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ODIHR opens special election assessment mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina

OSCE - mar, 28/10/2025 - 09:17

BANJA LUKA, 28 October 2025 – The OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) today opened an observation mission for the 23 November early election of the president of Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina, following an invitation from the national authorities.

The mission is led by Mátyás Eörsi and consists of 11 international core team experts from 9 OSCE participating States based in Banja Luka from 28 October and four regional analysts from four different participating States deployed in teams of two across Republika Srpska from 31 October.

The mission will assess the conduct of the election for its compliance with OSCE commitments and other international obligations and standards, as well as with national legislation. 

Observers will closely assess a number of specific areas, including the conduct of the campaign also on social networks, the work of the election administration at all levels, election legislation and its implementation, campaign finance, media environment, and the resolution of election disputes.

Meetings with representatives of state and entity-level authorities and political parties, the judiciary, civil society, the media and the international community form an integral part of the observation.

The observers will not carry out any comprehensive observation of the voting, counting and tabulation on election day, but mission members will visit a limited number of polling stations.

The day after the election, a statement of preliminary findings and conclusions will be presented at a press conference. A final report containing an assessment of the entire election process and recommendations for future elections will be published some months after the election.

The ODIHR special election assessment mission and the OSCE Mission to Bosnia and Herzegovina operate independently under their separate mandates. For further information on ODIHR’s election observation activities in the country, please visit: https://www.osce.org/odihr/elections/bih

For further information, please contact: 

Katya Andrusz, ODIHR Spokesperson: Katya.Andrusz@odihr.pl or +48 609 522 266

Veronica Laputska, Media Analyst with the Special Election Assessment Mission:  veronica.laputska@odihr-ba.org

Catégories: Central Europe

HARVEST: A seat on the cart

Euractiv.com - mar, 28/10/2025 - 09:16
In today's edition: CAP budget, deforestation, animal transport
Catégories: European Union

Energy & Environment Policy Conference

Euractiv.com - mar, 28/10/2025 - 09:00
09:00 – 09:20 PLENARY: Net-Zero by 2050 – The Clean Industrial Deal and its implications for Europe The European Commission’s Clean Industrial Deal will be the focus of this plenary session. We’ll delve into how it can translate into practice and its implications for European citizens and industry, exploring topics such as clean technologies, achieving […]
Catégories: European Union

Donald Tusk critiqué pour des remarques sur un retrait de la CEDH

Euractiv.fr - mar, 28/10/2025 - 08:47

Le Premier ministre polonais est sous le feu des critiques pour avoir suggéré que les pays incapables de se mettre d’accord sur les réformes de la Convention européenne des droits de l’Homme pourraient envisager de s’en retirer.

The post Donald Tusk critiqué pour des remarques sur un retrait de la CEDH appeared first on Euractiv FR.

FIREPOWER: Over 20 countries back NATO PURL initiative

Euractiv.com - mar, 28/10/2025 - 08:36
Plus Seán Clancy tells us about preparations to move EUMAM into Ukraine, and updates on drones, satellite cybersecurity, and the missing details of RESourceEU
Catégories: European Union

Municipales à Paris : cinq choses à savoir sur Pierre-Yves Bournazel, futur candidat Horizons-Renaissance

Le Figaro / Politique - mar, 28/10/2025 - 08:35
Pierre-Yves Bournazel, élu de Paris proche d’Édouard Philippe, se prépare à recevoir le soutien du parti présidentiel, en vue des élections de mars. À 48 ans, cet adversaire résolu de Rachida Dati, ancien LR tendance Juppé passé chez Horizons, se voit en candidat «challenger» capable de créer la surprise.
Catégories: France

In memoriam : Bangoura N'deye

Lefaso.net (Burkina Faso) - mar, 28/10/2025 - 08:30

Voilà un (1) an que le Seigneur a rappelé à Lui sa fille bien-aimée Bangoura N'deye, précédemment sage-femme à la Clinique Frany.

31 octobre 2024 – 31 octobre 2025

Yā ayyatuhā an-nafsu al-muṭma'innah, irji‘ī ilā rabbiki rāḍiyatan marḍiyyah, fa-dkhulī fī ‘ibādī, wa-dkhulī jannatī.

« Ô toi, âme apaisée, retourne vers ton Seigneur, satisfaite et agréée.
Entre donc parmi Mes serviteurs et entre dans Mon Paradis. »
(Sourate Al-Fajr, versets 27 à 30)

À l'occasion de ce triste anniversaire, les grandes familles Sombie, Koné, Youla, Bangoura, Traoré, Touré, Sylla,

les familles alliées Samandoulgou, Barro, Nakoulma, Wembanba, Balima, Ouédraogo,

ainsi que les amis et collègues,

à Bérégadougou, Guinée Conakry, Abidjan, France et États-Unis,

renouvellent leurs remerciements et leur profonde gratitude pour les nombreuses marques d'amitié, de sympathie, de compassion et de soutien multiforme reçues lors de son inhumation le 03 novembre 2024, suivie du Doua.

Ils vous informent qu'une cérémonie de Doua aura lieu le vendredi 31 octobre 2025 au domicile familial sis à Benogo (Cité de l'Avenir) à 7h30.

Catégories: Afrique

Les "Héros de Kharkiv" qui ont sauvé 48 enfants d'un jardin d'enfants attaqué par des drones russes en Ukraine

BBC Afrique - mar, 28/10/2025 - 08:23
Bien que tous les enfants soient indemnes, l'attaque met en évidence la nouvelle portée de la stratégie russe en Ukraine.
Catégories: Afrique

UN: Global greenhouse gas emissions set to fall for the first time, but not quickly enough

Euractiv.com - mar, 28/10/2025 - 08:00
But the forecasted 10% emission cut in 2035 would be insufficient to respect global warming red lines
Catégories: European Union

Timmermans boosted by gay youth controversy

Euractiv.com - mar, 28/10/2025 - 08:00
In today’s edition: a gay rights controversy jolts the Dutch election as centrist parties eye a comeback, Pedro Sánchez’s fragile alliance unravels after Catalan separatists cut ties, and Berlin urges restraint as EU-China trade tensions escalate over mineral export curbs
Catégories: European Union

VOLTAGE: EU faces COP30 countdown: carbon slump, raw materials race

Euractiv.com - mar, 28/10/2025 - 07:55
In today's edition: ETS2 carbon price, critical minerals, gas flows, net-zero shipping
Catégories: European Union

Serbie : le régime Vučić s'attaque à l'indépendance du groupe United media

Courrier des Balkans / Serbie - mar, 28/10/2025 - 07:50

Les derniers médias indépendants de Serbie sont menacés. Via Telekom Srbija, le régime a pris le contrôle du groupe United Medias, auxquels appartiennent notamment la télévision N1 et le quotidien Danas. Pour les mettre au pas.

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Serbie : le régime Vučić s'attaque à l'indépendance du groupe United media

Courrier des Balkans - mar, 28/10/2025 - 07:50

Les derniers médias indépendants de Serbie sont menacés. Via Telekom Srbija, le régime a pris le contrôle du groupe United Medias, auxquels appartiennent notamment la télévision N1 et le quotidien Danas. Pour les mettre au pas.

- Articles / , , , , ,
Catégories: Balkans Occidentaux

Affaire Brigitte Macron : l’insulte faite à la démocratie

Le Point / France - mar, 28/10/2025 - 07:43
CHRONIQUE. Le cyberharcelement contre la premiere dame, aujourd'hui en proces, est bien plus qu'un fait divers. C'est un coup porte a nos valeurs communes.
Catégories: Europäische Union, France

Genèse d'une rumeur transphobe sur Brigitte Macron devenue virale

France24 / France - mar, 28/10/2025 - 07:16
Le procès de dix personnes jugées pour cyberharcèlement à l'encontre de Brigitte Macron, cible depuis 2021 d’une rumeur affirmant qu’elle serait une femme transgenre, a débuté lundi. Retour sur la genèse de cette théorie complotiste et sa propagation planétaire.
Catégories: France

Tanzania’s Pandemic Fund Ushers in a New Era of Health Preparedness

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - mar, 28/10/2025 - 07:13

A Community Health Worker in a door-to-door campaign to vaccinate people in communities in Nanyamba village, Mtwara Region, in southeastern Tanzania. Credit: Kizito Makoye/IPS

By Kizito Makoye
DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania, Oct 28 2025 (IPS)

When COVID-19 hit Tanzania in 2020, Alfred Kisena’s life was torn apart. The 51-year-old teacher still remembers the night he learned that his wife, Maria, had succumbed to the virus at a hospital in Dar es Salaam. He wasn’t allowed to see her in her final moments.

“The doctors said it was too dangerous, and the virus was contagious,” Kisena said, gazing at a faded photo of her hanging on the wall.

Maria’s burial took place in eerie isolation. Municipal workers dressed in white protective gear lowered her body into a tomb at Ununio Cemetery on the city’s outskirts.

“Saying goodbye to a loved one is sacred, but I didn’t get a chance,” he said.

Across Tanzania, many families endured the same pain—losing loved ones and being denied the rituals that give meaning to loss. The government imposed strict measures: banning gatherings, restricting hospital visits, and prohibiting traditional burial rites. Schools shut down, and for three months, Kisena’s five children stayed home, their education abruptly halted.

“I was not working, so it was hard to meet the needs of my family,” he said. “We survived on the little savings I had.”

Five years later, as the scars of that crisis linger, Tanzania is charting a new path toward resilience. Earlier this month, the government launched its first-ever Pandemic Fund Project, aimed at strengthening the country’s capacity to prevent and respond to health crises.

Supported by a USD25 million grant from the global Pandemic Fund and USD13.7 million in co-financing, the initiative marks a shift from reactive crisis management to proactive preparedness. It unites local and international partners—including WHO, UNICEF, and FAO—under a “One Health” framework that recognizes the interconnectedness of human, animal, and environmental health.

Learning from the Past

The memories of COVID-19 and the more recent Marburg outbreak remain vivid. When the pandemic first struck, Tanzania’s laboratories were under-equipped, surveillance systems were weak, and community health workers were overwhelmed.

Tanzania’s Deputy Prime Minister, Doto Biteko, said during the launch that the lessons from those crises shaped the country’s new determination.

“For the past 20 years, the world has battled multiple health emergencies, and Tanzania is no exception,” he said. “We have seen how pandemics disrupt lives and economies. Strengthening our capacity to prepare and respond is not optional—it is a necessity.”

That necessity has only grown as Tanzania faces rising risks of zoonotic diseases linked to deforestation, wildlife trade, and climate change. The new project aims to address these vulnerabilities by upgrading laboratories, expanding disease surveillance, and training health workers across the country.

The Human Frontlines

In southern Kisarawe District, 38-year-old community health worker Ana Msechu walks along dusty roads with a backpack containing medicine, gloves, and health records.

“Sometimes I walk for three hours just to reach one family,” Msechu said. “During the pandemic, people stopped trusting us. They thought we were bringing the disease.”

With no protective gear or transport allowance, Msechu faced villagers’ suspicion head-on. At the height of the pandemic, she lost a colleague to the virus. Yet she continued, delivering messages about hygiene and vaccination.

“Sometimes we didn’t even have masks—we used pieces of cloth instead,” she recalled.

The new initiative, she believes, could change that. Implementing partners plan to supply personal protective equipment (PPE), digital tools for data collection, and regular training sessions.

“If we get proper support and respect, we can save many lives before diseases spread,” she said.

“Community health workers are the backbone of resilience,” said Patricia Safi Lombo, UNICEF’s Deputy Representative to Tanzania. “They are the first point of contact for families and play a critical role in delivering life-saving information and services.”

UNICEF’s role will focus on risk communication and community engagement—ensuring that people in rural and urban areas understand preventive measures, recognize early symptoms, and trust the health system.

Between Fear and Duty

Hamisi Mjema, a health volunteer in Kilosa District, remembers how fear became his biggest enemy.

When the Marburg virus hit last year, his job was to trace suspected cases and educate families about isolation.

“I was insulted many times, and some families wouldn’t even let me into their homes,” he said.

Without transport or communication tools, Hamisi walked from one remote village to another with his bicycle, often relying on farmers to share their phone airtime so he could report cases to district health officials.

Under the new initiative, local health officers say community health workers will receive field kits, digital disease-reporting tools, and risk communication materials in local languages.

“It will make our work safer and faster,” he said. “When we detect something early, the whole country benefits.”

Fighting Misinformation

In a lakeside village in Kigoma, volunteer health educator Fatuma Mfaume recalls how rumors once spread faster than the virus itself.

“People were afraid,” she said. “They said vaccines would make women barren. Others believed doctors were poisoning us.”

Armed with a megaphone, Mfaume moved through villages trying to dispel falsehoods—often facing insults. But her persistence paid off. Slowly, women began bringing their children for immunization again.

With the new project, she hopes community workers like her will gain formal recognition and training in communication skills.

“Many of us work without pay,” Mfaume said. “If this project can train us properly and give us materials, we can fight not just disease but fear and lies too.”

Animal-Borne Threats

At the same time, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) is strengthening animal health systems, recognizing that most pandemics originate from animals.

“By improving coordination between veterinary and public health services, Tanzania is taking vital steps to prevent zoonotic diseases before they spill over to humans,” said Stella Kiambi, FAO’s Emergency Centre for Transboundary Animal Diseases Team Lead.

These measures include upgrading veterinary laboratories, improving disease surveillance in livestock markets, and training field officers to detect early signs of outbreaks.

The World Health Organization (WHO) is also supporting efforts to strengthen human health systems—from expanding testing capacity to developing rapid response teams.

“This project marks a bold step forward in health security,” said Dr. Galbert Fedjo, WHO Health Systems Coordinator. “It advances a One Health approach that links human, animal, and environmental health.”

Rebuilding Trust and Hope

For Priya Basu, Executive Head of the Pandemic Fund, Tanzania’s project represents “an important step in strengthening the country’s preparedness to prevent and respond to future health threats.”

Across Africa, the Fund—established in 2022—has supported 47 projects in 75 countries with USD 885 million in grants, catalyzing more than USD 6 billion in additional financing.

According to the World Bank, every USD 1 invested in pandemic preparedness can save up to USD 20 in economic losses during an outbreak.

For Tanzania—a nation that lost thousands of lives and suffered deep economic shocks during COVID-19—the stakes couldn’t be higher.

“Preparedness is about saving lives and livelihoods,” said Dr. Ali Mzige, a public health expert. “It’s about making sure families don’t suffer when a pandemic strikes.”

For Kisena, the government’s new initiative is a quiet promise that the lessons of loss have not been forgotten.

“Maria’s death taught me how precious life is,” he said. “If this project can protect even one family from that kind of pain, then it will mean her death was not in vain.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Catégories: Africa

Plus de 74 milliards FCfa mobilisés pour soutenir 31 communes

24 Heures au Bénin - mar, 28/10/2025 - 07:04

Le ministre d'Etat chargé de l'économie et des finances, Romuald Wadagni, candidat des forces politiques de la mouvance présidentielle à l'élection présidentielle d'avril 2026 au Bénin, a décroché de gros financements pour soutenir l'agriculture, renforcer la formation professionnelle et améliorer l'accès à l'eau potable. C'était en marge des travaux des Assemblées annuelles de la Banque mondiale et du Fonds monétaire international (FMI).

Présent à Washington les 23 et 24 octobre 2025, dans le cadre des Assemblées annuelles de la Banque mondiale et du Fonds monétaire international, le ministre d'Etat chargé de l'économie et des finances a signé en marge des travaux, plusieurs accords de financement. D'un montant total de 74,5 milliards de francs CFA, ces accords ont été signés avec le Fonds OFID, la Banque ouest africaine de développement (BOAD), et le Fonds Koweïtien. Le but visé est de soutenir l'agriculture, renforcer la formation professionnelle et améliorer l'accès à l'eau potable. Une avancée pour la sécurité alimentaire, la formation technique et l'accès aux services essentiels.
Selon une publication des services de communication du gouvernement, plus d'une trentaine de communes vont bénéficier de ces financements. Il s'agit entre autres, de Karimama, Malanville, Banikoara, Kandi, Péhunco, Parakou, Tchaourou, N'Dali, Nikki, Pèrèrè, Ouaké, Djougou, Ouèssè, Bantè, Glazoué, Dassa, Aplahoué, Toviklin, Bopa, Houéyogbé, Bohicon, Agbangnizoun, Toffo, Allada, Kpomassè, Sô-Ava, Akpro-Missérété, Bassila, Athiémé, Bohicon et Natitingou.

F. A. A.

Catégories: Afrique

Facial recognition firm Clearview AI hit with criminal complaint

Euractiv.com - mar, 28/10/2025 - 07:01
Privacy rights group noyb, which has filed the complaint in Austria, wants criminal liability or even jail time for the AI company's leadership if they travel to the EU
Catégories: European Union

Europe Accelerates Clean Competitiveness

Euractiv.com - mar, 28/10/2025 - 07:00
Can the EU be sustainable and continue to grow? Can Europe remain competitive without being sustainable? For the new president of Eurima, an upcoming EU Industrial Accelerator Act (IAA) is a chance to show that competitiveness and decarbonisation work best together.
Catégories: European Union

Le Phare : « Félix Tshisekedi a lancé la première Semaine nationale du climat »

Radio Okapi / RD Congo - mar, 28/10/2025 - 06:48


Revue de presse kinoise du mardi 28 octobre 2025.


Deux sujets dominent la presse kinoise ce mardi. Le premier concerne le lancement de la Semaine nationale du climat, et le second, la destitution du gouverneur de la province de la Tshopo à la suite d’une motion de défiance.

Catégories: Afrique

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