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Scandale IMETAL : jusqu’à 10 ans de prison requis contre les hauts responsables

Algérie 360 - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 20:36

Le parquet de la Cour d’Alger a requis de lourdes peines à l’encontre des prévenus poursuivis dans une affaire de corruption ayant touché le groupe […]

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Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Press release - Provisional deal to update social benefit rules for EU mobile workers

Európa Parlament hírei - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 20:13
The agreed text seeks to clarify social security rules for EU workers who have moved to a different EU country, while fairly distributing obligations among member states.
Committee on Employment and Social Affairs

Source : © European Union, 2026 - EP

Nouvelle carte grise électronique : ce qui bloque vraiment sur le terrain selon Zebdi

Algérie 360 - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 19:01

Annoncée comme une étape clé pour simplifier les démarches administratives, la nouvelle carte grise électronique pour les véhicules connaît des débuts contrastés. Dans une mise […]

L’article Nouvelle carte grise électronique : ce qui bloque vraiment sur le terrain selon Zebdi est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique

Criminalized Sanctuaries: How India’s 2026 Trans Act Undermines Safety 

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 19:00

Safe cities cannot be built on a foundation of exclusion. They are built on trust, dignity, and the right to exist without fear. Credit: Shutterstock

By ElsaMarie D’Silva and Harish Iyer
MUMBAI, India, Apr 22 2026 (IPS)

On 30 March, the eve of Transgender Day of Visibility, the Transgender Persons Amendment Act, 2026 became law in India, narrowing who can be recognized as transgender and requiring individuals to have their identity verified by authorities. This bill risks placing already vulnerable people under deeper scrutiny while destabilizing the informal systems of care they rely on.

India’s earlier law – the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019 – included provisions that criminalized abuse and explicitly prohibited forcing a transgender person to leave their home, recognizing the vulnerability many face within families.

The idea of a “safe home” is often tested at one’s own front door. Harish saw this first-hand. The family of Kamal (name changed), a young trans man, only recognised his sex assigned at birth, female, and forced him into a marriage with a man for “correction,” subjecting him to repeated sexual violence. He escaped to safety, Harish’s apartment in Mumbai. When his abusers tracked him down, pounding on the door and threatening to drag him back, Harish stood his ground. That cramped apartment did what the system would not: it kept a survivor alive.

When transgender individuals can feel safe in their identity, they are more likely to seek help, report abuse, and participate fully in public life. This is why we must urgently revisit the 2026 amendments, ensuring they uphold self-identification, protect chosen families, and strengthen, rather than undermine, the conditions for safety

The 2026 amendments risk weakening these protections. Consider this: a young transgender person leaves an unsafe home, as Kamal did, and finds shelter with a friend or within a community network. In practice, these arrangements often exist outside formal legal recognition. Under a system that prioritizes biological families and requires official validation of identity, such support can be treated as informal, illegitimate, or even suspect.

The consequence is chilling. The very act of offering refuge can come under scrutiny, creating fear for those who open their doors and uncertainty for those seeking safety. Instead of strengthening protection, the law risks reinforcing the power of those who cause harm. Many people, unlike Harish, might not want to take the risk.

This is not just a legal shift. It is a shift in who feels safe to survive.

For many LGBTQIA+ people, especially transgender youth, home is not where you are born. It is where you are accepted. The amendment destabilizes that sense of safety.

Another concern is how the amended law introduces certification processes that require transgender individuals to have their identity validated by authorities. Let us consider the implications. If a transgender person is assaulted, how do they approach a police station when the same system questions their identity? If your identity must be approved, your credibility is already compromised.

From experience, we know that when trust in institutions declines, reporting declines, and when reporting declines, perpetrators operate with greater impunity. This is how violence scales, not through dramatic acts, but through systemic silence.

Indeed, through Red Dot Foundation’s Safecity platform, we have mapped over 130,000 reports of sexual and gender-based violence, and one pattern is unmistakable: violence concentrates where protection is weakest.

In Haryana, for example, Safecity data revealed harassment hotspots near alcohol shops along highways, areas where women reported routine intimidated. When this data was shared with the police, it prompted discussions on restricting alcohol consumption zones and increasing oversight.

What this demonstrates is critical: when lived experiences are made visible, institutions are better positioned to respond. Safety improves not through individual vigilance alone, but through systemic awareness and action.

This is what prevention looks like.

On the other hand, when laws increase stigma or make identity harder to assert, they weaken the very systems that enable such responses. Policies that increase barriers do not reduce violence, instead they drive it underground. Safety must be understood as a public good, designed through inclusive laws, responsive institutions, and community trust.

India’s Constitution guarantees equality, dignity, and personal liberty. These are not abstract ideals – they are the operating conditions for safe societies. When the state introduces identity verification processes that undermine autonomy and dignity, it is not just limiting rights.

It is weakening the systems that prevent violence.

This is not only India’s story. From parts of the United States to Europe, we see increasing attempts to regulate gender identity and restrict bodily autonomy – whether through limits on healthcare access, increased scrutiny of identity, or complex legal recognition processes. These policies are often framed as administrative safeguards. But their impact is consistent – they erode trust, isolate communities, and increase exposure to harm.

To change this, governments must:

  • uphold self-identification as a fundamental principle of dignity
  • ensure that support systems, formal or informal, are protected, not penalized
  • invest in data-driven approaches that surface, rather than suppress, lived experiences of violence

We have seen what works. When institutions listen, when communities are trusted, when dignity is non-negotiable – violence reduces. When transgender individuals can feel safe in their identity, they are more likely to seek help, report abuse, and participate fully in public life. This is why we must urgently revisit the 2026 amendments, ensuring they uphold self-identification, protect chosen families, and strengthen, rather than undermine, the conditions for safety.

Safe cities cannot be built on a foundation of exclusion. They are built on trust, dignity, and the right to exist without fear.

ElsaMarie D’Silva (she/her) is the founder of Red Dot Foundation and creator of Safecity, a global platform that crowdsources data on gender-based violence to inform safer cities. She is an Aspen New Voices Fellow, Yale World Fellow, and Visiting Fellow at the Centre for Protecting Women Online at the Open University, UK.

Harish Iyer (he/she) is a renowned equal rights activist and a gender fluid trans person. He is a veteran campaigner and moved Supreme Court in landmark cases, including the decriminalization of Section 377, Marriage Equality, and LGBTQIA+ blood donation rights. He works at the intersection of law and social justice to build a more equitable society.

Categories: Africa, Afrique

Comment le contact humain modifie votre cerveau et vous fait vous sentir mieux

BBC Afrique - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 18:54
Passer du temps avec les autres peut être bénéfique pour notre santé mentale et physique, affirme le neuroscientifique Ben Rein.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Comment l’IA et l’automatisation réduisent les coûts et optimisent la production en temps réel

Algérie 360 - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 18:48

Les défis auxquels font face les producteurs agroalimentaires sont nombreux : coûts opérationnels, incertitude sur les chaînes d’approvisionnement, pénurie de talents qualifiés, objectifs de durabilité…. […]

L’article Comment l’IA et l’automatisation réduisent les coûts et optimisent la production en temps réel est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique

Coupe du monde 2026 : Mandrea et Mastil forfaits, alerte rouge dans les bois !

Algérie 360 - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 18:12

C’était dans l’air, c’est désormais officiel ! Pas de Coupe du monde pour le gardien de but Anthony Mandrea. Il devra se faire opérer mercredi, […]

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Transport aérien en Afrique : Air Algérie intègre le Top 5 des compagnies en 2026

Algérie 360 - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 17:39

Dans un marché aérien africain en pleine mutation, Air Algérie tire son épingle du jeu. Grâce à une flotte renforcée et un réseau international en […]

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Oran : polémique après la destruction du mausolée Sidi Abdelkader, enquête en cours

Algérie 360 - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 17:23

C’est une séquence qui a choqué l’Algérie entière. À Marsat El Hadjadj (Oran), une enquête judiciaire et administrative a été lancée suite à la démolition […]

L’article Oran : polémique après la destruction du mausolée Sidi Abdelkader, enquête en cours est apparu en premier sur .

From Resolution to Reality: Delivering Water and Sanitation for “The Africa We Want”

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 16:49

Clean drinking water runs from a tap in Senegal. Credit: UN Photo/Evan Schneider
 
The African Union has pronounced their theme for 2026 to be: ‘Assuring Sustainable Water Availability and Safe Sanitation Systems to Achieve the Goals of Agenda 2063’. In an opinion piece, AUC Chairperson, Mahmoud Ali Youssouf explores the continent's renewed commitment to protecting and managing its vital water resources.

By Mahmoud Ali Youssouf
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia, Apr 22 2026 (IPS)

When Africa’s Heads of State and Government gathered in Addis Ababa on 14 February 2026 for the African Union’s 39th Ordinary Session, they did more than adopt another resolution. They made a choice: to place at the centre of the agenda the most fundamental, life-sustaining and strategic resource our continent possesses: water.

The theme adopted by our leaders, “Assuring Sustainable Water Availability and Safe Sanitation Systems to Achieve the Goals of Agenda 2063,” is not a bureaucratic formality. It is a declaration of intent. It reflects a simple but profound truth: without water security, there can be no food security, no industrialization, no public health, and no lasting peace or prosperity.

The scale of the challenge we face remains stark. Across Africa, water scarcity and inadequate sanitation continue to undermine economic growth and human dignity. Waterborne diseases remain among the leading causes of death in many parts of the continent. Millions of Africans, disproportionately women and girls in rural communities, still walk long distances each day to collect water instead of attending school, pursuing livelihoods, or participating fully in the life of their communities.

This is not merely an inconvenience. It is an injustice. It is also a brake on the ambitions we have set for ourselves in Agenda 2063, Africa’s collective blueprint for inclusive growth, sustainable development and shared prosperity.

The year 2026 must therefore mark a turning point: the moment we move decisively from diagnosis to delivery.

The African Union Commission’s Department of Agriculture, Rural Development, Blue Economy and Sustainable Environment has been entrusted with advancing this agenda. Yet responsibility cannot rest with one department or with the Commission alone.

Achieving water security will require sustained collaboration among member states, regional organizations, civil society, the private sector and, critically, African communities themselves.

The urgency of this task is heightened by the accelerating climate crisis. Africa is already experiencing more frequent droughts and devastating floods. Changing rainfall patterns are shrinking rivers, lakes and reservoirs in some regions while unleashing destructive flooding in others.

These disruptions threaten the livelihoods of millions of Africans who depend on agriculture and pastoralism. Sustainable water management is therefore not only a development priority; it is a resilience imperative.

Water also reminds us that cooperation is not optional. Nearly 60 percent of Africa’s freshwater resources are shared across national borders. Rivers such as the Nile, the Niger, Congo, the Zambezi and the Volta link countries and communities in complex hydrological systems that transcend political boundaries.

These shared waters can become either sources of cooperation or sources of tension. The choice is ours. Strengthening collaborative frameworks for the equitable and sustainable management of transboundary water resources must be a priority for our continent. Water, after all, recognizes no borders.

Sanitation demands equal urgency. Safe sanitation is not a luxury; it is fundamental to human dignity, public health and economic productivity. Yet millions of Africans, particularly in rural communities and rapidly expanding urban settlements still lack access to even basic sanitation facilities. In the twenty-first century, this reality is unacceptable.

Addressing these challenges will require investment, innovation and political will. It will also require a shift in how we design and implement solutions. Sustainable progress cannot be imposed from above. Communities must be involved in planning, building and maintaining water and sanitation systems. Local ownership is essential if infrastructure is to endure and deliver real benefits.

The African Union is therefore developing a comprehensive implementation strategy to support the theme of the year. This strategy will promote innovative technologies for water purification and efficient resource management.

It will encourage stronger water governance and expand access to sanitation infrastructure. It will also prioritize the participation of youth, women and marginalized communities while facilitating the sharing of best practices across our continent.

Innovation, inclusion and cooperation must guide our collective efforts.

As I travel across Africa in my capacity as Chairperson of the African Union Commission, I am reminded repeatedly that water is not merely a matter of infrastructure or policy. It is about people.

It is about a mother who no longer fears losing her child to a preventable disease caused by contaminated water. It is about a girl who can remain in school because clean water flows in her village. It is about a farmer who can irrigate crops through dry seasons. It is about an entrepreneur whose business can grow because reliable water supply supports production.

These everyday transformations form the true foundation of Africa’s development.

The African Union’s theme for 2026 is therefore a clarion call for governments to prioritize water and sanitation in national development agendas. Because water touches every sector; agriculture, health, energy, industry and education — our response must be equally integrated.

African countries must strengthen cooperation, share expertise and mobilize resources to address common challenges. Regional economic communities and river basin organizations have a crucial role to play in supporting collaborative water governance. The African Union will continue to facilitate dialogue and partnerships that promote sustainable and equitable management of shared water resources.

But governments cannot act alone. Civil society organisations, the private sector, research institutions and development partners must also contribute their expertise and resources. Investments in water infrastructure, sanitation systems and climate-resilient water management are investments in Africa’s stability, prosperity and future.

The stakes could not be higher. By 2050, Africa’s population is projected to double, placing increasing pressure on water resources and infrastructure. Ensuring sustainable water access today will determine whether our growing cities thrive, whether our agriculture can feed our people, and whether our economies can realize their full potential.

This is why the African Union’s theme of the year is not simply a slogan. It is a continental commitment.

Together, we can ensure that every African has access to safe water and dignified sanitation. In doing so, we will not only protect lives and livelihoods; we will unlock the immense potential of sustainable development across our continent.

Ultimately, our success will not be measured by the eloquence of our declarations. It will be measured by the taps that flow, the sanitation systems that function and the millions of lives transformed.

Mahmoud Ali Youssouf is Chairperson of the African Union Commission.

Source: Africa Renewal, United Nations

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Categories: Africa, Afrique

The Stadium of the Disappeared – World Cup Should Kick Off Justice for Families

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 16:36

Mexico is co-hosting the 2026 World Cup even as the country has been shaken by a wave of cartel violence and revelations of mass graves. Credit: Shutterstock

By Juanita Goebertus and Delphine Starr
BOGOTÄ, Apr 22 2026 (IPS)

This week marks the six-week countdown to the opening game of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which kicks off with a match between Mexico and South Africa on Thursday, June 11, at the Estadio Azteca in Mexico City.

Mexico is co-hosting the 2026 World Cup even as the country has been shaken by a wave of cartel violence and revelations of mass graves. In February, Jalisco New Generation Cartel, one of the country’s largest, retaliated after the government killed its longtime leader. The cartel established roadblocks, burned vehicles, and carried out other attacks across much of the country, including in Guadalajara, the capital of Jalisco state and one of three World Cup host cities in Mexico.

These scenes mark the latest escalation of ongoing violence. Four tournament games will be played at Guadalajara’s Akron Stadium. For the families of Mexico’s disappeared, the stadium holds little association with sports, fun, and cheering. Instead, the surrounding area has become synonymous with excavations, exhumations, mass graves, and the agony of not knowing where missing loved ones are.

Fans should know that in the very same state rushing to spend US$1.3 billion on highway reconstruction and hotel developments for the World Cup, mothers will continue digging in the dirt for their disappeared children

Civilian search collectives such as the Searching Warriors of Jalisco reported nearly two dozen clandestine graves last year, and recovered at least 500 bags containing human remains, all less than 20 kilometers from the stadium. In Las Agujas, a nearby plot of land, they found 270 bags.

These horrors are part of an ongoing national crisis that has devastated thousands of families in Mexico, where, according to an official registry, over 100,000 people are missing. And reported disappearances have increased more than 200 percent since 2015.

The state of Jalisco sits at the epicenter of the crisis, with a staggering 16,079 recorded disappearances as of March (this figure includes cases reported since 1952, although most are missing from 2006 onward). Experts say even this number may not reflect the true scale of the problem. The other two host cities — Mexico City and Monterrey — also have their own share of disappearances.

People are disappeared in Mexico for many reasons, often tied to organized crime. Criminal groups frequently use disappearances as a tool of control and intimidation. In Jalisco, the cartel’s forced recruitment of teenagers plays an important role. When families report disappearances, authorities often fail to investigate, Investigators and forensic technicians often lack the training and basic resources needed to do key parts of their jobs, like securing crime scenes, analyzing evidence, or identifying and storing human remains. Witnesses and victims are frequently terrified of retaliation for cooperating with investigations, and the authorities are unable or unwilling to effectively protect them.

Mexico’s government has also historically downplayed the scale of the crisis. During former president Andres Manuel López Obrador’s term, the number of people reported missing surpassed 100,000. He falsely claimed that the count had been “altered to attack the government,” prompting the top official searching for the disappeared to resign. López Obrador’s successor, President Claudia Sheinbaum, has rejected a UN inquiry over the disappearances and advanced legal changes that, relatives of some disappeared say, would weaken the search for the missing.

Many relatives of the victims feel justice will never come. Forensic work near Akron Stadium is incomplete; bags are still unprocessed and there is no comprehensive report on the total number of victims.

Most football fans visiting Guadalajara this summer will have no idea of the heavy history beneath its polished pedestrian walkways, modern stadium, and restaurants boasting artisanal tequilas. Fans should know that in the very same state rushing to spend US$1.3 billion on highway reconstruction and hotel developments for the World Cup, mothers will continue digging in the dirt for their disappeared children.

To start putting an end to their suffering, the Mexican government should use the World Cup and the world’s spotlight to strengthen its justice system so that people feel safe and at the same time the authorities can effectively search for the missing people. That would be a World Cup worth cheering for.

Juanita Goebertus is Americas director and Delphine Starr is an Editorial officer at Human Rights Watch.

 

Categories: Africa, Afrique

« Faux concours » : Le ministère de la Santé met en garde

Algérie 360 - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 16:25

À l’heure où les réseaux sociaux sont inondés de publications imitant à la perfection les logos et la charte graphique des institutions, la vigilance est […]

L’article « Faux concours » : Le ministère de la Santé met en garde est apparu en premier sur .

Retards de livraison et stocks américains sous tension : le Danemark mise sur la défense aérienne européenne

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 16:19

Selon un analyste, ce choix s'explique probablement par les efforts visant à renforcer l'industrie européenne de la défense et par les inquiétudes suscitées par les ambitions de Donald Trump concernant le Groenland

The post Retards de livraison et stocks américains sous tension : le Danemark mise sur la défense aérienne européenne appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

Comment des mercenaires colombiens ont aidé les FSR au Soudan

BBC Afrique - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 16:18
Le Conflict Insights Group (CIG) affirme que ses recherches montrent également l’étendue de l’implication des Émirats arabes unis.
Categories: Afrique

Comment des mercenaires colombiens ont aidé les FSR au Soudan

BBC Afrique - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 16:18
Le Conflict Insights Group (CIG) affirme que ses recherches montrent également l’étendue de l’implication des Émirats arabes unis.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Affaire du roman “Houris” : la justice condamne Kamel Daoud, le verdict tombe

Algérie 360 - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 15:47

La cour de Falaoucen, à Oran, a condamné hier le 21 avril, par contumace, l’écrivain franco-algérien Kamel Daoud à trois ans de prison ferme, assortis […]

L’article Affaire du roman “Houris” : la justice condamne Kamel Daoud, le verdict tombe est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique, European Union

Le ministre allemand de la Défense s’attend à une décision sur l’avion de combat SCAF « cette semaine »

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 15:35

Les progrès sont au point mort depuis des mois et les dernières tentatives de négociation ont échoué la semaine dernière

The post Le ministre allemand de la Défense s’attend à une décision sur l’avion de combat SCAF « cette semaine » appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

Algériens déportés en Nouvelle-Calédonie : le dossier relancé, le MAE annonce des mesures spéciales

Algérie 360 - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 15:25

Le dossier des Algériens déportés en Nouvelle-Calédonie par la France coloniale revient à nouveau sur la scène. Envoyés par force à l’autre bout du monde, […]

L’article Algériens déportés en Nouvelle-Calédonie : le dossier relancé, le MAE annonce des mesures spéciales est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique, European Union

Les ambassadeurs de l’UE donnent leur feu vert au prêt de 90 milliards d’euros à l’Ukraine

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 15:02

« Aujourd’hui, tant le prêt de 90 milliards d’euros à l’Ukraine que le 20e paquet de sanctions ont été approuvés au niveau du Coreper »

The post Les ambassadeurs de l’UE donnent leur feu vert au prêt de 90 milliards d’euros à l’Ukraine appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

L’est de l’Allemagne a davantage bénéficié des fonds européens que l’ouest, selon une étude de l’IFO

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 04/22/2026 - 14:30

Les fonds européens ont permis de soutenir les investissements publics en Allemagne de l'Est, qui auraient autrement été moins importants

The post L’est de l’Allemagne a davantage bénéficié des fonds européens que l’ouest, selon une étude de l’IFO appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

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