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Hungary/Russia/United States : Hungarian links appear in FBI probe of aircraft exports to Russia

Intelligence Online - ven, 31/10/2025 - 06:00
Several companies involved in the the FBI's probe of illegal exports of aircraft equipment to Russia also have links to [...]
Catégories: Defence`s Feeds

Laos : Vientiane's Five April International Shooting Range draws Chinese firms, Russian generals

Intelligence Online - ven, 31/10/2025 - 06:00
In the eastern suburbs of Vientiane, the calm capital of Laos on the Mekong, one sometimes hears the dry pop [...]
Catégories: Defence`s Feeds

Ukraine : Online auction site Reibert provides marketplace for Russian war trophies

Intelligence Online - ven, 31/10/2025 - 06:00
Online auction site Reibert.info features more than 2,200 items for sale in its category "Trophies from the Ukrainian liberation war", [...]
Catégories: Defence`s Feeds

China/Taiwan : How the Kuomintang undermines Taiwanese research

Intelligence Online - ven, 31/10/2025 - 06:00
Intelligence Online has learned that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is losing interest in Taiwanese scientific research. Documented practices show [...]
Catégories: Defence`s Feeds

KOMMENTAR - EU-Verträge: Die Vernehmlassung hat vieles ans Licht gebracht – jetzt muss der Bundesrat dringend nachbessern

NZZ.ch - ven, 31/10/2025 - 05:30
Die neuen Abkommen finden mehr Unterstützung als erwartet. Ob sie tatsächlich eine Chance haben, hängt nun stark vom Bundesrat ab. Vor allem bei der Rechtsübernahme muss er Klarheit schaffen. Die Gegner der Verträge haben noch immer keinen Plan B präsentiert, der diesen Namen verdient.
Catégories: Swiss News

Former President Duterte to Appeal ICC Ruling Affirming Its Jurisdiction

TheDiplomat - ven, 31/10/2025 - 05:21
Duterte's lawyers content that the court did not initiate a full-fledged investigation until after the Philippines withdrew from the court in 2019.

How to Put IR Theory Into Practice

Foreign Affairs - ven, 31/10/2025 - 05:00
American strategists should think more like social scientists.

The Fantasy of a New Middle East

Foreign Affairs - ven, 31/10/2025 - 05:00
Israel cannot destroy its way to peace.

Timor-Leste Shouldn’t Have to Buy Its ASEAN Seat With Silence

TheDiplomat - ven, 31/10/2025 - 01:23
Myanmar's military junta has used the bloc's procedures to silence calls for accountability made by the organization's newest member state.

'We saw people murdered in front of us' - Sudan siege survivors speak to the BBC

BBC Africa - jeu, 30/10/2025 - 23:01
Harrowing accounts from people who have escaped an RSF assault on the besieged city of el-Fasher.
Catégories: Africa

Afghanistan and the Long Shadow of Bagram

TheDiplomat - jeu, 30/10/2025 - 20:22
The former U.S. and Soviet air base has been a central location for empires for thousands of years. Does Trump truly understand its significance?

Pourquoi la droite revient en Bolivie

Le Monde Diplomatique - jeu, 30/10/2025 - 19:36
La gauche, fracturée et absente du second tour de l'élection présidentielle, quitte le pouvoir après vingt ans de domination. Derrière la victoire du candidat Rodrigo Paz, face à son concurrent Jorge « Tuto » Quiroga, une stratégie : le « capitalisme pour tous ». Et une profonde mutation (…) / , , , ,

From Slogans to Systems: Five Practical Steps for Turning Social Development Commitments into Action at Doha and Beyond

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - jeu, 30/10/2025 - 18:26

Women cooperative in Merzouga, Morocco. Credit: Forus/Both Nomads

By Mavalow Christelle Kalhoule
BRUSSELS, Belgium, Oct 30 2025 (IPS)

Thirty years ago, world leaders gathered in Copenhagen and made a promise: people would be at the center of development. This November, Heads of State and Government will meet again in Doha, Qatar, for the Second World Summit for Social Development or WSSD2.

For civil society, the Second World Summit for Social Development is a call to action to reshape social contracts, rebuild trust, and mobilise for implementation and accountability so that “leave no one behind” becomes more than a slogan. And civil society can help make that happen, not as bystanders, but as solution providers and accountability partners.

At the same time, governments also expect the private sector to share and take up responsibilities, not only by creating jobs, but by driving social development more rapidly and on a larger scale

“Solutions” are already here, in the form of community-rooted “fixes” and strategies.

Civil society and movements are working hard: from expanding social protection for informal workers, to youth alliances linking skills training with decent, safe jobs. Investments in the care economy are creating fair work, easing the burden on women, and improving childhood and support for older people. Civic groups are making local budgets transparent, while digital inclusion programs are designed with persons with disabilities and rural communities.

These ideas have been adopted and funded. What they need now is political will, stable support, and true collaboration between governments, civil society, and communities.

From slogans to systems: a practical agenda for Doha and beyond

To move from aspiration to action, we propose five concrete steps that governments, United Nations agencies, and civil society can take together starting in Doha.

1) Set up a national platform for social development in every country by mid-2026.
Give it a public mandate, a diverse membership, and a simple job: translate the declaration’s three pillars into a country plan with milestones, budget linkages, and annual public reviews. Include unions, employers, women’s rights groups, youth networks and Older People’s Associations, organisations of persons with disabilities, faith groups, and local authorities. Build in independent monitoring and a public dashboard so people can see progress and gaps.

2) Protect and expand social protection with a focus on those most often left out.
Adopt or update a national social protection strategy that commits to at least a two-percentage-point annual increase in coverage until universal floors are reached, as the declaration encourages. Prioritise universal child benefits, disability-inclusive schemes, and lifecycle guarantees for older persons. Publish grievance mechanisms and coverage maps down to district level.

3) Link promises to money.
Ask finance and planning ministries to table, within 12 months, a “social spending compact” that identifies protected budget lines for health, education, and social protection, lays out debt management measures that shield social spending, and commits to transparent tax reforms to broaden fiscal space fairly. Invite multilateral banks to align country frameworks and provide concessional windows for social policy, as the declaration urges.

4) Close the digital divide as a social policy priority, not a tech afterthought.
Treat access to affordable internet, digital assistive technologies, and digital public infrastructures and assistance as an enabler of social rights. Co-design digital inclusion targets with communities and invest in last-mile connectivity, inclusive ID systems, and digital literacy, while safeguarding rights and privacy.

5) Build accountability into the calendar.
Use the UN Commission for Social Development in early 2026 as the first checkpoint: each government should present its national platform’s workplan, spending compact outline, and coverage targets. Regionally, UN commissions can convene mid-year stock-takes. Civil society will publish parallel reports that track delivery, spotlight gaps, and lift up solutions that can be scaled.

The promise — and the gaps — of Doha

The already agreed Doha Political Declaration restates the three pillars of social development and links them explicitly to human rights and non-discrimination. It nods to today’s realities: deepening inequalities; demographic shifts; and the digital divide that keeps billions offline.

There is progress to welcome. For the first time, the text recognises the rights of older persons. It commits to universal social protection, including “social protection floors” that guarantee basic income security and essential services throughout the life course.

But the text is cautious where courage is needed. Financing is the missing bridge. The declaration references recent global financing discussions (including the Seville outcomes under the Financing for Development track), yet stops short of specifying how countries will protect social spending while tackling debt, or how multilateral banks will resource social policy at scale.

It says little about crisis settings: places where conflict, disasters, or displacement make social development both hardest and most urgent.

Universal health coverage appears, but without the strength advocates for sexual and reproductive health and rights or for non-communicable diseases hoped for.

And while the declaration acknowledges digital transformation, it does not spell out practical steps to close the divides that map so closely onto poverty, geography, gender, and disability.

None of that should deter us. As Essi Lindstedt of Fingo in Finland, reminds us “This is not only the time for declarations, it’s the time for delivery”.

The negotiation window may be closed, but the implementation window is wide open. The real work begins in capitals, municipalities, and communities, channeling the urgency and hope of citizens for dignity and wellbeing. “Poverty should not be seen as natural. Social policy can end poverty. Therefore, social policy should be managed as a global investment that enables every person, community and country to chart their own course to thriving.”

“We must go to the grassroots. Since Copenhagen, in the Sahel and particularly in Chad, our communities continue to struggle for access to water, to the land, healthcare, education, food, and essential infrastructure. We are facing security challenges, the simple fact of living together. All of these challenges are deeply interconnected and addressing them means putting human dignity at the center of development. Across the whole chain of actors — economic, social, and political — we must never lose sight of the most vulnerable,” says Jacques Ngarassal, of CILONG, the civil society network in Tchad.

“We need to ensure social cohesion”.

From closed negotiations to open implementation

That is where civil society comes in. National coalitions and grassroots organisations are already demonstrating that social progress is possible when communities lead.

The declaration invites this by calling for “multi-stakeholder engagement” and stronger national coordination to avoid policy silos. We should take that invitation literally, insisting on inclusion while modeling it: intergenerational, gender-responsive, disability-inclusive, locally led.

The next stage must therefore shift the focus from consultation to co-creation. Governments cannot deliver on the declaration alone. When it comes to financing what matters – civil society can connect those dots domestically.

As Carlos Arana of the Asociación Nacional de Centros (ANC) in Peru noted, many countries face “policy incoherence”: ambitious social plans undermined by debt pressures and austerity. Others are excluded from concessional finance because they have crossed an arbitrary income threshold, even where inequalities remain deep.

“We see two realities today. On one hand, our societies have moved toward greater equality; yet on the other, deep inequalities persist. We can say we have made some progress, but at this moment, what matters most is not to go backward. Around the world, there is growing concern about the weakening of democracies as conservative forces regain strength. This rollback is most visible in social policies and in the shrinking spaces for participation that many of our countries opened decades ago,” adds Josefina Huamán, Executive Secretary of ANC which is also the secretary of la Mesa de Articulación de Asociaciones Nacionales y Redes de ONGs de América Latina y el Caribe.

“In my own country, for example, spaces created 20 years ago to build consensus between the State, civil society, and political parties have eroded. They have weakened because a ruling class, empowered elites who perhaps never truly disappeared, have reclaimed hegemony. What is vanishing is that participatory spirit — the affirmation of men and women of all ages and backgrounds as active subjects in democracy. This conservative, or even neoconservative, resurgence is something we are witnessing clearly in Latin America — in Bolivia, in Argentina, in Peru — and it should deeply concern us all.”

The solution is to rethink how we measure and resource progress. Moving “beyond GDP” means judging success by well-being, equity, and sustainability. It also means linking Doha’s commitments to the broader Financing for Development agenda and to reforms of the international financial architecture.

Civil society is already leading: generating citizen data, advocating tax justice, and pressing for transparency in public spending. Governments and donors must now back these efforts with coherent policy and long-term, flexible funding.

The Doha Declaration closes one chapter and opens another. Civil society is ready. Open the door, and we will help carry this agenda from the conference hall to the places where it matters most: the neighborhoods, villages, and city blocks where trust is rebuilt and futures are made.

As Zia ur Rehman, Executive Director of the Pakistan Development Alliance and Chair of the Asia Development Alliance, reminds us:

“The true legacy of the Second World Summit for Social Development will not be the text agreed in Doha, but the accountability and hope we build afterwards. Civil society has shown we are ready. The question now is whether leaders are willing to meet us halfway.”

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Excerpt:

Mavalow Christelle Kalhoule is Forus Chair

25 Years of Women, Peace and Security: Advancing Women’s Inclusion and Equal Opportunities in North Macedonia

OSCE - jeu, 30/10/2025 - 17:35

This year marks the 25th anniversary of UN Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security - a landmark document recognizing women’s vital role in building peace, stability, and democracy.

For over two decades, the OSCE Mission to Skopje has worked to turn this commitment into action. Working with state institutions and civil society, the Mission has promoted women’s participation in decision-making, strengthened inclusive security, and advanced equal opportunities between women and men to create a solid foundation for lasting peace.

Strengthening Political Participation

Through long-term support to the Parliament, the Mission has helped make it a model of gender-sensitive governance. Consecutive Action Plans for Equal Opportunities between Women and Men, amendments to the Rules of Procedure and targeted training for Members of Parliament and staff have opened doors for more women leaders. Today, women hold 40 per cent of parliamentary seats - one of the highest rates in the region.

Promoting Women’s Leadership in the Security Sector

In partnership with the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Mission launched a Gender Mentoring Programme that has transformed leadership in the police. Since 2017, more than 150 officers - women and men - have participated in the programme while women’s representation in senior police positions has increased by 18 per cent. Similar initiatives are now being adopted in other public institutions, demonstrating that diversity and inclusion contribute to more professional, accountable, and people-centred public services.

Preventing Violence against Women and Girls

The Mission’s cross-dimensional approach strengthens institutional responses and accountability in preventing violence against women and girls. Efforts include training police cadets and officers in gender-sensitive interviewing techniques, improving interview room conditions to protect survivors’ dignity, and developing evidence-based tools for early prevention. In 2025, this work has culminated in the establishment of the Femicide Watch Platform – a collaborative initiative to improve data collection, inter-agency co-ordination and policy action in against femicide.

Bolstering Co-operation between Women and Human Rights Institutions

To help ensure that women’ voices are heard and their rights protected, the Mission has fostered collaboration between women human rights defenders, civil society organizations, and national human rights institutions - including the Ombudsperson Institution and the Commission for Prevention and Protection from Discrimination. This co-operation resulted in a Participatory Gender Audit and an Action Plan on Gender and Diversity Mainstreaming, ensuring that both institutions apply inclusive approaches in their work. Joint training and reporting initiatives have also improved the documentation and response to cases of discrimination and gender-based violence, creating more effective accountability and protection mechanisms.

Embedding Equality in Law and Policy

In co-operation with the Ministry of Labour and Social Policy and the Ministry of Information Society and Administration, in 2024 the Mission helped develop the Handbook on Gender Equality Regulatory Impact Assessment - now a mandatory tool required for reviewing all draft legislation. It ensures that draft legislation is assessed for its impact on women and men, reinforcing fair and inclusive policy-making processes and governance practices.

As the world marks 25 years of the Women, Peace, and Security agenda, the OSCE Mission to Skopje reaffirms its commitment to empowering women and fostering equal opportunities as key to lasting peace and stability.

“Ensuring that women and men have equal opportunities to participate in decision-making is essential for peace and democratic security. Through strong partnerships and sustained commitment, North Macedonia continues to demonstrate that progress is possible when everyone has a voice and a role in shaping the future,” said Ambassador Kilian Wahl, Head of the OSCE Mission to Skopje.

#SheForPeace #WithWomenForPeace #WPSMatters #GenderEquality #OSCESkopje

Catégories: Central Europe

Kein Tempolimit für Fußgänger in der Slowakei

Euractiv.de - jeu, 30/10/2025 - 16:54
Zahlreiche Internetnutzer und internationale Medienberichte hatten fälschlicherweise angenommen, ein neues Gesetz schreibe auch Fußgängern eine Geschwindigkeitsbegrenzung vor.
Catégories: Europäische Union

Taiwan’s T-Dome Missile Defense: Balancing Deterrence, Risk, and Regional Stability

TheDiplomat - jeu, 30/10/2025 - 16:37
Taiwan’s T-Dome is designed to protect the island from missile strikes, aerial incursions, and potential amphibious operations.

India’s Massive Mining Push in the Fragile Northeast Causes Concern

TheDiplomat - jeu, 30/10/2025 - 16:27
It has identified over 36,000 sq km of mineral-rich land with a potential for 3,000 mines in the region. These could trigger conflict.

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