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Orbán et les Balkans (4/5) : le maître de Budapest et son inséparable ami serbe de Bosnie-Herzégovine

Courrier des Balkans - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 08:43

Entre Viktor Orbán et le « boss » des Serbes de Bosnie-Herzégovine, Milorad Dodik, ce n'est pas de l'amour, c'est de la rage. Les deux hommes partagent tout : le nationalisme, la suspicion envers Bruxelles et l'amitié de Moscou. Et surtout la volonté de peser sur les équilibres des Balkans.

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Orbán et la fin de l’histoire

Euractiv.fr - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 08:38

Également dans l'édition de jeudi : l'Iran, Frontex, UE-Chine, la Hongrie, du café, l'OTAN

The post Orbán et la fin de l’histoire appeared first on Euractiv FR.

L'Otan renforce sa présence en Turquie, malgré les critiques

Courrier des Balkans - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 08:20

La Turquie se prépare à accueillir le prochain sommet de l'Otan en juillet et souhaite renforcer son rôle au sein de l'Alliance atlantique. Cet engagement croissant ne fait pas consensus dans la société. La gauche appelle même à la quitter.

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Iran delegation heads to Pakistan for US talks

Euractiv.com - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 08:19
"Despite skepticism of Iranian public opinion due to repeated ceasefire violations by Israeli regime"

Orbán and the end of history

Euractiv.com - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 07:17
Also, in Thursday’s edition: Iran, Frontex, EU-China, Hungary, coffee, NATO

Evidence Matters: Why the UWWTD Needs an Urgent Rethink [Promoted Content]

Euractiv.com - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 07:00
Europe does not have to choose between environmental protection and access to medicines. Evidence must guide policymaking. Without an urgent pause and thorough impact assessment, the UWWTD risks unintended consequences on medicines supplies and the sustainability of EU’s healthcare systems.

EU warns Spain and Poland over tax cuts on fuels

Euractiv.com - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 06:29
"We recommend rather to use reduction of excise duties," a Commission spokesperson said

Orbán turns food price fears into election weapon

Euractiv.com - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 06:00
The ruling Fidesz party is speaking to voters’ bread‑and‑butter concerns

Ukraine’s frontline increasingly supplied by unmanned ground vehicles

Euractiv.com - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 06:00
The use of ground-unmanned bvehicles has more than tripled in Ukraine since November

Frontex blocked from sharing data on human traffickers

Euractiv.com - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 06:00
EU border guards have their hands tied on passing on details of illegal migrant smuggling networks to law enforcement authorities

Swedish mining firms, steelmakers demand rollback of water protection rules

Euractiv.com - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 06:00
EU environment commissioner meets producers in her native Sweden, who say environmental rules need to be eased

INTERVIEW: Smaller notified bodies could go bankrupt, trade body warns

Euractiv.com - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 06:00
Manufacturers are holding back submissions until the final implementation of revised rules

PROFILE: Orbán, the divisive conservative radical who has refashioned European politics

Euractiv.com - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 06:00
Whether admired as the defender of Christian civilisation or condemned as an illiberal disruptor, Viktor Orbán is one of the most consequential European politicians of his era

Brussels bets on Rutte’s humility to ease transatlantic tensions

Euractiv.com - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 06:00
His main asset is a “rather limited sense of ego,” one EU diplomat said
Categories: Africa, European Union

Greece steps up clinical trial reforms as industry calls for stronger incentives [Advocacy Lab]

Euractiv.com - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 02:02
Despite measurable gains, the Greek pharma industry warns the country's clinical trial ecosystem still needs stronger incentives and structural reform to reach its full potential
Categories: Africa, European Union

Macron tells Trump, Iran president ceasefire must include Lebanon

Euractiv.com - Thu, 09/04/2026 - 00:52
Israel said it did not consider Lebanon covered by the Iran-US two-week truce
Categories: Africa, European Union

Concert : Srdjan Ivanovic Blazin' Quartet

Courrier des Balkans - Wed, 08/04/2026 - 23:59

Sortie de l'album : Cosmogonie (Rue Des Balkans - 2026)
Originaire de Sarajevo, carrefour entre l'Orient et l'Occident, Srdjan Ivanovic est un batteur au parcours des plus atypiques.
Ayant fui la guerre en Bosnie lorsqu'il était enfant, Srdjan s'est retrouvé en Grèce, où il s'est plongé dans un mélange éclectique de musiques, allant du chant byzantin et du folk grec à la pop italienne, entre autres. Ajoutant à cela sa découverte du jazz, il a développé son propre style musical, à la fois (…)

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“Humanity at the Edge of Its Own Humanity”

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Wed, 08/04/2026 - 20:14

By James Alix Michel
VICTORIA, Seychelles, Apr 8 2026 (IPS)

We live in a century of extraordinary achievement.

Humanity has split the atom, mapped the genome, and sent astronauts to the Moon, with plans now underway to reach Mars. Our knowledge has expanded, our tools have become more powerful, and our capacity to shape the world around us exceeds anything previous generations could have imagined. We communicate instantaneously across continents, diagnose diseases earlier, monitor climate patterns in real time, and design artificial intelligences that can aid in everything from medicine to climate modelling.

James Alix Michel

And yet, for all this advancement, we are caught in a troubling paradox.

We possess the means to protect our planet, restore degraded ecosystems, and build a future that is regenerative and sustainable. The Earth still holds enough resources to feed, shelter, and nourish every person on it.

The science is clear, the solutions are known, and the pathways are increasingly understood. We know how to phase out the most damaging fossil fuels, how to design circular economies, and how to restore forests and oceans on a large scale. The question is not whether we can heal, but whether we choose to.

Instead of using this knowledge to nurture life, we spend trillions on weapons, war, and systems of domination. We continue to refine instruments of destruction with the same ingenuity that once helped us survive as hunter gatherers.

From spears and arrows to missiles and nuclear arsenals, technology has evolved far faster than our moral imagination. The same species that can design satellites and decode life itself is also capable of perfecting the means to erase itself. We have turned our curiosity into a danger when it is not paired with humility.
War has become normalised. We export violence beyond our borders, fuel conflicts in distant lands, and justify the dehumanisation of others in the name of power, ideology, or fear.

In doing so, we risk losing sight of what it means to be human: to care, to share, to protect, and to build together. Our intelligence has grown, but our ethics have often lagged behind. We have impressive control over external environments, yet we struggle to govern our own impulses—greed, resentment, the desire for domination over cooperation.

We still behave as if survival depends on conquest, as though strength is measured by the capacity to destroy rather than by the courage to cooperate.

In that sense, humanity is trapped between two identities: one capable of profound creativity and compassion, and another still governed by ancient instincts of greed, lust for power, and tribal dominance.

We have evolved in technology, but not always in spirit. We built institutions meant to protect rights and distribute justice, yet those very institutions are often weaponised or hollowed out by self interest.

The Earth is still rich enough to nourish us all. The ocean still teems with life, the land can still grow food, and the air can still be cleansed. We have the tools to live in balance, instead of in excess. We can choose renewable energy systems that do not poison our skies, farming practices that restore soil instead of depleting it, and urban designs that integrate nature instead of paving it over.

The problem is not scarcity, but choices—choices that prioritise short term gain over long term survival, accumulation over equity, and fear over trust.

If humanity is to truly evolve, it must move beyond the old logic of domination and embrace a new ethic of stewardship. This is not a soft or sentimental vision. It is a hard, practical necessity if we want civilisation to continue.

Stewardship means recognising that power is not only the ability to control, but the responsibility to protect. It means designing economies that reward regeneration, not extraction; diplomacy that favours mediation over militarisation; and education systems that nurture empathy as much as efficiency.

Progress cannot be measured only by how far we can reach into space, or how fast we can compute. It must be measured by how well we can care for the planet and for one another. It must be measured by how peacefully we resolve our differences, how fairly we share resources, and how seriously we protect the rights of future generations.

True progress is the transition from a species that merely adapts to its environment, to one that consciously shapes it for the benefit of all life, not just a privileged few.

We have not lost our humanity. We have only forgotten it.
The challenge now is to rediscover it—not as a romantic ideal, but as a practical imperative.

In a world capable of such beauty, creativity, and connection, the only true insanity is the choice to destroy rather than to heal, to dominate rather than to share, and to fear rather than to love.

After all, the moon and the stars will remain, no matter how we choose; what is at stake is whether we will still be worthy of the Earth we were given.

That is the real test of our century. And it is one we must pass together.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Categories: Africa, European Union

EU farmers urge emergency aid amid Middle East crisis

Euractiv.com - Wed, 08/04/2026 - 18:15
Despite the recent ceasefire pushing oil prices down, farmers say they still need support
Categories: Africa, European Union

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