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La France a arraisonné un nouveau pétrolier en provenance de Russie

France24 / France - lun, 01/06/2026 - 07:40
Emmanuel Macron a annoncé, lundi, qu'un nouveau pétrolier en provenance de Russie avait été arraisonné par la France la veille. Ce dernier est attendu mardi matin en baie de Douarnenez (Finistère), a indiqué la préfecture maritime de l'Atlantique.
Catégories: France, Swiss News

Why Indonesia is Rebuilding Commodity Oversight

TheDiplomat - lun, 01/06/2026 - 07:31
President Prabowo’s new initiative reflects a broader effort to address fragmented oversight, reduce commodity leakage, and strengthen his country's role in global supply chains.

Africa’s Water is its Future. Who will Govern it?

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - lun, 01/06/2026 - 07:10

Credit: Adobe stock. Source Africa Renewal, United Nations

By Cristina Duarte
UNITED NATIONS, Jun 1 2026 (IPS)

Africa holds 9 per cent of global renewable freshwater, over 600 gigawatts of untapped hydropower potential, and between 60 and 65 per cent of the world’s uncultivated arable land.

Its workforce is the youngest on the planet. Its consumer market will reach 2.5 billion people by 2050. Together, these constitute every production factor that global water, energy and food systems will need in the coming decades.

This is not a continent of scarcity. It is a continent of strategic abundance, and the African Union’s decision to anchor its 2026 theme in water and sanitation signals that the continent’s leadership is ready to govern it as such.

Consider what governed abundance looks like. The Grand Inga Dam alone could generate twice the output of the Three Gorges and electrify industries across Central, Southern and West Africa. The Lesotho Highlands Water Project already proves that African-engineered, transboundary water infrastructure can operate at scale and supply major urban economies.

Expanding managed irrigation from 3.7 per cent of sub-Saharan Africa’s arable land (the lowest figure in the developing world) to even 10 per cent within a decade would transform food security, generate millions of jobs across agricultural value chains, and cut the continent’s exposure to rainfall variability.

Every one of these investments is within Africa’s technical reach. The engineering is known. The water is there. The land is there. The workforce is there.

The question is governance. On this, Africa must be frank with itself: the prevailing approach does not match the scale of the opportunity. Governments and donors have treated water as a social service delivery challenge, a matter of boreholes and latrines managed project by project, rather than as productive infrastructure on the same footing as roads, ports and energy grids.

A hand pump installed without a maintenance budget is not development. A pit latrine built without connection to a sanitation system is not development. These interventions may register as progress on a results framework, but they do not transform economies. They are consumables, not assets.

The evidence of this mismatch is plain. Less than half of Africa’s population, or 41 per cent, has access to safely managed drinking water. Twenty-three million primary school-age children attend class hungry. Some 429 million Africans live in extreme poverty, a number projected to remain above 400 million in 2030.

These figures do not describe a resource-poor continent. They describe a governance model that treats water as charity rather than strategy, and a “build, neglect, rebuild” cycle that consumes scarce capital without producing lasting systems.

Africa can break this cycle, and I propose three shifts that would change the trajectory.

First, adopt Strategic Asset Management as a continental doctrine.

Dams, irrigation networks, urban treatment plants and transboundary systems are assets with 50- to 100-year lifespans. They demand sustained institutional stewardship, not five-year project horizons. Govern them across the full lifecycle, from planning through maintenance and renewal, with climate adaptation at every stage.

The build, neglect, rebuild pattern ends when African governments treat water systems as national infrastructure: as permanent assets to maintain, not temporary projects to hand over.

Credit: Adobe Stock

Second, launch a continental irrigation expansion.

South Asia irrigates 41 per cent of its arable land. Sub-Saharan Africa irrigates 3.7 per cent. Closing even a fraction of that gap within a decade would generate employment, build agricultural value chains, strengthen food sovereignty and reduce dependence on imported food. Water without irrigation grows nothing. Land without water feeds no one. Managed irrigation is the fastest route from endowment to economic value.

Third, build enforceable cooperative governance for shared basins.

Ninety per cent of Africa’s surface water crosses at least one national boundary. The Nile, the Niger, the Congo, the Zambezi: these are regional systems that demand regional governance. Africa already has models that work. The Senegal River Basin Development Organisation, has managed a four-country transboundary system for half a century. The task is to make cooperative governance the norm, not as diplomatic courtesy but as a strategic requirement for regional stability and integration.

Financing these shifts requires Africa to lead with its own resources. Closing the water security gap demands between $50 billion and $64 billion annually, according to the AU High-Level Panel and the African Development Bank respectively. The primary financing base must be domestic: reform tariffs progressively, protect maintenance budgets, stop the leakages, and treat water investment with the seriousness that roads and energy grids receive.

Africa must also mobilise international climate finance, which the continent has chronically underutilized, for integrated water investments. And African Governments should not consider the approval of foreign land deals without mandatory water-impact assessments. African Governments need to address land management and governance in an integrated fashion with water governance. Every crop grown on a foreign-leased African field and exported is a transfer of virtual water off the continent, water that was never priced, never accounted for, never governed. Land and water are inseparable. To alienate one is to alienate the other.

The world will develop Africa’s water and land in the coming decades. That process is already under way. Wealthier nations, facing their own water and food constraints, understand the arithmetic of African abundance and are positioning accordingly. The only question is whether this development happens on African terms or someone else’s.

Let me end on a somber note. The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) will not be achieved in Africa by 2030. Honesty demands we say so. But the generation after 2030 can inherit something different, if Africa’s leadership chooses now to govern water as what it already is: a driver of economic transformation, a foundation of peace, and the most important asset the continent holds in trust for its children.

Africa’s water is its future. The question is, will Africa govern it, or will it be governed by others?

Cristina Duarte is the Under Secretary-General for the Office of the Special Advisor on Africa.

Source: Africa Renewal, United Nations

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Catégories: Africa, European Union

Philippines, Vietnam Upgrade Diplomatic Partnership Amid Maritime Tensions With China

TheDiplomat - lun, 01/06/2026 - 06:58
President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. stated that maintaining peace, stability, and the freedom of navigation in the South China Sea "remains non-negotiable" for both nations.

Hungary : Sweeping post-Orban intelligence purge on its way

Intelligence Online - lun, 01/06/2026 - 06:00
Lawyer and centre-right Tisza party leader Peter Magyar's general election victory in Hungary on 12 April, which put an end to the long reign of Viktor Orban, has triggered an upheaval in the Hungarian security services. Orban, the nationalist leader [...]

France : Academic honours ceremony in Paris draws cream of French security establishment

Intelligence Online - lun, 01/06/2026 - 06:00
The Palme Académique national order of merit for distinguished academics was awarded this year to Guillaume Farde, a security and [...]

Belgium/France/United States : DGSE and Aspretto, Belgian intel coordination, ODNI reshuffle

Intelligence Online - lun, 01/06/2026 - 06:00
France - DGSE boss makes discreet visit to AsprettoThe head of France's DGSE foreign intelligence agency, Nicolas Lerner, made a [...]

Turkey/UAE : Generation 5, Abu Dhabi's latest tool to do business with Turkish defence

Intelligence Online - lun, 01/06/2026 - 06:00
With the Emirates wanting to domestically manufacture some of the military equipment used by its own armed forces, Abu Dhabi [...]

Mexico/United States : Mexico's UIN naval intel plays key role in Washington's drug war

Intelligence Online - lun, 01/06/2026 - 06:00
On the sidelines of security meetings held between US and Mexican officials in recent weeks, Intelligence Online was able to [...]

France/Vietnam : Intelligence adviser to former French president top pick for ambassador to Vietnam role

Intelligence Online - lun, 01/06/2026 - 06:00
According to Intelligence Online sources, Didier Le Bret, the current director of the French foreign ministry's Académie diplomatique et consulaire [...]

How Migration Helps Authoritarians

Foreign Affairs - lun, 01/06/2026 - 06:00
The costs of democratic drain.

The End of Foreign Aid Is Not the End of Development

Foreign Affairs - lun, 01/06/2026 - 06:00
How the world can do more with less.

Ukraine Turns the Tide

Foreign Affairs - lun, 01/06/2026 - 06:00
Why a cease-fire is now a real possibility.

Les droits des travailleurs en recul dans le monde, alerte la Confédération syndicale internationale

France24 / France - lun, 01/06/2026 - 04:15
Selon la treizième édition de l'indice de la Confédération syndicale internationale, la crise des droits des travailleurs s'accentue et concerne désormais de "grandes démocraties" comme les États-Unis et la France. L'organisation fustige une hausse du recours à la force contre les travailleurs et des entraves à la justice.
Catégories: France, Swiss News

Violences à l'école : les députés adoptent à l'unanimité la proposition de loi post-Bétharram

France24 / France - lun, 01/06/2026 - 04:05
Les députés ont approuvé à l’unanimité, lundi, une proposition de loi visant à mieux protéger les enfants des violences à l’école et dans le périscolaire. Rédigé dans le sillage de l'affaire Bétharram – symbole des violences physiques et sexuelles infligées aux enfants dans l'enseignement privé catholique –, le texte renforce le contrôle des intervenants et la régulation des établissements privés.
Catégories: France, Swiss News

Grammy-winning director explores his Nigerian grandfather's role in the Biafran war

BBC Africa - lun, 01/06/2026 - 03:32
Filmmaker Meji Alabi directs a landmark BBC Africa Eye documentary about Nigeria's civil war.
Catégories: Africa, Defence`s Feeds

What to Expect from the Impeachment Trial of the Philippine Vice President Duterte

TheDiplomat - lun, 01/06/2026 - 03:00
Various contending political blocs are looking to capitalize politically on Sara Duterte's trial as they look ahead to the presidential election of 2028.

India Has Signed BrahMos Missile Deal With Vietnam, Indian Minister Says

TheDiplomat - lun, 01/06/2026 - 02:54
The country is set to become the third in Southeast Asia to purchase the powerful Indo-Russian missile system, after the Philippines and Indonesia.

Press release - Highlights of this week's international trade committee

Parlement européen (Nouvelles) - dim, 31/05/2026 - 23:43
Extraordinary meeting of the International Trade Committee and joint meeting with the Internal Market Committee and the Industry Committee. Both on Tuesday 2 June
Committee on International Trade

Source : © European Union, 2026 - EP
Catégories: Afrique, Union européenne

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