rfi 2025-12-19 00:07:55



EU Trade

Farmers descend on Brussels to protest EU Mercosur trade deal

Thousands of farmers have taken to the streets of Brussels to protest European Union plans for a trade agreement with the South American Mercosur bloc and the reform of agricultural subsidies. Meanwhile, with France and Italy urging caution and other EU member states pushing for speed, Europe is still divided over the deal.

Hundreds of tractors began rolling into the European quarter of the EU capital on Thursday morning, ahead of a high-stakes summit among European Union leaders.

Convoys of farmers had arrived overnight, coming primarily from the Netherlands – scene of strong mobilisation among farmers in recent years – but also from Belgium and northern France.

French and Belgian farmers also began demonstrating on Wednesday around Bierset airport, near Liège, Belgium – a symbolic gathering place, as the airport is a logistics hub and could be the gateway for South American agricultural imports in the future.

Farmers, particularly in France, worry that the Mercosur deal – which will be discussed at the EU leaders meeting – will see them undercut by a flow of cheaper goods from agricultural giant Brazil and its neighbours.

They also oppose plans put forward by the European Commission to overhaul the EU’s farming subsidies.

‘Unprecedented anger’

France’s President Emmanuel Macron warned on Thursday that Paris would not support the Mercosur deal without stronger safeguards for its farmers.

“I want to tell our farmers, who have been making France’s position clear all along: we consider that we are not there yet, and the deal cannot be signed [as it currently stands]’, he told reporters, vowing that France would oppose any “attempt to force this through”.

According to government spokesperson Prisca Thevenot Bregeon, Paris still lacks “sufficient visibility on the three conditions requested” by France – namely “mirror measures, the safeguard clause and controls”.

Those concerns centre on ensuring EU farmers are protected from imports produced under looser environmental and health standards, which have been a long-standing fault line in negotiations over the deal.

Is France misguided to keep rejecting the EU-Mercosur trade deal?

Belgium’s Walloon Agricultural Federation (FWA) said that Brussels’ plans to slash the subsidies scheme by 20 percent while pushing ahead with the Mercosur deal were “totally unacceptable”.

The FWA will be among more than 40 national farming groups represented at Thursday’s demonstration. Pan-European agriculture lobby group Copa-Cogeca said it expected 10,000 people to show up.

French agricultural union Confederation Paysanne told French news agency AFP that “anger in rural areas is reaching unprecedented levels”.

Europe divided

The European Union has been negotiating the trade pact with Mercosur for more than two decades.

But European Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen’s hopes of signing the treaty at the Mercosur summit in the Brazilian city of Foz do Iguaçu on Saturday hinge on securing the backing of a qualified majority of EU member states in Brussels.

The agreement, reached in principle a year ago, would create the world’s largest free trade area, linking the EU with Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay. Bolivia is also part of the Mercosur bloc.

Under the deal, the EU would gain greater access to Latin American markets for vehicles, machinery, wines and spirits, while South American exporters would find it easier to sell beef, sugar, rice, honey and soybeans to Europe.

Supporters of the agreement argue it has taken on renewed strategic importance as global trade patterns shift.

Germany, Spain and the Nordic countries have urged the EU to sign swiftly, saying the deal could help offset exports hit by United States tariffs and reduce Europe’s dependence on China by improving access to key minerals.

However, Italy – whose position is seen as decisive – has now publicly aligned itself with France in disputing the terms of the deal.

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said on Wednesday it was “still premature” to sign the agreement “in the coming days” before an additional package of protective measures for farmers is fully finalised with the European Commission, adding that the agreement needed adequate reciprocity guarantees for the agricultural sector.

“The Italian government has always been clear in saying that the agreement must be beneficial for all sectors and that it is therefore necessary to address, in particular, the concerns of our farmers,” Meloni told the Italian parliament.

‘We are preparing to win a war’

For French farmers like Bertrand Chauffier, who grows sugar beets among other crops, Mercosur directly threatens the sugar industry in France.

“We said it loud and clear 18 months ago when we went out on the highways. We didn’t want products that weren’t produced the same way as ours. The price of sugar will be wiped out. It’s unfair competition.”

French lawmakers unanimously opposed to EU-Mercosur trade deal

To illustrate his point, he has attached a large wooden coffin to the front of his tractor, symbolising the impending demise of his business.

“We put it on hinges so it’s clearly visible that it’s empty,” he explained to RFI. “Empty like the shopping carts of consumers if French agriculture disappears.”

He says the protesters will stay mobilised as long as necessary.

“We are preparing to win a war. A war is fought with well-fed men, tables, camp beds and water so that we can withstand a siege if our policies do not give us conclusive results.”

(with newswires)


FRANCE – JUSTICE

French anaesthetist jailed for life after decade of poisoning patients

A French court jailed a former anaesthetist for life on Thursday after convicting him of poisoning 30 patients in operating theatres, causing 12 deaths, in a case that has shocked the medical community.

Frédéric Péchier, 53, was found guilty of contaminating IV bags to trigger cardiac arrests or haemorrhages in patients treated by colleagues in two clinics in the eastern city of Besançon between 2008 and 2017.

The court heard that Péchier tainted IV bags with potassium, local anaesthetics, adrenaline and an anticoagulant. His youngest victim, 4-year-old Teddy, survived two cardiac arrests during a routine tonsil operation in 2016. The oldest victim was 89.

“You will be incarcerated immediately,” presiding judge Delphine Thibierge said as the verdict was delivered.

Péchier, who has denied wrongdoing since the investigation began in 2017 and had not been held in custody, appeared unmoved.

Members of his family broke down in tears. His lawyer Ornella Spatafora said he would appeal.

French doctor accused of fatally poisoning 12 patients goes on trial

‘Thirst for power’

The case began after a series of unexplained cardiac arrests during routine operations on patients considered low risk. Investigators opened a formal inquiry in 2017. Twelve of the patients could not be resuscitated.

During a trial lasting more than three months, prosecutors asked for a life sentence, telling the court Péchier had “used medicine to kill”. They said his actions were aimed at harming colleagues with whom he was in conflict.

“His goal was to ‘psychologically hurt’ caregivers and to ‘feed his thirst for power,’” prosecutors said.

Christine de Curraize, one of the state prosecutors, addressed the defendant directly in court. “You are not worthy of the title of doctor. You are the doctor of death,” she said.

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Denial and defence

Péchier maintained his innocence throughout the proceedings. He argued that most of the poisonings were the result of “medical errors” made by colleagues.

He admitted there had been someone poisoning patients in one of the clinics where he worked, but insisted it was not him. “I am not a poisoner,” he said.

One colleague described Péchier as a very good doctor with an “oversized ego”, the court heard. Earlier this month, Péchier told the court in tears that he had attempted suicide in 2021.

Péchier was taken into custody immediately after the verdict. Through his lawyer, he can ask the court to allow his release under strict conditions, FranceInfo reported.

Randall Schwerdorffer, another lawyer for Péchier, said he would assemble a “seriously reinforced defence” for the appeal.

“I will not be able to do it again on my own,” he told local media, adding that he would work with “a high-level lawyer”.

The verdict comes months after another high-profile case involving a doctor. In May, a court sentenced retired doctor Joel Le Scouarnec to 20 years in prison after he confessed to sexually abusing or raping 298 patients between 1989 and 2014, most of them children.

That case raised questions about how warnings from colleagues failed to prevent him from practising until retirement.


GUADELOUPE

Guadeloupe: 16,000 cars equipped with defective Takata airbags still on the road

The French overseas department of Guadeloupe still has 16,000 vehicles equipped with defective Takata airbags on its roads, despite the island having already seen several fatal accidents linked to the faulty equipment.

“At the beginning of the crisis, 42,000 vehicles were equipped with Takata airbags. We were able to identify a large number of them,” Guadeloupe’s prefect Thierry Devimeux said on Wednesday.

He warned that “owners are not taking the necessary steps” over the 16,000 identified vehicles whose airbags have still not been changed.

“The state services are unable to determine which vehicles are still on the road or not, which have been purchased or not,” he said, adding that police and gendarmes would begin random spot checking of vehicles on the roads.

Last week, the French Ministry of Transport announced that, starting 1 January 2026, all vehicles presented for technical inspection will be checked to determine if they are equipped with a Takata airbag and classified as “stop drive” if so – meaning an immediate ban on driving until they have been replaced.

Defective Takata airbags prompt mass recall of popular car models in France

Deadly explosions

The now bankrupt Japanese company Takata has been at the heart of a global scandal for more than a decade.

Its airbags have caused deadly explosions and resulted in serious injuries due to an explosive propellant – ammonium nitrate – which degrades over time, particularly in hot and humid climates.

The airbags deploy even in the event of a minor collision, causing an explosion similar to that of a grenade and projecting pieces of metal and plastic into the car.

To date, 46 accidents have been attributed to defective Takata airbag explosions across France – including 42 in overseas territories and departments – which have caused 20 deaths (18 of which were in overseas territories) and 25 injuries (24 in overseas territories).

Guadeloupe is the French overseas territory that has been most affected by accidents caused by Takata airbags, with 10 deaths recorded.

At the end of November, a driver also died due to a faulty airbag in Réunion Island, where as of 30 November there were 20,416 potentially dangerous vehicles still on the road, according to the prefecture.

Lawsuits

The French consumer association CLCV announced earlier this month that it had launched a class action lawsuit against the car manufacturer Stellantis on behalf of 150 owners of cars equipped with defective Takata airbags.

The CLCV said it wanted to “assert the damage” suffered by vehicle owners affected by the recall campaign, which it called “late, partial and disorganised”.

The organisation said owners were affected by “material” damages as well as moral damages such as “anxiety-related harm”.

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Stellantis declined to comment on the ongoing proceedings but told French news agency AFP that the group “is mobilising its entire network and implementing the most significant measures to guarantee the safety of its customers”.

The manufacturer also specified that 70 percent of the vehicles in its French fleet of Citroën, DS, and Opel brands “have been serviced,” including 90 percent of C3 and DS3 vehicles.

According to figures released by the Ministry of Transport on 3 December, 670,000 vehicles have been repaired since July, the date of the decree that strengthened the recall measures. In total, “almost 1.2 million vehicles have been repaired,” it added.

UFC-Que Choisir, another major consumer association, also launched a class action lawsuit against Stellantis in France for in July.

In the United States – the country hardest hit, with 28 deaths – Ford, Toyota, Honda, BMW, Nissan and Mazda have paid a total of $1.5 billion in compensation to victims.

(with newswires)


FRANCE – CRIME

French police arrest suspect over interior ministry cyber attack

French authorities have detained a 22-year-old man over a cyberattack on the email servers of the French interior ministry that compromised files containing criminal records. An investigation is underway into the incident, which Interior Minister Laurent Nunez says is “more serious” than initially thought.

The arrest follows an attack on the ministry’s email system that affected an unspecified number of sensitive files. 

A group of hackers claimed responsibility for the attack, which occurred on 11 December. They said they had stolen the data of “millions” of French people.

The French prosecutor’s department said on Wednesday that the suspect was already known to police and had been convicted of similar crimes earlier this year.

Criminal records accessed

The investigation is being handled by the cybercrime unit of the Paris prosecutor’s office. It is focusing on charges including attacks on a state-run automated personal data processing system by an organised gang.

This offence carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison.

Interior Minister Laurent Nunez said on Wednesday that the attack was more serious than initially thought.

“It’s serious,” he told FranceInfo radio. “A few days ago, I said that we didn’t know whether there had been any compromises or not. Now we know that there have been compromises, but we don’t know the extent of them.”

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No ransom demand

Nunez said he had not received any ransom demand from the hackers.

He said the compromised files included criminal records and files on wanted individuals. He said the data was accessed because of “carelessness”, with passwords shared on messaging apps.

“I can tell you that there have not been millions of pieces of data extracted as of this morning (…), but I remain very cautious about the level of compromise,” he said.

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A judicial probe and an administrative investigation were underway and the National Commission for Information Technology and Civil Liberties (CNIL) had been notified, Nunez said.

Cybersecurity specialist Baptiste Robert, who describes himself as an “ethical hacker”, said the attack was unprecedented regardless of its scale.

“In the nearly 15 years I’ve worked in cybersecurity, I’ve never heard of the Ministry of the Interior’s internal network being compromised,” he said. “They’re not the first hackers to try to attack the Ministry of the Interior, but they’re the first to have succeeded.”

(with newswires)


Ukraine crisis

Von der Leyen calls for unity on funding Ukraine as EU leaders meet in Brussels

As European Union leaders converge on Brussels, the debate over how to pay for Ukraine’s defence is coming to a head. The proposals to use frozen Russian assets are exposing legal risks, political fault lines and testing the limits of European solidarity.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen delivered a clear and urgent message ahead of a key EU summit taking place in Brussels this Thursday: Europe must decide – and quickly – how it will keep Ukraine afloat financially as the fourth anniversary of the Russian invasion approaches.

Speaking to members of the European Parliament on Wednesday, von der Leyen laid out the choice in stark terms, framing financial support for Kyiv as a core pillar of Europe’s own security.

“There is no more important act of European defence than supporting Ukraine’s defence,” she said. “The next days will be a crucial step for securing this. It is up to us to choose how we fund Ukraine’s fight.”

€90 billion loan

Leaders will be under pressure at Thursday’s summit to reach an agreement on a controversial plan to use frozen Russian state assets to bankroll Ukraine’s war effort over 2026 and 2027.

Around €210 billion of such assets are being held across the bloc, with €185 billion held in Belgium via the Brussels-based central securities depository Euroclear.

Smaller amounts sit in France, Luxembourg, Germany and Sweden.

Von der Leyen has been pushing a plan under which these assets would underpin a €90 billion loan to Ukraine over the next two years.

The idea is attractive to many capitals, because it avoids dipping into national budgets or fresh joint EU borrowing.

However, the scheme has exposed deep fault lines – above all with Belgium, which finds itself on the front line of potential legal and financial retaliation from Russia.

EU plan to tap Russian assets for Ukraine meets opposition from Belgium

Belgian misgivings

Belgium has made clear it will not sign off on the plan unless it receives firm guarantees that other EU states will share any legal or financial liabilities. It fears that by hosting most of the assets, it would bear the brunt of any lawsuits or countermeasures.

Attempts to reassure the Belgian government have so far failed to break the deadlock.

In theory, other EU countries could override Belgium using a weighted majority vote – but that is widely seen as a “nuclear option” which few are keen to deploy, given the political damage it could cause.

“There will be a decision on which route we want to take – but one thing is very, very clear: we have to take the decision to fund Ukraine,” said von der Leyen. “This is also about strengthening Ukraine’s ability to secure a real peace – one that is just, one that is lasting, and one that protects Ukraine and Europe.”

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Signs of progress

Concerns that only Belgium would be involved in the scheme have reportedly been resolved, with other countries that hold Russian assets agreeing to take part.

However, Belgium’s demand for solid guarantees remains the biggest hurdle. One EU diplomat described the country’s Prime Minister Bart De Wever as wanting “a blank cheque for forever” from other governments to cover any financial fallout – a step some member states are reluctant to take.

Other issues include the fate of bilateral investment treaties that 18 EU countries still have with Russia.

The European Commission wants these rescinded, arguing that they allow Moscow to challenge EU sanctions through investor-state dispute settlement mechanisms.

Such treaties could also be used to contest the use of Russian sovereign assets for Ukraine.

France, meanwhile, is pushing for conditions that would require Ukraine to spend any EU loan money on defence equipment made in Europe rather than from suppliers such as the United States.

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Moscow’s counteroffensive

Moscow has repeatedly warned that using its sovereign reserves amounts to theft and has threatened harsh retaliation, including the seizure of European private investments in Russia.

Earlier this week, Russia’s central bank filed a lawsuit in Moscow seeking approximately €210 billion in damages from Euroclear – a case that many see as the opening salvo in a broader legal campaign.

A preliminary hearing is scheduled for 16 January, according to the Moscow court’s press service.

The lawsuit has rattled nerves in Europe, with ratings agency Fitch placing Euroclear Bank on “rating watch negative”, citing potential legal and liquidity risks.

Euroclear said the move underlined the need for greater clarity around the EU’s loan plans.

Although Euroclear itself has no assets in Russia that could be directly seized, lawyers warn that a Russian court ruling in favour of the central bank could be enforced in jurisdictions Moscow considers friendly.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has called for European unity on the issue, warning that without continued support Kyiv’s ability to resist would be severely weakened.

Speaking in The Hague earlier this week, he said: “I do not see an opportunity to stand strong without this support.”

(with newswires)


MOROCCO

Anger mounts in Moroccan city of Safi as deadly floods expose decades of neglect

Residents of the Moroccan port city of Safi are accusing authorities of abandoning working-class neighbourhoods, ignoring known flood risks and failing to maintain basic infrastructure, after flash floods killed at least 37 people.

Four days after torrential rain struck the Atlantic coastal city on Sunday, shock and mourning have given way to fury.

Muddy water continues to resurface in narrow alleyways of the old town, despite repeated efforts to clear it away, reinforcing complaints of long-standing abandonment.

“There is no maintenance of the sewage system where we live. We aren’t prepared for the arrival of winter and rain,” Reda, a man in his thirties from the old town, told RFI.

He said the aftermath of the disaster has laid bare deep social inequality.

“The people who live here are working class. Politicians neglect this social class, do nothing for our rights, don’t represent us, and this is what happens,” he said.

The flood risk is well known in Safi. The city’s history is marked by several deadly floods linked to the Chaâba River, which runs through the old town. Dry for most of the year, it becomes dangerous during heavy rainfall.

Videos circulating on social media showed torrents of muddy water rushing through streets and sweeping away cars, rubbish bins and crates of goods.

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Years of neglect

The floods are the deadliest of this kind in Morocco in a decade. At least 70 homes and shops were flooded, Moroccan authorities said on Monday. Fourteen people were still receiving medical care, including two in intensive care.

Heavy rain flooded buildings in the old town and cut many roads in and around the city, which lies around 300 kilometres south of the capital Rabat. Schools were closed on Monday as residents assessed the damage and cleaned their homes.

Political parties, local organisations and trade unions on Tuesday announced the creation of a “solidarity commission” – which said the tragedy was “the direct result of years of abandonment” and poor management of infrastructure.

“Safi has experienced a process of marginalisation,” said Abdellah Mzirda, a member of the commission. “There is neither development nor progress in Safi, even though it’s a city that produces phosphate. The resources here are significant.”

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Protest planned

The solidarity commission has called for a sit-in on Sunday to “express the collective anger” of residents. Local authorities did not respond to requests for comment.

The national prosecutor’s office has opened an investigation to “determine the causes of this tragic incident and clarify the circumstances”.

Morocco is experiencing heavy rain and snowfall after seven years of drought that had depleted several major reservoirs.

Authorities said on Tuesday they were rolling out nationwide emergency aid – including food supplies and blankets – to help around 73,000 households across 28 provinces affected by freezing temperatures, rain and snow.


FRANCE

Louvre partially reopens despite staff vote to carry on strike

The Louvre partially reopened on Wednesday despite staff voting unanimously to extend a strike over pay and working conditions, union representatives said.

The museum’s management told the French news agency AFP that some areas were open even though not all spaces were accessible.

“The museum is opening and the first visitors are coming in,” the management said.

Staff meeting in a general assembly voted unanimously on Wednesday morning to continue the strike that had already stopped the Louvre opening on Monday. Tuesday is the museum’s weekly closing day.

“The strike notice has been maintained and the strike was voted unanimously,” said Valérie Baud, a representative of the CFDT union, speaking to reporters outside the museum.

Louvre museum closed as staff continue strike over working conditions

Opening delayed

A sign outside the glass pyramid told visitors that “the opening of the museum is currently delayed” and that the Louvre would communicate “the terms of a possible opening as soon as possible”.

Some visitors said they backed the workers.

“I am not angry because I respect the workers and they have to defend their rights,” said Maximilian Cimander, a 23-year-old German student in Paris for the week, speaking to AFP.

Others feared missing their chance to get in.

“We hope the museum will be open because we are going back to Japan on Thursday,” said Chika Nishi, a 29-year-old law student. “It’s now or never to visit it.”

Baud warned against reopening in these conditions, nearly two months after the theft of eight French crown jewels in a daytime robbery.

“The Louvre’s management must not put the safety of the museum at risk,” she said.

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Ministry proposals rejected

Gary Guillaud of the CGT union said culture ministry proposals had been turned down.

“There was a unanimous refusal of the ministry’s proposals,” he said, calling them “undignified”.

Workers are protesting about staff shortages, building damage and higher prices for non-European visitors. The CFDT said at least 300 staff were at the assembly.

A crisis meeting took place on Monday at the culture ministry. “There is great exasperation among staff,” said Christian Galani, a CGT delegate.

The ministry has proposed cancelling a planned €5.7 million cut in funding for 2026, redeploying staff, opening recruitment for visitor services and surveillance roles and paying an exceptional bonus.

The Louvre announced emergency measures in early November, including anti-intrusion devices.

Culture Minister Rachida Dati has also assigned Philippe Jost, in charge of the Notre-Dame restoration site, a two-month mission to reorganise the museum.

(with AFP)


FRANCE – HISTORY

How a scandal and a socialist MP broke the French state’s ties to the church

On 9 December 1905, France abolished Catholicism as the state religion after MPs voted to separate church and state, a move that redefined the relationship between the republic and religious worship and founded the principle of secularism seen in modern France.

Under the monarchy, the Catholic Church held major privileges and played a central role in society. The French Revolution of 1789 upended this order. Revolutionaries nationalised church property and required priests to swear allegiance to the new republic. Those who refused were persecuted.

Napoleon later tried to ease tensions by signing the Concordat of 1801 with Pope Pius VII. The state recognised Catholicism as the faith of most French people, but also recognised Reformed Protestant, Lutheran and Jewish communities. It appointed bishops and paid the clergy.

This system lasted throughout the 1800s but kept tensions high – particularly under the Third Republic, when republicans viewed the church as blocking modern reforms and supporting conservative forces.

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The scandal that paved the path

In 1894, Captain Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish artillery officer from Alsace, was wrongly convicted of treason and sent to a penal colony in French Guiana. This miscarriage of justice split the country. On one side stood Dreyfusards, who defended his innocence in the name of justice and truth. On the other, the anti-Dreyfusards refused to question military authority.

The Catholic Church strongly backed nationalist, anti-Dreyfusard groups and relayed anti-Semitic arguments in the press. This shocked republicans, who questioned how the church could oppose the values of justice, equality and truth.

Many concluded that as long as it held influence over institutions and political life, it posed a danger to democracy.

Aristide Briand gained prominence during this period. A lawyer, journalist and moderate socialist, he was elected as an MP in 1902 after a campaign dominated by religious questions.

Prime minister Émile Combes initially avoided any reform, despite pressure from the republican majority. But rising tensions with the Vatican changed his stance. He created a commission on separation, with Briand as rapporteur.

From March 1905, Briand orchestrated one of the longest and most passionate debates in French parliamentary history. Two visions of France faced each other: one monarchist and Catholic, the other republican and secular.

Briand chose the middle way and pushed for compromise, rather than confrontation.

“We are not making a law against religious worship, we are making a law of freedom,” he said. His aim was to guarantee freedom of conscience and equality before the state without persecuting religions.

The word laïcité, or secularism, does not appear in the 1905 text, which uses only the term separation.

However, the first two articles set out the founding principles of today’s laïcité: the state must stay neutral towards all religions, favour none, finance none and prohibit religious expression in public institutions. The term secularism entered the constitution in 1946.

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Violence over inventories

Many Catholics saw the 1905 law as a tragedy and refused to accept it. Church property had to be transferred to new religious associations, which required a full inventory of buildings and objects. State agents entered churches and presbyteries to draw up reports, and many faithful viewed the inventories as a desecration of sacred places.

Prefects were told to enforce the law while avoiding clashes, but violence still broke out. Bloody incidents occurred in Haute-Loire and in the Nord region near the Belgian border.

Géry Ghysel, a 35-year-old butcher and father of three, died in the village church of Boeschèpe, in the Nord department, during an inventory that turned violent.

On 11 February, 1906, less than two months after the law’s adoption, Pope Pius X issued a fierce response. In his encyclical Vehementer Nos, he condemned the separation of church and state.

“That the state must be separated from the church is an absolutely false thesis, a most pernicious error,” he said, adding that it was “gravely insulting to God, for the creator of man is also the founder of human societies and he preserves them in existence as he sustains us”.

Diplomatic relations remained broken until 1921.

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Exceptions in Alsace-Moselle

The 1905 law was not applied in Alsace-Moselle, which was then under German rule, having been annexed after France’s defeat in the Franco-Prussian War in 1871.

When the region was returned to France in 1918, the 1905 law still did not apply there, and still today the Bas-Rhin, Haut-Rhin and Moselle departments have retained local rules inherited from the 1801 Concordat, which had defined the relationship between the French State and the Catholic Church.

Priests, pastors and rabbis are paid by the state through the interior ministry, and religious education remains compulsory in public schools in the region.

The 1905 law devotes very few articles to public education, since secularisation of schools had already begun with the Jules Ferry laws of 1882, which removed religious teaching and replaced it with moral instruction.

By 1886, teaching posts were held only by lay staff. The Ligue de l’Enseignement, created in 1866, became a major supporter of a free, secular and compulsory school system and built a wide network of cultural and educational activities as an alternative to Catholic youth groups.

Modern battles

With social change, debate over religion in public spaces – especially in schools – has remained intense.

In 1989, several Muslim pupils were suspended from a school in Creil, north of Paris, for refusing to remove their headscarves. More such cases followed.

On 17 December, 2003, then president Jacques Chirac called for a stronger defence of secularism amid rising demands from religious and community groups.

A law adopted in March 2004 and applied from the following school year banned conspicuous religious signs in public schools, including headscarves, kippas and large crosses.

French court issues severe sentences to those linked to beheading of teacher Samuel Paty

After the January 2015 terrorist attacks at the office of Charlie Hebdo and the Hyper Cacher supermarket, then education minister Najat Vallaud-Belkacem reaffirmed the importance of secularism. She established national Secularism Day on 9 December and introduced new moral and civic education guidelines.

The murder of history and geography teacher Samuel Paty on 16 October, 2020, after he used Charlie Hebdo satirical cartoons in a class on laïcité and press freedom, marked a turning point. Schools had become targets for extremists because of the secular values they defend.

In August 2021, the 1905 law was amended with the tightening of controls on organisations and places of worship, particularly with regards to foreign funding – presented as a way to combat radical Islamism and other forms of separatism.


This article was adapted from the original version in French by Patricia Blettery.


Biodiversity

French research ship Tara sets sail to study secrets of heat-resistant corals

In the waters of the western Pacific lies the Coral Triangle – an area home to a third of the world’s corals. While warming seas have bleached swathes of other reefs, scientists say the Southeast Asian hotspot has proven more resilient. Now French research vessel Tara is heading out on an expedition that aims to understand how and why certain corals can resist climate change better than others.

The schooner departs from Lorient in Brittany on Sunday on an 18-month mission dubbed Tara Coral

The expedition will take it to the tropical waters of the Coral Triangle – a region encompassing 5.7 million square kilometres of ocean between Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Solomon Islands and Timor-Leste.

Nicknamed “the Amazon of the seas”, the zone contains some 600 different species of coral and is a hotspot of marine biodiversity.

Coral reefs provide precious habitats for underwater life, supporting an estimated one million other species. Yet as oceans warm, marine scientists have reported coral bleaching and death on a scale never seen before.

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Secrets of endurance

“In the Coral Triangle over the last few decades, the decline of these coral reefs is less pronounced than in other parts of the world,” Paola Furla, a researcher at Côte d’Azur University and scientific director of Tara Coral, told RFI.

“The idea is to try to understand what kind of factors have influenced this endurance.

“Is it the environment, the quality of the water? Is it the biodiversity found in the reef that is the strength of the corals, or is it their genetics?”

The Tara Ocean Foundation and more than 40 scientific partners have gathered a transdisciplinary team to study this “thermotolerance”.

From 2026 to 2028, eight scientists, six sailors, one artist and a journalist will compose the crew on board Tara.

Scientists will test several hypotheses as to why corals are surviving, looking into whether it could be down to the wide diversity of species in the area, the presence of more resistant species or individual corals that are pre-adapted to global warming, or the upwelling of cooler waters that limit ocean warming.

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Heat test

One of the tests conducted by the researchers will consist of briefly subjecting pieces of coral to acute heat stress and identifying colonies that do not bleach. 

“According to how they react, you will have an idea of how far they are resilient,” explained Serge Planes, director of research at France’s National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS).

The scientists will also use DNA analysis and genetics to try to make corals more resilient.

Genetic engineering is now beginning to be applied to coral reefs, said Planes, giving some examples: “How can you inject different microbiomes, different bacteria or nutrients which would provide the coral with more resilience?”

The aim is for these coral reefs to “be healthy in the future” and “to maintain biodiversity”, he said.

After leaving Lorient, Tara will head for Tokyo in early April and then Papua New Guinea in May 2026.

It is the latest environmental expedition for the sailing ship, which has previously been used to study Arctic ice, marine microorganisms and plastic pollution.


INTERVIEW

Sarkozy prison memoir a bid to ‘control the story’ and protect image for political future

One month after Nicolas Sarkozy walked out of prison, the former French president’s new book Diary of a Prisoner, recounting his 20 days behind bars, was released this week. Philippe Moreau-Chevrolet, a political communication specialist at Sciences Po Paris, tells RFI this is no simple memoir, but rather a calculated move to regain control of the narrative and reopen the door to political influence.

RFI: What is your impression of Diary of a Prisoner?

Philippe Moreau-Chevrolet: Nicolas Sarkozy leans heavily on emotion and this fits with his wider media defence strategy, which aims to strengthen his legal defence. He starts talking about his conviction almost straight away, so there is clearly a wish to protect his image for the future – since this is the first time in the history of the Fifth Republic that a president has been sent to prison.

The book focuses on injustice, but it is not a self-pitying story. By bringing in The Count of Monte Cristo – the Alexandre Dumas novel about a man seeking revenge after an unjust conviction, one of the two books he took to La Santé prison in Paris – he shapes the story as one of vengeance.

Former French president Sarkozy released from prison, pending appeal

He places himself in a future where he has won his legal battles and taken revenge for this humiliation.

From the start he also repeatedly invokes a comparison with Christ. Firstly, that speaks to right-wing voters. But it is also a way of saying he has sacrificed himself. It is a story of trial, suffering, sacrifice and revenge. It is not about redemption. This matches his legal defence, because he cannot say anything else without incriminating himself.

At the end, he even writes: “I started my life again.” The idea is he has been reborn stronger, more mature, more serious. This also has a therapeutic role for him – letting go of this episode and showing where he stands today. It is a story of rebirth.

He also says he already knew he would be released at his appeal hearing, so he went jogging and stayed active straight away. For him, the key is to show he is still in fighting mode.

RFI: Can the release of the book be seen as a well-orchestrated communication exercise?

PMC: For him, this is a long-term fight. The aim is to make himself heard as much as possible, with every tool available. He appeals to public opinion through dramatic moments – the people who accompanied him to prison, the gathering of his supporters, his many statements in the press.

It creates an emotional build-up around him to maximise attention and cast the accused in a favourable light. In the end this is a frontal attack on the judiciary and on those who accuse Nicolas Sarkozy, using the most forceful approach possible because of how serious the situation is.

RFI: The book was published by Fayard, a publishing house owned by conservative billionaire Vincent Bolloré…

PMC: Yes, there are opportunistic strategies at work. On the far-right side there is clearly an attempt to capture this Sarkozy moment and his electorate. That is what is at stake for 2027. The strategy for Marine Le Pen and for Bolloré’s media is to take up the defence of the former head of state and pull those voters towards them.

The National Rally is increasingly aligned, under Jordan Bardella, with the communication and campaign methods of the American far right – judges are enemies, adversaries, elites to bring down, and a conviction can make you look like a hero.

For the far-right electorate, Nicolas Sarkozy’s conviction is not a negative thing. It can even attract support.

Sarkozy is also trying to win over that electorate for future elections. In his book he even calls for a “rally” with the National Rally. This could become a point of convergence between the two forces, assuming Nicolas Sarkozy still carries real weight, which is hard to judge today.

The fall of France’s Nicolas Sarkozy, from palace to prison

RFI: Could the memoir’s release influence Sarkozy’s political agenda and his return to public life?

PMC: The book gives him a platform to communicate, appear in the media and get people talking again. It should give him some room to manoeuvre and a bit of airtime to influence the 2027 election. It puts him back in the political debate, because when he talks about the National Rally he pushes an agenda about recovering far-right voters and uniting the right.

He cannot do anything other than step back into his role as a political figure. Stopping now would look like admitting defeat. He is not ready for that. He does not want to lose his reputation or his influence. This is also typical of Sarkozy-style communication.

I am thinking of Rachida Dati, who gave a speech on the steps of the Élysée in heels five days after giving birth. It is a staged image of resilience, comeback and invincibility that is part of their communication code.

RFI: The book was published in record time, and Sarkozy posted on social media: “The end of the story remains to be written.” Is this an attempt to divert attention from his conviction?

PMC: It is mostly a way to frame the debate and shape how the public sees this episode. That is his whole aim.

He is releasing the book quickly to try to control the story before others define it. Speed matters – not letting others talk first and taking part in building the narrative rather than suffering it.

As with all media defence strategies in legal cases, the goal is to make sure the public hears the accused’s version first and identifies with it as much as possible. The reasons for the charges and the trial fade into the background.

This is a classic defence strategy: victimisation, challenging the media and the judges, and presenting his own truth. Repetition is key. He will repeat the same message in the media, in the book, everywhere, so that his version becomes dominant.

The reasons for the conviction are very complex – the investigation file is 400 pages long. Faced with a very simple and emotional message – the book – the competition [between the two narratives] is inevitably unequal.


This interview was adpated from the original version in French by Caroline Renaux.


Jihadism

The Fulani women living under the control of JNIM jihadists in the Sahel

What is life like for the women living in the central Sahel, in areas controlled by the jihadist JNIM group? British researchers spoke with women from the Fulani ethnic group, which is strategically targeted for recruitment to the JNIM.

In a report published on Monday, the UK research programme Xcept said that while some of the women say they “support” the armed group, they believe such testimonies are “more often a survival strategy than radicalisation”.

The al-Qaeda linked armed Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims controls larges parts of Mali and Burkina Faso. The researchers interviewed 77 women from the Fulani ethnic group – who are predominantly Muslim and historically associated with nomadic pastoralism – living in these areas.

Some were the wives, mothers or grandmothers of the jihadists, while others had no direct connection to them. More than half have lived for at least five years “under JNIM’s effective control”.

The researchers found a mixed reaction to the jihadists, with a mix of criticism and support, but said that most of the women have adopted “a survival strategy” rather than a full adherence to the group’s ideology.

Mali’s economy near standstill amid JNIM fuel attacks

State failings

“Women universally characterised JNIM’s ascendance as precipitating profound and overwhelmingly negative changes,” the report says.

These changes related to dress codes – an insistence on women wearing the veil and abaya – along with bans on women working and driving, the abolition of traditional ceremonies, and restricted access to healthcare and education, as jihadists have closed state schools and health centres.

“Respondents describe JNIM regulations as economically devastating and deeply detrimental to their physical and mental health,” the study says.

Hostage video shows abducted Malian journalists asking for help

However there was also “longstanding dissatisfaction” with state corruption, in both Mali and Burkina Faso, and the governments’ inability to protect communities.

The researchers highlighted that human rights violations and “real or perceived collective punishment of the [Fulani] community” by soldiers and affiliated militias and foreign military partners – including volunteers for the Defence of the homeland, Dozo hunters or Wagner Russian mercenaries – “weakens state legitimacy”.

Around three-quarters of the women interviewed reported acts of violence committed during counter-terrorism military operations which are “exploited” by JNIM – which presents itself as “more reliable protectors of women”, helping them recruit new members.

Increasing acceptance

The research found that some JNIM policies were popular, such as direct material aid – generally obtained through looting – and access to justice.

The group’s Sharia-based justice system was described as “faster, cheaper and more accessible than the state equivalent”.

Overall, the women’s perceptions of the JNIM tended to improve over time in areas where the jihadists are most entrenched and organised. However, the researchers note that “most women who said they appreciated the group’s provision of services did not equate this with support for its vision”.

There are accounts of women being beaten or whipped by jihadists enforcing Sharia law, followed by a gradual acceptance of these corporal punishments over the years.

Mali faces record number of kidnappings of foreigners by jihadist group

A few of the women admitted to helping JNIM by providing intelligence and logistical support.

According to the researchers, overall women’s perceptions of JNIM were “primarily negative”. Many had simply resigned themselves to the group’s presence and control, which, the study says, shows “an adaptation to life under the group’s dictates, rather than genuine radicalisation”.

However, researchers highlighted that their children, many of whom are growing up “without having lived under the state”, may have a different perspective.

“JNIM governance is altering social, generational, religious, behavioural and governance norms,” the authors wrote – presenting a challenge for future generations.


This article was adapted from the original version in French by David Baché.


Culture

Pont Neuf rewrapped: how Paris’s oldest bridge became new again

Artist JR will take over Pont Neuf, the French capital’s oldest surviving bridge, for a vast installation next summer, the City of Paris has announced. The project is inspired by another intervention 40 years earlier, which shifted the boundaries of what artists could do with France’s monuments.

It was September 1985, and creative partners Christo and Jeanne-Claude had been trying to realise their vision of wrapping the bridge for 10 years. 

The longtime mayor of Paris, Jacques Chirac, had finally given the green light a year earlier, but public safety concerns threatened to overturn the authorisation. It was three weeks after a crew of 300 had begun wrapping the Pont Neuf in champagne-coloured fabric that the final permit arrived. 

Forty years later, Mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo says she couldn’t be happier to revive that “unforgettable moment of poetry and beauty”.

She has signed off on another major installation, set for next June, on the Pont Neuf – which, as well as a working road and foot bridge, is a protected historic monument.

It’s a measure of how much attitudes to public art have changed since Christo and Jeanne-Claude put years of work and millions of dollars into convincing Paris that its heritage shouldn’t be off limit to creators.

The perfect pont

When Bulgarian-born Christo Vladimirov Javacheff and his French partner Jeanne-Claude Denat de Guillebon started work on the Pont Neuf project in 1975, they hadn’t yet staged any large-scale installations in France. 

Although the couple met in Paris, until then their most ambitious projects – bundling up a portion of the Australian coastline, stringing a curtain across a valley in Colorado, ringing islands off Miami with a squiggle of bright pink fabric – had taken place outside Europe. 

While cities in Germany and Italy had allowed them to wrap castles and Roman walls, Paris was less amenable. In 1969 the pair explored the idea of wrapping nearly 400 trees along the Champs-Elysées, but were unable to secure a permit.

Drawn to the bridges that span the River Seine, they first thought of the Pont Alexandre III, a grand steel structure built at the turn of the 20th century. They decided, however, that wrapping its single arch wouldn’t have the impact they wanted.

“The first consideration was aesthetic,” Jeanne-Claude later told an interviewer, explaining their ultimate choice: “The Pont Neuf has those 12 fingers in the water.”

Lobbying campaign

While the bridge’s history wasn’t foremost in their minds, it made the project more complicated. Completed in the early 1600s, the Pont Neuf crosses the ancient heart of Paris at the Ile de la Cité and has been a listed monument since 1889. 

As the artists studied how they might wrap the bridge without drilling into its protected stone, they pitched the project to city officials.

Chirac, elected mayor for the first time in 1977, was reluctant to risk a backlash. As months and then years passed, the artists hired a project director, Johannes Schaub, who encouraged them to get the public on side first. 

Schaub approached the challenge like an election campaign, sending envoys door to door in the neighbourhood around the bridge to convince locals. He booked Christo on a lecture tour and media blitz, and had the artist make a huge model of the wrapped Pont Neuf to display in La Samaritaine, the department store that faces the bridge on the Right Bank.

Key to the messaging was the promise that the installation wouldn’t cost taxpayers a centime; Christo and Jeanne-Claude would cover the cost from sales of their other work, as they did with all their projects. 

Meanwhile, the Socialist government France had elected in 1981 was beginning to champion ambitious cultural events, such as the Fête de la Musique, which shifted art out of museums and opera houses and into public spaces.

As momentum built in the art world and among the wider public – and after Chirac secured re-election – the mayor eventually agreed in August 1984.

France’s Fête de la Musique celebrates its 40th anniversary

Technical feat

It took two test runs on a smaller bridge in Grez-sur-Loing, a small town outside Paris, to perfect the technique that would be used to wrap the Pont Neuf.

Engineers designed a frame that would sit on top of the bridge, resting on rubber buffers. Thousands of metres of thin fabric, the colour of Parisian sandstone, would then be draped over it, tied by ropes and held taut by steel chains wrapped round the bridge’s base, a metre under water.

The process of installation – which took several weeks, from August to September 1985 – was a spectacle in itself. French media relayed every step, from the climbers who abseiled down the bridge pleating the fabric, to the divers who fixed the chains beneath the surface of the river.

In a final flourish, Christo personally wrapped the 44 street lamps that line the bridge.

By 22 September, the work was complete and the Pont Neuf reopened to the public.

‘The biggest sculpture in the world’

Journalists from around the world covered the event. A beneficent Chirac was filmed strolling across the bridge with Christo and Jeanne-Claude, congratulating the artists on meeting the conditions he claimed to have set: that the project didn’t cost Paris a penny, that it didn’t disrupt traffic and that it wouldn’t damage the Pont Neuf.

“It’s no longer a bridge, it’s the biggest sculpture in the world. But it’s also a bridge, where people pass over, under – they’re within the sculpture,” enthused one newscaster.

“It’s wonderful,” Christo told the reporter, “they’re all here, everyone.”

Transformed by the silky fabric, the bridge’s curved stone benches invited spectators to sit.

The artists were especially happy with the way the Paris light played on the material. “We didn’t expect that the fabric’s colour would take on so many nuances,” Jeanne-Claude later said. 

“The colours were incredible. In the morning, the fabric looked like straw, and by late afternoon it had turned into a rich golden tone.”

In total, an estimated 3 million people came to see The Pont Neuf Wrapped.

French TV talked about it as a once-in-a-lifetime experience, something Parisians would tell their grandchildren about in years to come. 

Fifteen days later, it was over. The installation was dismantled on 5 October, 1985. 

But it had shown that modern art could capture a mass audience’s imagination – even, or perhaps especially, when it was on a huge scale, challenging to create and in the middle of a busy urban space.

‘Rethinking the familiar’

In the decades since, Parisian authorities have welcomed contemporary creations at monuments from the Palais-Royal to the Pantheon and the Grand Palais.

In 2021, the city paid its ultimate tribute to Christo and Jeanne-Claude. After both their deaths, it allowed their representatives to wrap the Arc de Triomphe – a feat they had dreamed of in their early days in the capital but never pursued, assuming it was too much of a long shot. 

Paris crowds flock to see Arc de Triomphe, dressed to impress

Next year, they will be remembered again, in a work that artist JR says is inspired by their example. “I share their idea that the mission of art is to make the public think – or rethink about the familiar,” he said.

Originally planned to mark the 40th anniversary of the wrapping of the bridge but postponed to allow for more planning time, his installation – entitled The Cave of Pont Neuf – will now be on show from 6 to 28 June, 2026.

It’s a chance for the monument to live up to its name once again: Pont Neuf, the 400-year-old “new bridge”.


Indian Ocean

Mayotte’s recovery remains slow as Cyclone Chido anniversary approaches

As Mayotte prepares to mark one year since the French island department was hit by Cyclone Chido, recovery has been hampered by soaring costs, supply bottlenecks and stretched public finances. With this year’s cyclone season under way, thousands of residents are still living with leaks, unfinished repairs and rising anxiety.

Nearly a year after Cyclone Chido devastated Mayotte, large parts of the Indian Ocean archipelago remain visibly battered, with reconstruction advancing far more slowly than promised.

While emergency work on secondary schools allowed them to reopen to pupils in August, most public buildings and homes still bear deep scars.

In the capital Mamoudzou’s Hauts-Vallons neighbourhood – a residential district popular with civil servants – mounds of rubble lie untouched.

According to the Housing Foundation: “Sixty percent of the island’s buildings were damaged or destroyed and more than two-thirds of collective housing suffered damage.”

Ahmed Ali Mondroha, managing director of Mayotte’s main social housing provider, said the scale of destruction has proven overwhelming.

“It took us a long time to start the work,” he said, estimating the total cost of the damage at €72 million. “Of the 1,600 homes affected, 500 have been restored to use and around 600 are currently undergoing repairs.”

But even with crews on site, he says progress has been hampered by a succession of obstacles

“Construction companies do not always have the necessary materials, prices have skyrocketed since the cyclone hit – sheet metal, for example, has increased by 40 percent – and delivery times have lengthened.”

Schools in Mayotte set to reopen as unions warn cyclone recovery still lags

Supply delays

Julian Champiat, president of the Mayotte Federation of Building and Public Works (FMBTP), also spoke of the pressure on logistics, saying it now takes four months to receive an order of materials, compared with two months previously.

These delays are largely attributed to clogged customs procedures at Longoni’s commercial port, where a surge in containers has created bottlenecks.

Adding to the strain, many companies are struggling financially, with cash flow weakened by a slow restart in activity and a wave of payment defaults, causing further delays across the construction sector.

“The economic fabric is greatly weakened,” said Fahardine Mohamed, president of the Medef employers union in Mayotte.

Public sector finances – which underpin around 70 percent of the local economy – are, he said, “at an all-time low”.

After the cyclone, local authorities “committed to spending to deal with the emergency, and they are at the end of their term of office,” he noted, leaving budgets severely depleted.

Macron unveils €3bn package to rebuild cyclone-hit Mayotte

Exposed to the elements

Authorities too have been hit hard. In central Mamoudzou, part of the town hall roof was torn off and several offices remain unusable.

Higher up the hillside, the headquarters of the Dembéni-Mamoudzou urban community – Cadema – is still covered with tarpaulin rather than tiles.

“We’ve been working from home since the cyclone hit,” said one local authority employee, who asked not to be named. “My office is unusable, there are water leaks everywhere and when it rains, the electricity cuts out. Nothing has been done. The local authorities have no money left.”

Insurance payouts, too, are lagging. “We’re waiting for around €20 million,” said Mondroha.

At the Camion Blanc restaurant on Mamoudzou’s seafront, Melie Razafindrasoa prepares a papaya juice and notes one small sign of normality returning.

“We’re seeing [people] again at the market,” she said cheerfully. But her smile fades when she talks about her own home, saying she has still not received any insurance money.

“We lost the windows and a door of the house during the cyclone. We repaired them ourselves, but every time it rains, the rooms are flooded,” she explained, adding that she remains “very afraid of another cyclone coming”.

The rainy season has just begun, bringing more frequent storms. “Last time, there was a lot of wind and rain. My children were very scared, they are still traumatised.”

(with AFP)


Football

Joy of six as shootout heroics propel PSG to Fifa Intercontinental Cup

Paris Saint-Germain goalkeeper Matvey Safonov saved four penalties in the shootout against Flamengo on Wednesday night to propel his side to their first Fifa Intercontinental Cup and their sixth trophy of 2025.

The 26-year-old Russian, who played despite the return to fitness of the France international goalkeeper Lucas Chevalier, conceded the first penalty but then saved the next three to set up Bradley Barcola with the strike to win the title for the European champions against their South American counterparts.

The Flamengo goalkeeper Agustin Rossi parried the France international’s effort, giving Luiz Araujo a chance to level the score at two penalties apiece.

But Safonov pushed Araujo’s shot away and was immediately submerged by gleeful teammates before he was thrown into the air in celebration.

The feats were redemption for Safanov who played second fiddle to Gianluigi Donnarumma as PSG swept the board domestically with the Ligue 1 title, the French Super Cup and the Coupe de France. Donnarumma was in goal when PSG annihilated Inter Milan 5-0 in May to claim the Champions League crown for the first time

PSG’s ‘best’ prepare for Intercontinental Cup showdown with Flamengo in Doha

Safanov was Donnarumma’s understudy at the Fifa Club World Cup in the United States last summer and his back-up status was again underlined when PSG boss Luis Enrique sold Donnarumma to the English Premier League outfit Manchester City and drafted in Chevalier from Lille.

Chevalier made his debut in August in the European Super Cup final win over Tottenham Hotspur and maintained his pre-eminence until he was injured in the Ligue 1 match against Monaco at the start of December.

Title defence

The shootout drama unfolded at the Ahmed Bin Ali Stadium after the match ended 1-1 following extra-time.

Khvicha Kvaratskhelia opened the scoring just before half-time. But Flamengo, who won the Copa Libertadores in November, levelled from the penalty spot. Jorginho slotted home the spot kick awarded in the 61st minute after PSG skipper Marquinhos tripped Giorgian de Arrascaeta.

“We can be proud of ourselves,” said PSG midfielder Warren Zaire-Emery. “We played a great match against a tough opponent.

“Now we have to continue like this because the toughest part of the season is still ahead of us.”

PSG’s players will return to France to launch the defence of their Coupe de France title on Saturday against fifth-tier Vendée Fontenay Foot.

The success in Qatar makes PSG only the third team after Barcelona in 2009 and Bayern Munich in 2020 to win all three domestic trophies as well as the Champions League, the European Super Cup and the Intercontinental Cup.

It would have been a magnificent seven had Chelsea not beaten PSG in the final at the Fifa Club World Cup in July.


FRANCE – JUSTICE

Maximum fine sought for cement maker Lafarge over terror financing

French prosecutors have sought a record fine and prison sentences of up to eight years in the trial of Lafarge, accusing the cement giant of paying armed groups including the Islamic State to keep its Syrian factory operating.

Anti-terrorism prosecutors are asking the court to impose the maximum corporate fine of €1.2 million on Lafarge SA and prison terms of up to eight years for several former executives.

The case centres on payments allegedly made between late 2012 and 2014 to armed groups in northern Syria, including the Islamic State group.

After more than six hours of closing arguments, prosecutors said Lafarge deliberately financed terrorist organisations to maintain operations at its Jalabiya cement plant in northern Syria.

They said the company paid “at least” €4.6 million to armed groups. The sum was described as unprecedented and shocking.

“Four million euros represents more than 4,000 Kalashnikovs or the salaries of between 3,500 and 6,600 Islamic State fighters for a year,” one of the prosecutors said, based on known monthly payments of $50 to $100 per fighter.

Lafarge on trial in Paris over alleged payments to Islamic State in Syria

Business ‘at all costs’

She described the figure as “dizzying” and said it revealed a system that treated terrorist groups as “economic partners and commercial interlocutors”, rather than as enemies.

Prosecutors firmly rejected the defence claim that the defendants were unaware of who they were dealing with.

“No, there is no doubt,” the prosecutor said. “They knew they were talking to, negotiating with and doing business with three organisations that were clearly terrorist.”

She described the case as “the story of the total failure of individuals who could have chosen to leave” and “the story of the distortion of a flagship of French industry that ended up financing terrorist organisations for a purely mercantile objective”.

The prosecutor said the approach was driven by the pursuit of “business at all costs” and carried out through coordinated actions across the company. Decision-makers, advisers on the ground and intermediaries all played a role.

“Whatever their position in the operational chain, each one contributed to making the alleged offences possible,” she added.

Her colleague said the defendants had shown no remorse and had not questioned their actions during the trial.

France faces rising terror risk as younger users fall for online jihadism

Executives on trial

Prosecutors requested a six-year prison sentence, with a delayed committal order, for former Lafarge chief executive Bruno Lafont.

They accused him of making a “purely economic choice, astonishing in its cynicism” by approving payments while fully aware that some of the groups involved were terrorist organisations.

They said Lafarge’s Syrian subsidiary behaved like “a commercial animal” that “voluntarily fed the jihadist beast at the very moment it was seeking forces to structure itself, dominate and attack”.

The subsidiary financed terrorism for more than a year and a half, prosecutors said, following a strategy approved at the group’s Paris headquarters.

Alongside the corporate fine, prosecutors requested the confiscation of €30 million of Lafarge’s assets.

For individual defendants, prison sentences ranging from 18 months to eight years were sought. The heaviest sentence was requested for a Syrian intermediary who is absent from the trial.

Additional penalties, including fines and bans on managing companies, were also sought for some of the accused.

(with newswires)


UKRAINE CRISIS

Macron demands ‘robust security guarantees’ before any Ukraine territorial talks

Talks on ending Russia’s war in Ukraine have intensified, with France and other European powers stressing the need for robust security guarantees for Kyiv before any discussion of territorial concessions. While negotiators report progress on Western-backed assurances, deep differences remain over land occupied by Russia.

France has drawn a red line in the latest push to end Russia’s war in Ukraine, saying there can be no discussion of Kyiv ceding territory until “robust security guarantees” are firmly in place.

That’s how President Emmanuel Macron’s team framed two days of intensive talks in Berlin, where Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky met United States envoys and European leaders to try to reshape a US-brokered peace plan that many in Europe saw as too generous to Moscow.

“We want robust security guarantees first before any discussions on territory,” a senior adviser to Macron said, underlining Paris’s view that Ukraine must be protected against any future Russian aggression before being asked to make political concessions.

The adviser added that progress had been made on guarantees, particularly after greater clarity emerged on the form US backing would take.

The Berlin talks were part of a broader diplomatic effort led by Washington. While Us President Donald Trump has said a deal is closer than ever, European leaders – led by France and Germany – have been determined to strengthen the security pillar of any agreement before it progresses.

Zelensky in Berlin as Ukraine weighs NATO compromise and EU funding fight

Credible guarantees

At the heart of the European position is the belief that a ceasefire without strong enforcement mechanisms would simply invite renewed conflict.

To that end, leaders in Berlin proposed a European-led multinational force – backed by the US – as part of a package of security guarantees aimed at ensuring Russia does not violate any deal.

Zelensky acknowledged that negotiations with US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner were difficult but said they had delivered “real progress” on security guarantees – an issue he has repeatedly described as existential for Ukraine.

“These conversations are always not easy,” Zelensky said on Monday, but added that they had been productive.

He also confirmed that disagreements remained over territory, making it clear that Kyiv’s position on land would not change without firm guarantees in place.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz echoed this emphasis on security, describing the talks as opening “the chance for a real peace process”.

He praised the US for putting “substantial” legal and material guarantees on the table, calling the move “truly remarkable”.

US officials briefed on the talks said Washington was offering NATO-style assurances, even while ruling out Ukraine’s formal membership of the alliance.

One official described the guarantees as “Article Five-like” with a strong deterrent effect based both on commitments from Western powers and on maintaining a large Ukrainian military.

The tone from Washington, however, carried a sense of urgency. US officials warned that such guarantees would not remain available indefinitely and pressed Kyiv to move towards accepting the broader deal.

France says Ukraine peace plan can only be ‘finalised’ with Kyiv, European input

Territory on the table

For Macron and other European leaders, that pressure reinforces the need to lock in guarantees first. Trump has repeatedly argued that Ukraine will inevitably have to surrender territory, a stance that remains unacceptable to Zelensky and deeply sensitive in European capitals.

Behind closed doors, US negotiators continue to push for Ukraine to cede control of the eastern Donbas region, comprising Donetsk and Lugansk. Russia occupies almost all of Lugansk and around 80 percent of Donetsk, but Kyiv has refused to withdraw from the areas it still controls.

Russia, meanwhile, is sticking to its core demands. The Kremlin has said it expects the US to brief it on the Berlin discussions and has reiterated its opposition to any European-led force operating in Ukraine.

Moscow also insists that Ukraine must abandon its ambition to join NATO as part of any settlement.

However, US officials said Moscow has indicated it would be open to Ukraine joining the European Union as part of a peace deal – a position Russia has previously tolerated, but which would still represent a notable concession.

According to US officials, negotiators now agree on around 90 percent of the US-drafted plan.

Further talks are already planned, with another round of negotiations potentially following this weekend in the US.

Zelensky has also sought to underline Ukraine’s flexibility, saying Kyiv could drop its NATO bid if it received legally binding security guarantees backed by the US Congress.

Even so, he stressed that NATO membership remains Ukraine’s preferred long-term safeguard.

Wider security issues were also underlined in London, where the new head of the UK’s foreign intelligence service MI6 warned that Russia’s actions in Ukraine were reshaping the global threat landscape.

In her first public speech, Blaise Metreweli said President Vladimir Putin’s determination to export instability was creating increasingly unpredictable and interconnected security challenges for Europe and beyond.

(with newswires)


EUROPEAN UNION

EU rolls back 2035 petrol and diesel car ban amid industry pushback

The European Union has weakened its planned 2035 ban on new petrol and diesel cars, retreating from a flagship climate measure as it moved to support an auto industry hit by job cuts, factory closures and fierce global competition.

The change allows carmakers to keep selling a limited number of polluting vehicles after 2035, provided they offset the extra emissions through carbon credits. The original ban, adopted in 2023, required all new cars sold from that date to be zero-emission.

EU industry chief Stéphane Séjourné said the bloc was not abandoning its climate goals as he presented what he called a “lifeline” for Europe’s carmakers.

“The European Commission has chosen an approach that is both pragmatic and consistent with its climate objectives,” Séjourné said.

The decision follows months of lobbying by manufacturers and several EU governments, led by Germany, which argued that the shift to electric vehicles was slower than expected and left Europe exposed to competition from China.

Just over 16 percent of new vehicles sold in the first nine months of 2025 were electric, industry figures show.

Rigged diesel cars caused 16,000 deaths in France, study says

Carbon credits

Under the revised plan, carmakers will be able to sell petrol, diesel and hybrid vehicles beyond 2035 by compensating for their emissions in two ways.

One involves using low-carbon steel produced in the EU in vehicle manufacturing. The other depends on the amount of biofuels and so-called e-fuels placed on the market by energy companies each year.

Europe’s auto industry employs nearly 14 million people and accounts for about seven percent of the bloc’s economic output. Carmakers had warned that high costs and patchy charging networks had slowed consumer demand for electric vehicles.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz welcomed the shift, calling it a step in the right direction. “More openness to technology and greater flexibility are the right steps,” he said in a statement, adding that Berlin would examine the proposals in detail.

Manfred Weber, head of the European Parliament’s largest conservative group, also backed the move, saying that “forbidding technologies” would fuel support for far-right populists.

How the EU’s reliance on China has exposed carmakers to trade shocks

France pushes back

France criticised the decision and said it would try to stop it when the package is put to EU member states for approval.

“We regret the flexibility granted for combustion-engine cars,” French Environment Minister Monique Barbut said. “We will do all we can to have this flexibility removed.”

Spain, France and Nordic countries had warned that weakening the ban risked slowing the shift to electric vehicles and deterring investment. Greenpeace accused the EU of a “U-turn”, saying it was “flogging a dead horse” by diverting money away from electric cars.

“This backward industrial policy is bad news for jobs, air quality and the climate,” said Martin Kaiser, the group’s Germany executive director.

Critics in France have also warned that easing the ban risks leaving Europe behind as other regions accelerate the shift to electric vehicles.

“To claim that tomorrow’s jobs and innovations still lie in diesel or petrol engines, when the rest of the world has embarked on an industrial race towards batteries and electric vehicles, is to condemn the French and European automotive industry to decline,” Neil Makaroff, director at Paris-based think tank Strategic Perspectives, tol AFP.

Tesla customers in France sue over brand becoming ‘extreme right’

Help for electric fleets

Alongside the change, the European Commission unveiled measures to help carmakers meet emissions targets before 2035. These include “super credits” for small, affordable electric cars made in the EU, which will be counted more heavily when calculating fleet emissions.

Medium and large companies will also be required to green their vehicle fleets, which account for about 60 percent of new car sales in Europe. At least 30 percent of new vehicles bought by firms will need to be zero or low-emission, with higher targets for wealthier countries.

The EU also pledged €1.5 billion euros in interest-free loans to support European battery producers. Road transport accounts for about 20 percent of Europe’s total planet-warming emissions, with cars responsible for most of that, EU figures show.

(with newswires)


FRANCE – DRUGS

France triples drug user fines during Marseille trafficking crackdown

French President Emmanuel Macron has vowed to wage “war” against drug trafficking during a visit to Marseille, tripling fines for drug users to €500 and promising to pursue criminal network leaders blamed for deadly violence in France’s second-largest city.

Speaking during a day-long visit focused on security Tuesday, Macron said France would not back down in its fight against narcotics.

He inaugurated a new police station in Marseille, met police officers and paid tribute to families of young people killed in drug-related violence.

Macron spent nearly two hours at the newly opened station, where officers questioned him about the anti-drug trafficking law adopted several months ago but still only partly applied because some decrees have not yet been published.

“We are waiting for the law to be fully implemented,” a police officer told the president, saying the missing measures were needed to target the highest levels of organised crime.

“I am fully aware of that. We are not going to let go,” Macron replied.

The president defended his record, saying extra resources were already being deployed.

“We have added 300 police officers net to Marseille and a new national prosecutor’s office will be in place from 5 January,” he said.

Earlier in the day, during a public discussion with readers of the regional daily La Provence, Macron promised to take on drug networks that “kill innocent young people to intimidate and spread fear.”

He said there was “no chance” the criminal networks would win.

France urges EU to ‘wake up’ as drug crime spreads across Europe

A city scarred by violence

Macron also visited the grave of Mehdi Kessaci, who was killed on 13 November at the age of 20. His brother, Amine Kessaci, is known as an anti-drug trafficking activist.

“We are all thinking of the Kessaci family, his mother, his brothers and his sisters,” Macron said.

The killing shocked Marseille, a city long marked by violence linked to the drug trade. The number of people killed has fallen over the past two years, with 17 deaths recorded in the department this year, compared with 24 last year and 50 in 2023.

Macron also met the mother of Socayna, a young student who was killed by a stray bullet in 2023 while studying in her room, a case that deeply affected the city.

During his visit, Macron also said France would strengthen cooperation with countries where the leaders of drug trafficking networks operate, with the aim of seizing their assets and arresting them.

He said this cooperation was needed to target those directing operations from abroad.

Ministers vow tough response as Marseille reels from gangland murder

Higher fines for users

As part of the crackdown, Macron announced that the fixed fine for drug use would rise to €500 euros, up from 200. He has repeatedly criticised drug users for their role in sustaining the trade.

“I am sick of mourning young people and, in the same neighbourhoods, seeing others who think it is festive to go and buy drugs,” he said.

Marseille’s mayor, Benoit Payan, said the measure would not be enough on its own. The increase “will not put an end to trafficking”, he said, adding that his main enemies were traffickers “with blood on their hands”.

He also called for more resources to restore public services in deprived neighbourhoods affected by drug dealing.

A specialist in public drug policy, Yann Bisiou, warned that the higher fine risked being ineffective against the booming cocaine trade.

“It is a fine that targets a particular category of the population and consumers,” Bisiou told RFI.

Macron ended the day by inaugurating the expansion of Marseille’s Baumettes prison, keeping security at the centre of his visit.


Carbon emissions

French scientists turn waste carbon into fuel using new catalyst

French researchers have developed a breakthrough technology that could help tackle climate change whilst creating useful fuels from industrial waste. Dhananjay Khadilkar has this report.

A team at the Collège de France in Paris, led by Professor Marc Fontecave, has created a special catalyst – a material that speeds up chemical reactions – that can convert carbon into alcohols like ethanol and propanol. These alcohols can be used as vehicle fuels or to make plastics and other products.

The process works by first capturing carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas warming our planet, from factories or even directly from the air.

Record surge in CO2 puts world on track for more long-term warming

 This CO2 is then converted into carbon monoxide, which the new catalyst transforms into useful fuels using electricity. When this electricity comes from renewable sources like wind or solar power, the entire process becomes carbon-neutral.

The catalyst is made from copper, with tiny amounts of silver and gold added to improve its performance. It’s particularly good at producing propanol, which is valuable both as a fuel and for making plastics.

The research, conducted in partnership with energy company TotalEnergies, was published in the journal Nature Materials in March 2025

 It represents an important step towards creating “e-fuels”, synthetic fuels made using renewable electricity, which could help reduce our dependence on fossil fuels.


Terrorism

French anti-terrorist squad launches inquiry into Sydney anti-Semitic attack

French anti-terrrorist chiefs were on Tuesday investigating an attack against Jews in the Australian city of Sydney that left a Frenchman among the 15 dead and another in the 42 injured.

The investigation, which will run parallel with their Australian counterparts, was opened for “murder in connection with a terrorist undertaking” and “attempted murder in connection with a terrorist undertaking”, the French National Anti-Terrorism Prosecutor’s Office (Pnat) said.

“The main objective of this investigation is to enable the victims and their relatives living in France to have access to information about the progress of the investigations being conducted by the French and Australian judicial authorities,” said a Pnat spokesperson.

“It’s also to provide support, assistance or technical expertise to the Australian judicial authorities.” 

Jewish festival of lights

Dan Elkayam, a 27-year-old computer engineer, was killed when Sajid Akram and his son, Naveed, opened fire on around 1,000 people gathered on Bondi Beach for the Jewish festival of lights.

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told the national broadcaster ABC that the men were driven by “Islamic State ideology”.

“With the rise of Isis more than a decade ago now, the world has been grappling with extremism and this hateful ideology,” he said in a separate interview, using another name for the Islamic State group.

The pair travelled to the Philippines before the shootings and authorities are investigating whether they met Islamist extremists during the trip, Australian media reported.

Manila’s immigration department told the French news agency AFP that the pair spent most of November in the Philippines, with their final destination listed as Davao. Immigration records listed Sajid as an Indian national and his son as an Australian citizen, spokeswoman Dana Sandoval said.

After the assault, police found a car registered to Naveed Akram parked near the beach. Improvised bombs and two homemade Isis flags were discovered in teh vehicle, said New South Wales Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon.

France says Australia defence ties repaired after submarine row

Authorities are also facing questions over whether they could have acted earlier to foil the attack.

Australia’s intelligence agency

Albanese said Naveed Akram had come to the attention of Australia‘s intelligence agency in 2019 but was not considered an imminent threat at the time.

“They interviewed him, they interviewed his family members, they interviewed people around him,” Albanese said. “He was not seen at that time to be a person of interest.”

Police are still piecing together the duo’s movements before the shooting. Naveed reportedly told his mother on the day of the attack that he was heading out of the city on a fishing trip.

Instead, authorities believe that he was holed up in a rental apartment with his father plotting the assault.

Carrying long-barrelled guns, they peppered the beach and a nearby park with bullets for 10 minutes before police shot and killed 50-year-old Sajid.

 Naveed, 24, remains in a coma in hospital under police guard.

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

A 10-year-old girl and two Holocaust survivors were among those killed, while 42 others were rushed to hospital with gunshot wounds and other injuries.

Gun laws under scrutiny

Australia’s leaders agreed on Monday to toughen laws that allowed father Sajid to own six guns.

Mass shootings have been rare in Australia since a lone gunman killed 35 people in the tourist town of Port Arthur in 1996. The Port Arthur Massacre sparked a world-leading crackdown that included a gun buyback scheme and limits on semi-automatic weapons.

However, many Australians are now questioning whether those laws are equipped to deal with online sales and a steady rise in privately owned guns.

“This horrific situation now, it does make me personally feel that they need to be stricter,” David Sovyer, 43, told AFP at Bondi Beach.

 Retiree Allan McRae, 75, said that “not a lot of people need a gun”. “It would’ve reduced the possibility of it happening if more people had reduced access to a gun,” he told AFP.

France to sue Australian platform for ‘negligence’ after livestream death

The attack has also revived allegations that Australia is dragging its feet in the fight against antisemitism.

“The last four years, I was very clear. And I was very clear about the dangers of the rise in antisemitism,” Israel’s ambassador to Australia, Amir Maimon, said while visiting a memorial to the victims on Tuesday.

Desperate to help, Australians have lined up in their thousands to donate blood to the wounded. Red Cross Australia said more than 7,000 people gave blood on Monday..

A makeshift flower memorial next to Bondi Beach has grown as mourners gathered to pay tribute to the victims.

Hundreds, including members of the Jewish community, sang songs, clapped and held each other.

Leading a ceremony to light a menorah, a rabbi told the crowd: “The only strength we have is if we bring light into the world.”


French football

PSG ordered to pay former striker Mbappé €60m in unpaid salary and bonuses

A French court on Tuesday ordered European champions Paris Saint-Germain to pay their former star striker Kylian Mbappé more than €60 million in unpaid bonuses and wages, in a dispute linked to the end of his contract before his move to Real Madrid in 2024.

Last month, both Mbappé and PSG launched a series of claims and counterclaims.

PSG told a labour tribunal in Paris that they wanted €180 million from Mbappé for his refusal to go to the Saudi Arabian club Al Hilal, which had offered €300 million for the forward in July 2023.

Mbappé, 26, claims PSG owe him €240 million for the reclassification of his short-term contracts into a permanent contract, and in compensation for the poor manner in which the club treated him when he said he wanted to leave as a free agent at the end of his deal.

The four-person panel rejected Mbppé’s move to reclassify his fixed-term contracts as permanent contracts. They also dismissed PSG’s demands for money.

Mbappé’s legal team hailed the decision. “This ruling confirms that commitments made must be honoured. It restores a simple truth: even in the professional football industry, labour law applies to everyone.’

Kylian machine: Mbappé fires Madrid’s Champions League rout of Manchester City

The Ligue de Football Professionnel (LFP)  – which runs the top two divisions in France – ordered PSG in September 2024 to pay Mbappé €55 million in salary and bonuses he said he should have received when he quit the French capital for Real Madrid in July 2024.

PSG said they did not owe him that sum. They say that Mbappé verbally agreed to renounce the payments owed to him at the end of his contract when he was drafted back into the first team at the start of the 2023-24 season. Mbappé has rejected that claim.

He had been excluded from the squad after announcing he did not want to sign an extension and intended to see out his contract in the summer of 2024. 

Mbappé was eventually reinstated after the start of the season 2023/2024 season and his goals helped new boss Luis Enrique win the treble of Ligue 1 title, French Super Cup and Coupe de France.

Mbappé joined PSG in July 2017 and seemed poised to join Madrid during the summer of 2022 as a free agent.

But French President Emmanuel Macron encouraged him to stay at PSG and Mbappé stunned the Madrid hierarchy by signing a two-year deal in May 2022 with the option of a third year.

“I’m going to remain in my hometown and do what I like doing … playing football and winning more trophies,” said Mbappé, as his contract extension was announced to PSG fans before the game against Metz at the Parc des Princes. 

New kit brightens up PSG’s Champions League woes and Mbappé’s farewell

However, PSG failed to make inroads in the 2023/2024 Champions League and the call of Madrid resurfaced. In August 2023, Mbappé said he would not take up his contract with PSG’s option of a further year and would leave as a free agent in June 2024.

Outraged, the PSG hierarchy told Enrique to head off on a pre-season tour of Japan and South Korea without their star.

During his seven years at the Parisian club, Mbappé harvested 15 medals including six Ligue 1 titles. He became PSG’s record scorer with 256 goals in 308 games and was named Ligue 1 Player of the Season a record five consecutive times. He also claimed the Ligue 1 Golden Boot from 2019 to 2024.

Following Mbappé’s move, Enrique retained all three domestic trophies and PSG humiliated Inter Milan 5-0 to brandish the Champions League trophy for the first time.

PSG and Enrique took team of the year and coach of the year awards respectively at the Ballon d’Or ceremony in Paris in September, with PSG striker Ousmane Dembélé winning the individual prize for his performances.


NEW CALEDONIA

Macron to relaunch New Caledonia talks in January as Bougival agreement falters

France’s efforts to steer New Caledonia towards a new institutional settlement are entering a sensitive new phase. With the Bougival agreement facing delays, political pushback and lingering doubts over consensus, President Emmanuel Macron is seeking to relaunch talks with local leaders in the new year.

French President Emmanuel Macron has announced he will meet New Caledonian elected officials on 16 January in a bid to “continue the dialogue” on the Pacific archipelago’s institutional future and to “provide clarification on the Bougival agreement” signed last July.

In a letter to local elected representatives, President Macron said the meeting would build on talks held earlier this year and aim to reopen political discussion at a time when the agreement’s future looks increasingly uncertain.

“Following the discussions initiated at the Summit for the Future of New Caledonia held on 2 July at the Élysée Palace, in order to clarify the 12 July agreement, I have decided to organize a new forum for exchange to continue the dialogue,” the president wrote.

He added that this “progress report, aimed at opening up new political perspectives in which I would like you to participate,” would take place on 16 January with “New Caledonian elected officials”.

France’s new overseas minister due in New Caledonia to revive dialogue

Fragile timetable and mounting scepticism

The announcement comes as momentum around the Bougival agreement appears to be faltering.

A bill to organise an early consultation of New Caledonians on the text will not, after all, be presented to the Council of Ministers on Wednesday, as had initially been planned. The government spokesperson confirmed the delay on Monday, underlining how fragile the timetable has become.

At the same time, questions remain about the precise format and objectives of the meeting proposed by the president – and about whether it could reopen hard-fought compromises.

“Everyone understands that they are going to try to get us to renegotiate, to reopen the Bougival agreement to allow the FLNKS to come forward with its demands,” said New Caledonian MP Nicolas Metzdorf on the NC La 1ère channel. He also regretted that “the fear of possible new violence in New Caledonia … is guiding political action” in Paris.

From the loyalist camp, scepticism is equally pronounced. The Loyalists – a centrist and anti-independence right-wing alliance – have reportedly “made all the concessions they could” and would refuse any attempt to call into question the political balance struck by the agreement.

New Caledonia independence bloc rejects deal giving powers but no referendum

Searching for consensus

Signed in July between the French government, the independence movement and the anti-independence movement, the draft Bougival agreement sets out plans for the creation of a New Caledonian state within the French Constitution.

However, the text suffered a major setback in August when it was rejected by the Kanak and Socialist National Liberation Front (FLNKS), the main pro-independence coalition.

Despite this rejection, a majority of New Caledonia’s political forces continue to support the agreement in principle.

Several of them argue, however, that amendments are necessary in order to secure the broad consensus they see as essential for the deal to be implemented.

Against this backdrop, the French government has been searching for ways to revive a stalled process in an archipelago still scarred by deadly violence in the spring of 2024. Those unrests left 14 people dead and severely weakened New Caledonia’s economy.

In that context, Overseas Minister Naïma Moutchou floated the idea of organising an “early citizen consultation” in March 2026, ahead of the adoption of the constitutional law required to bring the agreement into force. The proposal was intended to re-engage the population and restore political momentum.

Yet even this prospect has drawn reservations, including from some supporters of Bougival. The National Union for Independence (UNI) made its backing conditional on amendments to the text.

Meanwhile, the Caledonian Congress, asked for its opinion on 8 December, confirmed that the bill was deadlocked, with 19 votes in favour, 14 against and 19 abstentions.

The doubts also reached Paris by early December, when the Socialist Party urged Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu to “suspend” the early consultation, arguing that it exposed a “lack of real consensus” around the agreement and made adoption of the bill unlikely.

(with newswires)


Paris Olympics

Paris Olympics ‘net cost’ drops to €2.8bn, government think tank says

The “net cost” of the 2024 Paris Summer Olympics and Paralympics to the French state has been adjusted down to 2.8 billion euros ($3.3 billion),  according to a government think tank.

The figure is “considerably reduced” from the 6.6 billion euros announced by the national audit body in September with the adjustment reflecting the estimated impact on employment and infrastructure.

“By factoring in certain benefits, the climate dimension and legacy value — still measured only partially — the total cost of the Games decreases considerably: it would be more than halved, to under 3 billion euros,” the high commission for planning (HCP) said in a “summary note” obtained by AFP on Monday.

‘Long-term benefits’

This “net cost” of 2.76 billion euros “would even drop to 1.5 billion euros, a reduction by more than a factor of four,” when “less conservative assumptions” are taken into account, the HCP said.

As France’s sports budget faces cuts, are Olympic promises being broken?

The body led a “cost-benefit analysis” of the Paris Games “aimed at covering all economic, social, and environmental effects for France,” the note details.

The study was conducted by the Research Centre for the Study and Observation of Living Conditions (Credoc) and overseen by a scientific board.

The HCP said the infrastructures built would have “long-term” benefits.

“Under certain assumptions, which may be refined over time, their legacy value would amount to nearly 3 billion euros,” the body said.

‘We’ve become role models’: French para athletes hail legacy of Paris Games

Jobs creation

Job creation was another important factor in bringing down the bill with its value to society estimated at 200 million euros.

Employee bonuses produced “a net benefit of around 500 million euros” while increased participation in sports and the associated health benefits is estimated at 250 million euros.

The HCP also claimed the “well-being derived by French spectators” can be valued at 300 million euros.

“This is a snapshot estimate; several of these benefits may materialise or increase over time,” said the HCP.

(with newswires)


DRC

DRC: M23 says it will withdraw from key city of Uvira

The M23 armed group said Tuesday it had agreed to a request from the United States to withdraw from the city of Uvira in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

The militia captured most of the town last week, in a move Burundi called a “middle finger” to the US after the signing of a peace deal in Washington.

The group “will unilaterally withdraw its forces from the city of Uvira, as requested by the US mediators”, the M23 said in a statement signed by coordinator Corneil Nangaa.

The M23 called for adequate measures to be put in place to manage the city, including “demilitarisation, protecting its population and infrastructure, and monitoring the ceasefire with a neutral force”.

It said it also wanted a framework ceasefire deal reached in a parallel peace process to be implemented. The accord was negotiated in the Qatari capital Doha in November but never respected on the ground.

The M23 added that it was pulling out its forces as a gesture “to instil trust in order to give the Doha peace process every chance to succeed”.

 

Washington summit on DRC-Rwanda relations aims for peace despite deep mistrust

After the capture of Uvira, the US ambassador to the UN, Mike Waltz, told the Security Council that Kigali was leading the region towards greater instability and war.

Last weekend, the US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, also highlighted the American administration’s displeasure. “Rwanda’s actions in eastern DRC are a clear violation of the Washington Accords signed by President Trump, and the United States will take action to ensure promises made to the President are kept,” Rubio said in an X post.

Burundi, which neighbours both the DRC and Rwanda, views the prospect of Uvira in the hands of Rwanda-backed forces as an existential threat.

Uvira sits across Lake Tanganyika from the Burundian economic capital Bujumbura, with only around 20 kilometres between the two cities.

More than 40,000 Congolese have fled the fighting and arrived in Burundi in the space of a week, the Burundian foreign minister told AFP.

According to an initial estimate by United Nations humanitarian agency OCHA, more than 200,000 people have been displaced within South Kivu province since December 2.

DRC and Rwanda hold fresh talks in Washington to revive fragile peace deal

According to several European diplomatic sources, the DRC fears the M23 pushing on towards the copper- and cobalt-rich Katanga province in the southeast, the vast country’s mining hub — which the state relies on to fill its coffers thanks to mining companies’ taxes.

The M23 is supported by up to 7,000 Rwandan troops in the Congolese east, according to UN experts, who accuse Rwanda of seeking to extract the DRC’s mineral wealth.

Burundi, which has thorny relations with Rwanda and fears a wider conflict in Africa’s Great Lakes region, has deployed around 18,000 men to eastern DRC

 

While denying giving the M23 military support, Rwanda argues it faces an existential threat from the presence across the Congolese border of ethnic Hutu militants with links to the 1994 Rwandan genocide of the Tutsis.


TRADE

France urges delay as EU pushes ahead with Mercosur trade deal

France has called on the European Union to pause its plans to sign a long-awaited free-trade agreement with the South American Mercosur bloc, setting the stage for a tense week in Brussels as EU leaders seek to push the landmark deal over the line.

Paris said that the conditions were not yet right for EU member states to approve the agreement, urging the bloc to postpone upcoming deadlines to allow more work on safeguards for European farmers.

In a statement from the French government issued on Sunday, France stressed that “legitimate measures of protection for our European agriculture” still needed to be secured.

The intervention comes as European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is preparing to travel to Brazil later this week to finalise the accord with Mercosur – a bloc made up of Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay.

The agreement, nearly 20 years in the making, would create a free-trade area covering around 722 million people, the largest of its kind in the world.

Before any signing can take place, however, the commission must win the backing of EU member states.

European nations are expected to consider the deal between Tuesday and Friday, although France argues that timetable is premature, particularly with a Mercosur summit scheduled for 20 December.

French lawmakers unanimously opposed to EU-Mercosur trade deal

Call for safeguards

Finance Minister Roland Lescure underlined France’s opposition in an interview with Germany’s Handelsblatt business newspaper, saying the treaty was “simply not acceptable” in its current form.

He said Paris had set three conditions for its approval – robust safeguard clauses, equal production standards for EU and Mercosur farmers, and tighter import controls. “Until we have obtained assurances on these three points, France will not accept the agreement,” he said.

President Emmanuel Macron has also personally appealed to von der Leyen to delay the process.

The European Commission, however, has rejected calls for a postponement and reiterated its determination to see the deal signed by the end of the year.

French farmers petition Macron to block Mercosur trade agreement

“Signing the deal now is a matter of crucial importance – economically, diplomatically and geopolitically,” a commission spokesperson said, reflecting concerns about Europe’s competitiveness, as it faces pressure from Chinese exports and US tariffs.

Meanwhile, Berlin – one of the agreement’s strongest backers – has also weighed in, calling for the deal to be signed this week. Germany hopes the pact will help revive its industrial exports and bolster Europe’s position in an increasingly competitive global trade environment.

Supporters of the agreement – including Germany, Spain and several Nordic countries – see it as a timely boost for EU exporters. The deal would make it easier for European firms to sell cars, machinery, wines and spirits in Latin America, while opening the EU market further to South American products such as beef, sugar, rice, honey and soybeans.

Brussels showdown

For many farmers in France, Poland and elsewhere, the deal raises fears of unfair competition from imports produced under less stringent environmental and animal welfare standards.

That concern is expected to spill onto the streets of Brussels this week, with up to 10,000 farmers planning protests during an EU leaders’ summit on Thursday and Friday.

In an effort to ease tensions, the European Parliament is due to vote on Tuesday on safeguard measures designed to reassure farmers.

Is France misguided to keep rejecting the EU-Mercosur trade deal?

While EU states have already approved the relevant clause, MEPs could seek to strengthen it further. The commission has also announced tighter checks on agricultural imports and promised to update rules on pesticide residues to prevent banned substances entering the EU via trade.

France still faces an uphill battle to block the treaty outright, as it only requires a weighted majority of member states to pass. Even so, diplomats warn that failure to find a compromise this week could have wider consequences.

Von der Leyen is expected to join Mercosur leaders in Foz do Iguaçu – home to the famous Iguaçu waterfalls – for the signing ceremony if the deal clears its latest hurdles.

Even then, the process will not be finished, as the European Parliament must still give its final approval – likely in early 2026.

(with newswires)


Tunisia

Trial of NGO workers accused of assisting ‘illegal’ migration opens in Tunisia

Aid workers accused of assisting irregular migration to Tunisia went on trial on Monday, as Amnesty International criticised what it called “the relentless criminalisation of civil society” in the country. 

Six staff members of the Tunisian branch of the France Terre d’Asile aid group, along with 17 municipal workers from the eastern city of Sousse, face charges of sheltering migrants and facilitating their “illegal entry and residence”.

If convicted, they face up to 10 years in prison.

Migration is a sensitive issue in Tunisia, a key transit point for tens of thousands of people seeking to reach Europe each year.

A former head of Terre d’Asile Tunisie, Sherifa Riahi, is among the accused and has been detained for more than 19 months, according to her lawyer Abdellah Ben Meftah.

Two years on from EU deal, violence against migrants in Tunisia remains rife

‘Bogus criminal trial’

“The only thing I’m sure of is that Sherifa and the other members of the association did nothing wrong. I’m certain they’ll be released sooner or later. Will it be this Monday or at another hearing? I don’t know, it’s 50-50,” Ben Meftah told RFI.

He also told French news agency AFP that the accused had carried out their work as part of a project approved by the state and in “direct coordination” with the government.

Amnesty denounced what it described as a “bogus criminal trial” and called on Tunisian authorities to drop the charges.

“They are being prosecuted simply for their legitimate work providing vital assistance and protection to refugees, asylum seekers and migrants in precarious situations,” Sara Hashash, Amnesty’s deputy MENA (Middle East North Africa) chief, said in the statement.

The defendants were arrested in May 2024 along with about a dozen humanitarian workers, including anti-racism pioneer Saadia Mosbah, whose trial is set to start later this month.

Driven from camp to camp, Tunisia’s migrants still dream of Europe

Illegal migrants

In February 2023, President Kais Saied said “hordes of illegal migrants”, many from sub-Saharan Africa, posed a demographic threat to the Arab-majority country.

His speech triggered a series of racially motivated attacks as thousands of sub-Saharan African migrants in Tunisia were pushed out of their homes and jobs.

Thousands were repatriated or attempted to cross the Mediterranean, while others were expelled to the desert borders with Algeria and Libya, where at least a hundred died that summer.

This came as the European Union boosted efforts to curb arrivals on its southern shores, including a 255-million-euro deal with Tunis.

(with newswires)


France – Algeria

Mother of jailed French journalist asks Algerian president for pardon

The mother of jailed French journalist Christophe Gleizes wrote a letter to Algeria’s president requesting he pardon her son from his seven-year sentence on terror-related charges.

“I respectfully ask you to consider granting Christophe a pardon, so that he may regain his freedom and his family,” Sylvie Godard wrote in the letter to President Abdelmadjid Tebboune, dated 10 December.

Gleizes’s lawyers are also seeking a new trial with the country’s highest court.

A contributor to the French magazines So Foot and Society, Gleizes was convicted of “glorifying terrorism” in June.

An Algerian appeals court upheld his sentence this month, a decision his mother called “incomprehensible”.

Gleizes is currently France’s only journalist imprisoned abroad, according to French NGO Reporters Without Borders (RSF), and French President Emmanuel Macron has vowed to work towards his release.

Macron joins family’s push to free jailed French journalist in Algeria

He was arrested in May 2024 while travelling to northeastern Algeria‘s Kabylia region to write about the country’s most decorated football club, Jeunesse Sportive de Kabylie.

In 2021, he met the head of the Movement for the Self-Determination of Kabylie (MAK), a foreign-based group designated a terrorist organisation by Algiers.

At this month’s appeal hearing, Gleizes said he did not know the MAK had been listed as a terrorist organisation, and asked the court’s forgiveness for his “journalistic mistakes”.

Algerian court increases jail time for French journalist convicted of ‘terrorism’

“Nowhere in any of his writings will you find any trace of statements hostile to Algeria and its people,” she wrote in her letter.

Diplomatic crisis

At the time of his arrest, Gleizes found himself caught in the midst of a diplomatic crisis between France and its former colony, marked in particular by the withdrawal of the two ambassadors and the reciprocal expulsions of diplomats. 

Tensions escalated with France’s recognition of Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara in July 2024, where Algeria backs the pro-independence Polisario Front.

French-Algerian writer Boualem Sansal was arrested in Algiers and sentenced in March to five years in prison for making comments about Western Sahara that Algerian authorities said undermined the country’s territorial integrity. 

He was freed last month after intense negotiations with Algeria by France and Germany.

(with AFP)

International report

Turkey and Iran unite against Israel as regional power dynamics shift

Issued on:

For years, regional rivalries have limited cooperation between Turkey and Iran. Now, shared security concerns over Israel are providing common ground. During a recent Tehran visit, the Turkish foreign minister called Israel the region’s “biggest threat”.

Turkish foreign minister Hakan Fidan, hosted in Tehran by his Iranian counterpart Abbad Aragchi, declared that both countries see “Israel as the biggest threat to stability in the Middle East”, because of its “expansionist policies”.

Ankara is increasingly angry over Israel’s military operations in Syria, which it considers a threat to security. Syria‘s new regime is a close Turkish ally.

With the Iranian-backed Syrian regime overthrown and Iran’s diminishing influence in the Caucasus, another region of competition with Turkey, Tehran is viewed by Ankara as less of a threat

“Ankara sees that Tehran’s wings are clipped, and I’m sure that it is also very happy that Tehran’s wings are clipped”, international relations expert Soli Ozel told RFI.

Ozel predicts that diminished Iranian power is opening the door for more cooperation with Turkey.

Cooperation

“Competition and cooperation really define the relations. Now that Iran is weaker, the relationship is more balanced. But there are limits, driven by America’s approach to Iran”, said Ozel.

Murat Aslan of SETA, the Foundation for Political, Economic, and Social Research, a Turkish pro-government think tank, points out that changing dynamics inside Iran also give an impetus to Turkish diplomatic efforts towards Tehran.

Israel talks defence with Greece and Cyprus, as Turkey issues Netanyahu warrant

“Iran is trying to build a new landscape in which they can communicate with the West, but under the conditions they have identified”, observes Aslan.

“In this sense, Turkey may contribute. So that’s why Turkey is negotiating or communicating with Iran just to find the terms of a probable common consensus.”

However, warming relations between Turkey and Iran are not viewed in a favourable light by Israel, whose ministers have in turn accused Turkey of being Israel’s biggest threat.

Tensions are rising over Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s strong support of Hamas, which Ankara’s Western allies have designated as a terrorist organisation.

“Obviously, Israel does not want to see Iranian and Turkish relations warm as Israel sees Iran as an existential threat and hence anything that helps Iran is problematic from Israel’s perspective”, warns Turkey analyst Gallia Lindenstrauss at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv.

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

This month, Israeli security forces accused Hamas of operating a major financial operation in Turkey under Iranian supervision. Many of Hamas’ senior members are believed to reside in Istanbul.

American ally

Israeli concerns over Turkey’s improving Iranian ties will likely be exacerbated with Turkish officials confirming that a visit by President Erdogan to Iran has been “agreed in principle”.

Ankara also has a delicate balancing act to make sure its Iranian dealings don’t risk antagonising its American ally, given ongoing tensions between Tehran and Washington.

Good relations with Washington are vital to Ankara as it looks to US President Donald Trump to help ease tensions with Israel. “For Israel, the United States shapes the environment right now”, observes Aslan.

“The Turkish preference is to have an intelligence diplomacy with Israelis, not to have an emerging conflict, but rely on the American mediation and facilitation to calm down the situation”, added Aslan.

The Sound Kitchen

Beautiful destructive flowers

Issued on:

This week on The Sound Kitchen, you’ll hear the answer to the question about the water hyacinths in Ghana. There’s The Sound Kitchen mailbag, your answers to the bonus question on “The Listeners Corner” with Paul Myers, and a tasty musical dessert on Erwan Rome’s “Music from Erwan”. All that and the new quiz and bonus questions too, so click the “Play” button above and enjoy! 

Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday here on our website, or wherever you get your podcasts. You’ll hear the 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 counselled 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 8 November, I asked you a question about an article sent to us by RFI English correspondent Michael Sarpong Mfum, who reports for us from Ghana. His article, “Invasive water hyacinths choke wildlife and livelihoods in southern Ghana”, is about the water hyacinth, a free-floating aquatic plant native to the Amazon River basin in South America. It’s also one of the world’s most invasive species.

The water hyacinth has found its way to Ghana, notably Lake Volta, a vast reservoir behind a hydroelectric dam that generates much of the country’s power.

Your question was: What are the consequences for Ghana’s Eastern and Volta regions from this hyacinth invasion? What did Jewel Kudjawu, the director of the EPA’s Intersectoral Network Department, warn about?

The answer is, to quote Michael’s article: “Jewel Kudjawu, director of the EPA’s Intersectoral Network Department, warned that the weed’s uncontrolled growth has dire consequences for aquatic life, fishing communities and hydropower production.”

In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question: What was the best week of your life?

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

The winners are: RFI Listeners Club member Radhakrishna Pillai from Kerala State, India. Radhakrishna is also the winner of this week’s bonus question. Congratulations on your double win, Radhakrishna.

Be sure and look at The Sound Kitchen and the RFI English Listeners Forum Facebook pages to see the stamps from Bhutan with Radhakrishna’s picture!

Also on the list of lucky winners this week are Debjani Biswas, a member of the RFI Pariwar Bandhu SWL Club in Chhattisgarh, India, and RFI Listeners Club member Mahfuzur Rahman from Cumilla, Bangladesh. Rounding out the list are RFI English listeners Shihabur Rahaman Sadman from Naogaon, Bangladesh, and Bashir Ahmad, a member of the International Radio Fan and Youth Club in Khanewal, Pakistan.

Congratulations winners!

Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: Music for the Royal Fireworks by George Frederick Handel, performed by Le Concert des Nations conducted by Jordi Savall; “Igbo Highlife”, produced by Mr. Zion; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer, and “Lança Perfume” by Roberto de Carvalho and Rita Lee, sung by Rita Lee.

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 Jan van der Made’s article “EU Council president rejects political influence in US security plan”, which will help you with the answer.

You have until 26 January to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 31 January 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

Israel responsible for half of journalist deaths in 2025, RSF report finds

Issued on:

A new Reporters Without Borders report warns of escalating danger for journalists globally, and highlights that deaths in Gaza at the hands of the Israeli military accounted for nearly half of all reporter deaths this year. The NGO’s chief Thibaud Bruttin told RFI that Palestinian journalists were deliberately targeted, and also spoke about the violence spreading across Latin America and how hundreds of reporters remain imprisoned worldwide.

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has warned that journalists are facing increasing dangers worldwide, with Israel emerging as the most lethal country for media workers for the third year running.

In its annual report, the Paris-based watchdog says 67 journalists were killed over the past 12 months – and almost half of them died in Gaza at the hands of Israeli forces.

Twenty-nine Palestinian journalists were killed by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) during the reporting period, alongside what RSF calls “a whole strategy” by Israeli authorities that has severely restricted reporting on the conflict.

The NGO’s director Thibaud Bruttin told RFI that the pattern of deaths in Gaza cannot be dismissed as the tragic fallout of war.

“There has been a whole strategy that has been put in place since October 2023,” he explained.

“First, there has been the decision to block the entry of Gaza to international journalists. Second, there has been a unit set up within the Israel Defence Forces to smear Palestinian journalists… and then we’ve seen massive strikes against journalists, which have been actually claimed as targeted strikes by the IDF.”

RSF says nearly 220 journalists have been killed since the Gaza war began in late 2023. Of those, the organisation believes 56 have been deliberately targeted.

Bruttin stressed that RSF is not including people loosely associated with Hamas in that count, as some Israeli officials have claimed.

“We’re talking about journalists – reporters who have been working, some of them for years, with respected international outlets – and these independent reporters have been deliberately targeted by the IDF.”

The report also highlights one of the deadliest attacks on media workers this year – a so-called ‘double-tap’ strike on a hospital in south Gaza on 25 August, which killed five journalists, including contributors to news agencies Reuters and the Associated Press.

French unions take Israel to court for restricting media access to Gaza

Information blackout

A key concern for RSF is the ongoing block on independent media access to Gaza. Foreign reporters can only enter on tightly controlled military tours, despite sustained calls from media groups and press freedom organisations.

The Foreign Press Association in Israel has taken the matter to court, challenging the IDF’s decision to deny access.

Bruttin said the case has reached a critical point. “There has been an intermediary decision by the Supreme Court… and we’re expecting any time in the coming weeks a decision which should, we hope, enable the press to enter.”

He added that a combination of the restrictions and IDF smear campaigns has cooled global solidarity with Palestinian journalists.

“The smear campaign … has had an impact on the solidarity among the profession,” he said. “It has been very hard to attract the attention of news media globally, and these news media outlets have been very timid in voicing concern over the fate of Palestinian journalists.”

But the scale of the recent strikes appears to have shifted sentiment. According to Bruttin, the deadly attacks of 10 and 25 August prompted “an uptick in the interest of media around this”, allowing RSF to launch a major drive on 1 September that “blew away the smear campaign of the IDF”.

With a fragile ceasefire now in place, he hopes momentum will grow around reopening access to Gaza and restoring independent reporting.

‘Nowhere in Gaza is safe’ says RFI correspondent amid call for global media access

Beyond the Middle East

While Gaza dominates the headlines, RSF’s report shows that the risks for journalists are a global concern.

Mexico remains one of the world’s most perilous environments for reporters, despite government pledges of greater protection. Nine journalists were killed there in 2025 – the deadliest year in at least three years.

Bruttin warns that the danger is spreading across Latin America. “The phenomenon has extended beyond the borders of Mexico,” he said. “We’ve seen journalists killed in Honduras, in Guatemala, in Peru, in Ecuador, in Colombia.”

Around a quarter of all journalists killed this year were in Latin America, with many targeted by cartels, narco-traffickers and armed groups. This trend, he said, is “very concerning” and presents a serious challenge for governments attempting to safeguard reporters.

Sudan and Ukraine also continue to be among the most dangerous places from which to report, with conflict making journalists prime targets on all sides.

Global press freedom at ‘tipping point’, media watchdog RSF warns

Journalists detained

Alongside killings, RSF’s report documents a surge in the number of journalists imprisoned for their work.

As of early December, 503 journalists were behind bars in 47 countries. China tops the list with 121 detained, followed by Russia with 48 and Myanmar with 47.

Bruttin believes the international community can do far more to secure the release of detained reporters.

“We need to effectively, deliberately campaign for the release of journalists,” he said. He pointed to the case of Wall Street Journal correspondent Evan Gershkovich, who was released as part of a prisoner swap with Russia. “If governments prioritise the release of journalists, they can meet success.”

He expressed particular concern for the 26 Ukrainian journalists detained by Russia, many “outside of any legal framework”.

He told RFI that Ukraine has the ability to prioritise their release through prisoner exchanges, citing a recent precedent in which RSF helped confirm proof of life for a detained Ukrainian reporter, forcing Russia to acknowledge holding him. “He was part of one of the latest prisoner swaps,” Bruttin noted.

Although the overall number of journalist deaths remains below the highs of the early 2010s, RSF says the deliberate targeting of reporters and the erosion of access to information are becoming worryingly entrenched.

Spotlight on Africa

Spotlight on Africa: Unesco’s history of Africa and Sammy Baloji’s Congolese history

Issued on:

In this new episode of Spotlight on Africa, we explore different perspectives on African history – from Unesco, which has just released the final three volumes of its General History of Africa, and from the Congo through the insights of artist and filmmaker Sammy Baloji.

For this final episode of 2025, we look back at the full sweep of the African continent’s history.

Sixty years after launching its ambitious project to recover, document and narrate Africa’s past from prehistory to the present day, Unesco has announced the completion of the last three volumes of the General History of Africa.

Relaunched in 2018, the project seeks to translate this body of knowledge into educational resources for teaching the continent’s history. Three new volumes – IX, X and XI – have now been published, introducing fresh material and innovative approaches.

Our special guest reflects on the project and on African history more broadly: UNESCO’s assistant director-general for social and human sciences, Lidia Brito, who discusses these three new volumes.

In the second part of this episode, we also welcome the Congolese artist and filmmaker Sammy Baloji, who discusses his new film The Tree of Authenticity, recently screened at Film Africa in London and now available on the website of the Franco-German television channel ARTE.

Rapper and sorcerer-poet, Baloji, works his magic on new album

The documentary begins in Yangambi, in the Congo, in search of the remnants of a former research centre for tropical agriculture, bearing witness to the country’s colonial past at the heart of the continent.

In doing so, it highlights the links between colonisation and the climate crisis, adopting an unusual perspective: that of the “tree of authenticity”, which plays a decisive role in regulating the climate.

Congolese filmmaker Baloji mixes magic with biting social commentary


Episode edited and mixed by Melissa Chemam and Erwan Rome.

Spotlight on Africa is produced by Radio France Internationale’s English language service.

International report

Turkey fears Ukraine conflict will spill over on its Black Sea shores

Issued on:

Ankara is voicing alarm over a spate of attacks on Russian tankers in the Black Sea, with fears that strikes on ships carrying oil and other key commodities could threaten global trade and pose environmental dangers to Turkey, which has the longest coastline in the strategic sea.

The Turkish government on Thursday summoned both Russian and Ukrainian envoys, warning them to desist from escalating the conflict in the Black Sea.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned the past week’s attacks on three Russian tankers as “unjustifiable”. Kyiv said its drones targeted two of the vessels, and Moscow has warned it may consider striking the ships of countries supporting Ukraine if such attacks continue.

“This escalation is very dangerous; no one can estimate what will happen,” warns international relations expert and former Turkish presidential advisor Mesut Casin.

“Putin says he will use reciprocity rights. This means some of the [Russian] submarines could attack not only Ukraine but also some of the Western NATO allies’ tanker ships,” he explains, a possibility that raises the threat of “a very big environmental disaster”.

Shadow fleet

Kyiv has claimed responsibility for the drone attacks on two empty Russian-flagged tankers but denied involvement in the strike on a ship carrying sunflower oil to Georgia.

The Russian tankers belong to Moscow’s so-called “shadow fleet“, which is used to circumvent international sanctions by carrying oil and other exports aboard ships not officially registered to the government. 

Given Turkey’s long Black Sea coast, fears of an environmental catastrophe are foremost for Ankara.

“These shadow fleet tankers are not modern and are not in good condition,” observes former Turkish diplomat Selim Kuneralp.

“The Russians provide their own domestic insurance for these ships,” he says. “But how useful and how valid these insurances will be […] remains a question mark.”

How one man’s ship-spotting hobby is helping thwart Russian sanction-busting

Trade implications

With Ukrainian forces destroying much of Russia’s navy in the Black Sea, Moscow has limited capacities to protect its tankers.

Ukraine has so far targeted only empty Russian tankers, but alarm bells are ringing on the potential implications for global trade.

“Both Ukraine and Russia are leading exporters of basic food and agricultural commodities,” notes analyst Atilla Yesilada of GlobalSource Partners.

“Despite massive bombing, Ukraine’s grain export capacity is largely intact and is taking the coastal route. So any impairment of that is bad for the world at a time when we are not certain of crop yields because of the ongoing drought elsewhere.”

Insurance premiums for cargo ships using the Black Sea have already spiked amidst the escalating conflict.

Ankara wary of escalation

Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan met with his NATO counterparts this week, broaching the topic of ensuring safe navigation of the vital sea trade route.

Turkey is already cooperating with its partners in the alliance that share the Black Sea coast, Romania and Bulgaria, to clear sea mines. Fidan said that cooperation could be expanded to enhance shipping security. 

However, any increased NATO involvement in the Black Sea would be borne mainly by the Turkish navy, given that the Romanian and Bulgarian navies are largely coastal forces.

Ships belonging to navies outside the Black Sea have been shut out by Ankara since the start of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, along with Russian warships. Turkey, under the 1936 Montreux Convention, regulates access to the sea and is only allowing warships to enter to return to their home ports.

Turkey’s mediator role in the Ukraine war faces growing US pressure

Former diplomat Kuneralp claims Ankara will be cautious of getting drawn into any conflict in the Black Sea.

“It would put all the burden on Turkey alone. What would it do? Would it try to intervene in a dispute between Russia and Ukraine? That’s unlikely. I would not want that to happen because it would be too risky,” he says.

“And that’s perhaps why there have not been any concrete actions since the start of the war other than talk.”

For now, Turkey – one of the few countries with good relations with both Kyiv and Moscow – is relying on diplomacy, and hoping that Washington’s ongoing peace efforts will succeed.

The Sound Kitchen

Côte d’Ivoire’s women speak out

Issued on:

This week on The Sound Kitchen, you’ll hear the answer to the question about women’s concerns in Côte d’Ivoire. There are your answers to the bonus question on “The Listeners Corner”, Ollia Horton’s “Happy Moment”, and a tasty musical dessert on Erwan Rome’s “Music from Erwan”. All that and the new quiz and bonus questions too, so click the “Play” button above and enjoy! 

Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday here on our website, or wherever you get your podcasts. You’ll hear the 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.

2026 is right around the corner, and I know you want to be a part of our annual New Year celebration, where, with special guests, we read your New Year’s resolutions. You must get your resolutions to me by 15 December to be included in the show. You don’t want to miss out! Send your New Year’s resolutions to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr

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 counselled 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 1 November, I asked you to listen to RFI English journalist Melissa Chemam’s podcast Spotlight on Africa: “Inside Côte d’Ivoire’s pivotal election: voices of hope and uncertainty”. Melissa had traveled to Côte d’Ivoire to cover their presidential election and talked to a wide variety of people about their hopes, their fears, and their desires for their country. Near the beginning of the show, Melissa talks about women who, she says, were very involved in the campaigns – as event organizers, supporters, and mothers. Melissa enumerates the main concerns of the Ivorian women – and that was your question. What are the four main concerns the women of Côte d’Ivoire voiced during the presidential campaign?

The answers are, as Melissa noted in her podcast, work, school for kids, childcare, and healthcare.

In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question: How do you make friends as an adult?

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

The winners are: RFI Listeners Club member Father Stephen Wara. Father Stephen is also the winner of this week’s bonus question. Congratulations on your double win, Father Steve!

Also on the list of lucky winners this week are RFI Listeners Club members Zenon Teles, the president of the Christian – Marxist – Leninist – Maoist Association of Listening DX-ers in Goa, India; Radhakrishna Pillai from Kerala State in India; Helmut Matt from Herzbolheim, Germany, and last but not least, Dipita Chakrabarty from New Delhi, India.

Congratulations winners!

Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: “Tapez fort” produced by DJ Tevecinq; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer; “Happy” by Pharrell Williams;  “Little Toot” by Allie Wrubel, sung by the Andrews Sisters, and “Little Rootie Tootie” by Thelonious Monk, performed by Monk and the Thelonius Monk Trio. 

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 Jan van der Made’s article “On NATO’s eastern flank, Romania finds itself at the crux of European security”, which will help you with the answer.

You have until 19 January to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 24 January 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

Presented by

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.

Produced by

The editorial team did not contribute to this article in any way.

Sponsored content

Presented by

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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