just another model of Western conservation” – but instead protection anchored in values and participation.

Stewardship, not ownership

Papahanaumokuakea is co-managed by four entities: native Hawaiian leaders, the US Federal Government, the state of Hawaii and the Office of Hawaiian Affairs.

Joint decisions cover both nature and culture, and include protecting reefs and endangered species, safeguarding creation stories and traditional navigation routes, and setting rules for access and research.

Instead of talking about “managing” a resource, Wilhelm describes a relationship of care.

“People used to call me the manager of Papahanaumokuakea,” she said. “And I said, I don’t manage anything. You don’t manage your grandmother. You don’t manage your elder cousins. This is a relationship. You ‘care for’ instead.”

The big blue blindspot: why the ocean floor is still an unmapped mystery

From sanctuary to survival

Indigenous people manage around a quarter of the world’s land and many of those places hold rich biodiversity. Advocates say the lesson is simple – when communities have a say, nature often fares better.

In the Solomon Islands the stakes are high. In lagoons such as Langa Langa and Lau, some families still live on artificial islands first built centuries ago. They now face rising seas, chaotic weather and stronger storm surges that push water into their homes.

Lysa Wini, a researcher from the Solomon Islands who works with Nia Tero, told RFI that communities are using what they know and are asking for resources so that guardianship can continue.

“That would be not just merely putting indigenous knowledge or wisdom into text, but actually into practice,” she said.

Nations vow to cut shipping noise as sea life struggles to be heard

Next steps

Once the treaty takes effect – and once the first Conference of the Parties (Cop) is held – countries can file formal proposals for MPAs under the new global system. The first Cop must meet within one year of the treaty coming into force.

States will agree basic rules, set up a secretariat, create a science panel and open an information hub to share data. Decisions are taken by consensus where possible, or by a three-quarters majority.

Each proposal must say where the area is, why it should be protected, which measures will apply, how long they will last and how progress will be checked.

Wilhelm told RFI the planet will need 53 more protected areas the size of Papahanaumokuakea in order to meet global targets.


Moldova elections 2025

Moldova’s vote sets it on EU course but deep political rifts remain

Sunday’s elections in Moldova marked a defining moment in the country’s democratic journey. Amid deep political divisions and heavy foreign interference, the vote offered Moldovans a clear choice between turning east or west. They delivered a decisive victory for the pro-European Party of Action and Solidarity.

“The parliamentary elections in Moldova demonstrated a high level of commitment to democracy, amid unprecedented hybrid threats coming from Russia,” according to Paula Cardoso, leader of the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe’s electoral observers team.

“From illicit financing funnelled through shadowy networks to relentless disinformation campaigns eroding public trust, and brazen cybersecurity incidents designed to sow chaos, these tactics sought to manipulate Moldova’s democracy and sovereignty,” she added.

“Yet, the nation’s democratic tenacity prevailed and helped to ensure the integrity of the vote.”

The legal framework governing the elections provided a solid foundation, with recently introduced laws having enhanced the definition of electoral corruption and tightened campaign finance regulations.

However, Cardoso told RFI that last-minute changes to the law and controversial decisions by the Central Election Commission, including the disqualification of some parties close to the election date, “raised questions about impartiality and limited the political landscape somewhat”.

Nevertheless, the election day itself was largely “smooth and orderly,” according to the observers – with high competence among electoral staff, the majority of whom were women, earning praise from international observers.

In pictures: Moldovans vote in decisive parliamentary elections

‘Russia failed’

In total, 1,578,730 people voted at 2,274 polling stations nationwide, with the Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS) winning 50.2 percent of the votes – followed by the pro-Russian Patriotic Bloc with 24.18 percent. 

“We respect the free and unimpeded choice of the Moldovans to determine their future. The Russian Federation does not,” said Michael Gahler, head of the European Parliament Election Observer mission to Moldova.

Had the Moldovans decided otherwise, “we [the EU] are not the ones who then come with tanks,” he told RFI during an interview in Anenii Noi, a small town in the east of Moldova, where he was checking a polling station designated for Moldovans who live in the breakaway Transnistria region

“In the run up to this election, Russia interfered at an unprecedented scale with cyber-attacks, disinformation campaigns, intimidation and illicit financing and vote buying schemes. Yet again, they failed,” he added.

How Russian disinformation flooded Moldova’s media landscape ahead of election

Political divisions

The result is being viewed by many as affirmation of the country’s European aspirations, amid ongoing conflict in neighbouring Ukraine and persistent Russian efforts to influence Moldovan politics.

“It’s a big win for the PAS, the main pro-European party in Moldova,” said Natalia Putina, a political scientist at the State University of Moldova.

Nevertheless, political divisions remain deep. The Patriotic Bloc lost ground but retained a base of support, particularly in separatist-leaning regions such as Transnistria. 

“We would have liked to see victory and opposition. We hoped that the opposition would find a solution. We believe that the current government hasn’t shown any results yet,” said Igor, an employee with a bank in Tiraspol, the capital of Transnistria.

He had come to the polling station in Arenii Noi, one of 12 along the border with Transnistria set up to accommodate Moldovans living in the breakaway region.

His trip was not without obstacles: he had first tried to vote at a polling station in Causeni, further south, but it was closed and he didn’t know why.

Obstacles remain

Others from Transnistria expressed impatience with what they see as discrimination from people living in Moldova proper.

“We are the same as our brothers from Moldova,” said Inna Romanyenko. “I am a Moldovan myself. I got married in Transnistria – does it mean that I am a separatist? No, of course not. I am a Moldovan, I love my country, I appreciate it.”

While she voted for the pro-Russian leader Igor Dodon, she acknowledged the difficulties both in Moldova and Europe.

“Maybe it’s better in Europe, I don’t argue,” she told RFI. “But it’s not easy there either. If Moldova joins the EU, what do you think will happen to Transnistria? Nothing good.”

According to the final results published by the Central Election Commission, 12,017 Transnistrian Moldovans voted, and more than 51 percent favoured the pro-Russian bloc, with PAS coming second with close to 30 percent. 

France, EU leaders say Moldova’s election results put it on path to join EU

Looking ahead, political scientist Putina cautioned that Moldova’s path towards EU membership, while endorsed by the electorate, will be fraught with obstacles.

She cited the ongoing military occupation of Transnistria by Russia and the complex effects of regional conflict – further complicated by a persistent struggle against corruption and the influence of oligarchs.

“Moldova’s democratic development is like a dance: two steps forward and one back,” she said.


French politics

French PM ditches parliamentary override in push for budget deal

French Prime Minister Sébastian Lecornu on Friday vowed to forgo an infamous article of the constitution that would have allowed him to steamroller a budget bill through parliament without a vote – but left him vulnerable to a vote of no confidence. The move means MPs must agree a compromise before time runs out to pass a budget at the end of the year.

Lecornu said he would not resort to a special clause in Article 49.3 of the French constitution – invoked by several of his recent predecessors – because it “essentially allows the government to halt debates”.

“I am forgoing it in order to engage the government’s responsibility and for the government to write the final version,” he told reporters.

“It’s a useful tool. But in a functioning parliament, one that was renewed around a year ago and reflects the French people and their divisions, you cannot force your way through or coerce the opposition.”

Race to set draft budget

Lecornu is in crunch talks with leaders of several parties in France’s deadlocked parliament, which has been divided into three main blocs since snap elections last year. 

He is in a race against time to present a draft budget for legislators to discuss and approve before the end of the year.

His predecessor, François Bayrou, left office after he failed to receive backing for his 2026 budget that would have required nearly 44 billion euros in savings – largely through cuts to public spending and scrapping two public holidays.

“Giving up Article 49.3 must not lead us to give up on France having a budget,” said Lecornu before meetings at his Paris office with leaders of the National Rally, the Socialist Party, the Ecologists and the French Communist Party.

Who is ‘political animal’ Sébastien Lecornu, France’s latest prime minister?

Lecornu, appointed on 9 September by President Emmanuel Macron, is forced to talk to parties from across the political spectrum after Macron’s decision to hold snap parliamentary elections in July 2024 backfired.

Parliament was left in a three-way split between Macron’s centrist bloc, the far-right National Rally and a left-wing coalition.

Bayrou joined Gabriel Attal and Michel Barnier as the premiers who failed to unite the disparate factions on a response to France’s debt crisis.

Public debt has climbed to 113.9 percent of GDP, due in part to bailing out the economy during the Covid pandemic in 2020 and 2021.

France’s debt: how did we get here, and how dangerous is it?

Wealth tax mooted

Lecornu will need either the right-wing Republicans or the left-wing Socialists to abstain or support him.

As part of the horse trading, the Republicans say they want a third of the posts in the cabinet that Lecornu is set to announce. The Socialists are seeking a wealth tax alongside or instead of austerity measures.

In a bid to break the impasse, Lecornu has proposed creating a form of wealth tax that would exclude business owners’ professional assets, anonymous sources told Reuters news agency on Friday, without providing details.

The 39-year-old PM is aware that not passing a budget will tarnish France’s credibility.

On 12 September, credit rating agency Fitch downgraded France’s sovereign credit score to the country’s lowest level on record.

The move to A+ stripped the euro zone’s second-largest economy of its AA- status to underline growing investor concerns over its ability to rein in the highest budget deficit in the euro zone.

Failure to produce a budget would leave the government falling back on a stop-gap rollover that lets it spend only at last year’s levels. 

Wait and see

Lecornu’s predecessors were heavily criticised for their reliance on Article 49.3 to pass controversial reforms.

His political opponents cautiously welcomed his decision not to invoke it, while stressing they needed a clearer picture of the new prime minister’s policies.

“Not using 49.3 seems to me more respectful of democracy than what has been done in previous years,” said Marine Le Pen, president of the National Rally parliamentary group, after meeting Lecornu.

While she added that she didn’t see the new premier breaking with the status quo, Le Pen said she would wait and see what was in his policy speech.

Olivier Faure, first secretary of the PS, emerged from a two-hour meeting with Lecornu calling the budget proposals “very insufficient and in many respects alarming”, but welcomed the decision to allow parliament to debate the bill. 

He said his party wanted to know if Lecornu was willing to meet its key demands, such as a vote in parliament to change pension reforms that were adopted via 49.3.

“We don’t just want procedural steps, we want the French people’s lives to change,” Faure said.

France’s article 49.3 a handy constitutional tool to bypass parliament

Introduced in 1958 with the Fifth Republic, Article 49.3 was designed to overcome the shortcomings of the previous republic – notably political deadlock due to rapid changes of government.

In exchange for bypassing a vote on legislation, it leaves the prime minister exposed to a no-confidence vote that can bring down the government.

Since 2008, 49.3 can be activated for only one bill per parliamentary session – outside of the state and social security budgets, for which there are no limitations.

(with newswires)

International report

Europe’s ‘Truman Show’ moment: is it time to walk off Trump’s set?

Issued on:

When Truman Burbank finally realises that his life is a television show – every neighbour an actor, every event scripted – he faces a terrifying choice: walk through the exit door into the unknown, or carry on in a comfortable illusion. Is this is the predicament Europe is facing under Donald Trump’s second term?

In his report for the European Sentiment Compass 2025, Pawel Zerka, of the European Council on Foreign Relations, suggests Europe is living its own “Truman Show moment”.

The United States, he says, is no longer the ally Europeans had been accustomed to having. Instead, under Trump, Washington is not only pulling the strings in trade, defence and digital disputes – it is waging an outright “culture war” on Europe.

The big question is whether the EU has the courage to step off the set, reclaim its autonomy and begin writing its own story.

Europe’s uncertainty after Trump’s first 100 days

Trump 2.0

Transatlantic tensions are nothing new. Rows over trade, NATO spending and climate policy have flared under every president from Kennedy to Obama. But Zerka insists that Trump marks a rupture.

“There is a clear difference vis-à-vis previous presidents, and even vis-à-vis Donald Trump 1.0,” he told RFI. “Before, we had never seen a US president targeting Europe so clearly and aggressively.”

This time round, the barbs are sharper, the interventions more deliberate. Trump openly mocks Europe’s migration and climate policies, last week using the world stage of the United Nations to declare that Europeans are “going to hell” with their “crazy” ideas.

Such rhetoric, Zerka argues, is not just bluster. It is part of a deliberate strategy to humiliate Europe, a way of painting the European Union as weak, dependent and incapable of agency.

And this culture war is not confined to speeches, Zerka says – the Trump administration has moved from commentary to active interference.

In Germany, US Vice President JD Vance and former Trump advisor Elon Musk openly backed the far-right AfD party during the country’s legislative elections in February.

Similar interference was seen in Poland, Romania and Ireland, where Washington lent support to Conor McGregor, a former mixed martial arts champion who had thrown his “Make Ireland Great Again” hat in the ring for the country’s upcoming presidential election on 24 October, but withdrew from the race in September. 

McGregor’s political ambitions had been boosted by an invitation to the White House on St Patrick’s Day, with Trump calling him his “favourite” Irish person.

“We haven’t seen anything like this before,” Zerka stresses. “There’s such active involvement in domestic politics of European countries, supporting rivals of the governments in place – and very often those rivals are problematic political players.”

“There is a lot of appetite among the European public for an assertive Europe, but leaders keep finding themselves in situations where they look ridiculous and Europe gets humiliated” – Pawel Zerka

Europe’s new right: how the MAGA agenda crossed the Atlantic

A Truman moment

So what does it mean for Europe to “walk off the set”? In Truman Burbank’s case, it was about courage – daring to leave behind the artificial comfort of a staged life. For the EU, Zerka says, it is about dignity and identity.

“European leaders must be ready,” he argues. “Currently they are buying time with Trump, because they depend so much on America for security, especially with Russia’s war in Ukraine. But the danger is that by playing along, they risk repeated humiliation – whether at NATO summits or in trade negotiations – where Europe ends up looking ridiculous to its own public and to the wider world.”

The challenge, Zerka believes, is that many EU leaders still don’t grasp the true nature of the confrontation.

They treat disputes over tariffs or defence spending as technical haggles, missing the larger picture – that they are part of a cultural battle over values, sovereignty and the very meaning of the West.

Without that recognition, Europe risks stumbling from one Trump-scripted crisis to another, always reacting, never setting the agenda.

Europe’s Truman Show cast

In Pawel Zerka’s European Sentiment Compass 2025 report, EU member states fall into five roles within Trump’s “reality show”.

Director’s crew
Countries actively producing Trump’s show in Europe, amplifying MAGA narratives:
Hungary, Italy, Slovakia – with the Czech Republic possibly joining.

Tempters
Those who normalise Trump’s script by offering comfort and status within the status quo:
Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Finland, Greece, Ireland, Netherlands, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Sweden.

Prophets
The truth-tellers urging Europe to break free of the illusion:
Denmark, after Trump questioned its sovereignty over Greenland. Sweden and Finland could also play this role.

Extras
On set but lacking influence, even when embroiled in MAGA-style battles at home:
Bulgaria, Slovenia, Croatia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Cyprus, Malta.

Door holders
The big players whose choices could determine the plot’s direction:
France, Germany, Poland.

The role of the prophet

In The Truman Show, it was a character named Sylvia who first whispered the truth to Truman, that his life was staged. In today’s Europe, Zerka sees Denmark as playing that role.

Trump’s suggestion that the US might buy Greenland directly questioned Danish sovereignty, giving Copenhagen a unique impetus for defending European autonomy.

“Denmark is the one country really trying to show Europe the difference between reality and illusion,” Zerka says, adding though that Sweden and Finland, both scarred by the Russian threat and largely resistant to Trump’s personal appeal, could also be well placed to push for European autonomy.

Then there are what he calls the “door holders”, the heavyweight countries whose choices could swing the EU’s future one way or another: France, Germany and Poland.

Each stands at a crossroads. Elections in the coming years could see them drift towards the pro-Trump “director’s crew” – Hungary, Italy, Slovakia – or rally behind the prophets calling for strategic autonomy.

The outcome, Zerka warns, will determine whether Europe claims its agency or sinks deeper into dependency.

Can Europe withstand the ripple effect of the MAGA political wave?

Walking the line

However, with Russian aggression on its doorstep, Europe cannot simply sever ties with Washington. Yet, Zerka argues, the notion that Europeans must appease Trump to preserve the transatlantic bond is a fallacy.

“It’s completely the other way around,” he says. “Only if Europe steps up in building its own capacities, and shows assertiveness, can it become a real partner rather than a subordinate.”

That means investment in defence, technology and energy resilience. It also means recognising the culture war for what it is, and refusing to be defined by Trump’s caricatures.

Trust in the EU is its strongest since 2007, with polls showing that citizens increasingly view the bloc not just as an economic club but as a community of shared values, and destiny.

Zerka believes European leaders must harness the public appetite for a more assertive Europe. The risk of inaction, he warns, is cultural subordination.

The reward of courage, by contrast, is the chance for Europe to write its own story, and participate in the transatlantic partnership as an equal.


DR CONGO

Kabila death sentence deepens political and regional divides in DR Congo

The death sentence handed to former president Joseph Kabila has deepened political and regional divisions in the Democratic Republic of Congo, exposing the fragile balance between demands for justice and hopes for peace.

Kabila, 54, was convicted in absentia on 30 September by the Military High Court in Kinshasa for treason and war crimes.

Prosecutors accused him of being a founder of the Alliance Fleuve Congo, the political wing of the M23 rebel movement, and the leader of the armed coalition AFC/M23. He has been living abroad since 2023.

The ruling has split opinion.

In Kinshasa, the government and its supporters frame it as a landmark step in the fight against impunity. In the east of the country, where Kabila still commands loyalty, many see it as a political attack that threatens peace efforts.

“We welcome this decision of the justice system,” Christian Lumu, of President Félix Tshisekedi’s Union for Democracy and Social Progress party (UDPS) youth wing, told RFI.

“Because whether we like it or not, the rule of law we are building under President Tshisekedi’s leadership rests on a clear principle: no one is above the law.”

Former Congolese president Kabila sentenced to death for war crimes

Condemnation

However, the NGO Human Rights Watch said the move could be interpreted as a warning to political opponents that they could suffer the same fate.

The NGO’s Africa director Lewis Mudge said he believed the manner in which the trial was held and the verdict bore the hallmarks of a political vendetta and showed that “the Congolese government is moving down a more authoritarian path”.

“It was a trial with several political aspects to possibly send a warning to other political opponents,” he said. “First, they stripped him of his immunity quite quickly. Then there was the fact that a trial took place rapidly and Kabila didn’t even have a lawyer. And finally, the trial was held in a military court.”

The verdict was also condemned by Sammy Jean Takimbula, a civil society leader in the east of the country, where Kabila continues to enjoy popularity.

The eastern region of the DRC, located on the border with Rwanda and rich in natural resources, including minerals, has been the scene of conflict for 30 years.

The violence intensified in early 2025, with the M23 armed group, supported by Rwanda, and Rwandan troops capturing cities including Goma in January and Bukavu in February.

International NGOs report mass killings and sexual violence in eastern DRC

“It’s another weakening of the search for peace here in the east of the country,” Takimbula told RFI.

“We understand that the Kinshasa government is not here for the people. It’s a government here for targeting, for their own interests, not for the benefit of the population. The people of South Kivu are suffering every day.”

Asked about the potential risk Kabila’s conviction might pose to ongoing peace process, particularly talks in Qatar between DRC authorities and the AFC/M23, Lumu said: “I don’t think [there is a risk posed], because the discussions in Doha, or the upcoming [inter-Congolese] dialogues under President Tshisekedi, have only one objective: to consolidate unity, build peace and reconcile Congolese people.”

He added: “These processes cannot be manipulated to protect those who refuse to account for their actions. Real justice must be done for reconciliation to be genuine. If we allow impunity, there will be no real reconciliation.”

DR Congo and M23 rebels say they will sign peace deal mid-August

‘A distraction’

For Takimbula, Kabila – who ruled DRC between 2001 and 2019 – had been working towards this reconciliation.

“Joseph Kabila came here to South Kivu,” he said. “He held consultations with all the representative layers of civil society. And it was for peace efforts. They [the government] are accusing him of having allied with the M23. But these are the same authorities who continue negotiations [with M23], who are conducting prisoner exchanges.”

“It’s a distraction. Condemning Kabila is just creating more problems,” he added.

HRW’s Mudge said that prosecutors had not presented any credible evidence against Kabila, who he said “when he was president, was at the forefront of the fight against the M23”.

He added: “There’s also the timing: there will be elections [including presidential elections] in 2028. Joseph Kabila is seen as someone who could be very inconvenient for President Tshisekedi.”


This article was adapted from the original version in French.


Côte d’Ivoire election 2025

Côte d’Ivoire bans protests over opposition leaders’ exclusion from election

In a statement released on Thursday, the National Security Council announced it would ban any public gatherings aimed at challenging the Constitutional Council’s ruling barring two opposition leaders from standing in this month’s election – a move that analysts say could backfire. 

The measure comes as the two main opposition parties were planning to hold a march on Saturday to “demand dialogue for inclusive, transparent, and democratic elections”.

The National Security Council (CNS) indicated that 44,000 members of the security and defence forces had been mobilised to “ensure a secure and peaceful election”, carrying out joint patrols.

The statement said that since the Constitutional Council published its final list of candidates for the 25 October presidential election, “several individuals, including political leaders, have been making xenophobic, hateful and subversive statements and spreading false information likely to disturb public order”.

Saturday’s planned march has now been banned because it posed “risks of public disorder,” according to the prefecture.

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

Risk versus reticence

For some analysts, despite the ban the risk of unrest remains.

“It’s particularly intense in Cote d’Ivoire at the moment,” researcher Paul Melly of British think tank Chatham House told RFI.

“Many young West Africans, particularly in the francophone countries, are frustrated with the political process and the political class more generally. And there’s a sense that the political class is preoccupied with its traditional disputes, its inter-partisan wrangles and tussles over power. And that they’re rather detached from the reality of people’s everyday lives.”

This all leads, he believes, to “a risk it could boil over and that there could be violence”.

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

He counters, however, that Ivorians are wary of violent protests, citing the events of 2010-11 around the election in which current President Alassane Ouattara came to power and incumbent Laurent Gbagbo refused to accept the result, sparking the Second Ivorian Civil War.

“With those past crises seared deeply into the memory of many Ivorians, there is a reticence to [take] political confrontation too far and take it out on to the streets, because many people feel they never want to go back there,” he said.

The more pressing concern, according to Melly, is that young Ivorians will become disillusioned with the political process as a whole.

‘France’s last bastion’

Ouattara, 83, who has led the country since April 2011, is seeking a fourth term, having changed the constitution in 2016 to remove presidential term limits, angering the opposition.

The former economist had a career as an international civil servant, notably at the International Monetary Fund, where he became director of the Africa department, then at the Central Bank of West African States in Dakar.

As president, he has been credited with keeping Côte d’Ivoire prosperous and economically dynamic.

“I am a candidate because our country is facing unprecedented security, economic and monetary challenges, the management of which requires experience,” he said in a speech on 29 July.

However, Ouattara’s Côte d’Ivoire is also seen as “France’s last bastion”, and he maintains close ties with France’s Emmanuel Macron – which, according to political scientist Mathias Hounkpé “has diminished his ability to intervene in crises in the Sahel”.

Press freedom NGO urges Côte d’Ivoire to protect journalists ahead of election

Disqualifications

Four candidates are standing against the incumbent president: former ministers Jean-Louis Billon, Ahoua Don Mello and Henriette Lagou, and Simone Gbagbo, the former wife of former president Gbagbo.

But neither of the main opposition parties – the PDCI and PPA-CI – have been able to field a candidate, due to several being disqualified by the Constitutional Council, including Laurent Gbagbo and Tidjane Thiam, former minister of development.

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

Provisional results will be published by the Independent Electoral Commission (CEI) between 26 and 30 October. To be elected in the first round, a candidate must obtain an absolute majority of the votes cast. If none of the candidates manage this, a second round could take place on 29 November.

This article was partially adapted from the original version in French.


EUROPE – DEFENCE

Russian ‘shadow fleet’ ship detained by French navy resumes voyage

A tanker accused of being part of Russia’s “shadow fleet” of sanction-busting ships resumed its voyage on Friday, six days after it was seized by the French navy off the coast of western France.

Maritime tracking websites Marine Traffic and Vesselfinder showed the Boracay, which claims to be flagged in Benin, heading towards the Suez Canal.

The vessel, also known as the Pushpa or the Kiwala, has been blacklisted by the European Union for being part of a fleet of ageing oil tankers used to bypass sanctions on Russia since its invasion of Ukraine three years ago.

It was boarded on Saturday by French authorities who detained the captain and first mate.

The skipper, who is due to appear in a French court in February over failing to comply with navy orders, was back on the vessel on Friday along with his chief officer, a source close to the case said.

France to try Chinese captain of Russia ‘shadow fleet’ vessel

Back on board

“They were brought back to their ship after being released from custody,” a source close to the case told the French news agency AFP.

French prosecutors said on Thursday that the Boracay was stopped because of inconsistencies over its registration while it was carrying a large cargo of Russian oil bound for India.

The Boracay has been linked to mysterious drone flights over Denmark last month, including military sites. They were part of a spate of drone sightings and airspace violations in European countries blamed on Russia although Moscow denies responsibility.

Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, condemned France’s detention of the vessel as “piracy” and promised to react to what he called European threats.

“We are closely monitoring the rising militarisation of Europe,” Putin told a foreign policy forum in the city of Sochi, southern Russia.

“The tanker was seized in neutral waters without any justification” adding that there was no military cargo onboard. “This is piracy,” he said.

“Retaliatory measures by Russia will not take long. The response to such threats will be very significant. Russia will never show weakness or indecisiveness.”

Moldova’s pro-EU party ahead in polls overshadowed by Russian meddling claims

Airspace incidents 

The airspace incidents are adding to tension between European nations and Moscow, already riding high over Russia’s war on Ukraine.

French President Emmanuel Macron urged European countries to do more to thwart Moscow’s efforts to skirt Western sanctions.

Speaking at a summit in Denmark, Macron said Europe needed to “kill the business model” of transporting Russian oil on ageing, foreign-flagged tankers by detaining such ships.

The Boracay left the Russian port of Primorsk near Saint Petersburg on 20 September, shipping data shows.

Marine Traffic data indicates it is scheduled to arrive in the Indian port of Vadinar on 20 October.


MOROCCO

Morocco Gen Z protests enter sixth day with calls to oust government

Mass protests in Morocco entered a sixth day on Friday, with the youth-led movement GenZ 212 demanding that the government be removed. The group said the authorities had failed to protect citizens’ constitutional rights and respond to basic social needs.

Three people have died since the demonstrations began. Hundreds have been arrested and nearly 300 people – mostly members of the security forces – have been injured in clashes and scuffles, the interior ministry said.

It added that 80 public and private buildings and hundreds of cars had been vandalised.

GenZ 212 also called for the release of all those detained in connection with what it described as peaceful protests.

The group, whose main organisers remain unknown, said its demand for the government’s dismissal was based on a constitutional article that gives the king the power to appoint and dismiss the prime minister and cabinet.

Morocco rocked by fourth day of Gen Z-led protests over public services

Social inequality

The rallies have been driven by anger over social inequality and failing public services. Protests swelled after reports last month of the deaths of eight pregnant women at a public hospital in the southern city of Agadir.

“Moroccan youth are taking to the streets to call for functioning hospitals, quality schools and decent jobs. They’re rejecting billions being spent on stadiums for the World Cup, while basic services are collapsing,” Tahani Brahma, a researcher and secretary general of the Moroccan Association for Human Rights, told RFI. 

“Most importantly, Moroccan youth do not want promises, they want their rights.”

In October 2023, Morocco was chosen, along with Portugal and Spain, to host the 2030 centenary edition of the World Cup. Six venues will be in Morocco, three in Portugal and 11 in Spain.

Government spending on new stadiums and refurbishing existing ones for the World Cup and the upcoming Africa Cup of Nations is estimated to exceed €5 billion.

Online forums

GenZ 212 has mainly used the online messaging platform Discord to mobilise protests. It has repeatedly said it rejects the violence and vandalism reported in several towns and cities.

Prime Minister Aziz Akhannouch, head of the National Rally of Independents, chaired a meeting on Tuesday attended by coalition partners Fatima Zahra Mansouri, Mohamed Mahdi Bensaid and Nizar Baraka.

“After reviewing the developments linked to youth expressions in online and public spaces, the government affirms that it listens carefully to and understands the social demands,” the politicians said in a communique.

“We are ready to respond positively and responsibly through dialogue and discussion within institutions and public forums, and by finding realistic, implementable solutions that serve the interests of the nation and citizens.”


Unesco

Unesco veteran Matoko pitches reform agenda ahead of leadership vote

The UN’s scientific and cultural agency, Unesco, faces criticism for being slow, politicised and short of funds. As it prepares to choose a successor to its French director general, Audrey Azoulay, on Monday, Congolese veteran Firmin Édouard Matoko tells RFI that his three decades inside the organisation are an asset – not a liability – in fixing it.

RFI: What is your vision for Unesco if you are elected?

Firmin Édouard Matoko: Well, I think that what we need to do is quickly come up with pragmatic solutions to the problems with the United Nations system – its inefficiency, its extreme bureaucracy and its politicisation.

I think we can do more, we can do better. What I propose is a reflection on the mission and mandate of Unesco. It is a technical, intellectual agency, not an agency designed to engage in political mediation.

It is an agency that must propose technical solutions to situations that are extremely complex, from a political point of view. We saw this with the war in Ukraine, for example. We see it in Gaza. We see it in conflicts that are unfortunately forgotten today – in Sudan, Haiti and Afghanistan.

RFI: You say that Unesco lacks resources. This year, the United States announced its withdrawal from the organisation. Do you have anything to say to Donald Trump, who says that Unesco is too politicised?

FEM: Listen, this is a universal organisation where every voice counts. And it is an intellectual organisation, so we welcome contradiction and debate. We are not here to decide in favour of one side or the other, we give member states and civil society a platform to express their views on major issues. This organisation is a space for dialogue and solidarity.

Unesco warns majority of World Heritage sites at risk from drought or flooding

RFI: You have been a senior official at Unesco for more than 30 years. What do you say to those who call you an apparatchik?

FEM: Is the word “apparatchik” still used? I didn’t know that…

Well, let’s just say that, precisely because I am an insider, I prefer someone who knows the company, who has been in management. I know where changes can be made, and I know what can be done immediately.

RFI: Your leadership rival, the Egyptian Khaled El-Enany, emphasises that he comes from outside the organisation and has practical experience, having been his country’s minister of culture. Is that the difference between the two of you?

FEM: I was minister of external relations for 15 years. I travelled to more than 100 countries, providing solutions in times of peace and in times of conflict – in Iraq, Jordan, Syria, Haiti, Cambodia, at the height of conflicts in Somalia and Sudan.

So I think I know what multilateralism is. We proposed solutions in Rwanda after the genocide, in Burundi, in Congo. And so I think it’s reductive to talk about me as an apparatchik.

Plastic Odyssey and Unesco sign deal to restore marine World Heritage sites

RFI: You have only officially been a candidate for six months, whereas your opponent has been one for more than two years and has garnered support from many countries in Europe and the Arab world. Are you going into this election at a disadvantage?

FEM: No, I don’t think so. I’d say I have been a candidate for 30 years, since the first day I joined Unesco. I always had the ambition. And I am a role model for many colleagues, because I’ve shown it’s possible for a person from a small country in the Global South, trained within Unesco, can rise to the highest levels of leadership.

I believe in the wisdom of the member states to choose the best candidate for this organisation.

RFI: The African Union has already declared its preference, and it’s for your opponent…

FEM: The African Union has endorsed a candidate, but member states here at Unesco are not required to elect a candidate from the African Union. The African Union does not vote, otherwise we would have had a candidate from Mercosur and a candidate from the European Union. I have a legitimate right to stand as a candidate.

RFI: How do you feel about Khaled El-Enany being the favourite to win?

FEM: That doesn’t discourage me, believe me. I am not a candidate from one region or one country. I am a candidate for all nations, all peoples. And I am going into this with conviction because I am passionate about this institution.


This interview was adapted from the original version in French and lightly edited for clarity.


CZECH ELECTIONS

Czechs head to polls with billionaire ex-premier tipped to come first

Prague (AFP) – Czechs will cast ballots on Friday and Saturday in a general election which the party of self-described “Trumpist” Andrej Babis is expected to top, though without getting a majority.

A possible return to power of the billionaire ex-premier could draw the Czech Republic – an ally of Ukraine – closer to EU mavericks Hungary and Slovakia, spelling rocky relations with both Kyiv and Brussels.

But even if Babis’s ANO (“Yes”) party tops the vote, it will almost certainly have to negotiate a coalition or backing from other parties.

Babis is campaigning in the EU and NATO member of around 11 million people on pledges of welfare and halting military aid to Ukraine.

The current centre-right coalition government of Prime Minister Petr Fiala has provided extensive humanitarian and military aid to Ukraine, but many voters blame it for ignoring problems at home.

“A change is necessary. The Czech Republic must be more autonomous, it must not be just a messenger boy for Brussels,” 68-year-old geographer Jaroslav Kolar told AFP.

But doctor Anna Stefanova, 41, told AFP she was afraid of a “sway towards Russia”.

Babis was critical of some EU policies while he was prime minister from 2017 to 2021, and is on good terms with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and Slovakia’s Robert Fico, who have maintained ties with Moscow despite its invasion of Ukraine.

France’s Macron in Prague for talks on Ukraine, nuclear energy

‘Czechs first’

Polling stations will opened at 12pm GMT and will close at 8pm GMT on Friday, before reopening from 6am-12pm GMT on Saturday, with the results expected on Saturday evening.

ANO tops the opinion polls with support exceeding 30 percent, ahead of Fiala’s Together grouping with about 20 percent.

In 2024, Babis co-founded the far-right Patriots for Europe group in the European Parliament, which also includes France’s National Rally among other parties.

Fiala, a 61-year-old former political science professor, said on X that voters would decide “whether we will continue on the path of freedom, high-quality democracy, security and prosperity, or whether we will go east”.

‘Pragmatic businessman’

But Charles University analyst Josef Mlejnek told AFP he did not expect “a fundamental change” if Babis wins.

“Babis is a pragmatic businessman and the only thing he cares about is being prime minister,” he added.

Analysts caution, however, that all will depend on the election results.

If Babis’s party comes first but fails to win a majority, he could try to pursue a coalition with the far-right opposition SPD movement, which is backed by about 12 percent of voters, according to analysts.

Some concerns about Russian propaganda being spread online to influence the elections have also emerged, though analysts say they cannot see a big shift in voter sentiment so far.

Slovakia’s neighbours boost border checks to stem illegal migrant flows

A group of analysts said last week that Czech TikTok accounts reaching millions of viewers “systematically spread pro-Russian propaganda and support anti-system parties through manipulated engagement”.

Both Babis and Fiala have seen scandals tarnish their reputations.

Fiala’s government is under fire over the justice ministry’s decision to accept $44 million in bitcoins from a convicted criminal.

Babis, Slovak-born and the seventh-wealthiest Czech according to Forbes magazine, is due to stand trial for EU subsidy fraud worth more than $2 million.

Babis allegedly took his farm near Prague out of his Agrofert food and chemicals holding company in 2007 to make it eligible for a subsidy for small firms.

He has rejected all allegations of wrongdoing as “a smear campaign”.


GERMAN REUNIFICATION

Germany marks 35 years of unity, despite persistent East-West divide

Germany marks 35 years since its reunification on Friday, but the country’s East-West divide continues to shape its economy and its political landscape. 

The anniversary celebrates the political turning point of 1990, when East and West Germany became one nation after more than four decades of division.

Integration was swift, dramatic and expensive. Some estimates put the cumulative cost of reunification at more than €2 trillion between 1990 and the mid-2010s.

In the years following reunification, the federal government poured money into infrastructure, social welfare and retraining programmes in the former East. Public and private transfers to that half of the country have remained substantial, sometimes reaching €70 billion a year.

It also launched a rapid monetary union and privatised state-owned enterprises through the Treuhand agency, which oversaw one of the largest public sell-offs in modern history.

Chancellor-elect Merz outlines new coalition’s vision for Germany

Disparity between east and west

Economic activity, capital investment and productivity in the former East initially surged, reducing the prosperity gap with the west of the country. However that momentum stalled, and today economic disparity between former East and West Germany is pronounced.

In 2023, GDP per capita in the east stood at around 66 percent of that in the west.

Several studies estimate that, depending on the metric used, the east remains 20 to 25  percent poorer than the former West.

Rural parts of eastern Germany are most acutely affected, with lower wages, weaker capital stocks, slower growth and demographic decline. Even among firms of comparable size in similar industries, productivity gaps persist. 

The rise of the AfD 

In recent weeks, the political and social tensions around this persistent divide have drawn attention anew.

On 25 September, Chancellor Friedrich Merz acknowledged that large parts of eastern Germany remain haunted by “fears of decline” as he met with state premiers from the region.

He lamented that many in the east feel like “second-class citizens” and warned that outward migration, de-industrialisation and disenchantment with politics have deepened disillusionment.

Since reunification, some 5 million people have left the east of the country for better opportunities in the west. The far-right AfD is now leading in the polls in all five eastern states.

German intelligence classifies AfD party as extremist threat to democracy

Merz stressed that there have been positive developments, pointing out that average incomes in the east now exceed those of some large European peers. He stressed a renewed focus on competitiveness, energy, transport and defence investment.

However, Merz’s personal engagement in the region has been limited – until recently he had rarely visited any areas in the east of the country outside Berlin.

From an economic viewpoint, Germany faces fresh headwinds. Growth has been sluggish, even contracting in recent years, and many analysts warn of structural malaise in Europe’s powerhouse economy.

The European Commission forecasts German stagnation in 2025, before a modest rebound in 2026. Against this backdrop, the former East’s enduring disadvantage feels especially stark, and the mood on 3 October decidedly mixed.


GAZA CRISIS

Israel to deport intercepted Gaza flotilla activists to Europe

Jerusalem (AFP) – Israel said on Thursday it will deport to Europe pro-Palestinian activists on an aid flotilla headed towards Gaza as the Israeli navy intercepted vessel after vessel in the Mediterranean.

The Global Sumud Flotilla of around 45 vessels began its voyage to Gaza last month, with politicians and activists including Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg aiming to break Israel‘s siege of the Palestinian territory, where the United Nations says famine has set in.

The Israeli navy began intercepting vessels on Wednesday after warning the activists against entering waters it says fall under its blockade, with Thunberg’s ship among those stopped from going further.

By Thursday, of the roughly 45 ships, more than 30 had been intercepted or were assumed to have been intercepted, according to the flotilla’s tracking system.

“Hamas-Sumud passengers on their yachts are making their way safely and peacefully to Israel, where their deportation procedures to Europe will begin. The passengers are safe and in good health,” the foreign ministry said on X, posting photos of Thunberg and other activists aboard a boat.

Flotilla spokesman Saif Abukeshek said the vessels that had not been intercepted were determined to continue.

“They are determined. They are motivated, and they are doing everything within their hands to be able to break the siege by this early morning,” he said.

In a statement, the flotilla organisers branded the interceptions as “illegal” since they were traversing international waters.

“Beyond the confirmed interceptions, live streams and communications with several other vessels have been lost,” the statement added.

Gaza flotilla boarded by Israeli navy amid calls to lift blockade

‘Piracy’

Israel’s foreign ministry said the intercepted activists were being transferred to an Israeli port.

It posted footage of the 22-year-old Thunberg retrieving her belongings, adding: “Greta and her friends are safe and healthy.”

Hamas, whose October 7, 2023 attack on Israel sparked the war in Gaza, condemned the interception of the flotilla as a “crime of piracy and maritime terrorism”.

With the war in Gaza dragging on, solidarity with the Palestinians has grown globally, with activists and increasingly governments criticising Israel for its actions.

Spain and Italy, which both sent naval escorts to protect its citizens on board the flotilla, had urged the activists to halt before entering Israel’s declared exclusion zone off Gaza, saying they would not be allowed to pass that mark.

After a 10-day stop in Tunisia, where organisers reported two drone attacks, the flotilla resumed its journey on September 15.

One of its main ships, the Alma, was “aggressively circled by an Israeli warship”, the group said, before another vessel, the Sirius, was subjected to “similar harassing manoeuvres”.

Growing calls for France to lift ‘collective punishment’ ban on visas for Gazans

‘Intimidation’

The flotilla had earlier vowed to press on with its bid to break the siege and deliver aid to Gaza despite what it called “intimidation” tactics by the Israeli military.

It said on X it remained “vigilant as we enter the area where the previous flotillas were intercepted and/or attacked”.

In Italy, which has already seen a general strike in support of the flotilla, hundreds of protesters turned out on Wednesday in Rome.

In Naples, demonstrators blocked trains at the main station for around an hour before being cleared by police.

Unions have called for another strike on Friday to urge stronger action from the government against Israel’s actions in Gaza.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro said he will expel all remaining Israeli diplomats in the country over the interception.

Turkey called the interception “an act of terrorism that constitutes the most serious violation of international law and endangers the lives of innocent civilians”.

Israel blocked similar flotilla campaigns in June and July.

As Gaza aid flotilla comes under attack, NGOs urge Europe to act

‘Stop now’

Spain’s digital transformation minister, Oscar Lopez, had urged the flotilla not to cross into Israel’s declared exclusion zone, extending 150 nautical miles off Gaza.

Italy, too, urged the activists to “stop now” after its frigate halted at that limit.

The activists said Spain and Italy’s decision was an attempt to “sabotage” their endeavours.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said the activists posed no threat and urged Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu not to consider them one either.

On Thursday, Spain summoned Israel’s top representative in Madrid, the foreign minister said, saying that 65 Spaniards were travelling with the flotilla.

And Italy’s Giorgia Meloni said the voyage could jeopardise US President Donald Trump‘s latest proposed Gaza peace plan, currently still under negotiation.


EUROPE – DEFENCE

Zelensky to urge EU leaders to speed up Europe’s drone shield plan

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky joined European Union leaders in Copenhagen on Thursday as they push ahead with plans to build a continent-wide defence shield against Russian drones. The summit follows a series of airspace intrusions that have rattled Denmark, Poland and Estonia, highlighting gaps in Europe’s security.

“The recent drone incidents across Europe are a clear sign that Russia still feels bold enough to escalate this war,” Zelensky said as he arrived for the talks.

“It was never just about Ukraine, Russia has always aimed to break the West and Europe.”

EU leaders meeting in the Danish capital on Wednesday endorsed the idea of a coordinated system of sensors, weapons and technology to detect and neutralise drones.

They said the move was urgent given Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine and what they called Moscow’s attempts to destabilise its neighbours.

“Europe must be able to defend itself,” Danish prime minister Mette Frederiksen said. She called for more investment in drones, anti-drone systems and a continent-wide network to respond to threats.

Zelensky offered Ukraine’s “war-tested” expertise in countering drone attacks, telling leaders: “If the Russians dare to launch drones against Poland, or violate the airspace of northern European countries, it means this can happen anywhere. We are ready to share this experience with our partners.”

EU leaders plot defence boost in shadow of Denmark drones

‘Russia tries to test us’

The informal summit came just days after unmanned aircraft disrupted flights in Denmark, prompting a nationwide temporary ban on drones.

Poland has reported repeated breaches of its airspace by Russian drones, while Estonia accused Russian fighter jets of flying over its territory. NATO scrambled fighter jets, helicopters and a Patriot missile defence system to respond to the Polish incident.

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen was blunt about Moscow’s tactics.

“Russia tries to test us. But Russia also tries to sow division and anxiety in our societies. We will not let this happen,” she said.

Von der Leyen’s call for a “drone wall” – a network of early-warning sensors and weapons along Europe’s eastern flank – has gained traction since she first raised it last month.

NATO secretary general Mark Rutte described it as “timely and necessary”, a view now backed by many EU leaders.

The Kremlin has denied responsibility. Spokesman Dmitry Peskov dismissed the “drone wall” idea, saying “as history has shown, erecting walls is always a bad thing”.

French president Emmanuel Macron said Western countries should take a tougher line when confronted by Russian drones.

“It’s very important to have a clear message. Drones which would violate our territories are just taking a big risk. They can be destroyed, full stop,” he said.

Romanian prime minister Nicosur Dan, whose country has already seen Russian drones cross over from Ukraine, warned that his forces would shoot down the next one to violate Romanian airspace.

French military to help counter drones over Denmark ahead of EU summit

Disagreements over priorities

While leaders endorsed the overall plan, they differ on how to make it work. Frederiksen and Finnish prime minister Petteri Orpo stressed the need to act quickly, warning that Russia will keep probing Europe’s defences.

French president Emmanuel Macron argued for a broader deterrence strategy, including early-warning systems and long-range strike capabilities. Italy’s Giorgia Meloni said the EU must also pay attention to threats on its southern borders.

Macron also urged Europe to crack down on what he called Russia’s “shadow fleet” of ageing oil tankers that Moscow uses to evade restrictions on exporting its oil.

“It is extremely important to increase the pressure on this shadow fleet, because it will clearly reduce the capacity to finance this war effort,” he said, noting that France had moved this week to hold a blacklisted tanker linked to Russia.

Funding Ukraine with frozen assets

The summit also discussed a proposal to use Russian assets frozen in Europe to help finance a large loan for Ukraine. Some member states back the idea, saying Moscow should help pay for the war it started. Others remain cautious, citing legal and financial risks.

The EU plan could raise around €140 billion. Proponents say it is needed to help Ukraine plug budget shortfalls – and that Russia, not European taxpayers, should ultimately foot the bill. But Belgium, which holds most of the frozen assets, is wary.

“We’re going to move to uncharted waters. This is very, very risky,” Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever said. He wants firm commitments from other EU leaders to share potential liability to shield Belgium from any Russian retaliation.

Von der Leyen said on Wednesday it was clear that the risk should not fall only on Belgium’s shoulders and promised to “intensify” talks to find a way forward.

The Kremlin has denounced the plan as “pure theft”.

Zelensky is expected to use his visit on Thursday to urge EU leaders to keep up military and financial support for Kyiv, as United States backing weakens.

(with newswires)

The Sound Kitchen

The EU, France, and pesticides

Issued on:

This week on The Sound Kitchen, you’ll hear the answer to the question about the Duplomb law. There’s “On This Day”, “The Listener’s Corner” with Paul Myers, Ollia Horton’s “Happy Moment”, and a lovely musical dessert to finish it all off. All that and the new quiz and bonus questions too, so click the “Play” button above and enjoy! 

Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday here on our website, or wherever you get your podcasts. You’ll hear the winner’s names announced and the week’s quiz question, along with all the other ingredients you’ve grown accustomed to: your letters and essays, “On This Day”, quirky facts and news, interviews, and great music … so be sure and listen every week.

Erwan and I are busy cooking up special shows with your music requests, so get them in! Send your music requests to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr  Tell us why you like the piece of music, too – it makes it more interesting for us all!

Facebook: Be sure to send your photos for the RFI English Listeners Forum banner to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr

More tech news: Did you know we have a YouTube channel? Just go to YouTube and write RFI English in the search bar, and there we are! Be sure to subscribe to see all our videos.

Would you like to learn French? RFI is here to help you!

Our website “Le Français facile avec rfi” has news broadcasts in slow, simple French, as well as bilingual radio dramas (with real actors!) and exercises to practice what you have heard.

Go to our website and get started! At the top of the page, click on “Test level”, and you’ll be counseled on the best-suited activities for your level according to your score.

Do not give up! As Lidwien van Dixhoorn, the head of “Le Français facile” service, told me: “Bathe your ears in the sound of the language, and eventually, you’ll get it”. She should know – Lidwien is Dutch and came to France hardly able to say “bonjour” and now she heads this key RFI department – so stick with it!

Be sure you check out our wonderful podcasts!

In addition to the breaking news articles on our site, with in-depth analysis of current affairs in France and across the globe, we have several podcasts that will leave you hungry for more.

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

Remember, podcasts are radio, too! As you see, sound is still quite present in the RFI English service.  Please keep checking our website for updates on the latest from our excellent staff of journalists. You never know what we’ll surprise you with!

To listen to our podcasts from your PC, go to our website; you’ll see “Podcasts” at the top of the page. You can either listen directly or subscribe and receive them directly on your mobile phone.

To listen to our podcasts from your mobile phone, slide through the tabs just under the lead article (the first tab is “Headline News”) until you see “Podcasts”, and choose your show.  

Teachers take note!  I save postcards and stamps from all over the world to send to you for your students. If you would like stamps and postcards for your students, just write and let me know. The address is english.service@rfi.fr  If you would like to donate stamps and postcards, feel free! Our address is listed below. 

Independent RFI English Clubs: Be sure to always include Audrey Iattoni (audrey.iattoni@rfi.fr) from our Listener Relations department in all your RFI Club correspondence. Remember to copy me (thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr) when you write to her so that I know what is going on, too. N.B.: You do not need to send her your quiz answers! Email overload!

This week’s quiz: On 26 July, I asked you a question about Paul Myers’ article “Petition seeking repeal of new French farming law passes one million signatures”.

It was about the Duplomb law, which was passed by the French parliament on 8 July. The law would allow the pesticide acetamiprid to be used, after a ban since 2018. French farmers protested the ban because it is allowed at the European level; they say it puts them at a disadvantage with their European counterparts.

But two weeks after the bill passed, Eléonore Pattery, a young student from Bordeaux, launched a petition calling for a recall.

And that was your question: you were to write in with the number of signatures on that petition as of 20 July, and also how many signatures French law requires before the lower house of Parliament, the Assemblée Nationale, has the right to hold a public debate on the contents of the petition.

The answer is, to quote Paul’s article: “Late on Sunday, the 20th of July, the number of signatures had risen to 1,159,000.

Under French rules, once a petition crosses that threshold and has verified signatures from throughout the country, the Assemblée Nationale has the right to hold a public debate on the contents of the petition.

The regulations also state that even if a petition gathers 500,000 names, it does not mean that the legislation will be reviewed or repealed.”

In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question, suggested by RFI Listeners Club member Jocelyne D’Errico from New Zealand. She wanted to know how you feel and what you think about soulmates.

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

The winners are: RFI English listener Kalyani Basak from West Bengal, India. Kalyani is also the winner of this week’s bonus quiz. Congratulations, Kalyani, on your double win.

Also on the list of lucky winners this week are Akbar Waseem, a member of the RFI Seven Stars Listeners Club in District Chiniot, Pakistan; RFI Listeners Club member Rasel Sikder from Madaripur, Bangladesh, and RFI English listeners Sadman Shihab Khondaker from Naogaon and Momo Jahan Moumita, the co-secretary of the Sonali Badhan Female Listeners Club in Bogura, both in Bangladesh.

Congratulations winners!

Here’s the music you heard on this week’s program: España by Emmanuel Chabrier, performed by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Ataúlfo Argenta; “Hoe-Down” from the ballet Rodeo by Aaron Copland, performed by the San Francisco Symphony conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer; “Happy” by Pharrell Williams, and “Mama Used to Say” by Junior Giscomb and Bob Carter, sung by Junior Giscomb.

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

This week’s question … you must listen to the show to participate. After you’ve listened to the show, re-read our article “Moldova’s pro-EU ruling party wins majority in parliamentary elections“, which will help you with the answer.

You have until 27 October to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 4 November podcast. When you enter, be sure to send your postal address with your answer, and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.

Send your answers to:

english.service@rfi.fr

or

Susan Owensby

RFI – The Sound Kitchen

80, rue Camille Desmoulins

92130 Issy-les-Moulineaux

France

Click here to find out how you can win a special Sound Kitchen prize.

Click here to find out how you can become a member of the RFI Listeners Club, or form your own official RFI Club. 


Defence

Macron urges Germany to stick with European fighter jet programme

French President Emmanuel Macron has said France and Germany must maintain their resolve to keep working jointly on the European fighter jet programme.

Governments in Berlin and Paris have been aiming to enhance the continent’s defence autonomy at a time of heightened tensions with Russia.

“Arms companies on both sides are claiming leadership,” Macron said in an interview with the German daily newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.

“It is therefore up to us to stay the course of what we consider to be in the general Franco-German interest and to continue working on joint solutions.”

The Future Combat Air System programme – known by its French acronym Scaf – was launched in 2017 to replace France’s Rafale jet and the Eurofighter planes used by Germany and Spain.

But the scheme, jointly developed by the three countries, has stalled as disagreements grow between France’s Dassault Aviation and Airbus, which represents German and Spanish interests.

France warns it could go it alone as European fighter jet project stalls

‘Necessary decisions’

 Macron also said he and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz had requested their defence ministers conduct a review of the project by the end of the year.

“And it is on this basis that we will rule and take the necessary decisions,” he added.

Both French and German executives said recently they can develop the fighter jet project without each other.

Last week, Dassault Aviation and a government official said that France was in a position to press on with the project alone should negotiations with Germany and Spain fail.

“I don’t mind if the Germans are complaining,” said Dassault Aviation chief Eric Trappier. “If they want to do it on their own, let them do it on their own.” 

Leaders in Berlin and Madrid have been exasperated by the position of Dassault, which has been vying for a main role in the project.

Air France, Airbus back in court over deadly 2009 Rio-Paris flight

France and Germany have also sought to jointly develop a next-generation battle tank equipped with artificial intelligence and laser technology.

But those plans have also faced delays amid rivalry between French and German industrial companies.

Macron said that both the fighter jet project and the advanced battle tank dubbed the Main Ground Combat System (MGCS) still meet the strategic needs of both countries.

“We knew from the outset that it would be very difficult, because competing manufacturers were forced to join forces for a project,” Macron said.

“However, I am in favour of maximum integration, because we need to produce more, and we need to do so at the European level.”

‘Strategic ambiguity’

During the interview with the paper, Macron also said he would not rule out downing a Russian fighter jet if it were to breach European airspace without authorisation.

France and Germany weigh future of joint EU weapons projects

“In accordance with the doctrine of strategic ambiguity, I can tell you that nothing is ruled out,” Macron told the paper.

After Russia was blamed for drone incursions into NATO members Poland and Romania, Macron last week said the alliance’s response would have to go up a notch in the case of new provocations from Moscow.

On Wednesday, Macron revealed that France was investigating an EU-sanctioned, Russian-linked oil tanker anchored off the French coast for what he said were serious offences.

The Boracay, a Benin-flagged vessel, has been blacklisted by the European Union for being part of Russia’s sanction-busting “shadow fleet”.

According to the specialist website The Maritime Executive, the vessel is suspected of being involved in mystery drone flights that disrupted air traffic in Denmark in September.


Conservation

Jane Goodall, pioneering primatologist and voice for wildlife, dies aged 91

Jane Goodall, the British primatologist whose pioneering research transformed humanity’s understanding of chimpanzees and who went on to become one of the world’s most influential voices for nature, has died aged 91, her institute announced on Wednesday.

Goodall “passed away of natural causes” while in California during a speaking tour of the United States, the Jane Goodall Institute said in a statement on social media.

“Dr Goodall’s discoveries as an ethologist revolutionised science, and she was a tireless advocate for the protection and restoration of our natural world,” it added.

Scientific pioneer

Born on 3 April 1934 in London, Valerie Jane Morris-Goodall – later known simply as Jane Goodall  – displayed a fascination with animals from a very young age. Her father gave her a toy chimpanzee, “Jubilee”, which she cherished throughout her life.

Enthralled by the Tarzan adventure books, she later remarked with amusement that Tarzan had married the “wrong Jane”.

Goodall’s unconventional path began in 1957 when, at the age of 23, she travelled to Kenya to visit a friend.

There she met Louis Leakey, the eminent Kenyan-based palaeontologist, who hired her as his secretary and soon recognised her extraordinary observational gifts.

Zoologist Jane Goodall warns: ‘The world is a mess’ ahead of COP16

Leakey dispatched her to what is now Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania, where she embarked on a groundbreaking study of chimpanzees in their natural habitat.

With no formal scientific training at the time, Goodall’s approach was unconventional but revolutionary: she named the chimpanzees she observed, rather than assigning them numbers, and emphasised their individuality, emotions, and social bonds.

Her most celebrated discovery came in 1960, when she observed chimpanzees using sticks and blades of grass as tools to extract termites from their mounds.

This shattered the long-held belief that tool-making was a uniquely human trait, forcing a profound re-evaluation of the boundary between humans and other animals.

Encouraged by Leakey, Goodall went on to pursue a doctorate at the University of Cambridge, becoming only the eighth person in the institution’s history to be awarded a PhD without first obtaining an undergraduate degree. Her thesis, based on her Gombe research, was published in 1965.

Research and global advocacy

In 1977 she founded the Jane Goodall Institute, which has since become a global leader in primate research, conservation, and community-led environmental projects.

Fourteen years later she launched Roots & Shoots, a youth movement dedicated to environmental and humanitarian action that now spans more than 60 countries.

Goodall’s transition from scientist to activist began in the 1980s after attending a US conference on chimpanzees, where she was confronted with the grim reality of animals used in biomedical research and the accelerating destruction of African forests. Deeply shaken, she resolved to speak out.

Anthropologist, conservationist and eternal optimist Richard Leakey dies at 77

From then on she travelled tirelessly, sometimes visiting more than 300 cities in a single year, urging audiences to act with compassion towards both animals and the planet. She became a powerful voice in global debates on biodiversity, climate change, and sustainable development.

Even in her later years, Goodall remained a commanding presence. Ahead of a United Nations biodiversity summit in Colombia in 2024, she told AFP: “The time for words and false promises is past if we want to save the planet.”

Her philosophy was rooted in the belief that every person, no matter how ordinary, can make a difference. “Each individual has a role to play,” she said, “and every one of us makes some impact on the planet every single day. We can choose what sort of impact we make.”

Indigenous Kenyans forced off ancestral lands in name of conservation: NGOs

Enduring legacy

Goodall received countless accolades during her lifetime, including damehood in 2004, the French Legion of Honour, the Benjamin Franklin Medal, and the Templeton Prize. She authored numerous books — from academic works to children’s stories — and was the subject of acclaimed documentaries, including National Geographic’s Jane (2017).

Despite her fame, she remained humble, often describing herself as “just a girl who loved animals”. Her legacy lies not only in her scientific achievements but also in the millions she inspired to treat animals and the natural world with empathy and respect.

(with newswires)

International report

Turkey and Egypt’s joint naval drill signals shifting Eastern Med alliances

Issued on:

As efforts continue to resolve Israel’s war in Gaza, the conflict is threatening to destabilise the wider region. A rare joint naval exercise between once-rivals Turkey and Egypt is being seen as a warning to Israel, as long-standing alliances shift and new rival partnerships take shape across the Eastern Mediterranean.

After a 13-year break, Turkish and Egyptian warships last week carried out a major naval drill in the Eastern Mediterranean.

The exercise is the latest step in repairing ties after years of tension that began when Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi ousted Mohamed Morsi, a close ally of Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“It marks the consolidation of the improvement in relations,” said Serhat Guvenc, professor of international relations at Kadir Has University in Istanbul, adding the drill sent “a powerful message to Israel of a new alignment”.

Guvenc said naval drills in the eastern Mediterranean have typically involved Cyprus, Greece and Israel, but this time Egypt broke with those countries, signalling it was no longer part of the anti-Turkey camp in the region.

Erdogan’s Washington visit exposes limits of his rapport with Trump

Shift in alliances

The Turkish-Egyptian exercise follows years in which Cairo built strong ties with Ankara’s rivals in the region. The shift has not gone unnoticed in Israel.

“Definitely, this is a major event that Turkey and Egypt have conducted a naval exercise after so many years,” said Gallia Lindenstrauss, an Israeli foreign policy specialist at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv.

The joint drill comes as Ankara has expanded and modernised its navy in recent years. Lindenstrauss said this has unsettled some of Turkey’s neighbours, giving Israel common ground with Greece and Cyprus.

“Some of them also have quite big disputes with Turkey, such as Cyprus and Greece,” she said. “Greece and Cyprus relations with Israel have been developing since 2010. We’ve seen a lot of military drills together. We saw weapons procurements between the three actors, and this has been going on for some time. So Israel is not alone.”

Turkey has long-standing territorial disputes with Greece and the Greek Cypriot government in the Aegean and the Mediterranean.

Guvenc said Israel has gained the upper hand over Turkey in their rivalry centred on Cyprus.

“The Greek Cypriots acquired a very important air defence system from Israel and activated it. They made life far more difficult for the Turkish military, in particular for the Turkish Air Force,” he said.

“This gives you an idea about the shifting balance of power in the Eastern Mediterranean as a result of Israel taking sides with Cyprus and Greece.”

Macron and Erdogan find fragile common ground amid battle for influence

Tensions over Gaza

Despite those rivalries, Turkey and Egypt are finding common ground in their opposition to Israel’s war in Gaza and in wider concerns over Israel’s growing regional power.

In September, Sisi reportedly called Israel an enemy.

“There is competition over who is the most dominant and important actor in the Middle East, in the Muslim world in general,” said Lindenstrauss.

“I really can’t imagine a unified Turkish and Egyptian action against Israel. I can imagine them cooperating to pressure Israel to change its position, which is what is happening now.”

Cairo and Ankara remain at odds over Libya, where they back rival governments. But analysts warn that the fallout from the Gaza conflict is increasingly shaping the region’s power calculations.

Guvenc said the outcome of peace efforts could determine the future balance in the Mediterranean.

“We see an alignment of Greece, Greek Cypriots and Israel. But once the Gaza issue is tackled, from an Israeli perspective, Turkey is strategically more important than these two countries,” he said.

“But if the strategic makeup of the region may not secure a solution, we may see deterioration in the general situation. Then outside actors will be invited by one side or the other, such as Russia, China or even India, to further complicate the issue.”

The Sound Kitchen

The EU, France, and pesticides

Issued on:

This week on The Sound Kitchen, you’ll hear the answer to the question about the Duplomb law. There’s “On This Day”, “The Listener’s Corner” with Paul Myers, Ollia Horton’s “Happy Moment”, and a lovely musical dessert to finish it all off. All that and the new quiz and bonus questions too, so click the “Play” button above and enjoy! 

Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday here on our website, or wherever you get your podcasts. You’ll hear the winner’s names announced and the week’s quiz question, along with all the other ingredients you’ve grown accustomed to: your letters and essays, “On This Day”, quirky facts and news, interviews, and great music … so be sure and listen every week.

Erwan and I are busy cooking up special shows with your music requests, so get them in! Send your music requests to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr  Tell us why you like the piece of music, too – it makes it more interesting for us all!

Facebook: Be sure to send your photos for the RFI English Listeners Forum banner to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr

More tech news: Did you know we have a YouTube channel? Just go to YouTube and write RFI English in the search bar, and there we are! Be sure to subscribe to see all our videos.

Would you like to learn French? RFI is here to help you!

Our website “Le Français facile avec rfi” has news broadcasts in slow, simple French, as well as bilingual radio dramas (with real actors!) and exercises to practice what you have heard.

Go to our website and get started! At the top of the page, click on “Test level”, and you’ll be counseled on the best-suited activities for your level according to your score.

Do not give up! As Lidwien van Dixhoorn, the head of “Le Français facile” service, told me: “Bathe your ears in the sound of the language, and eventually, you’ll get it”. She should know – Lidwien is Dutch and came to France hardly able to say “bonjour” and now she heads this key RFI department – so stick with it!

Be sure you check out our wonderful podcasts!

In addition to the breaking news articles on our site, with in-depth analysis of current affairs in France and across the globe, we have several podcasts that will leave you hungry for more.

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

Remember, podcasts are radio, too! As you see, sound is still quite present in the RFI English service.  Please keep checking our website for updates on the latest from our excellent staff of journalists. You never know what we’ll surprise you with!

To listen to our podcasts from your PC, go to our website; you’ll see “Podcasts” at the top of the page. You can either listen directly or subscribe and receive them directly on your mobile phone.

To listen to our podcasts from your mobile phone, slide through the tabs just under the lead article (the first tab is “Headline News”) until you see “Podcasts”, and choose your show.  

Teachers take note!  I save postcards and stamps from all over the world to send to you for your students. If you would like stamps and postcards for your students, just write and let me know. The address is english.service@rfi.fr  If you would like to donate stamps and postcards, feel free! Our address is listed below. 

Independent RFI English Clubs: Be sure to always include Audrey Iattoni (audrey.iattoni@rfi.fr) from our Listener Relations department in all your RFI Club correspondence. Remember to copy me (thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr) when you write to her so that I know what is going on, too. N.B.: You do not need to send her your quiz answers! Email overload!

This week’s quiz: On 26 July, I asked you a question about Paul Myers’ article “Petition seeking repeal of new French farming law passes one million signatures”.

It was about the Duplomb law, which was passed by the French parliament on 8 July. The law would allow the pesticide acetamiprid to be used, after a ban since 2018. French farmers protested the ban because it is allowed at the European level; they say it puts them at a disadvantage with their European counterparts.

But two weeks after the bill passed, Eléonore Pattery, a young student from Bordeaux, launched a petition calling for a recall.

And that was your question: you were to write in with the number of signatures on that petition as of 20 July, and also how many signatures French law requires before the lower house of Parliament, the Assemblée Nationale, has the right to hold a public debate on the contents of the petition.

The answer is, to quote Paul’s article: “Late on Sunday, the 20th of July, the number of signatures had risen to 1,159,000.

Under French rules, once a petition crosses that threshold and has verified signatures from throughout the country, the Assemblée Nationale has the right to hold a public debate on the contents of the petition.

The regulations also state that even if a petition gathers 500,000 names, it does not mean that the legislation will be reviewed or repealed.”

In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question, suggested by RFI Listeners Club member Jocelyne D’Errico from New Zealand. She wanted to know how you feel and what you think about soulmates.

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

The winners are: RFI English listener Kalyani Basak from West Bengal, India. Kalyani is also the winner of this week’s bonus quiz. Congratulations, Kalyani, on your double win.

Also on the list of lucky winners this week are Akbar Waseem, a member of the RFI Seven Stars Listeners Club in District Chiniot, Pakistan; RFI Listeners Club member Rasel Sikder from Madaripur, Bangladesh, and RFI English listeners Sadman Shihab Khondaker from Naogaon and Momo Jahan Moumita, the co-secretary of the Sonali Badhan Female Listeners Club in Bogura, both in Bangladesh.

Congratulations winners!

Here’s the music you heard on this week’s program: España by Emmanuel Chabrier, performed by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Ataúlfo Argenta; “Hoe-Down” from the ballet Rodeo by Aaron Copland, performed by the San Francisco Symphony conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer; “Happy” by Pharrell Williams, and “Mama Used to Say” by Junior Giscomb and Bob Carter, sung by Junior Giscomb.

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

This week’s question … you must listen to the show to participate. After you’ve listened to the show, re-read our article “Moldova’s pro-EU ruling party wins majority in parliamentary elections“, which will help you with the answer.

You have until 27 October to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 4 November podcast. When you enter, be sure to send your postal address with your answer, and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.

Send your answers to:

english.service@rfi.fr

or

Susan Owensby

RFI – The Sound Kitchen

80, rue Camille Desmoulins

92130 Issy-les-Moulineaux

France

Click here to find out how you can win a special Sound Kitchen prize.

Click here to find out how you can become a member of the RFI Listeners Club, or form your own official RFI Club. 

International report

Europe’s ‘Truman Show’ moment: is it time to walk off Trump’s set?

Issued on:

When Truman Burbank finally realises that his life is a television show – every neighbour an actor, every event scripted – he faces a terrifying choice: walk through the exit door into the unknown, or carry on in a comfortable illusion. Is this is the predicament Europe is facing under Donald Trump’s second term?

In his report for the European Sentiment Compass 2025, Pawel Zerka, of the European Council on Foreign Relations, suggests Europe is living its own “Truman Show moment”.

The United States, he says, is no longer the ally Europeans had been accustomed to having. Instead, under Trump, Washington is not only pulling the strings in trade, defence and digital disputes – it is waging an outright “culture war” on Europe.

The big question is whether the EU has the courage to step off the set, reclaim its autonomy and begin writing its own story.

Europe’s uncertainty after Trump’s first 100 days

Trump 2.0

Transatlantic tensions are nothing new. Rows over trade, NATO spending and climate policy have flared under every president from Kennedy to Obama. But Zerka insists that Trump marks a rupture.

“There is a clear difference vis-à-vis previous presidents, and even vis-à-vis Donald Trump 1.0,” he told RFI. “Before, we had never seen a US president targeting Europe so clearly and aggressively.”

This time round, the barbs are sharper, the interventions more deliberate. Trump openly mocks Europe’s migration and climate policies, last week using the world stage of the United Nations to declare that Europeans are “going to hell” with their “crazy” ideas.

Such rhetoric, Zerka argues, is not just bluster. It is part of a deliberate strategy to humiliate Europe, a way of painting the European Union as weak, dependent and incapable of agency.

And this culture war is not confined to speeches, Zerka says – the Trump administration has moved from commentary to active interference.

In Germany, US Vice President JD Vance and former Trump advisor Elon Musk openly backed the far-right AfD party during the country’s legislative elections in February.

Similar interference was seen in Poland, Romania and Ireland, where Washington lent support to Conor McGregor, a former mixed martial arts champion who had thrown his “Make Ireland Great Again” hat in the ring for the country’s upcoming presidential election on 24 October, but withdrew from the race in September. 

McGregor’s political ambitions had been boosted by an invitation to the White House on St Patrick’s Day, with Trump calling him his “favourite” Irish person.

“We haven’t seen anything like this before,” Zerka stresses. “There’s such active involvement in domestic politics of European countries, supporting rivals of the governments in place – and very often those rivals are problematic political players.”

“There is a lot of appetite among the European public for an assertive Europe, but leaders keep finding themselves in situations where they look ridiculous and Europe gets humiliated” – Pawel Zerka

Europe’s new right: how the MAGA agenda crossed the Atlantic

A Truman moment

So what does it mean for Europe to “walk off the set”? In Truman Burbank’s case, it was about courage – daring to leave behind the artificial comfort of a staged life. For the EU, Zerka says, it is about dignity and identity.

“European leaders must be ready,” he argues. “Currently they are buying time with Trump, because they depend so much on America for security, especially with Russia’s war in Ukraine. But the danger is that by playing along, they risk repeated humiliation – whether at NATO summits or in trade negotiations – where Europe ends up looking ridiculous to its own public and to the wider world.”

The challenge, Zerka believes, is that many EU leaders still don’t grasp the true nature of the confrontation.

They treat disputes over tariffs or defence spending as technical haggles, missing the larger picture – that they are part of a cultural battle over values, sovereignty and the very meaning of the West.

Without that recognition, Europe risks stumbling from one Trump-scripted crisis to another, always reacting, never setting the agenda.

Europe’s Truman Show cast

In Pawel Zerka’s European Sentiment Compass 2025 report, EU member states fall into five roles within Trump’s “reality show”.

Director’s crew
Countries actively producing Trump’s show in Europe, amplifying MAGA narratives:
Hungary, Italy, Slovakia – with the Czech Republic possibly joining.

Tempters
Those who normalise Trump’s script by offering comfort and status within the status quo:
Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Finland, Greece, Ireland, Netherlands, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Sweden.

Prophets
The truth-tellers urging Europe to break free of the illusion:
Denmark, after Trump questioned its sovereignty over Greenland. Sweden and Finland could also play this role.

Extras
On set but lacking influence, even when embroiled in MAGA-style battles at home:
Bulgaria, Slovenia, Croatia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Cyprus, Malta.

Door holders
The big players whose choices could determine the plot’s direction:
France, Germany, Poland.

The role of the prophet

In The Truman Show, it was a character named Sylvia who first whispered the truth to Truman, that his life was staged. In today’s Europe, Zerka sees Denmark as playing that role.

Trump’s suggestion that the US might buy Greenland directly questioned Danish sovereignty, giving Copenhagen a unique impetus for defending European autonomy.

“Denmark is the one country really trying to show Europe the difference between reality and illusion,” Zerka says, adding though that Sweden and Finland, both scarred by the Russian threat and largely resistant to Trump’s personal appeal, could also be well placed to push for European autonomy.

Then there are what he calls the “door holders”, the heavyweight countries whose choices could swing the EU’s future one way or another: France, Germany and Poland.

Each stands at a crossroads. Elections in the coming years could see them drift towards the pro-Trump “director’s crew” – Hungary, Italy, Slovakia – or rally behind the prophets calling for strategic autonomy.

The outcome, Zerka warns, will determine whether Europe claims its agency or sinks deeper into dependency.

Can Europe withstand the ripple effect of the MAGA political wave?

Walking the line

However, with Russian aggression on its doorstep, Europe cannot simply sever ties with Washington. Yet, Zerka argues, the notion that Europeans must appease Trump to preserve the transatlantic bond is a fallacy.

“It’s completely the other way around,” he says. “Only if Europe steps up in building its own capacities, and shows assertiveness, can it become a real partner rather than a subordinate.”

That means investment in defence, technology and energy resilience. It also means recognising the culture war for what it is, and refusing to be defined by Trump’s caricatures.

Trust in the EU is its strongest since 2007, with polls showing that citizens increasingly view the bloc not just as an economic club but as a community of shared values, and destiny.

Zerka believes European leaders must harness the public appetite for a more assertive Europe. The risk of inaction, he warns, is cultural subordination.

The reward of courage, by contrast, is the chance for Europe to write its own story, and participate in the transatlantic partnership as an equal.

Spotlight on Africa

DZ Fest brings Algerian culture centre stage in the UK

Issued on:

With more than two million Algerians and people of Algerian heritage living in France – the country’s former colonial power in North Africa – a smaller community of roughly 35,000 has made its home in the United Kingdom. In 2022, Rachida Lamri founded the DZ Fest, a cultural festival designed to celebrate and showcase Algerian traditions in English. RFI was present at this year’s event.

DZ Fest is the only festival focused on Algerian culture outside the country. It has been run every year since 2022 in the United Kingdom.

This year the festival took place in the latter half of September with events in both London and Nottingham.

Spotlight on Africa travelled to London to talk to the organisers and guests of DZ Fest, and to some Algerians living in the UK

Founder and creative director Rachida Lamri – an artist, musician and member of the London-based Arabo-Andalusian orchestra – curated a programme showcasing Algerian music, traditions, and cuisine.

We also met:

  • The Algerian chef Djamel Ait Idir, who runs couscous workshop in his restaurant, Khamsa, in Brixton, South London
  • Fayssal Bensalah, an Algerian-born novelist and a lecturer teaching creative writing in Cardiff, Wales
  • Comedian Mehdi Walker, also born in Algeria, who lives in France but performs his comedy sketches in English
  • Artist and filmmaker Leila Gamaz, who lives between Bristol and Morocco. 

 


Episode mixed by Melissa Chemam and Nicolas Doreau.

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

International report

Erdogan’s Washington visit exposes limits of his rapport with Trump

Issued on:

Turkey has hailed President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s first White House visit in six years as a diplomatic win, though tensions over Donald Trump’s support for Israel’s war in Gaza still cast a shadow.

Ankara is celebrating a diplomatic win after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was hosted by US President Donald Trump in Washington on Thursday.

In the Oval Office, Trump praised his guest in front of the world’s media.

“He’s a highly respected man,” Trump said. “He’s respected very much in his country and throughout Europe and throughout the world, where they know him.”

Erdogan smiled as he listened. The Turkish leader had been frozen out by President Joe Biden, who made clear his dislike for the Turkish leader.

Trump, by contrast, has long cultivated a friendship with him. But even that relationship has limits, with Israel’s war on Gaza still a source of strain.

Turkey walks a tightrope as Trump threatens sanctions over Russian trade

Restraint over Gaza

Erdogan is a strong supporter of Hamas, which he refuses to label a terrorist group, calling it instead a resistance movement. Yet he chose not to let the issue overshadow his visit.

Analysts say this restraint was deliberate.

“There’s been a concerted effort not to get into a spat about Gaza,” Asli Aydintasbas, of the Washington-based Brookings Institution, told RFI. “Uncharacteristically, he remains silent on the Gaza issue and that is by design.”

During his trip, Erdogan kept his criticism of Israel’s offensive in Gaza to remarks at the UN General Assembly, echoing broader international condemnation.

He also met French President Emmanuel Macron in New York and welcomed France’s recognition of a Palestinian state.

Erdogan is also seeking wider backing as concerns over Israel’s actions grow, an issue that also came up in his talks with Trump.

“Turkey’s concerns with Israel are not actually limited to Gaza,” said Ozgur Unluhisarcikli, of the German Marshall Fund in Ankara.

He said Ankara is also uneasy about Israel’s actions in neighbouring states, adding that the two countries’ policies towards Syria clash sharply.

“Turkey wants a stable Syria and one that’s centralised,” he said. “Whereas Israel wants a decentralised and less stable Syria.”

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

Energy and Russia

Turkey’s close ties with Russia risk becoming another flashpoint.

Sitting beside Erdogan at the Oval Office, Trump called for an end to Turkish purchases of Russian energy. He also criticised Erdogan’s long-standing policy of balancing relations between Washington and Moscow.

“Trump does not want a balancing Turkey, at least today,” said Aydintasbas. “That was more obvious than ever in his rhetoric and his dealings with Erdogan.”

She said Erdogan had assumed for the past decade that his balancing act between the West and Russia was acceptable. “It must come as a surprise,” she added.

Turkey is the third-largest importer of Russian oil and gas. But in a move seen as an attempt to placate Trump, Ankara this week signed a multibillion-dollar deal to buy US liquefied natural gas over 20 years.

The two leaders also signed a strategic agreement on civil nuclear cooperation, which could pave the way for Turkey to buy US-made nuclear reactors.

As Trump rails at UN and shifts Ukraine stance, Macron urges US to end Gaza war

Limited gains

Despite these gestures, analysts said Erdogan achieved little in return. He had hoped Trump would lift a US embargo on the sale of F-35 stealth fighter jets. Instead, Trump only gave a vague promise to address the issue.

For Erdogan, however, the White House meeting itself may have been the main prize.

US Ambassador to Turkey Tom Barrack said before the meeting that Trump wanted to give Erdogan “legitimacy”.

“For Erdogan, this is a big win,” said Sinan Ciddi, of the Foundation for Defence of Democracies. The Turkish leader, he said, has long sought a White House photo-op to showcase at home.

“He gets to show that he has met the US president, has gravitas on the world stage and is signing deals with Washington,” Ciddi added.

“At a time when he is jailing leaders and dismantling democratic governance inside Turkey, he is being legitimised by the leader of the so-called free world.”

The Sound Kitchen

Anyone else out there?

Issued on:

This week on The Sound Kitchen, you’ll hear the answer to the question about exoplanets.  There’s “The Listener’s Corner” with Paul Myers,  the new quiz and bonus questions, and a lovely musical dessert to finish it all off, so click the “Play” button above and enjoy! 

Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday here on our website, or wherever you get your podcasts. You’ll hear the winner’s names announced and the week’s quiz question, along with all the other ingredients you’ve grown accustomed to: your letters and essays, “On This Day”, quirky facts and news, interviews, and great music … so be sure and listen every week.

Erwan and I are busy cooking up special shows with your music requests, so get them in! Send your music requests to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr  Tell us why you like the piece of music, too – it makes it more interesting for us all!

Facebook: Be sure to send your photos for the RFI English Listeners Forum banner to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr

More tech news: Did you know we have a YouTube channel? Just go to YouTube and write RFI English in the search bar, and there we are! Be sure to subscribe to see all our videos.

Would you like to learn French? RFI is here to help you!

Our website “Le Français facile avec rfi” has news broadcasts in slow, simple French, as well as bilingual radio dramas (with real actors!) and exercises to practice what you have heard.

Go to our website and get started! At the top of the page, click on “Test level”, and you’ll be counseled on the best-suited activities for your level according to your score.

Do not give up! As Lidwien van Dixhoorn, the head of “Le Français facile” service, told me: “Bathe your ears in the sound of the language, and eventually, you’ll get it”. She should know – Lidwien is Dutch and came to France hardly able to say “bonjour” and now she heads this key RFI department – so stick with it!

Be sure you check out our wonderful podcasts!

In addition to the breaking news articles on our site, with in-depth analysis of current affairs in France and across the globe, we have several podcasts that will leave you hungry for more.

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

Remember, podcasts are radio, too! As you see, sound is still quite present in the RFI English service.  Please keep checking our website for updates on the latest from our excellent staff of journalists. You never know what we’ll surprise you with!

To listen to our podcasts from your PC, go to our website; you’ll see “Podcasts” at the top of the page. You can either listen directly or subscribe and receive them directly on your mobile phone.

To listen to our podcasts from your mobile phone, slide through the tabs just under the lead article (the first tab is “Headline News”) until you see “Podcasts”, and choose your show.  

Teachers take note!  I save postcards and stamps from all over the world to send to you for your students. If you would like stamps and postcards for your students, just write and let me know. The address is english.service@rfi.fr  If you would like to donate stamps and postcards, feel free! Our address is listed below. 

Independent RFI English Clubs: Be sure to always include Audrey Iattoni (audrey.iattoni@rfi.fr) from our Listener Relations department in all your RFI Club correspondence. Remember to copy me (thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr) when you write to her so that I know what is going on, too. N.B.: You do not need to send her your quiz answers! Email overload!

This week’s quiz: On 19 July, I asked you a question about RFI English journalist Dhananjay Khadilkar’s video and article about the study of exoplanets, or extrasolar planets, which are planets outside of our solar system.

As you read in Dhananjay’s article “Swiss exoplanet pioneer reflects on Earth’s place in the cosmos”, Didier Queloz, along with Michel Mayor, discovered the first exoplanet orbiting a solar-type star in 1995, which ushered in, as Dhananjay wrote, a new era in astronomy and planetary science. The two scientists won the 2019 Nobel Prize in Physics for their work.

Dhananjay met with Didier Queloz, who told him, and I quote: “Looking for exoplanets is essentially looking for us.”

What did Professor Queloz mean by that? You were to send in the answer to this question: According to Queloz, what is the essential reason for studying other planets?

The answer is, to quote Dhananjay Khadilkar’s article: “In essence, by studying other planetary systems, scientists are holding up a mirror to our own. Are the conditions that led to Earth’s habitability common or exceedingly rare? Is our solar system an outlier, or just one example among countless others?”

In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question: “Is it up to the State, the government, to decide what is fair, or what is just?”

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

The winners are: RFI Listeners Club member Dipita Chakrabarty from New Delhi, India. Dipita is also the winner of this week’s bonus quiz. Congratulations, Dipita, on your double win.

Also on the list of lucky winners is RFI Listeners Club member Pradip Basak from Kerala, India, and RFI English listeners Debashis Gope from West Bengal, India; Liton Rahaman Khan from Naogaon, Bangladesh, and Rashidul Bin Somor, the General Secretary of the Source of Knowledge Club, also in Naogaon.

Congratulations winners!

Here’s the music you heard on this week’s program: The allegro di molto from the Symphony No 38 in C Major (the “Echo” symphony) by Franz Joseph Haydn, performed by the Austro-Hungarian Haydn Orchestra conducted by Adam Fischer; “Space Ambient” produced by Space Relax; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer, and “Young at Heart” by Johnny Richards and Carolyn Leigh, sung by Connie Francis.

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

This week’s question … you must listen to the show to participate. After you’ve listened to the show, re-read Paul Myers’ article “Dembélé and Bonmati win Ballon d’Or as PSG take team and coach prizes”, which will help you with the answer.

You have until 20 October to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 25 October podcast. When you enter, be sure to send your postal address with your answer, and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.

Send your answers to:

english.service@rfi.fr

or

Susan Owensby

RFI – The Sound Kitchen

80, rue Camille Desmoulins

92130 Issy-les-Moulineaux

France

Click here to find out how you can win a special Sound Kitchen prize.

Click here to find out how you can become a member of the RFI Listeners Club, or form your own official RFI Club. 


Sponsored content

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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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The editorial team did not contribute to this article in any way.

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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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The editorial team did not contribute to this article in any way.