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Russian fish could be slipping onto your Christmas table

Euractiv.com - mar, 23/12/2025 - 08:00
Despite restrictions, the EU still buys Russian fish worth hundreds of millions of euros each year

Géopolitique et football au Kosovo : la marche vers le mondial 2026

Courrier des Balkans / Kosovo - mar, 23/12/2025 - 07:28

Dans les cafés de Pristina, chaque victoire de l'équipe du Kosovo souffle un vent d'espoir et de fierté. Après les déconvenues de l'Euro 2024, l'équipe s'est relevée, reconstruite, jusqu'à se permettre de rêver au mondial 2026. Elle affrontera la Slovaquie en barrages le 31 mars.

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Géopolitique et football au Kosovo : la marche vers le mondial 2026

Courrier des Balkans - mar, 23/12/2025 - 07:28

Dans les cafés de Pristina, chaque victoire de l'équipe du Kosovo souffle un vent d'espoir et de fierté. Après les déconvenues de l'Euro 2024, l'équipe s'est relevée, reconstruite, jusqu'à se permettre de rêver au mondial 2026. Elle affrontera la Slovaquie en barrages le 31 mars.

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Cautious Cypriot presidency faces tough agricultural agenda

Euractiv.com - mar, 23/12/2025 - 07:00
Cyprus aims to move forward on environmental and food safety reforms during its EU presidency but does not commit to finalising them

Gaza’s New Normal

Foreign Affairs - mar, 23/12/2025 - 06:00
Persistent limited conflict is more likely than peace.

Can Germany Afford to Be Europe’s Protector?

Foreign Affairs - mar, 23/12/2025 - 06:00
A stronger military requires a stronger economy.

Des hommes armés ont enlevé 28 personnes se rendant à une fête musulmane au Nigeria

France24 / Afrique - mar, 23/12/2025 - 02:42
Dans la soirée du 21 décembre, des hommes armés ont kidnappé 28 personnes, dont des femmes et des enfants, alors qu'elles se rendaient à un rassemblement pour la fête musulmane de Maouloud, dans le centre du Nigeria. La police a ouvert une enquête, ajoute un rapport des Nations unies, lundi.
Catégories: Afrique, European Union

Trump’s Greenland Ambitions Are Far From Over

Foreign Policy - lun, 22/12/2025 - 22:36
The White House signals its aims by appointing a special envoy to the territory.

Présidentielle en Guinée : derniers jours de campagne

France24 / Afrique - lun, 22/12/2025 - 22:30
Dernière ligne droite pour les candidats à la présidentielle en Guinée. Ils ont commencé à regagner Conakry après plusieurs semaines à sillonner le pays. Ils sont huit candidats à se présenter contre le chef de la transition, Mamadi Doumbouya. Les Guinéens devront aller les départager ce dimanche.
Catégories: Afrique, European Union

⚽CAN 2025 : Mali-Zambie, les joueurs déçus après un match nul

France24 / Afrique - lun, 22/12/2025 - 21:02
Le #Mali était favori pour son premier match à la CAN, mais la Zambie a égalisé le score au dernier moment, menant à un match nul (1-1) décevant pour les joueurs des deux équipes.#CAN2025 #MaliZambie #Mali #Zambie
Catégories: Afrique, European Union

Downward Spiral of Bangladesh Politics and EconomyWho Should be Blamed ?

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - lun, 22/12/2025 - 19:31

By Saifullah Syed
ROME, Dec 22 2025 (IPS)

Bangladesh in recent years started drawing global attention for its success in emerging out of poverty through economic growth and agricultural development. From early 2000 until 2023, while population growth continued to decline from 1.2 in 2013 to 1.03 in 2023, this growth has been the powerful driver of poverty reduction since 2000. Indeed, agriculture accounted for 90 percent of the reduction in poverty between 2005 and 2010 (World Bank).

Saifullah Syed

Despite frequent natural disasters and population growth, food grain production tripled between 1972 and 2014, from 9.8 to 34.4 million tons. As a result, the country became almost self-sufficient in basic food and, net overseas foreign aid (ODA), as a percentage of GNI fell from 8 in 1977 to less than 1 in 2023 (World Bank).

Along with agricultural development, buoyed by booming export, (led by the garment sector) and remittances, foreign reserves went past $30 billion.

With resources in hand and confidence to move forward the country launched mega infrastructure projects, such as huge bridges, deep sea port, urban metro transit, highways and modernization of airports; mega power projects including a nuclear power plant.

And then came the ‘deluge’ of corruption and the ‘rot’ of the basic moral fabric of the government, led by Sheikh Hasina, the daughter of the “Father of the Nation” and head of the Awami League (AL), the party that brought us independence. While the AL led government publicly started publicizing its achievements and successes, it was simultaneously systematically looting the country through corrupt practices, crony capitalism and outright theft through the banking system by forcefully appointing their henchmen onto the board of directors. Sheikh Hasina’s government further alienated the youth ‘by limiting access to government jobs to the supporters of her party by implementing a quota system.

Consequently, the students rebelled and overthrew her government and installed an Interim government with Nobel Laureate Professor Mohammed Yunus at its head. Everyone heaved a sigh of relief and hoped for a better future for the country guided by the most distinguished Nobel laureate, son of the soil.

Prof. Yunus found a country politically broken, financially drained without foreign currency reserve and a banking sector with empty coffers due to politically motivated loans to the AL leaders and their cronies without any hope of ever recovering them.

Prof. Yunus brought in several advisers to run the administration and focused on (a) stabilizing the financial sector ; and (b) reforming the institutions and the constitutions, assuming that weak institutions and the existing constitution enabled the AL government to loot the country dry.

He appointed very competent, well known and experienced economists at the head of the central Bank and the Ministry of Finance and they very successfully stabilized the financial market.

However, his attempts to reform, as well as his lackluster performance as a leader to guide the country and the reform process are pushing the country further into turmoil and towards a downward spiral. The hope that a Nobel laureate will save the country is turning into a nightmare!

Personal leadership of the Interim Government ?

Though widely respected, as a leader of the Interim government Prof. Yunus has given no indication of what he stands for. The civil society and the general public are totally confused by his failure to stand up for basic mainstream Bengali values, including women’s right and freedom, organization of cultural and musical events, support for the minorities and ethnic communities. His administration did not support the “Women’s Commission Report” without ever giving any adequate justification.

None can really explain why he failed to stand up in public and as the head of the government for the basic values he fought for as a leader of Grameen bank and cherishes in private. May be one day his memoirs will explain that.

The Interim government also failed to address education and research. It allocated Tk 95,645 crore (approx. $900+ million USD) for education in FY2025-26, representing about 11% of the total budget and 1.69 % of GDP, well below UNESCO recommendations (4-6% GDP). It is one of the lowest in the history of the country. The whole country was expecting eagerly that he, being a professor and a Nobel laureate, would start reversing the trend of low allocation for education. Instead he lowered it even further than before.

In addition, the business community is exasperated by lack of participation in the interim government and its failure to address closure of factories of politically tainted people affecting export and increasing unemployment. There was also inadequate consultation before ratifying the ILO conventions on labour rights under international pressure.

Flawed reform and governance conundrum ?

While the interim Government is committing most of its time discussing reforms of the institutions and the constitution, hardly a day goes by without some report of illicit land grabbing, police harassment of ordinary people, bribery and extortion in every government office, streets and local markets and transport hubs. There are wide spread arsons and killings. The security and law and order situation in the country is worse than ever before.

Reform before governance’ emphasizes making systemic improvements (like updating laws, processes, structures) before fully implementing the laws and rules to ensure that the foundation is sound, fair, and efficient.

However, interim government’s decision to prioritize was not based on any analysis demonstrating that there were flaws in the constitution, or in the judiciary etc. that allowed the last government to rob the country. Besides, the agitation that drove Sheikh Hasina’s government from power was motivated by lack of access to jobs, corruption and extortion, land grabbing, police brutality and political oppression. All these issues are related to governance. Reform was not on their agenda.

Prof. Yunus and his interim government are to be commended for their good intentions in seeking to carry out reforms that would forestall a return to the bad old days of the last government that looted the country. But they should have understood that reform may have been necessary but not sufficient.

Poor governance and lack of capacity to govern by the established institutions of Bangladesh and its bureaucracy is clear to the entire nation and the international community. Just look at any public institutions (from the airport to embassies, union parishad to district administration, telecom and power) the situation is blatantly visible to all. No one can get anything done without going through harassment, hustles, often paying a bribe or showing authority or power. People want relief from such miserable governance and administration and not Reform.

Fixing of the financial sector was indeed one of Prof Yunus’s government’s big achievement. However, though people feared that the financial and the political crisis would derail agricultural growth and then the rest of the economy along with it, fortunately that did not happen. Overall agricultural growth of the country kept its pace and total food grain production did not decline. Overall growth of value added in agriculture remained at more than 3 percent (Bureau of Statistics, Bangladesh).

Continued and sustained agricultural growth provided the life line to industries and the garment sector in particular to withstand the financial crisis. Overall, Bangladesh’s total exports expanded 24.9 % YoY in Nov 2024, compared with an increase of 25.7 % YoY in the previous month. Garment exports surged 12% in first 7 months of FY24–25, (Export Promotion Bureau of Bangladesh).

Likewise fixing the financial sector did not fix the economy. Even with a stronger financial sector, poor governance and inadequate attention to the business community have affected the real economy. Poverty is on the rise, export and agricultural productivity are declining. The country is now staring at downhill spiral both economically and politically.

Consequences of the failures of the Interim Government to Govern ?

The most significant consequence is that by offering no alternative to better governance than the regime that was over thrown, the people are likely to turn towards the Islamic parties, which are, as of now not tainted by corruption in power and poor governance. There is a high probability that they may win. People are tending to believe that the Islamic parties will provide better governance and will be less corrupt.

The only factor that may not bring them to power is the fear that some of their values related to women and culture do not correspond to mainstream Bengali values.

The main stream opposition party, Bangladesh National Party (BNP) is also hoping to win big as they see no clear opponent. This party, however, is also accused of committing crimes, extortion and corruption when it was in power. The founder of BNP is linked to the cruel murder of Sheikh Mujib and the members of his family, and the current leader of BNP is accused of masterminding the grenade attack aimed at killing Sheikh Hasina at an AL rally on 21st August 2004. Hasina survived the attack, but it killed 24 people and injured about 200. Though acquitted, under the Interim Government, the accusations and BNP’s corruption and extortion by its cadres are lingering in public minds.

In spite of these short comings and the relative strength of the Islamic parties, the BNP is very optimistic of winning. They believe that the minorities, the large section of the freedom fighters, the left leaning parties and the secular urban women will never vote for the Islamist parties, come what may. However, given the current volatile political climate anything is possible.

In a sense the interim Government of Prof. Yunus is making it inevitable for the people to choose between: “good governance” vs. “upholding socio cultural Bengali values”. Which one will win is yet to be seen. The future of the country now critically hinges on the forthcoming election in February 2026 and the kind of leadership it will produce. Either way the people will be the losers – either they will get BNP, a corrupt party very similar to the ousted party AL with a history of bad governance or the Islamists which may turn out to be a threat to main stream Bengali values.

The Author was a freedom fighter during the war of liberation of Bangladesh and Former Chief of Policy Assistance Branch for Asia and the Pacific of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).

IPS UN Bureau

 


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DRAFT OPINION on the proposal for a Council regulation laying down the Multiannual Financial Framework for the years 2028 to 2034 - PE781.487v01-00

DRAFT OPINION on the proposal for a Council regulation laying down the Multiannual Financial Framework for the years 2028 to 2034
Committee on Foreign Affairs
Dan Barna

Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP

DRAFT OPINION on the proposal for a Council regulation laying down the Multiannual Financial Framework for the years 2028 to 2034 - PE781.487v01-00

DRAFT OPINION on the proposal for a Council regulation laying down the Multiannual Financial Framework for the years 2028 to 2034
Committee on Foreign Affairs
Dan Barna

Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP
Catégories: Africa, European Union

Public don’t perceive how fast AI is reshaping journalism [Advocacy Lab]

Euractiv.com - lun, 22/12/2025 - 18:53
AI has advanced in newsrooms faster than transparency and trust can keep up, says Reuters Institute

British PM faces Labour revolt over closer EU ties

Euractiv.com - lun, 22/12/2025 - 18:31
UK Health Secretary Wes Streeting called for a stronger EU-UK trading relationship

The Brief – The European ‘Debt’ Union 

Euractiv.com - lun, 22/12/2025 - 18:17
Did EU leaders do the right thing last week to keep Ukraine afloat?

How Trump Shaped 2025

Foreign Policy - lun, 22/12/2025 - 17:44
FP Live looks back at the year’s geopolitical twists and turns.

Décès de OUEDDOUDA Jean Marie : Faire-part

Lefaso.net (Burkina Faso) - lun, 22/12/2025 - 17:30

Le Naaba Sinbdo, chef de canton de Diguila,
Le Naaba Saaga, chef de Kougr-sian
Le Naaba Sanem, chef de Sigdougou
Les grandes familles OUEDRAOGO, SAWADOGO, à Diguila, Kaya, Sian et Ouagadougou,
La famille OUEDDOUDA à Ouagadougou,
Les grandes familles TAPSOBA à Gounghin, KAFANDO à Boulsa et Ouagadougou,
Mr OUEDRAOGO Louis,

Mr OUEDDOUDA François de Sales et famille,
Mme SAWADOGO née OUEDDOUDA Rufine et famille,
Mme THIOMBIANO née OUEDDOUDA Henriette et famille,
Mme KABORE née OUEDDOUDA Florence et famille,
Mme IZOUNGOU née OUEDDOUDA Colette et famille,
Mr OUEDDOUDA Stanislas,

Mr OUEDDOUDA David,
Mr OUEDDOUDA Omer,
Les familles alliées : ROUAMBA, KABORE, NANA, YAMEOGO, OUEDRAOGO, SANON,
BAMBARA, KADEOUA, TRAORE.
Mme OUEDDOUDA née YAMEOGO Rosalie et famille,
Les enfants : Déborah, Michael et Alwin,
Les petits enfants : Marvin, Maelyse, Jade, Stone, Nathanael, Marie-Michelle, Mael et Aaron

Ont la profonde douleur de vous annoncer le décès de leur fils, frère, père, beau-père, beau-
frère, beau-fils et grand père,
OUEDDOUDA Jean Marie
Précédemment Agent commercial du CNEA à la retraite

Décès survenu de dimanche 21 décembre 2025 à Ouagadougou, à l'hôpital de Bogodogo.
Ce lundi 22 décembre, Une veillée de prière est prévue au domicile à la patte d'oie à 20h.
Le Mardi 23 décembre, aura lieu la levée du corps à 7h30 au domicile, suivi de l'absoute à 8h
à l'église Notre Dame des Apôtres de la patte d'oie, puis de l'enterrement au cimetière route
de Saponé.

Une messe sera demandée le dimanche 28 décembre à l'église Notre Dame des Apôtres de
la patte D'oie et fera office de messe de funérailles

Burkina/Église catholique : Décès de l'abbé Gérard Francis Yougbaré

Lefaso.net (Burkina Faso) - lun, 22/12/2025 - 17:27

L'archevêque métropolitain de Koupèla, Monseigneur Gabriel Sayaogo, annonce, dans un communiqué, le décès de l'abbé Gérard Francis Yougbaré. Le décès est survenu ce lundi 22 décembre 2025 à Prato, en Italie, où le prêtre de 55 ans était en mission.

Ordonné prêtre il y a 27 ans et serviteur fidèle du Christ, l'abbé Gérard Yougbaré a consacré sa vie au service de l'Église avec une foi sincère, une humilité exemplaire et un amour constant pour son prochain.

Les informations concernant ses obsèques seront communiquées ultérieurement.

Lefaso.net

Burkina : Une session du comité de pilotage pour dresser le bilan du PAMED

Lefaso.net (Burkina Faso) - lun, 22/12/2025 - 17:20

Ce lundi 22 décembre 2025, se tient à Koudougou la session du comité de pilotage de l'année 2025 du Programme d'amélioration des moyens d'existence durable en milieu rural (PAMED). Cette session marque l'aboutissement de six années d'engagement conjoint entre le gouvernement du Burkina Faso et le Programme des nations unies pour le développement (PNUD), dans un contexte national marqué par la vulnérabilité des moyens d'existence ruraux, la dégradation des ressources naturelles, les effets des changements climatiques et les défis sécuritaires. La cérémonie d'ouverture a été présidée par Christian Somda, directeur général de l'économie verte et du changement climatique.

Le PAMED est une initiative du gouvernement burkinabè soutenue par le Programme des nations-unies pour le développement (PNUD). Ses actions, selon Christian Somda, directeur général de l'économie verte et du changement climatique, visent à assurer la sécurité alimentaire, à améliorer les moyens d'existence résilients des petits exploitants agricoles organisés à travers des coopératives, des couches vulnérables, des populations déplacées et celles des zones d'accueil. Après six années de mise en œuvre, le programme est à terme. « L'heure est donc au bilan pour évaluer l'exécution du projet au troisième trimestre », situe M. Somda.

« Étant dans un processus de refondation, il faut que les recommandations nous servent pour l'avenir », Christian Somda

De manière globale, l'on retient bon nombre d'acquis liés à la réalisation et à la sécurisation des bases positives, cela à travers la promotion de l'agroécologie, la gestion durable des terres et la valorisation des ressources naturelles. « Parmi les acquis spécifiques majeurs, je retiens notamment l'aménagement de cinq fermes agroécologiques polyvalentes sur 48,25 hectares sécurisés sur le plan foncier et exploités par plus de 1 300 ménages, générant près de 70 millions de francs CFA de revenus annuels ; la réalisation du barrage de Nando, d'une capacité de 580 000 m³, ainsi que l'aménagement d'un périmètre irrigué de 56 hectares, doté de 12 puits maraîchers équipés de pompes solaires », résume Dieudonné Kini, représentant résident adjoint par intérim du PNUD.

« Nous sommes satisfaits des résultats engrangés par le PAMED », Dieudonné Kini

Outre cela, il relève le renforcement des capacités de 2 035 producteurs et productrices, dont 60 % de femmes, 30 % de jeunes et 20 % de personnes déplacées internes, mais aussi la production de 70 000 plants, dont 52 000 reboisés le long des cours d'eau et autour du barrage. « Ces résultats ont permis d'améliorer la productivité agricole, de renforcer la résilience des ménages, et de créer des dynamiques économiques locales favorables à l'emploi des jeunes et des femmes. Au-delà des infrastructures et des investissements matériels. Le PAMED a contribué à renforcer la structuration des organisations de producteurs, l'accès au marché et la gouvernance des ressources naturelles », a-t-il ajouté.

Une vue des participants à cette session

De son côté, le PDS de la commune de Dédougou, Dieudonné Tougfo, se dit satisfait des résultats engrangés par le programme dans son ressort. Selon ses dires, les villages de Noakuy et Moundasso ont bénéficié de fermes agroécologiques de respectivement 15 et 2 ha. « Pour le dernier site susmentionné, c'est environ 100 millions de francs CFA qui ont été déboursés par le PAMED. Pour le site de 15 hectares, c'est beaucoup plus. Ce sont des fermes agro-écologiques qui ont été certifiées bio », a-t-il précisé. Cela permet entre autres la protection de l'environnement, évite la dégradation des sols, favorise l'intégration des populations déplacées internes, l'autosuffisance des personnes vulnérables, une meilleure connaissance des produits cultivés.

« Nous aurions voulu que ce programme soit prolongé », Dieudonné Tougfo

Erwan Compaoré
Lefaso.net

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