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Paris : les lucratifs gang bangs du XVe délocalisés à Bagnolet près d’une école

Le Parisien / Paris - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 09:29

Pas de trêve pendant les fêtes. En décembre, 18 gang bangs ont eu lieu à la Factory. Mais ce club qui était installé dans le sous-sol d’une copropriété cossue, rue d’Alleray à Paris (XVe), a été délocalisé depuis octobre à Bagnolet (Seine-Saint-Denis). La conséquence de la fermeture, pour un problème d’accessibilité, des locaux parisiens ordonnée par la préfecture de police.

En banlieue désormais, ces événements qui consistent à placer une femme au centre des attentions de plusieurs hommes moyennant 80 euros l’entrée, se poursuivent donc à un rythme effréné. Ils ont lieu rue Jules-Ferry à Bagnolet dans des locaux servant jusque-là plutôt de showroom. Et situés à 50 m d’une école élémentaire et de plusieurs associations culturelles.

Catégories: France

« QG du HamaSS » : la permanence de la députée parisienne Danielle Simonnet dégradée par un tag

Le Parisien / Paris - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 09:29

Les lettres, en immenses, sont à la vue de tous. Rue des Pyrénées (XXe arrondissement de Paris), la permanence parlementaire de la députée (L’Après) de Paris Danielle Simonnet, a été taguée de l’inscription « QG du Hamas ». Les tagueurs prenant le soin d’inscrire deux fois la lettre « S ».

Après avoir découvert cette dégradation, la députée a dénoncé sur X des « tags diffamants ». « Continuons sans relâche à défendre le droit du peuple palestinien à vivre libre, et la paix pour les Palestiniens comme les Israéliens ! Que cessent enfin la répression et la colonisation » a-t-elle écrit.

Un premier tag l’an dernier

« Ce n’est pas la première fois que ça m’arrive », réagit Danielle Simonnet. En effet, la permanence de la députée avait déjà été la cible de tags en raison du soutien à la cause palestinienne de l’élue. Exemple lors de la campagne des élections législatives de 2024, quand la candidate de la Nupes avait découvert les inscriptions « LFI parti judophobe » à cette même adresse.

« La mairie de Paris s’est engagée à nettoyer ce tag », assure la députée, qui se réserve le droit de porter plainte.

Suite à ce nouveau tag, Danielle Simonnet a reçu le soutien de plusieurs personnalités politiques de gauche. « C’est l’absence de toute forme de nuance qui tue le débat public. Danielle n’a jamais été un soutien du Hamas, mais s’est justement et légitimement mobilisée pour une solution à deux États », écrit par exemple le premier parti du PS Olivier Faure, entre deux posts d’Alexis Corbière et de Raquel Garrido, également membres de L’Après.

« Le débat démocratique exige le refus de toute forme de violence, quels que soient les désaccords politiques », a écrit le candidat à la mairie de Paris Emmanuel Grégoire, dénonçant une « dégradation honteuse ». De son côté, le communiste Ian Brossat a comparé le sort de la permanence de Danielle Simonnet à la librairie Violette and Co et à la galerie l’Esprit d’Escalier, également taguées cette année « simplement parce qu’elles osent défendre le droit du peuple palestinien à vivre libre ».

Catégories: France

Africa Squeezed Between Import Substitution and Dependency Syndrome

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 09:27

President John Dramani Mahama of Ghana addressing the UN General Assembly last September. Credit: UN Photo

By Kester Kenn Klomegah
MOSCOW, Jan 8 2026 (IPS)

Squeezed between import substitution and dependency syndrome, a condition characterized by a set of associated economic symptoms—that is rules and regulations—majority of African countries are shifting from United States and Europe to an incoherent alternative bilateral partnerships with Russia, China and the Global South.

By forging new partnerships, for instance with Russia, these African countries rather create conspicuous economic dependency at the expense of strengthening their own local production, attainable by supporting local farmers under state budget. Import-centric partnership ties and lack of diversification make these African countries committed to import-dependent structures. It invariably compounds domestic production challenges. Needless to say that Africa has huge arable land and human resources to ensure food security.

A classical example that readily comes to mind is Ghana, and other West African countries. With rapidly accelerating economic policy, Ghana’s President John Dramani Mahama ordered the suspension of U.S. chicken and agricultural products, reaffirming swift measures for transforming local agriculture considered as grounds for ensuring sustainable food security and economic growth and, simultaneously, for driving job creation.

President Mahama, in early December 2025, while observing Agricultural Day, urged Ghanaians to take up farming, highlighting the guarantee and state support needed for affordable credit and modern tools to boost food security. According to Mahama, Ghana spends $3bn yearly on basic food imports from abroad.

The government decision highlights the importance of leveraging unto local agriculture technology and innovation. Creating opportunities to unlock the full potential of depending on available resources within the new transformative policy strategy which aims at boosting local productivity. President Mahama’s special initiatives are the 24-Hour Economy and the Big Push Agenda. One of the pillars focuses on Grow 24 – modernising agriculture.

Despite remarkable commendations for new set of economic recovery, Ghana’s demand for agricultural products is still high, and this time making a smooth shift to Russia whose poultry meat and wheat currently became the main driver of exports to African countries. And Ghana, noticeably, accepts large quantity (tonnes) of poultry from Russia’s Rostov region into the country, according to several media reports. The supplies include grains, but also vegetable oils, meat and dairy products, fish and finished food products have significant potential for Africa.

The Agriculture Ministry’s Agroexport Department acknowledges Russia exports chicken to Ghana, with Ghanaian importers sourcing Russian poultry products, especially frozen cuts, to meet significant local demand that far outstrips domestic production, even after Ghana lifted a temporary 2020 avian flu-related ban on Russian poultry.

Moreover, monitoring and basic research indicated Russian producers are actively increasing poultry exports to various African countries, thus boosting trade, although Ghana still struggles to balance imports with local industry needs.

A few details indicate the following:

    * Trade Resumed: Ghana has lifted its ban on Russian poultry imports since April 2021, allowing poultry trade to resume. Russian regions hve, thus far, consistently exported these poultry meat and products into the country under regulatory but flexible import rules on a negotiated bilateral agreement.

    * Significant Market: In any case, Ghana is a key African market for Russian poultry, with exports seeing substantial growth in recent years, alongside Angola, Benin, Cote d’Voire, Nigeria and Sierra Leone.

    * Demand-Driven: Ghana’s large gap between domestic poultry production and national demand necessitates significant imports, creating opportunities for foreign suppliers like Russia.

    * Major Exporters: Russia poultry companies are focused on increasing generally their African exports, with Ghana being a major destination. The basic question: to remain as import dependency or strive at attaining food sufficiency?

    * Product Focus: Exports typically include frozen chicken cuts (legs and meat) very vital for supplementing local supply. But as the geopolitical dynamics shift, Ghana and other importing African countries have to review partnerships, particularly with Russia.

Despite the fact that challenges persist, Russia strongly remains as a notable supplier to Ghana, even under the supervision of John Mahama’s administration, dealing as a friendly ally, both have the vision for multipolar trade architecture, ultimately fulfilling a critical role in meeting majority of African countries’ large consumer demand for poultry products, and with Russia’s trade actively expanding and Ghana’s preparedness to spend on such imports from the state budget.

Following two high-profile Russia–Africa summits, cooperation in the area of food security emerged as a key theme. Moscow pledged to boost agricultural exports to the continent—especially grain, poultry, and fertilisers—while African leaders welcomed the prospect of improved food supplies.

Nevertheless, do these African governments think of prioritising agricultural self-sufficiency. At a May 2025 meeting in St. Petersburg, Russia’s Economic Development Minister, Maxim Reshetnikov, underlined the fact that more than 40 Russian companies were keen to export animal products and agricultural goods to the African region.

Russia, eager to expand its economic footprint, sees large-scale agricultural exports as a key revenue generator. Estimates suggest the Russian government could earn over $15 billion annually from these agricultural exports to African continent.

Head of the Agroexport Federal Center, Ilya Ilyushin, speaking at the round table “Russia-Africa: A Strategic Partnership in Agriculture to Ensure Food Security,” which was held as part of the international conference on ensuring the food sovereignty of African countries in Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) on Nov. 21, 2025, said: “We see significant potential in expanding supplies of Russian agricultural products to Africa.”

It mentioned that the Agriculture Ministry’s Agroexport Department, and the Union of Grain Exporters and Producers, exported over 32,000 tonnes of wheat and barley to Egypt totaling nearly $8 million during the first half of 2025, Kenya totaling over $119 million.

Interfax media reports referred to African countries whose markets are of interest for Russian producers and exporters. Despite existing difficulties, supplies of livestock products are also growing, this includes poultry meat, Ilyushin said. Exports of agricultural products from Russia to African countries have more than doubled, and third quarter of 2025 reached almost $7 billion.

The key buyers of Russian grain on the continent are Egypt, Algeria, Kenya, Libya, Tunisia, Nigeria, Morocco, South Africa, Tanzania and Sudan, he said. According to him, Russia needs to expand the geography of supplies, increasing exports to other regions of the continent, increase supplies in West Africa to Benin, Cameroon, Ghana, Liberia and the French-speaking Sahelian States.

Of course, Russian exporters have nothing to complain. Africa’s dependency dilemma still persists. Therefore, Russia to continue expanding food exports to Africa explicitly reflects a calculated economic and geopolitical strategy. In the end of the analysis, the debate plays out prominently and also the primary message: Africa cannot afford to sacrifice food sovereignty for geopolitical solidarity.

With the above analysis, Russian exporters show readiness to explore and shape actionable strategies for harnessing Africa’s consumer market, including that of Ghana, and further to strengthen economic and trade cooperation and support its dynamic vision for sustainable development in the context of multipolar friendship and solidarity.

Kester Kenn Klomegah focuses on current geopolitical changes, foreign relations and economic development-related questions in Africa with external countries. Most of his well-resourced articles are reprinted in several reputable foreign media.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Catégories: Africa

FIREPOWER: Cyprus Presidency kicks off with Ukraine centre stage

Euractiv.com - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 09:26
Plus Denmark gets poised to fight America, and why Portugal might matter for defence
Catégories: European Union

Consent Ignored, Convictions Rare: Pakistan’s Courts Under Fire

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 09:15

Activists at a My body, My choice protest. Credit: Voicepk.net

By Zofeen Ebrahim
KARACHI, Pakistan, Jan 8 2026 (IPS)

As 2026 dawns, women in Pakistan are left grappling with a stark reality: rape and marital rape continue to be misinterpreted by judges in the country’s highest courts.

Earlier this month, Pakistan’s Supreme Court set aside a rape conviction, changing it to fornication (consensual sex out of marriage) – reducing a 20-year sentence to five years and slashing the fine from 500,000 rupees to 10,000 rupees, sparking fresh calls for better protections for Pakistani women.

“Such judgments do not give confidence to women to come out and report sexual violence perpetrated on them,” said Ayesha Farooq, chairperson of the government-notified Committee of the Anti-Rape Investigation and Trial Act, formed in 2021.

Despite protective legislation, 70 percent of gender-based violence incidents go unreported. Of those reported, the national conviction rate stands at just 5 percent, with some categories as low as 0.5 percent and domestic violence convictions at 1.3 percent.

Senator Sherry Rehman highlighted the stark figures: in 2024, Islamabad had seven convictions out of 176 rape cases, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa one out of 258, Sindh none from 243 rape cases and Balochistan reported 21 rapes with no convictions.

Nida Aly, Executive Director of AGHS, said, “I have never felt so disappointed in our judiciary. Judges have failed as a gender-competent forum and lost credibility.”

The Supreme Court case involved a survivor who, in 2015, was raped at gunpoint while relieving herself in the woods. She reported the incident seven months later; DNA tests confirmed the accused as the father of her child. The trial court convicted him, and the Lahore High Court upheld the verdict. Yet at the Supreme Court, two of three judges reclassified the act as fornication, citing the complainant’s silence, lack of resistance, and absence of physical marks. Section 496-B of the Penal Code prescribes five years’ imprisonment and a Rs10,000 fine for fornication.

This reasoning drew sharp criticism from the National Commission on the Status of Women, which said consent cannot be inferred from silence, delayed reporting, or lack of resistance, and urged courts to recognise the realities of trauma, fear, coercion, and power imbalances in sexual violence cases.

Ironically, after the recasting of the case, the woman was exempted from punishment.

She was reminded of another case of rape in 2024, where a woman accused her brother’s friend of rape.

“The same judge converted the conviction of rape into fornication – along with arguments like “the woman showed no resistance; there were no marks of violence” and there was a two-day delay in reporting to the police.

Justice Ayesha Malik’s dissenting note arguing there was no “standardised” rulebook response by the victim emphasised consent.

Jamshed M. Kazi, Country Representative, UN Women Pakistan, said such cases resonate far beyond the courtroom. “The language used and the conclusions reached shape not only legal precedent but also social attitudes, survivor confidence, and public trust in justice.”

He added, “For survivors of sexual violence, judgements can leave lasting marks on the lives of women and girls, affecting how their experiences are believed and remembered, and may discourage reporting, reinforcing silence, fear, or self-doubt among survivors.”

Another case saw the Lahore High Court dismiss rape complaints against a husband because he was still legally married, even though he raped the woman at gunpoint. The judge, while maintaining the conduct of the man to be “immoral” and “inappropriate under religious or social norms”, said it was not a crime since the marriage continued to exist legally at the time of the incident.

“The judge focused on the validity of the marriage and completely disregarded the woman’s claim of non-consent and being subjected to forced sex at gunpoint,” pointed out Aly.

While there is no explicit provision criminalising marital rape, the Protection of Women (Criminal Law Amendment) Act, 2006 removed marriage as a defence to rape. When the definition of rape was substantially revised under the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2021, no marital exemption was reintroduced.

Between 1979 and 2006, Maliha Zia, Director, Gender, Inclusion & Development at the Karachi-based Legal Aid Society, explained, marriage operated as a defence to rape because the law defined rape as sexual intercourse by a man with a woman “who is not his wife” under specified circumstances. The deliberate removal of the words “not his wife” in 2006 therefore eliminated marriage as a defence, a position that has remained unchanged since.

“The 2006 Protection of Women Act was an important step; it corrected major injustices by separating rape from zina (unlawful sexual intercourse – including adultery and fornication),” said Dr Sharmila Faruqui, a member of the National Assembly.  “But it stopped short of clearly saying that lack of consent within marriage is also rape and that silence has allowed old assumptions to survive.”

Faruqui stressed the need for judicial sensitisation, particularly at senior levels, but noted that judges are ultimately bound by the law. “When the law is unclear, even well-intentioned interpretations can go wrong,” she said. She called for legislative clarity—through a penal code amendment or another carefully considered route—emphasising that consent, grounded in dignity and equality, must remain central regardless of marital status. “Marriage was never meant to be a license for violence.”

This was endorsed by Zia, who has been among the trainers of judges who hear GBV cases. “Much work needs to be done to constantly sensitise the justice sector on women’s experiences and the trauma they go through due to sexual violence. “Many work on the assumption that the woman is most likely lying, especially if she didn’t fight or run or report straight away,” she added.

To its credit, Pakistan, under the anti-rape act of 2021 special courts were notified to look into gender-based violence cases. To date there are 174 such courts. Unfortunately, these courts are not exclusively handling GBV cases, said Zia. But even with this limitation, rape case convictions in Sindh rose to 17 percent in 2025, from 5 percent in 2020, when such courts did not exist. “Imagine how much better it could be!” According to her, in districts where there is a high caseload of GBV, courts should be exclusive, not necessarily more.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Catégories: Africa

Arrestation de Nicolás Maduro : quelles répercussions sur la stratégie de la Russie et de la Chine ?

BBC Afrique - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 09:05
 Alors que Nicolás Maduro du Venezuela fait face à des accusations aux États‑Unis, des experts se demandent si sa capture pourrait encourager la Chine et la Russie. 
Catégories: Afrique

Arrestation de Nicolás Maduro : quelles répercussions sur la stratégie de la Russie et de la Chine ?

BBC Afrique - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 09:05
 Alors que Nicolás Maduro du Venezuela fait face à des accusations aux États‑Unis, des experts se demandent si sa capture pourrait encourager la Chine et la Russie. 
Catégories: Afrique

Hong Kong champion des introductions en Bourse en 2025 : pourquoi les investisseurs se ruent sur la Chine

La Tribune - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 09:00
La place boursière de Hong Kong a levé plus de capitaux que Wall Street en 2025 grâce au retour des investisseurs sur les marchés chinois.
Catégories: France

A Legfelsőbb Bíróság döntése alapján Daniel Bombic rács mögött marad

Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 08:49
A Legfelsőbb Bíróság elutasította a szélsőséges bűncselekmények elkövetésével vádolt Daniel Bombic fellebbezését a Speciális Büntetőbíróság döntései ellen.

« Le rejet de l’industrie en tant que telle est très rare » : une étude dévoile le nombre d'usines contestées en France

La Tribune - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 08:40
La Fabrique de l'Industrie, qui défend les intérêts des industriels en France, vient de dévoiler une étude qui recense le nombre de projets d'usines ou extensions contestées dans le pays. Les chiffres témoignent d'un certain paradoxe.
Catégories: France

50 years of EU-China relations: Milestone meetings and trade tensions

Written by Anna Flynn.

The EU and China account for nearly 30 % of global trade. The EU has defined China as a ‘partner, competitor, and systemic rival.’

One of the key, current challenges is that, following the announcement of United States’ tariffs, China announced new export controls on their rare earth elements in April and October 2025. A second package was suspended until November 2026.

At the 25th EU-China Summit in Beijing, marking 50 years of diplomatic relations, the partners discussed trade, climate change, and Russia, against an ongoing backdrop of huge geopolitical shifts.

During the July 2025 summit, the EU urged China to lift its restrictions. China’s rare earth elements are difficult to source elsewhere, and simultaneously play an imperative role in the EU’s digital, defence, and green industries. According to the European Central Bank, 80 % of European firms are three intermediaries away from rare earth element producers; highlighting the value of these materials to the EU economy.

The EU’s plan to address this vulnerable, yet vital supply, is the Critical Raw Materials Act. The aim of this regulation (among other things) is to diversify the EU’s imports, support strategic projects, and strengthen EU monitoring of supply risks.

In July 2025, Parliament adopted a resolution urging the Commission to speed up the process of implementing the Critical Raw Materials Act, condemning China’s actions as unjustified and coercive.

Moreover, The EU’s trade deficit with China (€308.4 billion in 2024), is expected to rise.

Meanwhile, China’s relationship with Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) is growing, in direct competition with the EU’s objective to diversify critical raw material sources. Latin America produces large amounts of lithium and copper. By 2030, the EU’s demand for lithium is expected to increase 12-fold. Chinese companies have purchased half of the world’s largest lithium mines, and China is Latin America’s second largest trading partner today.

Nevertheless, in a joint statement following the EU-China summit, both parties reiterated that major economies should bolster climate efforts. They agreed to cooperate and lead a green transition.  

A couple of months afterwards, ahead of COP30, China submitted its nationally determined contribution (NDC), or climate targets, for 2035. China’s share of global emissions increased from 9 % in 1990 to 17 % in 2024, and this is the first time that it has agreed to an absolute greenhouse gas emissions reduction.

An additional source of contention is China’s involvement with Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine. At the summit, the EU stressed China’s responsibility to uphold world order and to refrain from supporting Russia’s military agenda. At the end of October 2025, the EU’s 19th package of sanctions was adopted against Russia, including sanctions on 12 entities located in China that are supporting Russia’s military and industrial complex.

This bilateral relationship will continue to carry far-reaching importance.

Links to EPRS publications
Catégories: European Union

Öt autó ütközött Pozsonyban, az Einstein utcán

Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 08:29
Öt autó ütközött Pozsonyban, az Einstein utcán. A baleset miatt dugó alakult ki, közölte az STVR Zöld Hulláma. Az útszakasz ugyan járható, de 15–20 perces késéssel kell számolni. (tasr)

'Like a movie' - Semenyo enjoys fairytale farewell

ModernGhana News - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 08:12
Football can often deliver fairytale moments - and at the Vitality Stadium on Wednesday, it served one up as Antoine Semenyo brought the curtain down on his Bournemouth career in perfect fashion. The forward, who is on the verge of joining Manchester City, provided yet another telling contribution for the Cherries when he struck in the fi .
Catégories: Africa

Agriculture au Kosovo (2/3) : des initiatives locales qui fonctionnent

Courrier des Balkans / Kosovo - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 08:07

Le Kosovo n'a pas de secteur agroalimentaire performant, mais des producteurs se lancent dans l'aventure de la transformation et de la commercialisation directe. Lait, fromage, pickles, miel et volaille : les alternatives locales à l'import existent.

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Catégories: Balkans Occidentaux

Agriculture au Kosovo (2/3) : des initiatives locales qui fonctionnent

Courrier des Balkans - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 08:07

Le Kosovo n'a pas de secteur agroalimentaire performant, mais des producteurs se lancent dans l'aventure de la transformation et de la commercialisation directe. Lait, fromage, pickles, miel et volaille : les alternatives locales à l'import existent.

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

Darren Fletcher to take charge for FA Cup - but Man Utd's problems are far bigger

ModernGhana News - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 08:06
Darren Fletcher has confirmed he will remain as Manchester United 39;s interim coach for the FA Cup third-round tie with Brighton at Old Trafford on Sunday. However, if there is one reality reinforced by United 39;s 2-2 draw at Burnley, it is that whatever issues there are at the club, they will not be solved merely be switching the man .
Catégories: Africa

OPINION. «Filmer plutôt que sauver »

La Tribune - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 08:05
HOMO NUMERICUS. Lors des premières minutes du terrible incendie de Crans-Montana, des vidéos sont apparues sur les réseaux sociaux témoignant que certains avaient préféré filmer plutôt que d’essayer de sauver. L’urgence est devenue contenu numérique et l’écran a supplanté le geste d’entraide. Par Philippe Boyer, directeur relations institutionnelles et innovation à Covivio.
Catégories: France

World Cup 2026: Fifa to digitally scan all players to create offside avatars

ModernGhana News - jeu, 08/01/2026 - 08:01
Fifa plans to create AI-enabled 3D avatars of every player at the 2026 World Cup to enhance the tournament 39;s semi-automated offside technology. This will mean creating a digital scan of all 1,248 players in the 26-man squads of the 48 teams.
Catégories: Africa

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