Vous êtes ici

Agrégateur de flux

Power restored in Berlin as bickering over blame continues

Euractiv.com - mer, 07/01/2026 - 12:16
Left-wing feud erupts over responsibility for blackout
Catégories: European Union

German MEP takes von der Leyen to court over arms industry contacts

Euractiv.com - mer, 07/01/2026 - 12:14
The co-chair of the left-populist BSW party argues that von der Leyen only partially and belatedly answered his formal request for information
Catégories: European Union

REPORT on the proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council amending Directives 2009/43/EC and 2009/81/EC, as regards the simplification of intra-EU transfers of defence-related products and the simplification of security and...

REPORT on the proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council amending Directives 2009/43/EC and 2009/81/EC, as regards the simplification of intra-EU transfers of defence-related products and the simplification of security and defence procurement
Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection
Committee on Security and Defence
Anna-Maja Henriksson, Pekka Toveri

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

REPORT on the proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council amending Directives 2009/43/EC and 2009/81/EC, as regards the simplification of intra-EU transfers of defence-related products and the simplification of security and...

REPORT on the proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council amending Directives 2009/43/EC and 2009/81/EC, as regards the simplification of intra-EU transfers of defence-related products and the simplification of security and defence procurement
Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection
Committee on Security and Defence
Anna-Maja Henriksson, Pekka Toveri

Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP

REPORT on drones and new systems of warfare – the EU’s need to adapt to be fit for today’s security challenges - A10-0270/2025

REPORT on drones and new systems of warfare – the EU’s need to adapt to be fit for today’s security challenges
Committee on Security and Defence
Reinis Pozņaks

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

REPORT on drones and new systems of warfare – the EU’s need to adapt to be fit for today’s security challenges - A10-0270/2025

REPORT on drones and new systems of warfare – the EU’s need to adapt to be fit for today’s security challenges
Committee on Security and Defence
Reinis Pozņaks

Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP

REPORT on the implementation of the common foreign and security policy – annual report 2025 - A10-0253/2025

REPORT on the implementation of the common foreign and security policy – annual report 2025
Committee on Foreign Affairs
David McAllister

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

REPORT on human rights and democracy in the world and the European Union’s policy on the matter – annual report 2025 - A10-0262/2025

REPORT on human rights and democracy in the world and the European Union’s policy on the matter – annual report 2025
Committee on Foreign Affairs
Francisco Assis

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

REPORT on addressing impunity through EU sanctions, including the EU Global Human Rights Sanctions Regime (so-called ‘EU Magnitsky Act’) - A10-0266/2025

REPORT on addressing impunity through EU sanctions, including the EU Global Human Rights Sanctions Regime (so-called ‘EU Magnitsky Act’)
Committee on Foreign Affairs
Antonio López-Istúriz White

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

REPORT on the implementation of the common security and defence policy – annual report 2025 - A10-0265/2025

REPORT on the implementation of the common security and defence policy – annual report 2025
Committee on Security and Defence
Thijs Reuten

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

REPORT on the implementation of the common security and defence policy – annual report 2025 - A10-0265/2025

REPORT on the implementation of the common security and defence policy – annual report 2025
Committee on Security and Defence
Thijs Reuten

Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP

Immatriculation des véhicules : la troisième phase du système national bientôt déployée

Algérie 360 - mer, 07/01/2026 - 12:05

Le ministère de l’Intérieur, des Collectivités locales et des Transports s’apprête à franchir une étape décisive dans la numérisation des services publics. Le lancement de […]

L’article Immatriculation des véhicules : la troisième phase du système national bientôt déployée est apparu en premier sur .

Catégories: Afrique, Europäische Union

Don’t Mourn, Organise: Europe’s Path Through Global Turbulence [Promoted Content]

Euractiv.com - mer, 07/01/2026 - 12:00
As geopolitical tensions intensify and the far right advances, Europe must act. In this article, industriAll Europe calls for organising around democratic values, internationalism, and a bold industrial renewal - mobilising investment, solidarity, and workers’ power to secure peace, resilience, and shared prosperity.
Catégories: European Union

Fin de mission d’Elizabeth Aubin : l’ambassadrice salue des relations « fortes et croissantes »

Algérie 360 - mer, 07/01/2026 - 11:20

Reçue hier mardi par le président de la République, M. Abdelmadjid Tebboune, l’ambassadrice des États-Unis d’Amérique, Mme Elizabeth Moore Aubin, a mis en avant la […]

L’article Fin de mission d’Elizabeth Aubin : l’ambassadrice salue des relations « fortes et croissantes » est apparu en premier sur .

Catégories: Afrique, Europäische Union

Devises en Algérie : une nouvelle loi ferme une porte longtemps ouverte, voici ce qui change concrètement

Algérie 360 - mer, 07/01/2026 - 11:17

L’entrée en vigueur de la loi de finances 2026, le 1er janvier, marque un tournant lourd de conséquences pour les voyageurs non-résidents, y compris les […]

L’article Devises en Algérie : une nouvelle loi ferme une porte longtemps ouverte, voici ce qui change concrètement est apparu en premier sur .

Catégories: Afrique, Europäische Union

Mali - Sénégal : un match de CAN sur fond d'histoire commune

BBC Afrique - mer, 07/01/2026 - 10:58
Le quart de finale de la Coupe d’Afrique des nations 2025 entre le Sénégal et le Mali dépasse largement le cadre sportif. Voisins géographiques, liés par l’histoire et la culture, les deux pays partagent une mémoire commune façonnée par les grands empires ouest-africains, la colonisation française et une brève expérience d’union politique.
Catégories: Afrique

Online Abuse is Real Violence — and Africa’s Women and Girls are Paying the Price

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - mer, 07/01/2026 - 10:30

Girl at computer. Credit: UNFPA Central African Republic/Karel Prinsloo
 
A bold action by governments, tech companies, and all communities is needed to confront the rising tech-facilitated GBV that is silencing women’s voices and threatening hard-won gains in Africa.

By Sennen Hounton and Lydia Zigomo
UNITED NATIONS, Jan 7 2026 (IPS)

New estimates show that violence against women and girls remains one of the most pervasive human rights violations in the world – and that one of its fastest-growing frontiers is the digital space.

Technology-facilitated gender-based violence includes online harassment, cyberstalking, image-based abuse, deepfake exploitation and coordinated digital attacks, and all of these are proliferating.

Anonymous accounts, weak reporting systems, and limited legal consequences have enabled perpetrators to weaponize technology to shame, silence, and violate women and girls at unprecedented scale and speed.

Africa is no exception.

Across the continent, disturbing patterns are emerging: Girls are facing cyberbullying and sextortion. Women leaders and human rights defenders are disproportionately targeted through coordinated online abuse designed to intimidate them out of public life.

During elections, women in public roles report harassment, smear campaigns and doxxing – tactics meant to silence civic participation.

In humanitarian settings – from the Sahel to the Lake Chad Basin to Sudan and the Democratic Republic of the Congo – displaced women and girls rely on digital tools to stay connected and access essential services.

Yet these same tools expose them to surveillance, extortion, blackmail and exploitation.

In conflict contexts, online threats have escalated into offline consequences – including intimidation, detention and physical violence.

Despite the scale of the problem, most cases remain invisible because technology companies, justice systems and communities have not kept pace. Reporting mechanisms are often ineffective.

Digital safety is rarely taught in schools or homes. Survivors face retaliation and victim-blaming. Perpetrators, and the platforms that enable them, are almost never held accountable.

The consequences are severe. Technology-facilitated violence impacts mental health, restricts mobility, destroys livelihoods and erodes confidence. “This virtual world can have real emotional impacts. It’s not enough to say ignore it or log off,” a 24-year-old woman in Chad told UNFPA.

Other young women in Africa also describe witnessing or experiencing harms with real-world impacts: “My page was hacked, I was forced to do things against my will,” a 31-year-old woman from Liberia said.

“Someone had published naked photos and videos of me in our local village Facebook group,” a young woman in Kenya shared. “I gathered the courage and went to a police station to report the incident. The officers I spoke to first admonished me and told me that this was not a criminal case, but rather a case of indecent behaviour on my part.”

In aggregate, these harms are reshaping the digital public sphere in ways that exclude women and girls.

When girls abandon online learning for fear their images may be misused, or when women delete their accounts to escape harassment, societies lose leadership, innovation and the voices essential to progress.

Gender equality cannot advance when half the population is pushed out of digital spaces.

That is why UNFPA and partners convened the first-ever Africa Symposium on Technology-facilitated Gender-based Violence in November, convening leaders in digital rights and gender-based violence prevention and response. It is time to build alliances and explore solutions. Africa is home to multiple hubs of technological innovation, and to the world’s youngest population.

As the digital divide slowly closes, we must ensure that the technology being adopted is safe, private and secure, and does not reinforce or amplify existing gender and social inequalities.

Symposium attendees recognized the need for a bold, coordinated response, one that follows the same principles that guide all efforts to end gender-based violence: dignity, consent, confidentiality, privacy, and survivor-centered care.

We must create a world where “African innovators lead the way in designing digital ecosystems that are safe, ecosystems that are inclusive and empowering for all, and in particular for women and marginalized communities,” said Judy Karioko, from the International Research & Exchanges Board (IREX) in Kenya, at one of the Symposium’s sessions.

UNFPA is committed to making every space – physical or digital – safe for women and girls in all their diversity. Through the Making All Spaces Safe programme, supported by Global Affairs Canada, concrete action is being taken across Africa, including Benin, Ghana, Kenya and Tunisia, to integrate technology risks into efforts to end gender-based violence.

But no single institution can end digital violence alone. Governments, tech companies, educators, civil society, faith leaders, families – and every digital citizen – share responsibility.

The world’s future begins with Africa. As a region, and as a global community, we cannot wait. Because if we fail to make the online world safe, we fail to protect the future of girls, and the world growing up in the digital age.

Dr. Sennen Hounton is the UNFPA Regional Director for West and Central Africa, while Ms. Lydia Zigomo is the UNFPA Regional Director for East and Southern Africa

Source: Africa Renewal, United Nations

IPS UN Bureau

 


!function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],p=/^http:/.test(d.location)?'http':'https';if(!d.getElementById(id)){js=d.createElement(s);js.id=id;js.src=p+'://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js';fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js,fjs);}}(document, 'script', 'twitter-wjs');  
Catégories: Africa

Pages