Kaláka lesz a Kolozs megyei Kidében a hétvégén: az úgynevezett gabonás tetejét fedik újra szalmával. Mi ez a gabonás és kiket várnak a kalákára? A Kide Egyesület nevében Kovács Péter beszélt minderről rádiónknak.
Articolul Hétvégi program? Kaláka Kidében! apare prima dată în Kolozsvári Rádió Románia.
As risks to online election campaigns increase in the digital age, the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) hosted its tenth annual election seminar this week in Vienna, with a focus on election campaigns in the online environment.
“Technology has transformed how elections are run and how candidates and voters engage, bringing both opportunities and serious challenges,” said ODIHR Director Maria Telalian. “Our mission is to ensure that the democratic principles underpinning electoral integrity as well as our work keep pace with innovation. This event was an excellent opportunity to share experiences and strengthen collaboration on these crucial issues.”
The event brought together election experts, representatives from OSCE participating states, election management bodies, civil society, and social media platforms to discuss best practices and innovative strategies for safeguarding the democratic process amid evolving technological challenges.
“The discussions held today underscored the importance of co-operation and informed action in safeguarding online electoral integrity. Romania’s recent experience shows that improving access to data and building shared expertise are not just desirable but essential steps,” said Mădălina Voinea, Digital Watchdog Co-ordinator at Expert Forum, a Romanian think tank. “This seminar has been a valuable forum for advancing such a collective effort as without transparent access to public data on social media, we risk falling behind threats that evolve faster than our safeguards.”
This year’s seminar focused on emerging threats in online campaigns, such as misinformation, foreign interference, and AI misuse, and building resilience by strengthening state preparedness and international cooperation. Experts exchanged insights on how to enhance legal frameworks, improve collaboration with social media platforms, and implement best practices for protecting the integrity of elections in the digital age.
La commission des Affaires juridiques (JURI) du Parlement a voté en faveur d’une action contre la Commission européenne devant la Cour de justice de l’Union européenne (CJUE) pour avoir décidé, plus tôt cette année, de retirer une proposition de réforme des brevets essentiels aux normes (BEN).
The post Des eurodéputés favorables à une action en justice contre la Commission pour le retrait de la réforme des brevets essentiels aux normes appeared first on Euractiv FR.
By External Source
Nov 4 2025 (IPS-Partners)
From the 10th to the 21st of November 2025, the 30th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP30) will be hosted in Belém, Brazil.
The world gathers in the Amazon’s gateway city to chart a course for climate action.
This edition of COP is more than a summit. It is set in the heart of the Amazon, the “lungs of the Earth,” symbolising the link between forest protection and climate justice.
Here, nearly 198 countries under the UNFCCC will negotiate climate policy, financing, adaptation and mitigation.
At the center, the goal to limit global warming to 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels remains the guiding star of the Paris Agreement and the COP process.
Yet current commitments put us far from that trajectory. The upcoming global stocktake and new Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) will be scrutinized here in Belém.
One of the defining agenda items is climate finance. At COP29, parties agreed to a US$300 billion per year target by 2035 for developing countries. But civil society and many Global South delegates call this “insufficient,” as the real need runs much higher.
For example, in 2022, developed nations pledged about US$116 billion – yet only USD 28 to 35 billion was delivered; nearly two-thirds of that came as loans, often on commercial terms.
Belém offers another unique spotlight: tropical forests and Indigenous rights. The Amazon Basin remains the epicenter of global forest loss. Brazil alone accounted for roughly half of all tropical forest degradation in the basin in recent assessments.
Indigenous leaders and civil society insist that the emerging “Loss & Damage” fund and climate finance models must recognize rights, agency and self-determination—not just top-down flows.
Innovation and technology transfer are also on the table: the UNFCCC has opened submissions for climate technology innovations that will be showcased at COP30.
And the Brazilian COP30 Presidency has launched more than 30 thematic days for inclusion and implementation – a shift toward action-oriented gatherings.
What does success look like in Belém?
Strong, visible commitments on new or enhanced NDCs aligned with the 1.5 °C goal. A credible roadmap from USD 300 billion to USD 1.3 trillion per year by 2035 for climate finance.
Operationalization of the loss and damage fund with meaningful access for the most vulnerable. Forest finance instruments that reward conservation and respect Indigenous stewardship.
Belém is more than a meeting place. It is a moment of choice—for equity, ambition and the planet’s future.
When the delegates leave Belém, the proof will not be in the words. It will be in the changed pathways: more finance flowing, forests standing, and carbon dropping. The world will be watching.
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Selon le contrat opérationnel défini dans le Livre blanc sur la défense et la sécurité nationale [LBDSN] de 2013, la Marine nationale devrait disposer de quinze frégates dites de premier rang. Or, ce format est actuellement atteint parce qu’il prend en compte les frégates de type La Fayette [FLF], que l’on ne peut pas considérer...
Cet article La Marine nationale va doubler la puissance de feu de ses frégates de défense et d’intervention est apparu en premier sur Zone Militaire.