Moroccan-French relations
Macron set for key Morocco visit as Western Sahara tensions cool
French President Emmanuel Macron will head to Morocco next week for a three-day state visit, the Moroccan royal palace said Monday, following years of strained relations.
The visit reflects the depth of bilateral relations based on a deep-rooted and solid partnership, thanks to the common desire of the two Heads of State to strengthen the multidimensional ties uniting the two countries, the Moroccan royal palace said in a statement.
The monarch has described the visit as an opportunity for “a renewed and ambitious vision covering several strategic sectors”.
It will be Macron’s second since 2018.
Tensions
Tensions between Paris and Rabat have risen in recent years for a number of reasons including France’s ambiguous stance on the disputed Western Sahara and also because of Macron’s attempts at rapprochement with Algeria.
A statement by the European Parliament in 2023 condemning a rollback in the kingdom’s freedom of the press also ramped up tensions, with some blaming Paris.
The two countries were also at odds after France in 2021 halved the number of visas it granted to Moroccans, a decision revoked the following year.
Macron in July initiated efforts to ease tensions with Rabat, saying at the time that Morocco’s autonomy plan for the territory was the “only basis” to resolve the decades-old conflict.
“The present and future of Western Sahara are part of Moroccan sovereignty,” Macron said in a statement.
France’s diplomatic turnabout had been long awaited by Morocco, whose annexation of Western Sahara had already been recognised by the United States in return for Rabat’s normalising ties with Israel in 2020.
Morocco’s king praises French support, diplomatic gains over status of Western Sahara
But the statement, made during the Olympic Games, didn’t please Sahrawis, Algeria, or the United Nations.
While Western Sahara, a former Spanish colony, is largely controlled by Morocco, it is also claimed by the Algeria-backed Polisario Front, which in 2020 declared a “self-defence war” and seeks the territory’s independence.
The UN considers Western Sahara a “non-self-governing territory” and has had a peacekeeping mission there since 1991. Its stated aim is to organise a referendum on the territory’s future.
But Rabat has repeatedly rejected any vote in which independence is an option.
After Macron’s statement endorsing Morocco’s autonomy plan, the Polisario Front and Algeria promptly withdrew their ambassadors from Paris and have yet to replace them.
Algeria recalls ambassador after France backs Moroccan plan for Western Sahara
Economic ties
The Moroccan monarch has also called the visit an opportunity for “a renewed and ambitious vision covering several strategic sectors”.
Rabat and Paris are old partners and now hope to pave the way for renewed economic deals, including in Western Sahara.
French engineering company Egis is set to extend the high-speed rail line between the Moroccan cities of Kenitra and Marrakesh.
In Western Sahara, French energy company Engie has been contracted to build a water desalination plant and a wind farm.
(with AFP)
ENVIRONMENT
Ecosystems hang in the balance as Colombia hosts crucial biodiversity talks
With a million species on the brink of extinction and 70 percent of global ecosystems degraded, the Cop16 biodiversity summit opens in Colombia on Monday as the window to prevent devastating losses is closing.
Leaders and delegates from 200 countries meeting in the south-western city of Cali are under mounting pressure to protect the planet’s remaining biodiversity.
The 12-day event will serve as the first major checkpoint on commitments made a year ago to safeguard 30 percent of the planet’s land and seas by 2030. Other key targets include restoring degraded ecosystems, reducing pesticide use, cutting destructive farming subsidies, and tackling invasive species.
The stakes are especially high for Colombia – the world’s second most biodiverse country after Brazil – which is seeking to position itself as a conservation leader despite battling severe environmental destruction of its own.
Rampant deforestation, notably for coca plantations, has surged since Colombia made a peace deal with Farc rebels in 2016.
South America has been grappling with multiple crises, including devastating wildfires that have fuelled the destruction of critical ecosystems like the Amazon. Illegal mining and agriculture, meanwhile, are accelerating environmental degradation and exacerbating climate change.
Underscoring the importance of regional leadership, Colombian Environment Minister Susana Muhamad described the event as “a Latin American moment”.
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who will host the Cop30 climate conference a year from now, and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum will be among the key leaders present.
‘Last chance’ deal to save world’s biodiversity agreed at Cop15
Indigenous rights
Indigenous peoples, recognised as key guardians of nature, are expected to play a central role at Cop16, though their demands for more influence and direct funding remain unmet.
While they account for only about 5 percent of the world’s population, indigenous peoples protect 80 percent of biodiversity, according to the World Bank.
Despite this, they continue to face threats from land dispossession, illegal mining and violence.
Dario Mejia Montalvo, former president of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues and a leader of Colombia’s Zenu people, will be among those pushing for stronger rights and more direct access to funding.
“Money in itself is not the objective, but recognising indigenous rights and strengthening their governance structures will require resources,” Montalvo told Mongabay, an environmental news site.
“International structures were created without indigenous inclusion. They were designed to exclude us.”
The real test, Montalvo added, would be whether indigenous rights are genuinely respected and integrated into global biodiversity plans. “It’s about recognising that biodiversity is not just a landscape issue but a relationship between people and nature.”
Why land rights for indigenous people could prevent future pandemics
Funding gaps
With species disappearing at an unprecedented rate, the window for action is closing. As things stand, only 17 percent of land and about 8 percent of oceans are protected.
Talks at Cop16 will focus on pressuring wealthy nations to deliver the promised $30 billion annually to support biodiversity protection in developing countries.
So far, pledges to a new biodiversity fund have fallen far short, with only about $400 million secured – and even less disbursed. Countries like China may also be called on to play a larger financial role.
“This will be an implementation and financing Cop,” said Hugo-Maria Schally, the European Union’s lead negotiator at the summit.
The headlining “30 by 30” target agreed at Cop15 in Montreal, to conserve 30 percent of the world’s land and oceans by 2030, is lagging behind schedule.
The UN has warned that without urgent and coordinated global action, the goal of halting biodiversity loss by 2030 could slip out of reach.
Dual crises
But the summit isn’t just about money. Aligning climate and biodiversity goals is critical, with growing recognition that the two crises are inseparable. Biodiversity loss weakens nature’s ability to store carbon and support ecosystems vital for human survival.
“The linked crises of climate change and biodiversity loss are increasingly tormenting our lives,” said Patricia Zurita of Conservation International, citing recent catastrophic wildfires and floods.
Meanwhile, fewer than half of the world’s countries have aligned their climate plans with their nature commitments. This misalignment continues to hamper global efforts to address the twin environmental crises.
The summit, which runs until 1 November, will test whether world leaders are prepared to bridge the gap between pledges and action on biodiversity, or risk allowing the ongoing destruction of ecosystems to continue unchecked.
Environment
Cote d’Ivoire has lost ‘nearly 80 percent of its forest and wildlife cover’
How can we protect wild animals when the world’s forest cover continues to shrink? This is just one of the many issues under discussion at the Cop16 biodiversity summit in Cali, Colombia. In West Africa, certain emblematic species such as the elephant are at risk of extinction. The head of the Côte d’Ivoire-based Roots Wild Foundation sounds the alarm.
Hallal Bilal, chair of the Roots Wild Foundation, talks to RFI about the dwindling elephant population in his native Côte d’Ivoire and efforts to ensure the country’s emblematic animal does not become extinct.
RFI: What do you expect from the Cop 16 biodiversity summit?
Hallal Bilal: That concrete and, above all, binding measures will be taken to force governments to invest much more in protecting biodiversity … and wildlife.
RFI: The previous Cop in Montreal set the goal of protecting 30 percent of the earth’s surface by 2030. Is this achievable?
Hallal Bilal: It’s achievable if everyone really does their bit. Governments alone can’t do everything, so we also need to get people much more involved. Civil society too, because these days we tend to run into problems with populations. So we need to work on raising awareness.
RFI: For the past two years, many environmental scientists have been insisting that this 30 percent figure should be applied on a country-by-country basis. Can we ask each nation to commit to that?
Hallal Bilal: You can’t just ask, you have to demand each nation protect at least 30 percent of its territory, because the figures are pretty catastrophic. It’s an obligation.
RFI: In your opinion, which African countries are in the worst situation?
Hallal Bilal: My own country of Cote d’Ivoire has seen almost 80 percent of its forest and wildlife cover disappear. The government and members of civil society are pulling out all the stops and things are beginning to change. So Côte d’Ivoire, and then the whole of West Africa.
RFI: Is this due to urbanisation or the development of agriculture?
Hallal Bilal: Urbanisation obviously plays a role; unemployment plays a very important role; agriculture plays a role. Whether it’s cocoa, oil palm, rubber – all crops contribute to deforestation.
Cocoa-producing countries call on EU to delay anti-deforestation law
RFI: Ivorian authorities hope to increase tree cover from 3 million to 6.5 million hectares by 2030. Is this objective possible?
Hallal Bilal: I think it’s possible because the government is doing a lot to promote reforestation throughout the country. The Ministry of Water and Forests has created National Tree Day and has opened up classified forest concessions to the private sector. Category 3 forests are therefore eligible for concessions, with private funding, to help the state restore its forests.
RFI: Côte d’Ivoire’s emblematic animal is the elephant but it’s threatened with extinction
Hallal Bilal: The number of elephant specimens in Côte d’Ivoire has fallen dramatically. I think we currently have a population of between 200 and 500 elephants maximum.
RFI: How many were there 20 years ago?
There were over a thousand. I’d say the elephant is practically on the brink of extinction in Cote d’Ivoire. That’s why it’s vital to take action to protect them and help them reproduce. The government has taken important measures. A few months ago, the National Assembly passed a bill to create two elephant sanctuaries – one in the north and one in the south.
Deforestation has unfortunately been a major factor in the decline of elephants. They end up roaming in villages because they’re completely disoriented since there are no forests left. It’s a disaster.
RFI: Are these wandering elephants killed by villagers?
Hallal Bilal: No. As soon as the Ministry of Water and Forests receives any information, we immediately dispatch a team to protect the elephant and raise public awareness. People are amazed to see elephants. So they might get close to the animal, which can be risky or the elephant may panic. But otherwise, people don’t kill animals. In fact, we recently supported the Ministry of Water and Forests in moving two elephants to safety.
RFI: Is there still poaching?
Hallal Bilal: There is still poaching – for ivory, skin, meat. We still have a culture of eating bushmeat in Africa.
Gabon takes down international ivory trafficking network
RFI: Aren’t you worried that, behind the official rhetoric, deforestation will continue and some species will disappear?
Hallal Bilal: We won’t let that happen because we’re committed and passionate people. We’ve dedicated our lives to protecting nature.
RFI: But if people agree with the way things are going, you won’t be able to do anything about it?
Hallal Bilal: In all honesty, we’re conducting a huge number of awareness campaigns, calling on the spirit of conservation that drives every Ivorian to take action. It’s our heritage and people understand that. Since 2023 we’ve recovered a huge number of animals.
Every day we take animals into our refuge. It’s transitional. We recover all the animals from the fight against poaching and species-trafficking. We care for them and prepare them to return to the wild, in safe areas.
And we’re continuing our awareness-raising campaigns, even in schools. Just yesterday, the foundation’s vice-president met with Adrienne Soundélé [head of the Soundélé Konan foundation fighting deforestation] and an official from the Ministry of Education, with a view to including this subject in the school curriculum.
Endangered elephants ‘eavesdrop’ on poachers in Republic of the Congo
This interview is adapted from the original conducted in French by RFI’s Christophe Boisbouvier. It has been lightly edited for clarity.
Biodiversity
Zoologist Jane Goodall warns: ‘The world is a mess’ ahead of COP16
As officials from around 200 countries prepare to meet in Colombia for the Cop16 biodiversity summit starting Monday, world-respected British zoologist Jane Goodall said there was little time left to reverse the downward slide. She wants the United Nations meeting to lead to action rather than “words and false promises”.
“What keeps me going is that right now, the world is a mess,” Goodall told RFI. “I care really passionately about the natural world, the environment, not just the chimpanzees, but all the other animals, but I also care about children. I care about the people around the world who are suffering so much today.”
Goodall has been a UN Messenger of Peace since 2002 and has used this platform to raise awareness about the damage done to nature.
At 90, she is still crisscrossing the globe in a bid to help defend the chimpanzee, who she first went to Tanzania to study more than 60 years ago.
“I was given a gift, and when I speak, people listen. And people who are losing hope, I seem to be able to give them more hope, to enable everyone to roll up their sleeves and take action,” she told RFI ahead of her talk at Unesco in Paris on Saturday.
Her visit to the French capital comes just two days ahead of the Cop16 biodiversity summit in Cali, Colombia.
Reverse species destruction
About 12,000 delegates from nearly 200 countries, including 140 government ministers and a dozen heads of state are due to attend the 16th Conference of the Parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity, running until 1 November.
Themed “Peace with Nature,” it has the urgent task of coming up with monitoring and funding mechanisms to ensure that 23 UN targets agreed in 2022 to halt and reverse species destruction can be met by 2030.
The delegates have their work cut out for them, with just five years left to achieve the UN goal of placing 30 percent of land and sea areas under protection by 2030.
Goodall told RFI that she hopes that promises made will be followed up “because the time for words and false promises is past”.
Thankfully, more people are aware of climate change now and these types of conferences lead to more networking behind the scenes and this “can lead to very positive results,” she says.
Wildlife populations plunge 73 percent amid warnings of biodiversity crisis
When asked about a recent World Wide Wildlife Fund report (WWF) that shows wildlife has fallen by 73 percent in the last 50 years, Goodall pointed out the obvious connections between climate change and the worsening biodiversity crisis.
One of the dangers, is that people don’t truly understand the issues at hand. “Scientific reports are a bit too scientific,” she says. That’s why she made a point of writing her own reports in an accessible language that “even the average 16 year-old could understand”.
“The trouble is everything, all the problems that we face… they’re all interrelated.”
One of the major issues is industrial agriculture, the use of pesticides and herbicides, and the significant quantity of water needed to change vegetable in animal protein, she points out. This results in a lot of CO2 produced with the use of heavy machinery, added to the methane gas produced by the animals themselves.
Stop greenwashing
Desperate measures are necessary, she says. Government and big companies really need to start “pulling in their belts and take action, not just greenwashing”.
“You may solve one problem, and if you’re not thinking holistically, that may create another problem.”
Besides biodiversity, Cop16 organisers have said Indigenous peoples will take an active part in the talks.
Even if Indigenous peoples have been all too often disappointed by the final decisions taken at biodiversity summits, that progress and increased presence was hailed by Goodall.
“Fortunately, we’re beginning to listen to the voices of the Indigenous people. We’re beginning to learn from them some of the ways that they’ve lived in harmony with the environment,” she told French news agency AFP.
Goodall also urged nations to tackle poverty to help protect the environment.
EU reaches ‘historic’ deal on contested biodiversity law
“We need to also alleviate poverty because very poor people destroy the environment in order to survive,” she said.
Preaching the importance of keeping alive the hope humanity can save the world, Goodall came with the message: “Realise every day you make a difference.”
“Each individual matters. Each individual has a role to play, and every one of us makes some impact on the planet every single day, and we can choose what sort of impact we make,” she said.
“It’s not only up to government and big business. It’s up to all of us to make changes in our lives.”
Goodall insisted that the world had just “five years in which we can start slowing down climate change”.
(with AFP)
Football
Female players urge Fifa to rethink sponsorship deal with Saudi oil giant
World football’s governing body Fifa came under pressure on Monday to reconsider a sponsorship deal with the Saudi Arabian oil firm Aramaco after it received an open letter from 106 female football players from 24 countries including France, Denmark and the United States.
The letter brands the contract worse than an own goal and hits out at Saudi Arabia’s record on the rights of women and LGBTQ+ people as well as the impact of Aramco’s oil and gas production on climate change.
“Fifa’s announcement of Saudi Aramco as its ‘major’ partner has set us so far back that it’s hard to fully take in,” said the letter issued through the environmental and social campaign group Athletes of the World.
“Saudi Aramco is the main money-pump for Saudi Arabia, and is 98.5% state-owned. Saudi authorities have been spending billions in sports sponsorship to try to distract from the regime’s brutal human rights reputation, but its treatment of women speaks for itself.”
In April, Fifa, which organises tournaments such as the men’s and women’s football World Cup, agreed a 200-million euro sponsorship deal deal which would run through the 2026 men’s World Cup in Mexico, Canada and the United States as well as the 2027 women’s World Cup in Brazil.
Cases
Citing several cases of women imprisoned for campaigning for social justice, the letter adds: “The Saudi authorities trample not only on the rights of women, but on the freedom of all other citizens too.
“Imagine LGBTQ+ players, many of whom are heroes of our sport, being expected to promote Saudi Aramco during the 2027 World Cup, the national oil company of a regime that criminalises the relationships that they are in and the values they stand for?”
Three up-and-coming French players – Emmy Jézéquel, Zalie Chaine and Elisa Rambaud – were among the names on the letter that was also endorsed by seasoned internationals such as Denmark’s Sofie Junge Pedersen, Dutch international midfielder Tessel Middag and 39-year-old Becky Sauerbrunn, who won two World Cups with the United States and led the campaign for equal pay for male and female American players.
The letter calls on Fifa to to give players a voice on the ethical implications of future sponsorship deals and adds: “We urge Fifa to reconsider this partnership and replace Saudi Aramco with alternative sponsors whose values align with gender equality, human rights and the safe future of our planet.”
Fifa bosses though appear determined to maintain their stance over the deal.
“Fifa values its partnership with Aramco and its many others commercial and rights partners,” said a Fifa statement.
“Fifa is an inclusive organisation with many commercial partners also supporting other organisations in football and other sports. Commercial revenue is reinvested into developing women’s soccer.”
(With newswires)
PHARMACEUTICALS
Sanofi confirms €16 billion sale of painkiller Doliprane to US investors
French pharamceutical giant Sanofi has confirmed plans to sell a controlling stake in its over-the-counter unit to a US investment fund, after employment and investment guarantees relieved political controversy.
According to Sanofi, the sale of a controlling 50 percent stake in Opella to Clayton Dubilier & Rice (CD&R) has valued the maker of France’s leading painkiller, Doliprane, at €16 billion.
“Sanofi and CD&R announce today a plan to join forces to fuel Opella’s ambitions as a French-headquartered, global consumer healthcare champion,” it said Monday, after French officials approved the deal over the weekend.
French Economy Minister Antoine Armand said on Sunday: “Our demands on employment, production and investment will be respected”.
The proposed sale had turned into a major political issue in France.
The coordinator of the hard-left France Unbowed party Manuel Bompard has called for the sale if Sanofi’s Opella subsidiary to be blocked.
Memories are still fresh of shortages of the painkiller during the Covid pandemic and government pledges to boost domestic pharmaceutical production.
Trade unions had also expressed concern it would put 1,700 jobs in France at risk.
- France could block sale of ‘best-selling’ drug if production doesn’t stay local
- Drugs shortage sees France restart local production, target antibiotics use
‘Growth strategy’
For its part, Sanofi insisted the sale would help Opella expand by bringing in a partner willing to invest in a market that has more in common with the consumer goods market than pure pharmaceutical drugs.
Opella employs over 11,000 workers and operates in 100 countries.
Sanofi said it is the third-largest business worldwide in the market for over-the-counter medicines, vitamins and supplements.
Doliprane is the brand under which Opella sells paracetamol, a non-opioid analgesic to ease mild to moderate pain and fever.
It also owns the antihistamine brand Allegra and the laxative Dulcolax.
“Together, CD&R and Sanofi will support Opella’s growth strategy as a pure-play, global and fast-moving consumer healthcare company,” said Sanofi, which will focus on innovative treatments and vaccines going forward.
French public investment bank Bpifrance is expected to take a two-percent stake in Opella at the end of the exclusive sale talks between Sanofi and CD&R.
The deal, however, is not expected to go through before the second quarter of next year.
(With newswires)
Mozambique
Mozambique opposition calls strike amid election fraud claims and assassinations
Mozambique’s opposition has called for a general strike on Monday, with nationwide demonstrations to protest alleged fraud in the 9 October elections. While official results are still pending, the protests follow the recent assassination of two close associates of opposition leader and presidential candidate Venancio Mondlane – his lawyer Elvino Dias and Podemos party member Paulo Guamba.
Police clamped down on the opposition demonstration in central Maputo on Monday morning, RFI’s correspondents report.
As presidential candidate Venancio Mondlane spoke to the press, police targeted his campaign headquarters with tear gas, forcing the opposition leader to flee, Lusa news agency has also reported.
The opposition had called for the strike and demonstrations on Saturday, the day when Mozambique learned that gunmen had killed the opposition lawyer and the party official after firing multiple rounds at a car in which they were travelling, rights groups said.
“They were brutally assassinated (in a) cold-blooded murder,” Adriano Nuvunga, CDD director, told Reuters by telephone.
“The indications that around 10 to 15 bullets were shot, and they died instantly,” he added, describing it as a “message” to opposition protesters planning to convene on Monday.
Mozambican civil society election observer group More Integrity said the attack happened in the Bairro Da Coop neighbourhood of the capital Maputo, killing Podemos lawyer Elvino Dias and party representative Paulo Guambe.
Human Rights Watch and the Mozambique’s Centre for Democracy and Human Rights (CDD) also issued statements confirming the attack.
Rising tensions
The killings raised tensions ahead of protests against a disputed election result.
New opposition party Podemos and its presidential aspirant Venancio Mondlane reject provisional results showing a likely win for Frelimo – the party that has ruled Mozambique for half a century – and its candidate Daniel Chapo.
“The Mozambican defence and security forces committed this,” Mondlane said. “We have the proof. The blood of two young men flowing now! All of us, we’re going down the street. We will demonstrate with our placards.”
Africa programme director at London-based international affairs think tank Chatham House, Alex Vines, called the killing a “serious escalation” that raised tensions ahead of Monday’s strike.
The European Union and Mozambique’s former colonial ruler Portugal condemned the killing and called for an investigation.
Later, in the evening, Frelimo’s candidate Chapo condemned the attack as an “affront to the principles of democracy that we must all defend”.
Mondlane’s rise to become Mozambique’s main challenger was a threat to Frelimo, but also to former official opposition party Renamo – once a rebel outfit backed by racist white regimes in South Africa and Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) during the Cold War.
Lack of credibility
Western observers have cast doubt on the credibility of the poll, noting reports of vote buying, intimidation, inflated voter rolls and poor transparency in collation – problems that have marred most polls since Frelimo introduced democracy in 1994 after two decades in power.
Full results are expected this week, on 24 October, but many fear Monday’s protest could turn bloody.
Mozambique’s security forces have previously opened fire on protesters, including after last year’s local elections, rights groups say.
For the president of Podemos, Albino Forquilha, the fight for electoral justice will continue.
“We are pressing effectively, using social media to convey our message,” Forquilha told RFI Portuguese service, “in order to make it clear that we will win these elections and deserve exactly that victory.”
To try to appease people’s anger, the Mozambican interior minister, Pascoal Ronda, called for calm and ordered the opening of an investigation.
“The government requests the relevant institutions, in particular the National Criminal Investigation Service and the police, to conduct rapidly throwing light on these matters and of translating the authors to justice,” he said.
(with newswires)
French football
PSG fans face scrutiny after alleged homophobic chants during Strasbourg clash
French football chiefs were on Monday investigating allegations of homophobic chanting during Paris Saint-Germain’s match against Strasbourg at the Parc des Princes.
Teenager Senny Mayulu scored his first Ligue 1 goal for the senior team as PSG won 4-2 to go top with 20 points after eight games.
But the match was punctuated during the second-half by abuse aimed at rivals Marseille – who PSG play next weekend – and the former PSG midfielder Adrien Rabiot who joined Marseille in September.
Despite repeated pleas over the public address system for the chanting to stop, a section of PSG fans continued and jeered the requests.
“These latest discriminatory chants made by Paris Saint-Germain supporters are unacceptable when, at the same time, the whole of professional soccer has been working to ban homophobic behaviour and chants from stadiums,” said Ligue 1 organisers, the Ligue de Football Professionnel.
PSG, who play PSV Eindhoven in the Champions League on Tuesday night at the Parc des Princes, condemned the abuse.
“Paris Saint-Germain reaffirms its firm commitment against all forms of discrimination, including homophobia,” said a club statement.
“The club takes all necessary measures, before and during matches, to ensure that the Parc des Princes remains an inclusive place for all. We are actively working to ban discriminatory behaviour and promote a respectful environment, where every fan can enjoy soccer in complete safety.”
Behaviour
Last season, four PSG players received a one-match suspended sentence from the LFP’s disciplinary committee for offensive chants aimed at Marseille after a home league match.
Ousmane Dembélé, Achraf Hakimi, Randal Kolo Muani and Layvin Kurzawa were filmed singing insults during celebrations at the end of a 4-0 victory over Marseille. The four players issued apologies.
That match was also marred by homophobic chanting by sections of PSG fans targeting Marseille players.
As a result, the LFP ordered the closure of a stand behind one of the goals at the Parc des Princes for two matches, including one that was suspended.
The French government on Monday also condemned the incident and promised tough action to stamp out the abuse.
Sports minister, Gil Avérous, convened a meeting with LFP supremos next week to discuss measures to prevent reoccurrences. PSG fans have also been banned from travelling to Sunday’s match in Marseille.
Othman Nasrou, the minister in charge of reducing discrimination, told BFMTV: “This kind of homophobic chanting is completely unacceptable.
“It is outrageous that these kind of things can be heard in our country in football stadiums.
“Homophobia does not have a place in football stadiums just like it has no place in wider society. We will be uncompromising in the fight,” Nasrou added.
Ban
On Sunday night, Rabiot was one of the stars in Marseille’s 5-0 waltz at Montpellier to set up an intriguing tie next Sunday night against PSG at the Vélodrome.
Victory for Marseille in front of their faithful would take them level on points with PSG and emphasise their title credentials under new boss Roberto de Zerbi.
The enmity between the clubs has been one of the most intriguing in French soccer since the 1990s, when Marseille was enjoying its heyday and PSG started to become more ambitious with the backing of the French TV broadcaster Canal Plus.
However, since 2011, the rivalry has melted into mythology. PSG, bankrolled by wealthy Qatari investors, has won the Ligue 1 title 10 times in 12 seasons to become the most successful French club domestically with 12 league titles — two more than Marseille and Saint-Etienne.
Although Marseille has not secured the top flight crown since 2010, its fans still claim bragging rights over their PSG counterparts as the only French outfit to win the Champions League, European club football’s most prestigious trophy.
Thomas Tuchel steered PSG to the 2020 Champions League final but his side lost to Bayern Munich.
MOLDOVA – REFERENDUM
Moldova’s vote on EU membership in deadlock as president cites ‘foreign interference’
A referendum on Moldova joining the EU was too close to call early Monday with almost all votes counted, as pro-EU President Maia Sandu blamed an ‘criminal groups working together with foreign forces’ – a veiled reference to Russia – for the outcome.
The close vote is a setback for President Sandu, who managed to top the first round of presidential elections held at the same time on Sunday but will face a tough second round.
The referendum had been widely expected to pass in the country of 2.6 million people which neighbours Ukraine.
Sandu had applied for Moldova to join the European Union following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
With more than 98 percent of the votes counted, the “yes” vote was slightly ahead at 50.08 percent, while the “no” camp – which had been ahead – stood at 49.92 percent early Monday.
Sandu said late Sunday that Moldova had witnessed “an unprecedented assault on our country’s freedom and democracy, both today and in recent months,” blaming “criminal groups, working together with foreign forces hostile to our national interests”.
In the presidential election, Sandu garnered almost 42 percent of the votes, according to the results, and so will face her closest competitor, Alexandr Stoianoglo, in a second round on 3 November.
Stoianoglo, a former prosecutor backed by the pro-Russian Socialists, had picked up a higher-than-expected result of more than 26 percent in the race with 11 competitors in total.
- France says it will support Moldova amid fears of Russian destabilisation
‘Weakens pro-European image’
According to Florent Parmentier, a political scientist at the Paris-based Sciences Po university, the referendum result – even if it results in a slim victory for the pro-EU camp – “weakens the pro-European image of the population and the leadership of Maia Sandu”.
Describing the result as a “surprise”, he said it would not impact the accession negotiations with Brussels, which began this June, though a clear “yes” would have been “a clear positive signal”.
Parmentier added the results “did not bode well for the second round” for Sandu, noting many of those who supported the nine other candidates on Sunday were more likely to vote for Stoiagnolu in the second round.
A former World Bank economist and Moldova’s first woman president, 52-year-old Sandu beat a Moscow-backed incumbent in 2020, had been the clear favourite in the race, with surveys also predicting a “yes” victory in the referendum.
Sandu’s critics say she has not done enough to fight inflation in one of Europe’s poorest countries or to reform the judiciary.
In his campaign, Stoianoglo – who was fired as prosecutor by Sandu – called for the “restoration of justice” and vowed to wage a “balanced foreign policy”.
The 57-year-old abstained from voting in the referendum.
- EU chief’s visit a boost for Moldova’s hopes of joining bloc
‘Unprecedented’ vote-buying scheme
Fears of Russian interference have been looming large.
Washington issued a fresh warning recently about suspected Russian interference, while the EU passed new sanctions on several Moldovans.
Moscow has “categorically” rejected accusations of meddling.
Police made hundreds of arrests in recent weeks after discovering an “unprecedented” vote-buying scheme that they say could taint up to a quarter of the ballots cast in the country of 2.6 million.
Police said millions of dollars from Russia aiming to corrupt voters were funnelled into the country by people affiliated to Ilan Shor, a fugitive businessman and former politician.
Convicted in absentia last year for fraud, Shor regularly brands Moldova a “police state” and the West’s “obedient puppet”.
“You have crushingly failed,” Shor posted on social networks after the vote.
In addition to the suspected vote buying, hundreds of young people were found to have been trained in Russia and the Balkans to create “mass disorder” in Moldova, such as using tactics to provoke law enforcement, according to police.
(With Wires)
Ghana loses historic forts along its coastline to climate change
Ghana – Ghana is gradually losing its historic forts along the 550-kilometer coastline to intense tidal waves from the Atlantic Ocean.
In addition to the loss of these forts, several coastal communities are also at risk of disappearing due to powerful tidal waves and other natural events.
It is estimated that Ghana loses an average of two meters of coastline annually to coastal erosion, with some areas having experienced as much as 17 meters of losses in all, according to a study by the Institute for Environment and Sanitation Studies.
Rising sea levels, driven by climate change, are not only threatening the livelihoods of low-lying communities but also posing a significant threat to the country’s historic slave forts and castles.
Historic Forts at Risk
The 240-year-old Fort Prinzenstein in Keta, Volta Region, once stood as a resilient fortress.
However, it now tells a different story after a decade of destruction by powerful tidal waves from the Atlantic Ocean. According to James Ocloo Akorli, the fort’s caretaker, about two-thirds of the fort now lies beneath the ocean.
“Eight of its ten dungeons, originally built to hold enslaved Africans during the trans-Atlantic slave trade, were completely submerged before a sea defense wall was erected to protect what remains of the monument,” Akorli said.
Just over 100 -kilometers west of Fort Prinzenstein, the 18th-century Fort Kongenstein in Ada, Greater Accra Region, could not withstand the relentless assault of tidal waves either.
Today, where the former slave post once stood is now open ocean, with no trace of the fort remaining. Similarly, Fort Fredensborg in Old Ningo, now 289 years old, has been reduced to a small remnant of what was once the armory of the fortress.
According to Joyce Ayorkor Guddah, the Tourism and Culture Officer in Ningo Prampram district, “Fort Vernon has become a death trap, as the tidal waves have severely damaged it.”
Communities on the brink
In addition to the forts, coastal communities from the Western Region to the Volta Region are facing extinction due to the encroaching sea.
Akorli Simon, a former resident of Fuveme, recalls, “the Sea began swallowing our community. We were devastated and had to abandon Fuveme in 2016 after a powerful tidal surge washed away the land.”
The displaced residents relocated to the nearby coastal village of Dzakplagbe, but Simon now fears that Dzakplagbe may suffer the same fate as Fuveme.
In the Western Region, the once-thriving Anlo village has been reduced to a narrow strip of land, trapped between rising tides and the swelling lagoon fed by the River Pra. The village has shrunk to a stretch of land only 60 to 100 meters wide between the sea and the lagoon.
The story is no different at Ghana’s capital Accra, in Glefe a suburb of the capital where many people have deserted their homes following the destruction from the tidal waves.
Ongoing Interventions
Efforts to combat this coastal erosion include the construction of the 8.3-kilometer Keta Sea Defence Wall, a project that began over a decade ago with funding from the United States Export-Import Bank (EXIM Bank) at a cost of $94 million (90 million euros).
In addition, the West Africa Coastal Areas Resilience Investment Project, Ghana 2, has been launched. This initiative aims to strengthen the resilience of Ghana’s coastline while restoring and protecting critical coastal ecosystems.
The Minister of Environment, Science, Technology, and Innovation, Ophelia Mensah Hayford, noted that, “the $155 million project (151 million euro), funded by the World Bank, will be implemented in key areas such as the Korle Lagoon, Densu Basin, and Keta Lagoon. These areas have long faced challenges from tidal waves, flooding, pollution, and erosion.”
France
France struggles to decide what place screens should have in schools
France lags behind many countries when it comes to using technology in classrooms, due in part to lack of coordination and a clear policy. But educators concerned about the impact of screen usage in schools say the country has the chance to reflect on best practice before rushing to adopt new tech.
“Their tablets have to stay in their bags,” says Christophe, who teaches management and economics at a private Catholic high school west of Paris, where every student receives a tablet.
The tablets are funded by the Ile-de-France region, which oversees high schools, public and private, and which in 2020 introduced digital textbooks.
Today about half of general high schools in the region use them.
At first, Christophe said, he was open to the idea: “Traditional books are not perfect. Sometimes they are heavy and sometimes students forget them, so at first I thought it could be a good solution.
“But I was very disappointed with the screens.”
Find more on this story on the Spotlight on France podcast:
First, there were technical problems – WiFi connectivity issues, students who couldn’t find their login codes, tablets that weren’t charged.
Then, once the students actually got onto the devices, they were distracted.
“We are here to develop their concentration, to develop their attention and these skills are very important. And when you give a screen to a teenager you can be sure that he doesn’t hear you and doesn’t listen to you – he’s focused on the screen,” says Christophe.
Screen break
Students themselves admit to wanting a break from screens, especially when they already take up much of their leisure time.
Charles, a first-year student who is in an elective management course with Christophe, says he spends hours on his computer at home playing video games, to the point of forgetting to do homework. He tries to avoid his tablet at school.
“It’s my screen-free time. I just don’t want to have a screen around me for school, so I can be more focused,” he says.
His classmate Carlette says he realised several years ago that his phone was taking up too much of his time, and tried to limit himself.
“I kind of put myself on a screen-time control,” he said. “And I noticed it’s better, in the way I socialise.”
He finds he manages to use his time better with less time on his phone.
Using tech mindfully
In the class, teacher Christophe leads a vocabulary exercise, where students fill in words from a scene they have watched from a television show – projected onto a shared screen at the front of the room – on a piece of paper.
“When they work in class, they do it on paper. They have to focus on the document,” he explains. “It’s easy for me to check they are doing the exercise, and to help students who have trouble.”
Christophe co-founded a collective a year ago calling for a joined-up approach to using technology in schools, amid mixed messages coming to students, parents and teachers.
Then and still today, lawmakers were grappling with the issue of screens – both in and out of education.
To ban or to back?
At the end of 2023, then Education Minister Gabriel Attal started talking about the serious health risks of screens and social media to young people.
More than once, he called young people using screens at home a potential “health catastrophe”.
Such caution resulted in a trial ban on personal smartphones in several schools at the start of the latest term.
Yet schools have equally been encouraged to embrace technology, even as uptake has proved variable.
While broad frameworks are set by the Ministry of Education, decisions about material, including screens and textbooks, are made locally – by French regions for middle and high schools, and by cities for primary schools.
This means there are vast differences across the country. Statistics show that there were 24 tablets and other mobile devices per student in high school classrooms in 2022, which suggests many regions do not have any.
In primary school, there is an average of four desktop computers per hundred students, and no mobile devices.
Defining a balance
In April, President Emmanuel Macron received an expert report he had commissioned on the use of screens by young people, which recommended limits on screens, smartphones and social media.
It highlighted the fact that decentralised policy-making undermines a unified approach to screens in schools. And it warned that consistency in and out of school is key.
“The strategies used in schools must be coherent with the messages sent from elsewhere to parents,” the report said.
Christophe, the high school teacher, agrees. “Parents say, ‘don’t use your screen’, and at school, ‘use your screen’,” he says. “It’s not logical, it’s hard to understand. We need a clear message.”
For him and his collective, the key is to strike the right balance between helping students focus on schoolwork and learning how to use computers responsibly.
Students “need digital skills and we think it’s necessary to have a class with computers so they can learn how to use Word, to use how to organise their files, how to use the internet”, he says.
“We want classes with digital tools, to learn digital abilities. But we don’t want the use of digital tools as a way to study other subjects.”
More on this story on the Spotlight on France podcast, episode 117. Listen here.
France
Meet ‘Mamie Charge’, the Calais woman topping up migrants’ batteries
For more than 20 years, Brigitte Lips has witnessed Europe’s migration crisis from her home in Calais, on France’s northern coast. Rather than shutting her door, she opened it to migrants seeking a safe place to recharge their mobile phones – an act that has earned her the nickname “Granny Charge”.
“It started off as ‘Mama’, and now as the years have gone by, it’s ‘Mamie’ (grandma),” Lips tells RFI.
Now a 68-year-old retiree, she has been helping migrants who come to Calais in the hope of crossing the English Channel for the past 24 years.
Living in a modest house opposite what was once part of “the Jungle“, the informal camps that housed thousands of people at a time, Lips remembers that the crisis showed up literally on her doorstep.
“People would ring my doorbell asking for water. I said to myself, ‘why me?’ Well, because no one else on the street opened their door to give out tap water,” she recalls.
“And then, as the months went by, other people started arriving with the little Nokia phones you used to get at the time, and I started charging these little Nokias in my house. And over the months, there came bigger telephones, batteries…”
Communication lifeline
Mobile phones are even more important for displaced people than most, those working on the ground point out.
“It is too often forgotten, and cannot be repeated often enough, that the mobile phone is the primary source of autonomous information: to translate, to call, to search, to find your way around, to call for help,” notes Techfugees, a non-profit that has assisted projects to provide migrants in Calais with chargers, power, SIM cards and WiFi.
“Everything requires a charged phone.”
Lips sees the demand for herself. So many people come to her house to top up that she has created an informal charging station in her garage, with rows of numbered power sockets and a gamut of cables.
People dropping off their phones are handed a handwritten ticket that they must bring back to exchange for their device, remembering to respect her opening hours.
“I open from 8 to 9 in the morning, from 11.30 to 12.15 in the afternoon and from 5 to 6 in the evening,” Lips explains.
“I close on Saturday and Sunday in order to keep time for my family,” she says, though she admits she has been known to relax those rules.
Painful stories
Lips also offers simple food, paid for out of her own pocket, and used clothing.
While she’s got to recognise many of the people who stop by, over time, she says, she learned not to push the relationship.
“At first I would ask dumb questions like, ‘are you still in touch with your mother?’ And I’d get the answer: ‘my mother was killed in front of my eyes,'” Lips says.
“Once I said, ‘have you ever seen the sea before?’ Absolute nonsense, because they’ve crossed the Mediterranean. And the guy told me: ‘yes, I’m one of the survivors from the boat that sank.’
“So after that, you stop asking. You wait, and if there’s a conversation, you listen. You wait for them to feel free. But for them to feel free, they need to be welcomed. You don’t just unburden yourself like that from the very first day. If they stay a while, they’ll start to tell a little bit of their story.
“So some of them, I know their stories. But it takes a very long time.”
Podcast: Human side of Calais Jungle shared on social media
Shadow of shipwreck
The accounts Lips hears are shocking, especially lately. At least 50 people are reported to have died attempting to cross the Channel on small boats this year so far.
In one incident earlier this month, four people died on overcrowded boats in one day, including a two-year-old child. The victims are believed to have been trampled by panicked passengers, with some drowning in water that accumulated in the bottom of their dinghy.
“That mother who lost her child of two years old – what a tragedy, what pain, honestly, to come so far and lose your child in the bottom of a boat,” Lips says. “These things are just horrible.”
Soon after that, she recalls, “one guy came to me and said: ‘Mamie, we didn’t make it over.’ And I said to him: ‘no, but you didn’t die.'”
Unstoppable
Lips understands why politicians are keen to show they’re taking action – including France’s new right-wing government, which has promised to table the country’s 33rd immigration law in 44 years by early 2025.
But after nearly a quarter century observing migration up close, she’s doubtful new measures will make a difference.
A heavy-handed approach by the authorities hasn’t stopped her own activities.
“The local police, national police, riot police, they’ve all come round to intimidate me, saying that the neighbours are complaining about the migrants flowing in and out of my property – as if these guys were coming all the way from the Horn of Africa to charge their phones at my house,” she says.
“Rubbish. I’ve never sent a message to Sudan saying, ‘come to my house, if you’re in Calais you’ll be welcomed with open arms’.”
Lips, who says her Catholic faith drives her to try to help, remains defiant about her own small contribution.
“The way I see it, I’m in my own home and I do what I like there.”
This story is adapted from an interview in French by RFI’s Charlotte Idrac.
AKAA Art and Design Fair 2024
Malam, an artist taking the idea of a ‘collection’ to a new level
Made up of hundreds of discarded toys, household items, broken cables and bits of plastic, Cameroonian artist Malam’s giant head-shaped sculptures are deceptively playful. Invited to the Also Known as Africa contemporary art and design fair (AKAA) in Paris, the artist says his installations are in fact a harsh critique of society’s obsessive consumerism and disregard for the environment.
Upon arriving at the fair, visitors are immediately confronted with a huge mass of mixed materials in the shape of a head. The eye sockets are computer screens filming people passing by. The face has a plastic toilet seat for the nose and a car bumper for a mouth.
One man’s trash is another man’s treasure? Yes and no, explains Cameroonian artist Malam, one of nearly 100 artists represented at the 9th edition of AKAA – ‘Also Known as Africa’ art and design fair, which wrapped up after three days on Sunday.
“I call this piece ‘Emergency Therapy’ because the way I see it, there’s an urgent need to reconsider our habits, our daily routines with regards to consumerism,” Malam told RFI.
Two companion sculptures, slightly smaller, were placed at different locations within the fair. “We’re watching you,” the large faces seemed to be saying.
Originally from Douala, Malam has been working for many years in a workshop in Saint-Denis, just north of Paris and is represented by the 193 Gallery. His works have been displayed at numerous art fairs over the years, including the Dakar Biennale, Johannesburg art fair and Art Basel in Switzerland.
His creative approach gives the notion of “collection” a whole new meaning. His works are made of junk that was left out for the garbage trucks. Sadly, the supply is endless, he says.
Everyday objects fill the space in between the long, coloured tubes that twist around the whole piece, providing the ears, chin and back of the head. Barbie dolls and trucks peek out from the chaos. Toys, Malam says, make up a sizeable quantity of discarded objects.
“I don’t choose the objects, they choose me,” he says, adding that the works are by nature “evolutive” and that “any object can find its place in this piece. There’s no rule”.
He says incorporating screens into the work is a way of provoking a form of self-awareness, which is sorely needed in today’s world.
Instead of filming selfies, it might be time to really look at our relationship to ourselves and our earth, he suggests.
African feminism pumps the heart of Benin’s debut at Venice Biennale
“We’re being scrutinised for our behaviour, what we buy and how we see ourselves. This installation addresses the fact that we need to get back to our core values.”
For Malam, artists have the freedom to create works that express universal messages, regardless of their country of origin. “Inspiration is global, there are no borders,” he says.
His works seem to be saying that in the same way, there are no borders when it comes to climate change. The environmental impact of pollution and overproduction affects us all.
In terms of representing the African continent and its multiple diasporas, AKAA has certainly come a long way from its humble beginnings, according to its founder and director Victoria Mann.
As an arts student she was shocked to hear people say “contemporary African art doesn’t really exist” and so she set out to rectify that.
South African artist Gavin Jantjes on his major retrospective
With 41 exhibitors of art sourced from 29 countries, the 2024 event has confirmed its ambition to be “a platform of discovery”.
After a focus on African-American artists in 2023, visitors were this year treated to a special focus was on the Caribbean region and French overseas territories such as Guadeloupe and Reunion Island.
The event is also gearing up to expand, with a special AKAA for Los Angeles on the horizon.
Ukraine crisis
Russian victory would bring ‘chaos’ on international scale: French FM
French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot warned in Kyiv on Saturday that if Russia defeated Ukraine on the battlefield it would sow “chaos” in the international system.
He spoke the same day Russian forces announced they had captured another village in eastern Ukraine as they continued their steady advance.
Barrot’s two-day visit, aimed at underlining Paris’s unflinching support for Ukraine, comes at the end of a week in which Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky unveiled his “victory plan” to defeat Russia, again calling for beefed-up Western backing.
“A Russian victory would consecrate the law of the strongest and precipitate the international order towards chaos,” Barrot said alongside his Ukrainian counterpart Andriy Sybiga.
Asked by a Ukrainian journalist whether Paris supported Zelensky’s “victory plan”, Barrot said: “We support the victory plan because we have been alongside Ukraine for nearly 1,000 days.”
Peace plan
During the rest of his remarks, Barrot only used the more general expression “peace plan” when referring to the possibility of bringing about an end to the conflict.
Paris, like Ukraine’s other Western backers, has not outlined an official position in response to Zelensky’s proposals and is studying the details.
After meeting Barrot in Kyiv, Zelensky said he was “grateful to France for its support of the victory plan” which can “bring real diplomacy and a just peace closer.”
“The meeting was exactly what we needed,” he said in his evening address.
The central plank of Zelensky’s plan is for Ukraine to be given an immediate invitation to join the NATO military alliance.
Barrot said Paris was “open” to the idea and was discussing it with other members of the alliance.
Zelensky defends ‘victory plan’ before EU leaders and NATO defence chiefs
Zelensky’s blueprint also rejects territorial concessions and calls for allies to lift restrictions on using donated long-range weapons against military sites inside Russia.
It also proposes deploying a “non-nuclear strategic deterrence package” on Ukrainian territory.
Since Russia invaded in February 2022, Kyiv has outlined several proposals, initiatives and principles that it says should underpin any end to the conflict.
In June, almost 80 countries endorsed a 10-point “peace formula” proposed by Ukraine that said its territorial integrity must be respected.
Ahead of Barrot’s visit, France’s foreign ministry said Paris welcomed the objectives that underpinned the latest initiative, which details how Kyiv believes it can win the war.
Zelensky last week undertook a whistlestop tour of Europe to brief key leaders, including France’s Emmanuel Macron, before outlining some details of the plan publicly.
US President Joe Biden and the leaders of Germany, France and Britain on Friday voiced their “resolve to continue supporting Ukraine in its efforts to secure a just and lasting peace”.
North Korea involvement
For Ukraine, Sybiga also warned Saturday that the involvement of North Korean soldiers fighting for Russia carried a “huge threat of further escalation”. There was a risk of the war “going beyond the current borders and boundaries”.
Seoul’s spy agency said Friday that North Korea had decided to send “large-scale” troops to support Moscow’s war in Ukraine, reporting that 1,500 special forces were already in Russia’s Far East and undergoing training.
Russia on Saturday claimed its latest territorial advance, saying it had taken the village of Zoryane in eastern Ukraine.
Biden calls on European allies to maintain backing for Ukraine
Moscow’s forces have been steadily advancing across the eastern Donetsk region, even as Kyiv continues to mount its own cross-border offensive into Russia’s Kursk border region.
Russia has been concentrating its offensive on Kurakhove, home to about 20,000 people before Russia invaded, and the strategic prize of Pokrovsk, some 30 kilometres to the north.
Ukraine has struggled with manpower and ammunition shortages in the face of Moscow’s better-equipped military.
France’s armed forces minister Sebastien Lecornu said separately that Paris was ordering new equipment for Ukraine’s army using 300 million euros of interest recovered from frozen Russian assets.
The new delivery will include 12 Caesar cannons, Lecornu told the Sunday edition of La Tribune.
(with AFP)
Right to die
India considers rules on ‘passive’ euthanasia as doctors prescribe caution
India has begun framing guidelines on so-called “passive” euthanasia that would lay out conditions for shutting off life support for terminally ill patients. But medical and religious organisations have expressed concerns that the norms would place too much responsibility on doctors to make decisions between life or death.
While India does not permit “active” euthanasia, which involves use of substances such as lethal injections or external force to end life, court rulings have permitted clinicians to withhold life-prolonging treatment in certain cases.
Now the government has drafted guidelines to standardise such decisions and is seeking expert feedback on the proposals.
According to the Health Ministry’s draft, published on 30 September, doctors must take considered decisions in a patient’s best interest in cases involving an incurable condition from which death is inevitable in the foreseeable future.
Life support may be forgone or discontinued at the request of terminally ill patients themselves, including through advance instructions for how they would like to be medically treated after losing decision-making abilities.
Alternatively, doctors may judge treatment more likely to cause suffering than benefit. In that case, the draft said, they must refer the case to a panel of other physicians for review.
If the board agrees, there will be another multi-disciplinary meeting with family and a shared decision will be made. In some circumstances, a second board of doctors must approve too.
Medical, religious opposition
India’s Supreme Court in 2018 ruled a terminally ill patient can seek passive euthanasia through a “living will”. Five years later, judges simplified the order and asked the government to prepare permanent rules.
The Indian Medical Association, which has 350,000 doctors on its rolls, said it would study the draft and advise the government to tweak its provisions if needed.
Association president RV Asokan warned that “the guidelines could expose doctors to legal scrutiny and increase stress in their decision-making”.
“The perception and assumption that machines are unnecessarily used to prolong lives is wrong. It exposes doctors to legal scrutiny,” he told news agency PTI.
India struggles to confront its mental health problems
Meanwhile many Christian activists are opposed to any form of euthanasia, which they argue is ripe for abuse.
“Relatives may want to get rid of an old patient who they take to be a burden on them and their freedom,” John Dayal, former president of the All India Catholic Union, told RFI.
“In a land where kidneys are stolen from beggars and rickshaw-pullers when they have been drugged into sleep, can we trust the medical profession and the law and justice system to be the watchdog guardian?”
Regulatory gap
But others involved in frontline care said the guidelines would help close a regulatory gap.
“We have been doing this for years,” said Sushma Bhatnagar, a professor of palliative care at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in Delhi, whose experts helped formulate the guidelines.
“Once we know that a patient is terminal, we counsel them and their family members to withdraw care. They are usually made comfortable and sent home. However, there was no guideline or legal procedure for the same,” she told the Indian Express.
Except in cases of medical emergency, she said, many patients prefer to spend their final days with their family rather than in intensive care.
By next year, 189 million people will be over 60 years of age and fuel demands for 175 million additional hospital beds in India, where 32 million people fall below an official poverty line every year because of medical bills.
Thwarted by Covid, India re-emerges as a medical tourism hotspot
Migration
Italian court rules outsourced migrant detentions in Albania illegal
Twelve Bangladeshi and Egyptian men left Albania for Italy on Saturday after judges ruled against their detention in the non-EU nation under a controversial deal between Rome and Tirana. Italy’s Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi said the administration would appeal the court’s decision.
Italian judges ruled Friday against the detention of the first migrants sent for processing in Albania, dealing a major blow to a flagship policy of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s hard-right government.
Rome has repeatedly said that said EU countries are interested in the scheme as a way of processing asylum requests in countries outside the bloc, and Brussels has been watching closely.
But just days after the plan went live, the first group of migrants sent to non-EU Albania were obliged to leave.
Sixteen men from Bangladesh and Egypt arrived at the Albanian port of Shengjin on Wednesday, nearly a year after an agreement to house asylum seekers in Italian-run centres in Albania until their cases are handled remotely by Italian judges.
However four of 16 were identified as “vulnerable” and were immediately sent back to Italy.
The remaining 12 on Saturday boarded an Italian coast guard vessel which will take them to Brindisi in southern Italy, Albanian port officials said.
Earlier, they were escorted by police from a temporary reception centre to Shengjin port, where they boarded the ship, a journalist from French news agency AFP saw.
Far-right Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni signed the controversial deal in November with her Albanian counterpart, Edi Rama.
So-called ‘safe countries’
The five-year agreement, estimated to cost €160 million euros annually, calls for male asylum seekers intercepted by the Italian navy or coast guard vessels in international waters – but within Italy’s search and rescue area – to be held in Albania.
From there, a determination will be made as to which individuals come from so-called “safe” countries, allowing for fast-track repatriation.
EU leaders confront tough decisions on migration and asylum policies
However, Italian judges on Friday ruled against the detention of the first migrants, saying a recent ruling by the European Court of Justice meant the men do not meet the criteria for detention in Albania and must instead be brought to Italy.
Italy’s Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi said Rome would appeal the court’s decision.
Meloni responded to the ruling on X, saying “Italians have asked me to stop illegal immigration, and I will do everything possible to keep my word.”
Rome recently expanded to 22 countries its list of “safe” countries of origin – defined as states where it deems there is no persecution, torture or threat of indiscriminate violence.
Albania criticised
But on the list are nations that include areas not considered safe.
A recent ruling by the European Court of Justice stipulates that EU member states can only designate whole countries as safe, not parts.
EU weighs creating migrant ‘return hubs’ to speed up deportations
Italy’s deal with Albania has been widely criticised by human rights groups, who question whether Albania can provide adequate protection for asylum seekers.
(with AFP)
GABON
Gabon to hold referendum on new constitution in November
Gabon will hold a referendum on 16 November on a proposed new constitution, a key step towards the return to a civilian regime which the military junta promised after a coup, the transitional government said.
The August 2023 coup put an end to 55 years of rule by the family of former president Ali Bongo Ondimba.
The draft new constitution includes abolishing the post of prime minister and imposing a seven-year presidential term, renewable once.
Gabon‘s Council of Ministers on Thursday passed the bill, the last component of a transition initiated after the removal of Bongo, according to an official statement sent by Laurence Ndong, spokeswoman for the government led by Brice Oligui Nguema.
“The Council of Ministers has expressed its satisfaction at the completion of the proposed new constitution,” the statement said.
“The next decisive step in the transition process will be the organisation of a constitutional referendum.”
Lawmakers in early September met to form a “reasoned opinion” on a final text, drafted from a thousand proposals collected during a national dialogue organised in April.
800 amendments
Candidates for head of state would have to be the offspring of Gabonese-born parents, according to a version of the proposed document circulating online – a claim authorities in the oil-rich country have not denied.
Neither the bill nor the 800 amendments proposed by the parliament have been made public.
The proposed text is notably believed to define marriage as a union between a man and a woman and would also make military service compulsory, while confirming French as the country’s official language.
Gabon junta sets August 2025 as ‘indicative’ election date
On 30 August 2023, an hour after the official announcement of Bongo’s election to a third term since 2009, a military junta proclaimed his rule was over, denouncing what they said was a rigged poll.
The military dissolved the country’s institutions and appointed 98 deputies and 70 senators to a transitional parliament.
Oligui has promised to restore civilian rule in Africa’s third-richest country in terms of per-capita GDP but where one in three lives below the poverty line, according to the World Bank.
He has not hidden his intention to win a presidential election slated for August 2025.
(with AFP)
Geopolitics
G7 defence ministers call for more aid to Gaza, pledge support to Ukraine
In their closing statement, G7 defence ministers reunited in Naples on Saturday voiced support for “significant and sustained increase” in humanitarian aid to Gaza as well as “unwavering” support for Ukraine.
G7 defence ministers convened Saturday against a backdrop of escalation in the Middle East and mounting pressure on Ukraine as it faces another winter of fighting.
Italy, holding the rotating presidency of the Group of Seven countries, organised the body’s first ministerial meeting dedicated to defence, staged in Naples, the southern city that is also home to a NATO base.
Invited to the one-day talks were NATO chief Mark Rutte and the EU’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell.
The summit comes two days after Israel announced it had killed Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar, mastermind of the 7 October 2023 attacks on Israel that triggered the devastating retaliatory war in Gaza.
“Certainly after the killing of Yahya Sinwar a new perspective is open and we have to use it in order to reach a ceasefire, to release the remaining hostages and to look for a political perspective,” Borrell told journalists.
The UN humanitarian affairs agency on Friday continued “to sound the alarm about the increasingly dire and dangerous situation that civilians in northern Gaza are facing. Families there are trying to survive in atrocious conditions, under heavy bombardment.”
Gaza‘s civil defence agency said Saturday more than 400 Palestinians were killed in the north of the territory over the past two weeks during an ongoing military assault Israel says is aimed at preventing Hamas militants from regrouping.
In their closing statement, the G7 ministers sad they support “significant and sustained increase” in humanitarian aid to Gaza.
More robust mandate needed
A morning session included discussions over recent strikes on UNIFIL, the UN’s Lebanon peacekeeping mission in Lebanon, where Israel is also at war with Hamas ally Hezbollah.
Borrell suggested the peacekeepers’ mandate should be beefed up by the UN Security Council to give them more scope to act amid repeated attacks on their positions they say are being conducted by Israeli forces.
“They cannot act by themselves, it is certainly a limited role,” he said.
France backs UN peacekeepers in Lebanon amid Israel’s Hezbollah offensive
Earlier Saturday, Borrell wrote on social media that “a more robust mandate for UNIFIL” was needed.
In Lebanon Friday, Italy’s prime minister, Giorgia Meloni slammed as “unacceptable” the recent strikes on UNIFIL.
Italy has around 1,000 troops in the UN peacekeeping force in Lebanon, which has soldiers from more than 50 countries.
As the Naples talks began, Italian Defence Minister Guido Crosetto told the group that the “critical situation in the Middle East”, Russia’s war in Ukraine, “profound instability” in sub-Saharan Africa and “increasing tension” in the Asia-Pacific region “highlight a deteriorated security framework with forecasts for the near future that cannot be positive”.
Unwavering support
On Ukraine, the defence ministers pledged “unwavering” support for Ukraine and specified that would include military aid, according to the final statement.
This comes as Kyiv faces a third winter at war, battlefield losses in the east – and the prospect of reduced US military support should Donald Trump be elected to the White House next month.
“We underscore our intent to continue to provide assistance to Ukraine, including military assistance in the short and long term,” read the group’s final statement following the one-day summit.
Biden to discuss Ukraine, Middle East with allies on farewell trip to Berlin
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, under mounting pressure from Western allies to forge a winning strategy against Russia, on Thursday presented what he called a “victory plan” to the European Union and NATO.
Its main thrust is a call for immediate NATO membership, deemed unfeasible by alliance members.
It also demands the ability to strike military targets inside Russia with long-range weapons, and an undefined “non-nuclear strategic deterrence package” on Ukrainian territory.
Under discussion will also likely be reports, based on South Korean intelligence, that North Korea is deploying large numbers of troops to support Moscow’s war against Ukraine.
NATO was not as yet able to confirm that intelligence, Rutte said on Friday.
(with AFP)
Sexual violence
The pivotal 1970s trial that rewrote France’s definition of rape
The closely watched trial of a man accused of drugging his wife and inviting others to rape her while she lay unconscious at their home in the south of France has become a rallying cry for those who say society needs to change the way it thinks about sexual assault. Fifty years ago, another rape case caused similar outcry – and led to lasting changes in French law.
“You know, this isn’t just one rape trial at stake.”
So said Gisèle Halimi, the activist lawyer responsible for turning a 1974 case into a public interrogation of France’s attitudes to rape.
Together with the two victims, she decided to put the French legal system itself on trial – and it would be found wanting.
Now, as another case exposes shortcomings in the law, a new generation of campaigners say it’s time for another turning point.
Listen to this story on the Spotlight on France podcast:
Three against two
The first came thanks to two women: Anne Tonglet and Araceli Castellano.
Both from Belgium and a couple at the time, they were backpacking on France’s south coast in summer 1974, aged 24 and 19.
On the night of 20 August, they set camp in the Morgiou calanque near Marseille. A local man approached them, found himself rebuffed, and tried again the next day with the same result.
That night, he returned with two others. The three men – Serge Petrilli, Guy Roger and Albert Mouglalis – forced their way into the women’s tent and beat and assaulted them for more than four hours.
The attack left both women injured and Castellano pregnant. They reported it to police the following morning and the men were arrested – and then Tonglet and Castellano found themselves up against a rape law that dated back to the time of Napoleon Bonaparte.
A matter of ‘decency’
Written when rape was primarily considered a dishonour to a husband and his heirs, France’s penal code at the time defined the offence as “illicit coitus with a woman who is known not to consent”.
That narrow interpretation excluded any other type of sex act, and any other type of victim – notably men. It also made the crime of rape difficult to prove.
Castellano and Tonglet were confronted with all the aspersions the law invited investigators to cast: had they really not consented? Not even after they stopped physically fighting back? And how were the men to know?
The judge initially tasked with assessing their case concluded it didn’t meet the bar for rape. She downgraded the charges to indecent assault and battery “not resulting in total incapacity to work for more than eight days”.
That was typical at the time. More often than not, rapes were tried as assault or “public indecency” – misdemeanours that went before the correctional tribunal, a court for lesser offences, where they would be heard by magistrates rather than juries and result in lighter sentences.
They were also tried, by default, behind closed doors. Judges said it was for the protection of the victim, but inevitably the accused benefitted too.
Law on trial
“What we want is publicity,” lawyer Halimi told a TV interviewer in 1977.
At the time she was one of the loudest voices calling for reforms of French laws that failed women, fresh from defending a landmark case that helped expose the injustice of prosecuting those who sought abortions and shift the needle in favour of legalisation.
Halimi believed a similar tack might be taken with rape, to press the need for criminal prosecutions and take the matter out from behind closed doors.
“Because we believe that it’s one thing for a man to rape, and another to know it’ll get around his village, his work, the papers,” she said. “Publicity can serve as a form of deterrent.”
That would take victims who were up for a fight. Among several women who approached Halimi to take on their cases were Castellano and Tonglet.
In her infamous abortion case, the lawyer had spoken of “putting the law on trial”, Tonglet recalled. “When I heard that, I said to myself, ‘that’s exactly what we have to do with rape too’,” she told France Culture radio decades later.
“It’s about indicting laws that are not fit for purpose.”
‘The trial of all women’
At the head of an all-female legal team, Halimi managed to drive their case up through the courts until finally a trial was set at the assize court of Aix-en-Provence.
It opened nearly four years after the events, on 2 May 1978, and lasted two tumultuous days.
Outside, women’s rights groups – and Halimi herself – clashed with people who had turned out to support the three men accused.
“I remember getting hit. People were spitting in our faces, we had a hard time reaching the courtroom,” Halimi later recalled.
Inside, Castellano and Tonglet faced other humiliations. Foreigners, lesbians and occasional naturists, they were subjected to questioning that implied they had provoked the accused by travelling together and sleeping naked.
Nonetheless they testified in open court, the proceedings reported by journalists from across France and beyond.
Defying the defence’s complaints that the trial had become “no longer the trial of two young women but of all women”, Halimi urged the jury: “You must convict these three men, because otherwise you will condemn women to never more be believed.”
On the evening of 3 May, all three men were found guilty. Petrilli, the instigator, was sentenced to six years in prison while Roger and Mouglalis each got four years.
Redefining rape
By the following month, France’s Senate – citing the effects of “recent cases that have been widely reported in the press” on public opinion – had voted in favour of rewriting the criminal code.
That process would end up taking another two and a half years, but in December 1980 a new law was passed that redefined rape as “any act of sexual penetration committed on another person by violence, constraint or surprise”.
And when rape was prosecuted, it would be treated as a serious offence, heard at a criminal trial and – unless the victim chose otherwise – in open court.
France has broadened its definition of rape in the decades since, but it remains roughly similar. And now, another high-profile trial is bolstering the argument that it needs its most radical update since the 1980 reform.
Mass rape trial revives question of consent within French law
Some of the men accused of raping Gisèle Pélicot while she lay drugged and unconscious have argued that they didn’t know she had not given her consent beforehand, nor did they have the obligation to seek it directly.
That defence demonstrates the urgency of changing French law so that any sex act performed without someone’s affirmative consent by definition counts as rape – something both President Emmanuel Macron and new Justice Minister Didier Migaud have said they support.
If indeed a reform is made, it will be the second time France has individual victims to thank for forcing the question into the public eye.
“It takes true courage for a woman to fight back,” Halimi said in 1977, “because she knows she’s not fighting for herself. I don’t know that she herself can ever recover, but she’s doing it precisely so that other women don’t have to go through the same ordeal as she has.”
Health
Local transmissions of dengue fever reach record high in France
French health authorities are sounding the alarm as dengue, a virus spread by tiger mosquitoes, continues to progress across the country. A record number of cases have been transmitted locally this year, new figures show, while experts warn France is at high risk of an epidemic in the next five years.
Since the beginning of May, the onset of tiger mosquito activity, 80 people have contracted the tropical disease without travelling to endemic regions, according to a study released by public health institute Santé Publique France this week.
This marks a new record, surpassing the 65 locally transmitted cases reported in 2022 and 45 in 2023.
It follows a recent report from the National Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health Safety (Anses) that suggests the risk of an epidemic of dengue, chikungunya or Zika – all diseases transmitted by tiger mosquitoes – is high.
On a scale of 0 to 9, the agency rated the likelihood of such an outbreak occurring in mainland France within the next five years at 6 to 7.
Localised outbreaks
Currently, dengue cases are localised mainly in the south-eastern Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur region, which has reported 58 infections this year alone.
The main factors contributing to potential outbreaks are warm temperatures – between 25 and 30 degrees Celsius – and the importation of viruses from areas experiencing epidemics.
Since the beginning of the year, Santé Publique France has recorded 3,938 imported dengue cases, alongside 22 cases of chikungunya and five of Zika – 1.5 times the number reported in 2023.
A significant majority of these cases – 68 percent – involved travellers returning from the French Caribbean territories of Guadeloupe and Martinique, in the grip of extensive outbreaks for over a year.
Fears of dengue fever epidemic in Guadeloupe as cases accelerate
Global concern
The tiger mosquito first arrived in mainland France in 2004, establishing a foothold in the southern town of Menton before spreading across the entire country.
Once an area is colonised by mosquitoes, eradication becomes a daunting challenge.
Residents are urged to eliminate standing water and other mosquito breeding sites in their surroundings.
Paris wards off tiger mosquito scourge ahead of Olympics
The World Health Organisation (WHO) warns that the spread of dengue and other mosquito-borne diseases in recent years is “an alarming trend that demands a coordinated response across sectors and across borders”.
The UN health agency said the number of dengue cases reported globally has approximately doubled each year since 2021, with over 12.3 million cases, including more than 7,900 deaths, reported in the first eight months of 2024 alone.
An estimated four billion people worldwide are currently at risk of contracting dengue, chikungunya or Zika, according to the WHO, with that number estimated to swell to five billion by 2050.
Dengue symptoms include high fever, often accompanied by headaches, nausea and vomiting, lasting two to three weeks.
(with newswires)
Justice
SUV driver charged with murder for running over cyclist in Paris
A driver who ran over a cyclist following an altercation in central Paris has been charged with murder in a case that has shocked France. Several gatherings are to take place on Saturday in homage to the 27-year-old victim who was a member of a citizens’ cycling association.
The 52-year-old driver of the SUV, identified as Ariel M., is accused of having deliberately targeted the cyclist, who was named as Paul Varry, 27.
Tuesday’s incident in Paris’s well-to-do 8th district came as tensions rise in the battle for street space in the congested capital.
Tense exchanges between cyclists and drivers are commonplace in the city centre.
The driver, whose teenage daughter was also in the car, was arrested on the spot.
On Tuesday, the motorist and the cyclist were seen having an angry dispute by the side of the road.
Altercation
According to seven witness statements, Ariel M., trying to make progress on the congested road, steered his car onto the adjacent cycling path for about 200 metres, where he drove over the cyclist’s foot, prosecutors said.
Varry, the cyclist, banged his fist on the bonnet of the car to alert the driver, who backed up at first.
Varry then stood in front of the car expressing his anger at the driver, who started driving towards him, according to witness statements.
An autopsy confirmed that Varry’s lethal injuries had been caused by the car. The driver’s test for alcohol and drugs came back negative.
CCTV footage showed the vehicle rising once when the left front tyre rolled over the body, and then again when the back tyre went over.
France begins low speed limit rollout on Paris ring road
The man’s lawyer, Franck Cohen, told French news agency AFP that his client “has no explanation for what happened”.
He said the driver “tried to extract himself” from a situation of “stress and fear” and may have lost control of his vehicle in the process.
Ariel M., a sales manager in the tech sector and father of four, had since been “thinking much more about the young man, who is the same age as his son, than about himself”, Cohen said.
A judge ruled Friday that the driver, who lives in the mostly wealthy Hauts-de-Seine department west of the capital, will be held in custody until his trial.
The accused himself said at the hearing, during which he broke into tears several times: “I’m sorry for what happened. I never meant to run over him. I have never been a thug, I have never consorted with thugs.”
‘Unacceptable tragedy’
French associations promoting cycling have condemned the incident, with “Paris en Selle” (Paris in the Saddle) calling it “an unacceptable tragedy”.
Varry was an “active member” of the group, according to its president Anne Monarché, who described the young man as someone who “fought for a peaceful city, so that we could cycle safely”.
Some 200 people gathered by the Madeleine church on Wednesday to pay tribute to Varry, with several demonstrations by cyclists planned for Saturday.
Paris en Selle have called for a homage at Place de la République in Paris on Saturday at 5.45pm as well as a minute of silence across the country.
France to invest €2 billion by 2027 to get people on their bikes
The city council of Saint-Ouen, the northern French suburb where he lived, said he had made the cause of urban cyclists “the commitment of his life” and had helped the authorities promote cycling in the city.
Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo said that “it is unacceptable to die in this day and age while cycling in Paris, at 27 years old”.
The next session of the Paris City Council on 19 November will open with a minute of silence for Varry.
Hidalgo, who has been running city hall for over a decade, is behind an ambitious initiative to turn Paris into a cycling-friendly city with the aim of making it “100-percent bikeable” by 2026.
Resentment
Paris is already ranked as one of the world’s dozen or so most bike-friendly cities since getting hundreds of kilometres of designated cycling paths.
Cyclists also get to run some red lights so long as there are no pedestrians, and can take one-way streets in the opposite direction from cars.
Much of the rue de Rivoli, one of the main thoroughfares in the heart of Paris, is now reserved for bicycles. City hall has promised to turn over the iconic Place de la Concorde to bikes and pedestrians soon.
But the new space accorded to bicycles has often come out of roads previously used entirely by motorists, many of whom resent the change.
Last year, 226 cyclists died on French roads.
(with AFP)
Turkey fears new wave of refugees as Israel continues Lebanon offensive
Issued on:
More than 400,000 people have fled to Syria to escape Israel’s military operations in Lebanon, according to the United Nations. With the numbers expected to grow as Israel steps up its offensive, neighbouring Turkey, already home to the world’s largest number of refugees, fears a new wave of people seeking sanctuary.
Over 405,000 people – both Lebanese and Syrian – have crossed into Syria from Lebanon since the start of Israel’s offensive, according to figures from UN refugee agency UNHCR.
Approximately 60 percent are under 18, UN spokesman Farhan Haq said on Thursday, and most are struggling to meet basic needs.
The returnees are mainly people who had sought sanctuary in Lebanon from the civil war in Syria, now in its 13th year. “In Lebanon, there have been nearly one million Syrian refugees just since 2011,” says Metin Corabatir of the Research Centre on Asylum and Migration, an Ankara-based NGO.
He warns this could be just the beginning of the exodus if the fighting in Lebanon continues, threatening to overwhelm Syria.
“We are not talking only about Syrian refugees going back to Syria, but the Lebanese population is moving, crossing the border to Syria. And Syria would either try to close the borders or force them to go north to the Turkish borders,” Corabatir told RFI.
“This really would lead to a catastrophic situation for people, for countries and may pull Turkey into more tensions with Israel.”
Anti-refugee backlash
People fleeing Lebanon have been arriving at refugee camps in north-east Syria, close to the Turkish border. But Turkey, already hosting an estimated five million refugees, including over three million Syrians, is facing growing public backlash over their presence.
“Turkey basically cannot handle more refugees,” warns Ozgur Unluhisarcikli, head of the Ankara office of the German Marshall Fund of the United States, an international think tank.
Earlier this year, tensions spilled over into violence against refugees in the provincial city of Kayseri. The issue has become a significant political liability for the government, with opinion polls routinely finding large majorities wanting refugees to leave.
Even if the country has the practical capacity to take more people in, “I don’t see Turkey accepting a massive new wave of refugees”, predicts Unluhisarcikli.
Turkey’s Syrian refugees face local hostility as economic problems mount
Border barricades
In the last couple of years, Ankara has constructed a wall along its border with Syria in a bid to prevent more refugees from entering Turkey.
Murat Aslan, of the pro-government Seta Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research, believes such efforts will only continue as the war in the Middle East threatens to trigger a new exodus.
“Turkey does not want any further waves coming from another region because Turkey is just experiencing and mending an economic crisis,” he says. “Inflation is currently under control, and we expect a decrease in it.
“What does another wave of refugees mean? A lot of spending, a lot of inflation, and other than this, societal insecurity. That’s why Turkey will not tolerate another wave.”
But such a stance will likely be tested if Israel continues its offensive, creating more refugees and with them, the risk of Turkey facing a humanitarian crisis on its border.
Turkey continues to host more refugees than anyone else, but for how long?
Madam Ambassador
Issued on:
This week on The Sound Kitchen you’ll hear the answer to the question about the new plan for gender equity at France’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. There’s a recap of this year’s Nobel Prizes, “The Listener’s Corner”, and plenty of good music – all that, and the new quiz and bonus questions too, so click on 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.
It’s time for you to start thinking about your New Year’s resolutions for our annual New Year’s Day show. If you’ve already made up your mind about what you’ll aim for in 2025, go ahead and send it to us … if not, be sure you send us your resolution – or resolutions if you are really ambitious! – by 15 December.
Erwan and I are busy cooking up special shows with your music requests, so get them in! Send your music requests to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr Tell us why you like the piece of music, too – it makes it more interesting for us all!
Facebook: Be sure to send your photos to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr for the RFI English Listeners Forum banner!
More tech news: Did you know we have a YouTube channel? Just go to YouTube and write “RFI English” in the search bar, and there we are! Be sure to subscribe to see all our videos.
Would you like to learn French? RFI is here to help you!
Our website “Le Français facile avec RFI” has news broadcasts in slow, simple French, as well as bilingual radio dramas (with real actors!) and exercises to practice what you have heard.
Go to our website and get started! At the top of the page, click on “Test level”. According to your score, you’ll be counselled to the best-suited activities for your level.
Do not give up! As Lidwien van Dixhoorn, the head of “Le Français facile” service told me: “Bathe your ears in the sound of the language, and eventually, you’ll get it.” She should know – Lidwien is Dutch and came to France hardly able to say “bonjour” and now she heads this key RFI department – so stick with it!
Be sure you check out our wonderful podcasts!
In addition to the breaking news articles on our site, with in-depth analysis of current affairs in France and across the globe, we have several podcasts that will leave you hungry for more.
There’s Paris Perspective, Spotlight on France, Spotlight on Africa, and of course, The Sound Kitchen. We have an award-winning bilingual series – an old-time radio show, with actors (!) to help you learn French, called Les voisins du 12 bis. And there is the excellent International Report, too.
Remember, podcasts are radio, too! As you see, sound is still quite present in the RFI English service. Please keep checking our website for updates on the latest from our journalists. You never know what we’ll surprise you with!
To listen to our podcasts from your PC, go to our website; you’ll see “Podcasts” at the top of the page. You can either listen directly or subscribe and receive them directly on your mobile phone.
To listen to our podcasts from your mobile phone, slide through the tabs just under the lead article (the first tab is “Headline News”) until you see “Podcasts”, and choose your show.
Teachers take note! I save postcards and stamps from all over the world to send to you for your students. If you would like stamps and postcards for your students, just write and let me know. The address is english.service@rfi.fr If you would like to donate stamps and postcards, feel free! Our address is listed below.
Another idea for your students: Br. Gerald Muller, my beloved music teacher from St. Edward’s University in Austin, Texas, has been writing books for young adults in his retirement – and they are free! There is a volume of biographies of painters and musicians called Gentle Giants, and an excellent biography of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., too. They are also a good way to help you improve your English – that’s how I worked on my French, reading books that were meant for young readers – and I guarantee you, it’s a good method for improving your language skills. To get Br. Gerald’s free books, click here.
Independent RFI English Clubs: Be sure to always include Audrey Iattoni (audrey.iattoni@rfi.fr) from our Listener Relations department in your RFI Club correspondence. Remember to copy me (thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr) when you write to her so that I know what is going on, too. N.B.: You do not need to send her your quiz answers! Email overload!
This week’s quiz: On 21 September, I asked you a question about a gender equality plan at France’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. We reported on that plan in our article “France’s foreign ministry unveils two-year gender equality strategy”.
You were to re-read the article and send in the answer to this question: What is the Foreign Ministry’s goal for promoting women to important posts? What is the percentage they are aiming for?
The answer is, to quote our article: “According to the ministry, this year more than 45 percent of ambassadors appointed for the first time will be women, while among newly-appointed consuls-general, over 40 percent will also be women.”
In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question: “How would you define a truly happy person?”, which was suggested by Sabah Binte Sumaiya from Bogura, Bangladesh:
Do you have a bonus question idea? Send it to us!
The winners are: RFI Listeners Club member Hans Verner Lollike from Hedehusene, Denmark. Hans is also this week’s bonus question winner. Congratulations, Hans, on your double win.
Also on the list of lucky winners this week are RFI Listeners Club members Samir Mukhopadhyay from Kolkata, India; Mizanur Rahman from Dhaka, Bangladesh, and Faiza Zainab – who’s also a member of the International Radio Fan and Youth Club in Khanewal, Pakistan.
Last but certainly not least, RFI English listener Tafriha Tahura from Munshiganj, Bangladesh.
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: “Mazurka no. 4″ by Frédéric Chopin, arranged by Serge Forté and performed by the Serge Forté Trio; “Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima” by Krzysztof Penderecki, performed by Antoni Wit and the National Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra; “La Grande Galerie de la Zoologie” by Philippe Hersant, performed by the Ensemble Bestiaire Fabuleux; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer, and “Don’t Worry, Be Happy” by Bobby McFerrin, performed by McFerrin.
Do you have a music request? Send it to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
This week’s question … you must listen to the show to participate. After you’ve listened to the show, re-read Paul Myers’ article “Kenya’s Ruth Chepngetich sets women’s world record at Chicago Marathon”, which will help you with the answer.
You have until 11 November to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 16 November podcast. When you enter be sure to send your postal address with your answer, and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.
Send your answers to:
english.service@rfi.fr
or
Susan Owensby
RFI – The Sound Kitchen
80, rue Camille Desmoulins
92130 Issy-les-Moulineaux
France
or
By text … You can also send your quiz answers to The Sound Kitchen mobile phone. Dial your country’s international access code, or “ + ”, then 33 6 31 12 96 82. Don’t forget to include your mailing address in your text – and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.
Click here to learn how to win a special Sound Kitchen prize.
Click here to find out how you can become a member of the RFI Listeners Club, or form your own official RFI Club,
Ghana grapples with crisis caused by world’s throwaway fashion
Issued on:
This week’s podcast focuses on textile waste from fast fashion. As cheap clothes from China, Asia and Europe increasingly end up in West Africa, pollution is rising – particularly in Ghana. RFI spoke to Greenpeace Africa investigators to understand the scale of the issue and how to combat it.
Ghana is being swamped by millions of unwanted clothes from the West, creating an environmental disaster as textile waste piles up across the country.
The scale of damage to public health and the environment has been laid bare in a new Greenpeace report that exposes the devastating impact of discarded clothing on communities and ecosystems in Ghana.
About 15 million items of second-hand clothing arrive in Ghana each week. Nearly half cannot be resold.
The unsellable clothes end up in informal dumps or are burned in public washhouses, contaminating the air, soil and water.
“The situation is catastrophic. These clothes are literally poisoning our communities,” said Sam Quashie-Idun from Greenpeace Africa, speaking to RFI.
The report shows how Ghana has become a dumping ground for the world’s unwanted textiles, with devastating consequences for local ecosystems.
“What we’re seeing is environmental racism. The Global North is using Ghana as its trash can,” said Hellen Dena of Greenpeace Africa.
The flood of cheap, disposable fashion reflects broader problems with global waste management and environmental justice.
To explore this issue further, RFI spoke to Sam Quashie-Idun and Hellen Dena from Greenpeace Africa.
Episode mixed by Cecile Pompeani.
Spotlight on Africa is a podcast from Radio France Internationale.
Algerian military’s ‘more important role’
Issued on:
This week on The Sound Kitchen you’ll hear the answer to the question about the new role for Algeria’s military. There’s a poem written by RFI Listeners Club member Helmut Matt, “The Listener’s Corner”, and Erwan Rome’s “Music from Erwan” – all that, and the new quiz and bonus questions too, so click on the “Play” button above and enjoy!
Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday – here on our website, or wherever you get your podcasts. You’ll hear the winner’s names announced and the week’s quiz question, along with all the other ingredients you’ve grown accustomed to: your letters and essays, “On This Day”, quirky facts and news, interviews, and great music … so be sure and listen every week.
Erwan and I are busy cooking up special shows with your music requests, so get them in! Send your music requests to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr Tell us why you like the piece of music, too – it makes it more interesting for us all!
Facebook: Be sure to send your photos to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr for the RFI English Listeners Forum banner!
More tech news: Did you know we have a YouTube channel? Just go to YouTube and write “RFI English” in the search bar, and there we are! Be sure to subscribe to see all our videos.
Would you like to learn French? RFI is here to help you!
Our website “Le Français facile avec RFI” has news broadcasts in slow, simple French, as well as bilingual radio dramas (with real actors!) and exercises to practice what you have heard.
Go to our website and get started! At the top of the page, click on “Test level”. According to your score, you’ll be counselled to the best-suited activities for your level.
Do not give up! As Lidwien van Dixhoorn, the head of “Le Français facile” service told me: “Bathe your ears in the sound of the language, and eventually, you’ll get it.” She should know – Lidwien is Dutch and came to France hardly able to say “bonjour” and now she heads this key RFI department – so stick with it!
Be sure you check out our wonderful podcasts!
In addition to the breaking news articles on our site, with in-depth analysis of current affairs in France and across the globe, we have several podcasts that will leave you hungry for more.
There’s Paris Perspective, Spotlight on France, Spotlight on Africa, and of course, The Sound Kitchen. We have an award-winning bilingual series – an old-time radio show, with actors (!) to help you learn French, called Les voisins du 12 bis. And there is the excellent International Report, too.
Remember, podcasts are radio, too! As you see, sound is still quite present in the RFI English service. Please keep checking our website for updates on the latest from our journalists. You never know what we’ll surprise you with!
To listen to our podcasts from your PC, go to our website; you’ll see “Podcasts” at the top of the page. You can either listen directly or subscribe and receive them directly on your mobile phone.
To listen to our podcasts from your mobile phone, slide through the tabs just under the lead article (the first tab is “Headline News”) until you see “Podcasts”, and choose your show.
Teachers take note! I save postcards and stamps from all over the world to send to you for your students. If you would like stamps and postcards for your students, just write and let me know. The address is english.service@rfi.fr If you would like to donate stamps and postcards, feel free! Our address is listed below.
Another idea for your students: Br. Gerald Muller, my beloved music teacher from St. Edward’s University in Austin, Texas, has been writing books for young adults in his retirement – and they are free! There is a volume of biographies of painters and musicians called Gentle Giants, and an excellent biography of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., too. They are also a good way to help you improve your English – that’s how I worked on my French, reading books that were meant for young readers – and I guarantee you, it’s a good method for improving your language skills. To get Br. Gerald’s free books, click here.
Independent RFI English Clubs: Be sure to always include Audrey Iattoni (audrey.iattoni@rfi.fr) from our Listener Relations department in your RFI Club correspondence. Remember to copy me (thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr) when you write to her so that I know what is going on, too. N.B.: You do not need to send her your quiz answers! Email overload!
This week’s quiz: On 14 September, I asked you a question about Algeria’s presidential elections. Held on 8 September, the incumbent, Abdelmadjid Tebboune, was reelected.
RFI English reporter Melissa Chemam followed the race closely; the day after the election she wrote an article for us, “High expectations as Algeria’s President Tebboune begins new mandate”. Her article is about what’s on Tebboune’s presidential plate economically and socially for his next mandate.
There are several worries in civil society, as Melissa noted: “The first mandate of President Tebboune saw a clampdown on civil liberties and seen the army take on a more important role.”
Your question was about the army, and its, as Melissa noted, “more important role”. In August, a few days before Tebboune declared his candidacy, a decree was issued involving the army. You were to tell me what was in that decree.
The answer is, to quote Melissa’s article: “A few days before Tebboune’s declaration of candidacy, in August, a decree was published to legalise the transfer of the senior civil administration under the direct authority of the army.”
In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question: “What is the first thing that comes to your mind when you hear the word “red”? The question was suggested by Ashik Eqbal Tokon from Rajshahi, Bangladesh.
Do you have a bonus question idea? Send it to us!
The winners are: RFI Listeners Club member Radhakrishna Pillai from Kerala State in India. Radhakrishna is also this week’s bonus question winner. Congratulations on your double win, Radhakrisha!
Also on the list of lucky winners this week are RFI Listeners Club members Father Stephen Wara from Bamenda, Cameroon; Shadman Hosen Ayon from Kishoreganj, Bangladesh, and Atikul Islam – who is also the president of the Narshunda Radio Listeners Family in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Last but certainly not least, RFI English listener Jahangir Alam from the Friends Radio Club in Naogaon, Bangladesh.
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: “Autumn” from The Four Seasons by Antonio Vivaldi, performed by Carla Moore and Voice of Music; Traditional Chaabi music from Algeria; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer, and “Mr. Bobby” by Manu Chao, performed by Chao and the Playing for Change musicians.
Do you have a music request? Send it to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
This week’s question … you must listen to the show to participate. After you’ve listened to the show, re-read our article “Algeria’s Tebboune refuses France visit in snub to former colonial ruler”, which will help you with the answer.
You have until 4 November to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 9 November podcast. When you enter be sure to send your postal address with your answer, and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.
Send your answers to:
english.service@rfi.fr
or
Susan Owensby
RFI – The Sound Kitchen
80, rue Camille Desmoulins
92130 Issy-les-Moulineaux
France
or
By text … You can also send your quiz answers to The Sound Kitchen mobile phone. Dial your country’s international access code, or “ + ”, then 33 6 31 12 96 82. Don’t forget to include your mailing address in your text – and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.
Click here to learn how to win a special Sound Kitchen prize.
Click here to find out how you can become a member of the RFI Listeners Club, or form your own official RFI Club,
Podcast: French song’s popularity abroad, screens in school, France’s Nobels
Issued on:
Why songs in French are attracting new audiences in non-francophone countries. How are French schools using screens in classrooms? And the history of France’s Nobel prizes.
The Paris Olympic Games and Paralympics gave French-language songs huge exposure, adding new fans to the global audience already growing on streaming platforms. But what kind of music are non-French-speakers listening to and why? A new exhibition at the recently opened International Centre of the French Language asks the question. Its curator, the music journalist Bertrand Dicale, based the exhibit on the idea that songs reveal who were are, and he talks about what popular songs reveal about France. He also highlights some surprising differences between French and foreign audiences, which have allowed stars like Aya Nakamura and Juliette Gréco to enjoy huge success abroad despite being scorned at home. (Listen @0’00)
France lags behind many countries in the use of technology in classrooms and there is no clear policy from an ever-changing education ministry. But the disorganisation may be buying educators time to consider the consequences. A report commissioned in the spring by President Emmanuel Macron advised placing limits on young people’s use of smartphones and social media, and some schools are testing a smartphone ban this year. Founded by concerned educators, the collective Pour une éducation numérique raisonnée (“For a sensible digital education”) has raised its own concerns about the push to digitise textbooks and get students learning on screens. We visit a class taught by one of its members, and see how technology is – and is not – used. (Listen @22’00)
In the midst of Nobel season, a look at some of France’s 71 prizes, from the first ever Nobel Peace Prize in 1901 to the five won by members of the Curie family for physics and chemistry. (Listen @15’00)
Episode mixed by Cecile Pompéani.
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 deepens Somali ties with energy push, but rising Ethiopia tensions jeopardise investments
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Turkey’s deployment of an energy research ship accompanied by a naval escort to Somalia is the latest step in deepening bilateral ties. However, rising Ethiopian-Somali tensions threaten Turkey’s substantial investments in Somalia, as Ankara’s mediation efforts stall.
With a great deal of fanfare, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan attended the leaving ceremony of Turkey’s energy research vessel Oruc Reis, which set sail this month to Somalia accompanied by two Turkish naval vessels.
Somali energy deal
The deployment of the Oruc Reis is part of an energy deal struck with Somalia and the latest step in Ankara’s long-term investment in the Horn of Africa nation.
“Turkey has its largest embassy in the world in Mogadishu. It has a military base there. The port of Mogadishu is controlled by a Turkish company, “explained Norman Rickelfs, a geopolitical consultant.
“[Turkey] signed a defense deal (with Somalia) in February, a two-part defense deal, and then an energy exploration deal in March. So, Turkey needs Somalia and Ethiopia to play well together.”
The threat of a new conflict in the Horn of Africa has been looming since January when Ethiopia signed a memorandum of understanding with Somaliland, a breakaway state from Somalia.
The agreement gives Ethiopia secure sea access in exchange for recognizing the breakaway state, a deal condemned by Somalia for infringing on its territorial integrity.
Turkey enters fray mediating Ethiopia and Somalia’s high-stakes dispute
Somalia, Ethiopia and Turkey
Ankara which has good relations with Ethiopia, as well as Somalia has been mediating. But September’s round of talks, during which Ankara had indicated an agreement could be reached, has been indefinitely postponed.
The postponement follows Egypt signing a defense pact with Somalia in August. Last month, Egypt sent its first shipment of arms to Somalia in four decades.
Elem Eyrice-Tepeciklioglu, an African studies professor at the Social Sciences University of Ankara, warns that Egypt’s military involvement complicates Ethiopian Somali reconciliation efforts.
“There are also some hurdles on the way with some recent tensions, especially with the involvement of Egypt and its increasing relations with Somalia,” claims Eyrice-Tepeciklioglu.
Tepeciklioglu warns that the longer the Ethiopian-Somalia dispute continues, the greater the risk of contagion in an unstable region.
“The shifting alliances in the region are also a source of problem, because most of the regional countries have strained relations with each other. And then they often have conflicting interests. So this might complicate the situation,” explained Tepeciklioglu.
Egypt’s support of Somalia is the latest chapter in Egyptian-Ethiopian tensions. Those tensions center on Ethiopia’s damming of the Nile River, which Egypt depends on.
Cairo’s position
Cairo has strongly criticized the project, warning it poses an existential threat. “Egypt’s military deployment to Somalia is a natural progression for an actor seeking to strengthen their hand in a regional competition,” said Kaan Devecioglu of the Ankara-based think tank Orsam.
However, Devecioglu says the priority must be to prevent current rivalries from overspilling into confrontation. “Egypt already has this strained relationship with Ethiopia due to tensions over the Nile River, which makes its presence in Somalia geopolitically sensitive. The issue is not that states are rivals but ensuring they are not enemies,’ explained Devecioglu.
Egyptian President Al Fateh Sisi discussed Ethiopian Somali tensions during last month’s Ankara visit. The visit is part of rapprochement efforts between the countries. That rapprochement Ankara is likely to use to contain current tensions in the Horn of Africa.
However, some experts warn Ankara‘s mediation efforts could be running out of time.
“We see tensions escalating in the region, and we see both sides sort of trying to extract leverage and put pressure on each other,” said Omar Mahmood, a Senior Analyst of the International Crisis Group.
Mahmood says that given the Horn Of Africa is already plagued with conflict Ankara’s mediation efforts needs international support,
“There needs to be a way to de-escalate, I think the mediation is very important. But I think there probably needs to be additional, you know, parties involved or additional pressure put on both sides in order to get to a breakthrough,” added Mahmood.
Currently, there is no new date for a new round of Turkish-brokered Ethiopian Somali talks, with Ankara saying it is negotiating with each country separately. But time is not on Ankara’s side as tensions continue to grow in the region, which is located on one of the world’s most important trade routes.
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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.