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La micropuce bientôt obligatoire pour tous les chiens et chats de l’UE 

Euractiv.fr - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 11:46

Ces règles plus strictes « empêcheront les opérateurs abusifs et illégaux de se cacher dans l’ombre », a déclaré l'eurodéputée Veronika Vrecionová (ECR), rapporteuse du dossier.

The post La micropuce bientôt obligatoire pour tous les chiens et chats de l’UE  appeared first on Euractiv FR.

EU heavyweights pick apart Commission’s telecoms reform plan

Euractiv.com - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 11:46
Germany, France, and Italy lead a group of six countries urging other capitals to oppose the Commission's ambitions for the Digital Networks Act
Categories: Africa, European Union

« Les décisions venaient d’en haut » : déballage ahurissant au procès Imetal et peines sévères requises

Algérie 360 - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 11:41

Le procès du complexe IMETAL continue de mettre au jour une cascade d’irrégularités, de tensions internes et de décisions contestées.  Devant le juge, les cadres […]

L’article « Les décisions venaient d’en haut » : déballage ahurissant au procès Imetal et peines sévères requises est apparu en premier sur .

Police investigate theft of four dogs from Malawi presidential palace

BBC Africa - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 11:35
Police search ex-President Chakwera's residence after a suspect said the dogs were being kept there.
Categories: Africa, Afrique

Russia closes Polish consulate in Siberia in tit-for-tat move

Euractiv.com - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 11:32
Poland is the only European country to have a consulate in Siberia

La police intercepte 19 voitures volées au Canada

24 Heures au Bénin - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 11:18

Une opération de la Police Républicaine a permis de mener un contrôle intensif sur le territoire béninois.

Dénommée « L'opération Screen » 2025, elle s'est déroulée au niveau des points d'entrée stratégiques du Bénin. Selon BIP Radio, les éléments de la Police Républicaine se sont rendus aux postes frontaliers terrestres de Hillacondji et Hounsahoué, au passage de Sèmè-Kraké, au port maritime, à l'aéroport international de Cotonou, et sur la lagune de Porto-Novo.
Le bilan de la période du 7 au 20 septembre 2025 fait état de saisie d'un faux passeport américain, d'un pistolet automatique, de 19 voitures à 4 roues volées au Canada, ainsi que 3 motocyclettes.

Le Commissariat de Sèmè-Podji a saisi plus d'une demi-tonne de cannabis. Des vérifications systématiques ont été effectuées sur environ 18 000 personnes et 4 500 véhicules. Une dizaine de navires ont été aussi inspectés.

Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

La HAAC sollicite 3,46 milliards FCFA pour ses actions en 2026

24 Heures au Bénin - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 11:11

Le Président de la Haute Autorité de l'Audiovisuel et de la Communication du Bénin (HAAC), Édouard Loko a défendu ce mercredi 26 novembre 2025 devant la Commission des finances de l'Assemblée Nationale du Bénin, un budget de 3,46 milliards FCFA.

Conformément au Cadre de Dépenses à Moyen Terme, l'enveloppe proposée s'élève à 2,85 milliards FCFA, soit une réduction de 8,12 % par rapport à 2025. Devant la Commission, le. Président de la HAAC a souligné que les ressources nécessaires pour les actions de l'institution en 2026 sont chiffrées à 3,46 milliards FCFA, soit un déficit de 606,6 millions FCFA.

Actions menées en 2025

Au 30 septembre de l'année en cours, 57,6 % des crédits ont été engagés et 81,4 % ordonnancés. Les ressources ont permis la tenue des sessions statutaires, le renouvellement des conventions avec les médias, les contrôles techniques, l'entretien des infrastructures, les activités scientifiques ainsi que la participation aux rencontres internationales.

Edouard Loko a noté des difficultés. Elles concernent les lenteurs des procédures de commande publique et l'insuffisance de moyens pour les équipements de monitoring. La HAAC a soimis des besoins additionnels évalués à 625 millions FCFA. Le président a sollicité un appui pour une dotation complémentaire de 606,6 millions FCFA afin que la HAAC puisse mener convenablement ses actions en 2026.

Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

EU-Migrationswende: Kommissar Brunner im Interview über Aufgaben und Grenzen der Kommission

Euractiv.de - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 11:00
Die EU ist gerade dabei, ihr Migrations- und Asylsystem grundlegend neu zu ordnen. Der Kommissar wirbt in seinen ersten 100 Amtstagen für strengere Rückführungsregeln.

Video einer Ausschusssitzung - Donnerstag, 27. November 2025 - 09:00 - Ausschuss für Sicherheit und Verteidigung

Dauer des Videos : 60'

Haftungsausschluss : Die Verdolmetschung der Debatten soll die Kommunikation erleichtern, sie stellt jedoch keine authentische Aufzeichnung der Debatten dar. Authentisch sind nur die Originalfassungen der Reden bzw. ihre überprüften schriftlichen Übersetzungen.
Quelle : © Europäische Union, 2025 - EP

FIRST AID: Good food, bad food and a tax debate

Euractiv.com - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 10:32
In today's edition: Pharma Package, tobacco and Europe's silent HIV crisis

Financement des ONG : la Commission rejette à nouveau les accusations d’irrégularités

Euractiv.fr - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 10:29

La Commission européenne a une nouvelle fois rejeté les allégations d’irrégularités dans l’octroi de subventions européennes à des groupes de défense de l’environnement, lors d’une audition mercredi 26 novembre au Parlement européen, alors que débutaient les travaux d’un comité d’examen sur la question.

The post Financement des ONG : la Commission rejette à nouveau les accusations d’irrégularités appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Visa Schengen pour la Belgique : la procédure de demande remise en question

Algérie 360 - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 10:27

Une recommandation du médiateur fédéral belge a été émise afin de réexaminer la nécessité de la révision de l’actuelle procédure de demande de visa Schengen […]

L’article Visa Schengen pour la Belgique : la procédure de demande remise en question est apparu en premier sur .

Precolonial, colonial, and postcolonial conflict and forced migration in Africa

In this chapter we draw on our research with displaced people, conflict, violence, gender, and humanitarian aid between 2006 and 2024 in different African countries, which we conducted separately but were brought together by these shared research interests. We address the nexus between conflict, peace, and forced migration using examples from Africa. We situate the discussion within the precolonial, colonial, and postcolonial eras, which we take not as mere footnotes but as salient periods in the continent’s history that have influenced current conflicts and forced displacement in Africa. We therefore emphasize the role of history in understanding contemporary conflicts and forced migration on the continent. In doing so, we critique Western research perspectives on forms of violence and their ahistorical explanations of contemporary violent conflicts in Africa. We explain the role of colonial borders not only in engendering conflict but also in creating structural obstacles for refugees to contribute to transformation in countries of origin. We also critique the separation of peacebuilding in the countries of origin from refugee protection in host countries and highlight this as a limitation of global (i.e., Western) perspectives on peacebuilding.

Precolonial, colonial, and postcolonial conflict and forced migration in Africa

In this chapter we draw on our research with displaced people, conflict, violence, gender, and humanitarian aid between 2006 and 2024 in different African countries, which we conducted separately but were brought together by these shared research interests. We address the nexus between conflict, peace, and forced migration using examples from Africa. We situate the discussion within the precolonial, colonial, and postcolonial eras, which we take not as mere footnotes but as salient periods in the continent’s history that have influenced current conflicts and forced displacement in Africa. We therefore emphasize the role of history in understanding contemporary conflicts and forced migration on the continent. In doing so, we critique Western research perspectives on forms of violence and their ahistorical explanations of contemporary violent conflicts in Africa. We explain the role of colonial borders not only in engendering conflict but also in creating structural obstacles for refugees to contribute to transformation in countries of origin. We also critique the separation of peacebuilding in the countries of origin from refugee protection in host countries and highlight this as a limitation of global (i.e., Western) perspectives on peacebuilding.

Precolonial, colonial, and postcolonial conflict and forced migration in Africa

In this chapter we draw on our research with displaced people, conflict, violence, gender, and humanitarian aid between 2006 and 2024 in different African countries, which we conducted separately but were brought together by these shared research interests. We address the nexus between conflict, peace, and forced migration using examples from Africa. We situate the discussion within the precolonial, colonial, and postcolonial eras, which we take not as mere footnotes but as salient periods in the continent’s history that have influenced current conflicts and forced displacement in Africa. We therefore emphasize the role of history in understanding contemporary conflicts and forced migration on the continent. In doing so, we critique Western research perspectives on forms of violence and their ahistorical explanations of contemporary violent conflicts in Africa. We explain the role of colonial borders not only in engendering conflict but also in creating structural obstacles for refugees to contribute to transformation in countries of origin. We also critique the separation of peacebuilding in the countries of origin from refugee protection in host countries and highlight this as a limitation of global (i.e., Western) perspectives on peacebuilding.

Critical minerals in EU trade discourse: navigating a trilemma in times of geopolitical competition

Critical minerals (CMs) have become a strategic priority for the European Union (EU) amid the green and digital transitions. These resources – including lithium, cobalt, rare earths and nickel – are essential for clean energy technologies, defence systems and electronics. Yet, their processing and refining are highly concentrated in a few countries, leaving the EU especially vulnerable to supply disruptions and fuelling geopolitical tensions.

Recent shocks, including the COVID-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine, have further exposed the fragility of supply chains. At the same time, extracting and trading CMs pose severe environmental and social challenges, from high carbon footprints to local community impacts. EU trade policy is therefore confronted with a trilemma: how to safeguard economic competitiveness, ensure en­vironmental sustainability and enhance security of supply.

This policy brief summarises research tracing how the Euro­pean Commission’s trade discourse on CMs has evolved to address the trilemma (Laurens, 2025). Initially, com­muni­cations focused narrowly on free trade and market access for raw materials. Gradually, sustainability and security considerations entered the narrative. Most recently, the EU has embraced a hybrid framing, simultaneously highlighting economic, environ­mental and security objectives in its trade discourse on CMs.

Although this hybrid discursive approach can help build broader support for CM policies and agreements by appealing to diverse stakeholders, it also demands careful policy design to minimise trade-offs and deliver on its promises. Without credible implementation and genuine integration of economic, environmental and security objectives, hybrid framing risks remaining largely rhetorical and failing to steer policy in practice.

Key policy messages:

  • The EU should adopt an integrated approach that effectively addresses economic, sustainability and security goals together while anticipating trade-offs to support more robust CM policies. This requires strong coordination across trade, industry, environ­ment and security-related directorates-general to align CM strategies, avoid policy conflicts and maximise synergies. It may also require short-term economic sacrifices for long-term resilience.
  • Early and meaningful engagement with research institutions, civil society, local communities and industry should move beyond formal consultation and enable genuine co-creation of solutions. Dialogue should begin before key decisions on CMs are finalised, incorporate stakeholder input trans­parently, and respond to concerns about sustain­ability and security of supply.
  • CM policies and agreements should provide for binding obligations and concrete implementation plans to ensure environmental and labour pro­tection, local value addition, skills development and technology transfer in resource-rich but eco­nomically vulnerable regions. Listening to partner governments and local communities as well as investing in the knowledge of local political, social and environ­mental contexts are essential for building trust and long-term partnerships.
  • International cooperation on CMs should be strengthened through inclusive arrangements that involve both major consumers and producing countries. Clubs composed primarily of resource-poor but wealthy economies risk being perceived as exclusionary.

Critical minerals in EU trade discourse: navigating a trilemma in times of geopolitical competition

Critical minerals (CMs) have become a strategic priority for the European Union (EU) amid the green and digital transitions. These resources – including lithium, cobalt, rare earths and nickel – are essential for clean energy technologies, defence systems and electronics. Yet, their processing and refining are highly concentrated in a few countries, leaving the EU especially vulnerable to supply disruptions and fuelling geopolitical tensions.

Recent shocks, including the COVID-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine, have further exposed the fragility of supply chains. At the same time, extracting and trading CMs pose severe environmental and social challenges, from high carbon footprints to local community impacts. EU trade policy is therefore confronted with a trilemma: how to safeguard economic competitiveness, ensure en­vironmental sustainability and enhance security of supply.

This policy brief summarises research tracing how the Euro­pean Commission’s trade discourse on CMs has evolved to address the trilemma (Laurens, 2025). Initially, com­muni­cations focused narrowly on free trade and market access for raw materials. Gradually, sustainability and security considerations entered the narrative. Most recently, the EU has embraced a hybrid framing, simultaneously highlighting economic, environ­mental and security objectives in its trade discourse on CMs.

Although this hybrid discursive approach can help build broader support for CM policies and agreements by appealing to diverse stakeholders, it also demands careful policy design to minimise trade-offs and deliver on its promises. Without credible implementation and genuine integration of economic, environmental and security objectives, hybrid framing risks remaining largely rhetorical and failing to steer policy in practice.

Key policy messages:

  • The EU should adopt an integrated approach that effectively addresses economic, sustainability and security goals together while anticipating trade-offs to support more robust CM policies. This requires strong coordination across trade, industry, environ­ment and security-related directorates-general to align CM strategies, avoid policy conflicts and maximise synergies. It may also require short-term economic sacrifices for long-term resilience.
  • Early and meaningful engagement with research institutions, civil society, local communities and industry should move beyond formal consultation and enable genuine co-creation of solutions. Dialogue should begin before key decisions on CMs are finalised, incorporate stakeholder input trans­parently, and respond to concerns about sustain­ability and security of supply.
  • CM policies and agreements should provide for binding obligations and concrete implementation plans to ensure environmental and labour pro­tection, local value addition, skills development and technology transfer in resource-rich but eco­nomically vulnerable regions. Listening to partner governments and local communities as well as investing in the knowledge of local political, social and environ­mental contexts are essential for building trust and long-term partnerships.
  • International cooperation on CMs should be strengthened through inclusive arrangements that involve both major consumers and producing countries. Clubs composed primarily of resource-poor but wealthy economies risk being perceived as exclusionary.

Critical minerals in EU trade discourse: navigating a trilemma in times of geopolitical competition

Critical minerals (CMs) have become a strategic priority for the European Union (EU) amid the green and digital transitions. These resources – including lithium, cobalt, rare earths and nickel – are essential for clean energy technologies, defence systems and electronics. Yet, their processing and refining are highly concentrated in a few countries, leaving the EU especially vulnerable to supply disruptions and fuelling geopolitical tensions.

Recent shocks, including the COVID-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine, have further exposed the fragility of supply chains. At the same time, extracting and trading CMs pose severe environmental and social challenges, from high carbon footprints to local community impacts. EU trade policy is therefore confronted with a trilemma: how to safeguard economic competitiveness, ensure en­vironmental sustainability and enhance security of supply.

This policy brief summarises research tracing how the Euro­pean Commission’s trade discourse on CMs has evolved to address the trilemma (Laurens, 2025). Initially, com­muni­cations focused narrowly on free trade and market access for raw materials. Gradually, sustainability and security considerations entered the narrative. Most recently, the EU has embraced a hybrid framing, simultaneously highlighting economic, environ­mental and security objectives in its trade discourse on CMs.

Although this hybrid discursive approach can help build broader support for CM policies and agreements by appealing to diverse stakeholders, it also demands careful policy design to minimise trade-offs and deliver on its promises. Without credible implementation and genuine integration of economic, environmental and security objectives, hybrid framing risks remaining largely rhetorical and failing to steer policy in practice.

Key policy messages:

  • The EU should adopt an integrated approach that effectively addresses economic, sustainability and security goals together while anticipating trade-offs to support more robust CM policies. This requires strong coordination across trade, industry, environ­ment and security-related directorates-general to align CM strategies, avoid policy conflicts and maximise synergies. It may also require short-term economic sacrifices for long-term resilience.
  • Early and meaningful engagement with research institutions, civil society, local communities and industry should move beyond formal consultation and enable genuine co-creation of solutions. Dialogue should begin before key decisions on CMs are finalised, incorporate stakeholder input trans­parently, and respond to concerns about sustain­ability and security of supply.
  • CM policies and agreements should provide for binding obligations and concrete implementation plans to ensure environmental and labour pro­tection, local value addition, skills development and technology transfer in resource-rich but eco­nomically vulnerable regions. Listening to partner governments and local communities as well as investing in the knowledge of local political, social and environ­mental contexts are essential for building trust and long-term partnerships.
  • International cooperation on CMs should be strengthened through inclusive arrangements that involve both major consumers and producing countries. Clubs composed primarily of resource-poor but wealthy economies risk being perceived as exclusionary.

Half of Europeans with HIV diagnosed late, report shows  

Euractiv.com - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 10:00
The bloc should urgently rethink its testing strategies, warned the ECDC

Europe’s Industrial Wake-Up Call: Act Now or Fade Away

Euractiv.com - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 10:00
Europe’s industrial base is at risk of collapse. Out of 18 sectors analyzed, only aerospace/defence remains competitive. Automotive, steel, chemicals, telecom, solar—all are losing ground to global rivals.  This is not fate; it is the result of corporate and political choices, from the creation of global overcapacities to austerity measures. This is the stark message […]

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