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Norvège: le fils de la princesse héritière condamné à quatre ans de prison pour viols

RFI (Europe) - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 09:53
Le fils de la princesse héritière de Norvège, Marius Borg Hoiby, a été reconnu coupable, lundi 15 juin, de deux des quatre viols dont il était accusé et condamné à une peine de quatre ans de prison ferme.
Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

Breaking Afghanistan’s Hydro-Political Trap

TheDiplomat - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 09:38
Since its neighbors rely on unregulated river flows, any unilateral Afghan attempt to develop water infrastructure is perceived as a threat, risking regional destabilization.

Le football amateur des jeunes menacé par le boom immobilier à Kinshasa

Radio Okapi / RD Congo - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 09:12

Le boom immobilier dans la capitale entraîne une transformation rapide du paysage urbain. De nombreux terrains de football de quartier, longtemps au cœur de la vie sociale des jeunes, disparaissent peu à peu. Autrefois animés par des tournois improvisés pendant la saison sèche et les grandes vacances, ces espaces sont aujourd’hui remplacés par des constructions privées, des habitations et des parkings.

Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

OPINION on the proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the Union Civil Protection Mechanism and Union support for health emergency preparedness and response, and repealing Decision No 1313/2013/EU (Union Civil...

OPINION on the proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the Union Civil Protection Mechanism and Union support for health emergency preparedness and response, and repealing Decision No 1313/2013/EU (Union Civil Protection Mechanism)
Committee on Security and Defence
Reinis Pozņaks

Source : © European Union, 2026 - EP

OPINION on the proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the Union Civil Protection Mechanism and Union support for health emergency preparedness and response, and repealing Decision No 1313/2013/EU (Union Civil...

OPINION on the proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the Union Civil Protection Mechanism and Union support for health emergency preparedness and response, and repealing Decision No 1313/2013/EU (Union Civil Protection Mechanism)
Committee on Security and Defence
Reinis Pozņaks

Source : © European Union, 2026 - EP

Exclusif : Ousmane Sonko déclare qu'"il n'y aura pas de déchirure" avec Bassirou Diomaye Faye

France24 / Afrique - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 08:16
Dans un entretien exclusif accordé à France 24 er RFI à Dakar, le président de l’Assemblée nationale sénégalaise, Ousmane Sonko, affirme qu'"il n'y aura pas de déchirure" avec le président Bassirou Diomaye Faye. Il revient également sur ses ambitions pour 2029, la dette sénégalaise, les élections, la gestion de la crise universitaire et défend le durcissement législatif sur l’homosexualité.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

Le gouverneur militaire Gaby Kasongo : « Je suis venu travailler avec la population iturienne pour le retour de la paix »

Radio Okapi / RD Congo - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 08:13


Le général Gaby Kasongo Mulumba, récemment nommé gouverneur militaire de l’Ituri, a atterri dimanche soir 14 juin à Bunia avec une double priorité : sceller un pacte de confiance avec la population afin de restaurer la paix et freiner la propagation de la 17e épidémie d’Ebola qui frappe la province.

Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

Exclusif : Ousmane Sonko déclare qu'"il n'y aura pas de déchirure" avec Bassirou Diomaye Faye

France24 / Afrique - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 08:10
Dans un entretien exclusif accordé à France 24 et RFI à Dakar, le président de l'Assemblée nationale sénégalaise, Ousmane Sonko, affirme qu'"il n'y aura pas de déchirure" avec le président Bassirou Diomaye Faye. Il revient également sur ses ambitions pour 2029, la dette sénégalaise, les élections, la gestion de la crise universitaire et défend le durcissement législatif sur l'homosexualité.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

Matthew Campbell on the ‘Man Who Stole the Gods’

TheDiplomat - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 08:01
A new book examines the life of Douglas Latchford, a British antiquities trader who was responsible for the mass looting of Cambodia's Angkorian heritage.

Serbie : Expo2027, vitrine internationale des dérives du système Vučić

Courrier des Balkans / Serbie - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 07:51

Marchés publics opaques, procédures d'exception, risques environnementaux : l'Expo2027 prévue à Belgrade reproduit des mécanismes déjà observés dans d'autres grands projets d'infrastructure en Serbie. Entretien.

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L'affaire Gradiška, ou comment l'ouverture d'un poste frontière déchire la Bosnie-Herzégovine

Courrier des Balkans / Bosnie-Herzégovine - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 07:47

L'ouverture du nouveau poste-frontière de Gradiška, que la Fédération voulait bloquer faute d'accord sur le partage des taxes entre les deux entités de Bosnie-Herzégovine, illustre la collusion entre nationalistes croates et serbes, au grand dam de Sarajevo et des partis citoyens.

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

Nuclear Nonproliferation Outcomes Stall in Backdrop of Geopolitical Strife

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 07:27

Du Hung Viet (left), President of the Eleventh Review Conference for the NPT 2026, chairs the closing session of the NPT Review Conference (27 April-22 May). Credit: UN Photo/Loey Felipe

By Naureen Hossain
UNITED NATIONS, Jun 15 2026 (IPS)

On principle, the nonproliferation of nuclear weapons is an issue that unites the international community. But for a select few states, these principles came with conditions and a refusal to compromise on their security strategy.

The Eleventh Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) concluded on May 22, 2026 without member states reaching consensus on a final outcome document. It was the culmination of four weeks of extensive debates starting on April 27, along with the special meetings, consultations and briefings that preceded the conference.

Compared to earlier editions shared before and during the conference, the final draft weakened much of the language surrounding the obligations of nuclear states, including those that related to disarmament efforts. Yet even with these concessions, for the third time in a row after 2015 and 2022, the NPT parties failed to adopt an outcome document.

At the closing session of the conference, Do Hung Viet, President of the NPT Conference and the UN Permanent Representative of Vietnam, remarked that the collective threat posed by nuclear weapons requires a collective response. He warned that in 2031, the NPT would pass 20 years without an outcome. It was the responsibility of state parties, he said, to uphold the NPT until Article VI, which calls for parties to pursue disarmament measures in good faith, could be implemented, and they needed to bolster the treaty as a tool to address modern threats.

Following the closing of the conference, Viet told reporters that the current state of the international environment requires “urgent action” in the face of recent tensions. Although the conference could not reach consensus, Viet attempted to find some positives in the proceedings, in that the engagement “highlights the value of the NPT and multilateralism as a whole”. Yet he expressed concern for the health of the treaty going forward as it related to state parties’ commitments.

Izumi Nakamitsu, UN Under-Secretary-General and High Representative for Disarmament Affairs, added that if parties to the NPT wanted to prevent a “further decrease of confidence” in the nuclear nonproliferation regime, then they “need to visibly make a commitment” through measurable steps.

She remarked that the international community at large needed to take lessons from the proceedings, starting with the acceleration of disarmament commitments under existing treaties. There were also increased calls for a “strengthening of the review process”, or enhancing accountability and transparency measures over the implementation of countries’ commitments to the NPT.

“Nonproliferation and disarmament are two sides of the same coin, and it is simply wrong for nuclear weapons states to assume that nonproliferation obligations will be just adhered to without nuclear weapons states’ commitment and implementation of disarmament commitments under Article 6,” said Nakamitsu.

Susi Snyder (left), ICAN Director of Programmes, and Seth Shelden (right), ICAN’s UN Liaison, at a press briefing held on the final day of the NPT 2026 Review Conference. Credit: Naureen Hossain/IPS

Parties to the NPT, including nuclear-armed states, repeatedly acknowledged the NPT as a “cornerstone” for multilateral diplomacy and the nuclear disarmament regime. However, when it came to other nuclear treaties, such as the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) and the Treaty for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), such acknowledgements were scarce. The final outcome draft makes a limited few references to these treaties but does not elaborate on the disarmament requirements outlined in them.

The final outcome document draft was noteworthy for its references to the humanitarian and environmental impacts of nuclear testing for the first time in the context of the NPT Review Conference. Experts from the International Campaign Against Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) noted that this was possible thanks to the advocacy efforts of civil society and of the communities impacted by nuclear weapons use and testing.

In particular, the draft “recognise[s] the growing calls for assistance to the people and communities affected by nuclear weapons use and explosive nuclear testing and for environmental remediation following nuclear weapons use and explosive nuclear testing” and “welcome[s] efforts already undertaken in this regard”.

The draft also included a call for member states to “take concrete measures to raise awareness of the public, including through education, on all topics relating to nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation” by sharing the experiences of peoples and communities affected by nuclear weapons use and testing.

Recognition of the NPT stood in contradiction to the actions and statements made by nuclear-armed states. These states, which include the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, all maintain positions that contradict the principles of the NPT and broader efforts toward disarmament. These states have openly made plans to expand their nuclear arsenals and weave in the salience of nuclear weapons into their security strategy by justifying it through concepts of ‘extended nuclear deterrence’ and nuclear sharing with other countries considering their own nuclear expansion. Two members of the Security Council are engaged in separate, active conflicts that have only exacerbated geopolitical tensions, while also dredging up anxieties around nuclear weapons as a security strategy. With seemingly no end in sight to these conflicts, those anxieties have only deepened, and has shaped global and regional security policies for years to come.

For a civil society group like ICAN, the lack of outcome for the NPT is emblematic of increasing risks of proliferation among nuclear-armed states and their allies.

“There is a reason why the countries that claim protection from nuclear weapons are afraid of discussion of what these weapons actually do to people and the environment. They simply don’t want people to know the true extent of the horror and cruelty nuclear weapons wreak, because acknowledging these harms will eliminate any credible legitimacy for retaining nuclear weapons,” said Susi Snyder, ICAN’s Director of Programmes.

What will it take, therefore, for these countries to reverse their positions? Snyder told Inter Press Service that “increasing the stigmatisation” of nuclear weapons would be one such tactic. Reinforcing the nuclear taboo by raising awareness among the populations of these countries is critical for them to recognise the complete destruction that a nuclear weapon would bring about, and the impact this would have on targeted communities and on themselves. Snyder noted the literal cost of proliferation, claiming that in 2024 nuclear-armed states spent over USD 3000 per second on their arsenals.

Finally, security doctrines built on the theory of nuclear deterrence need to be challenged. Seth Shelden, the UN liaison for ICAN, noted that if nuclear weapons can be seen as useless from a military perspective and unsustainable from a policy perspective, nuclear-armed states would reevaluate their positions. “Nuclear weapons are irrational. Nuclear deterrence is a fable. And all technology is abandoned once it is seen as no longer useful,” Shelden said.

Though the 2026 NPT Review Conference ended without consensus, member states still have other avenues to pursue the nuclear disarmament agenda, both within and outside the NPT process. There still remain specific nuclear weapon-free zone agreements among countries and treaties like the CTBT and the TPNW which also contain legally binding obligations for their signatories. Snyder confirmed that the TPNW will host its first review conference at the end of this year. Meanwhile, the NPT remains in its current form and state parties recognise its obligations and safeguards on the nuclear regime.

In 2024, the UN General Assembly pushed to establish an independent scientific panel on the effects of a potential nuclear war, whose panellists will present their findings in 2027.

Galvanising the world public opinion on the nuclear regime is critical to restoring faith in the nuclear regime. Otherwise, Nakamitsu warned, the world is in “the trajectory of a very dangerous path.

“Let’s get back to a path that is more sustainable peace rather than creating arms race dynamics.”

Note: This article is brought to you by IPS Noram in collaboration with INPS Japan and Soka Gakkai International in consultative status with ECOSOC.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Categories: Africa, France

Le Potentiel : « Sit-in de l’opposition : Augustin Kabuya accuse l’opposition d’avoir recruté des miliciens Mobondo pour attiser l’insurrection »

Radio Okapi / RD Congo - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 07:22

Revue de presse de lundi 15 juin 2026


Ce lundi 15 juin, l’actualité dans les médias reste dominée par les réactions et les accusations croisées au lendemain du sit-in de l’opposition à Kinshasa contre la révision constitutionnelle.

Categories: Afrique, Pályázatok

Chinese Authorities Arrest American Myanmar Researcher For Alleged Espionage

TheDiplomat - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 07:19
Min Zin, the head of a prominent Myanmar-focused think-tank, has been accused of "endangering China’s national security."

UE: Kaja Kallas ou la diplomatie européenne prise en étau entre Von der Leyen et les États membres

RFI (Europe) - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 07:04
Bataille interne dans l’UE autour du Service européen d’action extérieure, bras diplomatique dirigé par Kaja Kallas. Critiqué depuis plus d’un an, il fait l’objet de projets de réforme portés par plusieurs États, dont la France, tandis que la présidente de la Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, cherche à étendre ses prérogatives en matière d’affaires étrangères, créant une rivalité institutionnelle. Entretien avec Sébastien Maillard, conseiller spécial à l'institut Jacques Delors et spécialiste des institutions européennes.
Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

The End of the Gulf Model?

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 06:39

By Robin Frisch
ALGIERS, Algeria, Jun 15 2026 (IPS)

The German government, along with a number of other countries, are currently organising flights to evacuate travellers and influencers stranded in the Gulf states. For many citizens of other nationalities, however, there is no such assistance. They remain stuck in precarious situations, marked by exploitation and insecurity.

Robin Frisch

The war in the Middle East demonstrates with brutal clarity that the Gulf states’ economic model is built on the systematic vulnerability of migrant workers. More than half of the region’s workforce are from abroad. Millions of people come from the Philippines, India, Bangladesh and African countries to work in the Gulf states — often for many years. Their biggest fears stem from the dangerous security situation, massive loss of income and total uncertainty about whether or not they will even be able to remain in their host country. Returning to their home country, on the other hand, is out of the question. In Nepal and Jordan, remittances from the Gulf states alone account for eight per cent of gross domestic product. Many emerging economies depend not only on oil and gas from the Gulf region, but also on jobs.

A system based on exploitation

The fact that these migrant workers cannot be evacuated is due to structural reasons. In the Gulf monarchies, the kafala system binds migrant workers to a kafil, or sponsor. This modern form of servitude gives employers virtually unlimited control over their workforce. The Gulf model only functions because workers are permanently kept in temporary employment. They are imported, but not integrated. Their rights remain limited, social security is minimal and political participation not permitted. This arrangement is not a shortcoming but a prerequisite for maximum flexibility and low costs.

The fact that the Gulf states’ economic model is reaching its limits is also increasingly the subject of current debate. In a much-discussed New York Times essay, Richard Florida explains that the economic model in Dubai and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is actually exacerbating the crisis. His question – ‘Could this be the end of Dubai?’ – can certainly be answered in the affirmative, at least from a social perspective. The Gulf states have all failed to provide a social safety net for their millions of workers. The mere import of workers, and complete absence of integration or social security, signal the end of the Dubai model. For decades, the Gulf states have profited from permanently keeping their workers in temporary employment. This model may be economically efficient, but it is structurally vulnerable.

The current war is acting as a stress test for this system. And it has shown that there are no institutional mechanisms in place to protect migrant workers. While citizens are being evacuated, millions of migrant workers are left behind. While supply chains are being secured, there remains a lack of the most basic protection for those who keep those chains running. Nobody is taking responsibility — it is just being passed from pillar to post, between countries of origin, employers and governments.

An International Labour Organization (ILO) study showed that social security, if it exists at all, only ever applies to formal employment contracts. In almost all the Gulf states, these regulations place the burden on the employee. Health insurance is mandatory and must be purchased privately. Not one Gulf state has a functioning system of unemployment insurance. Saudi Arabia is the only state that provides social security coverage for workers from certain countries of origin. This model of temporary migration appears to be so successful that even the current crisis will not change it. It is not in the interests of the Gulf states to provide social security as they derive no benefit from it themselves.

Not a single Gulf country has ratified the landmark ILO Convention 189 on decent work for domestic workers, though Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE have at least made slight improvements to their national legislation and acknowledge the problems. In Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman, union activity is not strictly prohibited, and trade unions are working to better integrate migrant workers. However, the crisis caused by the war is now so dire that the extent to which the situation has improved for domestic workers seems of secondary importance. Whether through trade unions, government measures or employer obligations, what matters is that the situation for migrant workers in the Gulf states is fundamentally improved. Reforms will achieve little. It is time for systemic change.

Developing a social safety net

The executive secretary of the Arab Trade Union Confederation, Hind Benammar, has criticised the kafala system, but at the same time advocates for channels of communication to be opened with Saudi Arabia. Such diplomatic efforts are important now as they can help initiate reforms and resolve conflicts between governments. But the fundamental problem remains: How can working conditions be improved in the long term, and what form might an effective social security net take?

The victims of Iranian attacks in Dubai and the UAE were almost all migrant workers. In Dubai, there were even alarming social media posts about labour migrants being imprisoned. The strict internet censorship in these countries complicates the situation, as members of migrant communities are often unable to openly discuss the conditions on the ground. The fact that in this situation, it is the migrant networks – not governments – that are picking up the slack is not a sign of resilience but systematic failure.

One of the few organisations that are actually helping migrant workers at the moment is the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF). The IDWF organises emergency accommodation and coordinates aid, thereby effectively replacing government safety nets. Social security only exists where it is improvised. The millions of jobs as cleaners, nannies and nurses are primarily carried out by women. Domestic workers are often not even allowed to leave their workplaces, let alone move freely in public spaces. The social isolation of these workers is reminiscent of the pandemic. Here, too, they had nobody to rely on except for their own communities.

When governments, employers and insurances fail to provide assistance, communities must step into the breach. The IDWF approaches the embassies of workers’ countries of origin, calls for repatriation flights to be organised and provides its members with individual-level safeguards. They make contact with domestic workers through community leaders. These individuals, who together play a role similar to that of a works council, provide information about the situation, offer support in emergencies and organise training sessions on issues such as mental health, which is becoming increasingly important in light of the severe social isolation. In some of the Gulf states, this work has been criminalised, and several community leaders have even been detained. For domestic workers, but also for those in the construction and transportation sectors, this is a matter of sheer survival. For the most part, however, the Gulf states have no established trade union tradition. In the Gulf monarchies, policy-making is controlled by a handful of powerful men.

Over the last few years, Qatar and Saudi Arabia have sought to make financial contributions to the ILO. But the Gulf states will not be able to simply buy themselves a clean slate. Ambet Yuson, general secretary of the six-million-member Building and Wood Workers’ International (BWI), has condemned the fact that Saudi Arabia’s reforms by no means signify an abolition of the kafala system, claiming they are in fact little more than rebranding. In Saudi Arabia, stadiums for the 2034 World Cup are currently being built, but the construction sector also lacks a basic social safety net. It would be disastrous if the mistakes made in Qatar were to be repeated here. There, too, the kafala system resulted in exploitation, as any worker who lost their job found it nigh on impossible to switch to a new sponsor. Recruitment practices and indebtedness in the home country further exacerbate this dependence.

Thus, the war has not only exposed a crisis — it has marked a boundary. A model that consistently shifts risks onto legally marginalised workers will only remain stable provided no shocks occur. As soon as they do, it becomes clear that there is no social security because uncertainty is an inherent part of the system. The Gulf crisis shows just how important it is to develop the social safety net that the trade unions are advocating for. The much-discussed question of reforms does not go far enough. The real problem is structural. Yet this does not automatically result in systemic change. On the contrary: reactions so far suggest that the cost of the crisis will, in fact, continue to be shifted onto migrant workers.

Change will therefore not come from the Gulf states alone. Here, external and transnational levers are crucial. Countries of origin must enforce stronger protection mechanisms and binding social security agreements; international organisations such as the ILO must strengthen minimum standards; and European countries must take responsibility, for instance by regulating recruitment practices, supply chains and labour standards.

Robin Frisch is the head of the regional trade union project in the MENA region and of the Friedrich Ebert Foundation’s office in Algeria.

Source: International Politics and Society, published by the Global and European Policy Unit of the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Hiroshimastrasse 28, D-10785 Berlin.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Europe : Costs swell for 'Putin tribunal' in The Hague as Russian threat rises

Intelligence Online - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 06:00
The Dutch authorities, whose offer to host the new Special Tribunal for the Crime of Aggression against Ukraine was accepted during an informal competition, have been assessing the cost of securing the proceedings against Russia. While the thirty six member [...]
Categories: Afrique, Defence`s Feeds

China/France/United States : Ex-CIA at Stanford, French fight against organised crime, strategic post in Beijing

Intelligence Online - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 06:00
US – Former NIC vice-president lands new job at StanfordMaria Langan-Riekhof has joined the Hoover Institution at Stanford University as [...]
Categories: Afrique, Defence`s Feeds

Germany/United States : Bundeswehr looks to procure American autonomous weapons via intermediaries

Intelligence Online - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 06:00
In Germany, a trade dispute alleging breach of contract is likely to take on a highly political dimension given that [...]
Categories: Afrique, Defence`s Feeds

Myanmar : Min Aung Hlaing turns to Putin to help win back Southeast Asia

Intelligence Online - Mon, 15/06/2026 - 06:00
Expected in Kazan, Russia, on 17-18 June for the 35th anniversary of relations between the Association of Southeast Asian Nations [...]
Categories: Afrique, Defence`s Feeds

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