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« En restant sur l’international, il peut éviter le goudron et les plumes » : à un an de la fin de son mandat, Emmanuel Macron hanté par son héritage politique

Le Figaro / Politique - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 10:11
DÉCRYPTAGE - Alors que son second quinquennat doit se terminer le soir du 13 mai 2027, le président tente déjà de valoriser son bilan malgré son impopularité.

Kiev et Moscou reprennent les frappes après l'expiration de la trêve, au moins un civil tué

RFI (Europe) - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 10:10
Des frappes russes en Ukraine ont fait au moins un mort dans la nuit de lundi à mardi 12 mai. Ces attaques ont été lancées au moment où expirait une trêve de trois jours que Moscou et Kiev se sont mutuellement accusés d’avoir violée. 

Communiqué de presse - Accord sur la lutte contre les pénuries de médicaments essentiels dans l’UE

Parlement européen (Nouvelles) - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 10:03
Les mesures de l'accord visent à soutenir la compétitivité et à améliorer la disponibilité et l’approvisionnement en médicaments critiques dans l’UE.
Commission de la santé publique

Source : © Union européenne, 2026 - PE

THE HACK: OpenAI vs Anthropic on EU cyber AI access

Euractiv.com - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 09:54
In today's edition: EU Inc. legal basis, fruits of Apple interoperability, Scaleway CEO
Categories: Afrique, European Union

En Algérie, Christophe Gleizes a reçu sa première visite en prison d'un diplomate français

France24 / France - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 09:53
L'organisation Reporters sans frontières (RSF) a fait savoir mardi que le journaliste français Christophe Gleizes, détenu depuis près d'un an en Algérie, avait reçu la veille sa première visite consulaire. 
Categories: France

FIRST AID: EU seals Critical Medicines Act deal

Euractiv.com - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 09:47
In today's edition: hantavirus, Biotech Act, tobacco
Categories: Afrique, European Union

VOLTAGE: Get ready for the energy super-think tank

Euractiv.com - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 09:35
In today's edition: energy transition, internal combustion engines, bottom trawling, ETS handouts
Categories: Afrique, European Union

FIREPOWER: Fincantieri positive on defence outlook despite Q1 revenue drop

Euractiv.com - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 09:29
In today's edition: drones, Latvian resignation, Ukraine
Categories: Afrique, European Union

Pots de retrouvailles, association, projet de pèlerinage… Comment les fidèles d’Emmanuel Macron s’organisent pour l’après-2027

Le Figaro / Politique - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 09:26
RÉCIT - Diverses initiatives fleurissent chez les fidèles du président pour faire vivre la flamme, mais aussi contrer la captation du parti Renaissance par Gabriel Attal.

À Reims, Édouard Philippe défend la « raison » face aux « idées dangereuses » du RN et de LFI

Le Figaro / Politique - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 09:25
REPORTAGE - Le chef d’Horizons a attaqué les « changements de pied » du parti lepéniste et dévoilé son dispositif de campagne.

Au sommet "Africa Forward", les dirigeants africains réclament des réformes du crédit

France24 / Afrique - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 09:20
Au deuxième jour du sommet "Africa Forward", les dirigeants africains ont plaidé mardi pour faciliter l'accès au crédit des pays du continent. Une mesure soutenue par Emmanuel Macron, qui a promis d'appuyer cette proposition lors du prochain G7, à Évian, en juin.
Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

HARVEST: As simple as that

Euractiv.com - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 09:17
In today's edition: cider, trawling, state aid, organic trade
Categories: Afrique, European Union

Pourquoi le Festival de Cannes est à Cannes ?

France24 / France - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 08:51
Hitler et Mussolini sont-ils à l’origine du Festival de Cannes ? Vous ne le saviez peut-être pas, mais le tapis rouge le plus célèbre du monde est né pour contrer la menace fasciste… Alors, pourquoi et comment ? Tout commence à Venise…
Categories: France

Le Potentiel : « RDC-Ouganda : six mémorandums pour renforcer le commerce, l’énergie et la sécurité »

Radio Okapi / RD Congo - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 08:43



La presse kinoise met en avant, ce mardi 12 mai 2026, la signature d’accords stratégiques entre Kinshasa et Kampala, destinés à consolider la coopération bilatérale dans les secteurs clés du commerce, de l’énergie et de la sécurité.

Categories: Afrique

The Iran War Is Costing Children’s Lives in Somalia

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 08:31

By Mohamed Omar
MOGADISHU, Somalia , May 12 2026 (IPS)

When war erupted in the Middle East in late February, the most visible consequences were playing out in the Persian Gulf, with smoke rising from Dubai’s Jebel Ali port and shipping traffic across one of the world’s most critical maritime routes grinding to a near halt.

What was harder to see was a mother in Somalia, traveling 200 kilometers with a child too sick to sit upright, arriving at a stabilization center that was running low on the one product that could save her child’s life.

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most consequential maritime chokepoints, has sent shockwaves through global supply chains that reach far beyond the Gulf. Before the war began, roughly 3,000 vessels transited the strait each month.

In March, that number fell to just 154. The UN has warned that the resulting disruption is triggering a widening humanitarian and economic shock far beyond the Middle East, with rising oil prices and reduced maritime traffic driving up transport and food costs across import-dependent economies. We are certainly feeling that shock in Somalia.

Dr. Mohamed Omar is head of Health and Nutrition at Action Against Hunger in Somalia.

Somalia was already contending with acute malnutrition, with an estimated 1.84 million children under five expected to be impacted this year, up from 1.7 million last year. Of those cases, over 480,000 involve severe acute malnutrition, the form that requires immediate inpatient medical treatment.

These children are treated with two products: Ready to Use Therapeutic Food (RUTF) and therapeutic milk, specifically the formulas F-75 and F-100, which are produced exclusively by Nutriset in France. Before the Strait of Hormuz closure, those products arrived in Mogadishu in 30 to 35 days via the Suez Canal and the Gulf of Aden.

Ships now divert around the entire African continent, extending delivery times to 55 to 65 days. That is nearly double the original transit time, and it comes with far less certainty about when shipments will actually arrive.

The cost increases compound the delay. A carton of therapeutic milk that cost $139 in 2024 rose to $186 in 2025 after USAID funding cuts, and has since climbed to $200 in 2026 following the Strait of Hormuz closure, a 44 percent increase in two years.

Fuel costs inside Somalia have surged by 150 percent, raising both the price of food for households and the cost of transporting supplies from Mogadishu to remote program sites like Hudur in the Bakool region. They represent the difference between whether a child receives treatment and whether a facility can afford to stay open.

Action Against Hunger, which operates 10 of the 52 remaining stabilization centers in the country, currently has only 69 cartons of therapeutic milk on hand. That figure covers roughly two weeks to one month of supply under current demand, and demand is rising sharply. Admissions at our facilities increased 35 percent between the first quarter of 2025 and the first quarter of 2026. At the same time, the number of stabilization centers across Somalia has already fallen from 71 to 52, after USAID’s termination order prompted facility closures earlier this year.

In areas such as Wajid, Somalia, Action Against Hunger replaced diesel-powered engines with solar-powered systems to supply water, reducing costs and providing a sustainable, long-term solution. Credit: Action Against Hunger

The funding gap to sustain nutrition interventions through 2026 stands at $2.9 million. That figure covers product procurement and in-country transportation costs. To put that in context: treating a child for severe acute malnutrition costs between $140 and $213. Preventing it costs $35. The math on early intervention is not complicated.

The Council on Foreign Relations has documented how shipping containers at Dubai’s International Humanitarian City now carry a $3,000 emergency surcharge, while the World Food Program has warned that supply chain pressures are driving up the costs of life-saving operations globally. These are systemic failures that compound each other.

There is a specific and urgent timeline here. UNICEF’s in-country stock of therapeutic milk is projected to run out by August 2026. Because of the extended shipping times caused by the Africa diversion route, funding must be committed by May or June for the product to arrive before that deadline.

Iran has agreed, in principle, to facilitate humanitarian aid shipments through the strait, and diplomatic efforts to reopen the waterway to commercial traffic are ongoing. But the ceasefire remains fragile, and even a partial reopening offers no guarantee that the specialized supply chains supporting therapeutic nutrition programs will recover in time.

The supply chain disruptions caused by the Iran war are a new layer on top of pre-existing funding deficits and a withdrawal of US foreign aid that was already forcing closures and rationing across the country.

The children arriving at stabilization centers and outpatient nutrition sites in Somalia did not cause any of these disruptions. They are the downstream consequence of a global logistics network absorbing simultaneous shocks it was never designed to handle. A $2.9 million funding gap is solvable. The question is whether the international community will respond in time.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Categories: Africa, France

The new flexi-lateralism: International cooperation in an era of raw power politics

Escalatory attacks on multilateral rules and institutions in this era of raw power politics have plunged international politics into uncharted territory. Traditional alliances have been fractured and new partnerships between unlikely bedfellows are emerging. No longer in transition, the post-World War II world order is in rupture. This paper examines international cooperation under these conditions and argues that a new ‘flexi-lateralism’ is taking shape as a pragmatic response to changing times. We define the new flexi-lateralism as international cooperation expressed through adaptable modular tools and selective coalitions, anchored in UN norms, that proceeds even when universal commitments are openly contested and attacked. Our paper considers a set of initiatives launched around the Financing for Development (FfD) conference in Sevilla (July 2025) on the issue of debt servicing. We illustrate how cooperation often depends on selective participation, informal venues and issue-specific coalitions, rather than comprehensive universal bargains. The paper uses ‘flexi-lateralism’ as a term for these flexible multilateral forms that sit between classic UN-style universality and narrow great-power deals. We conclude that international cooperation in this era is neither automatically collapsing nor simply fragmenting. It is adapting and reconfigured through overlapping clubs and coalitions with uneven implications for the Global South and the North.

The new flexi-lateralism: International cooperation in an era of raw power politics

Escalatory attacks on multilateral rules and institutions in this era of raw power politics have plunged international politics into uncharted territory. Traditional alliances have been fractured and new partnerships between unlikely bedfellows are emerging. No longer in transition, the post-World War II world order is in rupture. This paper examines international cooperation under these conditions and argues that a new ‘flexi-lateralism’ is taking shape as a pragmatic response to changing times. We define the new flexi-lateralism as international cooperation expressed through adaptable modular tools and selective coalitions, anchored in UN norms, that proceeds even when universal commitments are openly contested and attacked. Our paper considers a set of initiatives launched around the Financing for Development (FfD) conference in Sevilla (July 2025) on the issue of debt servicing. We illustrate how cooperation often depends on selective participation, informal venues and issue-specific coalitions, rather than comprehensive universal bargains. The paper uses ‘flexi-lateralism’ as a term for these flexible multilateral forms that sit between classic UN-style universality and narrow great-power deals. We conclude that international cooperation in this era is neither automatically collapsing nor simply fragmenting. It is adapting and reconfigured through overlapping clubs and coalitions with uneven implications for the Global South and the North.

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