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L’Agence européenne pour l’environnement pointe les lacunes de la politique environnementale de l’UE

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 09/29/2025 - 13:35

La biodiversité est en déclin, les ressources en eau sont soumises à une « forte pression » et 10 % des décès prématurés en Europe sont liés à la pollution de l’air, de l’eau, du sol, au bruit ou à des produits chimiques nocifs, révèle un nouveau rapport de l’Agence européenne pour l’environnement (AEE).

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Les agriculteurs européens jouent la carte du lobbying 

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 09/29/2025 - 12:12

Plutôt que d'organiser d'autres grandes manifestations à Bruxelles, les syndicats prévoient de concentrer leurs efforts auprès des institutions européennes.

The post Les agriculteurs européens jouent la carte du lobbying  appeared first on Euractiv FR.

La menace des drones plane sur le sommet de Copenhague

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 09/29/2025 - 11:55

Pour assurer la sécurité de son aéroport avant l'arrivée d'une quarantaine de dirigeants européens cette semaine, le Danemark se tourne vers un système anti-drone suédois et une frégate allemande.

The post La menace des drones plane sur le sommet de Copenhague appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Moldavie : le parti pro-UE de Maia Sandu remporte les législatives

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 09/29/2025 - 10:30

Le parti pro-européen au pouvoir, le PAS, a remporté les élections législatives du week-end avec un peu plus de 50 % des voix, selon les résultats quasi définitifs publiés lundi 29 septembre par la Commission électorale centrale.

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FIRST AID / The week ahead: A liver screen before Gastein?

Euractiv.com - Mon, 09/29/2025 - 10:05
In today's edition: Trump's threats, unhealthy food, cardiovascular plan

Migrations : les États membres discutent d’un renforcement de Frontex et des renvois vers des pays tiers

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 09/29/2025 - 10:01

Selon une note interne du Conseil de l’UE, les Vingt-Sept s’apprêtent à débattre d’un renforcement du mandat de Frontex pour travailler avec les pays tiers, y compris la possibilité d’organiser des transferts de migrants entre des États non membres de l’UE — ce que les règles actuelles ne permettent pas.

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VOLTAGE: Brussels hit with atrocious environment scorecard

Euractiv.com - Mon, 09/29/2025 - 09:48
In today's edition: COMPET, cars, renewable moratorium

Loukachenko répond à la menace polonaise d’abattre les objets hostiles étrangers dans son espace aérien

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 09/29/2025 - 09:33

Varsovie a prévenu qu’elle ferait feu sur tout objet militaire survolant illégalement son espace aérien. Une mise en garde à laquelle Alexandre Loukachenko a répondu avec ironie.

The post Loukachenko répond à la menace polonaise d’abattre les objets hostiles étrangers dans son espace aérien appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Le Conseil européen fragilisé

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 09/29/2025 - 09:30

Bienvenue dans Rapporteur. Je suis Eddy Wax, avec Nicoletta Ionta à Bruxelles, et nous vous apportons tout ce dont vous avez besoin pour bien commencer votre semaine en Europe. À savoir : Moldavie : le parti au pouvoir pro-UE en passe de remporter les élections législatives malgré les accusations d’ingérence russe Bruxelles : les ministres […]

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Élargissement européen : Marta Kos essaie de ne pas désespérer Sarajevo

Courrier des Balkans - Mon, 09/29/2025 - 07:54

La Bosnie-Herzégovine est le seul pays des Balkans occidentaux à ne pas avoir encore touché les fonds du Plan de croissance européen, faute d'accord politique interne. En visite, la Commissaire européenne Marta Kos a rencontré la société civile, pour essayer de ne pas « désespérer Sarajevo ».

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Blog • Un retour attendu : la Slovaquie et l'Ukraine entre héritage commun et intérêts partagés

Courrier des Balkans - Mon, 09/29/2025 - 07:53

Par Valentin Smoliak
La rencontre de Robert Fico avec Volodymyr Zelensky à Oujhorod, le 5 septembre 2025, illustre l'approche pragmatique et multivectorielle adoptée aujourd'hui par la Slovaquie. Contrairement à Viktor Orbán, dont le régime autocratique repose sur des positions figées et prévisibles, Fico privilégie une flexibilité tactique. Son objectif est double : préserver des marges de manœuvre à l'échelle nationale et obtenir des avantages durables pour Bratislava, tout en intégrant (…)

- Libres opinions. L'espace de débat du Courrier des Balkans /

Défense : l’Ukraine reçoit un système antiaérien Patriot d’Israël

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 09/29/2025 - 07:05

Le système de défense Patriot permet notamment d'intercepter des missiles balistiques et de croisière à longue portée.

The post Défense : l’Ukraine reçoit un système antiaérien Patriot d’Israël appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Fil info Serbie | Incidents lors des rassemblements pro-SNS « contre les blocages »

Courrier des Balkans - Sun, 09/28/2025 - 20:20

Depuis l'effondrement mortel de l'auvent de la gare de Novi Sad, le 1er novembre 2024, la Serbie se soulève contre la corruption meurtrière du régime du président Vučić et pour le respect de l'État de droit. Cette exigence de justice menée par les étudiants a gagné tout le pays. Suivez les dernières informations en temps réel et en accès libre.

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

Fil info Serbie | Le « Ćacilend » s'étend devant la RTS

Courrier des Balkans - Sun, 09/28/2025 - 17:30

Depuis l'effondrement mortel de l'auvent de la gare de Novi Sad, le 1er novembre 2024, la Serbie se soulève contre la corruption meurtrière du régime du président Vučić et pour le respect de l'État de droit. Cette exigence de justice menée par les étudiants a gagné tout le pays. Suivez les dernières informations en temps réel et en accès libre.

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

Élections législatives en Moldavie : nette victoire des pro-européens

Courrier des Balkans - Sun, 09/28/2025 - 08:50

Les Moldaves, plus que jamais partagés entre désir de rejoindre l'Union européenne à marche forcée et volonté d'appartenir au « monde russe », renouvelaient dimanche leur Parlement. Le PAS, pro-européen, arrive nettement en tête.

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Élections législatives en Moldavie : une journée décisive pour l'avenir du pays

Courrier des Balkans - Sun, 09/28/2025 - 08:50

Les Moldaves, plus que jamais partagés entre désir de rejoindre l'Union européenne à marche forcée et volonté d'appartenir au « monde russe », renouvellent aujourd'hui leur Parlement.

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UN80: Three Tests to Make Reform About People, Not Spreadsheets

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 09/26/2025 - 22:30

Credit: Forus - UN High-Level Political Forum 2025

By Sarah Strack and Christelle Kalhoulé
NEW YORK, Sep 26 2025 (IPS)

This September the UN turns 80, but the lessons of peace, justice, and cooperation are still unfinished. The world today faces the flames of inequality, conflict, ecological collapse and growing digital threats. In short, the very problems the UN was created to solve are once again staring us in the face.

That’s why the UN’s latest reform push, “UN80,” matters. Launched this spring, it promises to make the multilateral system more inclusive and accountable. But here’s the real question: can it align with 21st century’s needs? Will it be remembered as a budget drill or the start of a renewal that truly delivers for people where they live?

If this moment is going to count, three things must happen.

First, reforms must put people at the center, and we must avoid a reform by spreadsheet.

The UN is under financial strain. Geopolitical tensions are sky-high, negotiations are gridlocked, Member States are late on dues and membership fees, arrears run into the billions, and the UN’s mandate, efficiency, and effectiveness are under question.

“In a polycrisis world, shrinking the UN’s capacity is like cutting the fire brigade during wildfire season,” warns Christelle Kalhoulé, Forus Chair and civil society leader in Burkina Faso. “Reform cannot be about cutting corners. It must be about giving people the protection, rights, and solidarity they are being denied today.”

The UN80 Initiative marks the most sweeping reform effort in decades, with three tracks: streamlining services and consolidating IT and HR systems, reviewing outdated mandates, and exploring the consolidation of UN agencies into seven thematic “clusters.”

On paper, these reforms could bring overdue coherence. But the process has too often felt opaque, with key documents surfacing via leaks and staff unions flagging limited transparency and consultation.

Increasing the use of tools like AI is among the “solutions” being floated to “flag potential duplication” and shorten resolutions — yet without clear guardrails, there’s a risk of automating cuts and reinforcing bias rather than empowering people-first innovation. And the debate has too often been framed around cash flow, back payments, and cuts. The United States alone owes $1.5 billion in dues. Major donors are cutting ODA, and several UN humanitarian agencies are planning double-digit reductions in 2025 in their budgets.

As Arjun Bhattarai, Executive Director of the NGO Federation of Nepal warns: “Reform cannot be a synonym for austerity. Cutting budgets may make spreadsheets look tidy in New York, but it leaves communities in Kathmandu, Kampala, Khartoum, or Kyiv without support when they need it most.”

The danger is a reform focused on management efficiencies instead of reimagining what the UN must be to meet today’s and tomorrow’s challenges.

Second, a better compass exists.

Despite its flaws, multilateralism remains indispensable. Without the UN, the world would be poorer when it comes to peace, cooperation, and collective problem-solving.

What makes the UN matter most, however, are not the halls of New York or Geneva, but the people and communities it exists to serve.

The UN was created “for the people and by the people”. Protecting, safeguarding and promoting healthy sustainable lives for communities must remain the core priority.

Our measure for reform is simple: a transformed UN must reduce inequalities, ensure fairer and more inclusive representation across its governance structures, deliver public goods fairly with accountability, and protect people better, faster, while safeguarding rights.

As Moses Isooba, Executive Director of the Uganda National NGO Forum, puts it: “A reformed UN must stand closer to the people than to the corridors of power. It must be measured not by the length of resolutions, but by the depth of hope it restores and the changes it makes for communities worldwide.”

If UN80 becomes a technocratic exercise in “doing less with less,” we will emerge with a smaller, weaker UN at precisely the moment we need it most.

If instead it becomes a justice-driven reimagining — linking architecture and finance to a clear vision of protection, equity, participation, and decentralization — it could renew the UN’s capacity to act as a backbone of international cooperation.

As Justina Kaluinaite, Policy and advocacy expert at the Lithuanian NGDO Platform, stresses: “The UN will survive another 80 years only if it learns to listen. True reform is not about doing more with less, but about doing better with those who have been left out.”

Third, put reforms through three simple tests.

When leaders meet in New York, we challenge them to have every reform proposal answering three questions:

    1. The Inequality Question: Does this reform measurably narrow gaps — by income, gender, geography, or status — in who is protected and who benefits?

    2. The Localisation Question: Does it move money, decisions, and accountability closer to communities, with transparent targets and timelines?

    3. The Rights Question: Does it strengthen — not dilute — protection, gender equality, and human rights?

As Christelle Kalhoulé, sums it up: “The measure of UN80 should not be how much paper it saves, but how many lives it protects. History and the legacy we leave to future generations will not ask whether the UN balanced its budget in 2025; it will ask whether it stood with people.”

If leaders embrace this moment, the UN can emerge sharper, stronger, and more inclusive, with a justice-driven renewal of multilateralism, reclaiming its place as the backbone of global cooperation. If not, UN80 may go down in history as the moment when multilateralism chose retreat over renewal.

If UN80 is going to matter, it must prevent crises before they explode, deliver for both people and planet, give underrepresented countries and communities a real voice, keep civil society free and strong, and fix financing so money reaches those on the frontlines. The real test isn’t how tidy the org chart looks, it’s whether lives are saved, trust is rebuilt, and the UN proves it can still rise to the moment and be fit to serve this 21st century world.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Excerpt:

Sarah Strack is Forus Director and Christelle Kalhoulé is Forus Chair and civil society leader in Burkina Faso
Categories: Africa, Union européenne

UN Member States Convene To Discuss Urgent Need for Equity in NCD and Mental Health Responses

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 09/26/2025 - 20:05

Annalena Baerbock (centre), President of the eightieth session of the United Nations General Assembly, addresses the fourth UN High-Level Meeting on the Prevention of Noncommunicable Diseases and Mental Health (NCDs) titled “Equity and integration: transforming lives and livelihoods through leadership and action on noncommunicable diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being. Credit: UN Photo/Eric Kanalstein

By Oritro Karim
UNITED NATIONS, Sep 26 2025 (IPS)

World leaders convened in New York to deliberate over the efforts needed to address non-communicable diseases.

On September 25, the United Nations (UN) convened a high-level meeting on the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) and the promotion of mental health and well-being during the 80th session of the General Assembly (UNGA80).

Organized in collaboration with the World Health Organization (WHO), the conference brought together numerous heads of state and government, many of whom acknowledged that progress toward the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) of reducing premature mortality from NCDs by one-third by 2030, will most likely not be achieved. Most participants also stressed the urgency of stronger global cooperation and financing to advance health promotion and disease prevention, while addressing the economic, social, and environmental factors driving premature NCD mortality.

According to figures from WHO, NCDs are the leading cause of premature deaths worldwide, claiming more than 43 million lives last year, with 18 million of these deaths occurring prematurely. Amina Mohammed, the Deputy-Secretary General of the UN, informed the panel that approximately one person under the age of 70 succumbs to an NCD every two seconds. Additionally, about 1 billion people globally live with mental health conditions and 2.8 billion more can’t afford a healthy diet. Roughly three-quarters of all NCD deaths are concentrated in low- and middle-income countries, with conflict and crisis-afflicted areas being the most vulnerable in the world.

“Every premature death from NCDs is lost potential,” said Lok Bahadur Thapa, President of the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC). “Every untreated mental health condition is a missed opportunity for inclusion and dignity. If we place solidarity, equity, and investment at the core of our response we can reverse current trends and ensure that NCDs and mental health conditions are no longer barriers to sustainable development, but drivers of shared progress for humanity.”

In recent years, progress in tackling NCDs and mental health challenges has slowed considerably, leading to the deepening of inequities around the world. In response, the UN announced three new targets: 150 million fewer global tobacco users, 150 million more people with access to mental health care, and 150 million more individuals with hypertension under control.

“To achieve these targets we must strengthen primary healthcare as the foundation of universal health coverage,” said Mohammed. “We must work across sectors and partners to address the social, economic, and environmental determinants and the market forces that shape how people live. We must elevate psychosocial care in crisis settings. We must place people living with NCDs at the center of our efforts. We must be accountable for our commitments.”

Several speakers highlighted systemic weaknesses in national health systems, particularly the misallocation of funding for response efforts. Many emphasized that a key priority for future NCD-response efforts should be greater investment in disease awareness and prevention rather than treatment. Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever remarked that prevention places a far lighter burden on national budgets than treatment and delivers high returns on investment by reducing productivity losses and alleviating pressure on healthcare systems.

“We must remember that health does not start in clinics and hospitals. It starts in homes, schools, streets and workplaces,” said Director-General of WHO Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “In the food people eat, the products they consume, the water they drink, the air they breathe, and the conditions in which they work.”

Additionally, mental health services remain particularly underfunded, with global expenditure averaging just USD 2 per capita, falling to below 25 cents per capita in some developing countries. Prime Minister of Fiji Sitiveni Rabuka informed the panel that mental health challenges affect nearly every Fijian family, with trauma, stress, and substance abuse particularly concentrated among youth, significantly hindering social development.

“Mental illness is one of the most persistent NCDs yet too often it remains invisible,” said Gaston Browne, Prime Minister of Antigua. “Its burden on health productivity and dignity is greater than any other chronic illness but stigma silences voices and delays urgent care. We are focused on transforming mental health from a whispered concern to national priority moving from outdated institutions and practices to modernized education and collaborative partnership…Our government alone cannot solve this issue so we are using an all of society approach as we engage families, community associations, churches and regional neighbors.”

Prime Minister of the Bahamas Philip Davis underscored the vulnerability of healthcare systems in low-lying coastal communities, noting that a single hurricane can wipe out years of economic growth in parts of the Bahamas, severely undermining the capacity of health systems to respond when they are needed most. Moreover, limited funding and support for gender-specific research often leave women and girls—who are disproportionately affected by NCDs and mental health challenges in developing countries—overlooked in response efforts.

Several speakers also underscored the importance of promoting healthy lifestyle habits as a key strategy for controlling NCDs and improving mental health. For example, President of Suriname Jennifer Geerlings-Simons urged for stricter limits on screen time and social media usage, warning of their damaging effects on mental health and social development, particularly for young girls.

Glenn Micallef, the European Commission’s Commissioner for Intergenerational Fairness, Youth, Culture, and Sports, emphasized the role of arts and culture in preventing and managing NCDs, noting their links to social cohesion, reduced loneliness, and improved mental wellbeing among young people. He also highlighted the potential of emerging tools such as artificial intelligence and digital assistive technologies to expand access to the arts.

Furthermore, another key aspect of the high-level meeting was to promote physical activity as a course of action against NCDs and mental health challenges. According to the President of the International Olympic Committee and double Olympic swimming champion Kirsty Coventry, eighty percent of adolescents and one-third of adults are not doing enough physical activity, which risks 500 million new cases of preventable diseases by 2030.

Physical activity is recognized as one of the most effective, low-cost, and high-impact forms of disease prevention and mental health management, saving millions of lives each year. “At a young age I was diagnosed with asthma and my parents did not want to put me on the number of drugs that was recommended,” recalled Coventry. “We went to another doctor who suggested swimming, and it worked. It taught me how to control my breathing, how to grow my lung capacity, and I never had to go on the level of dosage that was recommended when I was 2 years old.”

“This multiplier effect is being recognized,” added Coventry. “Development banks worldwide have pledged ten billion dollars by 2030 for sport and sustainable development projects. Their commitment reflects a growing recognition that investing in sport can generate ripple effects for health, education, inclusion, youth empowerment and so much more.”

During the meeting, member states deliberated over a political declaration on NCDs and mental health. The text calls encourages stakeholders to fast-track efforts to accelerate progress on NCDs and mental health and identified clear goals to achieve by 2030, including reducing the premature NCD mortality rate by one-third, 150 million fewer people using tobacco and 150 million more people with hypertension. This declaration is also among the first to clearly include mental health in its language.

Although there was strong consensus for the declaration from member states and regional alliances, it ultimately failed to receive a formal endorsement by the end of the meeting, with some member states voicing their objection, including a veto from the United States. The declaration will now be put to vote at the General Assembly.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Categories: Africa, Union européenne

Projet d’avion de combat européen : l’Allemagne reste ferme face à la France

Euractiv.fr - Fri, 09/26/2025 - 16:42

Le projet d’avion de combat européen se poursuivra, les Allemands et les Espagnols — qui collaborent avec la France sur ce projet — appelant à respecter la répartition des tâches établie initialement. Mais la France maintiendra-t-elle sa participation ?

The post Projet d’avion de combat européen : l’Allemagne reste ferme face à la France appeared first on Euractiv FR.

La Moldavie se prépare à un scrutin décisif sur fond de désinformation russe

Euractiv.fr - Fri, 09/26/2025 - 15:46

Dimanche 28 septembre, les Moldaves se rendent aux urnes pour une élection qui pourrait déterminer si le pays poursuit son rapprochement avec l’UE ou choisit une orientation pro-russe, alors que de vastes campagnes de désinformation, probablement appuyées par le Kremlin, influencent la campagne.

The post La Moldavie se prépare à un scrutin décisif sur fond de désinformation russe appeared first on Euractiv FR.

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