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Des potions naturelles pour un accouchement facile, des femmes en parlent

BBC Afrique - Wed, 02/04/2026 - 11:14
De plus en plus de femmes en Afrique utilisent des tisanes naturelles pour faciliter et accélérer l’accouchement. Mais est ce réellement bénéfique ?
Categories: Afrique, European Union

Tosyali enclenche le chantier d’une nouvelle usine : le minerai de Gara Djebilet au centre du projet

Algérie 360 - Wed, 02/04/2026 - 11:12

À Bethioua, à l’est d’Oran, le complexe sidérurgique Tosyali s’apprête à franchir une étape structurante dans la valorisation du minerai de fer de Gara Djebilet. […]

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Myanmar: Five Years Since the Coup and No End in Sight To War

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Wed, 02/04/2026 - 10:15

Prosthetics marketed by I-Walk at an event marking resistance to Myanmar’s military coup of five years ago. The enterprise has a waiting list of over 3,000 people. Credit: Guy Dinmore/IPS

By Guy Dinmore
MYANMAR & THAILAND, Feb 4 2026 (IPS)

Five years of conflict since the military seized power have reduced Myanmar to a failed state and taken a huge toll of lives lost and destroyed. But with all sides seeking total victory, there is no end in sight.

Levels of medieval brutality enhanced by modern technology have enabled the military junta, with help from China, to swing the fortunes of war back in its favour, often through air strikes and drone attacks on civilian targets. Torched villages are deserted.

Kyaw Thurein Win, on the anniversary of the military’s February 1, 2021, coup against the elected civilian government, watched his village of Shut Pon burning in the southern region of Tanintharyi – through satellite imagery.

“Today my village is witnessing the cruelty of the military. They set the fires and ordered that they not be stopped. This is beyond inhuman and beyond cruel. Watching this happen from afar is unbearable,” he wrote on Facebook.

While the strength of anti-regime defiance and determination is undeniable among many in Myanmar, there is also a growing realisation – especially among former combatants — that the resistance will not win this war so soon, if at all.

“It is a stalemate. Nobody can win,” said one military defector, saying that cries of total victory by both the regime and the resistance ring hollow.

A young woman who runs a safe house for former child soldiers as young as 13 says she joined the People’s Defence Forces of the resistance that sprang up against military rule in 2021. But she soon came to realise that, for her at least, war was not the answer and started taking in children forced by poverty and displacement to become fighters against the regime.

She rails against the “whatever it takes” mentality and the toll it takes.

“The civilian suffering is ignored or exploited,” she says, attending a coup anniversary event – a mix of politics and culture and foodstalls –  organised by anti-regime civilian activists in Chiang Mai, northern Thailand. She shares a picture of ‘Commando’ in uniform, armed to the teeth. He was 12 at the time.

Sayarma Suzanna, fundraising for her school in Kayin State, the Dr Thanbyah Christian Institute for displaced and local children, said she and her 97 students spent all of November hiding in the nearby forest because of air strikes.

“You have to understand that when the students don’t listen to you during lessons, it is because of their trauma,” she said, recounting how one student lost seven family members in air strikes on their village.

At a nearby stall, the manager of I-Walk displayed an array of quality prosthetic limbs made by his enterprise as affordable as possible. He has a waiting list of over 3,000 people.

Myanmar is the most landmined country in the world with the highest rate of casualties. It also ranks as the biggest producer of illicit opium and a major source of synthetic drugs. Networks of online scam centres run by criminal gangs and militia groups close to the regime have trafficked tens of thousands of people from multiple countries, scamming billions of dollars.

The UN says 5.2 million people have been displaced by conflict inside the country and across borders. Cuts by rich countries to aid budgets have had a crippling impact. Some clinics are reduced to dispensing just paracetamol.

This year’s coup anniversary coincided with the conclusion of parliamentary and regional elections tightly orchestrated by the regime over the scattered and sometimes totally isolated areas of territory it controls, which include all major cities.

The three-phase polls – endorsed by China and Russia but slammed by the UN and most democracies except notably the US – excluded the National League for Democracy, which won landslide election victories in 2015 and 2020.

NLD leader Aung San Suu Kyi has been held in prison since the coup. There is speculation that Senior General Min Aung Hlaing might move her to better conditions of house arrest after the military’s Union Solidarity and Development Party, led by former senior officers, forms a nominally civilian government in April.

The USDP is cruising towards its managed landslide victory, according to almost complete results released last week.

The UN said it had reliable reports of at least 170 civilians killed in regime attacks during the month-long election period. Other estimates put the figure considerably higher.

One airstrike in Kachin State in northern Myanmar reportedly killed 50 civilians on January 22. Long-running attempts by the Kachin Independence Army and resistance forces to capture the nearby and heavily defended Bhamo town from the military have been costly. Some analysts ask, for what gain?’

Kachin State’s second biggest town is strategically located on a trade route to China but most of its 55,000 or so inhabitants have long since fled. The military would surely respond with heavy air strikes to any occupation by the resistance.

Data gathered by ACLED, a nonprofit organisation that analyses data on political violence, indicates over 90,000 total conflict-related deaths since the coup. The military, reliant on forced conscription, has borne the brunt of casualties, but civilian deaths are estimated at over 16,000.

“The military has carried out air strikes, indiscriminately or deliberately attacking civilians in their homes, hospitals, and schools,” said Nicholas Koumjian, head of the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar, adding that there is evidence that civilians have endured atrocities amounting to crimes against humanity and war crimes since the military takeover.

The IIMM is also investigating a growing number of allegations of atrocities committed by opposition armed groups, over which the parallel National Unity Government set up by lawmakers ousted in the coup has little or no control.

Former combatants say rogue People’s Defence Forces are also extorting money from local populations and holding people to ransom.

“Myanmar remains mired in an existential crisis – measured both in human security and the state’s shrinking sovereignty as rival centres of power harden on the ground,” the Institute for Strategy and Policy – Myanmar, a think-tank, stated in its recent annual review.

“The regime is meanwhile trying to break the current stalemate by accelerating counter-offensives on three fronts: military, diplomatic and political,” it said. The military-staged elections of 2010 led to a process of political and economic reforms but this time the regime intended to impose its own terms, the think tank said.

It warned of the risk that ethnic armed groups controlling swathes of border territories with Bangladesh, India, China and Thailand would end up – not for the first time – negotiating bilateral ceasefires and “rent sharing arrangements” with the regime. These would “consolidate the power of armed elites and reinforce central control rather than advance democracy, human rights or the rule of law.”

On Sunday, a panel discussion featuring anti-regime politicians and activists hosted by Chiang Mai University reinforced the sense of an opposition fragmented along ethnic and geographical lines, even if speakers upheld the principles behind their shared goal of a democratic federal union.

There was the customary rhetoric of “taking down this junta” and “whatever it takes”, but barely a mention of the National Unity Government that is struggling to knit together these diverse forces under the umbrella of a “Federal Supreme Council”.

On the panel, Debbie Stothard, a Malaysian democracy and women’s rights activist long involved with Myanmar, said the resistance needed two more years for victory, as the generals had “bought” one more year with their sham elections.

“Hang in there. We have to keep on going for at least two more years,” she said.

But in the big cities where the regime is starting to try and foster a sense of normality against a dire economic backdrop, the mood on the street appears more of resignation than defiance.

“When we started protesting against the regime in the streets in 2021, I told my husband we would defeat the military in three months,” an elderly Chin activist told IPS in Yangon, the former capital. “He replied it would take five years. Now I am afraid it will take another five years,” she said.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Categories: Africa, Afrique

Bonatiro livre ses prévisions : les Algériens débuteront le jeûne du Ramadan 2026 à cette date

Algérie 360 - Wed, 02/04/2026 - 10:12

L’astronome algérien Loth Bonatiro s’est prononcé sur la date probable du premier jour du mois sacré de Ramadan pour l’année 2026, en se basant sur […]

L’article Bonatiro livre ses prévisions : les Algériens débuteront le jeûne du Ramadan 2026 à cette date est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Africa, Afrique

Centres de retour contre remboursement

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 02/04/2026 - 09:00

Dans l'édition de mercredi : sanctions contre la Russie, retraite des commissaires, accord commercial UE-États-Unis, États-Unis-Inde, Mercosur

The post Centres de retour contre remboursement appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

MAGYAROK A BOEING 747-ESEN, 2. RÉSZ

Air Base Blog - Wed, 02/04/2026 - 08:58

A magyar Boeing 747-es pilóták egyik kapcsolódási pontja Tajvan - néhányan közülük hosszabb-rövidebb ideig a szigetországban éltek és onnan repültek szerte a nagyvilágba. Egyikük Kormos István, aki nagygépes karrierje során repülte a BAe 146-ost, a Boeing 737-est, a 747-est és a 787-est. Jelenleg B 737-es kapitányként dolgozik. István rendelkezésemre bocsátotta leendő könyvének eddig elkészült kéziratát, amelynek egyik fejezete a Boeing 747-esen első tisztként eltöltött másfél év egy-egy mozzanatát idézi fel.

A könnyed stílusban megírt memoár-részletből ízelítőt kapunk egy embert próbáló életformáról - megtudhatjuk, hogy került bő húsz évvel ezelőtt egy fiatal magyar pilóta egy ázsiai óriáscég alkalmazásába, milyen próbatétel az emberi szervezet számára az időzónák és kontinensek közötti rendszeres repülés, hogyan lehet egy randevúról a fél világot megkerülve időben beérni a munkahelyre és milyen az, amikor egy járat teljesítése közben nincs B terv.

[...] Bővebben!


Bosnie-Herzégovine : rien n'affecte la vieille tradition d'amitié avec l'Iran

Courrier des Balkans - Wed, 02/04/2026 - 07:48

L'Iran a beaucoup soutenu la Bosnie-Herzégovine durant la guerre, et Sarajevo est toujours jumelée avec Téhéran. Pas une voix officielle ni dans la société civile ne s'élève pour dénoncer la répression. Une école salue même toujours la mémoire du général Qassem Soleimani, l'ancien chef de la force d'élite du Corps des gardiens de la révolution islamique.

- Le fil de l'Info / , , , ,

Pressemitteilung - EU-Umfrage: Wachsende Sorgen verstärken den Ruf nach europäischem Handeln

Europäisches Parlament (Nachrichten) - Wed, 02/04/2026 - 07:03
In einer Zeit wachsender geopolitischer Spannungen haben die Bürgerinnen und Bürger immer größere Zukunftssorgen und erwarten von der EU ein geschlossenes und ambitioniertes Handeln.

Quelle : © Europäische Union, 2026 - EP

Sajtóközlemény - EU-felmérés: a növekvő aggodalmak miatt fokozottabb európai fellépést sürgetnek

Európa Parlament hírei - Wed, 02/04/2026 - 07:03
A fokozódó geopolitikai feszültségek közepette a polgárok egyre jobban aggódnak a jövőjük miatt, ezért egységes és határozott fellépést várnak az Európai Uniótól.

Forrás : © Európai Unió, 2026 - EP

Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, son of ex-Libyan leader, reportedly shot dead

BBC Africa - Wed, 02/04/2026 - 02:37
The 53-year-old, who was once widely seen as the second most powerful person in Libya, was killed on Tuesday according to Libyan media.
Categories: Africa, Afrique

Why a beauty spot in South Africa could be about to run out of water

BBC Africa - Wed, 02/04/2026 - 01:41
Official estimates suggest that around 55% of the town's drinkable water is lost to leaking pipes.
Categories: Africa, Afrique

Why a beauty spot in South Africa could be about to run out of water

BBC Africa - Wed, 02/04/2026 - 01:41
Official estimates suggest that around 55% of the town's drinkable water is lost to leaking pipes.
Categories: Africa, Afrique

Pluies abondantes, chutes de neige et vents violents ce mercredi 4 février : voici les wilayas en alerte

Algérie 360 - Wed, 02/04/2026 - 00:07

Un net changement s’impose dans les prévisions météo en Algérie. Après une courte accalmie, les conditions hivernales reprennent de la vigueur avec le retour des […]

L’article Pluies abondantes, chutes de neige et vents violents ce mercredi 4 février : voici les wilayas en alerte est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique

L'histoire des Roms dans les Balkans, du Moyen-Âge à la Première Guerre mondiale

Courrier des Balkans - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 23:59

Dans le cadre de notre cycle de discussions sur l'histoire des Balkans, l'Institut français de Serbie a l'honneur d'accueillir l'historien Bernard Lory, grand spécialiste de l'histoire des Roms dans les Balkans, qui participera à des discussions à Belgrade (le mardi 3 février) et à Niš (le mercredi 4 février). Il se rendra ensuite, le 5 février, en Macédoine du Nord, à Skopje.
Bernard Lory est un historien français reconnu, professeur émérite de l'INALCO (Institut national des langues et (…)

- Agenda /

Renouvellement du parc algérien : une nouvelle cargaison de bus arrive au port de Djen Djen

Algérie 360 - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 21:17

Le programme de renouvellement du parc national de transport de voyageurs se poursuit. Mardi soir, le port de Djen Djen, dans la wilaya de Jijel, […]

L’article Renouvellement du parc algérien : une nouvelle cargaison de bus arrive au port de Djen Djen est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique

Vlavonou rend hommage à Adrien Houngbédji ce mercredi

24 Heures au Bénin - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 21:10

Le président de l'Assemblée nationale 9è législature, Louis Gbèhounou Vlavonou, présidera ce mercredi 4 février 2026 une cérémonie officielle d'hommage à Me Adrien Houngbédji, ancien président du Parlement.

Un ensemble d'études consacrées à Adrien Houngbédji, qui a dirigé l'Assemblée nationale lors des 1ère, 3ème et 7ème législatures, lui sera officiellement remis ce mercredi 4 février 2026.

La cérémonie se tiendra à partir de 10 heures au Palais des gouverneurs à Porto-Novo. Cette initiative vise à reconnaître la contribution de l'ancien président de l'Assemblée nationale à la vie institutionnelle et à l'enracinement de la démocratie parlementaire au Bénin.

Plusieurs autorités politiques, députés, universitaires et personnalités sont conviés à cette cérémonie.

Avocat et acteur politique de premier plan, Adrien Houngbédji est le président-fondateur de l'ex Parti du Renouveau Démocratique (PRD) fondu dans l'Union Progressiste le Renouveau (UP-R).
Me Adrien Houngbédji a été Premier ministre de 1996 à 1998, sous la présidence de Mathieu Kérékou, puis président de l'Assemblée du Bénin de 2015 à 2019.
M. M.

Categories: Afrique, European Union

Tebboune reçoit un appel de Meloni : Alger et Rome coordonnent leurs priorités communes

Algérie 360 - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 20:32

Les relations entre l’Algérie et l’Italie continuent de se consolider. Le président de la République, Abdelmadjid Tebboune, a reçu ce jour un appel téléphonique de […]

L’article Tebboune reçoit un appel de Meloni : Alger et Rome coordonnent leurs priorités communes est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique

Protecting Africa’s Ocean Future and Why a Precautionary Pause on Deep-sea Mining Matters

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 20:04

Close-up-of-a-yellowfin-tuna-swimming-in-the-sea. Credit: Freepik---EyeEm

By James Alix Michel and Dona Bertarelli
VICTORIA, Seychelles, Feb 3 2026 (IPS)

The world is entering a decisive period for the future of the ocean. With the High Seas Treaty coming into force and meaningful progress being made on the World Trade Organization Agreement on Fisheries Subsidies, global momentum for stronger marine governance is building. Yet, new pressures linked to the push for deep-sea mining — the extraction of minerals from seabed thousands of meters below the ocean surface — threaten to undermine these gains. To safeguard progress, global decision-making will have to keep pace with such emerging risks. In this context, Africa will host several global discussions in 2026, including those that will shape the ocean’s future, with a series of opportunities for leadership starting with the African Union Summit in February to the Our Ocean Conference in Mombasa, Kenya in June.

Dona-Bertarelli-and-James-Alix-Michel-meeting-at-Our-Ocean-Bali-in-2018. Credit: Dona-Bertarelli-Philanthropy

As two long-standing friends of the ocean who have witnessed both its fragility and its generosity, we view the ongoing discussions on deep-sea mining as a moment that calls for careful, science-based and inclusive reflection. This is especially true in a region of the world where people depend on a healthy ocean for livelihoods, culture, spirituality and climate resilience, and where more than 30 per cent of Africans, roughly 200 million people, rely on fish as their main source of animal protein.

These concerns are particularly relevant to the Western Indian Ocean (WIO), one of the most biodiverse marine regions in the world, with endemism as high as 22 per cent yet at the convergence of multiple environmental stresses. Coral reefs and mangrove forests are deteriorating, while illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing, and sand mining put additional pressure on already fragile ecosystems. The lasting impacts of the 2020 Wakashio oil spill in Mauritius show how quickly harm to the ocean can ripple across communities. In such a fragile setting, the introduction of a new extractive industry demands the highest level of scrutiny.

In the face of these emerging challenges, Seychelles has an important role to play. For decades, it has demonstrated leadership in championing the blue economy and protecting marine ecosystems. Early ratification of the BBNJ Treaty, along with advocacy for High Seas marine protected areas such as the Saya de Malha Bank, has positioned the country as a respected voice for responsible ocean governance. If deep-sea mining begins in the Pacific, the Indian Ocean is likely to follow, including on the mid-Indian Ridge east of Seychelles’ EEZ and within the Southern Indian Ocean Fisheries agreement region. Catalyzing a new wave of continental leadership on deep-sea protection would advance a vision of ocean stewardship grounded in equity and sustainability. A precautionary pause on deep-sea mining would give concrete expression to that vision.

Polymetallic nodules on the deep seabed. Credit: Deep-Rising

Scientific research continues to underline this need for caution. Deep-sea mining would have an irreversible impact on seabed ecosystems and species. And recent studies of the midwater zone, where waste plumes from deep-sea mining would spread, show that mining particles could reduce the nutritional quality of the natural food supply for zooplankton by up to ten times. This would decrease food quality and trigger effects that move through the food web, ultimately affecting larger species and the overall health of the ocean millions of people rely on. In an environment where more than 99.99 percent of the deep ocean floor has yet to be explored or directly observed, introducing large scale industrial activity could cause damage that cannot be undone.

The economic risks for the region are equally significant. The Western Indian Ocean’s natural assets have been conservatively valued at 333.8 billion dollars, making the ocean one of the region’s most important sources of long-term wealth. Within this, fisheries represent the single largest asset and a cornerstone of economic resilience. The region generates about 4.8 percent of the global fish catch, roughly 4.5 million tonnes each year, underscoring how many economies and communities depend on healthy stocks. In Seychelles and across the region, tuna fisheries in particular underpin national revenue, employment and food security. Undermining the sustainability of fisheries could therefore not only threaten livelihoods but also diminish long-term economic opportunity.

Deep-sea-creature. Credit: Schmidt-Ocean-Institute

The accelerating push for deep-sea mining activities also raises concerns about repeating historic patterns seen in other extractive sectors across Africa. The uneven distribution of benefits from land-based resource exploitation has shown how easily local communities can be left with environmental impacts while external actors capture most of the value. Without strong governance frameworks that ensure fair participation and transparent decision-making, current deep-sea mining models risk following a similar trajectory, privileging short-term economic gain for multinational corporations over regional priorities.

Finally, the argument that deep-sea mining is necessary for the renewable energy transition is also increasingly at odds with current evidence. Rapid advances in recycling technologies, circular economy approaches, and alternative materials are already reducing the projected demand for minerals from new extractions. These pathways can support the global transition without the need to industrialize one of the least understood parts of the planet. The United Nations Environment Programme has also made clear in their 2022 report that “there is currently no foreseeable way in which investment into deep-sea mining activities can be viewed as consistent with the Sustainable Blue Economy Finance Principles”.

White-sand-and-clear-turquoise-water-on-a-Seychelles-beach. Credit: Unsplash—Alin-Mecean

In parallel, African-led nature-positive initiatives are demonstrating how ocean resources can be managed in ways that support both people and the environment. Initiatives such as the Great Blue Wall aim to create connected networks of protected and restored marine areas that strengthen biodiversity, climate resilience and community wellbeing across the WIO region. These efforts demonstrate what a regenerative blue economy can look like in practice. Preserving these gains requires ensuring that new activities do not compromise the progress already made.

Across the continent, young leaders, civil society and scientific institutions are calling for greater accountability in decisions that shape our collective future. Their message is clear: long-term wellbeing for everyone must come before short-term gains for a select few. This call also echoes a growing movement worldwide, with more than 40 countries now supporting a pause on deep-sea mining, including France, Fiji, Chile and Mexico. A precautionary pause on deep-sea mining is not a rejection of economic progress, but a commitment to sound science, inclusive dialogue and responsible stewardship. We are hopeful that countries in Africa and elsewhere in the world will hear this call and secure the future of the ocean for generations to come.

James Alix Michel is the former President of Seychelles (2004–2016) and a global advocate for the blue economy, ocean conservation and climate resilience.

Dona Bertarelli is a Swiss philanthropist, IUCN Patron of Nature and biodiversity champion, deeply committed to a healthy balance between people and nature.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Categories: Africa, Afrique

Un homme jugé pour vol de vivres d'une cantine scolaire

24 Heures au Bénin - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 19:21

Une affaire de vol de vivres dans une école a été examinée ce mardi 03 février 2026, lors de l'audience correctionnelle de flagrant délit du tribunal de première instance d'Abomey-Calavi.

Un homme, la quarantaine révolue, a comparu devant le tribunal de première instance d'Abomey-Calavi ce mardi 03 février 2026, pour vol de vivres dans une école. Les aliments selon les déclarations à la barre, ont été volés lors d'un cambriolage perpétré par des hors la loi pendant les congés de fête. Dans ladite école, aucun gardien n'assure la sécurité, a déclaré la directrice présente au procès. Les malfrats selon ses déclarations, auraient emporté 7 sacs de maïs, 9 sacs de riz, 40 bidons d'huile de 5 litres, un sac de sel de cuisine, des boîtes de tomates et des pâtes alimentaires, et plusieurs autres aliments destinés aux apprenants.
L'enquête a conduit à l'interpellation d'un individu. Une partie des vivres volés aurait été retrouvée chez lui. Interrogé, il a déclaré que c'est l'un de ses parents enseignant dans la partie septentrionale du pays, qui lui a donné.
Le dossier est renvoyé au 24 février 2026, pour comparution du parent ayant fait don de vivres au prévenu et son époux, et pour continuation.

F. A. A.

Categories: Afrique, European Union

GAM Assurances finaliste aux MENA Intelligent Insurer Awards 2026 pour sa transformation digitale

Algérie 360 - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 19:05

GAM Assurances figure parmi les finalistes des Intelligent Insurer Awards 2026 – MENA, dans la catégorie Meilleure Transformation Digitale en Afrique et au Moyen-Orient. Une […]

L’article GAM Assurances finaliste aux MENA Intelligent Insurer Awards 2026 pour sa transformation digitale est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique

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