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Agrégateur de flux

The pitch for Europe’s AI Plan B

Euractiv.com - mar, 16/06/2026 - 04:00
European experts wants to build out data centres with American tech giants
Catégories: European Union

INTERVIEW: Theologian-turned-MEP on how he stood up to Trump

Euractiv.com - mar, 16/06/2026 - 04:00
The art of the deal means turning the other cheek, says Bernd Lange, who secured changes to Trump's 'unbalanced' EU trade deal
Catégories: European Union

Hormuz and the new era of economic warfare

Euractiv.com - mar, 16/06/2026 - 04:00
Tehran may be losing the export battle but its capacity to hamstring the global economy remains unchecked
Catégories: European Union

Beyond enlargement: Ukraine and Europe’s new strategic reality

Euractiv.com - mar, 16/06/2026 - 04:00
Ukraine isn’t just a recipient of security – it has become a contributor to it. This reality casts the enlargement debate in a new light
Catégories: European Union

UE: à Luxembourg, les négociations en vue d'une adhésion de la Moldavie relancées

RFI (Europe) - mar, 16/06/2026 - 03:08
Les ministres des Affaires étrangères de l’Union européenne étaient rassemblés à Luxembourg pour leur réunion mensuelle ce lundi 15 juin. L’occasion de relancer les négociations avec l’Ukraine et la Moldavie en vue d'une adhésion à l'Union européenne. Pour la candidature de la Moldavie, représentée par le Premier ministre Alexandru Munteanu, c’est un soulagement : en 2022, le pays avait bénéficié de la volonté de l’Union européenne de soutenir l’Ukraine, et avait en quelque sorte été aspiré dans l’ouverture de la candidature à l’adhésion, mais il dépendait, depuis, de celle de l’Ukraine, qui était bloquée.
Catégories: Afrique, Union européenne

Asian Synthetic Drug Seizures Surged to Record Highs in 2025, UN Says

TheDiplomat - mar, 16/06/2026 - 03:05
The UNODC warned of a growing convergence between drug trafficking operations and other criminal enterprises, particularly online scamming operations.

Recovery of Ebola patients offers rare moments of joy at epicentre of outbreak

BBC Africa - mar, 16/06/2026 - 01:26
There are glimpses of happiness in the Democratic Republic of Congo's fight against the virus that has killed more than 170.
Catégories: Africa, Afrique

'Greatest feeling ever': Cape Verdeans tell BBC of joy at holding Spain to draw

BBC Africa - mar, 16/06/2026 - 01:01
The streets of the capital, Praia, shook with wild celebrations as the small island nation held Spain to a shock 0-0 draw.
Catégories: Africa, Afrique

Le G7 est-il encore influent aujourd’hui ?

France24 / France - mar, 16/06/2026 - 00:19
Certains des grands dirigeants du monde sont en France. Le sommet du G7 s'est ouvert ce lundi à Évian, en Haute-Savoie et il va durer trois jours jusqu'au 17 juin. Une question se pose alors : étant donné que le poids économique des pays du G7 a diminué avec la montée en puissance des économies émergentes, ce sommet a-t-il perdu de sa superbe ?
Catégories: France

Pologne: couples gays, franchir la frontière pour se marier

RFI (Europe) - mar, 16/06/2026 - 00:01
Alors que la Pologne reste l’un des pays les plus restrictifs d’Europe en termes de droits LGBT, le gouvernement de Donald Tusk a légalisé fin mai la reconnaissance administrative des mariages homosexuels conclus à l'étranger. Une décision qui fait suite à la condamnation de la Cour de justice de l’Union européenne, selon laquelle Varsovie portait atteinte à la liberté de circulation de ces couples dans l’UE en leur retirant des droits acquis dans un autre pays. De quoi encourager de nombreux couples homosexuels polonais à organiser leur mariage à l’étranger ces derniers mois, alors que l’union des couples de même sexe reste interdite en Pologne.
Catégories: Afrique, Union européenne

RD Congo : 782 cas confirmés d'Ebola et deux nouvelles zones affectées, MSF s'inquiète

France24 / Afrique - lun, 15/06/2026 - 23:39
Alors que l''épidémie d'Ebola continue de s'étendre en RDC, MSF tire la sonnette d'alarme. L'ONG s'inquiète des "dangereuses lacunes" dans la réponse sanitaire. L'épidémie se diffuse plus rapidement que les capacités de réponse mises en œuvre sur le terrain. Notre envoyée spéciale à Bunia a pu se rendre dans un hôpital.
Catégories: Afrique, European Union

Mondial 2026 : le Cap-Vert crée la surprise en tenant l’Espagne en échec (0-0)

Radio Okapi / RD Congo - lun, 15/06/2026 - 23:08


Pour sa toute première participation à une Coupe du monde, le Cap-Vert a réussi un exploit ce lundi 15 juin, en arrachant un match nul (0-0) face à l’Espagne, championne du monde 2010 et l’une des favorites du Mondial 2026. 

Catégories: Afrique

U.S.-Iran Peace Deal Arrives Just in Time for G-7 Summit

Foreign Policy - lun, 15/06/2026 - 22:56
But continued Israeli strikes on Lebanon could derail the agreement before it takes effect.

The 40-year-old keeper who inspired Cape Verde's historic debut

BBC Africa - lun, 15/06/2026 - 22:15
Cape Verde stuns Spain with a goalless draw inspired by a 40-year-old goalkeeper who has gone viral on social media.
Catégories: Africa, Afrique

Mondial 2026 : la Côte d’Ivoire s’impose face à l’Équateur et relance son ambition mondiale

Radio Okapi / RD Congo - lun, 15/06/2026 - 22:00


La Côte d’Ivoire a bien lancé sa campagne au Mondial 2026 en s’imposant 1-0 face à l’Équateur. Un succès précieux pour les Éléphants, qui retrouvent la scène mondiale douze ans après leur dernière participation en 2014. Cette qualification marque la quatrième participation de la Côte d’Ivoire à une phase finale de Coupe du monde de la FIFA, après les éditions de 2006, 2010 et 2014.

Catégories: Afrique

Beyond the Malacca Dilemma: China’s Emerging Corridor-Hedging Logic

TheDiplomat - lun, 15/06/2026 - 21:22
China’s approach to external connectivity recognizes that different trade routes perform different functions under different political and operational conditions.

The Truce Between the U.S. and Iran Was the Easy Part

Foreign Policy - lun, 15/06/2026 - 20:46
Getting Iran to concede on key issues will be a struggle.

From Victoria to Mombasa: Will Africa’s Ocean Voice Be Heard?

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - lun, 15/06/2026 - 20:43

By James Alix Michel
VICTORIA, Seychelles, Jun 15 2026 (IPS)

Tomorrow, Africa hosts the Our Ocean Conference on its own shores for the first time, in Mombasa.

This is more than a diplomatic milestone. It is a test of whether we, as Africans, are prepared to safeguard our ocean as a shared heritage and a pillar of our future prosperity.

James Alix Michel

For island and coastal nations such as Seychelles, this is not an abstract debate. It is a question of survival, identity and dignity. Our ocean is the blue heart that sustains our people. It feeds our families, stabilises our climate, underpins our blue economies and shapes our cultures. If we fail to protect it, we will have failed our children.

As former President of Seychelles, I had the privilege to help pioneer the blue economy concept in Seychelles and the South West Indian Ocean. That vision, born from our own lived reality, was simple but profound: our economic future depends on a healthy ocean. We must build prosperity not by exhausting marine wealth, but by restoring and protecting it.

Today, as the world gathers in Kenya under the theme “Our Ocean, Our Heritage, Our Future”, that same blue economy vision must guide Africa’s choices. The theme is not a slogan to open a conference; it is a call to re imagine the relationship between our societies and the sea. It demands that we treat the ocean as a living heritage we hold in trust, not a frontier for short term extraction.

Earlier this year, together with Dona Bertarelli, we called for a moratorium on deep sea mining and for stronger protection of Africa’s ocean. We did so in anticipation of the Mombasa conference, knowing that the decisions taken there – or avoided there – will echo across our continent and far beyond. Africa’s voice on the ocean has to be heard clearly, and our commitments will be judged not by the elegance of our words, but by the protections that reach people and nature.

Deep sea mining crystallises what is at stake. The deep ocean is one of the last largely unknown frontiers on our planet. It supports ecosystems that have taken millennia to form and that play roles in global processes we are only beginning to understand. To open this fragile realm to industrial mining without robust, independent science and effective governance would be to gamble with consequences we cannot foresee and cannot reverse.

For Africa, the risks are even more acute. Many of our states are still building their scientific and regulatory capacities. Many of our coastal communities and small scale fishers already face pressure from climate change, pollution and overfishing. To layer the uncertain impacts of deep sea mining on top of these existing stresses would be reckless.

This is why I support a precautionary pause on deep sea mining. Precaution is not anti development. It is responsible leadership in a time of profound uncertainty. It says: we will not mortgage the ocean that sustains us for promises of quick gain, especially when those gains may flow elsewhere while the damage remains with us.

Africa’s seas underpin our food security, our climate resilience, our blue economies, our cultures and our identities as ocean peoples. They are the living foundation for millions of coastal and island communities across the continent, from the Western Indian Ocean to the Atlantic and Mediterranean shores. To treat them as mere repositories of minerals is to ignore their true value and the rights of those who depend on them.

As leaders, negotiators and experts gather in Mombasa, I believe Africa should speak with one clear, principled message.

First, our ocean is not a frontier for unchecked extraction, but a heritage we hold in trust. Decisions taken in Mombasa must respect the ocean’s ecological limits and recognise the special vulnerabilities and rights of small island developing states and coastal nations.

Second, any activity in the deep sea must proceed only when independent science shows it will not cause irreversible harm. That means investing in African and global scientific capacity and listening to evidence, not to pressure for rapid exploitation.

Third, ocean decisions must prioritise coastal communities, small scale fishers, women and youth, and the countries that depend on the sea every day. The benefits of a blue economy must be shared fairly, and its governance must be inclusive. Communities on the frontlines of change must be at the centre of decision making, not at the margins.

From Seychelles, we know that it is possible to chart a different course. Through marine spatial planning, marine protected areas, innovative financing and a strong commitment to conservation, we have shown that protecting the ocean can go hand in hand with creating opportunities for our people. The blue economy is not a theory for us. It is a lived pathway, built through hard choices and long term vision.

From Mombasa, Africa now has a chance to lead. True ocean leadership requires more than ambitious speeches. It requires restraint as well as innovation, protection as well as investment. It demands that we say “not yet” when the science is uncertain and the risks are too great. It asks us to measure success not only in money raised, but in coral reefs saved, fish stocks rebuilt and communities strengthened.

The Our Ocean Conference was created to move the world from promises to action. Let us ensure that the action that emerges from Mombasa honours its theme: “Our Ocean, Our Heritage, Our Future.” Let us ensure that the legacy of this conference is a safer ocean for Africa and for the world, not new risks passed on to our children.

From Victoria to Mombasa, from Seychelles to the African mainland, our message should be united and firm: Africa’s ocean is not for sacrifice. It is for stewardship. It is for our people. And it is for our future.

James Alix Michel is the former President of the Republic of Seychelles and founder of the James Michel Foundation.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Catégories: Africa, France

Le Sénat adopte à l’unanimité la proposition de loi sur l’organisation du référendum en RDC

Radio Okapi / RD Congo - lun, 15/06/2026 - 20:37


Le Sénat de la République démocratique du Congo a adopté à l’unanimité dans la soirée de ce lundi 15 juin, la proposition de loi fixant les conditions d’organisation du référendum. Les 89 sénateurs présents ont voté en faveur du texte, déjà validé par l’Assemblée nationale, dans un climat politique tendu marqué par les critiques de l’opposition.


Réunis en plénière, les sénateurs ont adopté la proposition de loi à l’unanimité. Ce texte encadre désormais les modalités d’organisation d’un référendum en RDC.

Catégories: Afrique

Autonomie de la Corse : « De quoi avez-vous peur ? », lance la ministre de la Décentralisation aux opposants de la réforme

Le Figaro / Politique - lun, 15/06/2026 - 20:09
ENTRETIEN - Examiné dans l’hémicycle de l’Assemblée nationale mardi, le projet de loi constitutionnelle sur l’autonomie de la Corse reconnaît un « fait démocratique » et une « singularité insulaire », fait valoir la ministre de la Décentralisation, Françoise Gatel.
Catégories: France

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