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We should have bought CB90's...

Snafu-solomon.blogspot - mer, 15/07/2026 - 08:20
U.S. Marines ride in a Multi-Mission Reconnaissance Craft Bravo at Naha Military Port, Okinawa, Japan, June 10, 2026. Offering superior maneuverability in shallow waters, these boats allow for rapid deployment in support of littoral operations. They are equipped to transport personnel and supplies, ensuring Marine forces maintain operational tempo and sustainment in austere, distributed environments. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Briseida Villasenor)

What does that mission set sound like? Yeah. That fits the CB90 to a tee only it would do it better. Better? I mean its faster, can carry more gear and troops, is out the box ready to mount weapons, launch uavs and sensors too. Did I mention that it is designed to operate in the "littorals"? The Marine Corps once again looked for an elegant solution instead of a ready made one. The USMC isn't threatened by extinction because its a "second land army". Fuck no. The Marine Corps is threatened by extinction because its NO LONGER A BARGAIN FOR THE AMERICAN PEOPLE!!! Below is a pick of the boat we should have bought. The mighty CB90!
Catégories: Defence`s Feeds

Cameroun: manifestation devant l’ambassade de France pour dénoncer la faible délivrance de visas aux étudiants

RFI /Afrique - mer, 15/07/2026 - 08:19
Au Cameroun, plusieurs dizaines de personnes ont marché pacifiquement mardi devant l’ambassade de France à Yaoundé pour dénoncer les nouvelles modalités financières exigées aux étudiants admis dans un établissement privé en France.
Catégories: Afrique

Le destin méconnu de la Grande Mosquée de Paris, cent ans au cœur de l'Histoire

France24 / France - mer, 15/07/2026 - 07:43
Nichée au cœur du Quartier latin, la Grande Mosquée de Paris célèbre ses 100 ans. Inaugurée en 1926, en hommage aux soldats musulmans morts pour la France lors de la Première Guerre mondiale, elle est devenue progressivement un outil géostratégique. L’historien Benjamin Stora revient pour France 24 sur l'histoire de ce lieu incontournable, qui établit un pont entre la France et l'Algérie, mais aussi entre juifs et musulmans. 
Catégories: France

Congo Nouveau : « Retrait des troupes rwandaises annoncé pour le 15 juillet : Washington floué par Kigali »

Radio Okapi / RD Congo - mer, 15/07/2026 - 07:40


Revue de presse de mercredi 15 juillet 


Les journaux parus ce matin se penchent sur l'échéance de la mi-juillet, date fixée pour le retrait des forces rwandaises du sol congolais, mais aussi sur la diplomatie congolaise à l’ONU.

Catégories: Afrique

Megnyílt a Magyar Ifjúsági Központ Kolozsváron

Kolozsvári Rádió (Románia/Erdély) - mer, 15/07/2026 - 07:30

Egy helyre költöznek Kolozsvár magyar diákszövetségei. Ez lesz a Magyar Ifjúsági Központ. A diákszervezetek a belvárosban, a Bocskai-ház mögötti épületben kapnak irodahelyiségeket, illetve egy ingyenesen használható rendezvény- és konferenciaterem is a rendelkezésükre áll. Az épület az Erdélyi Református Egyházkerület tulajdona, amelyet a következő 5 évben a Magyar Ifjúsági Központ Egyesület bérel. A fenntartási költségeket az […]

Articolul Megnyílt a Magyar Ifjúsági Központ Kolozsváron apare prima dată în Kolozsvári Rádió Románia.

Pakistan’s Operation Shaban Targets Both the TTP and BLA in Balochistan

TheDiplomat - mer, 15/07/2026 - 07:28
Operation Shaban is in response to a deadly terrorist attack on July 7 in the Mangi Dam area, which claimed the lives of 27 police personnel.

What Did the Nine-Dash Line Ruling Accomplish?

Foreign Policy - mer, 15/07/2026 - 07:00
Ten years on, the Philippines is stepping up its defense plans in the South China Sea.

Explosion im Tessin: Erst tötete der Tatverdächtige seine Ex-Frau, dann legte er vermutlich für die Einsatzkräfte eine Sprengsatzfalle

NZZ.ch - mer, 15/07/2026 - 07:00
Bei einem Einsatz der Sondereinheit in Leontica wurden drei Polizisten verletzt. Die Tessiner Kantonspolizei nimmt an, dass der mutmassliche Täter es auf das Sonderkommando der Polizei abgesehen hatte.
Catégories: Swiss News

RDC : toujours pas de retrait des troupes rwandaises espéré à la mi-juillet par Washington

Radio Okapi / RD Congo - mer, 15/07/2026 - 06:54

L’objectif évoqué par Washington n’a pas été atteint à propos de la guerre de l’Est de la RDC. Le 4 juin dernier, le secrétaire d’État américain Marco Rubio disait espérer voir les troupes rwandaises se retirer de l’Est de la RDC avant la mi-juillet. Cependant au 15 juillet, aucun désengagement des Forces de défense rwandaises (RDF) n’a été officiellement constaté dans les zones contrôlées par l’AFC/M23.

Catégories: Afrique

WHO: Urgent Action Needed for the Future of Cancer Care

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - mer, 15/07/2026 - 06:48

The WHO-led Women’s Integrated Cancer Services Program; the pilot programs were first implemented in Kenya in the Bungoma and Nyandarua counties. Credit: WHO/Yasin Abdullahi

By Shuli Wong
UNITED NATIONS, Jul 15 2026 (IPS)

One in five people will be diagnosed with cancer in their lifetime, and when the emotional and physical toll on close family members is factored in, an estimated 92 percent of people globally will be affected by cancer at least once in their lifetime. This staggering statistic is the centerpiece of the World Health Organization (WHO)’s latest global report on cancer.

The Global Status Report on Cancer 2026, published in July 8 in conjunction with the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), is the most comprehensive cancer assessment to date and provides an in-depth analysis of the current global status of cancer care and prevention. The report also paints an alarming picture of persistent and widening inequities in prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and care.

WHO estimates that cancer claimed nearly 10 million lives in 2024 (over 26,000 lives every day), along with 20.6 million new diagnoses globally. Without urgent and accelerated action, annual cancer cases are projected to rise to 35 million by 2050, said Stephane Dujarric, Spokesperson for the UN Secretary-General on July 8. Furthermore, the steepest increases in cancer cases are projected to disproportionately burden low-and-middle-income countries (LMICS), with a 133 percent increase in cancer incidence rates in low-income countries and an 86.5 percent increase in lower-middle-income countries by 2050.

The report highlighted the deep global inequities in cancer survival rates. In high-income countries, the five-year net survival rate for breast cancer exceeds 85 percent, while, in low-income countries it drops below 45 percent. For childhood leukemia, only 54 percent of countries have reached the 60 percent five-year survival rate that WHO’s Global Institute for Childhood Cancer set as the minimum target. Furthermore, there are stark regional differences, with some African and Eastern Mediterranean countries falling at only 19 percent, and some South-East Asian countries at 26 percent.

The regional disparities are highlighted by the report’s statement that “our experience of [cancer] and chances of surviving now depend less on the stage or biology of our disease than on where we live and our economic circumstances.” A primary driver of these inequities is limited treatment capabilities and infrastructure in LMICs. For example, 23 LMICs lack any active radiation facilities, resulting in over 197 million people without local access to any critical radiation treatment. Furthermore, even when facilities exist in LMICs, they are chronically unreliable and subject to downtime, high operating costs, limited local maintenance expertise, and delays in importing parts.

While the physical and emotional health effects of cancer are astronomical, the financial consequences for families are just as devastating. Approximately 45–60 percent of people diagnosed with cancer experience catastrophic health expenditure, leading to impoverishment, food insecurity, and disrupted education for the children and siblings of cancer patients. Even in countries that have universal health coverage, the indirect costs of cancer are detrimental, and female caregivers experience greater consequences for their employment and productivity than men.

Throughout the report, prevention is highlighted as the most important yet underused tool for reducing cancer incidence rates. In 2022, 38 percent of cancer cases were attributed to 30 modifiable risk factors, with tobacco use, infections, alcohol consumption, and excess body weight as the primary factors. However, only 30 percent of national cancer control plans incorporate evidence-based cancer prevention interventions.

The WHO outlined three strategic shifts to help shape the future of cancer control: better capabilities, better protections, and better value. These shifts are anchored in a person-centered cancer agenda that is shaped by lived experience. Cancer care needs stronger governance and financing that is centered around investing in human resources. Globally, there needs to be a primary focus on prevention through early detection and equitable access to diagnosis and treatment. Outcomes must be focused not just on survival but also on function and quality of life.

The report concluded, “the primary gap is no longer a gap in knowledge, but a gap between what we know and what we do, between what we plan and what we implement.” WHO Director-General, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, emphasized that the path forward for cancer care “must be shaped by more than data and scientific research; they must also reflect the voices and lived experiences of people impacted by the disease.”

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Catégories: Africa

Ebola en RDC : plus de 700 morts enregistrés en deux mois

Radio Okapi / RD Congo - mer, 15/07/2026 - 06:47

Du 15 mai 2026 au 15 juillet 2026, cela fait deux mois jour pour jour depuis que le Gouvernement congolais a officiellement déclaré la 17ème épidémie d’Ebola en République démocratique du Congo. La maladie, qui s' etend sur cinq provinces du pays, a déjà fait plus 700 morts.

Catégories: Afrique

«Demain, faudra-t-il dire : “Et à 16 heures, madame Martin sera euthanasiée” ?» : à l’Ehpad Saint-Augustin, le refus de devenir un « lieu de mort »

Le Figaro / Politique - mer, 15/07/2026 - 06:42
RÉCIT - Cet établissement, qui juge l’aide à mourir contraire à sa mission de solidarité, espère échapper à son application.
Catégories: France

Pride: Once Again a Protest

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - mer, 15/07/2026 - 06:32

Pride Parade participants march on the Elisabeth bridge in Budapest, Hungary on 27 June 2026. Credit: Attila Kisbenedek/AFP

By Inés M. Pousadela
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, Jul 15 2026 (IPS)

On the morning of 28 June, riot police sealed off Taksim Square with iron barriers and enforced bans on all weekend gatherings in Istanbul. Marchers pressed ahead anyway, re-emerging from side streets each time police dispersed them. By the end of the day police had detained at least 50 people, including a journalist. It was Istanbul Pride’s 24th edition, and the 12th year running that the authorities banned it outright.

Homosexuality is not illegal in Turkey, so the state cannot prosecute people for who they are. Instead, it punishes them for making themselves visible. Authorities ban marches on ‘public morality’ grounds, block access to the social media accounts of LGBTQI+ organisations and put activists on trial for ‘obscenity’.

The pattern repeats in country after country. For a movement that spent decades making progress in winning recognition of rights, this Pride season tells a story of regression. A concerted backlash is clawing back territory once claimed, and Pride has again become a protest.

Much of the current wave of regression is a direct response to the gains LGBTQI+ movements made over previous decades. Anti-discrimination laws, recognition of equal marriage rights and growing public visibility have given opponents a clear target to mobilise against, and governments under economic or political pressure have found a convenient scapegoat in the LGBTQI+ community.

Authoritarian and populist leaders, facing discontent over corruption, inflation and unemployment, redirect public anger towards a minority that can be attacked without political cost, while conservative religious institutions find in opposition to LGBTQI+ rights, and particularly trans rights, a rallying cause that restores their claim to define society’s moral order. The result is a mutually reinforcing alliance between political power and religious conservatism, dressed up as the defence of children, the family and national identity.

Existence criminalised

A growing number of states are going further, criminalising not only LGBTQI+ people’s visibility but their very existence. Four West African states have criminalised consensual same-sex relations in the past two years, framing their move as a defence of national sovereignty against western influence. Mali’s military government criminalised homosexuality in December 2024 and Burkina Faso’s junta followed in September 2025. Niger’s new penal code, adopted last month, imposes punishment of up to 20 years in prison. Within weeks, media reported at least 40 arrests, the suspension of HIV prevention services and people fleeing the country.

Electoral democracies aren’t immune. In Senegal, parliament doubled the maximum sentence for ‘unnatural acts’ to 10 years in March, and over 300 ‘suspected homosexuals’ have reportedly been arrested in the past few months. Ghana’s parliament passed a bill imposing jail sentences on anyone who identifies as LGBTQI+ and requiring people to report prohibited activities to the authorities. President John Mahama has yet to sign it into law, but the debate about the bill has already fuelled a rise in blackmail, evictions and workplace discrimination.

The model is Uganda’s 2023 Anti-Homosexuality Act, which includes the death penalty for ‘aggravated homosexuality’ and punishes the vaguely defined crime of ‘promoting’ homosexuality with up to 20 years in prison.

All these laws, marketed as a rejection of foreign interference and imported values, have been promoted with foreign money. US-based conservative groups such as the American Center for Law and Justice and Family Watch International have played a key role in funding anti-rights advocacy. Days after passing its bill, Ghana’s parliament hosted the African Inter-Parliamentary Conference on Family Values and Sovereignty, a platform with documented ties to those groups that has promoted Uganda’s law as a template for the continent.

Consensus in retreat

US anti-rights groups have their president’s ear. Since returning to office, Donald Trump has signed a series of executive orders rolling back federal protections, particularly targeting transgender people. Private companies heard the message. Major events including NYC Pride and San Francisco Pride lost sponsors in 2025, and Tampa Pride had to cancel its 2026 parade.

For years, activist groups such as New York’s Reclaim Pride Coalition accused corporations of pinkwashing, that is, turning Pride into a corporate vehicle without advancing demands for rights. Many sponsors are now gone, but for the wrong reasons. Whatever its motives, sponsorship functioned as a seal of approval from mainstream institutions. Money withdrawn out of political fear takes with it more than event budgets; it erodes a social consensus that took decades to build.

Marching for those who can’t

In this context, the year’s biggest marches have become acts of political defiance. A million people marched in São Paulo under the theme ‘The street summons, the ballot box confirms’, ahead of Brazil’s October general election. In Bangkok, an all-time record half a million people marched a year after Thailand’s marriage equality law took effect, a testament to what legal recognition can do for a community’s visibility.

On 27 June, tens of thousands joined the 31st Budapest Pride, the first held since voters removed the right-wing populist government that repeatedly banned it. Organisers are treating this as a starting point, pressing the new government with a list of 14 demands that begins with repealing a 2021 ‘anti-LGBT propaganda’ law the European Union’s top court has ruled incompatible with equality and human dignity. Hungary shows that change is possible after all.

In places like Indonesia, Iraq, Niger and Uganda, among many more, there’s no Pride march to ban, because holding one is unthinkable. Even private organising now risks prosecution. In those places, people are looking outward, hoping that a crowd marching freely somewhere else will march for them too. That’s the duty of Pride season for those still free to gather: to mobilise both for themselves and for the many being forced to hide who they are.

Inés M. Pousadela is CIVICUS Head of Research and Analysis, co-director and writer for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report. She is also a Professor of Comparative Politics at Universidad ORT Uruguay.

For interviews or more information, please contact research@civicus.org

 


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Catégories: Africa

NATO Is Splitting in Two

Foreign Policy - mer, 15/07/2026 - 06:01
Mark Carney and Mark Rutte offer competing visions for the future of the trans-Atlantic alliance.

Kwame N’Krumah, père du panafricanisme et idéologue oublié de Conakry

LeMonde / Afrique - mer, 15/07/2026 - 06:00
« Chefs d’Etat africains en exil » (3/6). L’ancien dirigeant du Ghana exilé en Guinée était le héraut du panafricanisme et un grand défendeur de l’indépendance des pays d’Afrique. Aujourd’hui, il est difficile de trouver des documents qui racontent son histoire.
Catégories: Afrique

France/Syria : French corporate intelligence seeks Damascus foothold

Intelligence Online - mer, 15/07/2026 - 06:00
The economic delegation that accompanied President Emmanuel Macron to Damascus on 6 and 7 July included the former head of [...]
Catégories: Defence`s Feeds

France/United Kingdom/United States : Ex-gendarme at Saint-Gobain, K2, Verbatim Investigations

Intelligence Online - mer, 15/07/2026 - 06:00
Paris – New security director at Saint-GobainGendarme Louis Rose, who has been in charge of security at the French building [...]
Catégories: Defence`s Feeds

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