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Moldavie : Ilia Uzun, sulfureux gouverneur par intérim de la Gagaouzie

Courrier des Balkans - Tue, 09/09/2025 - 07:48

Depuis l'arrestation de sa gouverneure, la région moldave de Gagaouzie est dirigée de facto par Ilia Uzun, un proche de l'oligarque en fuite Ilan Șor, accusé d'avoir agressé un adversaire politique et soudoyé des électeurs pour le compte du DPS de Bulgarie.

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North Worsens Tropical Catastrophe

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Tue, 09/09/2025 - 07:29

By Jomo Kwame Sundaram
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia, Sep 9 2025 (IPS)

Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have risen over the last two centuries, with current and accumulated emissions per capita from rich nations greatly exceeding those of the Global South.

Tropical vulnerability
The last six millennia have seen much higher ‘carrying capacities’, soil fertility, population densities, and urbanisation in the tropics than in the temperate zone.

Jomo Kwame Sundaram

Most of the world’s population lives in tropical and subtropical areas in developing nations, now increasingly threatened by planetary heating.

Different environments, geographies, ecologies and means affect vulnerability to planetary heating. Climate change’s effects vary considerably, especially between tropical and temperate regions.

Extreme weather events – cyclones, hurricanes, or typhoons – are generally much more severe in the tropics, which are also much more vulnerable to planetary heating.

Although they have emitted relatively less GHGs per capita, tropical developing countries must now adapt much more to planetary heating and its consequences.

Many rural livelihoods have become increasingly unviable, forcing ‘climate refugees’ to move away. Increasing numbers in the countryside have little choice but to leave.

Worse, economic and technological changes of recent decades have limited job creation in many developing countries, causing employment to fall further behind labour force growth.

Unequal development has also worsened climate injustice. Adaptation efforts are far more urgent in the tropics as planetary heating has damaged these regions much more.

Technological solutions?
While science may offer solutions, innovation has become increasingly commercialised for profit. Previously, developing countries could negotiate technology transfer agreements, but this option is becoming less available.

Strengthened intellectual property rights (IPRs) limit technology transfer, innovation, and development. The World Trade Organization (WTO) greatly increased the scope of IPRs in 1995 with its new Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) provisions.

Thus, access to technology depends increasingly on ability to pay and getting government permission, slowing climate action in the Global South. Financial constraints doubly handicap the worst off.

Despite rapidly mounting deaths due to the unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic, European governments refused to honour the West’s public health exception (PHE) concession in 2001 to restart WTO ministerial talks after the 1999 Seattle debacle.

Instead of implementing the TRIPS PHE as the pandemic quickly spread, Europeans dragged out negotiations until a poor compromise was reached years after the pandemic had been officially declared and millions had died worldwide.

With the second Trump administration withdrawing again from the World Health Organization (WHO) and cutting research funding, tropical threats will continue to dominate the WHO list of neglected diseases.

Climate finance inadequate
Citing the 2008 global financial crisis (GFC), rich nations claimed they could only afford to contribute a hundred billion dollars annually to climate finance for developing countries in line with the sustainable development principle of ‘common but differentiated responsibility’.

This hundred-billion-dollar promise was made before the 2009 Copenhagen Conference of the Parties (COP) to secure support for a significant new climate agreement after the US Senate rejected the Kyoto Protocol before the end of the 20th century.

Rich nations promised to raise their concessional climate finance contributions from 2020 after recovery from the recession following the GFC. However, official development assistance has declined while military spending pledges have risen sharply.

The rich OECD nations now claim that the hundred-billion-dollar climate finance promise has been met with some new ‘creative accounting’, including Italian government funding support for a commercial gelateria chain abroad!

In recent climate finance talks, Western governments increasingly insist that only mitigation funding should qualify as climate finance, claiming adaptation efforts do not slow planetary heating.

Meanwhile, reparations funds for ‘losses and damages’ remain embarrassingly low. Worse, in recent years, much of the West has abandoned specific promises to slow planetary heating.

Despite being among the greatest GHG emitters per capita, the USA has made the least progress. The two Trump administrations’ aggressive reversals of modest earlier US commitments have further reduced the negligible progress so far.

In late 2021, the Glasgow climate COP pledged to end coal burning for energy. But less than half a year later, the West abandoned this promise to block energy imports from Russia after it invaded Ukraine.

Concessional to commercial finance
Responding to developing countries’ demands for more financial resources on concessional terms to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and address the climate crisis, World Bank president Jim Kim promoted the ‘from billions to trillions’ financing slogan.

The catchphrase was used to urge developing countries to take much more commercial loans as access to concessional finance declined and borrowing terms tightened.

With lower interest rates in the West due to unconventional monetary policies following the 2008 GFC, many developing nations increased borrowing until interest rates were sharply raised from early 2022.

Funds leaving developing countries in great haste precipitated widespread debt distress, especially in many poorer developing countries. Thus, purported market financial solutions compounded rather than mitigated the climate crisis.

Meanwhile, growing geopolitical hostilities, leading to what some consider a new Cold War, are accelerating planetary heating and further threatening tropical ecologies, rural livelihoods, and well-being.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Turquie : la police investit le siège du CHP à Istanbul

Courrier des Balkans - Tue, 09/09/2025 - 07:27

La police a donné l'assaut au siège d'Istanbul du CHP, le principal parti d'opposition en Turquie, où des députés s'étaient retranchés. Les manifestations sont interdites jusqu'à mercredi et l'accès aux réseaux sociaux a été ralenti.

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Pourquoi la crise politique française n’est pas (encore) une crise économique

Euractiv.fr - Tue, 09/09/2025 - 07:22

Pourtant, l'instabilité nuit à la croissance et à l'investissement, tandis que l'explosion de la dette nationale présente des risques à long terme.

The post Pourquoi la crise politique française n’est pas (encore) une crise économique appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Media advisory - Accreditation for the European Council, 23 and 24 October 2025

Europäischer Rat (Nachrichten) - Mon, 09/08/2025 - 14:51
The European Council meeting will take place on 23 and 24 October 2025 in the Europa building in Brussels.

One-year badge 2025 - accreditation is open

Europäischer Rat (Nachrichten) - Mon, 09/08/2025 - 14:51
Information about accreditation requirements for the one-year badge (2025)

Press remarks by President António Costa following the meeting with Prime Minister of Finland, Petteri Orpo

Europäischer Rat (Nachrichten) - Mon, 09/08/2025 - 14:51
Press remarks by President António Costa following the meeting with Prime Minister of Finland, Petteri Orpo

Media advisory - Accreditation for the European Council, 23 and 24 October 2025

Európai Tanács hírei - Mon, 09/08/2025 - 14:51
The European Council meeting will take place on 23 and 24 October 2025 in the Europa building in Brussels.

One-year badge 2025 - accreditation is open

Európai Tanács hírei - Mon, 09/08/2025 - 14:51
Information about accreditation requirements for the one-year badge (2025)

Press remarks by President António Costa following the meeting with Prime Minister of Finland, Petteri Orpo

Európai Tanács hírei - Mon, 09/08/2025 - 14:51
Press remarks by President António Costa following the meeting with Prime Minister of Finland, Petteri Orpo

Ukrainer sitzt in Hochsicherheitsgefängnis – nun soll er nach Deutschland ausgeliefert werden: Nord-Stream-Verdächtiger wird im Gefängnis «James Bond» genannt

Blick.ch - Mon, 09/08/2025 - 14:41
Ein in Italien festgenommener Ukrainer bestreitet jegliche Beteiligung an der Nord-Stream-Pipeline-Sprengung. Sein Anwalt erklärt, dass der 49-Jährige in einem Hochsicherheitsgefängnis sitzt und Deutschland seine schnelle Auslieferung fordert.
Categories: Central Europe, Swiss News

Des greffes d'organes pour l'immortalité : Xi et Poutine sont-ils sur la bonne voie ?

BBC Afrique - Mon, 09/08/2025 - 14:29
Les présidents de la Chine et de la Russie ont été entendus en train de discuter des greffes comme moyen de prolonger la vie.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Neuseeland: Tom Phillips entführte seine Kinder und lebte vier Jahre lang in der Wildnis: «Bereits ein kleiner Fingerschnitt kann gefährlich werden»

Blick.ch - Mon, 09/08/2025 - 14:27
Tödliches Ende einer Entführung: Fast vier Jahre lang hielt ein Neuseeländer sich und seine Kinder in der Wildnis versteckt. Am Montag erschoss die Polizei den Entführer und rettete die Kinder. Wie man sich so lange versteckt hält, erklärt ein Experte.
Categories: Central Europe, Swiss News

Gesamtweltcupsiegerin ist grösster Heim-WM-Trumpf: Für ihre Velo-Kids ist Alessandra Keller schon Weltmeisterin

Blick.ch - Mon, 09/08/2025 - 14:22
Alessandra Keller ist bei der WM im Wallis die grösste Gold-Hoffnung bei den Mountainbike-Frauen. In der Sommerpause war ihr Fokus aber ganz woanders: Die Gesamtweltcupsiegerin führte ein Camp für Kinder durch.

Missions - AFET ad-hoc mission to Switzerland – 11-12 September 2025 - 11-09-2025 - Committee on Foreign Affairs

A delegation of the Committee on Foreign Affairs (AFET), led by Chair David McAllister, will travel to Bern, Switzerland from 11 to 12 September 2025. During the visit, Members will discuss notably the new broad package of agreements that aim to consolidate, deepen and expand the bilateral relations between the EU and Switzerland.
Political agreement on this broad package was reached in December 2024. In Bern, Members will have the opportunity to exchange with representatives of the government and parliament on the upcoming ratification processes on both sides.
Location : Switzerland
Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP

Highlights - AFET ad-hoc mission to Switzerland – 11-12 September 2025 - Committee on Foreign Affairs

A delegation of the Committee on Foreign Affairs (AFET), led by Chair David McAllister, will travel to Bern, Switzerland from 11 to 12 September 2025. During the visit, Members will discuss notably the new broad package of agreements that aim to consolidate, deepen and expand the bilateral relations between the EU and Switzerland.
Political agreement on this broad package was reached in December 2024. In Bern, Members will have the opportunity to exchange with representatives of the government and parliament on the upcoming ratification processes on both sides.
Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP

Latest news - AFET committee meetings - Committee on Foreign Affairs

Next AFET committee meeting will be held on:

  • Monday 22 and Tuesday 23 September, room SPAAK (3C50), Brussels

Meetings are webstreamed with the exception of agenda items held "in camera".


AFET - DROI calendar of meetings 2025
Meeting documents
Webstreaming
Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP

Blick geht mit auf Spritztour in der 100-jährigen Luxuskarosse: Diesem Schweizer gehört der Rolls-Royce der Queen

Blick.ch - Mon, 09/08/2025 - 14:04
Der Zuger Patrick Mohler (54) ist im Besitz des ehemaligen Commander-Fahrzeugs von Queen Elizabeth II. Dieses chauffierte die Königin zu ihren Lebzeiten an diversen Paraden durch London. Er zeigt Blick die speziellen Details des rund 100-jährigen Rolls-Royce Phantom I.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Bilanz-Telekom-Rating 2025: Das sind die besten und billigsten Anbieter

Blick.ch - Mon, 09/08/2025 - 14:03
Das Feld rückt enger zusammen, die Nachzügler holen auf: Das zeigt die 26. Rangliste der besten Schweizer Telekom-Anbieter. Der Wettbewerb für die Platzhirsche verschärft sich – zur Freude der Kunden.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Schont das Portemonnaie: Fünf hochkarätige Weinregionen fürs kleine Budget

Blick.ch - Mon, 09/08/2025 - 14:01
Guter Wein geht auch günstig. Einige der renommiertesten Regionen Europas bieten Tropfen mit Charakter, die preislich auf dem Boden bleiben. Unsere fünf Tipps, wo sich Entdeckergeist und Genussfreude besonders lohnen.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

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