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Charity linked to Prince Harry admits human rights abuses in Congo

BBC Africa - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 19:38
African Parks acknowledged its rangers committed human rights abuses in Congo-Brazzaville.
Categories: Africa

Trump says ‘fantastic’ von der Leyen desperate for trade deal

Euractiv.com - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 19:38
The European Union is a “big thing”, Trump said. “They want to make a deal very badly”.
Categories: European Union

Éjszaka talaj menti fagyokra figyelmeztetnek a meteorológusok

Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 19:03
Éjszaka és hajnalban az ország túlnyomó részén talaj menti fagyokra figyelmeztetnek a meteorológusok, ez veszélyt jelenthet a növényekre.

Zelenszkij: a moszkvai győzelem napi díszszemle a gyilkosok és a cinizmus parádéja

Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 19:02
Volodimir Zelenszkij ukrán elnök videóüzenetet rögzített csütörtökön, a nácizmus felett aratott győzelem és emlékezés napján az ukrán főváros központjában, bemutatva "a különbséget a kijevi Függetlenség terén zajló élet és a moszkvai Vörös téren tartandó félelemmenet között", utóbbit beszédében a gyilkosok és a cinizmus parádéjának is nevezte.

SBIN et ISOCEL se taillent 90% du marché de l'internet fixe au Bénin

24 Heures au Bénin - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 18:43

En 2024, le marché de l'internet fixe au Bénin se caractérise par une forte concentration autour de deux opérateurs. SBIN (CELTIIS) et ISOCEL, qui contrôlent 90% du marché, avec respectivement 76,10% et 13,9% de parts de marché.

Le marché de l'internet fixe en 2024 indique une concentration du marché autour des opérateurs SBIN et ISOCEL avec des parts de marché en volume respectives de 76,10% et 13,9%. Cette situation s'explique par le fait que seuls ces deux opérateurs proposent aux consommateurs des solutions technologiques à forte demande (FTTH).

Au 31 décembre 2024, le Bénin compte vingt-cinq (25) fournisseurs d'accès à Internet. Il est noté une baisse de la concurrence entre les fournisseurs d'accès à Internet fixe au cours de la période 2023- 2024, selon l'ARCEP Bénin.

Le régulateur a mis en place des facilités réglementaires, qui devraient permettre à de nouveaux acteurs d'émerger. Ces initiatives pourraient redynamiser la concurrence et offrir aux consommateurs davantage de choix dans les années à venir. Un nouvel opérateur a fait récemment son entrée sur le marché de l'internet.

Quid du marché de l'Internet mobile ?

« On note une légère baisse de la concentration sur le marché de l'Internet mobile en 2024. Cette baisse de la concentration est la conséquence de la nouvelle distribution des parts de marché des opérateurs au niveau de ce segment de marché ».

Selon l'ARCEP Bénin, de 2023 à 2024, la part de marché de SPACETEL BENIN (MTN) est passée de 60,07% à 55,43%, celle de MOOV AFRICA BENIN de 28,64% à 23,65% et celle de CELTIIS de 11,29% à 20,92%.
M. M.

Categories: Afrique

Catholic Church elects Robert Francis Prevost as new pope

Euractiv.com - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 18:41
He is the first American Pontiff in the history of the Catholic Church.
Categories: European Union

Agenda - The Week Ahead 12 – 18 May 2025

European Parliament - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 18:39
Committee meetings

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

Amerikai egyházfőt választottak, XIV. Leó az új pápa

Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 18:21
Délután 6 óra után pár perccel felszállt a fehér füst a Vatikánban, megválasztották Ferenc pápa utódját, írja a Telex. Az új egyházfő, Robert Francis Prevost XIV. Leó néven lép trónra.

UK lands deal to duck some Trump tariffs

Euractiv.com - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 18:15
The bare-bones deal leaves plenty of space for a more ambitious deal with the EU later this month.
Categories: European Union

A kijevi parlament ratifikálta az ukrajnai ásványkincsekről szóló ukrán-amerikai megállapodást

Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 18:04
Az ukrán parlament megszavazta csütörtökön az Ukrajna és az Egyesült Államok közötti közös befektetési alap létrehozásáról, vagyis az ukrajnai ásványkincsek kiaknázásáról szóló megállapodás ratifikálását. Az Ukrajinszka Pravda hírportál beszámolója szerint az előterjesztést 338 képviselő támogatta a 450 tagú törvényhozásban.

Poland launches free adult health checks to boost early disease detection

Euractiv.com - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 18:01
The programme offers a range of laboratory tests, including blood count, glucose, creatinine, and lipid profile.
Categories: European Union

Tariffs won’t trigger EU pharma exodus, says Dutch Minister

Euractiv.com - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 17:51
Some EU-branded pharmaceutical companies say they will increase their US investments, ING Bank says EU has two levers it can still pull.
Categories: European Union

DRAFT REPORT on the 2023 and 2024 Commission reports on Ukraine - PE769.901v01-00

DRAFT REPORT on the 2023 and 2024 Commission reports on Ukraine
Committee on Foreign Affairs
Michael Gahler

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

Shock as missing South African journalist's decomposed body found

BBC Africa - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 17:32
Human remains, believed to be that of a journalist and his partner, have been found by police.
Categories: Africa

Berlin denies plan to suspend EU law on borders following media reports

Euractiv.com - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 17:27
The new conservative government has pledged to tighten German border rules.
Categories: European Union

The Brief – The green win that farmers wished for?

Euractiv.com - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 17:24
Farmers have long protested the green requirements attached to their subsidies. But cutting the obligations will likely impact payments.
Categories: European Union

Az ellenzék bírálja, hogy 2023 őszétől betöltetlen az alkotmánybírói poszt

Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 17:23
Az ellenzék bírálja a kormánykoalíciót amiatt, hogy 2023 őszétől nem sikerült jelölteket állítani a megüresedett alkotmánybírói posztra. Szerintük a kormányt nem érdekli az állam működőképessége, csupán a hatalom megtartása.

The Taliban Took Everything – Even My Hope

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 17:19

Once a lifeline for women and families, the Afghanistan Family Guidance Association (AFGA)—one of the country’s oldest NGOs—has been forced to shut down its centers nationwide under Taliban orders. Credit: Learning Together.

By External Source
KABUL, May 8 2025 (IPS)

Rukhsar (pseudonym), 27, is a widow and sole breadwinner for a family of five. She recounts her life story under Taliban rule, a reality faced by thousands of women in Afghanistan.

Every time I picked up a pen, I would write about turning failure into success, rising up after falling, and the highs that follow life’s lows. Each time I wrote, my mood, soul, and mind came alive, fueled by the words of my achievements.

With every victory achieved and each milestone reached, I redoubled my efforts. Like a mountaineer dreaming of reaching the summit, my hope of realizing my dreams grew with each passing day.

But this time, my dreams have crumbled, and I am left defeated.

I, too, once had a stable life, but the winds of fate blew it apart. Shattering my dreams.

Exactly seven years ago, I began a relationship with a kind and brave person, Yusuf, who was my source of security while I in turn took care of patients in a hospital.  As nurses, our days were spent caring for the people of our country. We dedicated ourselves to our sacred duty with passion and enthusiasm.

It felt like being a woman in itself was a crime in Afghanistan. We could not study or go to the parks. Women were flogged on the mere of suspicion sleeping with anyone other than their husbands. Young girls were forced into marriage and women committed suicide. We are probably the most oppressed people in the history of Afghanistan

In the midst of life’s joys, Yusuf and I were blessed with two children, Iman and Ayat. They made our life shine brighter.

However, just when everything appeared to flourish, we began to hear rumblings in the distance. The Taliban had begun a fight to take back Afghanistan. We heard about districts falling in neighboring provinces such as Balkh, and the deaths, and disappearances of our loved ones. 

As the days passed by, the intensity of the war between the government and Taliban fighters increased. We were all in a state of panic, fearing that we could become victims of the conflict. The war was getting closer to the city with each passing moment.

One day Yusuf urged me not to go to work. He went instead. He kissed our children goodbye, tears in his eyes.  Thas was the last time we saw him alive.

After he left, I kept calling him at short intervals to ask if everything was fine with him, and each time he called back without delay. However, my call to him in the afternoon went unanswered; neither did he return the call. That triggered off restlessness in my mind. It soon took hold of me entirely and was no longer controllable.

At the peak of my desperation, and exhaustion, Yusuf’s father told me he had received a call from an unfamiliar number. Yusuf was no longer with us, he announced. He was brutally killed by a tyrannical, ruthless, bloodthirsty, and oppressive group.

The date is forever edged in my memory. It was June 16, 2021. 

The grief of losing Yusuf brought sleepless nights, memories that haunted me every moment, and a deep loneliness that nothing could fill. I was entrapped in emotional and mental struggles from which I could not escape.

Days and months went by, and problems kept piling up one after the other with no respite. There was no psychological support, I was caught midst of increasing financial struggles, and I constantly worried about how to provide for our children, which were now entirely under my care. I had to find a way out.

I returned to my former work place at the hospital in Mazar-i-Sharif, but someone new took up my place. I returned home empty-handed. All around me was despair and fear. 

All the while, I was under increasing pressure from my family to consider a second marriage. No one could really understand the pain I was enduring. My husband Yusuf was gone but his love was still alive. It was the only thing besides the children, which gave me hope. I started looking for work and eventually got one as a midwife at Afghanistan Family Guidance Association (AFGA), one of the oldest NGOs in Afghanistan.

It was in 2023. I had an eight-hour job and was now earning monthly salary of over 9,500 Afghanis, which enabled me to support my children and financially support my late husband’s parents as well. I was excited and nervous about the new phase in my life.

We provided services to the most vulnerable clients who were suffering from impact of earthquakes, floods, and drought.

Nevertheless, every day I heard news about how the Taliban regime was planning to shut down various organizations that support women and families, as well as banning women from schools and universities. At my workplace, we could foresee that thousands of families would soon be left without help.

A flood of bad news kept inundating us each day about measures that adversely affected women’s situation. It felt like being a woman in itself was a crime in Afghanistan. We could not study or go to the parks. Women were flogged on the mere of suspicion sleeping with anyone other than their husbands. Young girls were forced into marriage and women committed suicide. We are probably the most oppressed people in the history of Afghanistan.

However, my colleagues and I took comfort in the fact, that since we were working in the medical field as essential members of society, we assumed we were indispensable.

We still maintained high hopes that our work in the medical field would continue, even though officials from the brutal and oppressive unit, the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, continuously monitored us. For one hour every Thursday, these officers would give us religious lessons as if we were not Muslim.

We were working mainly with women patients, yet we were made to cover our faces with masks and to maintain our hijabs. We were prohibited from speaking loudly, and from engaging in any conversation with the male companions of the patients. The restrictions kept increasing, but I had to stay strong for my family.

Despite all the bullying and oppression, we continued to work because serving our patients brought us peace of mind, not to mention the deep satisfaction and relief of being able to provide financial support to our families. 

On the morning of December 3, 2024, I heard the news about the closure of medical institutions. It was incredibly painful, like a dagger thrust into my heart. I spent the entire day in tears and sorrow. In the small shelter where I worked, we were all crushed by grief. 

That day passed by and we did not know how we had managed to get through it. We concluded to each other at the end of the day that, “We might be the last generation of medical professionals.”

On January 3rd, at 9:08 AM, I received a call from a colleague at the Kabul central office. She informed me that Mullah Hibatullah Akhundzada, the misogynist Taliban leader, had issued a decree to close down healthcentres funded by foreign donors. They were, according to him, aimed at curtailing the increase of the Muslim population.

My blood ran cold. My colleagues and I nevertheless entertained the hope that the decree would be reversed. It did not happen.

Just a week later, we were notified by email that AFGA had to close due to Taliban’s new restrictions.

At that moment, as I read the email, it felt like the ground had been cut from under my feet. My mind became consumed by thoughts of Ayat and Iman, wondering what to do next and which door to knock on.

I was not alone. Similar thoughts must have been coursing through the minds of 270 Afghan women working in 23 provinces. I also lost every shred of hope for the future. I had no idea what I could do next.

 

Excerpt:

The author is an Afghanistan-based female journalist, trained with Finnish support before the Taliban take-over. Her identity is withheld for security reasons
Categories: Africa

Számos városban tüntet a Fico-kormány ellen az ellenzék

Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - Thu, 05/08/2025 - 17:19
Csütörtök este Pozsonyban, Kassán, Besztercebányán és számos más városban tart tüntetéseket a PS, az SaS, a KDH és a Demokraták. A pozsonyi tüntetésen felszólalt Ivan Korčok (PS) és Viliam Karas (KDH), 8 500-9 000 ember tiltakozik.

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