ISRAEL – SOMALIA
UN ambassadors condemn Israel’s recognition of Somaliland
Several UN ambassadors criticised Israel during an emergency Security Council meeting on Monday, condemning its unilateral recognition of Somaliland as a violation of sovereignty and international law. The United States was the only member state to defend Israel’s decision to recognise the breakaway region.
Countries at the United Nations raised concerns over whether Israel’s recognition of Somaliland could lead to the future relocation of Palestinians from Gaza or the establishment of military bases there.
Israel announced on Friday that it was officially recognising Somaliland, becoming the first country to do so since the self-proclaimed republic declared in 1991 that it had unilaterally separated from Somalia.
Somaliland, which has for decades pushed for international recognition, holds a strategic position on the Gulf of Aden and has its own money, passport and army.
Israel’s recognition of Somaliland ‘is not an isolated initiative’: expert
Regional backlash
Israel’s move was criticised by the African Union, Egypt, Turkey, the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council and the Saudi-based Organisation of Islamic Cooperation. The European Union said Somalia’s sovereignty should be respected.
Arab League UN Ambassador Maged Abdelfattah Abdelaziz told the UN Security Council on Monday that the 22-member regional organisation rejects “any measures arising from this illegitimate recognition aimed at facilitating forced displacement of the Palestinian people or exploiting northern Somali ports to establish military bases”.
Pakistan’s deputy UN ambassador Muhammad Usman Iqbal Jadoon echoed the criticism, telling the council that the recognition of Somaliland was “unlawful”.
He said Israel’s past references to Somaliland as a possible destination for Palestinians were “deeply troubling”, especially in relation to Gaza.
Somalia holds first local elections in decades, amid tight security
‘Double standards’
The US defended Israel’s right to recognise Somaliland at the meeting, comparing it to the recognition of a Palestinian state by several countries.
“Israel has the same right to conduct diplomatic relations as any other sovereign state,” Tammy Bruce, the deputy US ambassador to the UN, said during the session.
She added that earlier this year several countries had chosen to recognise what she described as a “nonexistent Palestinian state”, accusing council members of applying “double standards”.
Despite defending Israel’s decision, US President Donald Trump has said he opposes recognition of Somaliland. Bruce told the council on Monday that “there has been no change in American policy”.
UN Security Council approves international force for Gaza
Somalia response
As one of the current members of the Security Council, Somalia’s ambassador Abukar Osman condemned Israel’s recognition.
“This act of aggression is aimed at encouraging fragmentation of the territory of Somalia,” he said, urging the UN to reject the move.
He said he spoke for other council members Algeria, Guyana and Sierra Leone who “unequivocally reject any steps aimed at advancing this objective, including any attempt by Israel to relocate the Palestinian population from Gaza to the northwestern region of Somalia”.
Osman said he was speaking on behalf of fellow council members Algeria, Guyana and Sierra Leone, who he said “unequivocally reject any steps aimed at advancing this objective, including any attempt by Israel to relocate the Palestinian population from Gaza to the northwestern region of Somalia”.
Several member states reaffirmed their support for Somalia’s unity without directly naming Israel. UK ambassador James Kariuki said Britain supported “the sovereignty, territorial integrity, political independence and unity of Somalia”.
Israel‘s coalition government, the most right-wing and religiously conservative in its history, includes far-right politicians who advocate the annexation of both Gaza and the West Bank and encouraging Palestinians to leave their homeland.
But Israel’s Deputy UN Ambassador Jonathan Miller told the council the choice to recognise Somaliland “was not a hostile step towards Somalia, nor does it preclude future dialogue between the parties. Recognition is not an act of defiance. It is an opportunity,” he said.
Israel said last week it would seek immediate cooperation with Somaliland in agriculture, health, technology and the economy. Somaliland hopes the move will encourage other countries to follow, boosting its diplomatic standing and access to global markets.
(with newswires)
africa cup of nations 2025
Hakimi returns as Morocco stroll into last-16 at Africa Cup of Nations
Achraf Hakimi entered the Cup of Nations fray on Monday night as Morocco cruised into the last-16 with a 3-0 win over Zambia.
Hakimi, 27, had been on the sidelines during Morocco’s first two matches against Cormoros and Mali.
On the eve of their third match in Group A, Morocco coach Walid Regragui said his skipper would be deployed during the game at the Stade Prince Moulay Abdellah in Rabat.
And the 50-year-old former Morocco international honoured his word.
Morocco boss Regragui includes injured PSG star Hakimi in Cup of Nations squad
Hakimi, injured playing for his club Paris Saint-Germain during a Champions League match against Bayern Munich on 4 November, came on as a replacement for Noussair Mazraoui.
At the time of his arrival, Morocco were 3-0 up. Ayoub El Kaabi opened the scoring in the ninth minute and Brahim Diaz doubled the advantage after 27 minutes.
El Kaabi bagged his brace just after the restart to effectively wrap up the match against a willing but limited Zambia side who could have qualified for the second phase with a win.
Nightmare ending, admits Nigeria boss Chelle after Fez thriller against Tunisia
Mali joined Morocco in the next phase following their 0-0 draw with Comoros in Casablanca.
The Malians dominated the encounter at the Stade Mohamed V but failed to translate possession into goals.
And they nearly paid the price for their lack of precision. Substitute Amadou Haidara was handed a straight red card after a video review in the 87th minute for a hack on Youssouf M’Changama.
But despite the numerical disadvantage, Tom Saintfiet’s players survived to secure second place with three points.
Comoros ended the campaign in third place with two points.
In Group B on Monday afternoon, Oswin Appollis converted a late penalty to give South Africa a 3-2 victory over Zimbabwe in Marrakesh and second place in the pool behind Egypt who played out a goalless draw with Angola in Agadir.
The South Africans took the lead in the seventh minute through Tshepang Moremi.
But Zimbabwe drew level 12 minutes later. Tawanda Maswanhise picked up possession just inside the South Africa half, surged forward past two players and fired the ball past South Africa goalkeeper Ronwen Williams.
Just after the restart, Lyle Foster scored his second goal of the tournament to give South Africa the lead.
Uganda coach Put urges squad to take heart from underdog status against Nigeria
But they they were unable to consolidate. Zimbabwe equalised 17 minutes from time when the ball Aubrey Modiba conceded an own goal.
Appollis saved Modiba’s blushes with the converted penalty to send Hugo Broos’ players into the last-16 for the second successive tournament.
On Tuesday, the final round of games take place in Group C and Group D.
In Fez, Group C winners Nigeria play Uganda while in Rabat, second-placed Tunisia face Tanzania.
In Group D, Senegal take on Benin in Tangier and in Rabat, Botswana play the Democratic Republic of Congo.
africa cup of nations 2025
Uganda coach Put urges squad to take heart from underdog status against Nigeria
Uganda boss Paul Put called on his players to embrace their tags as underdogs in their all-or-nothing Africa Cup of Nations clash against Nigeria on Tuesday night in Fez.
Put’s players will go onto the pitch at the Stade de Fes aiming for a victory that could either take them through to the last-16 knockout stages as runners-up in Group C or as one of the four best third-placed sides in the 24-team competition.
“We’re facing a very good team,” said Put. “They reached the final at the last Cup of Nations and they’ve won both of their games here in Morocco.
“We know the quality of the Nigerian players. Many of them are playing in high level competitions in Europe. So we have to be very concentrated.
“But we know what we’re playing for. It’s going to be hard. It’s going to be difficult. But if we work, everything is possible.”
Morocco boss Regragui includes injured PSG star Hakimi in Cup of Nations squad
Tunisia, who take on Tanzania in Rabat in the pool’s other game on Tuesday night, swept past Uganda 3-1 in the opening game on 23 December.
In their second match, the Ugandans had to settle for a 1-1 draw with Tanzania after Allan Okello fluffed a late penalty.
“We had a big opportunity to win the game,” said Uganda defender Jordan Obita. “But that wasn’t to be.
Morocco boss Regragui confirms Hakimi’s return for Cup of Nations pool clash
“We can’t go into the game against Nigeria with any fear. We will have to go into the game believing that we can do something and that’s what we’re going to do.”
Uganda reached the last-16 in 2019 in Egypt – the first time the Africa Cup of Nations paraded 24 teams.
But squads from the country failed to qualify for subsequent competitions in Cameroon and Cote d’Ivoire.
In 2027, Uganda will co-host the event with Kenya and Uganda. Obita said players in the Uganda squad wanted to use the 2025 tournament as a showcase for their mettle.
“Everybody back home in Uganda needs to see that we can compete with the best nations in the world,” said the 32-year-old who plays for Hibernian in the Scottish Premiership.
“When we played Algeria in the World Cup qualifiers, it showed that we can go toe to toe with top quality nations and players.”
Morocco boss Regragui declares skipper Hakimi fit for Africa Cup of Nations
Nigeria boss Eric Chelle played coy on Monday over the composition of his team on Tuesday night.
“I’m keeping my plans for myself,” said the 48-year-old former Mali international. “A lot of players deserve to play for this team.
“I make difficult choices for every match. I’ve got two or three teams in mind.”
TRANSPORT
Italian rail operator teams up with US fund to expand French services
Italy’s state rail operator Ferrovie dello Stato has said it will increase operations in its Trenitalia France unit, via a billion-dollar joint venture with US private equity fund Certares.
The agreement seeks to “accelerate the growth” of Trenitalia France and “consolidate its presence in France, the United Kingdom and cross-border markets,” the partners said in a statement.
Trenitalia France, a passenger subsidiary of Ferrovie dello Stato (FS), plans to expand its fleet to at least 19 trains, as well as to open a maintenance facility outside Paris and offer increased service capacity on existing routes, including Paris to Lyon, from a current nine daily services to 14.
Trenitalia France also intends to compete with Eurostar on the latter’s Paris-London route by 2029 and is planning to invest €1 billion in its routes in the UK, as well as France.
FS is scaling up its ambitions at a time when high-speed rail services are expanding amid intensified cross-border competition.
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SNCF competition
The Italian operator is also considering moving in on the Paris-Brussels route, the group indicated during a presentation of its strategic plan earlier in December.
It has been in direct competition with French state rail network SNCF for four years, offering services from Paris to Lyon, Marseille, and Milan – without these as yet being profitable.
Certares’s activities focus on travel and tourism, hospitality, business and consumer services, and Trenitalia France also intends to improve its services distribution through agreements with companies within the Certares portfolio – including business and leisure travel agencies CWT, Ovation, Egencia, Havas Voyages and Selectour.
In the coming year, Trenitalia France plans to focus on consolidating and retaining customers in France, hoping to boost occupancy rates on its TGV trains, its management said.
(with newswires)
Humanitarian aid
US vows €1.7bn for UN humanitarian aid, lower than previous years
The United States on Monday unveiled a €1.7 billion pledge for United Nations humanitarian aid, even as President Donald Trump’s administration continues to scale back foreign assistance and warns UN agencies to “adapt, shrink or die” in line with new financial realities.
The sum represents a fraction of previous US contributions but is presented as a generous commitment designed to preserve America’s position as the world’s largest humanitarian donor.
The money will be placed in a central fund and distributed to UN agencies under a new system of stricter oversight, a key condition of Washington’s push for sweeping reform that has alarmed aid groups and forced deep cuts to services.
In recent years, total US humanitarian funding for UN-backed programmes has reached as much as €14.4 billion annually, according to UN data, of which €7– 9 billion came as voluntary contributions. Critics argue the drastic cut risks worsening hunger, displacement and disease and undermines US soft power overseas.
“We are watching the lifeline for millions of people disintegrate before our eyes,” according to Cindy McCain, executive director of the World Food Program.
Turbulent year
The announcement caps a turbulent year for UN bodies such as the WFP, the refugee agency UNHCR and the International Organisation for Migration, all of which have faced severe budget strain following massive US aid reductions.
Other western donors, including Britain and Germany, have also reduced contributions.
The new pledge forms part of a preliminary agreement with the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), headed by former British diplomat Tom Fletcher.
UN to assess refugee strategy, funding at global forum
Despite global needs soaring – with famine declared in parts of Sudan and Gaza and extreme weather disasters displacing thousands – OCHA has been forced to lower its fundraising targets.
The US seeks what officials describe as “more consolidated leadership authority” in how aid is delivered.
Under the plan, OCHA will act as a central conduit for funding rather than separate US allocations to individual agencies.
“This humanitarian reset should deliver more aid with fewer tax dollars,” said US ambassador to the UN, Michael Waltz.
Reduce bureaucratic overhead
According to the State Department, “the agreement requires the UN to consolidate humanitarian functions to reduce bureaucratic overhead, unnecessary duplication, and ideological creep”.
“Individual UN agencies will need to adapt, shrink, or die,” the statement said.
It called the arrangement “a critical step” in reforming how humanitarian operations are funded and monitored.
UN food agency warns aid cuts risk pushing 13.7 million people into extreme hunger
Initially, the funds will focus on 17 countries, including Bangladesh, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Haiti, Syria and Ukraine. Afghanistan and the Palestinian territories are not on the list, with US officials saying they will be addressed under Trump’s proposed Gaza peace plan.
The United Nations estimates that some 240 million people – in conflict zones, suffering from epidemics, or victims of natural disasters and climate change – are in need of emergency aid.
In 2025, the UN’s appeal for more than €38 billion was only funded to the €10 billion mark, the lowest in a decade.
That only allowed it to help 98 million people, 25 million fewer than the year before.
(With newswires)
Crime
Authorities say Malian suspect in Paris metro stabbing is also French citizen
The French Interior Ministry has acknowledged that a man suspected of stabbing three women in the Paris metro on Friday – and who was initially described as a Malian national ordered to leave France – in fact holds French citizenship.
The 25-year-old man was arrested on Friday, suspected of stabbing three women in the Paris metro.
In a statement issued on Friday evening, the Interior Ministry said the alleged attacker was a Malian citizen imprisoned in January 2024 for aggravated theft and sexual assault.
He had been issued with an order (known as a OQTF) to leave France after being released in July.
The man had been placed in an administrative detention centre but failure to obtain a consular travel document required for his deportation had meant he was released after 90 days, as required by law, the statement said.
Legal resident
However, investigators since discovered that the suspect was in possession of a French passport, the Interior Ministry said on Monday, confirming reports by RTL radio.
The suspect obtained French nationality in 2018, a source close to the enquiry told French news agency AFP.
“At no point did he mention this nationality in the various proceedings he has faced over the past three years – trials, appearances before the judge for liberties and detention,” the ministry added.
“At this stage of the checks, there is nothing to call into question the fact that he is French,” the same source said, stressing that “the verifications are currently under way”.
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Mentally unstable
The suspect was released from custody on Saturday evening for psychiatric reasons, according to the Paris public prosecutor’s office, after his state of health was “considered incompatible” with police custody.
He was taken to a psychiatric hospital, prosecutors said.
The man is suspected of having lightly injured the three women on Friday afternoon on line 3 of the Paris metro before fleeing the scene.
French government to ban knife sales to minors after deadly school attack
He was identified thanks to CCTV footage and later arrested in Val-d’Oise, north of Paris, using the geolocation of his mobile phone, the prosecutor’s office said.
Interior Minister Laurent Nunez last week called for “maximum vigilance” during the festive season in a message to senior officials due to what he said was a “very high level of the terrorist threat” and “the risk of public disorder”.
Nunez specifically asked for particular attention to be paid to security on public transport.
(with newswires)
Sudan crisis
Sudan’s El-Fasher ‘an epicentre of human suffering’, UN says
Traumatised civilians left in Sudan’s El-Fasher after its capture by paramilitary RSF forces are living without water or sanitation in a city haunted by famine, says UN aid coordinator Denise Brown after making the agency’s first visit in almost two years.
El-Fasher, the capital of the North Darfur State, fell to the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in October after more than 500 days of siege.
For the first time in nearly two years, a small UN humanitarian team was able to make a short visit last Friday.
The capture of the city was reportedly accompanied by mass atrocities, including massacres, torture and sexual violence. Satellite pictures reviewed by French news agency AFP show what appear to be mass graves.
Brown described the city as a “crime scene”, but said investigations would be carried out by human rights experts while her office focuses on restoring aid to the survivors.
“We weren’t able to see any of the detainees, and we believe there are detainees,” she said in an interview with AFP.
UN urges action on Sudan’s ‘forgotten war’ as humanitarian crisis takes hold
‘Ghost of its former self’
From a humanitarian point of view, she said, El-Fasher remains Sudan‘s “epicentre of human suffering” and the city – which once held more than a million people – is still facing a famine.
“El-Fasher is a ghost of its former self,” Brown said.
“We don’t have enough information yet to conclude how many people remain there, but we know large parts of the city are destroyed. The people who remain, their homes have been destroyed.”
“These people are living in very precarious situations,” warned Brown, a Canadian diplomat and the United Nations‘ humanitarian coordinator in Sudan.
“Some of them in abandoned buildings. Some of them… in very rudimentary conditions, plastic sheeting, no sanitation, no water. So these are very undignified, unsafe conditions for people.”
Death toll from RSF attack rises to 60 in Sudan’s El-Fasher: activists
‘Nothing good’
Since April 2023, Sudan has been gripped by a conflict between the regular army and its former allies the RSF that has triggered a humanitarian catastrophe.
Brown said that the team “negotiated hard with the RSF” to obtain access, and managed to look around and visit a hard-pressed hospital and some abandoned UN premises – but only for a few hours.
Their movements were also limited by fears of unexploded ordnance and mines left behind from nearly two years of fighting.
The Saudi hospital was still standing, with some medical staff present, but has run out of supplies.
UN human rights council orders investigation into atrocities in Sudan
“There was one small market operating, mostly with produce that comes from surrounding areas, so tomatoes, onions, potatoes,” she said.
“Very small quantities, very small bags, which tells you that people can’t afford to buy more.”
“There is a declared famine in El-Fasher. We’ve been blocked from going in. So there’s nothing good about what’s happened in El-Fasher.
The war in Sudan has killed tens of thousands of people, driven 11 million from their homes and has caused what the UN has declared “the world’s worst humanitarian disaster“.
(with AFP)
KENYA
Stigma and sisterhood: how one Kenyan woman knitted a healthcare revolution
Mary Mwangi turned to her knitting needles for solace during her cancer treatment – and then used them to help other women survivors reclaim their dignity.
The first thing you notice about Mary is her laughter – warm, loud, and quite unexpected from one who has faced death twice.
Inside a tiny tailoring shop in the town of Thika, near the Kenyan capital Nairobi, rolls of fabric spill off the shelves and sewing machines hum. Mary sits in one corner, yarn in hand, looping stitch after stitch with meditative focus.
Knitting was not always her livelihood, it was once just a childhood hobby, forgotten somewhere between raising three children and building a business. It only resurfaced in 2017, when her body forced her to slow down.
‘I felt like the world had slapped me’
That year, Mary was diagnosed with spinal cancer and was bedridden for 11 months. She remembers the silence in her house, the long days and the longer nights, and a mind restless with fear. In an attempt to escape it all, she reached for her knitting needles.
“I just needed something to keep my mind from sinking,” she says, her fingers absently tracing the rim of a basket full of yarn.
She began knitting hats and donating them to cancer patients at Kenyatta National Hospital.
WHO launches plan for free child cancer medicines in low-income countries
A year later, her cancer was back – this time, stage three breast cancer. Mary remembers the doctor’s voice fading into a blur as she was told the news.
“I felt like the world had slapped me,” she says. She turned off her phone and withdrew from her friends, telling her husband she didn’t want to speak to anyone. “Everything felt violent. Even the air.”
Her treatment was gruelling – a mastectomy, 33 rounds of radiotherapy, endless visits to the hospital. Her hair disappeared. Her savings vanished. The loan of $10,000 she had taken out to expand her small tailoring shop was swallowed up by medical bills.
‘A common wound’
But what cut deepest for Mary was the stigma around losing her breasts.
“People whispered. They called me ‘the woman whose breasts were cut’. Losing them, and your sense of dignity and womanhood… it’s not something you can prepare for,” she says.
When Mary was well enough to walk around the cancer ward, she saw other women draped in scarves and oversized jumpers, disguising the area where a breast used to be.
“The conversations revealed a common wound: stigma and silence,” she says.
Silicone prosthetic breasts cost far more than most of these women can afford. So Mary turned again to the thing that had got her through her illness – her knitting, But this time she had a different purpose in mind.
She learned how to make soft yarn breast prostheses, mastered the technique with YouTube videos and long nights of trial and error.
“Knitting saved me mentally,” she says. “It pulled me from fear into purpose.”
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Small shop, big dreams
Today, Mary’s tailoring shop is more than a business, it’s a sanctuary.
As the staff work the machines, Mary sits by the window knitting prosthesis after prosthesis – round, soft and colourful. She sells them for 1,500 shillings each, and organisations buy them in bulk to donate to cancer survivors.
She has now made more than 600 prostheses and more than 450 hats, and the orders just keep coming.
Every week, Mary also holds classes teaching women – many of whom are fellow survivors – how to knit the prostheses, in order to earn an income.
The Moroccan women artists harnessing the creative power of crafts
Hannah Nungari Mugo is a former vegetable seller, who says she felt her identity fade away after her 2019 mastectomy.
“People treated me like a broken thing,” she says. Knitting gave her something to hold on to, and she now makes around even prostheses a week.
Mary Patricia Karobia, who had a liver transplant, says she too knows what that stigma feels like. “I heard people whisper about my liver being removed.” For her, knitting is about healing, and showing others her strength.
Mary hopes one day to be able to train women throughout Kenya, but space and finances are standing in her way for now.
“Cancer took a lot from me,” she says, looking down at the colourful prostheses on her table. “But it also gave me purpose. And I want to pass that purpose on.”
Migration
‘All the comforts you find in Paris’: the man helping African ‘repats’ head home
Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire – Many young Africans who have studied in Europe are turning the dream of returning home to build a career or start a business into a reality. RFI spoke to Pierre Djemis, who organises forums in Abidjan and Paris to connect these repatriates with new opportunities, and with each other.
They are called “repats”, short for “repatriates” – young people who left their African homes, be they in Gabon, Cameroon, Congo or Côte d’Ivoire, to chase a better education or business opportunities in Europe and are now choosing to head home to put those gains to good use.
They speak of reuniting with their families, and contributing to the African continent’s development.
In 2019, a survey supported by the French Development Agency revealed that 40 percent of members of the African diaspora were ready to return. Since then, the continent’s economic appeal has only grown.
The study polled 800 people to identify the motivations, and the obstacles, for graduates and professionals in the diaspora who are considering working in Africa.
France sees immigration shift as more educated Africans arrive than Europeans
The key finding was the sheer number who aspire to return. Almost 71 percent were considering going back to work on the continent, with 38 percent saying they were ready to return immediately.
In terms of location, West Africa was the most popular region among respondents, at 32 percent.
However, with many African economies still largely informal and labour markets tight, returning can be a challenge.
According to the United Nations, the number of people born to African immigrant parents in the diaspora could represent almost 20 million people worldwide. Many African countries are seeking to attract them, with return assistance programmes to support projects and business ventures.
‘You can have a life here’
Senegal and Côte d’Ivoire are attracting a large number of investors and businesses. And the latter has seen a clear economic boom in the last decade.
In Abidjan, one man has made it his business to support repats coming back from Europe to Côte d’Ivoire. Pierre Djemis, a lawyer born in France, settled in his father’s country a few decades ago, and has since seen many more people express the desire to do the same.
Young voters in Côte d’Ivoire want jobs, change – but most of all, peace
To support them, he organises forums for repats twice a year, one in Abidjan, another in Paris, with the next to be held in the French capital on 24 January.
“Today, people between 28 and 35 years old are excited when they see Abidjan,” Djemis told RFI.
“It is a pleasant city to live in, a modern city where you have all the comforts you find in Paris. You have the bakeries you find in Paris, the clothing stores you see in Paris. You have beaches, a comfortable lifestyle, cars in Abidjan that you don’t even find in the 16th or 15th arrondissements.”
He added: “You can have a life here, a vibrant life, a dynamic life similar to the life that one can find in Asia, in Shanghai, Hong Kong and so on. So, these young people also want to be part of that movement; it’s the economic movement of the future.”
Djemis says he witnessed a first wave of parents who studied abroad in France, Germany, Switzerland or the United States and who returned to Africa in the 1990s as doctors, lawyers and civil servants.
Since then a second wave of repats who were born in Europe, grew up there and only know Africa through their cultural upbringing, but feel the desire to “return” to their parents’ homelands, has emerged.
“Often, they believe there’s what’s called ‘the glass ceiling’, well known in Europe and elsewhere. At a certain level, they feel they can no longer access certain positions because of their background. And they believe they can be useful elsewhere, especially back home.”
Integration challenges
According to a study published in 2023 in the Revue Akofena journal, graduates’ motivations for returning to Côte d’Ivoire include the search for professional opportunities, attachment to their country of origin, a desire to contribute to the country’s development, and a sense of belonging to the Ivorian community.
However, they face significant challenges when it comes to professional and economic integration.
African graduates know that salaries are potentially higher in Europe. Many also struggle to adapt to professional environments that are different from the ones they studied or began their careers in. It can take months, if not years, to gain the trust of local partners. Others, meanwhile, face difficulties accessing financing for their investment.
Advisers like Djemis encourage these repats to lean on their networks gained through work or at university.
The study however notes that return migration is vital in terms of its contribution to the development of the countries to which these young people are returning.
It added that ultimately “their potential contribution… will depend on the ability of development policies to encourage return migration, facilitate the transition and create opportunities for their contribution”.
Transport
Public transport takes to the skies in Greater Paris with first urban cable car
Limeil-Brévannes – The first urban cable car in Greater Paris was unveiled on 13 December, offering a faster link between isolated neighbourhoods and Paris Métro line 8. The 4.5-kilometre line, which includes five stations, is the longest urban cable car in Europe.
French authorities officially inaugurated the C1 cable car line on 13 December in Limeil-Brévannes, a suburb south of Paris.
Stretching 4.5 kilometres and serving five stations, it is now the longest urban cable car system in Europe.
France already has seven urban cable cars fully integrated into public transport networks, including in cities such as Brest, Saint-Denis de La Réunion and Toulouse. Planners of the C1 drew inspiration both from projects in France and from international examples, particularly in South America, where cable cars are widely used in urban settings.
The system operates with 105 cabins. During peak hours, a cabin arrives every 23 to 24 seconds, each able to carry up to 10 passengers.
“We estimate that around 11,000 people will use the cable car on a weekday, but we have a boarding capacity of 1,600 people per hour in each direction,” Arnaud Crolais, technical director at Ile-de-France Mobilités, told RFI.
‘Environmentally friendly’
“It is 100 percent accessible, with universal accessibility and a distinctive design for the cabins, pylons and stations.
“And it is extremely environmentally friendly. The propulsion is 100 percent electric,” he adds.
The new line links Créteil to Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, passing through Limeil-Brevannes and Valenton. The full journey takes 18 minutes, including stops, compared with roughly 40 minutes by bus or car.
Connecting isolated areas
Cable car systems like this are increasingly chosen to connect neighbourhoods that are difficult to reach using traditional transport infrastructure.
“We decided on a cable car as a way to serve this isolated area,” explains Crolais.
“We are in an area with quite a few urban dividing lines. You have to cross railway tracks over 100 metres wide, a lot of road infrastructure, both national and regional. There is also a high-speed line that runs right nearby. Behind us, there is a wooded area to get over. This is a plateau and therefore somewhere there weren’t many roads big enough for a tram or bus.”
The line now connects previously isolated neighbourhoods to Line 8 of the Paris metro.
“I had to drive to avoid taking the bus. It was easier for me, as I was going to Maisons-Alfort. And now, to get to Paris, I walk to the cable car. It’s more convenient,” says Raoul, a resident of Limeil-Brévannes, told RFI.
“I don’t know yet if it’s faster, as this is my first trip. Otherwise, I think it’s good.”
Françoise, a passenger, agreed: “Very practical. There’s less traffic already and it saves time, so no stress. It’s brilliant!”
Environment
Land pollution is drowning the oceans in plastic, French experts warn
Marseille – With global plastic production doubling in less than 10 years, reducing it is key for protecting the world’s oceans. RFI spoke to experts working aboard French research ship Tara, which docked in Marseille for a day dedicated to tackling plastic pollution.
Ahead of the UN Ocean Conference in June, French and European scientists and policymakers gathered at the Mucem museum in Marseille in May for a summit organised by the Tara Ocean Foundation and the French branch of the Interparliamentary Coalition to End Plastic Pollution.
“Today, we are facing a plastic crisis, which is a major crisis affecting the oceans and the environment in all its dimensions – climate change, pollution and biodiversity loss,” Henri Bourgois-Costa, head of public affairs for the Tara Ocean Foundation, told RFI.
French schooner Tara charts a course for change ahead of UN oceans summit
Recycling not (the only) solution
Today, at a global level, 50 percent of plastics are landfilled, 14 percent are recycled, 17 percent incinerated and 19 percent are poorly managed, explained Fabienne Lagarde, an environmental chemist at Le Mans university.
“Recycling is the tree that hides the forest, because the end of life of plastic is also polluting,” she said.
Moreover, 98 percent of plastics today are not biodegradable, and two-thirds are not recyclable, Lagarde pointed out.
France pushes for action as high seas treaty hangs in the balance
“Most of our waste is either buried or incinerated, leading to a major environmental leak that originates primarily from land,” explained Jean-François Ghiglione, a researcher from the French National Centre for Scientific Research and the scientific director of the Tara Microplastics mission 2019, whose initial results were published in April.
“And more than 80 percent of plastics that end up in the sea come from the land,” he added.
The study, which focused on nine major European rivers, showed that 100 percent of these rivers were polluted by microplastics arriving directly from land.
“Microplastics come from the breakdown of large waste. A large piece of waste – through abrasion, friction and UV exposure – breaks into smaller and smaller pieces, almost infinitely,” explained Ghiglione.
These microplastics measure between 0.025mm and 5mm, and are invisible to the naked eye.
Digital boom makes Marseille a global data hub – but at what cost?
The study also showed that 85 percent of plastics in the sea are in microplastic form.
These microplastics are also found throughout the food chain, affecting 1.4 million birds and 14,000 mammals every year. Doctors are now investigating the consequences for human health.
“We absolutely must reach a global plastics treaty that reduces the quantity of plastics, because we have scientifically shown that the more plastic is produced, the more pollution there is,” concluded Ghiglione. “The relationship is linear.”
ENVIRONMENT
China’s power paradox: clean energy surge conflicts with coal safety net
Ten years on from the Paris climate agreement, China sits at the heart of the global energy transition – as both the world’s biggest emitter of carbon dioxide and its biggest driver of renewable power.
China produced around 60 percent of the world’s new solar power in 2025, making it the world’s largest manufacturer and deployer of renewable energy. It is installing more solar and wind capacity than the rest of the world combined.
However, a decade after the Cop21 talks in Paris – which led to the Paris Agreement, ratified by China in 2016 – China also remains heavily dependent on coal.
With Beijing now painting itself as central to global efforts to tackle climate change, the question is whether Chinese technology can help put the world on a viable climate path.
“We’re studying China’s technological progress, not only in photovoltaics, but also in wind power, solar thermal energy, onshore wind, offshore wind and nuclear energy,” Jiang Kejun, from the Energy Research Institute of China’s National Development and Reform Commission, told RFI.
If the world stays on track, he adds, it may still be possible to limit global warming to 1.5C using Chinese technology alone. That view reflects a broader shift in China’s message, with the transition framed not just as a national effort but a global one.
China’s energy transition differs from Europe’s. It is not built on reducing demand, but on meeting rising energy needs driven by urbanisation, industry and the electrification of the economy.
“Almost all the growth in energy demand comes from electricity, and almost all the growth in electricity this year has come from solar and wind,” says Dave Jones, chief analyst at Ember, a global energy think tank. China’s oil consumption is no longer rising, he adds, while gas use is rising but remains low.
China is not yet replacing fossil fuels outright. Instead, it is largely avoiding new fossil demand by steering growth towards low-carbon electricity. As a result, emissions are stagnating rather than notably falling, even as renewable energy expands.
While Beijing is aiming for its CO2 emissions to peak before 2030, energy stability remains the priority in a country with one of the world’s largest power systems.
Paris Agreement turns 10 as heat rises faster than global action
Race to cut costs
China’s strategy rests on producing electricity at very low cost. Vast solar and wind projects are being built in the Gobi Desert, a huge arid region in northern China, as well as in the Taklamakan in the far west, one of the world’s largest sandy deserts, and across the open grasslands and desert areas of Inner Mongolia.
These installations have been engineered to generate cheap electricity that is then sent east through ultra high voltage transmission lines, a field in which China is a global leader.
“China has made this product very affordable,” Jiang explains. “There is no overcapacity and no unfair price competition. Even with the existing supply of about 0.6 yuan per watt for photovoltaic modules, companies can still remain profitable.”
Western arguments about overcapacity no longer make sense in a world facing a climate emergency, he argues – adding that Chinese solar power has become cheap enough to outcompete fossil fuels even without subsidies.
“Even in a baseline scenario, investing in photovoltaics or carbon-free energy supply is already much cheaper than relying on fossil fuels,” Jiang says.
In his view, falling renewable costs mean fossil fuels no longer need to play a central role in future energy systems. That shift is already visible in the price of solar equipment.
“A solar panel today costs between $50 and $60 in countries that do not impose high tariffs on Chinese imports,” says Ember’s Dave Jones. “That panel can produce electricity for 20 or 30 years.”
Falling costs help explain why Chinese solar is spreading rapidly, including in poorer countries where access to electricity remains limited.
Coal as a safety net
But despite the expansion of renewables, coal remains central to China’s power system. Beijing continues to approve new coal plants – not to drive growth, but to secure supply in a country where power shortages are politically sensitive.
“Coal-fired electricity generation in China may not be rising, but it is not falling either,” Jones explains. “The system absorbs huge amounts of solar and wind, but coal is still there to guarantee stability.”
Coal now acts as a buffer when solar output drops or demand spikes, and China is investing heavily in making its coal plants more flexible.
“This is so plants can shut down during the day and let cheap solar feed the grid,” Jones says. “It is not happening fast enough, but it is happening at scale.”
The next challenge is closing coal plants rather than simply building fewer of them. But for now, political and economic stability come before a rapid exit from coal, as electricity demand continues to rise.
Clean energy surpasses coal but policy headwinds threaten 2030 goals, IEA warns
Making solar work
Producing large amounts of solar power is only part of the task. The bigger challenge is integrating it into the grid without causing instability.
Jones points to two key tools: flexible coal generation and energy storage, where China has built a strong technological lead.
“Battery technology developed by Chinese manufacturers has advanced significantly,” he says. “Prices have fallen to the point where storage is becoming profitable, allowing solar power to become dispatchable electricity.”
China already dominates close to 80 percent of the global battery supply chain, from lithium processing to recycling. Storage itself is not seen as a major barrier, with Chinese researchers saying existing technologies are already capable of supporting large-scale solar power.
“Whether in the Gobi Desert or even in the Sahara, new storage technologies are already good enough,” Jiang says. “The problems are manageable. All of this can work.”
Beyond electricity generation is a broader industrial shift. The goal is no longer just green power, but fully integrated industrial ecosystems supplied by cheap renewables.
“In the future, within a single industrial park, investment will cover photovoltaics, wind, power generation, hydrogen purification, synthetic ammonia or olefins, right through to the final product,” Jiang says. “The system is fully integrated, and such a design can be supported 100 percent by photovoltaics.”
African leaders urge fair funding with $50bn climate call
Power struggles
However, China’s expansion in clean energy has fuelled concern in Europe and the United States, where Chinese technologies are often viewed as a source of strategic dependence.
Climate urgency is used to push back against those concerns. “My main concern is whether the world can still maintain the 1.5C warming target,” Jiang says. “The pace of warming is extremely fast. We do not have time. We must act.”
He also warns against turning the energy transition into a geopolitical dispute, saying climate discussions lose substance once international power struggles take over.
At the same time, the rise of Chinese clean technologies is not being driven solely by state planning. Much of the expansion reflects market forces and growing demand.
“Manufacturers introduce panels into new markets, they appear on shelves for the first time and demand grows organically,” Jones explains.
Both experts agree that the future of the transition now largely depends on the Global South.
“Solar power offers a real opportunity to catch up,” Jones says. “Countries do not need to follow the historic path of building dependence on oil and gas. They can electrify directly with clean energy.”
Unlocking finance and technology transfers is now critical, Jiang argues: “The key issue today is to release Chinese technology and capital flows to developing countries as quickly as possible.”
Control over renewable technologies is increasingly tied to control over future energy systems, a point energy experts say will shape the coming decade.
This article was adapted from the original version in French by RFI’s Clea Broadhurst.
CRIME
France sees sharp rise in church thefts targeting sacred art
Thefts from churches in France have surged this year, as sacred objects and artworks are increasingly targeted by thieves – driven by soaring gold prices and easy access to many small, poorly protected buildings.
The Interior Ministry recorded 538 cases in 2025, an 11 percent rise from the previous year.
The thefts often involve small churches that are easy to access and poorly protected. Higher gold prices have also increased the value of some of the objects being stolen.
Three men were convicted on Friday for around 30 thefts from churches in northern and eastern France.
They received prison sentences, some of them suspended, after stealing cultural objects with the help of a second-hand dealer.
Hadrien Lacoste, vice president of France’s Observatory for Religious Heritage, told RFI the thefts cover different types of crime.
“The theft of collection boxes and donations is what we would call petty larceny,” he said. “Then there is a second type of theft, involving art objects that are often made from precious materials and often signed by major goldsmiths.”
These objects are works of art rather than everyday religious items, Lacoste added.
Louvre museum closed as staff continue strike over working conditions
Objects sought from abroad
Stolen religious objects are resold at flea markets or through antique dealers in France. Some are also sold outside the country.
“The Catholic Church, for example in Asia, is very dynamic, with patrons who are willing to support these communities by buying high-quality religious objects,” Lacoste said. “That’s why these objects today are closely watched from abroad.”
Because churches built after 1905 fall under the responsibility of mayors, Lacoste is calling for greater awareness of the value of what he described as shared and local heritage.
“There needs to be a real awareness of the value of this shared and local heritage, which must be preserved, showcased and secured,” he said.
Proposed measures to tackle the problem include drawing up detailed inventories for each church and installing protective display cases for valuable objects.
africa cup of nations 2025
Pressure of coaching Nigeria is on another level, says Chelle
Nigeria head coach Eric Chelle offered a heartfelt insight into the intensity of leading the nation’s football team as he pored over the choices for the starting line-up for his side’s final game in Group C on Tuesday night at the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations.
Chelle’s charges enter the tie against Uganda at the Stade de Fes as pool winners following victories over Tanzania and Tunisia.
Nigeria laboured to the 2-1 win over Tanzania – a side 74 places below them in the Fifa world rankings – and they clung on to beat Tunisia 3-2 after leading 3-0 going into the final 15 minutes.
“When I was the coach of Mali, it was very difficult because it was my country and I had a lot of pressure,” Chelle said on the eve of the fixture at the Stade de Fes.
“But when I took this job for Nigeria, the pressure went up another level.
“At every moment in the day, I feel the pressure. I feel the expectation of this country.
Nigeria and Tunisia bosses ignore World Cup fortunes for Cup of Nations clash
“And whenever this is over, I don’t know if I will ever feel something like that again.
“It’s like you are on a mountain and at every moment you can fall down.”
Chelle, after two years with Mali, had been three months in the job at MC Oran in the Algerian top flight when he was drafted in to lead Nigeria in January.
“I feel good. I do what I want. I do what I feel,” Chelle added. “Sometimes it’s good, sometimes it’s not good. But this is, for sure, 100 percent, the best job for me. I’m very happy with that.”
Five things we learned on Day 6: Nigeria find danger in dominance
Second-placed Tunisia, Tanzania, who lie third and Uganda are vying for the runners-up spot behind Nigeria and an automatic place in the last-16 at the 24-team tournament.
Failing that, the trio can also put themselves in the frame to advance as one of the four best third-placed teams.
Shorn of such cares, Chelle said he might deploy players who had not featured in the first two games.
“I try every time to do my best, like the players on the pitch,” he added.
“I’m very proud of them. I’m very proud to work for Nigeria and to work to bring some prizes.”
Nigeria’s coach Eric Chelle
Since arriving in Morocco, Chelle has brushed off suggestions that he and the team need to lift the Cup of Nations trophy to redeem themselves after botching a 2026 World Cup qualifying campaign in which they finished second behind South Africa and then fluffed their reprieve at an African play-off for a place at an intercontinental tournament leading to two spots at next year’s competition.
Chelle merely urged his squad to surpass the feats of the 2023 vintage who reached the final in Cote d’Ivoire before going down to the hosts who had eliminated his Mali side in the quarter-finals.
“A lot of the players are with me,” said Chelle. “They feel the same. They want to die for Nigeria. They want to die. And we are ready for that. So at every training session, everything I say to them I give with my heart.
“I’m just very happy and I’m trying to live this period like it’s the best of my life.”
In Group D on Tuesday night, Benin, fresh from their first victory at a Cup of Nations tournament, take on Senegal in Tangier and Democratic Republic of Congo face Botswana in Rabat.
On Monday evening, Morocco skipper Achraf Hakimi returned from a seven-week injury lay-off during his team’s 3-0 stroll past Zambia to claim top spot in Group A.
Mali joined them in the last-16 as runners-up following a 0-0 draw with Comoros.
In Group B, Egypt and South Africa advanced. Egypt drew 0-0 with Angola in Agadir while South Africa twice squandered the lead in Marrakesh before Oswin Appollis converted an 82nd-minute penalty to give them a a 3-2 victory over Zimbabwe.
“Once again we fell asleep after a good start,” said South Africa boss Hugo Broos.
“Our passing was bad at times and we should have concentrated on retaining possession in the closing minutes instead of seeking a fourth goal.
“We have to work on controlling games.”
africa cup of nations 2025
Five things we learned on Day 8: Hakimi up and running
Morocco boss Walid Regragui promised us Achraf Hakimi would make an appearance during the third pool match of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations. And he duly appeared in the second-half. Let the tournament commence!
Waiting for Achraf
His was an arrival eagerly anticipated. And it came in the 64th minute at the Stade Prince Moulay Abdellah in Rabat. Achraf Hakimi, golden boy of Moroccan football, stepped onto the pitch amid raucous cheers from the partisans in the stands. Hakimi was injured on 4 November while playing for his club Paris Saint-Germain against Bayern Munich in the Champions League. Luis Diaz chopped the poor lamb down just before half-time to leave Hakimi, who was celebrating his 27th birthday in tears on the deck. Restored, his smile was big and broad after the 3-0 victory over Zambia to take Morocco into the last-16.
Birthday boy
As Nigeria finalised their preparations for their Day 9 game against Uganda, star striker Victor Osimhen celebrated his 27th birthday. Prickly as relations are between Nigeria’s finest sports reporters and Osimhen’s boss, Eric Chelle, the chance to unite was clear and present. And one of the assembled hacks offered Chelle a sitter. Even though a defender in his playing days, Chelle did not miss the target. “I wish a lot of of good things for my striker … my favourite striker,” gushed Chelle. Praise continued as unbounded as Osimhen’s appetite to humiliate defenders and goalkeepers. “For me, he is the best striker in the world. He’s focused and I hope that this Africa Cup of Nations will be a great one for him.” Absolutely no vested interests in that encomium.
You make me feel mighty real.
A good Africa Cup of Nations for Victor James Osimhen will, by extension, yield rewards for one Eric Sékou Chelle. The 48-year-old former Mali international took over Nigeria in January. And promptly failed to steer the team to the 2026 World Cup. “This is the football,” Chelle relativised as he broached the third Group C game against Uganda and Tunisia’s comeback from 3-0 down to 3-2 in the second pool match on 27 December. “If we can talk about the bad things, we can talk about the good things too.” said Chelle. “The fact is we won 3-2. For sure we let Tunisia come back. But the reality? We want the reality. In two games we have scored five goals.” Looking intently at the impertinent hack who questioned the side’s defensive resolve, Chelle added: “You want the clean sheet? But me, I see the goals that we can score. Maybe in the last four games of the tournament, we score maybe between 10 and 12 goals.” Eric, come back. Stay with us, Eric.
Dreamer
But there’s nothing wrong with flights of fancy. Uganda boss Paul Put can attest to that. Back in 2013 at the Cup of Nations in South Africa, his Burkina Faso side were in the same group as Nigeria in Nelspruit. The Review carries fond memories of a hotel room adjacent to the swimming pool, wonderful food and attentive staff. As for the football pool, Burkina Faso drew with the Nigerians and enjoyed a dreamy run to the final in Johannesburg where they lost 1-0 to the Nigerians – incidentally their last continental crown. Put says he’s not after revenge as Uganda seek victory over Nigeria on Day 9 to secure a place in the last-16. “I cannot go to my players and say: ‘Because I lost in the final with Burkina Faso, now you have to do me a favour.’ No. They are playing for their homeland. They know only one result is possible to progress.” The Review was rather impressed by the absence of ego. With a twinkle in his eye, Put added mischievously: “But for me personally, it would be very nice if we could beat Nigeria. I would be very happy and I would invite all the players to dance with me.” That would be a dream of a story.
Control freak-out
Paul Put’s fellow Belgian, Hugo Broos, is having a fair old time of it at the helm of South Africa. He took them to third place at the last Cup of Nations in Cote d’Ivoire and after leading them to a berth at the 2026 World Cup, he has steered the side to second in Group B behind Egypt. They reached the last-16 at the 2025 extravaganza following a 3-2 win over Zimbabwe. But after the success over their southern African neighbours, Broos cut loose. “Once again we fell asleep after a good start,” he fumed. “We continuously lost possession,” added the 73-year-old. Broos took an unheralded Cameroon side to the 2017 title in Gabon. That conquest, he told The Review, was based on a squad camaraderie he had never witnessed in his 30-odd years of coaching. Of his new charges, he complained: “Our passing was bad at times and we should have concentrated on retaining possession in the closing minutes instead of seeking a fourth goal. We have to work on controlling games.” Will they heed his words?
Ukraine war
Trump says US and Ukraine ‘a lot closer’ on peace deal but ‘thorny issues’ remain
US President Donald Trump has said that he and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky were “getting a lot closer, maybe very close” to an agreement to end the war in Ukraine, but acknowledged that the fate of the Donbas region remains a key unresolved issue.
President Trump, who had promised to finish the war on day one of his presidency, said he was embarking on a year-end diplomatic sprint as he welcomed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Sunday.
At a joint news conference after the meeting, both leaders reported progress on two of the most contentious issues in peace talks – security guarantees for Ukraine and the division of eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region that Russia has sought to capture.
Both Trump and Zelensky offered few details and did not provide a deadline for completing a peace deal. Trump said it will be clear “in a few weeks” whether negotiations to end the war will succeed. He said a few “thorny issues” around territory must be resolved.
Zelensky said an agreement on security guarantees for Ukraine has been reached. Trump was slightly more cautious, saying that they were 95 percent of the way to such an agreement, and that he expected European countries to “take over a big part” of that effort with US backing.
French President Emmanuel Macron announced on Monday that Kyiv’s allies would meet in Paris next month to discuss security guarantees as part of the peace agreement.
“We will bring together the countries of the Coalition of the Willing in Paris in early January to finalise each one’s concrete contributions,” Macron said on X after speaking with Zelensky and Trump.
Zelensky reveals US-Ukraine plan to end Russian war, key questions remain
Donbas unresolved
Zelensky has said previously that he hopes to soften a US proposal for Ukrainian forces to withdraw completely from Donbas, a Russian demand that would mean ceding some territory held by Ukrainian forces. While Moscow insists on getting all of Donbas, Kyiv wants the map frozen at current battle lines.
Both Trump and Zelensky said on Sunday the future of the Donbas had not been settled, though the US president said discussions are “moving in the right direction”. The United States, seeking a compromise, has proposed a free economic zone if Ukraine leaves the area, although it remains unclear how that zone would function in practical terms.
“It’s unresolved, but it’s getting a lot closer. That’s a very tough issue,” Trump said.
Nor did the leaders offer much insight into what agreements they had reached on providing security for Ukraine after the war ends, something Zelensky described Sunday as “the key milestone in achieving a lasting peace”.
Russia has said any foreign troop deployment in Ukraine is unacceptable.
Zelensky said any peace agreement would have to be approved by Ukraine’s parliament, or by a referendum. Trump said he would be willing to speak to parliament if that would secure the deal.
EU greenlights €90bn loan for Ukraine, without frozen Russian assets
Kremlin ‘support’ for negotiations
Shortly before Zelensky and his delegation arrived at Trump’s Florida residence, Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke in a call described as “productive” by the US president and “friendly” by Kremlin foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov.
Ushakov, in Moscow, said Putin told Trump a 60-day ceasefire proposed by the European Union and Ukraine would prolong the war. The Kremlin aide also said Ukraine needs to make a decision regarding the Donbas “without further delay”.
Trump said he and Putin spoke for more than two hours. He said the Russian president pledged to help rebuild Ukraine, including by supplying cheap energy. “Russia wants to see Ukraine succeed,” Trump said. “It sounds a little strange.”
As Trump praised Putin, Zelensky tilted his head and smiled.
Trump said he would call Putin again following the meeting with Zelensky.
The Kremlin expressed support for Trump’s negotiations.
“The whole world appreciates President Trump and his team’s peace efforts,” Kirill Dmitriev, Putin’s special envoy, posted on X early on Monday.
(with newswires)
Migration
Over 3,000 migrants died in 2025 trying to reach Spain: aid group
More than 3,000 migrants died while trying to reach Spain this year, a report released by a Spanish migration rights group said on Monday, a sharp decline from 2024 as the number of attempted crossings fell.
Caminando Fronteras (Walking Borders) said most of the 3,090 deaths recorded until 15 December took place on the Atlantic migration route from Africa to Spain’s Canary Islands, considered one of the world’s most dangerous.
While there has been a “significant” decrease in migrant arrivals in the Canaries, “a new, more distant and more dangerous” route to the archipelago has emerged with departures from Guinea, it said.
The group compiles its figures from families of migrants and official statistics of those rescued. It included 437 children and 192 women among the dead.
Caminando Fronteras also noted there had been a rise in the number of boats leaving from Algeria, mainly to the holiday islands of Ibiza and Formentera in the Mediterranean.
Record number of deaths
Traditionally used by Algerians, the route is seeing a surge of migrants from Somalia, Sudan, and South Sudan in 2025, the group said.
The number of deaths on this route had doubled this year to 1,037 when compared to 2024, it added.
Spain adopts plan to relocate unaccompanied minors from Canaries
At least 10,457 migrants died or disappeared while trying to reach Spain by sea in 2024, according to Caminando Fronteras, the highest number recorded since it began tracking data in 2007.
Spain’s interior ministry says 35,935 migrants reached Spain until 15 December this year, a 40-percent decrease from the same period last year.
Nearly half of them came through the Atlantic migration route from the coast of West Africa to the Canary Islands.
(with AFP)
society
Remembering Bardot: ‘sex symbol’, ‘crazy cat lady’ and far-right supporter
International and French media have paid tribute to Brigitte Bardot following her death on Sunday at the age of 91. While some highlighted her reputation as “the biggest sex symbol of French cinema”, others drew attention to her role as a “controversial activist”.
Images of the screen diva were splashed across media outlets around the globe following the announcement of her death on Sunday. Many also highlighted her role as a catalyst for social change in France.
Bardot’s libertine attitude in her breakthrough 1956 movie And God Created Woman outraged censors at the time. The French Catholic daily La Croix said she had a “career without much success” which she cut short to devote herself to animals.
The left-leaning Liberation newspaper said, however, that Bardot had a “meteoric career”.
“She was probably the last of that handful of new and free figures in which France liked to recognise itself at the turn of the 60s,” noted Liberation, which called her the “greatest sex symbol of French cinema”.
The conservative Le Figaro said “this blonde whirlwind burst on to the screens” in a France still suffering from the fallout of the Second World War. “She shook things up, danced the mambo on the tables of Saint-Tropez,” it added, recalling her iconic scene in And God Created Woman.
Bardot: the screen goddess who gave it all up
‘She hid nothing’
International media highlighted the screen sensation and the controversy after Bardot gave up acting to defend animal rights, as well as to become a far-right supporter. She was convicted and fined five times over comments that incited racial hatred.
“She was a French cocktail of kittenish charm and continental sensuality,” said the United Kingdom’s public service broadcaster the BBC.
Italy’s La Repubblica newspaper called her “a diva rebel” who “chose liberty until the very end”.
In Spain, El Pais called Bardot a “controversial activist”, adding: “In her own way, she hid nothing. Neither the wrinkles, nor her increasingly radical character or her ideological convictions, which she evoked with crude euphemisms.”
The New York Times said that Bardot “redefined mid-20th century movie sex symbolism”, highlighting her “unapologetic carnal appetite” on screen.
But, it added: “At best, Ms Bardot was considered eccentric in her later years, prompting observations that this former sex kitten, as she was often called, had turned into a ‘crazy cat lady’.”
Bardot was repeatedly convicted for hate speech – mostly against members of the Islamic faith after migration from France’s former colonies.
French screen legend Brigitte Bardot fined for racial slurs against Reunion islanders
She actively backed far-right presidential contender Marine Le Pen when she ran in 2012 and 2017.
Germany’s Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung said it would be better to “forget, even if it may be difficult, the political Bardot of recent years for the duration of this obituary” and “remember THE Bardot” instead.
Bardot “will be buried in her garden near the sea,” said her long-time friend and journalist Wendy Bouchard on Monday.
“It was her wish and it will be respected,” said Bouchard, referring to the icon’s last wish to “be buried near those she cherished, her animals” with a simple wooden cross to mark her grave.
However, Saint-Tropez, officials said on Monday that Bardot would to be buried in a seaside cemetery, without giving a date.
(with newswires)
KENYA
‘It’s about stopping harmful tourism’: the fight against Maasai Mara luxury hotel
In Kenya’s Maasai Mara, local people say a new luxury safari hotel is threatening the ecosystem – and the livelihoods of those for whom tourism was supposed to bring opportunity.
At dawn, when the mist is still clinging to the grass, Nasieku Kipeke’s hands are already moving through beads. Red, blue, white… she threads them with the same rhythm her mother taught her.
The beaded bracelets she makes will end up in the hands of tourists who come to the Maasai Mara to witness the Great Migration – the epic annual journey made by 2 million zebras, wildebeest and gazelles from Tanzania to Kenya, following the path of the seasonal rains.
The money Nasieku earns from her beads pays for her children’s porridge and books and, when she can manage it, clinic visits – which she often puts off.
But this morning, her fingers are slow. Word has spread about the new luxury hotel rising near Sand River, one of the most important wildlife corridors in the reserve. For her, the development feels like a storm cloud settling over land she depends on but has no power to protect.
“When they block the animals, they block us,” she says in a low voice. “We survive because the world comes to see what lives here.”
‘Climate whiplash’: East Africa caught between floods and drought
Opportunities out of reach
Down the road, 20-year-old Lemayian leans on a crooked fence post. His ambition is to be a wildlife guide – one who can speak about lions, migration cycles and Maasai history in the same breath.
But jobs are thin on the ground now. Conservancies are tightening rules. The land for grazing is shrinking.
“They tell us tourism will give us opportunities. But sometimes I feel like the opportunity is fenced away from us, something we can see but not reach.”
For people like Lemayian, the pace of development can be a double-edged sword, promising prosperity while encroaching on and eventually closing off spaces that his family has depended on for generations.
Jane Goodall, pioneering primatologist and voice for wildlife, dies aged 91
Ole Nkaputie, a herder in his seventies, drives his cattle toward a water point. Each step is deliberate, steady, shaped by a lifetime of reading the land. To him, the world-famous Maasai Mara National Reserve is not a tourist attraction – it’s memory, livelihood, identity.
“The animals move like we move,” he says, as he watches his cows drink. “When you block their path, you block ours too.”
He remembers when people would assemble under a tree to debate the changes, when the elders spoke and everyone had their say.
‘Fear cannot guide us’
Dr. Meitamei Ole Dapash is a conservationist. His small office is cluttered with maps of wildlife routes and folders full of petitions and legal papers. The weight of responsibility hangs heavily over him.
“This isn’t about stopping tourism,” he says, tapping a map where the Sand River flows. “It’s about stopping harmful tourism – development that ignores the people and the wildlife it claims to celebrate.”
It was Dapash who took the fight to court, challenging the construction of the Ritz-Carlton luxury Masai Mara Safari Camp on the grounds of poor community consultation and suspect environmental review.
The women carrying the burden of Kenya’s rural healthcare on their backs
He has put himself squarely in the crosshairs of powerful interests. The threats have followed – late-night calls, anonymous warnings, intimidation.
“But fear cannot guide us,” he says. “If we lose this land, what will my grandchildren inherit? Photographs of animals that used to roam here?”
When he speaks with communities, he listens more than talks. Women like Nasieku speak of incomes drying up with bad tourist seasons. Young people like Lemayian ask who will hire them when the land they depend on is parcelled off. Elders like Nkaputie warn of a day when cultural erosion will creep in, long before anyone notices it happening.
He walks one afternoon with a group of women to the edge of the river. A herd of zebra hesitates nearby, unsure of the new noise. One woman sucks her teeth in frustration. “This place was for the animals,” she says. “Now it is for the rich.”
Gaza
‘Shivering from cold and fear’: winter rains batter displaced Gazans
It only took a matter of minutes after the heavy overnight rain first began to fall for Jamil al-Sharafi’s tent in southern Gaza to flood, drenching his food and leaving his blankets sopping wet.
The winter rains have made an already precarious life worse for people like Sharafi, who is among the hundreds of thousands in the Palestinian territory displaced by the war, many of whom now survive on aid provided by humanitarian organisations.
“My children are shivering from cold and fear… The tent was completely flooded within minutes,” Sharafi, 47, said on Sunday.
“We lost our blankets, and all the food is soaked,” added the father of six, who lives in a makeshift shelter with his children in the coastal area of Al-Mawasi.
A fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hamas has been in place since 10 October, following two years of devastating fighting.
Thousands of displaced Gazans return home as Israel-Hamas ceasefire takes effect
But despite the truce, Gazans still face a severe humanitarian crisis, and most of those displaced by the war have been left with little or nothing.
Families are crowded into camps of tents hastily erected from tarpaulins, which are often surrounded by mud and standing water when it rains.
“As an elderly woman, I cannot live in tents. Living in tents means we die from the cold in the rain and from the heat in the summer,” said Umm Rami Bulbul.
“We don’t want reconstruction right now, just provide us and our children with mobile homes.”
Nighttime temperatures in Gaza have ranged between eight and 12 degrees Celsius in recent days.
French unions take Israel to court for restricting media access to Gaza
Insufficient aid
Nearly 80 percent of buildings in the Gaza Strip have been destroyed or damaged by the war, according to United Nations data.
And about 1.5 million of Gaza’s 2.2 million residents have lost their homes, said Amjad Al-Shawa, director of the Palestinian NGO Network in Gaza.
Of more than 300,000 tents requested to shelter displaced people, “we have received only 60,000”, Shawa told AFP, pointing to Israeli restrictions on the delivery of humanitarian aid into the territory.
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The UN refugee agency for Palestinians, UNRWA, said the harsh weather had compounded the misery of Gazans.
“People in Gaza are surviving in flimsy, waterlogged tents & among ruins,” UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini wrote on X.
“There is nothing inevitable about this. Aid supplies are not being allowed in at the scale required.”
COGAT, the Israeli defence ministry body responsible for Palestinian civilian affairs, said in mid-December that “close to 310,000 tents and tarpaulins entered the Gaza Strip recently” as part of an increase in aid under the ceasefire.
Earlier this month, Gaza experienced a similar spell of heavy rain and cold.
The weather caused at least 18 deaths due to the collapse of war-damaged buildings or exposure to cold, according to Gaza’s civil defence agency, which operates under Hamas authority.
On 18 December, the UN’s humanitarian office said that 17 buildings collapsed during the storm, while 42,000 tents and makeshift shelters were fully or partially damaged.”Look at the state of my children and the tent,” said Samia Abu Jabba.
“I sleep in the cold, and water floods us and my children’s clothes. I have no clothes for them to wear. They are freezing,” she said.
“What did the people of Gaza and their children do to deserve this?”
(AFP)
INTERVIEW
Paris textiles exhibition reveals the interwoven history of India and France
Paris – The exhibition “Textile Matters” at the Mobilier National arts and crafts institution in Paris tells the story of how the textile histories of India and France are interwoven. This 400-year cultural exchange has influenced fashion, interiors and weaving traditions in both countries. RFI spoke to Mayank Mansingh Kaul, a textile designer based in Delhi and co-curator of the exhibition alongside designer Christian Louboutin.
RFI: Why choose the Mobilier National in Paris, France’s national furniture and decorative arts institution, for this exhibition?
Mayank Mansingh Kaul: I think it’s a perfect venue for this kind of exhibition because what we were really hoping to highlight was how rich and diverse the contemporary practice of textile is today in both countries.
The historic Gobelins tapestry workshop [a key part of the Mobilier National]… is an example of how that kind of craftsmanship in France is revered, is appreciated, is kept alive at the highest levels of patronage and of aesthetics, as well as interest, and how it is a very important symbol of culture to the country.
It’s extraordinary that when you walk through the galleries of the Gobelins looking at the exhibition, you are quite aware that just behind the galleries are active workshops that are producing furniture and tapestries.
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RFI: What ties link France and India through textiles?
MMK: We’ve known for about 400 years that France and India have both inspired and influenced each other in textiles.
We have, historically, for instance, very fine handspun and handwoven cotton fabric, which was exported to France, which then became a very important aspect of 18th century and early 19th century French women’s fashion.
We also know how block-printed and hand-painted, naturally dyed textiles in cotton from India – which were exported and were [all the rage] in France – actually shaped its interiors, and shaped its fashion for a very long period of time. It also led to the establishment of certain kinds of traditions of French print itself.
It is the same in the case of the famous hand-woven cashmere shawl – the famous cashmere shawl, with its beautiful motif of the paisley – which were exported on the luxury market to France and became important aspects of French fashion and French interiors.
And in the same way, we know of, for instance, examples of French lace, which has now become a very important part of the Indian repertoire of textiles, which came historically 200-300 years back from France, and became embedded in India’s textile landscape.
We also know that there has been some exchange and influence between Lyon, the pre-eminent brocade weaving centre in France, and Varanasi in north India, which is one of the most important brocade centres in India.
One significant way in which brocades from Lyon influenced the Indian brocades from Varanasi was observed in the late 19th century and the early to mid-20th century, when aesthetic movements such as that of the French Art Nouveau and the French Art Deco were very visibly reflected in the designs of Indian brocades.
The Moroccan women artists harnessing the creative power of crafts
RFI: Today, how do these ties continue to shape cultural exchange?
MMK: One, of course, is the embroideries and surface embellishments… designed and produced in India for French couture houses, for French brands.
More recently, we’ve observed artists between the two countries who are working with textiles as a medium taking and giving from each other quite actively.
[There is also] the Villa Swagatam residency programme [run by the French Institute and the French Embassy in India] which invites artists and designers and creative practitioners from India to residencies in France, and likewise French practitioners to India.
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So it’s at the level of design, of visual arts, of contemporary arts, of craftsmanship [and the] deep appreciation that the two countries have for craftsmanship. The two countries innately recognise [each other’s] reverence and appreciation for things handmade and artisanal.
And I think that overarching sentiment also becomes a great means of understanding and support to practitioners between the two countries.
Ce qui se trame. Histoires tissées entre l’Inde et la France runs until 4 January, 2026 at the Mobilier National in Paris.
Central African Republic
Central African Republic’s Touadéra primed for third term as voters head to polls
Central African Republic President Faustin-Archange Touadéra is seeking a controversial third term this Sunday, following a decade in office, a change in constitution and the forging of closer ties to Russia.
Alongside their president, Centrafricains are set to elect national, regional and municipal lawmakers.
Touadéra, who oversaw a referendum in July 2023 that scrapped the presidential term limit, allowing him to seek a third term, is the favourite to win of the seven candidates running.
The 68-year-old, a mathematician with an academic background and a former prime minister, came to power in 2016 during a civil war.
Analysts say his lead was aided by civil servants campaigning for him and the significant advantage in terms of resources he enjoys over his opponents.
“The president will win because he has much more financial capacity than the opponents,” said Charles Bouessel of International Crisis Group.
Central African Republic (CAR) has endured repeated cycles of unrest since gaining its independence from France in 1960, leaving most of its 5.5 million people in poverty.
Russian ties
Touadéra’s government has been repeatedly accused of turning to Russia for security in exchange for access to gold and other resources.
In 2018, CAR became the first country in West and Central Africa to bring in Russia’s Wagner mercenaries, a move later mirrored by Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger.
But Russian security has come at a cost. In 2023, the Africa Center for Strategic Studies think tank said Russia had made more than $2.5 billion in African gold through its mercenary missions in CAR, Mali and Sudan.
Touadéra has also launched two cryptocurrency ventures to attract investors, which the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime (GI-TOC) warned could expose state assets to foreign criminal networks.
He is also seeking investors for a long-discussed railway project linking CAR to Cameroon and Sudan, and has vowed to boost revenue from mining under a new code adopted in 2024. However, illegal mining and criminality remain rampant in CAR. China last month issued a rare warning to its citizens on the risks of kidnapping, extortion and slavery in the sector.
Touadéra’s economic initiatives have brought little relief to a country where two-thirds of people live in extreme poverty, according to 2023 World Bank data.
“We are always promised jobs and schools, but many young people remain unemployed,” said Clarisse, a university student in Bangui.
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Fragile gains
In 2022, CAR became the first African nation – and second globally, after El Salvador – to adopt bitcoin as legal tender.
The president has also been touting his infrastructure investment, including the signing of a deal last week to launch Starlink, Elon Musk’s company SpaceX’s satellite-based internet service, in CAR.
He claims too to have improved security across the country.
“When I came to power in 2016, you couldn’t travel 10km without being harassed. There was no security, no roads, nothing. We have worked so hard to achieve this result today,” he told supporters this month at a rally in Bangui.
Despite his close ties with Russia, Touadéra has also signalled a renewed interest in Western partnerships, telling the Financial Times in September that he would welcome any country willing to develop CAR’s lithium, uranium and gold reserves.
His supporters see him as a peacemaker, after he struck a controversial 2019 peace accord with 14 armed groups involved in the civil war, essentially bringing warlords into the government in return for the disarming of their militias.
This reduced violence in some regions and helped economic growth rise to around 3 percent, up from 1.9 percent in 2024, according to International Monetary Fund data.
Touadéra says peace deals are proof of progress as CAR readies for election
But analysts warn the gains are fragile: rebels have not fully disarmed, reintegration is incomplete and incursions by combatants from neighbouring Sudan fuel insecurity in the east.
Human Rights Watch has also accused Russian mercenaries of executions and torture. In November, the United Nations Security Council extended the mandate of its peacekeeping mission.
“There are a lot of ingredients that could lead to a renewed cycle of violence,” said Nathalia Dukhan, Central Africa analyst for GI-TOC. Government and allied forces “have been using fear and terror” to maintain control, she added.
Security remains a top concern for voters. Jean-Claude Kolego, a trader in Bangui, said: “What we want are roads and peace.”
(with Reuters)
Guinea Conakry elections
Guinea votes in presidential election expected to cement Doumbouya’s rule
Guinea votes on Sunday in a presidential election widely expected to hand Mamady Doumbouya, who seized power in a 2021 coup, a seven-year mandate, completing the West African nation’s transition back to civilian rule.
The former special forces commander, believed to be in his early 40s, faces eight other candidates in a fragmented field with no strong challenger.
Ousted president Alpha Conde and longtime opposition leader Cellou Dalein Diallo remain in exile.
Guinea holds the world’s largest bauxite reserves and the richest untapped iron ore deposit at Simandou, officially launched last month after years of delay.
Doumbouya has claimed credit for pushing the project forward and ensuring Guinea benefits from its output.
His government this year also revoked EGA subsidiary Guinea Alumina Corporation‘s license after a refinery dispute, transferring its assets to a state-owned firm.
The turn toward resource nationalism – echoed in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger – has boosted his popularity, as has his youth in a country where the median age is about 19.
“For us young people, Doumbouya represents the opportunity to send the old political class into retirement,” said Mohamed Kaba, a mechanic in Conakry. “There is a lot of corruption right now, but I hope these things will be sorted out.”
Guinea voters back new constitution clearing path for junta leader
Doumbouya expected to entrench power
If elected, Doumbouya “will likely utilise his position to further entrench his power and that of the military over Guinea,” said Benedict Manzin, lead Middle East and Africa analyst at risk consultancy Sibylline.
“In particular he is likely to position his allies and associates to benefit from the expected economic boom associated with the launch of production” at Simandou, Manzin added.
A transition charter adopted after the coup barred junta members from contesting elections. But in September, Guineans overwhelmingly backed a new constitution removing that clause, extending presidential terms to seven years and creating a Senate.
Provisional results showed turnout at 86.42 percent, though opposition figures disputed that.
Opposition activity restricted during the campaign
Political debate has been muted under Doumbouya. Civil society groups accuse his government of banning protests, curbing press freedom and restricting opposition activity.
The campaign period “has been severely restricted, marked by intimidation of opposition actors, apparently politically motivated enforced disappearances, and constraints on media freedom,” UN rights chief Volker Turk said Friday. These conditions “risk undermining the credibility of the electoral process,” he added.
The government did not respond to a request for comment.
Doumbouya kept a low profile during the campaign, leaving surrogates to make his case.
At a closing rally on Thursday in Conakry, he skipped a speech although he danced with his wife while Congolese star Koffi Olomide performed.
He wore a white baseball cap and track jacket emblazoned with the name of his movement: “Generation for Modernity and Development.”
About 6.7 million people are registered to vote, with provisional results expected within 48 to 72 hours of polls closing.
(Reuters)
africa cup of nations 2025
Nightmare ending, admits Nigeria boss Chelle after Fez thriller against Tunisia
Nigeria coach Eric Chelle admitted on Sunday the last 15 minutes of his side’s Africa Cup of Nations game against Tunisia was the stuff of nightmares.
The Super Eagles – as they are nicknamed – had soared into a 3-0 lead at the Stade de Fes with goals from Victor Osimhen, Wilfred Ndidi and Ademola Lookman.
But slack marking at a free-kick allowed Montassar Talbi to head in Tunisia’s response after 74 minutes and Ali Abdi thrashed home a penalty on 87 minutes to set up a grandstand finish in front of just over 25,000 mainly Tunisian fans at the arena.
But Nigeria held out through seven minutes of stoppage-time to take the three points, secure top spot in Group C and a place in the last-16 at the 24-team tournament.
“Those final 15 or so minutes will give me nightmares,” Chelle told RFI. “I was going a little bit crazy about what was happening because the players deserved a big game.
“And it was a test against a big team like Tunisia.”
Just before the Cup of Nations in Morocco, Tunisia wrapped up qualification for next year’s World Cup without conceding a goal in their 10 games while Nigeria failed to reach the competition in the United States, Mexico and Canada after finishing second in their qualifying group and then losing at an African mini-tournament for a place at a contest next March offering two places at the World Cup.
Nigeria and Tunisia bosses ignore World Cup fortunes for Cup of Nations clash
Both sides entered the clash on Saturday night on the back of opening day wins. Nigeria laboured to a 2-1 victory over Tanzania while Tunisia cruised past Uganda 3-1.
But it was Nigeria who bossed the opening exchanges. Osimhen should have hit the target after eight minutes when he rose to meet Akor Adams’ cross from the right. Osimhen headed just over a few minutes later from Lookman’s corner from the same flank.
Just before half-time, Osimhen atoned for his inaccuracy when he found a gap between Abdi and Talbi to head in Lookman’s cross from the left past the Tunisia goalkeeper Aymen Dahmen.
And Tunisia were breached again soon after the restart. Ndidi rose to head in Lookman’s corner. Mid way through the second-half, Osimhen turned from predator to provider.
Fed the ball by Alex Iwobi, Osimhen drove into the penalty area and took three defenders with him. But rather than shooting, he tapped the ball inside for the unattended Lookman who slotted past Dahmen.
“Tunisia didn’t let in one goal during the World Cup qualifiers,” Chelle said. “Three goals against this team! This is for me a great game. We kept the ball so well during 70 or so minutes.”
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The 48-year-old former Mali international added: “We still have to play a game that will bring the confidence and shows our ambitions.
“There’s positives in Tunisia’s comeback,” Chelle insisted. “It shows that there is still something for us to work on and something to improve. It will keep me and my players motivated.”
On Tuesday, in the final Group C game, Nigeria will take on Uganda who drew 1-1 with Tanzania in Rabat while Tunisia will seek redemption against Tanzania.
Kosovo elections
Kosovo goes to polls in bid to end year-long political impasse
Kosovo si going to the polls on Sunday, with nationalist Prime Minister Albin Kurti’s party seeking a majority to end a year-long political deadlock that has paralysed parliament and delayed international funding for Europe’s youngest nation.
The vote is the second this year in Kosovo after Kurti’s Vetevendosje party fell short of a majority in February. Months of failed coalition talks prompted President Vjosa Osmani to dissolve parliament in November and call an early election.
Failure to form a government and reopen parliament would prolong the crisis at a critical time. Lawmakers must elect a new president in April and ratify 1 billion euros in loan agreements from the European Union and World Bank that expire in the coming months.
The Balkan country’s opposition parties have refused to govern with Kurti, criticising his handling of ties with Western allies and his approach to Kosovo’s ethnically divided north, where a Serb minority lives. Kurti blames the opposition for the impasse.
To woo voters, Kurti has pledged an additional month of salary per year for public sector workers, one billion euros per year in capital investment and a new prosecution unit to fight organised crime.
Opposition parties have also focused on improving living standards.
“We want the next government to create conditions for the youth to stay here and not leave,” one voter, 58-year-old Rexhep Karakashi, told Reuters in the capital Pristina.
Opinion polls are not published in Kosovo, leaving the outcome uncertain. Many voters say they are disillusioned.
“There wouldn’t be great joy if Kurti wins, nor would there be if the opposition wins. This country needs drastic changes, and I don’t see that change coming,” said Edi Krasiqi, a doctor.
Polls opened at 7am (0600 GMT) and close at 7pm. Exit polls are expected soon after voting ends.
Political crisis hits funding
Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008 with U.S. backing, including a 1999 NATO bombing campaign against Serbian forces trying to crush an uprising by the 90% ethnic Albanian majority.
Despite international support, the country of 1.6 million has struggled with poverty, instability and organised crime. Kurti’s tenure, which began in 2021, was the first time a Pristina government completed a full term.
Tensions with Serbia flared in 2023, prompting the EU to impose sanctions on Kosovo. The bloc said this month it would lift them after ethnic Serb mayors were elected in northern municipalities, but the measures likely cost Kosovo hundreds of millions of euros.
(Reuters)
My Ordinary Hero
Issued on:
Feast your ears on listener Rasheed Naz’s “My Ordinary Hero” essay. All it takes is a little click on the “Play” button above!
Hello everyone!
This week on The Sound Kitchen, you’ll hear a “My Ordinary Hero” essay by listener Rasheed Naz from Faisal Abad, Pakistan. I hope you’ll be inspired to write an essay for us, too!
If your essay goes on the air, you’ll find a package in the mail from The Sound Kitchen. Write in about your “ordinary” heroes – the people in your community who are doing extraordinarily good work, quietly working to make the world a better place, in whatever way they can. As listener Pramod Maheshwari said: “Just as small drops of water can fill a pitcher, small drops of kindness can change the world.”
I am still looking for your “This I Believe” essays, too. Tell us about the principles that guide your life … what you have found to be true from your very own personal experience. Or write about a book that changed your perspective on life, a person who you admire, festivals in your community, your most memorable moment, and/or your proudest achievement. If your essay is chosen to go on-the-air – read by you – you’ll win a special prize!
Send your essays to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
Or by postal mail, to:
Susan Owensby
RFI – The Sound Kitchen
80, rue Camille Desmoulins
92130 Issy-les-Moulineaux
France
I look forward to hearing from you soon!
Here’s Rashid Naz’s essay:
Heroes are not always found in stories or movies. Sometimes they live among us, quietly working to make our world a better place. My “ordinary” hero is a community leader in our town, someone who has taught me that real heroism comes from serving others with kindness and courage.
Our community leader, Mr. Ahmed, is not rich or powerful, but he has a heart full of compassion. He organizes clean up drives, helps poor families, and encourages young people to stay in school. Whenever there is a problem – a sick neighbor, a broken road, or a family in need – he is the first to step forward. His actions remind us that small efforts can bring big changes.
What I admire most about him is his humility. He never seeks fame or reward. When people thank him, he simply says, “We are all responsible for our community.” Those words inspire me. He believes that leadership means service, not authority, and he proves it every day through his actions.
To many people, he might seem like an ordinary man. But to me, he is a true hero – a symbol of dedication, honesty, and hope. Because of him, I’ve learned that anyone can be a hero, not by wearing a cape, but by using their heart to make a difference.
That is why my “ordinary” hero is our community leader Mr Ahmed, a man whose quiet strength and selfless service continue to inspire us all.
Be sure and tune in next week for our annual New Year’s Resolutions program! Talk to you then!
US pushes Israel to accept Turkish role in Gaza stabilisation force
Issued on:
Washington is stepping up diplomatic efforts to address Israeli objections to a possible Turkish role in an International Stabilisation Force in Gaza, a move that could affect plans to disarm Hamas and advance US President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace plan.
Trump is due to host Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on 29 December in Florida.
The meeting is the latest attempt to revive the Gaza plan, which aims to move from a ceasefire towards the creation of a new governing arrangement in Gaza, the deployment of an international force and the disarmament of Hamas.
On Friday, Turkish and Egyptian officials met their US counterparts in Miami.
With a ceasefire in place in Gaza, Washington is pushing the next phase of its plan, which would include Turkish troops in an International Stabilisation Force.
From Washington’s perspective, Turkey’s involvement is considered essential to the plan, said Asli Aydintasbas of the Brookings Institution.
Turkey and Iran unite against Israel as regional power dynamics shift
Israeli objections
Hamas disarmament depends on the creation of a new Palestinian governing entity and the presence of international peacekeepers, with Turkey acting as a guarantor, Aydintasbas said.
“Without Turkey in this process, decommissioning Hamas weapons would not occur. That is implicit in the agreement.”
Turkey’s close ties with Hamas are well known, with senior Hamas figures reportedly hosted in Turkey. While Turkey’s Western allies label Hamas a terrorist group, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said its members are liberation fighters.
Trump has publicly thanked Ankara for using its influence to encourage Hamas to accept the peace plan.
Israel opposes any Turkish military presence in Gaza, fearing Turkey would support Hamas rather than disarm it.
Israel is also concerned about cyber attacks attributed to Hamas operating from Turkish territory and doubts Turkey would act in Israel’s interests, said Gallia Lindenstrauss, a Turkey analyst at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv.
“There’s a risk of an accident between Israeli and Turkish forces, given the already high tensions and suspicions. It’s hard to see a positive outcome,” she said.
Israel has struggled to persuade Trump to back its position. “The US has its own priorities, and is receptive to Ankara due to strong Trump-Erdogan relations,” Lindenstrauss added.
Turkey ready to help rebuild Gaza, but tensions with Israel could be a barrier
Turkey’s position
Erdogan, who has cultivated close ties with Trump, has said Turkey is ready to send soldiers to Gaza. Reports have claimed Turkey has a brigade on standby for deployment.
Turkey’s relationship with Hamas is a “double-edged sword”, said Ozgur Unluhisarcikli, head of the German Marshall Fund office in Ankara. From Israel’s point of view, Turkey is too close to Hamas, but “if you want to contribute to disarming them, dialogue is needed”.
Any Gaza mission would be risky, but the Turkish army has decades of experience, Unluhisarcikli said. “It has a proven track record in terms of post-conflict stabilisation from the Balkans to Afghanistan. They have proven they can operate in such environments.”
Despite strained diplomatic ties, the Turkish and Israeli militaries still maintain open communication. The two countries operate a hotline to avoid clashes between their air forces over Syria, demonstrating continued military coordination despite political tensions.
Turkey warns Kurdish-led fighters in Syria to join new regime or face attack
Regional doubts
Egypt and Saudi Arabia distrust Turkey’s ties with Hamas and question its intentions in Gaza, Unluhisarcikli said, with concerns that echo memories of Ottoman-era rule.
On Monday, US Ambassador to Turkey Tom Barrack met Netanyahu in an effort to ease Israeli concerns. However, prospects for a breakthrough are likely to depend on this month’s meeting between Netanyahu and Trump.
Incentives may be offered to encourage Israel to accept Turkey’s role, but the issue is unlikely to be resolved that way, said Asli Aydintasbas of the Brookings Institution.
“Because this is such a fundamental and existential issue for Israel, I don’t think incentives will work,” she said.
“As to whether or not Trump would go so far as to withhold military or financial aid, it would be very unlikely. Rather, it may just let this situation sort of fester. I don’t think the Americans have a clear plan to push forward if the answer from Netanyahu is to say no.”
Merry Christmas!
Issued on:
This week on The Sound Kitchen, there’s a special Christmas programme from us to you. Just click on the “Play” button above and enjoy!
Hello everyone! Merry Christmas!
This is Alberto Rios’ poem, which you heard him read on the programme.
Christmas on the Border, 1929
1929, the early days of the Great Depression.
The desert air was biting, but the spirit of the season was alive.
Despite hard times, the town of Nogales, Arizona, determined
They would host a grand Christmas party
For the children in the area—a celebration that would defy
The gloom of the year, the headlines in the paper, and winter itself.
In the heart of town, a towering Christmas tree stood,
A pine in the desert.
Its branches, they promised, would be adorned
With over 3,000 gifts. 3,000.
The thought at first was to illuminate the tree like at home,
With candles, but it was already a little dry.
Needles were beginning to contemplate jumping.
A finger along a branch made them all fall off.
People brought candles anyway. The church sent over
Some used ones, too. The grocery store sent
Some paper bags, which settled things.
Everyone knew what to do.
They filled the bags with sand from the fire station,
Put the candles in them, making a big pool of lighted luminarias.
From a distance the tree was floating in a lake of light—
Fire so normally a terror in the desert, but here so close to miracle.
For the tree itself, people brought garlands from home, garlands
Made of everything, walnuts and small gourds and flowers,
Chilies, too—the chilies themselves looking
A little like flames.
The townspeople strung them all over the beast—
It kept getting bigger, after all, with each new addition,
This curious donkey whose burden was joy.
At the end, the final touch was tinsel, tinsel everywhere, more tinsel.
Children from nearby communities were invited, and so were those
From across the border, in Nogales, Sonora, a stone’s throw away.
But there was a problem. The border.
As the festive day approached, it became painfully clear—
The children in Nogales, Sonora, would not be able to cross over.
They were, quite literally, on the wrong side of Christmas.
Determined to find a solution, the people of Nogales, Arizona,
Collaborated with Mexican authorities on the other side.
In a gesture as generous as it was bold, as happy as it was cold:
On Christmas Eve, 1929,
For a few transcendent hours,
The border moved.
Officials shifted it north, past city hall, in this way bringing
The Christmas tree within reach of children from both towns.
On Christmas Day, thousands of children—
American and Mexican, Indigenous and orphaned—
Gathered around the tree, hands outstretched,
Eyes wide, with shouting and singing both.
Gifts were passed out, candy canes were licked,
And for one day, there was no border.
When the last present had been handed out,
When the last child returned home,
The border resumed its usual place,
Separating the two towns once again.
For those few hours, however, the line in the sand disappeared.
The only thing that mattered was Christmas.
Newspapers reported no incidents that day, nothing beyond
The running of children, their pockets stuffed with candy and toys,
Milling people on both sides,
The music of so many peppermint candies being unwrapped.
On that chilly December day, the people of Nogales
Gathered and did what seemed impossible:
However quietly regarding the outside world,
They simply redrew the border.
In doing so, they brought a little more warmth to the desert winter.
On the border, on this day, they had a problem and they solved it.
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: The traditional “We Wish You a Merry Christmas” sung by the Gracias Choir conducted by Eunsook Park, and “Santa Claus Llego A La Ciudad” by J.Fred Coots and Haven Gillespie, sung by Luis Miguel.
Be sure and tune in next week, 27 December, for a “My Ordinary Hero” essay by your fellow listener Rasheed Naz.
Podcast: in defence of paper Braille, Le French Gut, a pioneering midwife
Issued on:
France’s largest Braille publisher struggles to continue producing embossed books in the digital age. Researchers delve into people’s guts with a large-scale study on the French population’s microbiome. And Louise Bourgeois, the French midwife who in 1609 became the first woman in Europe to publish a book about medicine.
As France marks 200 years since Louis Braille invented his system of raised dots allowing blind people to read by touch, we visit the country’s only remaining Braille printing house. At the CTEB in Toulouse, a team of 12 staff and mainly blind volunteers transcribe more than 200 books each year for both adults and children, along with bank statements, brochures and other documents. Despite extremely high production costs, the centre sells its books at the same price as the originals to ensure equal access. Now deeply in debt, it’s calling for state aid to survive – arguing that, even in the age of digital Braille and audio books, turning a page is important in learning to read. (Listen @3’15”)
Scientists are increasingly convinced that the trillions of bacteria living in the human digestive system also contribute to health and wellbeing. Le French Gut is a large-scale study intended to track the connection between the microbiome and disease. Launched in 2023, it aims to recruit 100,000 French participants, to contribute samples and fill out health and diet questionnaires. Now the scientists are looking to get more children on board. Project director Patrick Vega shows the lab and biobank where the bacteria are being analysed, and talks about the discoveries in the gut that could help predict or even cure diseases. (Listen @21’20”)
Seventeenth-century French midwife Louise Bourgeois, the first woman in Europe to publish a medical book, was a pioneer in women’s health at a time when only men were allowed to be doctors and women delivered babies according to tradition, not science. (Listen @14’45”)
Episode mixed by Cecile Pompeani.
Spotlight on France is a podcast from Radio France International. Find us on rfienglish.com, Apple podcasts (link here), Spotify (link here) or your favourite podcast app (pod.link/1573769878).
Turkey and Iran unite against Israel as regional power dynamics shift
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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.
Beautiful destructive flowers
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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.
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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!
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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!
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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.
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Madhya Pradesh: the Heart of beautiful India
From 20 to 22 September 2022, the IFTM trade show in Paris, connected thousands of tourism professionals across the world. Sheo Shekhar Shukla, director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, talked about the significance of sustainable tourism.
Madhya Pradesh is often referred to as the Heart of India. Located right in the middle of the country, the Indian region shows everything India has to offer through its abundant diversity. The IFTM trade show, which took place in Paris at the end of September, presented the perfect opportunity for travel enthusiasts to discover the region.
Sheo Shekhar Shukla, Managing Director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, sat down to explain his approach to sustainable tourism.
“Post-covid the whole world has known a shift in their approach when it comes to tourism. And all those discerning travelers want to have different kinds of experiences: something offbeat, something new, something which has not been explored before.”
Through its UNESCO World Heritage Sites, Shukla wants to showcase the deep history Madhya Pradesh has to offer.
“UNESCO is very actively supporting us and three of our sites are already World Heritage Sites. Sanchi is a very famous buddhist spiritual destination, Bhimbetka is a place where prehistoric rock shelters are still preserved, and Khajuraho is home to thousand year old temples with magnificent architecture.”
All in all, Shukla believes that there’s only one way forward for the industry: “Travelers must take sustainable tourism as a paradigm in order to take tourism to the next level.”
In partnership with Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board.
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Exploring Malaysia’s natural and cultural diversity
The IFTM trade show took place from 20 to 22 September 2022, in Paris, and gathered thousands of travel professionals from all over the world. In an interview, Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia discussed the importance of sustainable tourism in our fast-changing world.
Also known as the Land of the Beautiful Islands, Malaysia’s landscape and cultural diversity is almost unmatched on the planet. Those qualities were all put on display at the Malaysian stand during the IFTM trade show.
Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia, explained the appeal of the country as well as the importance of promoting sustainable tourism today: “Sustainable travel is a major trend now, with the changes that are happening post-covid. People want to get close to nature, to get close to people. So Malaysia being a multicultural and diverse [country] with a lot of natural environments, we felt that it’s a good thing for us to promote Malaysia.”
Malaysia has also gained fame in recent years, through its numerous UNESCO World Heritage Sites, which include Kinabalu Park and the Archaeological Heritage of the Lenggong Valley.
Green mobility has also become an integral part of tourism in Malaysia, with an increasing number of people using bikes to discover the country: “If you are a little more adventurous, we have the mountain back trails where you can cut across gazetted trails to see the natural attractions and the wildlife that we have in Malaysia,” says Hanif. “If you are not that adventurous, you’ll be looking for relaxing cycling. We also have countryside spots, where you can see all the scenery in a relaxing session.”
With more than 25,000 visitors at this IFTM trade show this year, Malaysia’s tourism board got to showcase the best the country and its people have to offer.
In partnership with Malaysia Tourism Promotion Board. For more information about Malaysia, click here.
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