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L'acteur et champion d'arts martiaux Chuck Norris est décédé à l'âge de 86 ans

BBC Afrique - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 17:59
Chuck Norris était une figure emblématique des arts martiaux américains, ainsi qu'un acteur reconnu pour ses rôles dans des films d'action. Né en 1940 à Ryan, petite ville de l'Oklahoma, il a servi dans l'armée de l'air américaine avant d'accéder à la célébrité en tant que star des arts martiaux.
Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

Greece vs. England: The Burke Paradox of Partial Sovereignty

Foreign Policy Blogs - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 17:18

In the 21st century, sovereignty is no longer an absolute condition but a measurable configuration of strengths and vulnerabilities. According to the methodology developed by the International Burke Institute and operationalized through the Burke Sovereignty Index, sovereignty must be assessed across seven dimensions: political, economic, technological, informational, cultural, cognitive, and military. When examined through the Burke framework, Greece and the United Kingdom illustrate a central paradox of modern statehood: neither deep integration nor dramatic withdrawal guarantees genuine independence.   Greece represents the first model of the Burke paradox — sovereignty constrained within integration. By adopting the euro, Athens transferred control over monetary policy to the European Central Bank. It relinquished the ability to devalue its currency, independently set interest rates, or issue money to stabilize its economy. The Maastricht criteria — limiting deficits to 3% of GDP and public debt to 60% — institutionalized fiscal discipline. Structurally, the eurozone is a monetary union without a fiscal union: a shared currency but no unified taxation or pension system. In Burke terms, this creates asymmetry within economic sovereignty.   The 2009–2015 debt crisis exposed that asymmetry. Greece’s reported deficit of 3% was revised to 15.6% of GDP, and public debt reached 129.7%. Between 2008 and 2014, GDP contracted from €242 billion to €179 billion — a 26% decline, the longest recession in the developed world. In April 2010, Greece requested international assistance. Three bailout programs in 2010, 2012, and 2015 totaled roughly €290 billion from the European Commission, the ECB, and the IMF. By 2015, public debt had climbed to approximately 180% of GDP.   Within the Burke framework, Greece entered a zone of critical economic leverage. Sovereignty remained formally intact, but fiscal decisions became conditional. Between 2010 and 2016, twelve rounds of austerity — salary cuts, pension reductions, privatizations, and tax increases — were implemented under creditor supervision. Political sovereignty existed in constitutional terms, yet economic sovereignty was structurally constrained.   The 2015 referendum highlighted this contradiction. On July 5, 61.31% of Greek voters rejected the creditors’ proposed conditions. Days later, the government accepted an even stricter agreement to avoid financial collapse and eurozone exit. In Burke analytical terms, democratic will could not override economic dependence. Sovereignty as authority collided with sovereignty as capacity.   The United Kingdom followed the opposite path. The 2016 Brexit referendum promised to “Take Back Control” over laws, borders, and trade. Parliamentary supremacy — a core element of British political identity — framed the campaign. The UK formally left the European Union on January 31, 2020, restoring legislative autonomy.   According to the Burke Sovereignty Index, Britain’s political sovereignty stands at approximately 77/100 — a strong indicator of constitutional independence. However, the Burke methodology stresses that sovereignty is multidimensional. Gains in political autonomy can be offset by vulnerabilities elsewhere.   Economically, Brexit imposed measurable costs. Estimates suggest that by 2025 the UK economy was 6–8% smaller than it would have been without Brexit. The EU remains Britain’s largest trading partner, accounting for roughly 47% of goods exports. Post-Brexit trade adjustments contributed to a 23.7% reduction in imports from the EU and an 18.6% decline in exports during the early implementation period. The Office for Budget Responsibility projects a long-term trade reduction of around 15%, translating into a 4% decrease in national income.   In Burke terms, Britain strengthened political sovereignty but absorbed economic vulnerability. The 2025 revisions to the UK–EU Trade and Cooperation Agreement — including compromises on fisheries and regulatory alignment — demonstrate that exit did not eliminate obligations. Instead, it transformed integration into negotiated interdependence.   Greece and England therefore embody two faces of partial sovereignty. Greece maintained integration and sacrificed crisis autonomy. Britain rejected integration and encountered the structural limits of economic decoupling. The Burke model clarifies that sovereignty cannot be understood as indivisible. High performance in one dimension does not neutralize weakness in another.   Modern states operate within dense networks of financial markets, supply chains, security alliances, and regulatory regimes. Monetary unions limit currency flexibility. Trade exits reduce market access. Strategic alliances shape military capability. Technological dependence constrains industrial autonomy. The Burke framework treats these constraints not as failures but as structural realities.   The Greek case demonstrates how integration can convert economic vulnerability into external policy influence during crisis. The British case shows how formal independence can generate new economic trade-offs. Both confirm that absolute sovereignty is unattainable in an interdependent system.   Ultimately, the Burke analysis leads to a balanced conclusion. Sovereignty today is not a binary status but a strategic equilibrium across dimensions. Greece and the United Kingdom chose different paths, yet both remain partially dependent. Integration creates conditional governance; exit creates negotiated constraints. The difference lies not in the presence of limits but in their distribution and cost. In the contemporary world, sovereignty is less about isolation or control and more about managing asymmetry within unavoidable interdependence.

La main pense

Défense en ligne - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 14:57

Au Musée d'Art moderne et contemporain de Saint-Étienne Métropole, on a pu voir récemment « Le verre au-delà de la matière », une exposition qui restitue l'histoire méconnue du CIRVA : le Centre international de recherche sur le verre et les arts plastiques. Un détail de muséographie, discret et peut-être peu remarqué, mérite l'attention : sur chaque cartel, sous le nom de l'artiste « auteur », apparaît le nom des techniciens qui ont réalisé matériellement les pièces exposées. Un geste muséographique qui conteste l'exclusivité de l'autorat d'artistes qui n'ont pas fabriqué l'œuvre.

- Contrebande / ,
Categories: Afrika, Afrique, Défense

Le Sénégal déchu de son sacre à la CAN : "L'Afrique est la risée du monde", dit Abdoulaye Sow

France24 / Afrique - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 14:38
Abdoulaye Saydou Sow, secrétaire général de la Fédération sénégalaise de football, dénonce sur France 24 une "forfaiture" après la décision du jury d'appel de la CAF d'attribuer la CAN 2025 au Maroc sur tapis vert, estimant que "l'Afrique est la risée du monde". Le Sénégal va saisir le Tribunal arbitral du sport, dont il croit "très fortement" qu'il "maintiendra sa réputation".
Categories: Afrique, European Union

BTS est de retour : systèmes anti-drones et 260 000 fans pour le grand retour du groupe le plus populaire au monde

BBC Afrique - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 14:10
RM, Jin, Suga, J-Hope, Jimin, V et Jung Kook se produiront ensemble pour la première fois depuis octobre 2022.
Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

Agenda - The Week Ahead 23 – 29 March 2026

European Parliament - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 12:43
Plenary session and committee meetings, Brussels

Source : © European Union, 2026 - EP
Categories: Afrique, European Union

Fin du Ramadan : quelle est la tradition du "droit du sel" ?

France24 / Afrique - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 11:59
Les musulmans s'apprêtent à célébrer la fête de l'aïd el Fitr, l'occasion pour nous de vous parler d’une tradition au Maghreb, "HaQ El Melh", littéralement le "droit du sel" selon les régions. Cela désigne un geste de gratitude, qui consiste à offrir un cadeau à celles qui ont travaillé sans relâche en cuisine durant le Ramadan.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

Centrafrique : les taxis en première ligne face à la hausse du prix de l'essence

France24 / Afrique - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 11:55
En République centrafricaine, la hausse des prix des produits pétroliers décidée par le gouvernement en 2023 continue de peser sur le quotidien des habitants. A Bangui et dans les grandes villes du pays, cette augmentation a entraîné une flambée des prix des transports urbains. Les usagers se tournent de plus en plus vers les motos-taxis. Reportage à Bangui, Cyrille Jefferson Yapendé et Jospin Bissi.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

RD Congo : quel débat autour de la Constitution congolaise ?

France24 / Afrique - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 11:49
En RD Congo, un débat fait rage : faut-il changer ou réviser la Constitution congolaise ? Sur cette question, les membres de la majorité s’affichent ouvertement pour un changement de la Constitution promulguée il y a 20 ans par Joseph Kabila. Les précisions à Kinshasa de notre correspondante, Aurélie Bazzara Kibangula.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

Afrique : taxes sur les jeux d'argent pour limiter les risques de dépendance

France24 / Afrique - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 11:47
Face à l'essor de l'industrie des jeux d'argent, de nombreux gouvernements africains commencent à introduire des hausses d'impôts sur le secteur afin de limiter les risques de dépendance et de renflouer les caisses de l'État. Au Sénégal, certains acteurs de la société civile réclament de meilleures structures de prévention et de prise en charge de la dépendance.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

CAN 2025 : le Sénégal a saisi le tribunal arbitral du sport

France24 / Afrique - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 11:44
La colère n’est toujours pas retombée au Sénégal 48 heures après la décision du jury d’appel de la Confédération Africaine de Football retirant le titre de la CAN 2025 au Sénégal au détriment du Maroc. Ce jeudi devant la presse, la fédération sénégalaise de football a affirmé engager le combat devant le tribunal arbitral du sport. Les précisions avec notre correspondant à Dakar, Elimane Ndao.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

Tout savoir sur le barrage intercontinental décisif pour la Coupe du Monde 2026

BBC Afrique - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 11:29
La RDC joue un barrage intercontinental décisif le 31 mars 2026 au Mexique face au vainqueur du match Nouvelle-Calédonie - Jamaïque. Les Léopards visent une qualification historique à la Coupe du Monde, 52 ans après leur dernière participation.
Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

Le retour du détroit de la peur

Défense en ligne - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 11:15

En réplique à l'agression israélo-américaine, ce qui reste du régime iranien des mollahs tente d'embraser l'ensemble du Proche-Orient. Le « président de la paix » Donald Trump, mué en chef d'une guerre en forme de jeu vidéo, a tenté sans succès d'amener ses « alliés » à l'aider à imposer la réouverture du détroit d'Ormuz, bloqué par Téhéran depuis le début des hostilités.

- Défense en ligne / , , ,

Comment la guerre en Iran a brisé l'illusion de sécurité dans des lieux du Golfe comme Dubaï et le Qatar (et les pertes financières colossales qu'elle entraîne)

BBC Afrique - Fri, 20/03/2026 - 08:28
La frustration grandit parmi les monarchies du Golfe, qui se sont retrouvées entraînées dans une guerre qu’elles n’avaient pas buscée, aux conséquences extrêmement coûteuses et sans issue claire en perspective.
Categories: Afrique, Union européenne

CAN : la colère ne retombe pas au Sénégal, qui saisit le TAS

France24 / Afrique - Thu, 19/03/2026 - 22:34
La colère n’est toujours pas retombée au Sénégal, 48 heures après la décision du jury d’appel de la Confédération africaine de football retirant le titre de la CAN 2025 au Sénégal au détriment du Maroc. Ce jeudi devant la presse, la Fédération sénégalaise de football a affirmé engager le combat devant le Tribunal arbitral du sport, plus haute juridiction sportive basée à Lausanne.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

From ‘Prosecutor Republic’ to ‘Police State’: How Lee Jae-myung’s Power Grab Endangers Korean Democracy

Foreign Policy Blogs - Thu, 19/03/2026 - 17:17

Lee Jae-myung’s ascent—from factory floors to South Korea’s presidency, carried aloft by the Democratic Party—has been marketed as a parable of grit, resilience, and populist authenticity. Yet governing under a shadow of unresolved criminal allegations, Lee now presides over a far starker transformation: the long-term degradation of democratic restraint through the consolidation of coercive state power. Even where convictions were overturned or cases remain pending, the scandals themselves—Daejang-district profiteering, politically convenient rezoning deals, and illicit remittances linked to North Korea—continue to cling like exhaust fumes that never quite dissipate. Under the banner of “reform,” the prosecutorial system was dismantled and replaced by a swollen police apparatus that concentrates authority over major crimes, intelligence gathering, and institutional oversight units—an architecture that trades legal contestation for administrative command. Revived police intelligence units, cosmetically rebranded but structurally familiar, resurrected the habits of political surveillance without restoring the external checks that once constrained them. This is not the democratization of justice so much as a classically illiberal power swap: authority shifted from a visible, litigable institution to a sprawling police bureaucracy insulated by discretion and scale. In the long run, such hypertrophy corrodes democratic development itself, normalizing surveillance as governance and substituting managerial control for popular accountability. South Korea’s old prosecutorial monopoly has been exchanged for a mega-police—accountable upward, politicized downward—an arrangement not merely convenient for a presidency under a permanent cloud, but actively hostile to the patient, adversarial checks on which durable democracy depends.

Lee Jae-myung holds four confirmed prior convictions—all resulting in fines—that together sketch an early and revealing pattern of ethically dubious, ends-justify-means conduct. In the early 2000s, he impersonated a prosecutor in order to secretly record and intimidate the mayor of Seongnam City during a corruption investigation; when confronted, he escalated by filing false charges, ultimately earning convictions for simulating public authority and perjury, compounded by violating a confidentiality pledge when he publicized the recording. Earlier still, as a political activist in the 1990s, Lee led a violent occupation of the Seongnam City Council over an ordinance dispute, obstructing official proceedings and physically injuring three councilors—injuries lasting two to three weeks—for which he was fined five million won. These pre-office episodes—abuse of authority, betrayal of trust, and willingness to deploy physical coercion—take on added significance when viewed alongside unresolved mega-cases rooted in municipal governance: the Daejang-dong public–private development project in Seongnam City (roughly $375 million in public losses tied to preferential treatment for private developers, with close aides already convicted), the Baekhyeon-dong rezoning scandal involving alleged breach of trust and illicit lobbying, accusations of embezzlement through Gyeonggi Province funds, and approximately $8 million in illegal remittances to North Korea. The absence of jail time and the lack of post-inauguration verdicts as of February 2026 have not softened these critiques; they have sharpened them, reinforcing the view that Lee is a serial opportunist whose early methods have merely scaled up alongside his power.

From Criminal Exposure to Police Expansion, South Korea Moves Toward a Surveillance State

It is within this context—not abstraction—that Lee’s signature institutional project must be judged. Branded as “prosecutorial reform,” his government did not merely curb an overmighty legal caste. It dismantled the prosecutorial system altogether, formally abolishing prosecutors’ investigative authority by October 2026 and transferring its core functions to the police. What replaced the so-called “prosecutor republic” was not a diffusion of power, but its consolidation—this time in uniform.

The centerpiece of this shift is the Heavy Crime Investigation Headquarters (hereafter Jungsubon). By 2026, Jungsubon had expanded to more than 6,400 officers, absorbing over 1,600 new hires in a single year. Its jurisdiction now spans the “nine major crimes”: corruption, economic crime, public officials, elections, defense, disasters, drugs, national security, and cybercrime—virtually the entire domain once monopolized by prosecutors. Budgets and manpower increased by roughly 30 percent in tandem, while oversight mechanisms lagged behind. The police, unlike prosecutors, operate without an external indictment authority or a genuinely independent supervisory body. Power moved laterally, not downward.

The internal dynamics of this expansion are equally revealing. In 2026 alone, 1,214 officers were reassigned from riot control units into Jungsubon divisions focused on phishing, narcotics, and financial crime. Applications for detective posts surged by 2.2 times amid public hype surrounding the new elite investigative corps. Career advancement within the police has been recalibrated around centralized investigation and intelligence work, embedding surveillance-oriented policing at the apex of institutional ambition. This was not accidental. It was design.

The resurrection of the police Information Division completes the picture. Officially abolished in 2024 after decades of criticism over political surveillance, the division returned quietly but extensively: 1,424 officers redeployed across 198 police stations nationwide. The stated rationale was operational failure—intelligence lapses exposed by a high-profile kidnapping case in Cambodia. Yet the response was not narrow correction but wholesale revival. To blunt public backlash, the units were rebranded as “Cooperation Officers,” a cosmetic fix meant to sanitize a historically toxic function. Interior Ministry assurances that there would be “no spying” were paired with a telling caveat: oversight would remain internal.

What emerges from these reforms is not democratized law enforcement but a fused apparatus of investigation, intelligence, and enforcement—a “mega-police” state. Authority now flows through Police Review Boards and the National Police Commission, bodies structurally tethered to the executive. The old prosecutorial monopoly has been replaced by something more opaque: a police force that gathers intelligence, controls investigations, and reviews itself, all within a single bureaucratic ecosystem.

Defenders argue that this merely ends prosecutorial abuse. But the cure may be worse than the disease. Prosecutors, for all their pathologies, were constrained by courts, adversarial procedure, and public visibility. Police power, by contrast, is front-loaded with surveillance—communications metadata, financial tracking, informant networks, digital monitoring. When such tools are deployed at scale across elections, corruption, and national security, the boundary between crime control and political management erodes rapidly.

The danger here is structural, not conspiratorial. Under a presidency burdened by ongoing legal exposure, the incentives for politicized enforcement need not be explicit. Anticipatory compliance—investigators intuiting the preferences of those who control budgets, promotions, and jurisdiction—does the work quietly. Abuse does not require orders; it emerges organically.

South Korea did not slide into a surveillance state through tanks in the streets. It arrived there through reform bills, staffing tables, and administrative fixes to elite crisis. In dismantling one illiberal institution, Lee Jae-myung’s government constructed another—larger, less transparent, and harder to challenge. What he governs today is not merely a country under a cloud, but a security architecture optimized for governing under one.

CAN : chaos dans le football africain

France24 / Afrique - Thu, 19/03/2026 - 16:56
La décision du jury d'appel de la Confédération africaine de football (CAF) de réattribuer la Coupe d'Afrique des nations au Maroc provoque une avalanche de réactions, à commencer par celle du Sénégal qui annonce un recours devant le Tribunal arbitral du sport et réclame une enquête internationale pour corruption. Un coup dur pour le foot africain ? On va plus loin avec Zyad Limam, Florent Rodo et Hervé Kouamouo, journaliste spécialiste de football africain. 
Categories: Afrique, European Union

Vincent Bolloré sera jugé à Paris pour corruption d'agent public au Togo

France24 / Afrique - Thu, 19/03/2026 - 15:59
Le milliardaire français va être renvoyé devant le tribunal en décembre prochain pour des accusations de corruption d'agent public au Togo. Le groupe Bolloré est soupçonné d'avoir bénéficié d'avantages en échange de prestations sous-évaluées pour la campagne du président togolais Faure Gnassingbé en 2010.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

Quatre puissants empires qui ont marqué l'histoire de l'Afrique de l'Ouest

BBC Afrique - Thu, 19/03/2026 - 15:17
Entre le VIII et XVIe siècle, de grands empires aux territoires immenses, aux richesses énormes ont émergé en Afrique de l'Ouest. Mêmes s'ils sont tombés après en déclin, ces empires ont considérablement marqué l'histoire durant leur apogée.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

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