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Intégration européenne : l'Albanie et le Monténégro, toujours premiers de la classe ?

Courrier des Balkans - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 08:19

La Commission européenne a présenté son rapport annuel sur les « progrès » réalisés par les candidats à l'Union européenne ce mardi 4 novembre. Dans les Balkans, à part pour l'Albanie, la Moldavie et le Monténégro, le constat est sévère.

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Intégration européenne : l'Albanie et le Monténégro, toujours premiers de la classe ?

Courrier des Balkans / Monténégro - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 08:19

La Commission européenne a présenté son rapport annuel sur les « progrès » réalisés par les candidats à l'Union européenne ce mardi 4 novembre. Dans les Balkans, à part pour l'Albanie, la Moldavie et le Monténégro, le constat est sévère.

- Le fil de l'Info / , , , , , , , , , , ,

Intégration européenne : l'Albanie et le Monténégro, toujours premiers de la classe ?

Courrier des Balkans / Kosovo - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 08:19

La Commission européenne a présenté son rapport annuel sur les « progrès » réalisés par les candidats à l'Union européenne ce mardi 4 novembre. Dans les Balkans, à part pour l'Albanie, la Moldavie et le Monténégro, le constat est sévère.

- Le fil de l'Info / , , , , , , , , , , ,

Intégration européenne : l'Albanie et le Monténégro, toujours premiers de la classe ?

Courrier des Balkans / Bosnie-Herzégovine - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 08:19

La Commission européenne a présenté son rapport annuel sur les « progrès » réalisés par les candidats à l'Union européenne ce mardi 4 novembre. Dans les Balkans, à part pour l'Albanie, la Moldavie et le Monténégro, le constat est sévère.

- Le fil de l'Info / , , , , , , , , , , ,

Intégration européenne : l'Albanie et le Monténégro, toujours premiers de la classe ?

Courrier des Balkans / Albanie - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 08:19

La Commission européenne a présenté son rapport annuel sur les « progrès » réalisés par les candidats à l'Union européenne ce mardi 4 novembre. Dans les Balkans, à part pour l'Albanie, la Moldavie et le Monténégro, le constat est sévère.

- Le fil de l'Info / , , , , , , , , , , ,

The World’s Forests Cannot Wait: Why COP30 Must Center Indigenous Peoples’ and Local Communities’ Leadership

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 08:10

By Juan Carlos Jintiach and M. Florencia Librizzi
NAPO, Amazonia, Ecuador / NEW YORK, Nov 6 2025 (IPS)

As world leaders prepare to gather in Brazil for COP30 next week, they will convene in the heart of the Amazon — a fitting location for what must become a turning point in how the world addresses the intertwined crises of climate change and biodiversity loss.

Around the world, Indigenous Peoples and local communities’ leadership has long been and will continue to be a critical path forward.

A new report released by the Global Alliance of Territorial Communities (GATC) and Earth Insight exposes the staggering scale of industrial threats facing the 36 million Indigenous Peoples and local communities who steward more than 958 million hectares of vital tropical forests.

The findings underscore the need for immediate action from the governments, financial institutions, and international bodies gathering at COP30 to reinforce solutions led by Indigenous Peoples and local communities who have cared for these forests and multiple ecosystems for generations.

Aerial view of Indigenous participants at a demonstration for “The Answer Is Us” campaign. Credit: The Answer Is Us

Alarming Threats in the Pan-Tropics

The evidence is sobering. In the Amazon, 31 million hectares of Indigenous Peoples’ territories are overlapped by oil and gas blocks, with an additional 9.8 million hectares threatened by mining concessions. In the Congo Region, 38% of community forests face oil and gas threats, while peatlands critical to global carbon storage — holding roughly 30 billion tons of carbon — are threatened by new licensing.

In Indonesia, Indigenous Peoples’ territories confront massive overlaps with timber and mining concessions. In Mesoamerica, Indigenous Peoples and local communities face extensive mining threats across their lands.

These forests regulate the global climate, sustain biodiversity, and are essential for cultural and spiritual continuity for millions of people. These territories produce oxygen, regulate rainfall systems across continents, and store carbon essential to preventing runaway climate change.

When these forests are destroyed, the consequences reach far beyond their borders — destabilizing weather patterns, accelerating species extinction, and pushing the planet closer to irreversible tipping points.

These statistics represent the lived reality of communities like the Waorani in Ecuador, whose territories face a 64% overlap with oil blocks despite a historic court victory affirming their rights. They describe the plight of the O’Hongana Manyawa in Indonesia, one of the last Indigenous Peoples living in voluntary isolation on Earth, now surrounded by nickel mining operations destroying their forest homeland in the name of the “green transition.”

The violence accompanying this destruction is equally stark. Indigenous Peoples, local communities, and Afro-descendants, defending lands they have protected for generations, are being killed for standing in the way of corporate profits and national development schemes that ignore both human rights and planetary boundaries.

Solutions and Success Models That Need to be Scaled

Amid these threats, there are also stories of resilience, proven solutions, and a clear pathway forward. In Guatemala’s Maya Biosphere Reserve, community forest concessions lost only 1.5% of their forests over ten years — seven times less than the national average. In Colombia, 25 Indigenous Peoples’ Territorial Entities maintain over 99% of their forests intact.

In Indonesia’s Wallacea Archipelago, Gendang Ngkiong communities reclaimed 892 hectares of customary land through participatory mapping and legal reforms. The pattern is consistent and undeniable: when Indigenous Peoples’ and local communities’ rights are secured, and communities lead, forests thrive.

This is the paradox world leaders must finally confront at COP30 and beyond. Despite representing less than 5% of the global population, Indigenous Peoples and local communities safeguard 54% of the world’s remaining intact forests and 43% of Key Biodiversity Areas.

While Indigenous Peoples’ and local communities’ governance systems, ancestral knowledge, and traditional ways of life have kept these multiple ecosystems in balance for generations, that balance is now threatened by the relentless advance of extractive industries. Mining operations, agribusiness expansion, oil extraction, illegal logging, and land invasions — often backed by policies that actively undermine Indigenous Peoples’ and local communities’ rights — are dismantling the very systems that have proven most effective at conservation.

Indigenous Peoples and local communities are not obstacles to progress or barriers of last resort; they are the foundation of viable climate solutions and the living embodiment of synergy between people and nature.

At COP30 and moving forward, world leaders must move beyond symbolic recognition to concrete action. The Brazzaville Declaration provides the roadmap: securing Indigenous Peoples and local communities’ land rights, guaranteeing free, prior, and informed consent, ensuring direct financing, protecting defenders’ lives, and integrating traditional knowledge into global policies.

These demands should guide governments, funders, and institutions in how to shift from extraction to regeneration, demonstrating that without securing Indigenous Peoples and local communities’ rights and supporting community-led stewardship, international climate and biodiversity targets cannot be achieved. Yet by following the leadership of those who have protected these ecosystems for generations, the world has a viable roadmap toward regeneration.

As COP30 opens in Brazil, the symbolism is powerful. Will world leaders honor the wisdom of the land they gather upon? Will they listen to those whose ancestral knowledge has sustained the Amazon and countless other ecosystems for millennia? Or will they continue policies that treat forests and nature as expendable and Indigenous Peoples and local communities as obstacles to progress?

The future of the world’s tropical forests and vital ecosystems, and humanity’s shared climate, will be determined by whether governments, funders, and global institutions act on this knowledge. The answer is us — all of us, working together, with Indigenous Peoples and local communities leading the way.

Juan Carlos Jintiach is Executive Secretary, Global Alliance of Territorial Communities and M. Florencia Librizzi is Deputy Director, Earth Insight

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Categories: Africa, European Union

Bosnie-Herzégovine : tragédie meurtrière à la Maison de retraite de Tuzla

Courrier des Balkans - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 08:01

Onze personnes sont décédées dans l'incendie qui a ravagé une partie de la maison de retraite de Tuzla dans la nuit du 4 au 5 novembre. Le directeur de l'établissement a annoncé sa démission et la ville a déclaré ce jeudi, jour de deuil dans le canton. Des manifestations sont prévues.

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Bosnie-Herzégovine : tragédie meurtrière à la Maison de retraite de Tuzla

Courrier des Balkans / Bosnie-Herzégovine - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 08:01

Onze personnes sont décédées dans l'incendie qui a ravagé une partie de la maison de retraite de Tuzla dans la nuit du 4 au 5 novembre. Le directeur de l'établissement a annoncé sa démission et la ville a déclaré ce jeudi, jour de deuil dans le canton. Des manifestations sont prévues.

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Promise lawmakers no promises

Euractiv.com - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 07:38
In today’s edition: Parliament pushes for a rewrite of the EU’s €2 trillion budget after talks over €865 billion in national subsidy plans yield no breakthrough, the Commission prepares alternative funding options for Ukraine as its Russian asset loan scheme remains blocked, and the EPP considers turning to the far right for support after its red tape reform was shot down

Europe’s moment to lead on Type 1 Diabetes Early Detection

Euractiv.com - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 07:00
On 4 November, the European Diabetes Forum (EUDF) and EDENT1FI (European Action for the Diagnosis of Early Non-clinical Type 1 Diabetes for Disease Interception) convened experts, policymakers, people living with diabetes and industry partners to discuss how early detection can transform the future of Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) care. The event was hosted by MEP Stine Bosse at the European Parliament in Brussels, under the auspices of the Danish Presidency of the Council of the EU.

German foreign minister sparks CDU row over Syrian repatriations

Euractiv.com - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 06:51
Johann Wadephul’s remarks that the war-torn country remains “barely" liveable have undercut Merz’s increasingly hard-line stance on migration

EU agrees to open Horizon research fund to defence projects

Euractiv.com - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 06:02
Negotiators have struck a deal to extend the €93.5 billion research and innovation programme to cover projects with both civilian and military uses

Russia’s hardliners are rewriting the meaning of victory

Euractiv.com - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 06:00
As the Kremlin’s ideologues concede the limits of conquest, Moscow turns defeat into a story of endurance. But admitting that a 1945-style victory is impossible does not end the conflict – it widens its arena

Kein Geld für Fluglotsen: Wegen dem Shutdown müsse US-Flughäfen Flüge streichen

Blick.ch - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 04:55
Die US-Luftfahrtbehörde FAA plant, den Flugverkehr an 40 Standorten um zehn Prozent zu reduzieren. Grund sind Engpässe bei der Flugsicherung. Tausende Flüge könnten ab Freitag betroffen sein.

‘Europe must act, not analyse’ to be competitive, warns Business Circle leader

Euractiv.com - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 03:57
Europe cannot afford another decade of declarations without delivery
Categories: European Union

Bis zu 424 Millionen Aktien: Tesla-Aktionäre entscheiden über Musks Billionen-Paket

Blick.ch - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 03:40
Heute kommt es bei Tesla zu Showdown: Die Aktionäre müssen über eine gigantische Vergütung für ihren CEO abstimmen. Für den Fall einer Ablehnung drohte Musk mit seinem Rücktritt.

New Greenland health agreement expands Danish hospital access

Euractiv.com - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 03:30
Thousands of Greenlandic Inuit women will be able to pursue IUD compensation claims, starting late next year

Greek pharma clawbacks ‘unsustainable’, industry sounds funding alarm

Euractiv.com - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 03:15
With drug funding exhausted, time-sensitive reforms are needed to protect both innovation and public health

EU investments in defence: Council and Parliament agree to support faster, more flexible and coordinated investments in European defence

European Council - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 02:41
The presidency of the Council and European Parliament negotiators reached a provisional agreement on the proposal to incentivise defence-related investments in the EU budget to implement the so-called ReArm Europe plan.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

Passenger and freight transport: provisional agreement boosts transparency and comparability of data on greenhouse gas emissions

European Council - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 02:41
The Council of the EU and the European Parliament reached a provisional agreement aimed at ensuring that transport services can use a single method for calculating their greenhouse gas emissions.

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