rfi 2025-01-10 00:13:17



FRANCE – TERRORISM

Jewish leaders warn of rising hate as France remembers supermarket victims

French Jewish leaders joined politicians, rights campaigners and some 200 people in eastern Paris on Thursday to mark 10 years since four people were killed in a terrorist attack at a kosher supermarket.

The ceremony took place outside the Hypercacher store at Porte de Vincennes where Yohan Cohen, Philippe Braham, Yoav Hattab and François-Michel Saada died on 9 January 2015.

The attacker, Amedy Coulibaly, was killed when police stormed the building to free hostages. Coulibaly was linked to the Kouachi brothers who killed 12 people at Charlie Hebdo magazine two days earlier.

Relatives and politicians lit 10 candles on a specially constructed altar to remember the victims, including teachers Samuel Paty and Dominique Bernard, killed by extremists in 2020 and 2023.

Additional candles honoured victims of anti-Semitism in France, global terrorism and the Hamas attack on Israel in October 2023.

Michel Gugenheim, the chief rabbi of Paris, read The Kaddish, the Jewish prayer for the dead. Rabbi Haïm Korsia and Christophe Le Sourt, of the conference of French bishops, followed with a prayer for the republic.

The 30 minute service was organised by the Crif, an umbrella group representing French Jewish institutions, and will be followed on Thursday night by a debate staged in tandem with Charlie Hebdo on freedom of expression, Islamism and anti-Semitism. 

Tributes honour victims a decade after Charlie Hebdo attack shook France

Ongoing cycle of anti-Semitism

Thursday’s commemoration ceremony was marred after Stars of David and the word “Jew” were found tagged on buildings near the store and at a local synagogue.

“We’re commemorating Islamist terror attacks of extreme gravity,” said Elie Korchia, head of the Consistoire Central des Israelites de France – the religious organisation of French Jewry.

“But we see that through these tags, insults, through the daily anti-Semitic acts … that the cycle of anti-Semitism has not ended,” he told RFI.

Anti-Semitic acts rose by 192 percent in early 2023 compared to 2022. Crif documented just over 1,670 incidents throughout 2023. The French ministry fighting discrimination reported 1,500 attacks in November 2024 alone.

An editorial by French daily Liberation headlined “The solitude of France’s Jews” highlighted the vulnerability felt by the community in the wake of a rising number of attacks.

Korchia expressed particular concern about the rise in assaults following the Hamas attack on Israel.

““We cannot accept that in France we can be stigmatised simply because we are Jewish. Of course Jews in France feel isolated because we see these daily anti-Semitic acts continue and increase,” he said.

“It’s not enough to just be aware of this, we also have to reflect on what causes this increase in anti-Semitism in 2025 and fight against it in all its forms, including anti-Zionism.”


DRC CRISIS

Rebels tighten grip on Congo mineral wealth as UN warns of long-term control

M23 rebels are establishing control over key mineral-rich territories in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), United Nations experts have warned.

The Tutsi-led rebels, active in North and South Kivu provinces, have seized key towns since April 2024 – allegedly with support from Rwandan forces, though Kigali denies involvement and says it is committed to a ceasefire and peace talks.

report by the UN Security Council’s Group of Experts accuses M23 of setting up shadow administrations to explot strategic mines and trade routes.

“This constitutes the most important contamination of supply chains with ineligible minerals recorded in the Great Lakes region over the last decade,” they said in their report, released Wednesday.

The rebels are also accused of using forced labour to expand roads, and patrolling mining areas to make sure minerals were only sold to authorised Congolese and Rwandan traders.

The UN said M23 was financing its operations by exporting minerals from areas under its control, including coltan, a resource used in electronics like smartphones and computers.

It added that M23 had created a “mining ministry” to oversee coltan exports from Rubaya, home to one of the world’s largest deposits of the mineral.

“In this way, the militants collected at least $800,000 per month in taxes on coltan production and trade in Rubaya”, the report said.

The ongoing territorial expansion has continued despite agreed ceasefires, suggesting M23’s true aim is long-term occupation and exploitation of conquered areas, the UN experts added.

Macron urges Rwanda to end support for DRC M23 rebels, withdraw troops

A global issue

The UN report highlights concerns about how M23’s actions could affect global electronics manufacturers, which face pressure to ensure conflict-free supply chains.

Congo has filed criminal complaints against Apple subsidiaries in France and Belgium, accusing the tech firm of using conflict minerals in its supply chain.

Apple disputes the claims, saying it requires its suppliers to avoid sourcing from the region.

Conflict-mineral laws in the US and EU require companies to trace the origins of minerals from regions like eastern Congo. However, a 2022 Global Witness report said such regulations have failed to stop irregular trade.

Meanwhile the renewed violence has displaced more than 100,000 people in North Kivu since early 2025, reaching levels not seen in over a decade. This adds to the millions already displaced since M23’s resurgence in 2021.

DRC case against Apple brings new hope in conflict minerals crisis

Protests

Meanwhile, several hundred people demonstrated in Bukavu, South Kivu, on Wednesday to protest illegal mining in the country’s east, where authorities are investigating claims of widespread illicit Chinese involvement.

The gathering followed the announcement on Sunday of the arrest of three Chinese nationals found in possession of gold bars and large sums of cash, according to South Kivu Governor Jean-Jacques Purusi.

Local authorities in the resource-rich province say hundreds of mining companies, mainly Chinese, extract gold without declaring profits and often without valid operating permits.

“South Kivu minerals should serve the development and well-being of communities,” read one banner held aloft at the demonstration, called by pro-democracy movements and unions.

(with newswires)


LEBANON

Army chief Joseph Aoun elected Lebanese president, ending two-year wait

Beirut (AFP) – Lebanese army chief Joseph Aoun was voted in as president in a second round of parliamentary voting Thursday, ending a more than two-year vacuum in the war-battered country.

“The speaker announces that the president is Joseph Aoun,” speaker Nabih Berri said, reporting that Aoun received 99 out of 128 votes after failing to get a required majority in a first round earlier in the day.

A source close to Hezbollah and ally Amal said representatives of the blocs met with Aoun after the first round.

The Mediterranean country has been without a president since the term of Michel Aoun – not related – ended in October 2022, with tensions between the Iran-backed Hezbollah movement and its opponents scuppering a dozen previous votes.

But international pressure had mounted for a successful outcome with just 17 days remaining in a ceasefire to deploy Lebanese troops alongside UN peacekeepers in south Lebanon after a Hezbollah-Israel war last autumn.

Lebanon’s divided political elite usually agrees on a consensus candidate before any successful parliamentary vote is held.

US, Saudi and French envoys have visited Beirut to increase pressure in the run-up to the vote.

From protector to onlooker: how France lost its influence in Lebanon

Reduced powers

Aoun, who will turn 61 on Friday, was widely seen as the preferred pick of army backer the United States, as well as regional heavyweight Saudi Arabia.

In the commander’s home village of Aishiyeh in south Lebanon, residents had gathered from the morning in front of the church, adorned with several Lebanese flags and his portrait.

The president’s powers have been reduced since the end of the 1975-1990 civil war.

But filling the position was key to overseeing consultations towards naming a new prime minister to lead a government capable of carrying out reforms demanded by international creditors.

Under Lebanon’s constitution, any presidential candidate must have not held high office for at least two years.

Aoun faces daunting challenges, with the truce to oversee on the Israeli border and bomb-damaged neighbourhoods in the south, the east and the capital to rebuild.

Since 2019, Lebanon has been gripped by the worst financial crisis in its history.

The Hezbollah-Israel war has cost Lebanon more than $5 billion in economic losses, with structural damage amounting to billions more, according to the World Bank.


China – EU

Beijing accuses EU of slapping unfair restrictions on Chinese firms

China has accused the European Union of imposing discriminatory trade barriers following a six-month investigation into EU policies targeting Chinese firms, the Commerce Ministry said on Thursday.

The Commerce Ministry launched the inquiry in July after the EU began looking into whether Chinese government subsidies were undermining European competition.

It said that the implementation of the EU’s Foreign Subsidies Regulation (FSR) discriminated against Chinese businesses and constituted trade and investment barriers.

However, ministry officials did not mention whether Beijing planned to take action in response.

The EU and China are in dispute over several issues most notably over Beijing’s support for its renewables and electric-vehicle sectors.

EU actions against Chinese firms have come as the 27-nation bloc seeks to expand renewable energy use to meet its target of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

But Brussels also wants to move away from what it views as an over-reliance on Chinese technology.

Complained filed

When announcing the probe, the ministry said its national chamber of commerce for importing and exporting machinery and electronics had filed a complaint against the FSR measures.

The 20-page document detailing the ministry’s conclusions said their selective enforcement had resulted in Chinese products being treated more unfavourably during the process of export to the EU than products from third countries.

It added that the FSR had vague criteria for investigating foreign subsidies and placed a severe burden on the targeted companies.

The ministry said EU measures such as surprise inspections exceeded the necessary limits, while investigators were subjective and arbitrary on issues such as market distortion.

It added that companies deemed not to have complied with the inquries of EU officials had also faced severe penalties.

Beijing has consistently denied that its industrial policies are unfair and has threatened to take action against the EU to protect the legal rights as well as the interests of Chinese companies.   

The ministry said FSR investigations had forced Chinese firms to abandon or curtail projects, causing losses of around 2 billion euros.

“The measures have damaged the competitiveness of Chinese enterprises and products in the EU market,” the ministry said. 

Extra tariffs

The EU’s first probe under the FSR in February targeted a subsidiary of Chinese rail giant CRRC, but closed after the company withdrew from a tender in Bulgaria to supply electric trains.

A second inquiry looked at Chinese-owned solar panel manufacturers seeking to build and operate a photovoltaic park in Romania, partly financed by European funds.

In October, Brussels imposed extra tariffs on Chinese-made electric cars after an anti-subsidy investigation under a different set of rules concluded Beijing’s state support was unfairly undercutting European automakers.

In response, Beijing announced provisional tariffs on brandy imported from the EU, and later imposed temporary anti-dumping measures on the liquor.

(with newswires)


FRANCE – Terrorism

‘I saved human beings’, says Muslim man who hid Jews in Paris siege

France is marking 10 years since a terror attack at a Paris kosher supermarket left four Jewish people and their Islamist assailant dead. The majority of hostages survived thanks to the quick thinking of a Muslim employee from Mali who helped police end the siege. Lassana Bathily sat down with RFI to recall the day he became an accidental hero. 

Bathily was 24 and stacking shelves when gunman Amedy Coulibaly stormed the Hypercacher store at Porte de Vincennes on 9 January 2015, two days after the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

The narrative of a Muslim saving Jews from a jihadist made him a strong symbol of fraternity in a traumatised France.

“I’m just a good, simple citizen who reacted at the right time,” Bathily told RFI, denying he’s a hero.

However, a decade on, he’s still “scarred” by what was the deadliest anti-Semitic attack in modern French history.

Huddled in a cold store

Bathily was winding up his shift in the late afternoon, unpacking frozen items in the basement, when he heard shots fired upstairs.

Coulibaly, who claimed to be working in the name of Islamic State, had shot dead three shoppers and taken 17 others hostage.

He threatened to kill them unless the Kouachi brothers – who had carried out the Charlie Hebdo attacks two days earlier and were holed up in a printworks outside Paris – were allowed to go free.

“At first I thought it was an accident outside. But when the shots were repeated and then I saw all these customers, about 20 people, coming down towards me, I started to understand what was happening,” Bathily said.

He ushered them into the cold store, holding the door. After a few minutes he suggested they try and escape by using the goods lift to reach the emergency exit.

“They didn’t want to, they said it would put our lives in danger. I told them our lives were already in danger and we had to try something, but they didn’t want to follow me,” Bathily added.

So he cut off the motor, told them to put their phones on silent mode, and took the delivery lift alone.

Looking back, Bathily said the hostages had made the right decision. Colleagues later told him that Coulibaly had heard a noise near the emergency exit and went to investigate.

He would almost certainly have fired on a crowd.

Paris terror attacks trial recalls ‘terror’ and ‘cruelty’ of kosher store rampage

Seen as an accomplice

Outside, police mistook Bathily for an accomplice.

“They thought I had explosives on me so they shot at me,” he said. “They treated me badly in the beginning. They kept me handcuffed for an hour and a half.”

Once they realised he was a supermarket employee, Bathily used his knowledge of the store to map out the layout, helping police to prepare their raid.

Elite forces stormed the supermarket, killing Coulibaly and rescuing 15 hostages. Four hostages were found dead.

French police kill suspects in Charlie Hebdo attack and hostage taker

A reluctant hero

Bathily’s actions drew national attention, and the media celebrated him as a hero. A BFMTV video of him went viral.

“It was very difficult because I gave my first interview at 2 or 3 in the morning,” the now 34-year-old said. “Then the next day my face was everywhere and everyone was talking about me. People started criticising me, too.”

Some said that media and politicians in need of a feel-good story after three days of terrorist violence had exaggerated Bathily’s role.

“The media and officials wanted to paint this pretty picture, that he helped us escape downstairs, that he hid us, and so on,” one of the hostages told the daily Liberation a year after the attacks.

“It wasn’t really true, but that’s not Lassana’s fault.”

Bathily maintains he “didn’t invent anything” but was out of his depth and overwhelmed. 

“A Muslim working with Jews, who saved Jews, became a strong symbol,” he said. “No one was expecting it. I’ve always said Jews are my brothers.”

He had practised his faith freely at work, praying daily and observing Ramadan. One of the victims who died, Yohan Cohen, had been his good friend.

“I always say I saved human beings, whether Jews, atheists, or whatever. We’re all human beings, and we have to help one another when needed,” he added.

Pain endures for French Jews a decade after Toulouse shootings

‘Long live France’

Eleven days after the supermarket siege, Bathily was granted French nationality by then president François Hollande.

Having arrived in France in 2006 aged 16 as an unaccompanied minor, he had become, in the words of Hollande, “my favourite Frenchman”.

‘Long live freedom, long live friendship, long live France’, Bathily said in his acceptance speech.

The recognition has helped Bathily to build a normal life.

He now works at Paris city hall organising events, and goes into schools to talk about his experience and the importance of fighting against both Islamophobia and anti-Semitism.

“I’ll continue to tell my story, to talk about how we can continue to live together, whatever our religion,” Bathily said – though his hope to become an ambassador for fraternity remains unfulfilled.

Back in his home region of Kaï in southern Mali, some still speak of his actions. “They say: ‘Oh it’s Bathily the guy who saved people in France’,” he said.

“But in my own village we’ve moved on. I’m just Lassana. Lassana of the past, Lassana of the present. Still the same.”


MOZAMBIQUE

Thousands welcome Mozambique opposition leader as he returns from exile

Maputo (AFP) – Thousands of people turned out to meet Mozambique’s main opposition leader after he returned home from more than two months in exile Thursday to push his claim that he won the October presidential election.

Security forces barred supporters from going to Maputo‘s international airport to meet Venancio Mondlane as he landed, with at least one person shot and wounded at one of the barricades, an AFP photographer said.

But thousands gathered later at a market in the centre of the city, chanting “Venancio” and blowing whistles and vuvuzelas as Mondlane, flanked by security guards, stood on the top of a car and waved and pointed to the crowd.

His vehicle was thronged by large crowds as it left the area. Riot police fired tear gas that dispersed the gathering, an AFP reporter said.

Mondlane’s return comes a week before the inauguration of the next president, Daniel Chapo, the candidate of the ruling Frelimo party who was proclaimed winner of the vote.

Mondlane claims the vote was rigged in favour of Frelimo, which has held power for 50 years. He says a separate count showed that he won the vote, which he repeated at the airport.

Raising a hand as if taking an oath, Mondlane said in front of journalists that he was the “president… elected by the genuine will of the people”.

The dispute over the election results has unleashed waves of violence that have left around 300 people dead, including protesters killed in a police crackdown, according to a tally by a local rights group.

Via regular and widely followed social media addresses, Mondlane directed the demonstrations from an unknown location abroad.

Post-election chaos in Mozambique sparks mass exodus to Malawi

Uncertainty

The unrest has caused major losses to Mozambique‘s economy, stopping cross-border trade. Shipping, mining and industry have also been affected, while thousands of people are reported to have fled to neighbouring countries.

Soon after exiting the terminal, Mondlane knelt on the ground, a bible in his hand.

“I’m here in the flesh to say that if you want to negotiate… I’m here,” he told reporters, in a message for the authorities.

The government has called for dialogue to end the dispute but ignored Mondlane’s request for the talks to be held virtually while he was out of the country.

The opposition leader said he had also returned to “witness” what he said were attacks and the kidnapping of his supporters and to face any criminal charges the authorities had laid against him.

There had been no political agreement, Mondlane said. “I came to make history, I didn’t come to have a position, I didn’t come to have a role, I didn’t come to have perks.”

There were fears ahead of his arrival that Mondlane could be arrested, including on charges related to the weeks of protests by his supporters, many of them young Mozambicans desperate for change.

Mozambique’s highest court confirms Frelimo election victory

Any government action against Mondlane could send Mozambique — still scarred by years of civil war — into a major crisis, analysts said.

“If the government arrests Venancio, there will be an international outcry and potentially very dangerous demonstrations,” said Eric Morier-Genoud, an African history professor at Queen’s University Belfast.

“If they don’t arrest him, he will occupy the centre and Frelimo will be weakened just a few days before the inauguration of the deputies and the president,” he told AFP on Wednesday.

Back in Mozambique, Mondlane will “reclaim the political initiative”, Morier-Genoud said.

Mondlane’s return “will either destabilise or resolve the current political crisis”, said Tendai Mbanje, analyst at the Johannesburg-based African Centre for Governance.

“He is the current hope and future of the youths: if his life is at risk or tampered with, that will be a source of unending instability,” he said.

“On the other hand, if Frelimo would like to unite the country, it is time that they take his return as an opportunity for dialogue.”


Chad

At least 19 die in Chad during gunfight at presidential palace

The Chadian capital N’Djamena was on alert on Thursday after 19 people died during clashes between security forces and gunmen in the presidential complex.

The assault came after President Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno returned to his compound following talks with China’s Foreign Minister Wang-Yi.

Playing down Wednesday night’s assault, government spokesman Abderaman Koulamallah said on social media: “It was a little incident … everything is calm. This whole attempt at destabilisation has been thwarted.”

Eighteen assailants were killed in the gunfight and six wounded, the government said. One soldier from the presidential guard also died in the exchanges with the commando unit and three were injured as tanks moved onto the city’s streets. 

Earlier security sources described the incident as an attempted terrorist attack. But Koulamallah described the gunmen as  drunken “Pieds Nickelés” – a reference to a French comic strip featuring hapless crooks.

Change

Chad faces regular attacks by the terrorist group Boko Haram, especially in the western Lake Chad region that borders Cameroon, Nigeria and Niger.

On 20 December, Chad gave France six weeks to clear out its military personnel. The order came less than a month after Chad said it wanted to terminate the security and defence agreements that have linked it with France since the end of the colonial era

The declaration caught French diplomats off guard, but Déby stressed the move was not intended to strain ties with France, which has also been asked to withdraw troops from Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger in recent years. Senegal and Ivory Coast have also asked France to vacate military bases on their territory.

“The decision in no way constitutes a rejection of international cooperation or a calling into question of our diplomatic relations with France,” Déby said. “It is not a question of replacing one power with another.”


French politics

Brigitte Macron says Emmanuel deserves respect and won’t resign

President Emmanuel Macron “deserves” respect and is “sometimes” hurt by criticism, his wife Brigitte said in an interview broadcast on Wednesday. 

In an interview broadcast on Wednesday, she insisted, however, that he has no intention of resigning before the end of his term.

France has been mired in political deadlock since Macron gambled on snap elections last summer in a bid to bolster his authority and combat the rise of the far right.

Macron admits snap elections created more instability for France

The move backfired, with voters electing a parliament fractured between three rival blocs, while Macron’s approval ratings have hit record lows.

The 47-year-old French leader has been weakened by months of political crisis, with some opposition politicians urging him to resign.

 

‘More divisions than solutions’

Speaking to TF1 television, Brigitte Macron said: “Sometimes what he hears hurts him. It’s very difficult. But he doesn’t say it. He keeps it to himself,” in what were rare public comments about her husband’s political standing.

“Before, he spoke much more easily. Now he doesn’t say it. And that I understand. Because if there’s one thing Emmanuel deserves, it’s respect”.

During the interview, France’s 71-year-old first lady was asked about Macron, his relationship with the French, the dissolution of parliament and his desire to see his term of office through to the end.

Addressing French people in a televised address on New Year’s Eve, the French head of state admitted that dissolving parliament had “for now brought more divisions to the National Assembly than solutions”.

2024: The French president’s annus horribilis

History will judge

Brigitte Macron maintains that history will judge his decision.

“We’ll have to wait and see,” she said. “It’s not for me to say what I think, I’ve never said it and I never will”.

However, she admitted that the dissolution affected French people who she said were “anxious” and “a little lost“.

“Everyday life is very difficult”, Brigitte Macron added. “From abroad, France seems like a land of plenty, where you have health care, education, help, everything”.

Regarding any suggestion that Macron might step down before the end of his mandate in 2027, she underlined: “He said he would go all the way because that was the mission given to him by the French people,” adding he cared “so much” about the French.

“He cares about everything and he puts all his intelligence, all his heart at the service of the French people”. 

(With AFP)


French diplomacy

Blinken honoured in France, shrugs off Trump’s jibes ahead of transition

Signing off as America’s top diplomat, Antony Blinken was feted Wednesday by ally France – and forced to brush aside bombastic remarks by incoming president Donald Trump.

Blinken, on a farewell tour less than two weeks before Trump takes office, visited Paris where President Emmanuel Macron was presenting him with the Legion of Honor, France’s highest order of merit.

Blinken on Trump

“I would like to tell you that you show the face of the America that we love,” French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot told Blinken before the ceremony.

But as Blinken looked to highlight President Joe Biden’s efforts to nurture alliances, the secretary of state was asked to address threats by Trump against Greenland.

France warns Trump over military threats to take control of Greenland

The president-elect has made clear his designs on oil-rich and strategically placed Greenland, an autonomous territory of European Union member Denmark, and refused to rule out military action.

Asked about the remarks at a news conference with Barrot, Blinken, without using Trump’s name, said: “The idea expressed about Greenland is obviously not a good one, but maybe more important, it’s obviously one that’s not going to happen.”

“So we probably shouldn’t waste a lot of time talking about it,” Blinken said.

Blinken to receive France’s top honour in final diplomatic mission

Musk is ‘private citizen’ 

Blinken, a longtime Democratic Party policymaker and aide to Biden who generally has steered clear of electoral politics, also played down statements by Elon Musk, the technology entrepreneur joined at the hip with Trump for months.

The South African-born billionaire, who has been tasked by Trump with an initiative to curb government spending, has rattled European politicians by championing the far right in Germany and Britain.

Macron, Starmer join forces to tackle Musk ‘interference’ in European affairs

“Private citizens in our country can say what they want,” Blinken said. “He, like any American, has the right to express his views.”

Barrot, however, took direct aim at Musk and regretted the direction of Trump’s Republican Party, which championed more traditional security partnerships with Europe under Ronald Reagan.

“Everyone has the right to express their opinions, but obviously when you’re participating or aspiring to participate in a government, opinions take on a particular meaning,” Barrot said.

Barrot said Musk was making alliances with “parties of the far right that flirt with neo-Nazi currents, as is the case with the AfD” in Germany.

“The Republican Party will have to take responsibility for linking its destiny to parties that represent what the Republican Party always fought against,” he said.

Macron, Starmer join forces to tackle Musk ‘interference’ in European affairs

Hoping for French leadership

Blinken also visited South Korea and Japan on the tour and will head Thursday to Italy, where he will consult European allies on Syria and join Biden in an audience with Pope Francis.

But the visit to France, including the private ceremony for the Legion of Honor award, is especially poignant for Blinken, a fluent French speaker who spent part of his childhood in Paris and has spoken of France’s role in forming his worldview.

The decision to recognise Blinken also illustrates the full turnaround in relations since the start of Biden’s term in 2021, when France was infuriated after the United States forged a new three-way alliance with Britain and Australia that resulted in the rescinding of a lucrative contract for French submarines.

(With AFP)


WORLD HISTORY

War, peace and progress: why 2025 will be a standout year of remembrance

From Nazi Germany’s surrender to the historic Paris climate accord, 2025 marks a year of pivotal anniversaries that have shaped the world. As France reflects on Simone Veil’s groundbreaking fight for abortion rights 50 years ago and mourns a decade since terror struck the heart of Paris, we also commemorate 80 years since the dawn of the nuclear age, 35 years since Nelson Mandela’s walk to freedom, and an intrepid Moroccan scholar’s transformative journey seven centuries ago. 

JANUARY 

50 years since France’s abortion law passed 

In a watershed moment for women’s rights in France, parliament passed the Veil Law on 17 January 1975, decriminalising abortion. Coming eight years after the Neuwirth Law legalised contraception, the legislation followed campaigns where 343 women publicly declared having had abortions and 331 doctors admitted performing them. The law, championed by Health Minister Simone Veil, was made permanent in 1979. 

80 years since the liberation of Auschwitz  

On 27 January 1945, Soviet soldiers reached Auschwitz concentration camp, home to just a few thousand surviving prisoners, including future writer Primo Levi. The soldiers stumbled upon the camp by chance, and its immense scale shocked them. In the following days, filmmakers and investigators documented the survivors’ harrowing experiences. For years, the Jewish identity of most victims remained underacknowledged, often overshadowed by broader references to “victims of fascism”. 

FEBRUARY 

80 years since the Yalta Conference  

The future of post-war Europe was decided at the Yalta Conference in Crimea, opening on 4 February 1945. With Nazi Germany’s impending defeat, the meeting between Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt agreed to divide Germany into zones of occupation and shift Poland‘s borders eastward. General Charles de Gaulle of France, however, was excluded from the talks, underscoring France’s precarious position as it recovered from years of occupation and collaboration. His absence from the famous photographs long remained a sore point in France. 

35 years since Mandela’s release  

Nelson Mandela walked free after 26 years in prison on 11 February 1990, raising his fist in victory alongside his wife Winnie. His party, the African National Congress, was unbanned days later. The apartheid system, in place since 1948, was abolished the following year. Mandela and President Frederik de Klerk shared the 1993 Nobel Peace Prize before Mandela became South Africa‘s first black president in 1994. 

MARCH 

80 years since Anne Frank’s death  

Around 1 March 1945, Anne Frank died aged 15 in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Born in Frankfurt, she had lived in Amsterdam since 1933 when her family fled Nazi persecution. From 1942 to 1944, while hiding in a secret apartment, she wrote her famous diary. Her father Otto, the family’s sole survivor, published it in 1947. 

60 years since first spacewalk  

Soviet cosmonaut Alexei Leonov made history on 18 March 1965 as the first human to conduct a spacewalk. Floating 200 kilometres above Earth for precisely 12 minutes and nine seconds, he had prepared with 1,000 kilometres of cycling, 150 practice sessions and 117 parachute jumps. He risked gas embolism during re-entry, and his spacecraft landed 400 kilometres off target. 

APRIL 

50 years since Lebanon’s civil war began  

On 13 April 1975, attacks between Palestinian fighters and Christian militias launched Lebanon into 15 years of civil war. The violence began when Palestinian fedayeen attacked a Maronite church, followed by Christians targeting a bus carrying Palestinian fighters and civilians. The country, once nicknamed the “Switzerland of the Middle East” for its prosperity and stability, emerged from the conflict devastated and under the influence of Syria and Israel.

50 years since the Khmer Rouge takeover  

After five years of civil war, the Khmer Rouge captured Phnom Penh on 17 April 1975, overthrowing General Lon Nol‘s US-backed government. They immediately forced the population to leave the capital as part of their rural revolution. In under four years, their genocidal regime killed one in four Cambodians. 

MAY 

80 years since VE Day and the Setif massacre  

Nazi Germany formally surrendered to the Allied forces on 8 May 1945, marking the end of World War II in Europe. The same day, French colonial forces violently suppressed protests in Sétif, Guelma and Kherrata, killing thousands of Algerians. These massacres are now seen as precursors to the Algerian war of independence, which began nine years later. 

70 years since the Warsaw Pact  

On 14 May 1955, the Soviet Union and its eastern European allies signed the Warsaw Pact, a military alliance formed in response to NATO. The pact symbolised the division of Europe during the Cold War

JUNE 

80 years since Germany was divided  

On 5 June 1945, the four victorious Allied powers formalised the division of Germany into four occupation zones controlled by the US, the UK, the Soviet Union and France. Berlin sat within the Soviet sector. This laid the groundwork for the Cold War and Germany’s later split into East and West. 

700 years since Ibn Battuta’s pilgrimage 

On 14 June 1325, Moroccan explorer Ibn Battuta, hailed “the greatest medieval Muslim traveller”, embarked on a pilgrimage to Mecca. His voyage spanned 24 years and over 120,000 kilometres, taking him across Africa, the Middle East, India and Southeast Asia. Ibn Battuta’s detailed accounts remain invaluable records of medieval life and cultures.  

50 years since Mozambique’s independence 

Mozambique declared independence from Portugal on 25 June 1975 after a decade-long war of liberation. The end of Portuguese colonial rule across Africa was hastened by Portugal’s Carnation Revolution in 1974. 

JULY 

30 years since Srebrenica massacre 

Bosnian Serb forces overran the town of Srebrenica, a UN-designated safe zone, on 11 July 1995. Over the following days, they carried out the systematic massacre of more than 8,000 Muslim men and boys, making it Europe’s worst atrocity since World War II. About 30,000 people fled to Potocari seeking protection at the Dutch UN base, but found little safety. The victims’ bodies were buried in mass graves across the region, and the International Criminal Court later ruled the killings a genocide. It became a symbol of the world’s failure to prevent mass atrocities in the Bosnian War

80 years since first nuclear test  

The first nuclear weapons test took place on 16 July 1945 at Alamogordo, New Mexico, as part of the Manhattan Project. Los Alamos scientists developed the plutonium fission device nicknamed “Gadget”. Project leader J Robert Oppenheimer chose the codename Trinity from a John Donne poem. The blast, equal to 20 kilotons of TNT, was heard 160 kilometres away. 

AUGUST 

80 years since Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs 

At 8:15am on 6 August 1945, a US B-29 bomber dropped “Little Boy“, the first atomic bomb used in warfare, on Hiroshima. Exploding 500-600 metres above ground, it generated power equivalent to 15,000 tonnes of TNT. Nearly one-third of the city’s 245,000 residents died instantly, while thousands more perished in the following months from radiation exposure. Three days later, on 9 August, a second atomic bomb named “Fat Man” devastated Nagasaki, instantly killing an estimated 40,000 people. 

SEPTEMBER 

80 years since the end of World War II 

Japan formally surrendered aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay on 2 September 1945, bringing World War II to an official close.  

80 years since Vietnam’s independence 

Also on 2 September 1945, Vietnam declared independence from French colonial rule. This followed a brief period of Japanese occupation during World War II. The declaration by Ho Chi Minh marked the start of Vietnam’s struggle to achieve full sovereignty, which would take decades to realise. 

OCTOBER 

90 years since the Italian invasion of Ethiopia  

Benito Mussolini‘s forces invaded Ethiopia from Italian Somalia and Eritrea on 3 October 1935. It took seven months to conquer Emperor Haile Selassie‘s empire. This colonial war, seen as anachronistic by other European powers, exposed the failure of the League of Nations, the world’s first international peacekeeping body, to prevent conflict. It also saw the widespread use of poison gas against civilians. 

80 years since the UN’s founding  

The United Nations was established on 24 October 1945 after China, the US, France, Britain, the Soviet Union and 45 other member states ratified its charter. The global body was created to promote peace and prevent conflicts after the devastation of World War II. 

NOVEMBER 

100 years since France’s first radio news  

On 3 November 1925, French journalism entered the modern era when Maurice Privat delivered the country’s first regular radio news bulletin from the Eiffel Tower. This historic broadcast came just three years after Radio Tour Eiffel began transmitting as France’s pioneering radio station. The station, which operated until the Nazi occupation in June 1940, revolutionised how French citizens received their news. In a significant shift toward media independence, the government had already begun separating state control of radio frequencies from programme content in 1924, allowing independent associations to shape what went on air. This early commitment to editorial freedom helped establish France’s enduring tradition of public broadcasting.

10 years since the Paris attacks  

On 13 November 2015, coordinated terrorist attacks by Islamic State struck Paris and its suburb of Saint-Denis, killing 130 people and hospitalising 413. The attackers targeted the Bataclan concert hall, several busy cafes and restaurants, and the national stadium during a France-Germany football match. The Bataclan suffered the heaviest toll, with 90 people killed during a two-hour hostage situation. The attacks remain the deadliest in modern French history. They marked the tragic peak of a year that began with January attacks on the Charlie Hebdo newspaper and a kosher supermarket, which killed 17 people. 

80 years since the Nuremberg trials  

The Nuremberg trials of 24 top Nazi leaders opened on 20 November 1945, establishing the first international criminal court. Eleven defendants were hanged on 16 October 1946, while Hermann Göring committed suicide the night before. Three were acquitted, one died before trial and another was deemed medically unfit. 

50 years since Franco’s death  

Spanish dictator Francisco Franco died in Madrid on 20 November 1975, aged 82, ending his 36-year grip on power. His death followed a month-long illness that gained international attention. His son-in-law helped extend Franco’s survival through artificial means to delay the inevitable succession crisis. Known as El Caudillo (the Leader), Franco made his final public appearance on 12 October. His death marked the end of Western Europe’s longest-running dictatorship and paved the way for Spain‘s return to democracy. 

DECEMBER 

10 years since the Paris climate agreement  

On 12 December 2015, 196 nations adopted the Paris Agreement to combat climate change. While legally binding, the agreement’s goal of limiting global warming to “well below” 2C remains increasingly challenging. The US withdrew in 2020 but rejoined the following year. The UN has warned the world is on track for far higher temperature increases by the end of the century. 

40 years of Les Restos du Coeur  

French comedian Coluche founded Les Restos du Coeur (Restaurants of the Heart) on 21 December 1985, creating what is today one of France’s most vital food charities. It was launched during a period of harsh economic austerity, when many French families struggled to afford food. Inspired by singer Daniel Balavoine, who sponsored the first campaign, the charity began by offering free meals to those in need. Four decades later, it has grown into a national institution. In 2022-23, amid rising living costs and inflation, the organisation set a new record by distributing 170 million meals to France’s most vulnerable citizens.  

80 years since establishment of the CFA franc  

On 26 December 1945, France officially established the CFA franc as the currency for its African colonies, though it had been in use since 1939. Originally the “French Colonies in Africa” franc, the currency survived decolonisation and is still used today in 14 African nations. France’s ratification of the Bretton Woods agreements brought the currency into the International Monetary Fund’s parity system, pegging it first to the French franc and later to the euro. The arrangement has sparked ongoing debate, with critics seeing it as a tool of French economic control in Africa, while supporters argue it provides monetary stability. The currency stands as one of the most enduring legacies of French colonialism in Africa. 

80 years since founding of the IMF and World Bank  

Two institutions that would shape the post-war economic world opened their doors in Washington on 27 December 1945: the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. Created at the Bretton Woods Conference in July 1944, the IMF emerged as the guardian of global financial stability, helping countries manage currency crises and economic challenges. On the same day, its sister institution, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), began its mission to rebuild war-torn economies. The IBRD later evolved into today’s World Bank Group, becoming the world’s largest development bank.


FRANCE

French government denounces street parties celebrating Jean-Marie Le Pen death

French officials have condemned jubilant street celebrations following the death of far-right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen, urging dignity after hundreds gathered in major cities to mark Tuesday’s passing of the controversial National Front founder. 

The government struck a measured tone in response to the death of Le Pen, who was expelled from his own party after repeatedly denying the Holocaust – with Prime Minister François Bayrou describing him as a “fighter” and a “figure of French political life”. 

Impromptu parties that broke out in several cities quickly drew sharp criticism. 

“Nothing, absolutely nothing justifies dancing on a corpse,” said Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau. “The death of a man, even if he is a political opponent, should inspire only restraint and dignity. These scenes of jubilation are deeply disgraceful.”  

Scenes in Paris, Lyon, Marseille 

In the French capital, several hundred demonstrators converged on Place de la République, with some climbing the square’s central statue and chanting anti-fascist slogans and lighting smoke bombs.  

One placard in the crowd read: “That filthy racist is dead.” 

Around 200 to 300 gathered in Lyon, reportedly at the invitation of extreme-left groups, where fireworks were set off, while in Marseille protesters displayed signs reading “Finally” as they opened bottles of champagne.  

While those gatherings were mostly peaceful, police in Strasbourg intervened to disperse around 200 demonstrators. 

Far-right National Front founder Jean-Marie Le Pen dies aged 96

Reactions were more nuanced in Marseille’s Saint Barnabé neighbourhood, a National Rally stronghold – an indication of the deep divisions over Le Pen’s legacy. 

“May he rest in peace. He lived 96 years. You have to admit he was a character – although there were some some slip-ups that I didn’t like,” Jeannot, 64, told RFI at a local cafe. 

Forty-year-old National Rally voter Vincent, who lives in the neighbourhood, said: “He’s a man who left his mark on my youth and my adult life because he shaped the political landscape. Even if we don’t agree with him, we have to acknowledge that he had the strength of character to defend France as he saw it.” 

Defining figure

Le Pen, who founded the National Front in 1972 and led it until 2011, became a defining figure of the far right in France.

Convicted multiple times for hate speech, including comments dismissing the Holocaust as “merely a detail of history”, his political career was marred by controversy.  

Le Pen’s rhetoric often attracted fierce opposition and widespread protests, particularly during his surprise run-off in the 2002 presidential election. 

After taking over the party’s leadership, his daughter Marine Le Pen expelled him in an effort to rebrand the movement and distance it from his extremist image. The party was renamed the National Rally.

Jean-Marie Le Pen passed away on Tuesday in a health facility near Paris.

A private service is planned in the capital, followed by burial on Saturday in his hometown of La Trinité-sur-Mer, in Brittany.  


History

Jean-Marie Le Pen’s death revives Algeria’s painful colonial memories

The death of right-wing French politician Jean-Marie Le Pen on Tuesday has brought dark memories to the surface for many in Algeria, where he was accused of using torture during the war of independence. He also raised heckles with his rejection of migrants, his position on Islam and on France’s colonial role in the north African country.

Jean-Marie Le Pen’s involvement with Algeria began in the mid-1950s.

Freshly elected to parliament, he left France at the age of 27 to fight as a paratrooper against the country’s struggle for independence from France.

“I felt that it was my duty to go there with the contingent since, deep down, I agreed to preserve this part of France,” he said of this period.

There, he was accused of torture. While he would later deny these accusations he did not deny that this type of practice took place.

“If it is necessary to torture one man to save a hundred, torture is inevitable, and therefore, in the abnormal conditions in which we are asked to act, it is just,” Le Pen was quoted as saying in Le Monde, in 1957. 

RFI correspondent Fayçal Metaoui cites the eyewitness accounts of Mohamed and Dahmane, two Algerian veterans, who testified against Le Pen in a documentary broadcast in 2017.

“They removed the mattress, tied me and my father to the box spring… and then they started the electricity. And it was Jean-Marie Le Pen who flipped the switch. It was Jean-Marie Le Pen! He was the leader of the torturers at Fort l’Empereur!”, the men said.

France called to fully recognise use of torture during Algerian war

Painful memories

Farida, a pharmacist, also evokes Le Pen’s presence in Algeria‘s war years. “Jean-Marie Le Pen was a person reviled and hated by Algerians because of his dark past. During the French occupation, he practiced torture against Algerians in a horrific manner,” she says. “He tried not to admit to his crimes, but testimonies and evidence exist that confirm his actions.”

Kamel, a teacher, accuses the founder of the National Front of promoting racism. “These heinous practices during the national liberation war are remembered by today’s generations and it does not stop there. Since then, Le Pen has greatly contributed to building an opinion hostile to migrants in France and to spreading hatred against foreigners in this country.”

Le Pen’s time in Algeria would be key to the rest of his political career. It was with supporters of French Algeria and former collaborators with the German Nazis that he created the National Front in 1972.

France to consider foundation for Algerian harki fighters and their descendants

For French historian Benjamin Stora, “Le Pen is fundamentally a man of the Fourth Republic, and this is the moment when the colonial empire falters.”

Arriving too late for the Indochina War, Le Pen intended to make up for it in Algeria, Stora explains in an interview on FranceInfo on Tuesday.

“The whole political memory [of Jean-Marie Le Pen] is that of nostalgia, of a great France of the empire, which according to him would have been betrayed and abandoned by the various French political leaders”.

Anti-immigration

Le Pen’s party’s obsession was immigration, particularly from Algeria – a subject he brought to the fore in French political debate from the 1980s onwards.

Le Pen earned numerous condemnations for his racist and discriminatroy comments over the years.

In 2005, for example, he was sentenced on appeal to a €10,000 fine for inciting racial hatred after comments in an interview with the newspaper Le Monde on 19 April, 2003.

“The day we have in France, no longer 5 million but 25 million Muslims, they will be in charge. And the French will creep along beside the walls, get off the sidewalks and lower their eyes,” he said in the interview.

Anti-Semitic hate trial opens for French far-right veteran Jean-Marie Le Pen

He was ordered to pay €10,000 in damages to the Union of Jewish Students of France for comments he made in 1996: “I believe in racial inequality. Yes, of course, it’s obvious. All history demonstrates this. They do not have the same capacity nor the same level of historical evolution,” he declared.

Elsewhere in Africa, Le Pen had mixed reviews and found himself at odds with most leaders.

He never hid his admiration for South Africa’s system of aparteid and was accused of receiving money from Gabon’s president Omar Bongo in 1987, a charge he denied.

In the end, it was only with Jean-Bedel Bokassa that Jean-Marie Le Pen maintained a semblance of a relationship. He met the deposed Central African leader in France in the early 1980s. The two men shared a common past, that of fighting in the Indochina war within the French army.


France – Iran

France warns citizens against traveling to Iran until hostages are released

France’s foreign minister on Tuesday urged its citizens to avoid travelling to Iran until French nationals held there have been released.

“The situation of our compatriots held hostage in Iran is quite simply unacceptable. They have been unjustly detained for several years, in unworthy conditions,” Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said, urging French nationals not to go to Iran until the hostages have been freed.

According to French authorities, three French nationals are held in Iran.

Cecile Kohler and her partner Jacques Paris have been jailed in Iran since May 2022 on charges of espionage, a capital offence in the Islamic republic.

Another French citizen, identified only by his first name, Olivier, has been in jail since October 2022. French authorities have not released details of his case.

Barrot said Paris had not forgotten about them “for a single second”.

Iran claims French couple imprisoned since 2022 ‘in good health’

Since the election of President Masoud Pezeshkian and “despite our efforts to engage at the highest level, their situation has deteriorated”, Barrot added.

“I say to the Iranian authorities: our hostages must be released,” he said, adding that “bilateral relations and the future of the sanctions” were at stake.

“And until our hostages have been completely released, I ask our compatriots not to travel to Iran.”

Iran, which does not recognise dual citizenship, holds several Europeans in detention, most of them also Iranian.

Rights groups describe them as “hostages” used as leverage in negotiations.

France denounces ‘state hostage-taking’ by Iran as couple mark two years in jail

In December, Italian journalist Cecilia Sala, reported to be 29, was arrested in Tehran.

Iran said it arrested Sala for “violating the law”, a move decried by Italy as “unacceptable”.

(with AFP)


EU DEMOCRACY

Macron, Starmer join forces to tackle Musk ‘interference’ in European affairs

Paris and London have called out billionarie Elon Musk for alleged interference in European political debate and spreading of misinformation, with France urging a robust EU response to protect public discourse.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer will host French President Emmanuel Macron for talks this Thursday following comments made by tech billionaire Elon Musk which have been deemed as “interfering” with European politics. 

According to the prime minister’s office, Starmer will meet with Macron at his country retreat of Chequers in Buckinghamshire near London. 

Musk has provoked fury across Europe with a string of hostile attacks on Starmer and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

The billionaire has spent days posting incendiary comments on his X platform over historical sex offences against children in northern England.

Musk has called for Labour leader Starmer – elected by a landslide in a general election last July – to be removed from office.

He has also urged the release from jail of Tommy Robinson, one of Britain’s best known far-right agitators. 

On Monday, Starmer condemned those “spreading lies and misinformation,” adding that “a line has been crossed” with some of the online criticism – in a thinly veiled swipe at Musk.

Starmer pushes for stronger post-Brexit EU ties in Paris and Berlin talks

Protect EU states from ‘interference’

This comes as France’s foreign minister urged the European Commission to protect EU member states with “the greatest firmness” against interference in political debate, particularly from Musk. 

Speaking this Wednesday on France Inter radio, Jean-Noel Barrot said: “Either the European Commission applies with the greatest firmness the laws that we have given ourselves to protect our public space, or it does not do so and then it will have to agree to give back the capacity to do so to the EU member states.”

“We have to wake up,” he added.

Asked whether X could be banned in Europe, Barrot replied that such a mechanism to close a social media platform “is laid out in our laws”.

“As Europeans,” Barrot posted on X, “we have equipped ourselves with clear rules to protect public debate online”.

Musk’s ‘DOGE’ commission

Musk, who has secured unprecedented influence thanks to his proximity to US president-elect Donald Trump, is set for a prominent role in Trump’s administration as head of a so-called “Department of Government Efficiency” or DOGE. 

He has provoked fury across Europe with a string of attacks on the continent’s leaders, including German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

“When you take part in a government or aspire to take part in one, your opinions have a rather special value,” said Barrot.*

EU concerned by high disinformation rate on Musk’s X platform

Macron slams ‘direct intervention’

On Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron accused Musk of intervening in elections, including Germany’s snap legislative polls next month.

“Ten years ago, who could have imagined it if we had been told that the owner of one of the largest social networks in the world would support a new international reactionary movement and intervene directly in elections, including in Germany,” Macron said in a speech to French ambassadors.


geopolitics

France warns Trump over military threats to take control of Greenland

France warned the United States on Wednesday against threatening European Union sovereignty after president-elect Donald Trump refused to rule out military action to take control of Greenland. 

The European Union will not tolerate threats to its borders, France‘s foreign minister said, as tensions rose over Trump’s comments about the Arctic territory, which is an autonomous part of EU member Denmark. 

“There is obviously no question that the European Union would let other nations of the world attack its sovereign borders, whoever they are,” Jean-Noel Barrot told France Inter radio.

“We are a strong continent.”  

Greenland push 

Trump first expressed interest in acquiring Greenland, an autonomous territory of EU member Denmark, in 2019 when he cancelled a trip to Copenhagen after Denmark’s prime minister dismissed the idea of its purchase as “absurd”.  

Trump’s most recent comments came during a press conference where he was asked whether he would commit to avoiding economic or military action to acquire Greenland and the Panama Canal. 

“No, I can’t assure you on either of those two. But I can say this, we need them for economic security,” Trump said. 

He later took to his platform, Truth Social, to elaborate on his intentions.  

Activist Paul Watson freed after Denmark refuses extradition to Japan

“Greenland is an incredible place, and the people will benefit tremendously if and when it becomes part of our nation. We will protect it, and cherish it, from a very vicious outside World. MAKE GREENLAND GREAT AGAIN,” Trump posted

While expressing concern over Trump’s comments, Barrot downplayed the likelihood of actual conflict. 

“If you’re asking me whether I think the United States will invade Greenland, my answer is no. But have we entered into a period of time when it is survival of the fittest? Then my answer is yes,” he said. 

Danish position 

Denmark has reiterated that Greenland, which has been part of its kingdom for more than 600 years, is not for sale. 

“I don’t think it’s a good way forward to fight each other with financial means when we are close allies and partners,” Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said. 

While she welcomed US interest in the Arctic, Frederiksen stressed it must be “done in a way that is respectful of the Greenlandic people”. 

Greenlandic Prime Minister Mute Egede, who has called for eventual independence from Denmark, also rejected the idea of joining the US.  


Football

French coach Deschamps to step down after 2026 World Cup

France’s 2018 World Cup-winning coach Didier Deschamps announced on Wednesday he will leave his post after the 2026 World Cup in North America.

“I have been there since 2012, it is planned that I will be there until 2026,” Deschamps told French broadcaster TF1 on Wednesday.

“I have done my time, with the same desire, the same passion to keep the France team at the highest level, but 2026 is good,” he added.

Deschamps led the French team ‘Les Bleus’ to the 2018 World Cup title, becoming only the third man to win the football tournament as a player and a manager.

He took over from Laurent Blanc in 2012 and has taken France to three major finals in total, losing the Euro 2016 final to Portugal and the 2022 World Cup showpiece to Argentina.

Deschamps was captain when Les Bleus won their first World Cup on home soil in 1998.

The 56-year-old has already set the record for longest-serving official France coach.

European qualifying for the 2026 World Cup, which will be held in the United States, Mexico and Canada, gets under way later this year.

Zidane waiting in wings?

Zinedine Zidane, who won the 1998 World Cup as a player alongside Deschamps, has long been tipped as the favourite to eventually replace him in the dugout.

Now 52, Zidane has been lying in wait since ending his second spell as coach of Real Madrid in 2021. One of France’s greatest ever players, he won the Champions League three times with Madrid but has not managed any other club.

“Nobody is irreplaceable,” admitted Deschamps. “I have tried to be as indispensable as possible with the results that you know, but that is behind us now.”

Zidane’s shadow will continue to hang over the France team in the coming months, as they prepare for their next matches, beginning with a two-legged Nations League quarter-final in March against Croatia.

(with AFP)


GLOBAL RELATIONS

Africa takes centre stage as South Africa maps ambitious G20 agenda

As the first African country to lead the trillion-dollar G20 group, South Africa will spend 2025 pushing debt relief, climate change and international justice issues. This means there’s a lot at stake for Brics and developing nations.

“We will work towards solidarity, equality and sustainable development that will have an impact on many people around the world,” President Cyril Ramaphosa said in his New Year address last night.

“Every South African will be part of the journey towards a better future for all.”

Pretoria aims to put African development priorities firmly on the G20 agenda – and more broadly, those of the Global South.

South Africa took over the rotating presidency of the grouping in December, and will host its main annual summit in November 2025, before handing over to the United States.

‘Not unexpected’

The forum unites 19 of the world’s largest economies plus the European Union, who meet regularly to coordinate global policies on trade, health, climate and other issues. The group granted the African Union membership in 2023.

South Africa is the last member of the G20 to hold the presidency of the group, which was set up in 1999 to create a platform for the world’s most dynamic economies beyond the G7.

William Gumede, of the University of the Witwatersrand‘s School of Governance in Johannesburg, says it’s important not to overstate the significance of an African country taking the helm.

“The G20 has a rotating presidency, so it was at some point coming to South Africa. It is not out of the ordinary, it is not unexpected,” he told RFI.

G20 backs climate finance deal but faces fossil fuel backlash

“The only irony is that this comes after Brazil and it appears that all the Brics countries in the last couple of years have been taking over the presidency. But, it is just by rotation,” he added, referring to the economic bloc comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Iran, Egypt, Ethiopia and the United Arab Emirates.

A challenging time

South Africa’s G20 presidency comes as the country and its governing African National Congress (ANC) party faces significant internal challenges.

Economic stagnation, high unemployment and political uncertainty have cast a shadow over the country’s leadership aspirations.

But its leadership also stands to create opportunities for growth.

“Such events help improve infrastructure and create at least temporary jobs, which is happening now, especially in Cape Town,” he said.

Events throughout the year, including cultural performances with international guests, will allow South Africa to showcase itself to global partners.

South Africa’s humbled ANC seeks to form national unity government

Key issues

Debt relief, climate change and peacekeeping are expected to dominate this year’s G20 discussions.

“The climate change crisis is worsening,” Ramaphosa said in early December, as he unveiled his G20 priorities. “Many economies carry the burden of unsustainable levels of debt.”

Pretoria’s new coalition government, formed in June last year, is also advocating for a transition to cleaner technologies, such as solar power, which is increasingly being adopted in southern Africa.

And it wants to promote unity and diversity as a positive tool not only for South Africa, but more broadly for developing economies.

Zambia’s crippling drought creates chance for solar power to shine

Foreign affairs

The presidency is likely to influence South Africa’s foreign relations, particularly with the United States.

Some key summit dates remain unconfirmed, possibly awaiting news of Donald Trump.’s plans following his inauguration on 20 January.

If Trump attends the G20 summit, it will mark his first major global appearance outside industrialised nations.

“Putin is not going to come, but speculatio is raging about Trump. For him, it would be big and symbolic,” Gumede said.

South Africa takes Israel to international court for ‘genocidal’ acts in Gaza

But it may not be smooth sailing for relations between the US and South Africa. 

Cameron Hudson, a senior fellow at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in DC, noted that tensions between South Africa and the US could complicate matters.

“Pretoria has long had pro-China, pro-Russia and anti-Israel positions, which will not work well with Donald Trump,” he said.

Talks at this year’s forum could potentially influence South Africa’s foreign policy, shifting it to a more neutral stance, Gumede suggested.

“The new unity government has shared no criticism of Trump so far, not even from the ANC,” he told RFI. And that could help improve relations between the US and the African continent in general.


Sudan crisis

US sanctions Sudan’s RSF leader over genocide claims but critics say it is not enough

The United States has determined that Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have “committed genocide” in Sudan and has imposed sanctions on the paramilitary group’s leader. While conflict resolution NGOs have welcomed the decision, many organisations and analysts fear that the move may be ‘too little, too late.’

The announcement was made on Tuesday and deals a setback to the RSF’s efforts to improve its image and assert its legitimacy, including attempts to establish a civilian government.

The paramilitary group aims to expand its territory beyond the area it currently controls, which amouts to about half the country.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the determination was based on information about the RSF’s systematic murder of men and boys and the targeted rape of women and girls from certain ethnic groups.

“The United States is committed to holding accountable those responsible,” Blinken said. He also announced sanctions against RSF leader Mohammad Hamdan Daglo, known as Hemedti, for his role in what he describes as systematic atrocities committed against the Sudanese people.

Avaaz, Refugees International, and other NGOs welcomed the decision.

The genocide determination will substantially impact the RSF’s ability to continue fighting, Mohammed Suliman, a Sudanese researcher and writer based in Boston, told Avaaz, particularly given the Emirati lobby’s efforts to neutralise US involvement in the Sudanese conflict.

Call to action

The US Treasury Department unveiled its own sanctions against Daglo on Tuesday, accusing the RSF of engaging in a brutal armed conflict with the Sudanese Armed Forces for control of Sudan.

“Through its campaign in Darfur, Gezira and other combat areas, the RSF has committed a litany of documented war crimes and atrocities,” a Treasury Department statement said.

As the overall commander of the RSF, Daglo “bears command responsibility for the abhorrent and illegal actions of his forces,” it added.

The Treasury has designated seven companies and one individual linked to the RSF for their roles in procuring weapons for the group.

“The United States continues to call for an end to this conflict that is putting innocent civilian lives in jeopardy,” said D Secretrary  of the Treasury, Wally Adeyemo, said.

In response, the RSF has accused the US of double standards, saying it is failing to effectively address the ongoing crisis.

Criticisms

The announcement had been expected by many in Sudan and in the humanitarian workers community. But for most of them, it is “too little too late,” as Cameron Hudson, a senior fellow at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in DC, wrote on social media.

“It’s too late to fix a failed (non-existent) Sudan policy and it’s too late to get on the right side of history,” he added.

“The fact is that this Administration had all the evidence they needed to make these announcements months ago when they could have had an impact on this war and they chose not to make them. With less than 2 weeks left in power, this is nothing more than a reflection of a guilty conscience.”

Blinken’s announcement is only as meaningful as the actions taken to address it, civil society groups also said.

Lauren Fortgang is executive director of Preventing And Ending Mass Atrocities (PAEMA), a US-based organisation working with communities in Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Burma, and Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh, dedicated to preventing and ending mass atrocities by amplifying the integral role of community centred solutions.

The genocide determination by the US Secretary of State “reaffirms the daily reality of millions of Sudanese living through hell on Earth due to the brutality unleashed by the RSF and SAF,” she wrote in a statement, but “it must be accompanied by stronger policies that match the severity of the worst humanitarian crisis the world has ever seen, as well as the severe protection crisis which worsens by the day.”

Sudan war sparks ‘biggest humanitarian crisis ever recorded’ – IRC

The group called for the long overdue sanctions against Hemedti to be coordinated and truly effective.

The United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, adopted after World War II, defines genocide as “acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group.”

But legal experts started to question the ability of Secretary Blinken to determining genocide, especially as the UN, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have declared an ongoing genocide in Gaza, which the US refuses to recognise let alone address.

War in Sudan leaves 13 million people displaced and more than half the population malnourished

 (with newswires)

Spotlight on Africa

DRC takes on Apple: can conflict mineral mining be stopped?

Issued on:

The Democratic Republic of Congo is launching an unprecedented case against the American tech giant Apple over conflict minerals. To explore the issues at hand, RFI talked to a former UN expert to discuss whether any progress has been made in curbing illegal mining.

This week, we focus on the fight against the exploitation of ‘blood minerals’ or ‘conflict minerals’ in Central Africa, particularly in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

Conflic minerals is the term used by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) to describe minerals sourced from conflict-affected and high-risk areas, such as tantalum, tin, tungsten (referred to as the ‘3Ts’), gold, cobalt, coltan, and lithium.

These minerals are essential for high-tech applications, including smartphones, electric batteries, and other advanced technology such as appliances, cars, and even wind turbines. They are predominantly found in the African Great Lakes region, especially in eastern DRC.

In an effort to combat the illegal and exploitative trade of these minerals, the NGO Global Witness established a transition team several years ago.

The May 2022 a report from Global Witness revealed that these minerals are used in products by international brands such as Apple, Intel, Samsung, Nokia, Motorola, and Tesla.

Now, with a trial underway in France and Belgium accusing Apple, many observers are hopeful that it could bring about meaningful change.

The Democratic Republic of Congo has filed a criminal case against European subsidiaries of the tech giant Apple, alleging the company has illicitly used conflict minerals in its supply chain.

The American company claims it no longer sources conflict minerals from Central Africa, but is it doing enough?

DRC case against Apple brings new hope in conflict minerals crisis

The complaints filed against Apple have been described by lawyers involved as a matter of significant public interest.

European countries, consumers, and non-governmental organisations are increasingly scrutinising the international supply chains of minerals, with calls for highly profitable companies to be held accountable.

This complaint could mark the beginning of a broader wave of legal actions targeting technology companies linked to the sourcing of conflict minerals.

To examine the implications of this trial, this week’s guest is Gregory Mthembu-Salter, a researcher specialising in Africa’s political economy and a former consultant to the UN Group of Experts on the DRC on due diligence regarding conflict minerals. He is based in South Africa.


Episode mixed by Erwan Rome.

Spotlight on Africa is a podcast from Radio France Internationale.


France

Far-right National Front founder Jean-Marie Le Pen dies aged 96

Jean-Marie Le Pen, the founder of the far-right National Front, died on Tuesday at the age of 96. Le Pen was often embroiled in legal battles over his racist, anti-Semitic, and homophobic remarks, and was eventually expelled from the party he founded, which has since moved from the fringes to the mainstream of French political life.

Over the course of his sixty-year political career, which spanned five presidential elections, Jean-Marie Le Pen revived the French far right, which had previously been disgraced by its collaboration with the Nazi regime.

He stayed at the head of the National Front, the party he co-founded in 1972, until 2011, when he handed the reins to his daughter, Marine Le Pen.

But his racist and anti-Semitic stances made him unpalatable for a renewed far right, and the party expelled him in 2015 because he repeated comments, first made in 1987, that the Nazi gas chambers were a “detail of history”.

From Algeria to France

Born in Brittany, in La Trinité-sur-Mer, in 1928, Le Pen came to politics relatively early in his life.

After studying law and political science in Paris, he enlisted in the army in 1954, going to Indochina.

Back in Paris, an accolade of populist Pierre Poujade, Le Pen was elected to parliament in 1956, becoming the youngest member of the National Assembly.

At the end of that year he returned to Algeria, where he served in the army from the end of 1956 to April 1957 – the height of the Battle of Algiers.

Le Pen was accused of torturing Algerians, which he made little attempt to hide at the time.

“I have nothing to hide. I tortured because it had to be done,” he said in a 1962 interview in the Combat newspaper, which he later corrected, saying he used “methods of coercion”, not torture.

Decades later, he came to deny using torture at all and filed several legal suits against anyone insinuating it.

Unifying France’s far right

Le Pen headed the 1965 presidential campaign of far-right lawyer Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour, and he worked to consolidate the various far-right movements in France.

In 1972, he was appointed to head a new party called the Front national pour l’unité française, known as the Front national, or National Front (FN).

Le Pen ran for president for the first time in 1974, and made his way through French politics – becoming a millionaire along the way, after inheriting a mansion in 1976.

By 2002, running on a platform of “national preference” and promising to immediately deport “all illegal immigrants”, Le Pen won more votes that Socialist prime minister Lionel Jospin, making it into the second round of the election.

Rise of the party, fall of the man

The surprising result brought millions of people into the street to march against racism and Le Pen as its political incarnation. He was thrashed by conservative candidate Jacques Chirac. 

That marked the start of the party’s rise, even as Le Pen’s own political career began to nose-dive.

Marine Le Pen took over the FN and began to try and make it palatable to a broader constituency, in a process that she called dé-diabolisation, or de-demonisation.

However, her father disagreed with the approach and remained true to himself, continuing to espouse anti-Semitic and other hate speech.

In 2015, after repeating his take on the gas chambers, the party decided to dismiss its founder, expelling him from the party the following year.

  • France’s far right tries to move away from past anti-Semitism

Grudging acceptance

Le Pen remained bitter about how the party was being run and never forgave his daughter for changing the name to the National Rally in 2018. He left the European Parliament in 2019 and gradually withdrew from public life.

Keen to keep his legacy alive, Le Pen wrote the first volume of his memoirs in 2018: Fils de la nation (Son of the nation), which sold out even before it went on sale.

He created the Jean-Marie Le Pen Institute in August 2020 to house the archives of the far right.

Family first

The Le Pens agreed to stop debating each other in public in the spring of 2023, after Jean-Marie suffered a heart attack.

A year later, he was put under the guardianship of his daughters, meaning they would make legal decisions for him. This put into question his ability to stand trial in the case involving parliamentary assistants working for the National Rally at the EU parliament. 

His case ended up being separated from that of his daughter and other party leaders, after a medical expert concluded he was not able to prepare his own defense.

Le Pen died in a hospital in Garches, near Paris, where he had been admitted several weeks ago, according to his family.

He is survived by his second wife, Jany Le Pen, three daughters – of whom Marine is the youngest – as well as eight grandchildren. One of his granddaughters, politician Marion Marechal Le Pen, left the National Rally to found her own far-right movement.


Charlie Hebdo

Charlie Hebdo vaunts its ‘indestructibility’ 10 years after massacre

A decade after jihadists stormed its Paris newsroom killing eight staff members, satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo is charting an ambitious course for its next 10 years. Chief editor Gerald Biard tells RFI the paper remains resolute in its mission to mock all religions. 

The Kouachi brothers, who had pledged allegiance to Al-Qaeda, attacked Charlie Hebdo on 7 January 2015, killing eight staff members, including cartoonists Cabu, Charb, Honoré, Tignous and Wolinski.

The satirical weekly had, since 2006, riled Islamists with its caricatures of the Propet Mohammed.

Despite the trauma, the magazine continues to take swipes not just at Islam but Christianity, Judaism and any other insitutionalised belief system, in line with its defence of freedom of expression and the French form of secularism known as laicité.

The front cover of its 10th anniversary edition shows a Charlie Hebdo reader sitting on a rifle under the headline “indestructible”.

The issue contains a selection of caricatures of God, submitted through a global competition launched in November 2024.

“The most interesting are the ones without captions, because the whole world understands with no need for translation,” Biard told RFI. “It’s very difficult to pull off that kind of drawing, but when you succeed it’s unparalleled.”

 

One cartoon shows Christ on the cross taking a selfie. Another depicts a cartoonist wondering whether it’s acceptable to draw “a guy who draws a guy who draws Mohammed”.

“God is an idea like any other… no less or more respectable than any other,” argues Biard.

“Like all ideas, we have the right to laugh about it, make fun of it, contest it… to make fun of what it embodies, of those who claim to speak in its name or in their name, because there are thousands of deities around the world.”

Legal loopholes are undermining press freedom in France, report warns

Ongoing threats

Biard is speaking to RFI in the offices of Charlie Hebdo’s press liaison. The location of its newsroom remains a closely guarded a secret due to ongoing death threats.

Biard said many people on social media face similar harassment.

Criticism of Charlie Hebdo comes from various quarters, not just those offended by its religious satire. A recent cover featuring rape victim Gisèle Pelicot also sparked backlash.

Veteran cartoonist Riss recently expressed feelings of isolation, saying that criticism of Charlie Hebdo often outweighs support. Biard echoed this sentiment, saying he wished for “more support, or simply some support, instead of continuing to put targets on our backs”.

But he takes comfort from subscribers, loyal readers, people who write in every week “most of whom say how important Charlie is to them” – which is “nice to hear”.

The paper, founded in 1970, counts 30,000 subscribers and sells around 50,000 copies per week.

A survey by the Fondation Jean-Jaurès in June 2024 found that 76 percent of French people believe “freedom of expression is a fundamental right,” with the freedom to caricature included.

France focuses on freedom of speech, but comic Dieudonné arrested for controversial remarks

Satire in decline

However, Charlie Hebdo finds itself in a smaller and smaller playing field as newspapers grow shy of satirical cartooning.

The New York Times has stopped, and last week The Washington Post killed a cartoon featuring its billionaire owner Jeff Bezos kneeling before a statue of President-elect Donald Trump. Its creator, Ann Telnaes, resigned as a result.

“Press drawings, satire, caricature, causes you hassle,” Biard concedes. “So clearly The New York Times’ editorial board prefers to have peace and tranquillity.

“This is awkard though, when you claim to defend democracy and freedom of expression in a country that will, I think, need it over the next four years.”

Turkey to sue over ‘despicable’ Charlie Hebdo cartoon of half-naked Erdogan

Looking forward

Cartoons remain an “essential” journalistic tool, Biard argues. “They show society what we cannot or do not want to see.” The boundaries of satire, he says, are defined by France’s 1881 law on freedom of the press, which addresses defamation, racism and antisemitism.

“It’s quite clear and applies to all citizens,” Biard adds. In addition, everyone has their own limits.

“There are subjects I wouldn’t treat. For example I won’t talk about someone’s private life if they haven’t themselves made it public or if it doesn’t concern society at large.”

He considers that Charlie Hebdo‘s gritty and sometimes nasty humour still has its place.

“There is no reason to stop. And we’re not the only ones using this type of humour,” he says.

House of Press Cartoons coming in 2027, says French culture chief Dati

Reflecting on the loss of colleagues in the 2015 attacks – including psychanalyst Elsa Cayat, subeditor Mustapha Ourra and economist Bernard Maris – Biard says: “They’re still with us. We carry them in us, and they’re always present in the pages of the newspaper.”

With an independent business model, Charlie Hebdo operates without external shareholders or advertising. “It lives thanks to its readership, that’s quite rare, very rare in fact,” Biard says.

The editorial team of between 30 and 40 people collaborates with a host of young cartoonists and journalists. The publication’s future, he says, is increasingly in their hands.

“The future of Charlie isn’t Paris, it isn’t me. It’s them.”

While the 7 January anniversary is a “fundamental date in the newspaper’s history”, the younger generation are the ones “who’ll also make the Charlie Hebdo of 10 years on”.

“That’s what we’re aiming for, what we’re thinking about, and I hope, where we’re heading.”

Spotlight on Africa

DRC takes on Apple: can conflict mineral mining be stopped?

Issued on:

The Democratic Republic of Congo is launching an unprecedented case against the American tech giant Apple over conflict minerals. To explore the issues at hand, RFI talked to a former UN expert to discuss whether any progress has been made in curbing illegal mining.

This week, we focus on the fight against the exploitation of ‘blood minerals’ or ‘conflict minerals’ in Central Africa, particularly in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

Conflic minerals is the term used by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) to describe minerals sourced from conflict-affected and high-risk areas, such as tantalum, tin, tungsten (referred to as the ‘3Ts’), gold, cobalt, coltan, and lithium.

These minerals are essential for high-tech applications, including smartphones, electric batteries, and other advanced technology such as appliances, cars, and even wind turbines. They are predominantly found in the African Great Lakes region, especially in eastern DRC.

In an effort to combat the illegal and exploitative trade of these minerals, the NGO Global Witness established a transition team several years ago.

The May 2022 a report from Global Witness revealed that these minerals are used in products by international brands such as Apple, Intel, Samsung, Nokia, Motorola, and Tesla.

Now, with a trial underway in France and Belgium accusing Apple, many observers are hopeful that it could bring about meaningful change.

The Democratic Republic of Congo has filed a criminal case against European subsidiaries of the tech giant Apple, alleging the company has illicitly used conflict minerals in its supply chain.

The American company claims it no longer sources conflict minerals from Central Africa, but is it doing enough?

DRC case against Apple brings new hope in conflict minerals crisis

The complaints filed against Apple have been described by lawyers involved as a matter of significant public interest.

European countries, consumers, and non-governmental organisations are increasingly scrutinising the international supply chains of minerals, with calls for highly profitable companies to be held accountable.

This complaint could mark the beginning of a broader wave of legal actions targeting technology companies linked to the sourcing of conflict minerals.

To examine the implications of this trial, this week’s guest is Gregory Mthembu-Salter, a researcher specialising in Africa’s political economy and a former consultant to the UN Group of Experts on the DRC on due diligence regarding conflict minerals. He is based in South Africa.


Episode mixed by Erwan Rome.

Spotlight on Africa is a podcast from Radio France Internationale.

The Sound Kitchen

Listener resolutions for 2025

Issued on:

This week The Sound Kitchen is full to bursting! We have two guest chefs with us: Ruben Myers (Paul’s son) and Mathilde Owensby Daguzan (my daughter) for a familial round-up of your fellow listener’s New Year Resolutions and Wishes, so join in the fun! Just 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.

Here’s the music you heard on this week’s program: “Be Our Guest” by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman; “Auld Lang Syne”, performed by the Glenn Miller Orch, and “New Year Resolution” by M. Cross, R. Catron, and W. Parker, performed by Otis Redding and Carla Thomas.

The quiz will be back next Saturday, 11 January, with the answer to the question about the legislative elections in Senegal. Be sure and tune in! 

The Sound Kitchen

This I Believe

Issued on:

This week on The Sound Kitchen you’ll hear a “This I Believe” essay from RFI Listeners Club member Helmut Matt from Herbolzheim, Germany. Just click the “Play” button above and enjoy!

Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday. This week, you’ll hear what Helmut Matt, your fellow RFI English listener, has found to be true in his life. Don’t miss it!

Here’s the music you heard on this week’s program: “Butterfly Lovers” by He Zhanhao and Chen Gang, performed by the National Cinema Symphony Orchestra.

Next week, be sure and tune in for a special program featuring your New Year Resolutions and Wishes for 2025.

 

   

International report

Turkey steps up military action against Kurds in Syria as power shifts

Issued on:

Turkish-backed forces have launched a new offensive against Kurdish fighters in Syria following the collapse of the Assad regime.

The Syrian National Army, supported by Turkish air power, is pushing against the US-supported People’s Defense Units (YPG), which Ankara claims is linked to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, the PKK, which has been fighting Turkey for decades. 

The YPG controls a large swathe of Syria bordering Turkey, which Ankara says poses a security threat.

Turkish foreign minister Hakan Fidan says Turkey is determined to prevent the YPG and its affiliate the PKK from exploiting a power vacuum following the fall of former Syrian president Bashar al-Assad.

As Erdogan celebrates Turkish role in ousting Assad, uncertainty lies ahead

“We are in communication with the groups to make sure that terrorist organisations, especially Daesh [Islamic State] and the PKK, are not taking advantage of the situation,” he said. “Turkey is committed to continuing the fight against terrorism. All minorities – non-Muslims, Christians, non-Arabs, Kurds – should be treated equally.”

Opportunity for Ankara

Ever since the YPG took over control of the Syrian territory at the beginning of the Syrian civil war, Ankara has been seeking to remove it. 

With the ousting of the Assad regime and the withdrawal of its Iranian and Russian backers, which had in the past blocked Turkish military interventions, analysts say Ankara now sees an opportunity to finally remove the YPG threat.

“The current situation creates an opportunity for its [Turkey’s] fight against PKK and YPG because there is now no Russia, there is no Iran,” explains Bilgehan Alagoz, a professor of international relations at Istanbul’s Marmara University.

“Turkey was facing the Russian forces, the Iranian forces, and Assad’s regime forces while it was combatting the PKK and YPG,” she added. “We can name it as an opportunity for its fight against PKK and YPG.”

Success of rebel groups in Syria advances Turkish agenda

However, the YPG is still being supported by a small US military force, as part of the war against the Islamic State (IS). The YPG is also detaining thousands of IS militants.

‘The Euphrates is a line’

With the Turkish-backed Syrian National Army now approaching the Euphrates River, analysts say further eastward advances could put Ankara on a collision course with both Washington, and Syria’s new rulers – Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS

“The Euphrates now is like a line perhaps for the US military,” explains Aydin Selcen, a former senior Turkish diplomat who served in the region and is now a foreign policy analyst for Turkey’s independent Medyascope news outlet.

“If that [military advance] goes on as such, it could bring Turkey indirectly head to head with the US, with even perhaps HTS, and it could put Ankara in a delicate diplomatic position again,” warned Selcen.

Tensions with Israel

The Israeli military’s advance into Syria is adding to Ankara’s concerns over the threat posed by the PYG and its political wing, the Democratic Union Party (PYD). Israeli foreign minister Gideon Saar last month described the Kurds as a “natural ally” of Israel, a comment that came amid growing Israeli-Turkish tensions.

Turkey seeks Gaza ceasefire role despite US criticism over Hamas ties

“Israel is now carving out a corridor [in Syria] between the PKK/PYD-controlled territories, and its own territories,” explained Hasan Unal, a professor of international relations at Ankara’s Baskent University.

“That suggests that this is what they [Israel] are trying to do – [to create] a Kurdish puppet state east of the Euphrates. And this is something that is likely to create lots of problems with Turkey,” he added.

With Israel’s presence in Syria, Ankara is likely to step up pressure on the YPG, and on the incoming Trump administration to end US military presence in Syria.

The Sound Kitchen

Merry Christmas!

Issued on:

This week on The Sound Kitchen you’ll hear the answer to the question about Paris Photo. There’s some Christmas cheer to be had, as well as “The Listener’s Corner” – all that, and the new quiz and bonus questions too, so click the “Play” button above and enjoy! 

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

The RFI English team is pleased to announce that Saleem Akhtar Chadhar, the president of the RFI Seven Stars Listening Club in District Chiniot, Pakistan, won the RFI / Planète Radio ePOP video contest, in the RFI Clubs category. Bravo Saleem! Mubarak ho!

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

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

Remember, podcasts are radio, too! As you see, sound is still quite present in the RFI English service. Please keep checking our website for updates on the latest from our 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!

We have a new RFI Listeners Club member to welcome: Himangshu Mukharjee from West Bengal, India. Welcome, Himangshu! So glad you have joined us!

This week’s quiz: Paris Photo – the largest international art fair dedicated to photography – is held every November at the magnificent Grand Palais. RFI English journalist Isabelle Martinetti wrote an article about it: “Paris Photo fair focuses on photo books and their publishers”.

You were to re-read Isabelle’s article and send in the answers to these questions: What is the name and nationality of the photographer who won the First Book prize at this year’s Paris Photo fair?

The answer is, to quote Isabelle: “The first book prize was awarded to Taiwanese photographer Tsai Ting Bang for “Born From the Same Root”, a self-published work, awarded with a $10,000 cash prize.”

In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question:  “What do you like to eat in the winter? Why?” The question was suggested by Liton Hissen Mia from Naogaon, Bangladesh.

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

The winners are: RFI Listeners Club member Dipita Chakrabarty from New Delhi, India. Dipita is also the winner of this week’s bonus question. Congratulations, Dipita!

Also on the list of lucky winners this week are Ferhat Bezazel, the president of the Butterflies Club Ain Kechera in West Skikda, Algeria, and Zaheer Ayiaz, a member of the Naz Radio France and Internet Fan Club in Faisal Abad, Pakistan. There’s also RFI Listeners Club member Shaira Hosen Mo from Kishoreganj, Bangladesh, and last but not least, RFI English listener Sadman Shihabur Rahaman, from Naogaon, Bangladesh.

Congratulations, winners!

Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: “Santa Claus is Coming to Town” by J. Fred Coots and Haven Gillespie, performed by Johnny Bregar; “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” by Hugh Martin and Ralph Blane, performed by the Dexter Gordon Quartet; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer, and “Un flambeau, Jeannette, Isabelle”, attributed to Nicolas Saboly and Emile Blémont, performed by Les Petits Chanteurs de Mont-Royal.

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, listen to Melissa’s 15 December International Report podcast – “Gaza’s powerful war narratives make their way to the Oscars”, which will help you with the answer.

You have until 27 January to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 1 February podcast. When you enter be sure to send your postal address with your answer, and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.

Send your answers to:

english.service@rfi.fr

or

Susan Owensby

RFI – The Sound Kitchen

80, rue Camille Desmoulins

92130 Issy-les-Moulineaux

France

Click here to 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.   

Spotlight on France

Podcast: Renaming Tibetan art, Paris region’s first olive oil, Comoran independence

Issued on:

Tibetans question why a French museum has renamed its collection of Tibetan art. A group of neighbours south of Paris produce the region’s first olive oil. And the independence of the Comoros, without Mayotte.

Tibetans and Tibetan scholars are alarmed at how Paris’ Guimet museum of Asian art has categorised its art and artefacts from Tibet. Tenam and other Tibetans in exile, who have been demonstrating regularly outside the museum, talk about the importance of using the name Tibet, and scholar Katia Buffetrille questions the role of China in putting pressure on a French public institution. (Listen @2’48”) 

Like many residents in the town of Malakoff, just south of Paris, Vincent Chévrier had an olive tree in his garden but wasn’t doing much with it. So he federated a group of fellow local olive tree owners and together they’ve made Born to be Olive – the first olive oil “made in Ile de France”. Their collective project isn’t just about making a locally grown, organic product, it’s brought people together in a unique way. (Listen @17’37”)

On 22 December 1974, the people of the Comoros in the Indian Ocean voted overwhelmingly for independence from France. But the island of Mayotte did not, and became France’s 101st department. It’s created an immigration conundrum, straining the island’s already sparse resources  which were laid bare by Tropical Cyclone Chido last week. Listen @13’40”)

Episode mixed by Hadrien Touraud

Spotlight on France is a podcast from Radio France International. Find us on rfienglish.com, Apple podcasts (link here), Spotify (link here) or your favourite podcast app (pod.link/1573769878).


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Madhya Pradesh: the Heart of beautiful India

From 20 to 22 September 2022, the IFTM trade show in Paris, connected thousands of tourism professionals across the world. Sheo Shekhar Shukla, director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, talked about the significance of sustainable tourism.

Madhya Pradesh is often referred to as the Heart of India. Located right in the middle of the country, the Indian region shows everything India has to offer through its abundant diversity. The IFTM trade show, which took place in Paris at the end of September, presented the perfect opportunity for travel enthusiasts to discover the region.

Sheo Shekhar Shukla, Managing Director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, sat down to explain his approach to sustainable tourism.

“Post-covid the whole world has known a shift in their approach when it comes to tourism. And all those discerning travelers want to have different kinds of experiences: something offbeat, something new, something which has not been explored before.”

Through its UNESCO World Heritage Sites, Shukla wants to showcase the deep history Madhya Pradesh has to offer.

“UNESCO is very actively supporting us and three of our sites are already World Heritage Sites. Sanchi is a very famous buddhist spiritual destination, Bhimbetka is a place where prehistoric rock shelters are still preserved, and Khajuraho is home to thousand year old temples with magnificent architecture.”

All in all, Shukla believes that there’s only one way forward for the industry: “Travelers must take sustainable tourism as a paradigm in order to take tourism to the next level.”

In partnership with Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board.


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Exploring Malaysia’s natural and cultural diversity

The IFTM trade show took place from 20 to 22 September 2022, in Paris, and gathered thousands of travel professionals from all over the world. In an interview, Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia discussed the importance of sustainable tourism in our fast-changing world.

Also known as the Land of the Beautiful Islands, Malaysia’s landscape and cultural diversity is almost unmatched on the planet. Those qualities were all put on display at the Malaysian stand during the IFTM trade show.

Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia, explained the appeal of the country as well as the importance of promoting sustainable tourism today: “Sustainable travel is a major trend now, with the changes that are happening post-covid. People want to get close to nature, to get close to people. So Malaysia being a multicultural and diverse [country] with a lot of natural environments, we felt that it’s a good thing for us to promote Malaysia.”

Malaysia has also gained fame in recent years, through its numerous UNESCO World Heritage Sites, which include Kinabalu Park and the Archaeological Heritage of the Lenggong Valley.

Green mobility has also become an integral part of tourism in Malaysia, with an increasing number of people using bikes to discover the country: “If you are a little more adventurous, we have the mountain back trails where you can cut across gazetted trails to see the natural attractions and the wildlife that we have in Malaysia,” says Hanif. “If you are not that adventurous, you’ll be looking for relaxing cycling. We also have countryside spots, where you can see all the scenery in a relaxing session.”

With more than 25,000 visitors at this IFTM trade show this year, Malaysia’s tourism board got to showcase the best the country and its people have to offer.

In partnership with Malaysia Tourism Promotion Board. For more information about Malaysia, click here.