You are here

Feed aggregator

Les Européens se préparent à des discussions tendues à la Maison-Blanche

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 18:34

Les dirigeants européens sont à Washington ce 18 août pour assister à une rencontre entre Donald Trump et Volodymyr Zelensky. Ils craignent que Kiev ne subisse des pressions et veulent éviter un accord entre le président américain et Vladimir Poutine qui pourrait défavoriser l’Ukraine.

The post Les Européens se préparent à des discussions tendues à la Maison-Blanche appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Categories: Union européenne

UN Security Council Confronts South Sudan’s ‘Compounding Crises’

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 17:26

Representatives from Denmark, France, Greece, Guyana, the Republic of Korea, Sierra Leone, Slovenia, the United Kingdom and Panama spoke to media ahead of the UN Security Council debate on Sudan. Credit: Jennifer Xin-Tsu Lin Levine/IPS

By Jennifer Xin-Tsu Lin Levine
UNITED NATIONS, Aug 18 2025 (IPS)

The UN Security Council convened today (August 18) to discuss South Sudan and the “interlinked challenges of climate change and conflict” affecting the region.

Security Council members who have joined the Joint Pledges on Climate, Peace and Security – Denmark, France, Greece, Guyana, the Republic of Korea, Sierra Leone, Slovenia, the United Kingdom and Panama – spoke at a media stakeout ahead of what the representative from Panama called a “compounding crisis” in South Sudan.

The representative for Panama noted the “interlinked challenges of climate change and conflict affecting South Sudan,” referring to climate crises causing flood, drought, minimal resources and famine, further straining peace and fostering inter-communal violence.

He highlighted worsening gender-based violence specifically, saying, “Women and girls are disproportionately and systematically affected by the intersection of climate shocks and insecurity… the breakdown of community support systems heightens the risk of gender-based violence, early marriage, abduction and exploitation, yet women and girls remain key actors in community resilience and peace-building.”

In the Security Council meeting, many other representatives echoed this concern for aid provisions. The Assistant Secretary-General for Africa, Martha Ama Akyaa Pobee, warned Security Council members of the risks caused by lack of funding, saying, “funding cuts are leaving millions without life-saving assistance.”

According to the latest UNICEF South Sudan Humanitarian Situation Report, the Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan is only 28.5 percent funded over halfway through the year. Between April and July, approximately 7.7 million people faced high levels of acute food insecurity, including 83,000 at risk of catastrophic conditions. Approximately 9.3 million people are in dire need of various humanitarian assistance.

The primary conflict between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), the country’s official military, and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a paramilitary group, has fueled this humanitarian crisis.

Since clashes erupted in April 2023, the fighting has displaced millions internally and across borders – contributing to famine, widespread violence and food insecurity.

The conflict heightened further in March of 2025 when First Vice President Riek Machar was arrested on charges of stirring up rebellion. His arrest effectively ended the 2018 peace agreement which had ended the civil war and established a government – since then, political legitimacy across the country has grown steadily weaker. Many see the upcoming December elections as a chance to reinstate democracy and fair, representative governance.

Murithi Mutiga, Program Director for Africa at the International Crisis Group, said, “The immediate priority should be to prevent any escalation of violence.”

He encouraged UN member states with close ties to South Sudan like Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, South Africa and Tanzania to “call for opposing military actions to create an opportunity for dialogue between the government and opposition groups” and other Security Council members to amplify these discussions without overtaking them.

The representative from Somalia, speaking on behalf of the A3+, a group of African and Caribbean nations, echoed this statement. He said, “an African-led approach, grounded in partnership, inclusivity and respect for South Sudan’s sovereignty, unity and territorial integrity offers the most sustainable path to peace.”

The Pobee further emphasized the necessity of all stakeholders collaborating and acting in good faith to promote democracy in the upcoming elections in December.

She warned, “Failing this, the risk of a relapse into widespread violence will only grow against the background of an already unstable region. It is therefore our shared responsibility to work in close coordination and synergy to help the South Sudanese parties to avoid such an outcome. The people of South Sudan are counting on us.”

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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

Excerpt:

Security Council members discussed solutions to the climate crisis in South Sudan, advocating for more humanitarian aid and influence from international bodies to foster democracy and minimize violence.
Categories: Africa, Défense

IA dans la santé : les règles et la méfiance constituent un frein, selon une étude de la Commission

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 16:51

Un nouveau rapport de la Commission européenne souligne que l’IA pourrait améliorer la qualité des soins de santé, mais que son adoption dans ce domaine est ralentie par la complexité des règlementations et la méfiance.

The post IA dans la santé : les règles et la méfiance constituent un frein, selon une étude de la Commission appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Categories: Union européenne

Europeans brace for fraught White House talks on Ukraine

Euractiv.com - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 16:35
Security guarantees, not concessions, top Ukraine allies’ agenda

A security guarantee fit for Ukraine is still out of reach

Euractiv.com - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 16:27
The only effective deterrent is to create a credible threat that Moscow cannot beat, with much less wriggle room for would-be protectors to soften their commitment

Former Swedish government advisor on trial over mislaid documents

Euractiv.com - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 16:23
Henrik Landerholm, who resigned in January over the scandal, left documents in an unlocked locker at a hotel in March 2023

Frankreich ringt um Versöhnung in Neukaledonien

Euractiv.de - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 16:07
Mehr als ein Jahr nach den tödlichen Unruhen in Neukaledonien unternimmt Paris einen neuen Anlauf, um ein umstrittenes politisches Abkommen des Territoriums voranzubringen.

Africa’s Moment: From Addis to the World, Food Systems Must Change Now

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 16:00

UNFSS+4 delivered a clear message: solutions already exist. What’s missing is political will, adequate funding, and a willingness to challenge the status quo. Credit: UNFSS by kin creative-9555

By Stefanos Fotiou
ROME, Aug 18 2025 (IPS)

The global food system is under pressure from every direction – climate, conflict, inequality, and economic instability. But in Addis Ababa this July, something shifted. At the UN Food Systems Summit +4 Stocktake (UNFSS+4), over 3,500 people from 150 countries came together to confront the lack of progress and push forward solutions that can no longer wait.

Crucially, Africa wasn’t just a location for a global meeting. It led the conversation. Ethiopia showed what political commitment to transformation can deliver – investing in school feeding programmes, linking environmental restoration with jobs and food security, supporting local markets, and working across levels of government. These efforts are producing measurable outcomes under real-world conditions.

Governments that are serious about change now need to prove it. That proof depends on financing, coordination across sectors, and policies that support those making change happen

UNFSS+4 was also different in tone and structure. It didn’t rely solely on government declarations. Hundreds of civil society groups, farmers’ organizations, youth networks, research institutions, and private sector actors played an active role in shaping the Summit’s agenda and outcomes.

As Director of the UN Food Systems Coordination Hub, I was tasked with leading the team that supported this process. What I saw behind the scenes was the real engine of the Summit: a team of people – from governments, NGOs, development partners, and grassroots coalitions – working together with urgency, arguing through difficult decisions, staying focused on what mattered. The energy behind the Summit came from people who were committed to getting things done.

The outcomes reflected that. The Summit’s Call to Action spelled out the scale of the crisis:

  • As many as 720 million people still go hungry;
  • 2.6 billion cannot afford a healthy diet, with the situation worsening in Africa;
  • Farmers are dealing with increasingly volatile climate shocks, rising costs, and unfair market conditions.

On top of that, governments are scaling back humanitarian funding. Food systems are being hit by inflation, debt, war, and ecological breakdown. And while political leaders often speak about the urgency of transformation, most continue to act as if change can wait.

UNFSS+4 focused on practical steps. First, it called for a reversal of the decline in food-related aid. People living through conflict or crisis need access to food now – and humanitarian actors need resources to reach them.

Second, it demanded progress on National Pathways – the country-level plans created after the first Food Systems Summit in 2021. These plans are where real change happens, or doesn’t. But without domestic funding and political backing, they risk stalling.

Third, it challenged public and private investors – including development banks – to back smallholder farmers, food workers, and local food economies. This means shifting incentives away from industrial monocultures and toward approaches that protect ecosystems and livelihoods. It also means connecting food policy with land use, financial systems, and public procurement, instead of treating them as separate agendas.

Finally, the Summit emphasized one point that too often gets lost in global meetings: the role of youth. Young people are organizing, farming, creating food enterprises, shaping policy debates – and demanding space to lead. The UNFSS+4 Youth Declaration, developed through months of consultations and adopted at the Summit, is a clear signal that young people are no longer asking to be included. They are already doing the work, and they expect institutions to catch up.

The obstacles ahead are real. Many governments still make food policy behind closed doors, influenced more by political calculations than public needs. Agricultural subsidies often benefit those who already hold power, rather than those feeding communities or regenerating land.

The same dynamics play out at the international level – where trade rules, financial flows, and climate decisions frequently ignore the priorities of low- and middle-income countries.

If we want transformation, we have to deal with these structures directly. That means more transparency. It means real accountability – tracking how funds are spent, who benefits, and what results are achieved. It means recognizing that technical solutions – better seeds, smarter logistics, improved data – won’t deliver much if the underlying incentives still reward extraction and exclusion.

Africa’s leadership at the Summit was not a symbolic gesture. It was a political statement: that the region hardest hit by the current food crisis is also prepared to lead efforts to fix the system.

But global actors must respond accordingly. That means more than offering praise or short-term grants. It means shifting the terms of engagement – on finance, on trade, on governance – and recognizing that power imbalances are part of the problem.

Summits often generate headlines and then fade. This one shouldn’t. With only five years left to meet the Sustainable Development Goals, and with hunger rising rather than falling, we are moving in the wrong direction. If we continue to delay action, the consequences will be measured not in targets missed, but in lives lost.

UNFSS+4 delivered a clear message: solutions already exist. What’s missing is political will, adequate funding, and a willingness to challenge the status quo. Governments that are serious about change now need to prove it. That proof depends on financing, coordination across sectors, and policies that support those making change happen.

Food is not just an economic sector. It is the foundation of human survival and dignity. And it’s time we treated it that way.

Excerpt:

Dr. Stefanos Fotiou is Director, UN Food Systems Coordination Hub
Categories: Africa, Défense

Thon : l’UE contrainte de justifier sa position sur une méthode de pêche controversée

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 15:46

Le thon, poisson préféré des Européens, est à nouveau au centre de l’attention, la bataille juridique contre l’usage d’un dispositif de pêche controversé dans l’océan Indien étant relancée.

The post Thon : l’UE contrainte de justifier sa position sur une méthode de pêche controversée appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Categories: Union européenne

Paris scrambles to rescue New Caledonia deal after pro-independence rejection

Euractiv.com - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 15:21
Over a year after deadly riots erupted in New Caledonia, Paris is making a fresh bid to revive the territory’s disputed political agreement

Belgium sees 62% increase in e-scooter accidents

Euractiv.com - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 14:56
Numbers in all three Belgian regions went up but with a jump of 95% Wallonia takes first place

European leaders, Zelenskyy to hold meeting before White House talks

Euractiv.com - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 14:12
The Brussels huddle with Zelenskyy appeared on von der Leyen’s agenda ahead of the Oval Office meeting

Sie verdienen weniger, weil sie zu viel wiegen

Die Diskriminierung von übergewichtigen Menschen am Arbeitsplatz ist ein wachsendes Problem. Besonders Frauen verdienen schlechter, wegen neuer, alter Schönheitsideale., Übergewicht hat sich in den vergangenen Jahrzehnten zu einer großen gesundheitlichen Herausforderung mit pandemischen Ausmaßen entwickelt. Die WHO spricht schon seit 1997 von einer globalen Epidemie. Wir wissen zwar viel über die Auswirkungen von Übergewicht auf die Gesundheit und die Sozialsysteme, ...

‘No future in oil’: Greta Thunberg and 200 activists block Norway oil refinery

Euractiv.com - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 13:27
Norway, western Europe's biggest oil and gas producer, is regularly criticised for its oil and gas production

Spain and Portugal battle wildfires as death toll mounts

Euractiv.com - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 13:20
This year’s blazes have already set a record for land burnt in Spain, with firefighters warning the peak wildfire season is still ahead

Paix en Ukraine : les Européens veulent rester impliqués

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 12:48

Le sommet de vendredi dernier en Alaska entre Donald Trump et Vladimir Poutine a suscité de vives critiques en Europe, où les dirigeants tentent désormais de peser sur la suite des négociations.

The post Paix en Ukraine : les Européens veulent rester impliqués appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Categories: Union européenne

Une étude européenne alerte sur les limites des tests de performance de l’IA

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 12:33

Des chercheurs européens mettent en garde contre les failles des méthodes actuelles d’évaluation de l’intelligence artificielle et appellent les régulateurs à s’assurer que les éléments avancés par les entreprises du secteur reflètent bien la réalité.

The post Une étude européenne alerte sur les limites des tests de performance de l’IA appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Categories: Union européenne

Thunfisch: Europas Lieblingsfisch im Fangstreit

Euractiv.de - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 12:22
Der Europäische Gerichtshof hat der EU-Kommission eine Niederlage zugefügt: Brüssel habe eine Beschwerde der französischen NGO BLOOM nicht ausreichend geprüft. Nun steht der Thunfisch erneut im Zentrum des Streits um seine Fangmethoden.

Tuna in trouble? Court ruling reignites EU-Indian Ocean fishing row

Euractiv.com - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 11:14
An NGO has reopened the battle over controversial tuna fishing devices in the Indian Ocean

Sensibilisation à l’obésité ou publicité illégale ? Une campagne de Novo Nordisk en Espagne fait polémique

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 08/18/2025 - 10:59

Retour sur la dernière campagne publicitaire du poids lourd de l'industrie pharmaceutique Novo Nordisk en Espagne qui a créé la polémique, posant la question de la frontière entre messages de santé publique et publicité illégale.

The post Sensibilisation à l’obésité ou publicité illégale ? Une campagne de Novo Nordisk en Espagne fait polémique appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Categories: Union européenne

Pages

THIS IS THE NEW BETA VERSION OF EUROPA VARIETAS NEWS CENTER - under construction
the old site is here

Copy & Drop - Can`t find your favourite site? Send us the RSS or URL to the following address: info(@)europavarietas(dot)org.