Middle East war
French jets intercept Iranian drones as first evacuees arrive in Paris
French authorities said Rafale fighter jets have neutralised Iranian drones targeting the United Arab Emirates, as the widening Middle East war also forced France to bring citizens home. A first repatriation flight carrying French nationals stranded in the region landed in Paris early on Wednesday, with more evacuations planned.
President Emmanuel Macron has also called a new defence and national security council meeting for Wednesday evening to assess the rapidly evolving situation in the Middle East, the government said.
France is reinforcing its military presence in the region, including deploying the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle to the Mediterranean.
The first flight organised to repatriate French nationals stranded in the Middle East since the start of the war arrived early on Wednesday morning at Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airport from Oman.
The aircraft chartered by Air France left Muscat, Oman, in the early evening and landed shortly before 3am on Wednesday in Paris.
The Minister for French Nationals Abroad Éléonore Caroit told journalists at the terminal that around 100 places had been reserved by the Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs to bring back “the most vulnerable” people.
Families first
The flight was carrying customers and staff of the airline as well as families, young children, pregnant women, participants of a holiday camp and other passengers who were mainly in Dubai.
“The idea is to increase the number of such arrangements so that as many French citizens as possible can return home safely,” she added.
Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said on France 2 television that there would be “several flights” on Wednesday, including one carrying French nationals from the United Arab Emirates and “another leaving from Egypt to bring back some of our most vulnerable compatriots (…) from Israel”.
French authorities said additional repatriation flights were planned on Wednesday as the government steps up efforts to help citizens leave the region.
Barrot also said French Rafale jets had intercepted and destroyed Iranian drones aimed at the United Arab Emirates, underlining France’s military presence in the region.
Paris says its military involvement in the region is “strictly defensive”, aimed at helping partners such as the United Arab Emirates protect their airspace from Iranian attacks.
Following the Israeli-American attack on Iran on Saturday and the Islamic Republic’s retaliation against Gulf monarchies and Israel, the airspace of many countries has been closed.
Caroit warned the “highly volatile” situation meant the airspace “could open and close, and corridors that are set up but can be suspended”.
France mobilises to help 400,000 nationals stranded due to Middle East war
Long journeys home
French tourist Xavier Figuls and his family’s holiday was cut short: this night-time landing at Roissy marked the end of a long journey, after “10 hours on a bus from Dubai to Muscat”.
The couple, originally from Perpignan, arrived in the United Arab Emirates on Saturday morning with their 4- and 9-year-old children “almost at the start of the bombings,” Marie recalls.
“We were cut off from the outside world, and we were in a part of the city where we couldn’t hear the bombing,” she says.
“We heard from our families in France that things were starting to look very bad,” adds the Air France employee.
When the first bombs hit Dubai, 18-year-old Emmy Coutelier was in the hotel swimming pool joking with her boyfriend Adam, “far from imagining what was about to happen”.
Fear and uncertainty
After a long hug with her sister, who had come to pick her up at the airport, she recounts, still very emotional, her deep fear when “an alarm sounded in the middle of the night telling us not to stay near the windows”.
“We went down to the basement: we never thought it would happen,” says the young woman, who, when she took the repatriation flight, felt “as if she were fleeing danger, even though it’s a relatively safe country”.
Some 400,000 French nationals are present in the 15 or so countries affected by the conflict, and more are reporting to the consular authorities, “but not all of them want to return to France,” the minister said.
The government is also closely monitoring the situation of two French nationals detained in Iran since 2022 – Cécile Kohler and Jacques Paris. Officials say the aim is to bring them back to France as soon as possible.
In four days, the war in the Middle East has caused the cancellation of 19,000 flights, according to specialist data provider Cirium.
(with newswires)
Justice
French police arrest two more suspects over killing of far-right activist
Two more men were arrested on Wednesday morning in connection with the death of far-right activist Quentin Deranque in Lyon on 12 February.
The suspects, aged 22 and 26, were arrested in the Lyon area and in the Aube region, police sources told French news agency AFP.
“We now believe we have all those who were directly involved in the attack on Quentin Deranque,” they said.
Quentin Deranque, 23, died during a clash between far left and far right supporters on the sidelines of an event at Sciences Po university in Lyon hosted by MEP Rima Hassan, a member of the far-left party France Unbowed (LFI).
Deranque was part of a group who were in attendance to ensure the safety of activists from the far-right, anti-immigrant Némésis collective.
He died from severe head injuries two days after the incident.
More than 3,000 march in Lyon in tribute to far-right activist
On 17 and 18 February, 11 people were arrested in several French departments, seven of whom were suspected of having participated in the attack. The other four are suspected of having attempted to help them evade justice.
Six men suspected of assaulting Deranque have been charged with voluntary homicide and one with complicity.
Political tensions
Aged between 20 and 26, the seven are, according to a source close to the case, known to be either members of or close to the Jeune Garde (“Young Guard”), a far-left movement founded in 2018 in Lyon by LFI MP Raphaël Arnault, which was dissolved last June.
Two of the seven were parliamentary assistants.
Killing of far-right activist triggers turmoil across French political spectrum
The case has heightened political tensions ahead of municipal elections in March and France’s 2027 presidential race, in which the far-right National Rally (RN) party is seen as having its best chance yet.
President Emmanuel Macron – a centrist barred by term limits from standing for re-election next year – said there was no place in France “for movements that adopt and legitimise violence” and called on all political parties to “clean up” their act.
“Nothing can justify violent action – neither on one side nor the other,” he said.
(with AFP)
UK – Migration
UK halts study visas from four countries to stop students claiming asylum
The British government has imposed an “emergency brake” on visas for students from Afghanistan, Cameroon, Myanmar and Sudan, in response to what it said was a surge of requests for asylum from people arriving in the United Kingdom to study.
In a change to immigration rules announced on Tuesday, the UK will also cease granting work visas to Afghan nationals.
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said the ban – the first of its kind – was designed to close a back-door route to claiming asylum.
“Britain will always provide refuge to people fleeing war and persecution, but our visa system must not be abused,” she said in a statement.
“That is why I am taking the unprecedented decision to refuse visas for those nationals seeking to exploit our generosity.”
The changes are the centre-left government’s latest effort to harden its immigration and asylum rules as its rivals on the right use the issue to rally support.
UK toughens asylum rules to discourage migration
Student visa statistics
The new policy will apply from 26 March.
According to the Home Office, the number of people claiming asylum after arriving in the UK with a valid visa or other permit has more than trebled in the past five years. Around 39,000 such claims were filed last year, bringing the total to 133,760 since 2021.
People from Afghanistan, Cameroon, Myanmar and Sudan make up “an above average proportion” of asylum seekers accommodated at public expense, the ministry said, reporting that claims by students from the four countries had spiked.
Official figures from 2025 show that the top five nationalities with the largest number of people claiming asylum were Pakistan, Eritrea, Iran, Afghanistan and Bangladesh.
The government has reported an increase in the number of applications from Pakistan and Bangladesh in particular, with over 80 percent of claimants from these countries requesting asylum after arriving in the UK on a work, study or other permit. In contrast, 83 percent of Afghan claimants arrived without documents.
A total of 12,578 people claimed asylum last year after coming to the UK on student visas, the government’s statistics show. A higher number – 13,557 – applied while on a work visa.
Over half of African states subjected to travel bans or visa bonds by US
Asylum overhaul
The UK’s previous right-wing government also cracked down on student visas, raising financial requirements and barring undergraduates from bringing dependent family members with them to the UK.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer‘s Labour government has continued the drive to bring down immigration and asylum numbers, especially as polls show rising support for hard-right populist party Reform UK.
Under changes introduced this week, the government made protection for refugees temporary and subject to review every 30 months, after Home Secretary Mahmood argued the UK’s system was too generous compared to other countries in Europe.
In November, the UK threatened to block all visas for Angola, Namibia and the Democratic Republic of Congo unless their governments agreed to take back migrants denied permission to stay.
The Home Office has since signed agreements with all three countries to allow Britain to deport people to their territory.
Greece
Greek court upholds convictions of neo-Nazi Golden Dawn leaders
A Greek appeals court on Wednesday upheld the convictions of leaders of the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party for running a criminal organisation, in a landmark ruling linked to violent attacks during the country’s economic crisis.
The court confirmed earlier guilty verdicts against dozens of party members over crimes including the murder of anti-fascist rapper Pavlos Fyssas in 2013 and attacks on migrant workers and trade unionists.
More than 40 defendants face possible sentences of up to 15 years in prison, with the presiding judge expected to announce the punishments later on Wednesday.
Golden Dawn rose to prominence during the 2012 debt crisis, when 18 of its members were elected to parliament.
The group became known for violent anti-migrant rhetoric and for so-called “assault battalions” that targeted left-wing activists and minorities.
The turning point came in 2013, when anti-fascist rapper Pavlos Fyssas was stabbed to death by party member Giorgos Roupakias.
Reviewing verdicts
In 2020, after a five-year trial, a court convicted party leaders including Nikos Michaloliakos of running a criminal organisation. Members were also found guilty over the attempted murder of Egyptian fishermen in Perama and attacks on trade unionists.
The appeals court is now reviewing those verdicts. The prosecutor has recommended that the convictions be upheld in full and has called for harsher sentences for senior figures including Ilias Kasidiaris and Ioannis Lagos.
The court also confirmed the murder conviction of Giorgos Roupakias for killing Fyssas.
Tension had been building ahead of the decision, with victims’ families led by Fyssas’s mother Magda calling for closure.
More than 200 people gathered outside the Athens court in support of Fyssas during the hearing.
The Nazi roots of today’s global far-right movements
Strike and rallies
The public sector union Adedy has called a strike in the Attica region until 11am. It has urged workers to gather outside the appeals court at 8.30am.
In a statement, the union called for the “Nazi murderers to receive the harshest possible penalties” adding that the “labor movement fights against fascism and the system that breeds it”.
The Piraeus Labor Center also urged workers and young people to join the rally. “Only through organised struggle can we crush fascism,” it said.
The left-wing opposition party Syriza called for mass participation, saying that “the presence of every democratic citizen is necessary.”
In its statement, the party warned of a resurgence of the far-right across Europe and urged citizens to honour the memory of victims including Pavlos Fyssas and migrant worker Sahzat Lukman.
Golden Dawn was once Greece’s third-biggest party, gaining around 400,000 votes at the height of its influence before losing its parliamentary representation in 2019.
(with newswires)
War on Iran
France sends aircraft carrier to Mediterranean over Iran war
Paris (France) – French President Emmanuel Macron said in a televised address on Tuesday evening that he had ordered an aircraft carrier group to the Mediterranean in response to the widening Middle East conflict, while acknowledging that the US-Israel strikes on Iran were outside international law.
Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday said France was sending an aircraft carrier to the Mediterranean in response to the widening conflict in the Middle East following US-Israeli airstrikes on Iran.
“I have ordered the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle, its air assets, and its escort of frigates to set course for the Mediterranean,” he said in a televised speech a day after he warned of the risk of the conflict spilling over Europe‘s borders.
France backs Gulf states as Iran launches fresh wave of missile strikes
Macron said he was also sending air defence capacities to Cyprus a day after Iranian-made drones hit the Mediterranean island’s British air base at Akrotiri.
“I have also decided to send additional air defence assets and a French frigate, the Languedoc, which will arrive off the coast of Cyprus this evening,” he said.
The United States and Israel launched attacks against Iran on Saturday, killing supreme leader Ali Khamenei.
Iran has responded by targeting US allies across the Middle East.
France prepares Middle East evacuations and deploys jets to UAE
“The United States of America and Israel decided to launch military operations, conducted outside international law, which we cannot approve of,” said Macron.
But “the Islamic republic of Iran bears primary responsibility for this situation”, he said, because of its “dangerous” nuclear programme, support for regional proxies, and orders to shoot “its own people” during protests in January.
Macron said French forces downed drones “in self-defence” during the opening hours of the conflict.
“We reacted immediately and shot down drones in self-defence in the early hours of the conflict to defend the airspace of our allies, who know they can count on us,” he said, referring to defence agreements with Qatar, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates.
(AFP)
Geopolitics
What could Macron’s French nuclear umbrella mean for Europe?
France’s decision to expand its nuclear arsenal for the first time in decades is drawing mixed reactions across Europe, reopening debate over who should guarantee the continent’s security.
President Emmanuel Macron set out the plan in a speech at the Ile Longue submarine base on Monday, announcing an increase in warheads and what he called “advanced deterrence”. He also invited European partners to host French assets, take part in exercises and integrate conventional forces under Paris’s sole command.
Framed as protecting “vital French interests” in Europe, the proposal raises the possibility of extending a French “nuclear umbrella” to European partners. Macron did not provide a timeline or cost for the plan. He also said Paris would “no longer be disclosing details on its nuclear stockpile”.
France already has one of the world’s most capable independent nuclear forces, with around 290 operational warheads, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute said in its 2026 Yearbook.
Those weapons are split between sea-based and airborne systems. About 240 are submarine-launched ballistic missiles carried on four Triomphant-class submarines, while the remainder are ASMP-A hypersonic cruise missiles carried by Rafale jets.
The “strict sufficiency” doctrine, defined by the French government as “the lowest possible level compatible with the strategic environment and the foreseeable development of threat”, unchanged since the 1959-69 government of Charles de Gaulle, ensures minimal but credible second-strike capability.
Upgrades such as the M51.3 SLBM and ASN4G missile were already in the pipeline prior to Macron’s announcement.
France to increase nuclear warheads as part of shared plan to protect Europe
Europe has long been covered by the US nuclear umbrella, in place since the beginning of the Cold War in the 1950s when the US began positioning nuclear arms in European countries.
Macron’s initiative comes as questions have been raised about the future of that protection. In March last year, Trump’s national security team called Europe “pathetic” and “freeloaders” in a group chat which was leaked to a journalist at The Atlantic magazine.
Reactions on the continent
Poland, eyeing Russian threats from its position next door to Ukraine, has welcomed the prospect of a French-led European umbrella. Prime Minister Donald Tusk posted on X: “We arm ourselves together with our friends so our enemies dare not attack us.”
On the streets of Warsaw, one man named Piotr told RFI: “If we don’t have our own [nuclear arsenal], we will gladly host [those of our] allies to respond, or attack, quickly.”
Magda, another local, said she would accept the French veto: “You don’t hand over the trigger.” Meanwhile Rima said she would prefer Polish input, but hopes for peace.
Meanwhile Germany, under Chancellor Friedrich Merz, could be warming to the idea, with a Franco-German nuclear steering group also announced on 2 March in a joint declaration. Berlin is eyeing exercises this year and financial contributions.
However, Jacob Ross, a research fellow with the German Council on Foreign Relations, told RFI he questioned whether the costs would be a barrier. “Macron’s call for fair burden-sharing is interesting— but could we fund this on a European scale?” he asked.
Europe’s defence dilemma: autonomy or dependence?
In France itself, reaction to Macron’s announcement has been mixed across the political spectrum.
MP Jean-Louis Thiériot, of the centre-right Republicans, said he supported the plan, adding that it constituted “no challenge to de Gaulle’s principles, [as] sovereignty rests with the president”.
However, the far-left party France Unbowed’s Thomas Portes described it as a “muscle-flexing armament race”. Dieynaba Diop of the Socialist Party urged de-escalation, saying: “We’ve reduced arsenals before – fight escalation via Europe.”
Marion Maréchal of the far-right National Rally, meanwhile, said she was reassured, and saw no doctrinal violation in the new plan.
Middle East War
Unesco raises alarm over heritage sites as bombing in Iran intensifies
The United Nations cultural body Unesco has called on warring parties in the Middle East to respect international conventions protecting cultural property after Iran’s heritage-listed Golestan Palace was damaged in US-Israeli air strikes.
The palace in Tehran was hit in an attack on Arag Square in the south of the city on Sunday evening, local media reported.
“Following the joint US-Israeli attack on Arag square in southern Tehran on Sunday evening, parts of the Golestan Palace… were damaged,” the ISNA news agency reported. It added that windows, doors and mirrors were hit by reverberations from blasts.
Iran’s Mehr news agency carried a similar report.
Unesco warning
The former royal palace “was reportedly damaged by debris and the shock wave following an air strike to the Arag Square, located in the buffer zone of the site in the Iranian capital”, Unesco said in a statement late on Monday.
The UN cultural agency said it had “communicated to all parties concerned the geographical coordinates of sites on the World Heritage List as well as those of national significance, to avoid any potential damage”.
EU foreign ministers warn on impact of conflict in Iran after Khamenei’s death
It also pointed to protections for cultural property set out in international conventions.
The Iranian presidential office’s information channel released video and images of the palace interior.
Afarin Emami, director of the Golestan Palace World Heritage Site, said there was significant damage to “architectural decorations, especially wooden elements, including doors, windows, and decorative moldings”.
War impact
He added that after the 12-day war, objects in the palace were collected and transferred to secure storage, and no damage was done to them.
Golestan Palace was the residence of the Qajar dynasty’s kings and was registered on the Unesco World Heritage List in July 2013.
The conflict started on Saturday when the United States and Israel launched attacks against Iran, killing supreme leader Ali Khamenei.
Iran has responded by targeting US allies in the Gulf region.
The US military said on Tuesday it had hit more than 1,250 targets in the first 48 hours of the war against Iran.
A fact sheet released by US Central Command, which is responsible for American forces in the region, said the targets included command-and-control centres, ballistic missile sites, Iranian navy ships and submarines, and anti-ship missile sites.
(with newswires)
FRANCE – CRIME
In France, women accusing Al-Fayed seek answers over trafficking claims
Paris (AFP) – Mohamed Al-Fayed traded on the glamour of owning Harrods, the Paris Ritz and luxury yachts, but he and his brother were also at the centre of a dark web of alleged abuse, say French lawyers for women who liken him to US sexual predator Jeffrey Epstein.
French authorities began investigating the late Egyptian businessman and his brother Salah last year amid allegations of a vast system of sex trafficking and abuse on French soil.
“Every time I met Mohamed Al-Fayed, he tried to assault me,” his former personal assistant Kristina Svensson told French police of her two years working at the Ritz.
Her testimony is all too familiar.
The alleged crimes of Mohamed Al-Fayed, who died in 2023 aged 94, first came to light in a BBC investigation in September 2024. In it, several young women who worked at his upmarket London department store Harrods accused him of rape and sexual assault.
Late Harrods owner Al-Fayed accused of rape: BBC
British police told AFP that 154 victims have so far come forward to say the former owner of Premier League club Fulham abused them.
His brother Salah, who died in 2010, is also accused.
More than 400 people come forward over Al-Fayed sexual abuse claims
But frustrated by London Metropolitan Police‘s investigation of the alleged crimes, which span more than 35 years, some victims have turned to France in the hope of finding justice.
“In England they’re ignoring the trafficking… They just want to make it about Al-Fayed and Harrods,” said Rachael Louw, a former Al-Fayed employee, speaking for the first time about her ordeal.
The French investigation, however, is handled by “a unit specialised in human trafficking”, she told AFP.
It is “a relief that our cases are actually being recognised as trafficking”.
Mohamed Al-Fayed, outsider shunned by British high society
Consumed ‘like meat’
Louw was 23 when her bosses sent her to Salah Fayed’s yacht on the French Riviera. Now after 31 years she was able to testify about what happened there to French investigators on February 10.
Louw told AFP she was first “spotted” by Mohamed Al-Fayed in 1993 while working as a sales assistant at Harrods. Shortly after, she was placed on a management training scheme, which required her to submit to a medical exam by a Harley Street doctor before being employed by the chairman’s office in the summer of 1994.
The medical appointment went far beyond a standard checkup, with a pelvic exam and “thorough breast exam”, smear and HIV tests.
And the results were not kept confidential.
The report, seen by AFP, was handed over to Harrods, and described Louw’s personal life: her parents’ separation when she was young, her father living in the United States and the death of her mother and grandmother.
The doctor also noted that she took a birth control pill, had a boyfriend and was in “excellent” health.
The doctor “sent confidential information to arm the rapist”, said French lawyer Eva Joly, who is representing Louw and another former Al-Fayed assistant.
“These young women were like meat, and they wanted to know if they were fit to consume,” said Caroline Joly, another member of the legal team.
Several encounters were arranged between Louw and Salah Fayed at his home in London’s glitzy Park Lane, where Louw said she was drugged with “a crack cocaine mix”.
Louw was then offered a job as an assistant to Salah in France and she was sent there by private jet.
She said she refused further drugs, “and because he didn’t push anymore, I thought it was okay”.
“I had no reason not to trust this man… this was my first job from university.”
Rape victim Pelicot recounts tale of survival, resilience in ‘hopeful’ memoirs
‘I didn’t feel safe’
Staff confiscated her passport as she flew from London’s Luton airport to his yacht. And once she arrived, “nothing” resembled the job she signed up for.
“I thought I was supposed to be filing paperwork, making arrangements, organising office work,” she said.
Instead “there was no office, no normal working hours, no time off. I was expected to just be with him”, she said.
Louw recalled appearing alongside Salah Fayed at dinners attended by elderly, wealthy men with “young girls and lots of touching”.
When she managed to call her boyfriend, who worked at Harrods, he was fired.
One night, Louw woke up to find Salah in her bed, claiming he was lonely, she said.
“I went ramrod straight and the rest of the night I was awake just lying there petrified,” she said, fearing any movement would be an invitation for him to touch her.
“I didn’t know what he would do to me… I didn’t feel safe.”
She saw other young women in the Fayeds’ orbit.
On a trip to Saint Tropez she encountered a red-headed “young girl”, possibly younger than herself, sunbathing on Mohamed Al-Fayed’s yacht that was moored just off his villa.
“Mohamed starts rubbing lotion all over this girl, she’s wearing a bathing suit and then he started to kiss her,” Louw told AFP.
“I don’t remember anything else” of that day, she said, “so I don’t know if there were drugs, I can’t say for sure whether I was drugged that afternoon,” she added.
What jolted her to escape was the prospect of being trapped alone with Salah after he bought a speedboat with only one bedroom, telling her “that he would take me to sail around the Italian coast”.
“I knew that if I went on that boat nothing good would happen,” she said.
Panicked, she booked the first Air France flight out and worked up the courage to ask for her passport back, which she received although it was clear Salah “was very angry”.
Home again, “I had blocked out” the details of what happened, she said. “I didn’t want to remember.”
For decades she feared she was bound by a confidentiality agreement she had signed at her interview, but seeing other victims speak out against Al-Fayed in 2024, she reconsidered.
“How can I be silent? There has to be a cost to what the perpetrators did. Because if they go unpunished, it emboldens the next man.
“If we women do not speak up we become complicit in our own oppression… powerful men will never change a system that benefits them.”
‘Organised system’
Despite the deaths of the brothers, the women hope investigators can still track down who enabled the trafficking network.
“There is no such thing as a small piece of information. Every element is useful for the investigation,” Al-Fayed assistant Svensson said, calling on victims and witnesses to speak to police.
The Swedish woman arrived in France in 1993 and was placed by a temp agency at the Ritz in 1998, then owned by Mohamed Al-Fayed, as his assistant.
Svensson, aged 30 at the time, was to help him manage his affairs after the death of his son Dodi with Princess Diana in a Paris car crash, perceived as a prestigious assignment.
During her interview with the Ritz management, the questions posed were “focused” on her appearance and her personal background, she said, even pointing out that she was the “spitting image” of Al-Fayed’s wife.
The Ritz then sent her to Harrods in London for an interview with Al-Fayed himself, and organised accommodation for her at a luxury residence he owned.
“I had brought my CV. He wasn’t interested in that. He only asked me personal questions.”
What followed was a regular pattern of meetings with Al-Fayed. Svensson said she was left in a room alone for hours with no instruction, until he eventually arrived and she would endure sexual assault and attempted rape during which “he’d laugh”.
“I hoped that in time he would see that I wasn’t interested in him and that he would take me seriously,” Svensson told police.
“I was a foreigner, with no family or network in the country, no knowledge of French labour law, and no one to lean on financially if I quit.”
In retrospect, Svensson compares herself to a closely watched “luxury product”, which Al-Fayed wanted to possess, “a doll on a shelf”.
Al-Fayed was born Mohamed Fayed in Alexandria, but later changed his surname to the grander Al-Fayed, while his brother kept the original family name.
London investigation ‘continues’
At the Ritz, she recalls that staff warned her that there were “microphones and cameras in every corner”. And at a villa in Saint Tropez, she said a housekeeper suggested that she block her bedroom door at night.
The Ritz Paris told AFP in a statement that it was “deeply saddened by the testimonies and the allegations of abuse” and that it is “ready to fully cooperate with the judicial authorities. Our teams do not tolerate any form of inappropriate behaviour, which would be a serious breach of our code of conduct.
“We want to express our deepest respect to the women who spoke out,” it added.
Harrods said it “continues to support the bravery of all women in coming forward. Their claims point to the breadth of abuse by Mohamed Fayed and again raise serious allegations against his brother, Salah Fayed. The picture that has emerged suggests that this pattern of abusive behaviour took place wherever they operated.”
They said more than 180 survivors had already received counselling support through its independent advocate. The store also urged survivors to claim compensation through the Harrods Redress Scheme.
London’s Metropolitan police said its “investigation into those who could have facilitated or enabled Mohamed Al-Fayed’s offending continues” and urged victims to come forward.
“The way the Met works has moved on immeasurably, and our teams have transformed the way we investigate rape and sexual offences.”
Lawyers for the two women say their testimony helps sketch the outlines of a “powerful system” of trafficking which resembles the one established during the same period by Epstein.
France opens twin Epstein inquiries and calls on victims to testify
“As with Epstein, with the Al-Fayeds there is a frenzied consumption of young women and an organised system to procure them,” said lawyer Eva Joly, who is also a former judge and European parliament member.
“The pattern is the same: selecting vulnerable young women, transport, accommodation, isolation and money, which is used to intimidate or corrupt,” she said.
And as with the Epstein case, while the statute of limitations may have expired, an investigation into the Al-Fayeds can still establish the facts and identify any victims whose cases could be still prosecuted.
“We are only at the beginning of piecing the puzzle together in France,” Joly insisted.
FRANCE – IRAN
The French village where Ayatollah Khomeini fomented Iran’s revolution
Neauphle-le-Château (AFP) – It has been nearly 50 years since the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini recorded speeches calling for an Islamic revolution from a country home in an affluent village west of Paris. But the inhabitants of Neauphle-le-Chateau have still not got over their famous guest, as the US-Israeli war against Iran puts the spotlight back on the ayatollah’s legacy.
Khomeini, the original spiritual guide of Iran‘s modern theocracy, spent barely 120 days ensconced in a villa in the village 40 kilometres west of the French capital, before returning in a blaze of publicity to complete the ousting of the Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, in the Iranian Revolution in early 1979.
Andre, an 86-year-old neighbour of the house that was briefly Khomeini’s headquarters, recalled the sudden storm that hit sleepy Neauphle-le-Chateau in the Yvelines department.
“One evening on the television, they announced that an ayatollah had set up home in a comfortable district in the Yvelines,” said the retired engineer, who declined to give his family name but has lived in the village since 1974.
“From the Saturday morning, there was an invasion of journalists. They were parked everywhere.”
Neauphle-le-Chateau, which is just 20 kilometres from Versailles palace, soon became a major draw. “The number of people that the ayatollah would receive, especially the young Iranians who studied in Germany,” said Andre.
“It was incredible. He organised the whole Iranian revolution from Neauphle-le-Château.”
Revolutionary exile
Khomeini, then 76, needed a new bolthole after being expelled from his exiled base in the Iraqi city of Najaf by the country’s dictator Saddam Hussein.
“The only place an Iranian could go to without a visa was France,” said Bernard Hourcade, a specialist on Iran at the CNRS, France’s main research institute.
Abolhassan Banisadr, a future president of the Islamic Republic, at first offered accommodation at Cachan, southeast of Paris. But then a friend offered the house west of the capital and Neauphle-le-Chateau became internationally famous.
The ayatollah arrived on 6 October, 1978 and left France again on 1 February, 1979. He died in Iran in 1989.
Why Iran’s power structure may prove stronger than Khamenei’s killing
According to Hourcade, one of Khomeini’s main activities at the house was to record speeches condemning the shah and calling for revolution, which were recorded on cassettes and secreted into Iran.
Michel, an 87-year-old resident, who also did not want to give his family name, recalled the “police checks” and “blocked roads” during the ayatollah’s stay.
“We weren’t bothered by his presence, but the neighbours on Chevreuse road (where the ayatollah lived) were quite inconvenienced.”
Some, like former resident Alain Simonneau, 80, played down the ayatollah’s role in the history of the village. “It was a minor event for Neauphle-le-Chateau, even if it’s part of our collective memory, whether we like it or not.”
But Lydie Kadiri, who arrived in 1999, said it is a part of history that everyone remembers. “When we say we come from Neauphle-le-Château, everyone immediately remembers the ayatollah!” she said.
The destiny of the house where the ayatollah stayed is another mystery.
The home was destroyed in an explosion in February 1980, a few months after the ayatollah’s death. Other buildings have since been erected.
“One evening, I heard an explosion and suddenly, everything burst into flames. The house shook from the blast. Some glass was cracked in my hall,” recalled Andre.
For some years, a signboard stood on the land where the house had been, signalling the link between Iran’s original spiritual guide and the village. This was vandalised in 2023.
Now pilgrimages are held each year to mark his return to Iran on February 1, 1979.
Khomeini’s successor, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed in the US-Israeli air strikes on Iran.
A Neauphle-le-Chateau resident, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that between 150 and 200 people came each year with Iran’s ambassador “to celebrate the anniversary” of Khomeini’s return to Iran.
In Tehran, a road is named after Neauphle-le-Chateau. The French embassy is located on the street.
MIDDLE EAST WAR
Why Iran’s ‘beheaded’ power structure may outlive Ali Khamenei
Iran has begun a formal transition, following the killing of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in American-Israeli strikes. Under the country’s constitution, an interim leadership council is now in place, but this death strips the Islamic Republic of the figure who stood at the apex of power for 36 years. As some Iranians celebrate and others mourn, attention turns to whether the system Khamenei led can continue to function – and whether change will be driven from inside the country.
Khamenei, 86, had held power since 1989 and left no officially designated heir. The government announced 40 days of national mourning following his death on Saturday.
Parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf sought to project confidence, telling state television that Iran had prepared for “all scenarios”, including the death of its leader.
The constitutional machinery has been set in motion. Authorities said a provisional leadership council would be formed, as required by the constitution, to steer the country while a successor is chosen.
It is made up of President Massoud Pezeshkian, judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei and cleric Alireza Arafi, a member of the Assembly of Experts and the Guardian Council.
The Assembly of Experts must appoint a new supreme leader “as soon as possible”.
That person could be chosen “within one or two days”, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told Al Jazeera.
Observers say authorities are likely to apply the law strictly to demonstrate stability.
“You can expect Iran to apply the law rigorously to show that the country is not fragile – one leader goes, others are there,” Iran specialist Bernard Hourcade told RFI, adding that other senior Iranian officials were also killed in the strikes.
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‘A lock that has been broken’
Khamenei’s death marks an unprecedented moment for the political order he shaped for more than three decades.
“The American-Israeli strikes have destabilised the country, and the elimination of Ali Khamenei is clearly a lock that has been broken,” Hourcade said.
But removing one man does not necessarily dismantle the structure around him.
Iran is “a system” with institutions, a structured security apparatus and a network of political and economic elites, particularly around the Revolutionary Guards, which Hourcade described as the backbone of the regime.
“Eliminating a few leaders will not change the system.”
Power extends well beyond the office of the supreme leader. The structure includes the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC), Iran’s elite military force; the Basij, a volunteer paramilitary group; the Guardian Council, which vets election candidates and legislation, and administrative and security networks that reach into provinces and smaller towns.
The regime has been “beheaded”, but it retains a “capacity for self-regeneration”, said Sébastien Boussois, a Middle East researcher at the European Geopolitical Institute.
“It is not because you eliminate the symbolic head of a regime and bomb a country that the country falls ipso facto.”
He pointed to two precedents: al-Qaeda survived the killing of Osama bin Laden, and the Islamic State group outlasted the death of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
That view is echoed by others analysing the crisis. Since the strikes, many have repeated that no regime has ever been destroyed from the air. Whether this one survives, they argue, will depend on what happens inside the country.
“There will be no overthrow of the regime unless it is the Iranian population that takes its destiny in hand,” Admiral Alain Coledefy, a former inspector general of the French armed forces, told RFI.
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A nation divided
Reactions inside Iran have been mixed. Soon after state television announced Khamenei’s death, cries of joy were heard in some neighbourhoods of Tehran and other cities, RFI’s correspondent reported.
Videos circulating on social media showed people dancing in the streets and women celebrating with their hair uncovered. In southern Iran, a crowd toppled a monument bearing Khamenei’s image as people chanted and set off fireworks.
Similar scenes were observed within the diaspora, from Europe to Los Angeles – home to the largest Iranian community outside Iran, nicknamed “Tehrangeles”.
But there were also signs of grief and anger. A crowd gathered at Enghelab Square in central Tehran on Sunday morning. Prompted by a speaker with a microphone, people shouted “Death to America!” while beating their chests in rhythm, following Shia mourning traditions.
“There is no doubt that a large majority of Iranians have had enough of the Islamic Republic and want change,” Hourcade said. But bombing a country while claiming to liberate it, he added, remains an ambivalent approach.
Whether people will return to the streets as they did during January’s protest movement – which was met with a crackdown that left thousands dead according to provisional tolls – remains uncertain.
Military pressure is for now preventing mobilisation, people are not going out and schools are closed, RFI’s correspondent said. The authorities have also warned against any mobilisation or collaboration with what they call “enemies”.
There has so far been no violent action by citizens that could lead to an internal overthrow, such as taking control of the presidency or the government. “We are absolutely not there,” Boussois explained, pointing to the absence of a structured opposition.
EU foreign ministers warn on impact of conflict in Iran after Khamenei’s death
Risk of regional escalation
Beyond Iran’s borders, the confrontation is widening.
Tehran has promised a “terrible” response, but its immediate military capacity appears limited. “The Iranian authorities are not capable, militarily, of facing it,” Coledefy said.
That does not mean Iran lacks other means of retaliation.
“We have not yet seen the reactions of its proxies,” Admiral Alain Oudot de Dainville, a member of the French Naval Academy, and former chief of staff of the French navy, told RFI – referring in particular to the Houthis in Yemen.
Iran carried out new strikes on American bases in the Gulf and in Iraq’s Kurdistan region on Sunday. Blasts were reported in several Gulf cities, including Doha and Dubai.
The position of Gulf monarchies is especially sensitive, Boussois warned. Several are viewed by Tehran as “traitor states”, he said – pointing to the 2020 Abraham Accords, which established diplomatic ties between Israel and several Arab states, as well as the presence of major American bases in the region.
Tehran could seek to “stoke tensions” to push those states into turning against the United States, he said.
Oman, which had been acting as a mediator in indirect talks between Washington and Tehran and had until then avoided being drawn into the conflict, was targeted by Iranian drones on Sunday.
The nature of the confrontation has shifted, Bertrand Besancenot, a former French ambassador to Saudi Arabia and Qatar, told RFI.
On the American and Israeli side, the aim is to destroy the leadership of the Revolutionary Guards and the Basij and to neutralise ballistic missile installations, in the hope that weakening the regime could trigger a popular uprising.
On the Iranian side, the authorities believe this time it is a fight to the death and are using every tool available, he said. They are no longer only striking Israel or American bases, but widening their list of targets.
Despite the escalation, Hourcade does not expect a regional war. “I don’t think it will trigger a regional war – nobody wants it and nobody can afford it.”
This story has been adapted an updated from the original version in French
KENYA
‘They saw potential when I saw only my mistake’: training Nairobi’s teen mothers
Nairobi’s Passion to Share Foundation is empowering young mothers and girls who dropped out of school to build their own futures, teaching them the skills they need to start businesses and support themselves and their families.
In the centre of Nairobi, where corrugated iron roofs shimmer under the afternoon sun and narrow footpaths weave through tightly packed homes, lives 23-year-old Sharon Achieng. Although there was a time when she thought she’d merely survive, rather than live.
She grew up in Kibera, one of the biggest slum towns on the African continent. Her mother sold vegetables by the roadside, while her father drifted in and out of casual jobs.
Sharon loved school – the order of writing in notebooks and the certainty of exams – but when she became pregnant at the age of 16, all that changed. Her classmates whispered, and teachers avoided making eye contact with her. Eventually, she stopped going to school.
“I felt like the world had decided my story,” Sharon says. “Teen mother. Failure. Finished.”
For months after her son Brian was born, she rarely left the house. With no income, no diploma and no plan, the weight of the responsibility pressed on her. What frightened her most was not poverty, it was the fear that nothing would ever change.
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Training over charity
Then a neighbour told her about a small organisation based nearby called the Passion to Share Foundation, which offers training for young mothers and girls who have dropped out of school.
Sharon was hesitant, having heard promises of help before. But then, walking through the gates of the organisation’s offices one Monday morning with Brian strapped to her back, she met founder Lydia Anyango.
She too, years earlier, had had to rely on sponsorship to complete her education and understood the humiliation women can feel when they need to ask for help.
“When I started Passion to Share, I didn’t want charity,” Lydia explains. “I wanted transformation. I wanted girls to discover what they are capable of.”
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Founded in 2017, the organisation started life with little more than borrowed space and borrowed hope.
Lydia’s vision was simple: equip disadvantaged girls and young mothers with the practical skills that will allow them to earn an income – including fashion design, computer graphics and beauty therapy. She believes poverty is not just about lack of money, but lack of options.
Sharon enrolled in the fashion design programme, learning to measure fabric, cut clean lines and operate an industrial sewing machine.
She recalls that she felt overwhelmed, starting something new. But, surrounded by other young women with similar stories of young motherhood and dropping out of school, she no longer felt like an outsider.
Business loans
The Foundation also anticipates one of the biggest barriers young mothers face: childcare. Through its day care programme, infants as young as four months are supervised while their mothers attend training.
Knowing that Brian was being looked after left Sharon free to focus on the new skills she was acquiring as the months passed.
Childcare solution springs up for Nairobi’s market trader mothers
As her confidence grew, she began designing dresses for her neighbours. Then she received her first paid order: matching outfits for a local church choir. She worked late into the night, stitching under a single bulb.
When the choir members appeared on in her creations, there was applause from the congregation. Sharon says it was the first time she had felt seen not for her circumstances, but for her skills.
The Foundation has launched a savings plan and an interest-free loan initiative to help graduates start micro-businesses – among them a roadside salon and a tailoring kiosk. Another graduate is now teaching digital design to secondary school students. Their successes have allowed them to not only pay their rent and buy textbooks for their children, but to shift the dynamics of their families.
‘Passion is persistence’
Sharon used the loan facility to buy her own sewing machine, which has allowed her to turn her skills into her livelihood.
Today, she runs a small but growing tailoring business from a rented stall. Brian, now six, wears school uniforms that his mother made.
But when asked what changed her life, she doesn’t mention the loan or the sewing machine: she says it was the belief that Lydia and Passion to Share showed in her.
“They looked at me and saw potential,” she says. “Before that, I only saw my mistake.”
Lydia tells her students that passion is not just excitement, it’s persistence – choosing to show up every day, even when resources are limited and outcomes uncertain.
In a community where challenges include unemployment, teenage pregnancy and limited access to education, Passion to Share does not claim to be able to solve every problem, but rather offers its service users what they need to carve out their own path.
On one recent afternoon, Sharon returned to the Foundation as a guest speaker for a new group of young mothers.
“I thought my story ended at 16,” she told them. “But it was just a different beginning.”
ANALYSIS
Are France’s once disparate far-right groups merging?
Ten days after the death of far-right activist Quentin Deranque in Lyon, President Emmanuel Macron convened government officials this week to discuss the fight against ‘violent extreme groups’. Although France’s far right has historically been divided into several factions, there have been signs of rapprochement in recent years, as seen at the march in Deranque’s name held on 21 February.
According to French domestic intelligence services, there are 3,300 individuals currently involved with one of the three main factions of the extreme right in the country: identitarians, revolutionary nationalists and monarchists.
The ethno-nationalist identitarian movement emerged in the early 2000s, before being represented on a national scale by the small group Génération Identitaire from 2012 onwards.
Its supporters advocate an “ethnic definition” of identity based on a “triptych of identity”, explained Marion Jacquet-Vaillant, a specialist in the movement, to French news agency AFP. “For example, an individual is from Nice, French and European.”
Nine arrested as Lyon activist killing becomes flashpoint in French politics
Revolutionary nationalist ideology is anti-parliamentarian and neo-fascist. It has long been represented in France by the Groupe Union Défense, better known by its acronym GUD.
This neo-fascist movement made headlines in 2013 when the young anti-fascist activist Clément Méric was beaten to death by skinheads linked to a small group close to this movement, which was subsequently dissolved by the government.
“Revolutionary nationalism is a movement that claims to be social, popular, anti-bourgeois and internationalist,” said Lebourg.
The third and final movement is that of the monarchists, whose main incarnation in France is the group Action Française. Founded in 1898, it originally advocated for a return to the monarchy to restore traditional values and national unity. It is now focused on cultural identity and Euroscepticism.
While the group share ideological similarities, their approach to violent action differs.
The monarchists of Action Française make little or no use of violent methods.
The identitarian movement, meanwhile, has resorted to violence in the past – most prominently the attempted assassination of then President Jacques Chirac in 2002 by Maxime Brunerie, an identitarian activist. Since then, this movement has favoured shock tactics, such as occupying mosques or displaying banners with racist connotations, such as the one targeting singer Aya Nakamura.
Among revolutionary nationalists, violence is in the movement’s DNA. Lebourg notes: “Seventy-five percent of their violent acts since 2017 have been assaults.”
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A changing landscape
The landscape of the far right in France has been changing over the past decade, mainly as a result of the French government ordering the dissolution of several groups.
Macron’s time in office has seen the dissolution of more political groups than during any other administration, and since 2017 half of those dissolved have been far-right groups. Génération Identitaire was banned in March 2021, and the GUD in June 2024.
However, with the disappearance of these national structures, small collectives have reformed at the local level, both in cities and rural areas – sometimes with as few as 15 members. The online media outlet StreetPress lists 141 such groups on its website.
The effectiveness of banning these groups is disputed by academics, who argue that dismantling larger national organisations means intelligence services lose track of certain activists.
It also reinforces the sense of belonging among members to the same ostracised movement, explains political scientist Jean-Yves Camus.
“These activists say to themselves, since repression affects us all, why do we continue to divide ourselves? There is a widespread feeling of ‘what unites us is stronger than what divides us’, despite ideological and historical differences.”
How did Lyon become France’s capital of political violence?
Camus says the march organised in Lyon on 21 February in tribute to Deranque demonstrated this new unity between the various factions of the far right – as did Deranque himself, having rubbed shoulders with identitarian and monarchist groups as well as revolutionary nationalists.
Of the three factions of the far right, the ideology of the identitarians is increasingly dominating the other two – in particular its adherence to the racist conspiracy theory of the “Great Replacement”.
Popularised by Renaud Camus, a theorist of the radical far right in France, it argues that there is an orchestrated plot to replace white European populations with non-white immigrants, primarily from Muslim-majority countries and advocates the forced return of immigrants to their countries of origin.
Thus, Lebourg says: “[With] the obsession with the ethnic question, we have a great simplification of the movement that has been under way since 2015,” adding that there has effectively been a collapse of the “ideological barriers” that once divided the far right.
This article has been adapted from the original version in French by Baptiste Coulon.
UNITED NATIONS
Burundi nominates former Senegalese president Sall for UN chief
A new secretary-general of the United Nations will be appointed on 1 January, 2027 to succeed Antonio Guterres, with three current nominations on the table – former Senegalese president Macky Sall, plus former Chilean president Michelle Bachelet and the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Argentine Rafael Grossi.
The selection process was launched last November, with each candidate to be formally nominated by a state or group of states, not necessarily by their country of origin. The Security Council must begin the selection process by the end of July.
UN General Assembly spokeswoman La Neice Collins confirmed Burundi’s nomination of Sall on Monday.
Burundi currently chairs the African Union (AU), and a source close to Sall told French news agency AFP that during Sall’s time as president of the AU, from February 2022 to February 2023, his priority “was to carry Africa’s voice within international bodies”.
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Other candidates
The current composition of the Council could be favourable to Sall, as three African members are sitting on it this year – the Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia and Somalia.
While the entire Security Council will elect the next secretary-general, its five permanent members – France, the United Kingdom, China, the United States, and Russia – will ultimate be the deciders, as they have power of veto.
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Two other candidates have been formally nominated: former Chilean president Michelle Bachelet and Argentine diplomat Rafael Grossi, who currently heads the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
Costa Rica has also put forward its former vice president Rebeca Grynspan, but her letter of candidacy has not yet been officially submitted to the UN.
Senegal ex-president Sall ‘could face charges’ following public finances report
Controversy in Senegal
Sall led the West African nation from 2012 to 2024. The current government accuses him of covering up unfavourable economic data and concealing the true extent of the country’s fiscal problems.
Senegal charged four former government ministers from Sall’s cabinet with corruption and embezzlement related to the management of Covid-19 funds – under a wider anti-corruption campaign by President Bassirou Diomaye Faye.
(with newswires, and partially adapted from this report in French.)
Belgium – cameroon
Belgian police detain three linked to Cameroonian separatist group
Belgian authorities detained three people on Tuesday after four arrests in an investigation targeting a Cameroonian secessionist group over possible war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Federal prosecutors said the arrests followed simultaneous searches in Antwerp and Londerzeel on Sunday. The inquiry, launched last summer, focuses on people living in Belgium suspected of being part of the leadership of the Ambazonia Defence Forces, or ADF.
“Money is reportedly being raised for the armed struggle and for the purchase of arms and ammunition, and instructions for attacks and liquidations are said to be given from Belgium,” the federal prosecutor’s office said.
Three suspects were remanded in custody by an investigating judge, prosecutors said. One person was released. Authorities said they were working with officials in Norway and the United States, where similar investigations are under way and arrests have been made.
Cameroon opposition leader flees to Gambia for ‘safety’ after contested vote
Conflict since 2016
Cameroon’s two English-speaking regions in the northwest and southwest have been hit by violence since 2016. Separatist fighters have clashed with state forces in a conflict that has killed at least 6,000 civilians, Human Rights Watch said.
The crisis began after President Paul Biya, who has ruled for more than four decades, cracked down on peaceful protests by English speakers, who make up about 20 percent of the population.
Lucas Cho Ayaba, leader of the ADF, is being held in Norway. He was arrested in September 2024 on suspicion of playing a central role in the armed conflict for the creation of what separatists call Ambazonia. He denies committing war crimes.
The English-speaking North-West and South-West regions were once part of British Cameroon. The territory was created after German Cameroon was divided between France and the United Kingdom at the end of the First World War.
In 1961, part of British Cameroon joined newly independent Cameroon, while another part joined Nigeria.
Gunmen kill at least 20 in one of Cameroon’s anglophone regions
Abuses by ‘all sides’
In July 2023, Amnesty International said security forces, separatist rebels and ethnic militias from both sides of the country’s linguistic divide had carried out executions, torture and rape.
The group said civilians were caught between the army, armed separatists and militias. Its investigation also looked at militias in the northwest drawn from the Mbororo community, Fulani herders who have a history of conflict with settled farmers.
“The Mbororo Fulani populations have been quickly targeted by armed separatists, in part because they are perceived as supporting the authorities in power,” the report said.
“As the situation deteriorated, militias mainly composed of Mbororo Fulani – supported or tolerated by the authorities – committed abuses against the settled population.”
(with newswires)
South Sudan
UN warns of resurgence of violence in South Sudan following massacre
The United Nations has expressed deep concern following another massacre in South Sudan, in which at least 169 people were killed and buried in a mass grave. Local officials have attributed the weekend attacks to intercommunal violence, which come amid growing political instability in the country.
At least 169 people were killed in Abiemnhom, in the Ruweng administrative zone bordering Sudan, according to local authorities, who emphasised that this toll is still provisional.
“People fled in all directions, so we will undoubtedly find more wounded and more bodies,” the local government’s Minister of Information, James Monyluak, told RFI’s correspondent.
The exact reasons for the massacre are currently unknown but local authorities are citing intercommunal violence, against a backdrop of growing political instability in South Sudan.
According to Monyluak, the attack took place around 4am on Sunday, when a “very large number” of armed Nuer youths from the neighbouring Mayom County, some dressed in military uniforms, stormed Abiemnhom.
Faced with the large number of victims of the attack, the authorities had no choice but to bury them in a mass grave.
Seventy-nine soldiers and police officers were reportedly killed trying to repel the attackers, the correspondent added.
The NGO Doctors Without Borders (MSF) announced that it had treated 80 people with gunshot wounds at the hospital in Abyei, located a few kilometers to the west.
Some victims died from their injuries, including a pregnant woman, the NGO said.
Civilians shelter at UN base
United Nations peacekeepers from the UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) took in nearly 1,000 civilians at their base, where they provided emergency care to the wounded.
The South Sudanese government condemned what it called “the barbaric attack” in a statement, confirming the killing of two senior local officials.
Minister of Information Ateny Wek Ateny said the casualties include “both civilians and members of law enforcement” and that the incident would be investigated thoroughly.
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The UN pointed to the sharp resurgence of violence in the country in recent months, particularly in Jonglei state, where fighting between supporters of President Salva Kiir and those of opposition leader Riek Machar has intensified, despite the peace agreement that both sides signed in 2018 to end the civil war that began in 2013.
Priyanka Chodhury, spokesperson for UNMISS, told RFI that “the fighting between the two parties that signed the peace agreements has intensified”.
“We are receiving reports of airstrikes and we know that there has been significant population displacement, destruction, and looting of humanitarian infrastructure. This brutal escalation of hostilities is extremely worrying,” she added, urging all parties to cease hostilities and engage in constructive dialogue.
From civil war to economic chaos: Ten years of independence for South Sudan
Deteriorating situation
Some 280,000 people have been displaced and humanitarian workers targeted during the clashes in Jonglei in the past two months, according to the UN.
On Monday, MSF said 26 members of its staff were missing following an air strike on one of its facilities. The organisation has suspended medical services in Lankien and Pieri in Jonglei state.
UN rights chief Volker Turk voiced alarm last Friday at the country’s deteriorating situation, calling for swift action to avert a return to full-scale civil war.
South Sudan, the world’s youngest country, has been beset by civil war, ethnic violence, poverty and massive corruption since it was formed in 2011.
Basketball
French basketball giant Wembanyama buys stake in boyhood club
French basketball star Victor Wembanyama confirmed on Tuesday he has bought a minority stake in his boyhood club Nanterre 92.
The 22-year-old played for the club between the ages of 10 and 17 before leaving in June 2021 to join French top-flight side ASVEL in Lyon in south-eastern France.
He left a year later for Metropolitans 92 just outside Paris. He said he was drawn to the club because head coach Vincent Collet was known for giving young players a chance.
The choice paid off. In June 2023, Wembanyama was drafted by NBA Western Conference team San Antonio Spurs as their top young recruit for the 2023-2024 season.
At the end of that campaign, he was named 2024 NBA Rookie of the Year. He became the first Frenchman to win the award since it was created in 1953 and only the sixth player to receive it by unanimous vote.
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“Nanterre shaped me as a player and as a man,” Wembanyama said in a statement on Tuesday. “I want to help make it a benchmark club that is ambitious, inclusive and true to its values in the long term.”
The club did not reveal how much he invested. Executives said his stake would help fund training programmes and youth projects.
“This significant and formative decision is a natural continuation of Victor’s commitment to the club that trained him,” the club said in a statement.
“It reflects a clear desire to make a lasting contribution to the development of a club that has played an important role in his sporting and personal development.”
Setting records
Since joining the Spurs, Wembanyama has continued to notch up records.
On 10 February, he scored 40 points and took 12 rebounds in a 136-108 win over the LA Lakers.
He scored 37 points in the first half, the highest-scoring half by a Spurs player in the 21st century. He also passed Spurs legend Tim Duncan in career 40-point games, recording his sixth. Wembanyama became the third player in the past 50 seasons to score at least 40 points while playing 27 minutes or fewer.
“Seeing Victor become a shareholder in the club that trained him is a sign of exceptional trust and a powerful symbol for all generations of players who wear or will wear our colours,” Frédéric Donnadieu, president of Nanterre 92, said.
French basketball prodigy Wembanyama prepares for NBA ascent
Return to Paris
In January 2025, Wembanyama was one of the main attractions when the Spurs and Indiana Pacers played two regular season games in Paris as part of the NBA’s international drive to boost the popularity of its teams.
Wembanyama limbered up with his teammates on his old stomping ground at the Palais des sports Maurice-Thorez in Nanterre and he inaugurated two basketball courts in his home town of Le Chesnay, some 17 kilometres west of Paris.
In an interview with the French sports newspaper L’Equipe on Tuesday, Wembanyama said: “I don’t even remember who approached whom first but it happened naturally. I was born and raised in France. I want to have an impact on French basketball and at Nanterre because that’s where I feel at home.”
Rwanda – DRC conflict
US imposes sanctions on Rwanda military over DR Congo fighting
The US on Monday imposed sanctions on the Rwanda Defence Force and top military officials over their role in ongoing fighting in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo and called for their immediate withdrawal from the mineral-rich region.
Rwanda has long rejected allegations from Congo, the United Nations and Western powers that it supports the AFC/M23 rebel group, which staged a lightning offensive last year and now holds more territory in eastern DRC than ever before.
But the US Treasury Department said in a statement on Monday that the rebels’ gains would have been impossible without Rwandan backing. The State Department said separately that Rwanda‘s support had enabled “horrific human rights abuses.”
Rwanda’s government said in an statement sent to news agencies that the sanctions unjustly targeted only one party to the peace process and “misrepresent the reality and distort the facts of the conflict.”
The statement added that Kigali was “fully committed to disengagement of its forces in tandem with the DRC implementing their obligations” under US-led mediation, but accused Congo of failing to keep promises such as ending support for militias.
Mass graves found in eastern DRC following M23 withdrawal from Uvira
Congo’s government said it welcomed the sanctions, describing them as “a strong signal in support of respect” for its territorial integrity and sovereignty.
A spokesperson for AFC/M23 did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The sanctioned Rwandan officials include army chief of staff Vincent Nyakarundi, as well as the chief of defence staff, the special operations force commander and the commander of the 5th Infantry Division, according to the Treasury Department.
Mediation efforts fail to stop fighting
Rwanda and Congo signed a peace deal in Washington in December as part of US President Donald Trump‘s push to broker peace in the region and attract billions of dollars in Western investment.
Just days after that ceremony, however, AFC/M23 rebels entered the eastern Congo city of Uvira, near the Burundian border, in the war’s biggest escalation for months.
Goma’s residents reflect on life a year after DR Congo city fell to M23 rebels
They later pulled out under US pressure, though the Treasury Department said on Monday that the rebels’ continued presence near Burundi‘s border “carries the risk of escalating the conflict into a broader regional war.”
Fighting continues in eastern Congo on several fronts.
Over the weekend Congolese officials accused AFC/M23 of launching a drone attack on the airport in the strategic city of Kisangani, hundreds of kilometres from any active front lines.
AFC/M23 claimed responsibility for the attack late Monday.
(Reuters)
FRANCE – JUSTICE
French court cuts jail terms for three men in Samuel Paty murder case
A French appeal court upheld one jail term and reduced three others over the chain of events that led to the beheading of teacher Samuel Paty by a Chechen jihadist in October 2020.
Paty’s killer, Abdoullakh Anzorov, was shot dead by police after the attack outside the Bois-d’Aulne secondary school in Conflans-Sainte-Honorine, west of Paris, where Paty taught history and geography.
At the end of the initial trial in December 2024, 66-year-old Islamist preacher Abdelhakim Sefrioui was sentenced to 15 years for criminal association with a terrorist group. His sentence was upheld after a five-week appeal hearing in Paris.
After the ruling, Sefrioui’s lawyers said they would appeal to the Court of Cassation.
Reduced sentences
Brahim Chnina, 54, the father of a pupil in Paty’s class, had his 13-year sentence reduced to 10 years for instigating an online hate campaign against the teacher.
The 16-year terms handed to Naïm Boudaoud, 24, and Azim Epsirkhanov, 25, were cut to six and seven years. They were convicted of criminal conspiracy, without any terrorist element being taken into account.
They had been accused of driving Anzorov and helping him obtain weapons. Prosecutors had pursued them for complicity in murder.
The events began with a lie told by a 13-year-old pupil, Chnina’s daughter. She accused Paty of discriminating against Muslim students during a lesson on freedom of expression in which he showed a satirical cartoon of the prophet Muhammad.
She had not attended the class. Her claims were shared widely on social media by her father and Sefrioui.
‘Shock still raw’, French teachers fearful, five years after Samuel Paty killing
Online campaign
After several days of a virulent online campaign targeting the 47-year-old teacher, Anzorov stabbed and beheaded him.
In their original verdict, judges said Chnina and Sefrioui did not know the attacker.
However, they added: “The two defendants knowingly took the risk, despite the danger and threats to Samuel Paty, that a violent and radicalised third party, who became their armed wing, would deliberately harm him physically.”
During the appeal hearing, Chnina’s lawyers Franck Berton and Louise Tort asked the court to put their client’s actions into perspective. “He never participated in any terrorist activity,” they told the appeal court.
As for Boudaoud and Epsirkhanov, trial judges said they were aware of their friend’s dangerous nature but still helped him, especially in his search for weapons.
Boudaoud’s lawyers, Hiba Rizkallah and Martin Méchin, challenged the case against their client. “Our client was convicted on the basis of fragile and hazardous interpretations, without any evidence of criminal intent,” they told the appeal court.
They urged judges not to give in to emotion or media pressure.
(with newswires)
Diplomacy
Germany’s Merz on high-stakes Washington trip amid Iran fallout
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has arrived in Washington – the first European leader to visit President Donald Trump since the United States and Israel launched their war against Iran. The high-stakes visit to the White House is Merz’s third since taking office.
The previously scheduled meeting Tuesday had been expected to focus on the Ukraine war, US-EU trade tensions and a wider effort to salvage frayed transatlantic ties.
Now the key topic will be the war started by the US-Israeli attacks on Iran that killed supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and have seen Tehran strike back at targets across the region and beyond, with no quick end in sight to the fighting.
The German chancellor – long a harsh critic of the Islamic republic’s leadership – on Sunday said Berlin shared the Iranian people’s “relief” that the “mullah regime is coming to an end”.
On the issue of whether the attack complied with international law, Merz said now was not the time “to lecture our partners and allies” and pointed to past failed attempts to curb Tehran’s nuclear and missile programmes.
Germany, France and Britain said Sunday they were ready to defend their interests and those of their allies in the Gulf if necessary by taking “defensive action” against Iran.
EU foreign ministers warn on impact of conflict in Iran after Khamenei’s death
Trump’s hawkish ally, Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, slammed all three for what he labelled their “pathetically soft” response to America’s “Operation Epic Fury”.
Germany has since made clear it would not join the war, other than to take any actions needed to protect its troops based in the Middle East.
The escalating Middle East war, and Europe’s stance on it, add another potential flashpoint to the Merz-Trump meeting, held at time of growing estrangement between the long-time allies.
Trade talk
Merz – alongside NATO chief Mark Rutte, Italy’s Giorgia Meloni and Finland’s Alexander Stubb – has managed to maintain cordial ties with Trump and escape his wrath or ridicule.
He has done so in part by meeting a key Trump demand and massively raising German defence spending to 5 percent, in line with America’s position that European NATO members need to step up on joint defence.
When it comes to Trump’s tariffs blitz, Merz has been able to point out that the European Union, not its 27 member states, is in charge of managing the response.
While the threats have rattled Germany’s export-driven economy, a recent US Supreme Court ruling overturned key levies on EU goods, including cars.
In their Oval Office talk, Merz will outline the EU’s “coordinated position”, a spokesman said, adding that “businesses need planning security, and that applies on both sides of the Atlantic”.
‘Under destruction’: Europe’s future security in question at Munich conference
Merz has at times pushed back against the mercurial US president, especially over Ukraine, and often asserted that Europe must become more sovereign in times of geopolitical upheaval.
During their first White House meeting last June, Merz challenged Trump to heap pressure on Moscow to end the “terrible” Ukraine war raging since Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion.
At February’s Munich Security Conference, Merz pointed to the “deep rift” between the traditional allies – but also urged America to “repair and revive transatlantic trust together”.
(with newswires)
Defence
France to increase nuclear warheads as part of shared plan to protect Europe
President Emmanuel Macron says France would increase the number of its nuclear warheads and cooperate with eight European countries to help protect the continent as key NATO ally Washington turns away.
Macron warned Monday that a widening war between the United States, Israel, and Iran risks spilling over to Europe’s borders, as he unveiled a new strategy for France’s nuclear deterrence.
The Middle East conflict, which began on Saturday, “brings and will continue to bring instability and a possible conflagration to our borders, with Iran’s nuclear and ballistic capabilities still intact”, he said.
Macron’s presentation of the country’s updated nuclear doctrine comes as Russia’s war against Ukraine grinds into a fifth year, prompting worry among NATO allies about Washington’s wavering commitment.
European nations, which have relied on the US nuclear deterrent throughout the Cold War and in the decades since it ended, are increasingly debating whether to bolster their own atomic arsenals.
“We must strengthen our nuclear deterrent in the face of multiple threats, and we must consider our deterrence strategy deep within the European continent, with full respect for our sovereignty,” Macron said in his speech given at France’s Ile Longue nuclear submarine base in Brittany.
He announced “the gradual implementation of what I would call advanced deterrence”.
Macron announced a series of concrete measures in a bid to bolster Europe’s security as France’s allies are concerned that a possible win by the eurosceptic far-right National Rally party of Marine Le Pen in next year’s presidential election could undermine cooperation in Europe.
“An upgrade of our arsenal is essential,” Macron said. “That’s why I ordered an increase in the number of nuclear warheads in our arsenal.”
Macron added however that France would no longer be disclosing details on its nuclear stockpile.
France maintains the world’s fourth-largest nuclear arsenal, estimated at around 290 warheads. Britain, which is no longer a member of the European Union, is the only other European nuclear power.
By contrast, the United States and Russia, the world’s two main atomic powers, have thousands of nuclear warheads each.
EU ministers push for joint defence fund to secure a more self-reliant Europe
Macron said eight European countries had agreed to participate in the “advanced” nuclear deterrence scheme proposed by France, including Germany, Britain and Poland.
These countries – also including the Netherlands, Belgium, Greece, Sweden and Denmark – will be able to host French “strategic air forces”, which will be able to “spread out across the European continent” to “complicate the calculations of our adversaries”, he said.
The scheme could also involve “the conventional participation of allied forces in our nuclear activities,” such as recent military exercises in which British forces were involved, Macron added.
Europe’s defence dilemma: autonomy or dependence?
France and Germany also released a joint statement on Monday to announce the creation of a “nuclear steering group”, in an arrangement they said would “add to, not substitute for, NATO’s nuclear deterrence”.
“France and Germany have agreed to take first concrete steps beginning this year, including German conventional participation in French nuclear exercises and joint visits to strategic sites as well as development of conventional capabilities with European partners,” the statement said.
(with newswires)
IRAN – NUCLEAR
IAEA finds no evidence of hits on Iran nuclear facilities, urges restraint
The United Nations nuclear watchdog – the IAEA – has called for restraint and renewed diplomacy, having found no clear evidence of damage to Iran’s atomic facilities after the latest air strikes on the country.
The head of the UN’s nuclear watchdog said on Monday there is no evidence so far that Iran’s nuclear facilities have been damaged following recent US and Israeli strikes, offering a note of cautious reassurance amid a tense backdrop.
Opening an extraordinary session of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s board of governors on Monday, director general Rafael Grossi said the agency had seen “no indication” that key sites – including the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant and the Tehran Research Reactor – had been hit.
“Up to now, we have no indication that any of the nuclear installations … have been damaged or hit,” Grossi said, while stressing that the situation remains fluid and under close observation.
Macron urges calm as Iran halts nuclear cooperation amid IAEA row
No major damage seen
Grossi acknowledged that communication with Iranian authorities has been patchy since the strikes began. The IAEA has attempted to reach Iran’s nuclear regulatory bodies but has so far received no response.
“We hope this indispensable channel of communication can be reestablished as soon as possible,” he said.
Despite the lack of direct contact, the agency has been analysing satellite imagery and other available data. Speaking to reporters, Grossi said there were no signs of significant military activity targeting nuclear facilities.
“There might be something there, but not significant or comparable in any way to what we saw last time,” he noted, referring to strikes during a 12-day conflict in June last year that did hit key sites including Natanz.
However, Iran’s ambassador to the IAEA, Reza Najafi, told reporters that the Natanz facility – a central part of Iran’s nuclear programme – had been attacked. He did not provide further details on the extent of any damage.
Najafi also criticised Washington’s long-standing accusations that Iran is seeking nuclear weapons, calling them “just the pretext to attack and invade”.
IAEA inspectors are not currently in Iran, and access to sites such as Natanz has been restricted since last year’s conflict, further complicating efforts to independently verify conditions on the ground.
UN nuclear body asks Iran to explain uranium enrichment levels
Restraint and diplomacy
Grossi described the broader regional situation as “very concerning”, pointing to the risks posed by military activity in areas with operational nuclear infrastructure.
“Iran and many other countries in the region… have operational nuclear power plants and nuclear research reactors… increasing the threat to nuclear safety,” he said.
Even so, his message struck a measured tone – urging restraint while keeping the door open for diplomacy.
Grossi called for negotiations between Iran and the US to resume “as quickly as possible”, noting that recent Oman-mediated talks in Geneva had failed to produce a breakthrough.
“An understanding eluded the parties this time,” he said. “We are, quite understandably, feeling a strong sense of frustration.”
The extraordinary meeting of the Vienna-based agency was convened at the request of Russia, following a similar appeal from Iran. It comes just ahead of a scheduled regular session of the IAEA’s 35-member board.
The diplomatic impasse reflects deeper divisions. Western countries – led by the US and Israel – accuse Iran of seeking to develop nuclear weapons, while Tehran insists its programme is strictly for civilian use.
(with newswires)
Middle East war
African leaders call for restraint, dialogue as Iran crisis intensifies
Leaders on the African continent have called for “restraint” after the attacks launched by the United States and Israel on Iran at the weekend. While some support Tehran’s right to self defence, others have denounced a violation of international law which threatens the stability of an entire region.
Across the African continent, reactions have been pouring in since the United States and Israel launched strikes against Iran on Saturday evening and the subsequent retaliation which saw Iran attack several countries across the Middle East.
Most African countries have called for de-escalation and respect for international law, while others support Tehran’s right to respond.
The African Union (AU) said in a statement that the military strikes and Iran’s subsequent response, “represent a perilous and deeply troubling escalation – one that marks a serious intensification of hostilities in the Middle East and threatens to engulf the entire region in an uncontrollable cycle of violence, suffering, and pain.”
The bloc urged all parties to “act fully in accordance with international law and the United Nations Charter to safeguard international peace and security.”
Economic strain
The pan-African body’s head, Mahamoud Ali Youssouf called “for restraint, urgent de-escalation and sustained dialogue”.
“Further escalation risks worsening global instability, with serious implications for energy markets, food security, and economic resilience – particularly in Africa, where conflict and economic pressures remain acute,” he stressed.
The Chair also condemned on Saturday evening the Iranian missile and drone attacks against its neighbours Bahrain, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia.
The Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) has also expressed its deep concern regarding the escalating hostilities in the Gulf. Ecowas emphasised that “any prolonged disruption in the Persian Gulf would threaten global oil and gas flows,” according to Afrik.com.
“A surge in energy prices would have an immediate impact on West African economies, already weakened by inflation and dependence on refined product imports,” the organisation added.
It also underlined risks to food security, as many African states rely on imports of cereals and agricultural inputs transiting through sensitive trade routes.
Ali Khamenei’s voyage: from boy cleric to Iran’s man with the final word
Fraternal compassion
South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa was the first African leader to react individually. He said on Saturday that the US and Israeli strikes on Iran violated international law.
“Anticipatory self-defence is not permitted under international law and self-defence cannot be based on assumption or anticipation,” he said in a statement, calling for “maximum restraint”.
South Africa was until recently the only African member of the BRICS economic group, which includes Iran, Brazil, Russia, India and China, but recently accepted a few new members from the Arab world and beyond (Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates).
Mindful of its ties with Tehran, the South African government reacted in a measured manner, calling on all parties to exercise restraint.
But other political parties were more vocal, like Julius Malema’s Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF). The radical left-wing group insisting that Iran “has the right to defend itself” and denounced a Washington-Tel Aviv alliance “resolutely determined to defend Israeli interests throughout the region, whatever the human cost.”
Chadian President Mahamat Idriss Déby expressed his country’s “fraternal compassion to Ayatollah Khamenei, as well as to the entire brotherly people of Iran in the face of this adversity that has struck a sister nation.”
N’Djamena however clarified later that it also “condemned with equal firmness” the Iranian attacks against brotherly countries.
The Kingdom of Morocco, closer to Israel since the signature of the Abraham Accords, denounced in a statement the “abhorrent Iranian missile attacks that violated the integrity and security of brotherly Arab states.”
Other nations, such as Senegal, Algeria, Kenya, and Ghana, have been calling for an immediate ceasefire since Saturday, while urging their citizens to exercise caution.
African media, like Seneplus in Senegal, TSA in Algeria and Ledjely in Guinea note that populations in Africa sympathise with Iran and its strategy to counteract the USA’s dominance, but fear retaliation.
Africans in the Arab peninsula
African nationals living abroad are concerned for their safety, notably in Dubai, where Iranian missiles have already caused damage, including at the international airport.
“This morning, I was woken up by a missile that exploded over my neighborhood,” Ibrahima, a young Senegalese man who lives in Dubai, told RFI. “We’re trying to keep our families informed, and they’re keeping us updated through the news channels.
He added the situation is quite stressful. “We get alert messages on all our phones when the missiles are approaching. We see and hear the intercepted missiles coming from Iran. It’s true that it’s quite dramatic and stressful, all day long.”
A Cameroonian woman contacted by RFI said: “The instruction given so far is to stay home, not to go out onto balconies or look out of windows, because the missile debris that has been falling since last night is serious.”
A five-star hotel was hit overnight and large shopping centers are closed because of the debris.
The authorities in Cameroon, through their diplomatic missions, called on the entire Cameroonian diaspora residing in countries of the region to strictly adhere to the preventive security measures issued by their host governments.
Ghanaian authorities also called their citizens residing in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates to stay home as much as possible and “comply with directives issued by local authorities.”
MIDDLE EAST WAR
Lebanon rocked by Israeli strikes as Hezbollah joins Iran war
Lebanon has been pulled into the war with Iran after Hezbollah – weakened by months of confrontation and under pressure to disarm – fired long-range missiles and drones into northern Israel on Monday. Within hours, Israeli forces launched heavy air raids across the country, killing dozens and triggering a large-scale flight of civilians.
The escalation marks a decisive step for the Shiite political and military movement. When Israel and the United States launched military action against Iran on Saturday morning, Hezbollah faced a crucial choice – remain on the sidelines or get involved. By dawn on Monday, it had made its choice.
Hezbollah said in a statement that it had fired a salvo of long-range missiles and sent a squadron of drones towards targets south of the city of Haifa. The operation, it added, was carried out to avenge the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
The Israeli offensive began around two hours later. The heaviest strikes hit Beirut’s southern suburbs at dawn, RFI’s correspondent in the capital Paul Khalifeh reported. Numerous air-to-ground missiles struck the area, while powerful explosions echoed across the city.
Lebanon’s health ministry said at least 31 people were killed and 149 wounded. Around 15 towns and villages both south and north of the Litani river were also hit by air raids or artillery and tank fire.
Hezbollah, an armed movement founded in 1982 with backing from Iran, has maintained close ties with Tehran since its creation. Giant portraits of Khamenei have been displayed for decades in Hezbollah strongholds across Lebanon.
From protector to onlooker: how France lost its influence in Lebanon
Israel signals escalation
Israel’s military issued evacuation orders to residents of around 50 villages in southern Lebanon and in the eastern Bekaa valley.
Overnight from Sunday to Monday, Israeli Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir said residents in northern Israel had been informed that the strikes on Lebanon would continue for at least several days.
“The strikes are continuing and their intensity will increase,” Rafi Milo, head of Israel’s northern command, wrote in an army statement on Telegram. He said Hezbollah would “pay a heavy price” for its support for Tehran.
The movement is widely seen as severely weakened after its military confrontation with Israel since 2024. It has suffered heavy losses and its main leaders have been killed. Since last year, Lebanon’s authorities have been engaged in a process aimed at disarming Hezbollah. Despite its historic weakening, it has refused to lay down its weapons.
Tens of thousands displaced
The raids and evacuation calls triggered a large and chaotic movement of people fleeing their homes. The exodus began at dawn and intensified in the early hours of Monday.
Hundreds of families who fled Beirut’s southern suburbs spent the night in freezing cold conditions under bridges or in parks in the capital. As Israeli calls to evacuate villages spread, tens of thousands more people left southern Lebanon.
Many headed further north, causing heavy traffic along the coastal highway.
Macron hosts Lebanon’s PM to discuss ceasefire, Hezbollah disarmament
Schools and universities remained closed on Monday. Motorists rushed to petrol stations to fill up their tanks, and supermarkets were crowded as residents stocked up on food in anticipation of a long war.
The authorities said Lebanon has enough fuel and food reserves to last two months. Around a dozen public schools in Beirut and its suburbs were converted into shelters for displaced families.
Prime Minister Nawaf Salam described the developments as “an irresponsible act”. President Joseph Aoun said he regretted that Lebanon was once again being used as “a platform for wars that do not concern it”.
Speaking at a press conference in Paris on Monday, French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot called for “Lebanon to be spared from this regional escalation”.
JUSTICE
Trial for Swiss Islamic scholar accused of rape opens in Paris
The trial of Swiss Islamic scholar Tariq Ramadan on charges of raping three women in France between 2009 and 2016 opened on Monday before the Paris Criminal Court – but in his absence, as the 63-year-old remains hospitalised in Switzerland.
This recent development could yet delay proceedings, with French judges set to decide whether to postpone the case after hearing submissions from all parties.
The trial had been scheduled to run until 27 March before a panel of professional judges, with Ramadan facing up to 20 years in prison if convicted.
Ramadan, who denies the allegations, has been admitted to hospital in Geneva since Saturday, according to his lawyer Marie Burguburu. She requested a postponement, arguing that her client must be “fit to appear” before the court.
The academic, who suffers from multiple sclerosis, had reportedly been travelling frequently to Geneva in recent months to visit his 93-year-old mother.
However, the presiding judge noted that his judicial supervision required him to reside in Saint-Denis, near Paris, and not near the Swiss border.
For some of the civil parties, the timing raised eyebrows. “We understand that the idea is to avoid the debate that is due to start today,” said David-Olivier Kaminski, lawyer for one of the complainants, Henda Ayari.
Islamic Scholar Tariq Ramadan convicted of rape on appeal in Switzerland
A long-running and complex case
The trial marks the latest chapter in a case that has unfolded over several years and drawn widespread attention in France and beyond. In June 2024, the Paris Court of Appeal ordered Ramadan to stand trial for three alleged rapes.
The charges relate to separate incidents: an alleged aggravated rape in Lyon in October 2009 involving a woman identified as “Christelle”; a second allegation in Paris in 2012 involving Ayari, a former Salafist who later became a secular activist and whose complaint in 2017 triggered the investigation; and a third alleged assault in 2016.
Initially, a fourth case involving Mounia Rabbouj had also been included. However, the Court of Appeal ultimately dismissed that charge.
The court also rejected the notion that Ramadan exercised “control” over the women in a way that deprived them entirely of free will. Instead, judges pointed to accounts that placed emphasis on alleged violence.
Tariq Ramadan accuser seeks ban on book about rape allegations
Allegations of violence and a shifting defence
According to investigators, the complainants described particularly brutal encounters. Their accounts included claims of physical force, restraint, and behaviour framed by domination and submission – elements the court said were central to the case.
Ramadan initially denied any sexual relationship with the women. However, in 2018, he acknowledged that relationships had taken place, describing them as adulterous, consensual, and marked by a degree of domination – a significant shift that reshaped the proceedings.
Since then, his legal team has pursued multiple procedural challenges, seeking to reopen investigations and delay the trial, arguing that new expert evidence supports his innocence.
The case also carries an international dimension. In Switzerland, Ramadan was acquitted at first instance before being sentenced on appeal in September 2024 to three years in prison – including one year without parole – for the rape of a woman in a Geneva hotel in 2008.
He has said he will appeal to the European Court of Human Rights and has also requested a review of that judgment, which is currently under consideration by Swiss courts.
(with newswires)
Justice
France arrests activists blocking ship over alleged Russia uranium links
Police arrested four Greenpeace activists on Monday for blocking a cargo ship in France that they alleged was transporting uranium from Russia for the country’s nuclear power plants.
Around 20 protestors carrying signs reading “Stop toxic contracts” and “Solidarity with Ukrainians”, blockaded the Mikhail Dudin at the northern port of Dunkirk early on Monday morning, to prevent it from unloading its cargo, a journalist from French news agency AFP observed.
French authorities then arrested four individuals, Dunkirk police told AFP, adding that the blockade was lifted around 9am local time.
Greenpeace has repeatedly accused France of maintaining ties with Russia’s state-owned energy company, Rosatom, despite President Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine.
Activists, some on kayaks, had impeded the ship while a large banner stretched across the lock read, “Uranium: EDF loves Putin” – a jab at the French state-owned energy giant.
In 2018, France’s EDF signed a 600-million-euro deal with a Rosatom subsidiary, Tenex, for reprocessed uranium from French nuclear power plants to be sent to Russia to be converted and then re-enriched before being reused in power production.
Greenpeace claims French resumption of nuclear trade with Russia
Rosatom has the only facility in the world – in Seversk in Siberia – capable of carrying out key parts of the conversion of reprocessed uranium to enriched reprocessed uranium.
“This trade, which indirectly fuels Putin’s war, must stop,” said Pauline Boyer, an energy campaigner for Greenpeace France on Monday.
The environment group alleges it has “on numerous occasions” observed the Mikhail Dudin unloading Russian natural and enriched uranium in France.
An AFP analysis of Global Fishing Watch tracking data shows the Mikhail Dudin has made more than 20 round trips between Dunkirk and the Russian ports of Vistino, Ust-Luga and Saint Petersburg since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine began on 24 February, 2022.
The Baltiyskiy-202 – another vessel that Greenpeace alleges has transported uranium between France and Russia – has completed more than 15 round trips during the same period.
Both sail under the Panamanian flag and are owned by companies registered in Hong Kong, according to the International Maritime Organisation’s register.
EDF did not immediately respond to AFP’s request for comment.
Greenpeace steals Macron wax figure from Paris museum for anti-Russia protest
In 2022, France ordered EDF to halt its uranium trade with Rosatom when Greenpeace first revealed the contracts in the wake of Russia’s invasion.
But in March 2024, Jean-Michel Quilichini, head of the nuclear fuel division at EDF, said the company planned to continue to “honour” its 2018 contract.
France in March 2024 said it was “seriously” looking at the possibility of building its own conversion facility to produce enriched reprocessed uranium.
AFP analysis of French customs data shows that in 2025, France imported at least 112 tonnes of enriched uranium and its compounds from Russia, accounting for a quarter of total purchases by volume – a level stable compared to 2024.
These imports however fell significantly between 2022 and 2024.
(with AFP)
MIDDLE EAST WAR
EU foreign ministers warn on impact of conflict in Iran after Khamenei’s death
European Union foreign ministers emerged from two hours of emergency talks on Sunday night to call for a de-escalation of the violence that left Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei dead and the Gulf region plummeting into chaos amid retaliatory attacks, cancelled flights stranding hundreds of thousands of travellers and potential delays along vital oil shipping lines.
“The Middle East stands to lose greatly from any drawn-out war,” said a joint statement issued after their video link rendez-vous.
“Iran’s attacks and violation of sovereignty of a number of countries in the region are inexcusable. Iran must refrain from indiscriminate military strikes. We express our solidarity with partners in the region that have been attacked or affected.”
Kaja Kallas, the foreign policy chief for the 27-nation bloc, convened the meeting on Saturday night after a day of strikes from Israeli and American air force planes that pounded Iranian targets killing Khamenei and two top military generals.
Before the meeting, the Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu and the American president Donald Trump said their armed forces would continue with the attacks on Iranian targets.
“We call for maximum restraint, protection of civilians and full respect of international law, including the principles of the United Nations Charter, and international humanitarian law,” the joint statement added.
“The events unfolding in Iran must not lead to an escalation that could threaten the Middle East, Europe and beyond, with unpredictable consequences, also in the economic sphere.”
On Sunday, French president Emmanuel Macron held a second defence and security council session with his most senior politicians and advisors.
His first took place on Saturday night just hours before Netanyahu and Trump said Khamenei had been killed during Saturday’s wave of bombardments on the Iranian capital Tehran.
Iranian state media announced the 86-year-old’s death on Sunday morning.
“No one can believe that the issues of Iran’s nuclear programme, ballistic missile activity and regional destabilisation will be resolved simply by strikes and, of course, the legitimate rights of the Iranian people to make their voices heard,” said Macron on Sunday.
Ali Khamenei’s voyage: from boy cleric to Iran’s man with the final word
On Sunday in a televised address, Iran’s parliamentary speaker, Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, called on Iranians to avenge Khamenei’s death.
“You have crossed our red line and must pay the price,” he said. “We will deliver such devastating blows that you yourselves will be driven to beg.”
Trump, though, warned on social media that any retaliation would only lead to further escalation.
How America lit the fuse on Iran’s nuclear programme
“IF THEY DO, WE WILL HIT THEM WITH A FORCE THAT HAS NEVER BEEN SEEN BEFORE!” he posted.
In a sign of how the attack could foment regional unrest, nine people died during clashes with police and paramilitary forces after several hundred protesters stormed the US Consulate in Pakistan’s port city of Karachi, authorities said.
Iran launches missiles and drones
As Iranian targets came under a second day of bombing, its armed forces fired missiles and drones on Israel and nearby Arab Gulf countries hosting US forces.
French Defence Minister Catherine Vautrine confirmed that a French military base in the United Arab Emirates was hit in an Iranian drone attack targeting the port of Abu Dhabi.
“The damage is limited and only material,” Vautrine said. “No injuries have been reported.”
Continued conflict could rattle global markets, say analysts particularly if Iran were to make the Strait of Hormuz unsafe for commercial traffic.
Around 20 percent of the world’s traded oil passes through the waterway. The EU ministers said disruption along the channel must be avoided.
On Sunday, the shutdown of airports in Dubai, Doha and Abu Dhabi which were hit as part of the Iranian retaliation, created travel chaos for hundreds of thousands of passengers who were unable to pass through the hubs for flights between Europe, Africa and Asia.
Cirium, an aviation analytics firm, estimated that at least 90,000 people alone change flights daily in the airports in Dubai, Doha or Abu Dhabi on three airlines, Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad Airways.
“The EU and its member states are taking all necessary steps to ensure the safety of EU citizens in the region,” said the joint statement which also urged Iran’s new leaders to end the country’s nuclear programme and curb its ballistic missile programme.
“The EU will continue to contribute to all diplomatic efforts to reduce tensions and to bring about a lasting solution to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon.” they added.
(with newswires)
Spotlight on Africa: Reflections on the future of the African Union
Issued on:
African Heads of State convened for the 2026 African Union Summit last month at a critical time for the continent, amid escalating conflicts and democratic backsliding. This episode examines the AU’s relationship with the United Nations, the European Union and the United States, and its place within a fractured global order.
At the 39th African Union (AU) Summit in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital and home to the headquarters of the organisation, leaders held debates on conflicts, institutional reform, financial sovereignty, critical minerals, artificial intelligence and Africa’s place in the emerging new geopolitical order.
Giorgia Meloni was a guest of honour, invited to co-host the second Italy-Africa Summit and to consider a strategy to tackle the root causes of migration.
United Nations secretary-general António Guterres was also in attendance, and called again for two permanent seats for Africa on the UN Security Council.
The rotational chair passed from Angola to Burundi, putting leadership of the AU for 2026 with the latter’s President Évariste Ndayishimiye.
Outgoing chair João Lourenço, president of Angola, parted with the warning that: “Normalising coup-makers who retake power through elections cannot become standard practice.”
With 10 military coups having taken place on the continent since 2020 and elections held in a climate of repression, plus wars in Sudan and eastern Democratic Republic of Congo and insurgency in the Sahel region, observers agree that Africa needs stronger institutions and leadership.
We spoke with Liesl Louw-Vaudran, senior advisor for the AU at the International Crisis Group (ICG), and Désiré Assogbavi, an international development strategist with more than two decades of experience in policy analysis.
African Union summit opens, as continent faces conflict and climate extremes
Imprints of violence
Also in this episode, we meet South African photographer Jo Ractliffe, whose images focus on the residues of violence left by apartheid, regional conflict and population displacement.
South African photographer Jo Ractliffe captures imprints of violence
RFI’s Isabelle Martinetti met her in Paris, where her latest exhibition “Out of Place” is showing at the Jeu de Paume, displaying work from the past four decades.
With photographs taken in South Africa and Angola, several of which are being shown in France for the first time, the exhibition explores places marked by history and trauma.
Episode edited by Melissa Chemam and mixed by Erwan Rome. Spotlight on Africa is produced by RFI’s English service.
Life after ruin: Aghdam’s fragile rebirth after the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
Issued on:
Three decades after war reduced the city of Aghdam to ruins, deminers and returning residents are laying the groundwork for its revival.
The destruction of the city of Aghdam in the contested enclave of Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh is among the most visible signs of the decades-long conflict between Azerbaijanis and ethnic Armenians. Now efforts are underway to bring the city back to life.
A loud explosion breaks the winter silence as the latest disposal of collected mines takes place. ‘We’ve cleared three hundred thousand square meters and found more than ten thousand landmines,” proudly declares Elnur Gasimov, head of mine clearance operations in Aghdam.
The dangerous work, done in freezing weather, carries significant risk. Gasimov’s right hand is missing several fingers.
“We have more than 10 deminers who have lost their legs, and we lost two deminers during the explosive disposal,” Gasimov told RFI.
He explains that, with Aghdam once close to the frontline in fighting between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces, the area was among the heaviest mined during the conflict.
Azerbaijan lifts Armenia border restrictions, but hurdles to peace remain
Clearing the mines
Nagorno-Karabakh was historically home to a predominantly ethnic Armenian population. In 1993, they broke away from Azerbaijan, declaring a breakaway Republic of Artsakh. But in 2023, during a lightning war, Azerbaijani forces recaptured the region.
With access to Aghdam still tightly controlled since the end of the fighting, RFI joined a small group of journalists on a trip organised by the Azerbaijani authorities.
The city of Aghdam was once home to 40,000 people, predominantly Azerbaijani. Long a cultural centre of the region, the city was also home to Azerbaijan’s most famous football club – Qarabag – which now plays out of the capital, Baku.
Today, not a single house remains standing – all were razed to the ground, and even the trees didn’t escape the conflict. It’s a barren wasteland.
The historical Juma mosque was one of the few buildings that survived, partially intact, and was used as a shelter for farm animals by ethnic Armenians.
Imam Mehman Nesirov, 45, is the proud custodian of the fully restored mosque, where up to 100 worshippers now attend Friday prayers as life slowly returns to the city.
Nesirov fled Aghdam in 1993 as a child: “We were forced to leave because of the sound of fighting, which was getting closer and closer. Everyone was terrified and panicked.”
Nesirov explained to RFI that he and his family spent the first years of their lives living in a railway wagon. “I will never forget those years. We always prayed to God that one day we could return and pray at this mosque,” said Nesirov. “We can’t put into words how we feel that dream we had as a child, a teenager, and an adult is finally realised.”
Azerbaijan must allow ‘safe’ return to Nagorno-Karabakh: UN court
Returns and ruptures
Around a thousand people have returned to Aghdam, all housed in new state-built accommodation, as the city itself remains uninhabitable. While Azerbaijanis are slowly returning, ethnic Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh have now become refugees following the victory of Azeri forces in 2023.
“What we saw within 24 hours was the forced expulsion of the remaining 110,000 Armenians from their homes in Nagorno-Karabakh,” said Richard Giragosiyan, director of the Regional Studies Center, a Yerevan think tank.
“They were leaving behind whole homes, personal possessions, family graves, and coming to Armenia, which was more of a foreign country than many people understand,” added Giragosiyan.
However, Giragosiyan claims that Azerbaijan’s forces’ success in Nagorno-Karabakh opened the door to a “diplomatic breakthrough,” with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan committing themselves to improving relations in the aftermath of the conflict. Baku in January opened its border to allow oil and grain from Kazakhstan to reach Armenia, which is important for Yerevan as it tries to rely less on Russia and move closer to Europe.
In Aghdam’s newest hotel, manager Aykhan Jabbarov welcomes rapprochement efforts between Yerevan and Baku.
Jabbarov, a veteran of the last Nagorno-Karabakh war whose family fled Aghdam thirty years ago, looks forward to a time when Azerbaijanis and Armenians can again live together in the city. “If we look to history, we lived together before now, every leader talks about peace … We have to build a good relationship. It will help both countries’ economy, people’s social life and the regional economy, everything.”
However, diplomatic efforts to restore relations and normalise Armenian-Azerbaijani ties still have plenty of work ahead. With repercussions of the past never far away, Ruben Vardanyan, a leading member of the breakaway Armenian administration captured by Azeri forces, was convicted this week of war crimes and sentenced to 20 years in jail by an Azerbaijani court.
What does the end of US-Russia nuclear arms treaty mean for disarmament?
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For 15 years, the New Start treaty bound the United States and Russia to curb their nuclear arsenals – until it expired earlier this month. Researcher Benoit Pelopidas tells RFI what hope remains for disarmament now that there are no longer fixed limits on the world’s two largest nuclear powers.
In what could mark a major turning point in the history of arms control, New Start expired on 5 February. Neither US President Donald Trump nor his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin has shown interest in renewing it.
The treaty was signed between the United States and Russia on 8 April 2010 and came into force on 5 February 2011. Initially planned to last 10 years, it was extended for another five in 2021.
Its goal was to limit each side to 800 missile launchers and 1,550 nuclear warheads, with the two countries authorised to inspect each other’s stockpiles.
It was never a global treaty. Other countries signed up to the broader Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), which came into force in 1970 and now has 191 parties, including the US and Russia.
But Washington and Moscow also had bilateral arms control agreements in place continuously since 1972 – until now, notes Benoît Pelopidas, an expert on nuclear threats at Sciences Po university in Paris.
“But it would be false to deduce from that that the arms race has not started yet and might start now,” he tells RFI.
“There are reasons to think that the arms race started as early as the spring of 2010.”
Europe confronts ‘new nuclear reality’ as Macron signals broader deterrence role
‘Possible acceleration’
Even before New Start expired, implementation of the treaty deteriorated over time, culminating in Russia suspending its participation in 2023.
“And now we’re at a full level where it’s no longer implemented at all,” says Pelopidas. “It’s new diplomatically, and it enables the possible acceleration of an ongoing arms race.”
NATO called for “restraint and responsibility” after the treaty expired.
“Russia’s irresponsible nuclear rhetoric and coercive signals on nuclear matters reveal a posture of strategic intimidation,” an official told French news agency AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.
“NATO will continue to take the measures necessary to ensure its credibility and the effectiveness of its overall deterrence and defence position.”
The Kremlin had proposed continuing to comply with New Start’s limits until February 2027, but the White House did not respond.
Moscow considers the treaty’s expiration “a negative development”, Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters. “We express our regret in this regard.”
China shuns calls to enter nuclear talks after US-Russia treaty lapses
Disarmament still possible
According to Pelopidas, disarmament is possible and has been partially achieved before, especially in the early 1990s after the end of the Cold War.
“In 1991, we had 58,000 nuclear weapons on the planet. And we’re now at a level of roughly 12,000 in 2025, which is a massive decrease,” he says.
“We have, between 1986 and today, dismantled or retired over 80 percent of the existing arsenal in the world. So it is not materially impossible to dismantle or disarm.”
The world’s remaining nuclear stockpile still has the potential to wreak huge destruction, he stresses, a fact that he believes should drive all nuclear powers to work towards de-escalation.
“If the theory of nuclear winter is correct, a so-called limited nuclear war between India and Pakistan that led to the explosion of 100 Hiroshima-sized bombs – that is, roughly 1 percent of the existing arsenal – would lead to the death of 2 billion people by starvation due to its indirect consequences over two years,” Pelopidas says.
“That’s how destructive the capacity of the existing arsenal is.”
Episode mixed by Erwan Rome.
Spotlight on Africa: the race for Africa’s critical minerals
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In this episode of Spotlight on Africa, we’re looking at the race for critical minerals on the continent. In the first week of February, around forty African delegations were invited to Washington DC for a summit dedicated to the issue. The leaders of the Democratic Republic of Congo appear keen to sign deals, but much of the rest of Africa has been calling for better proposals and more robust mechanisms to ensure accountability. So what is happening?
The African continent is rich in resources that are critical to the energy transition, as well as to the electronics and high-tech industries. Africa holds vast reserves of coltan, gallium, cobalt, tantalum, lithium, nickel, and many other strategic minerals that sit at the heart of this global competition.
The Trump administration is seeking to counter China‘s growing dominance over the continent’s metals and mining sectors.
DR Congo weighs price of security in minerals deal with US
For the moment, Trump is focused on a US – DRC agreement, which would prioritise American interests in the central African country’s supply chain. The DRC sits on vast mineral wealth and is currently engaged in a peace process with Rwanda, brokered by the United States.
DRC takes on Apple: can conflict mineral mining be stopped?
To help us analyse the context of these deals, we are joined today by three guests.
First, Clionadh Raleigh, head of ACLED – the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project. We also have Akin Adegoke, Chief Digital Officer at Lotus Bank, who brings experience in driving technology-led, inclusive banking.
And finally, Frédéric Mousseau, Policy Director at the California-based Oakland Institute, who argues that, that under the guise of peace and development, the US–DRC Strategic Partnership Agreement rewrote Congo’s laws to favour American mining interests.”
Delegates also gathered at the Cape Town International Convention Centre for the 32nd edition of the African Mining Indaba, the continent’s largest conference on the sector.
You’ll also hear reactions from people on the ground in the DRC, as well as from leaders in South Africa and Zambia, on what has already been dubbed the new scramble for Africa.
Episode edited by Melissa Chemam and mixed by Erwan Rome.
Spotlight on Africa is produced by Radio France Internationale’s English language service.
Somalia becomes a flashpoint in Turkey’s rivalry with Israel
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Staunchly allied with Turkey, Somalia has become a flashpoint in Turkey’s rivalry with Israel. Ankara recently deployed fighter jets to Mogadishu in the latest signal that it is determined to protect its strategic interests in the Horn of Africa after Israel recognised the breakaway region of Somaliland.
In a conspicuous display of military strength, Turkish F-16 fighter jets roared over the Somali capital, Mogadishu, in late January.
According to Turkish officials, the deployment was aimed at protecting Turkish interests and supporting Somali efforts to counter an insurgency by the radical Islamist group al-Shabaab.
It follows Israel’s recognition of Somaliland in December, which Ankara condemned as a threat to Somalia’s territorial integrity.
Turkish international relations expert Soli Ozel said the jets send a message to Israel: “Don’t mess with our interests here.”
Somalia is poised to become the latest point of tension between the countries, he predicts. “I don’t think they will fight, but they are both showing their colours. Israel’s recognition of Somaliland and the Turks sending F-16s and drones are attempts to set limits to what the other party can do,” he said.
“Could it get out of hand? I don’t know. It may.”
The risky calculations behind Israel’s recognition of Somaliland
Mutual suspicion
The episode reflects broader strains in Israeli-Turkish relations, which remain fraught over Ankara’s support of Hamas and Israel’s war in Gaza.
“It’s a new chapter in the competition between the two countries, which are now the dominant military powers in the Middle East,” said Norman Ricklefs, CEO of geopolitical consultancy Namea Group.
According to Gallia Lindenstrauss, an Israeli foreign policy specialist at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv, Israel is not seeking to challenge the interests of Turkey or Somalia.
Instead, she argues Israel’s recognition of Somaliland and its commitment to deepening cooperation are motivated by the breakaway’s state strategic location facing Yemen, where Houthi rebels launched attacks against Israeli cities last year.
“The Houthis were the last ones who were still launching missiles against Israel, from the Iranian proxies. This is the most major threat for Israel,” she said.
However, Lindenstrauss acknowledges that both sides increasingly view each other’s actions with suspicion. “What Israel sees as defence, Turkey sees as something against Ankara.”
Rival blocs
Turkey’s suspicions could grow if Israel deploys military hardware in Somaliland to counter threats from Yemen, a move an anonymous Israeli expert suggested is Israel’s aim.
Ricklefs warns Israel needs to tread carefully, given the significant investments Turkey had made in Somalia over the past 15 years. Turkey has its largest overseas military base and embassy in Somalia, while Ankara has signed agreements with Mogadishu to explore potential energy reserves, as well as a naval accord.
“Turkey is running the [Mogadishu] port, counterterrorism training, charities, NGOs, and all that kind of stuff. So it appears very important to Turkey’s regional strategic ambitions,” said Ricklefs. He noted that Somalia’s location on the Horn of Africa, with coastlines in the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean, makes it “key for regional influence”.
With Somalia naval deal, Turkey steers into strategic but volatile region
Lindenstrauss observed that the Turkish-Israeli rivalry over Somalia is further complicated by the emergence of two competing axes: “On the one hand, you see Greece, Cyprus, Israel, the UAE. On the other hand, you see Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Egypt and Qatar,” she explained.
“They are loose axes, but you do see that on many issues, these two axes think differently. And that’s also a cause of the rising tensions.”
Ricklefs noted that tensions have already spilled over into confrontation elsewhere. “We’ve already seen the pretty strong competition leading to violence in Libya, between blocs aligned with the Emirates and, on the other side, blocs aligned with Turkey in Libya,” he said.
As for whether the same could happen in Somalia, Ricklefs said he doesn’t believe the situation has yet reached that point.
“I don’t think we’re there just yet with Somaliland and Somalia,” he said. “And frankly, the only party that can play a mediating role, a conflict-reducing role, in this situation is the United States.”
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Madhya Pradesh: the Heart of beautiful India
From 20 to 22 September 2022, the IFTM trade show in Paris, connected thousands of tourism professionals across the world. Sheo Shekhar Shukla, director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, talked about the significance of sustainable tourism.
Madhya Pradesh is often referred to as the Heart of India. Located right in the middle of the country, the Indian region shows everything India has to offer through its abundant diversity. The IFTM trade show, which took place in Paris at the end of September, presented the perfect opportunity for travel enthusiasts to discover the region.
Sheo Shekhar Shukla, Managing Director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, sat down to explain his approach to sustainable tourism.
“Post-covid the whole world has known a shift in their approach when it comes to tourism. And all those discerning travelers want to have different kinds of experiences: something offbeat, something new, something which has not been explored before.”
Through its UNESCO World Heritage Sites, Shukla wants to showcase the deep history Madhya Pradesh has to offer.
“UNESCO is very actively supporting us and three of our sites are already World Heritage Sites. Sanchi is a very famous buddhist spiritual destination, Bhimbetka is a place where prehistoric rock shelters are still preserved, and Khajuraho is home to thousand year old temples with magnificent architecture.”
All in all, Shukla believes that there’s only one way forward for the industry: “Travelers must take sustainable tourism as a paradigm in order to take tourism to the next level.”
In partnership with Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board.
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Exploring Malaysia’s natural and cultural diversity
The IFTM trade show took place from 20 to 22 September 2022, in Paris, and gathered thousands of travel professionals from all over the world. In an interview, Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia discussed the importance of sustainable tourism in our fast-changing world.
Also known as the Land of the Beautiful Islands, Malaysia’s landscape and cultural diversity is almost unmatched on the planet. Those qualities were all put on display at the Malaysian stand during the IFTM trade show.
Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia, explained the appeal of the country as well as the importance of promoting sustainable tourism today: “Sustainable travel is a major trend now, with the changes that are happening post-covid. People want to get close to nature, to get close to people. So Malaysia being a multicultural and diverse [country] with a lot of natural environments, we felt that it’s a good thing for us to promote Malaysia.”
Malaysia has also gained fame in recent years, through its numerous UNESCO World Heritage Sites, which include Kinabalu Park and the Archaeological Heritage of the Lenggong Valley.
Green mobility has also become an integral part of tourism in Malaysia, with an increasing number of people using bikes to discover the country: “If you are a little more adventurous, we have the mountain back trails where you can cut across gazetted trails to see the natural attractions and the wildlife that we have in Malaysia,” says Hanif. “If you are not that adventurous, you’ll be looking for relaxing cycling. We also have countryside spots, where you can see all the scenery in a relaxing session.”
With more than 25,000 visitors at this IFTM trade show this year, Malaysia’s tourism board got to showcase the best the country and its people have to offer.
In partnership with Malaysia Tourism Promotion Board. For more information about Malaysia, click here.
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