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As Integration in the Greater Bay Area Accelerates, Small Businesses in Macau Suffer

TheDiplomat - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 16:13
Drawn by lower prices, a wider variety of products and convenience, Macau’s residents have taken to spending in mainland China.

“Nous avons failli” : les réponses du gouvernement à propos de l'affaire Lyhanna

France24 / France - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 16:09
Renforcement des peines pour les violeurs en série, délai contraint pour les enquêtes sur les crimes visant des enfants : Sébastien Lecornu et son gouvernement ont présenté mardi matin des premières mesures pour tenter de répondre à la colère et à l'immense émotion suscitées dans le pays par la mort de la jeune Lyhanna, 11 ans. Ils ont ensuite répondu aux questions des députés à l'Assemblée Nationale.
Categories: France, Union européenne

Cachez ces armes

Défense en ligne - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 15:58

Nouvelle dégradation des relations franco-israéliennes : à quelques jours de l'ouverture du salon de l'armement terrestre Eurosatory, un des principaux du genre, le conseil de défense français refuse la présence d'officiels du gouvernement du premier ministre Benyamin Netanyahou, et enjoint les entreprises israéliennes d'armement de ne pas exposer de matériels offensifs, invoquant le non respect par Tel-Aviv des cessez-le-feu conclus au Liban et à Gaza.

- Défense en ligne / , , , ,
Categories: Defence`s Feeds, Défense

Affaire Lyhanna : Sébastien Lecornu tente de reprendre la main et de trouver des réponses

France24 / France - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 15:54
Ce matin à partir de 11h30, Sebastien Lecornu a reçu à Matignon une partie de son gouvernement. Sous pression, face aux nombreuses interrogations sucitées par l'affaire Lyhanna, le Premier ministre doit décider avec les ministres concernés par la protection de l'enfance, de nouvelles mesures. Dans une lettre à ses ministres il dit vouloir "enrichir" un projet de loi déjà déposé sur la protection des enfants. Analyse de Flore Simon, journaliste politique France 24.
Categories: France, Union européenne

Quel est le parcours judiciaire d'un enfant victime de violences sexuelles ?

France24 / France - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 15:51
Gérald Darmanin, Garde des Sceaux, a présenté hier ses excuses au nom de la justice. Il a partagé des chiffres : trois millions de plaintes diverses en souffrance dans les commissariats et les gendarmeries, et 70 000 pour des viols ou des attouchements sexuels sur mineurs actuellement devant les tribunaux… Quel parcours judiciaire attend les victimes ?

Lyhanna : le #MeToo des enfants ? Parlons-En avec V. Bousardo, R. Debruyne, L. Boyet et M. Schuster

France24 / France - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 15:37
La mort insupportable d'un enfant pourrait provoquer un électrochoc, tant dans le système judiciaire français que dans la société. Faut-il encore rappeler ces chiffres : 160 000 enfants victimes d'abus, un toutes les trois minutes et l'immense majorité des plaintes classées sans suite. Les défaillances judiciaires que l'affaire Lyhanna illustre tragiquement sont-elles la conséquence d'un déni ? D'une parole des enfants qui n'est pas entendue comme il le faudrait ? La pédocriminalité est-elle une fatalité ?

Pistorius outlines alternatives after Germany, France scrap FCAS

Euractiv.com - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 15:37
A consortium of companies has proposed its own plan
Categories: European Union

Ghanaian women defy odds to get Cambridge degrees

BBC Africa - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 15:36
Scholarships help three women who grew up in poverty complete master's qualifications in the UK.

The Democratic Dilemma in South Korea’s Local Election Ballot Shortage

TheDiplomat - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 15:33
President Lee sold Korean democracy abroad as a system that fixes itself. Now his party and the administration have to prove it by holding the election commission to account without handing the conspiracy theorists a win.

Nigeria : 360 otages libérés lors d’une opération contre Boko Haram

France24 / Afrique - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 15:32
Au Nigeria, l'armée a annoncé la libération de 360 otages détenus par Boko Haram et ses groupes affiliés. Une opération de sauvetage qui a eu lieu dans un fief du groupe situé dans le sud de l'État du Borno.
Categories: Afrique, France

EU leaders running scared of China, says Belgian PM

Euractiv.com - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 15:30
Economic imbalance must be addressed with a proper strategy, not countless new initiatives, Bart De Wever warns ahead of EU leaders summit
Categories: European Union

Sperme de saumon, fientes d'oiseaux… pourquoi ces soins de la peau improbables séduisent-ils ?

BBC Afrique - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 15:12
L'utilisation de substances exotiques suscite de plus en plus d'intérêt, mais des études montrent que l'efficacité de toutes ces pratiques n'est pas prouvée.
Categories: Africa, Afrique

Le Maroc élimine un haut responsable du Front Polisario

LeMonde / Afrique - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 15:00
Fils d’un ancien chef de l’organisation indépendantiste, Lehbib Mohamed Abdelaziz, 37 ans, a été tué par un drone, dimanche 7 juin, au Sahara occidental.
Categories: Afrique

Plugging the gaps – can interoperability unlock Europe’s smart energy future? [Advocacy Lab]

Euractiv.com - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 14:59
As Europe's homes adopt solar panels, heat pumps, and electric vehicles, a fragmented patchwork of proprietary systems threatens to undermine the continent's climate ambitions
Categories: European Union

Amid Rising Military Tension in War Zones, World’s Nuclear Powers are Modernizing Their Arsenals

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Tue, 09/06/2026 - 14:39

(AI image for representative purpose)

By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS, Jun 9 2026 (IPS)

As ongoing military conflicts in Europe and the Middle East continue with no signsof winding down, there is increasing focus on nuclear weaponsamid heightened risks of escalation.

The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI),in its annual assessment of the state of armaments, disarmament and international security, singles out key findings in its SIPRI Yearbook 2026 that “states are increasingly relying on nuclear weapons as instruments of national power—reversing decades of efforts to reduce the numbers and role of nuclear weapons—even as the risks of miscalculation and escalation are rising”.

World’s nuclear arsenals expanded and upgraded

The world’s nine nuclear-armed states—the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France, China, India, Pakistan, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (North Korea) and Israel—continued programmes to modernize and enhance their nuclear arsenals in 2025, and most deployed new nuclear-armed or nuclear-capable weapon systems during the year, said SIPRI.

The current military conflicts include a nuclear Russia vs non-nuclear Ukraine, a nuclear US vs non-nuclear Iran and a nuclear Israel vs non-nuclear Palestine and Lebanon.

Of the total global inventory of an estimated 12, 187 warheads in January 2026, about 9,745 were in military stockpiles for potential use.

An estimated 4,012 of those warheads were deployed with missiles and aircraft and the rest were in central storage. Between 2100 and 2200 of the deployed warheads were kept in a state of high operational alert on ballistic missiles, according to the report.

Nearly all of these warheads belonged to Russia or the USA, and to a lesser extent France and the UK, but China and India may now occasionally deploy a small number of warheads mounted on missiles during peacetime.

‘Influential voices, including some world leaders, are advocating nuclear weapons as a guarantee against attack by a hostile state. But making national defence and security strategies dependent—or more dependent—on nuclear weapons could significantly increase nuclear risks,’ said SIPRI Director Karim Haggag.

‘The dangers associated with nuclear weapons are growing due to advances in weapon technology, the breakdown of nuclear arms control and heightened geopolitical tensions, among a range of other factors. At the same time, world events—not least the outbreak of conflict between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan—are challenging nuclear deterrence logic.’

Dr M. V. Ramana, Professor and Simons Chair in Disarmament, Global and Human Security, Director pro tem, School of Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, told Inter Press Service the continued modernization of nuclear weapons and the increased emphasis on nuclear weapons in military doctrines is a dangerous trend, especially when this is happening when many of the most military powerful countries in the world are resorting to attacking other countries with bombs, missiles, and drones rather than diplomatically settling differences.

“Any of these ongoing wars can easily escalate into ones where some country resorts to using nuclear weapons, which would result in destruction an order of magnitude greater than what is already being wrought by the weapons being used currently,” he pointed out.

Such a contingency becomes even more imaginable with the integration of Artificial Intelligence and other software tools to accelerate the kill chain, and possibly removing people from the process of deciding who to attack and what weapons to use, h argued.

Countries without nuclear weapons currently are also witnessing recommendations from influential spokespeople to consider developing a nuclear arsenal. Such a race can quickly spiral out of control, making it urgent that the world collectively step away from expanding nuclear arsenals and considering their use, and more generally, cease the use of militaristic violence to settle differences, said Dr Ramana.

Since the end of the cold war, says SIPRI, the gradual dismantlement of retired warheads by Russia and the USA has normally outstripped the deployment of new warheads, resulting in an overall year-on-year decrease in the global inventory of nuclear weapons. This trend is likely to be reversed in the coming years, as the pace of dismantlement is slowing, while the deployment of new nuclear weapons is accelerating.

‘The evidence is growing that the nuclear weapon states are sidelining, and even walking away from, their disarmament commitments and are instead flexing their nuclear muscles,’ said Hans M. Kristensen, Associate Senior Fellow with SIPRI’s Weapons of Mass Destruction Programme and Director of the Nuclear Information Project at the Federation of American Scientists (FAS).

‘By reaching for nuclear solutions, states are creating new risks and fuelling arms-race dynamics,’ he said.

Dr. Natalie Goldring, the Acronym Institute’s representative at the United Nations, told IPS the nine countries with nuclear weapons are engaged in extremely destabilizing behaviors — developing new weapons, increasing the size of their nuclear arsenals, abandoning arms control frameworks and verification systems, and threatening to use nuclear weapons in response to conventional weapons attacks, among other dangerous moves. Each of these choices increases risk; taken together, the potential consequences are terrifying.

Even the existence of nuclear weapons poses enormous military, economic, and environmental threats, among others. Fortunately, there’s a promising way forward — the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), which rejects the contention that nuclear deterrence and continued development of new nuclear weapons somehow make us safer.

Under the TPNW, States commit themselves to not develop, test, produce, acquire, possess, stockpile, use, or threaten to use nuclear weapons. The TPNW has 74 States Parties, with an additional 25 signatories that have not yet become States Parties. It’s arguably our best hope of breaking the cycle of continual upgrades and “modernization” of weapons, while decreasing nuclear threats.

“We don’t know whether the fact that nuclear weapons haven’t been used in wartime since the United States military dropped nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki is because of luck, skill (including deterrence), or a combination of those factors. Proponents of deterrence don’t tend to talk about the role of luck. They also don’t tend to talk about the risk of nuclear use through accident or miscalculation. That’s a short-sighted, high-risk approach. Militaries frequently have accidents; they also frequently fail to correctly calculate their adversaries’ capabilities and motivations.”

“The inherent risks of these weapons are compounded by the individuals involved. For example, US President Donald Trump is a threat to international security. He is unpredictable, prone to fits of rage, disinclined to listen to or learn from experts, and poorly informed about specific and general US military policies. And because of US nuclear weapons policy, he has the authority to order the launch of nuclear weapons without anyone else needing to confirm that order. That’s an extraordinarily dangerous situation, especially given his volatility.”

Recent events also increase risk. For example, the New START Treaty limited the number of deployed nuclear weapons for both the United States and Russia and contained useful verification provisions. Unfortunately, the treaty expired in February 2026, removing both the numerical limits on US and Russian nuclear stockpiles and the verification procedures.

Another example is the recent conclusion of the 2026 Review Conference on the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. This conference continued the pattern from the previous two review conferences, as States were not even able to agree on an outcome document. More importantly, the five nuclear weapons states defined by the treaty (the US, Russia, the United Kingdom, China, and France) continue to fail to meet their commitment to disarmament under Article VI of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

“The US’s stated reliance on the idea of nuclear deterrence may have encouraged other countries to do the same. I remember being at a meeting many years ago, where a South Asian diplomat asked me why the US government was so arrogant that it thought it had a monopoly on nuclear deterrence. He said there was no reason that India and Pakistan couldn’t or shouldn’t have a similar set of strategies. TPNW provides a more sensible answer – all of these States should renounce nuclear weapons.”

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Categories: Africa, Afrique

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