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French farmers call for EU aid to mitigate impact of poor grain harvest

Euractiv.com - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 16:00
French wheat growers are calling for the release of the EU's crisis funding, known as agricultural reserve, and increased state aid for the sector as persistent rains since last autumn are leading to poor harvests in major European grain-producing countries.
Categories: European Union

L’armée tchèque va recevoir quinze chars offerts par l’Allemagne

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 15:57
La République tchèque va recevoir de l’Allemagne 14 chars Leopard 2A4 et un char de dépannage Büffel 3 en contrepartie de son soutien à l’Ukraine, a annoncé le 31 juillet le ministère tchèque de la Défense.
Categories: Union européenne

Danish Renew MEP steps down from bank board after criticism

Euractiv.com - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 15:36
EU lawmaker Stine Bosse from the Danish Moderate Party (Renew Europe) announced on Wednesday (31 July) she is resigning from the board of the Norwegian bank DNB to avoid a possible conflict of interest with her role in the European Parliament.
Categories: European Union

Sahara occidental : la position européenne à l’épreuve des dernières annonces de l’Elysée

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 15:17
Emmanuel Macron a estimé dans une lettre mardi 30 juillet que le plan d’autonomie marocain pour le Sahara occidental était la « seule base de règlement » au conflit qui oppose ces deux territoires depuis plus de trente ans. Un positionnement qui s'éloigne de celui de l’UE.
Categories: Union européenne

Telekommunikationsbranche fordert Binnenmarktkommissar zur Überprüfung einiger Positionen auf

Euractiv.de - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 15:15
Der amtierende Binnenmarktkommissar Thierry Breton wurde vom französischen Präsidenten Emmanuel Macron für eine weitere fünfjährige Amtszeit vorgeschlagen. Vor diesem Hintergrund wurde er von Interessenvertretern der Telekommunikationsbranche aufgefordert, einige seiner früheren Positionen zu überdenken.
Categories: Europäische Union

L’UE commence le paiement d’une aide de 400 millions d’euros à l’Autorité palestinienne

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 14:38
L’UE a annoncé le 31 juillet le versement d’une première tranche de 150 millions d’euros dans le cadre d’une aide d’urgence de 400 millions d’euros à l’Autorité palestinienne, confrontée à de graves problèmes budgétaires.
Categories: Union européenne

Un retour en or pour Simone Biles

BBC Afrique - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 14:02
Simone Biles affirme qu'elle savait qu'elle et ses coéquipières américaines remporteraient l'or olympique lorsqu'elle n'a pas eu de flash-back de Tokyo.
Categories: Afrique

Le Clos primed for Paris after treading 'dark path'

BBC Africa - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 14:00
South African swimmer Chad le Clos is ready to challenge in the Paris pool after having to "rebuild" following mental health struggles.
Categories: Africa

At Paris Olympics, Art Runs in Tandem with Sports

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 13:54

Cover of the Cultural Olympiad programme

By SWAN
PARIS, Jul 31 2024 (IPS)

As cheers from beach-volleyball fans fill the air at the Eiffel Tower Stadium on a steamy, sunny day, pedestrians just down the road are enjoying another kind of show: an outdoor exhibition of huge photographs gleaming on the metal railings of UNESCO headquarters.

Titled Cultures at the Games, the exhibition is among hundreds of artistic and cultural events taking place across France during the 2024 Olympic Games (hosted by the French capital July 26 to Aug. 11), and they’re being staged alongside the numerous athletic contests.

The events even have an umbrella name – the Cultural Olympiad – and include photography, painting, sculpture, fashion, and a host of attractions linking art and sport. Most are scheduled to run beyond the closing ceremony of the Games.

UNESCO (the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) is a “partner” in the Cultural Olympiad, arranging not only the usual meetings where bureaucrats give lofty speeches, but also showcasing a series of works to highlight diversity and inclusion.

Cultures at the Games, for instance, comprises some 140 photographs portraying memorable aspects of the opening and closing ceremonies of the Olympics since 1924 and is presented in association with the Olympic Museum of Lausanne.

Images show how national delegations have transmitted their culture during these extravaganzas, and the pictures depict athletes such as Jamaica’s Usain Bolt, whose “lightning bolt” pose has become part of the Games’ folklore even as he has helped to make the green, gold and black colours of his country’s flag more recognizable.

Inside UNESCO’s Y-shaped building, meanwhile, a collection of panels focuses on how sport can “Change the Game”, a theme running across all of the organization’s “Olympiad” events. (At the “World Ministerial Meeting” that UNESCO hosted on July 24, just ahead of the Olympics, officials discussed gender equality, inclusion of people with disabilities, and protection of athletes, for example.)

A notable section of the indoor exhibition features historic photographs that pay tribute to athletes who sparked change through their achievements or activism. Here, one can view an iconic picture of American athlete Jesse Owens, the “spanner in the works that completely disrupted the Nazi propaganda machine set up during the 1936 Berlin Olympics,” according to the curators.

Owens won four medals at the Games, but “received no immediate (official) recognition from his own country” despite being welcomed as a hero by the public, as the exhibition notes. The racism in the United States meant that President Franklyn D. Roosevelt refused to congratulate him “for fear of losing votes in the Southern states.” The photo shows him standing on the podium in Berlin, while behind him another competitor gives a “Hitler salute”.

 

Jesse Owens at the Berlin Olympics, in Athletes who changed the world at UNESCO;

 

Athletes who changed the world equally features boxer Mohammad Ali, who in 1967 refused to fight in Vietnam and was stripped of his world championship title and banned from the ring for three years.

Perhaps the most famous image, however, is that of athletes Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the 1968 games in Mexico City. They “removed their shoes and walked forward in socks to protest against the extreme poverty faced by African Americans,” as the caption reminds viewers. “With solemn faces, Smith and Carlos bowed their heads and raised their gloved black fists, aiming to raise global awareness about racial segregation in their country.”

 

A photo of Tommie Smith, in Athletes who changed the world at UNESCO

 

The exhibition outlines the long battles faced by women athletes as well, and it highlights the work of Alice Milliat who, as president of the French Women’s Sports Federation, “campaigned for women’s inclusion in Olympic sports”. She organized the first Women’s Olympic Games in Paris in 1922, bringing together five countries and 77 athletes.

Although Milliat “died in obscurity” in 1957, her “legacy endures today, with the Paris 2024 Games highlighting gender equality in sports, largely thanks to her visionary efforts,” says the photo caption.

Similarly, the exhibition spotlights the contributions of disabled athletes such as Ryadh Sallem, who was born without arms or legs, a victim of the Thalidomide medication that was prescribed to pregnant women in the 1950s and Sixties and caused deformities in children.

Sallem won 15 French championship titles in swimming and later turned to team sports such as wheelchair basketball and rugby. At UNESCO, his photograph is prominently displayed, along with the story of his hopes for the 2024 Paralympics and his mission to “promote a positive vision of disability”.

Elsewhere in the city, artists and museums are also paying tribute to Paralympic competitors, ahead of the Paralympic Games from Aug. 28 to Sept. 8 in Paris.

On the fencing around the imposing Gare de l’Est (train station), colourful works by artist Lorenzo Mattoti show disabled athletes competing in a variety of sports, while the Panthéon is presenting the “Paralympic Stories: From Sporting Integration to Social Inclusion (1948-2024)”. This exposition relates the “history of Paralympism and the challenges of equality,” according to curators Anne Marcellini and Sylvain Ferez.

For fans of sculpture, Paris has a range of “Olympiad” works on view for free. In June, the city unveiled its official “sculpture olympique” or Olympic Statue, created by Los Angeles-based African-American artist Alison Saar, who cites inspiration from Africa, the Caribbean and Latin America.

The sculpture, located near the famed Champs Elysées avenue, depicts a seated African woman holding a flame in front of the Olympic rings, and it “embodies Olympic values of inclusivity and peace,” according to the office of Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo.

When it was inaugurated on June 23, however, it sparked a flurry of hostile remarks from some far-right commentators on social media, who apparently felt threatened by the work.

Another statue of a woman, that of Venus de Milo or the mythical goddess Aphrodite, has been “reinterpreted” in six versions by artistic director Laurent Perbos to symbolise “feminine” sporting disciplines, including boxing, archery and surfing. The statues stand in front of the National Assembly, and the irony won’t be lost on most viewers: French women secured the right to vote only in 1944.

Of course, Paris wouldn’t be Paris without another particular artform. As the much-discussed Opening Ceremony of the Olympics showed, fashion is an integral part of these Games, and those who didn’t get enough of the array of sometimes questionable costumes can head for another dose with “La Mode en movement #2” (Fashion in Motion #2).

This exhibition at the Palais Galliera / Fashion Museum looks at the history of sports clothing from the 18th century, with a special focus on beachwear. Among the 250 pieces on display, viewers will surely gain tips on what to wear for beach volleyball.

For more information, see: Olympiade Culturelle (paris2024.org)

Categories: Africa

Telecoms stakeholders urge Breton to reconsider some stances in light of Commission appointment

Euractiv.com - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 13:51
Telecom industry stakeholders have called on incumbent Commissioner for the Internal Market, Thierry Breton, to reconsider some of his previous stances in light of his potential reappointment for the 2024-2029 term.
Categories: European Union

Zone euro : l’inflation poursuit son yo-yo en juillet, incertitude pour la BCE

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 13:35
L’inflation a poursuivi son mouvement de yo-yo dans la zone euro en juillet, en légère hausse après un faible recul en juin, maintenant l’incertitude sur une baisse des taux de la Banque centrale européenne (BCE) en septembre.
Categories: Union européenne

IA : la Commission invite les parties prenantes à participer à l’élaboration d’un code de bonnes pratiques

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 12:47
La Commission européenne a lancé le 30 juillet un appel à manifestation d’intérêt pour participer à la rédaction d’un code de bonnes pratiques pour l’intelligence artificielle à usage général, un élément clé de la conformité au règlement sur l’IA (AI Act) pour les développeurs.
Categories: Union européenne

Can Kenya’s Gen Z Lead an African Agriculture Revolution?

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 12:08

Time is ripe to tap on this youthful Gen Z generation and ensure that they are supported financially and with the knowledge they need to lead the much-needed African agriculture revolution. Credit: Busani Bafana/IPS

By Esther Ngumbi
URBANA, Illinois, US, Jul 31 2024 (IPS)

Kenyan Gen Z recently led a series of historic protests that resulted in Kenya’s President rejecting the Finance Bill 2023 and dissolving his cabinet.  These protests are inspiring a wave of change, revolutions, and optimism in Kenya and the African Continent.

Importantly, these protests present Kenyans with a chance to reflect on governance and other fundamental issues including food insecurity and hunger, youth unemployment and an agricultural sector that is yet to deliver for Kenyans and the African continent.

The agricultural sector, that is a source of livelihood for over 70% of African citizens if tapped upon by Gen Zs can offer a crucial part of the solution to this dilemma.

For one, as a sector, agriculture provides multiple avenues for Gen Zs and youth to tap in- from the production all the way to marketing agricultural products to the consumers.

Further, according to the African Development Bank, and The World Bank this sector is projected to be worth around one trillion dollars by 2030, with opportunities at every stage of the agricultural value chain.

Gen Zs possess the energy and creativity needed to revolutionize African agricultural sector. They have college degrees, are tech-savvy, purpose-driven and entrepreneurial

At the same time, according to the world bank’s “Unlocking Africa’s Agricultural Potential” report, there are enormous opportunities stemming from the several areas where the sector is currently lagging.

These include the gap between regional demand and supply, the low adoption of irrigation technologies and climate-smart farming practices, limited use of inputs and new technologies including precision technologies, ranging from remote sensing platforms, use of sensors and drones, automated mechanical weeders drones, satellite powered weather stations, soil health determination and monitoring tools and artificial intelligence.

Gen Z and the youth can view these as opportunities that can be tapped on and leveraged to bring upon this agricultural revolution.

But to tap onto these opportunities presented by the agricultural sector value chain and to transform the sector into a high-technology powerhouse of innovation and a global food powerhouse, Gen Z will need to access financial capital and other investments.

Governments in African countries, including Kenya and other credible development funding agencies such as USAID, The Rockefeller foundation, and the African Development Bank, must finance entrepreneurial efforts and agriculture-focused startups launched by Gen Zs.

Indeed, Kenya’s and Africa’s Gen Zs have the potential to lead the much-needed Africa’s agricultural revolution that will see Kenya and other African countries produce abundant, safe and healthy food that will not only meet the continent’s food needs, but also be of such taste, class and distinction that the whole world will want it.

Gen Zs possess the energy and creativity needed to revolutionize African agricultural sector. They have college degrees, are tech-savvy, purpose-driven and entrepreneurial.

Time is ripe to tap on this youthful Gen Z generation and ensure that they are supported financially and with the knowledge they need to lead the much-needed African agriculture revolution. It will do more than produce food. It will create jobs, wealth and bring the much-needed makeover of the agricultural sector in Kenya and Africa.

Esther Ngumbi, PhD is Assistant Professor, Department of Entomology, African American Studies Department, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Categories: Africa

Annulation des concerts de Fally Ipupa et Ferre Gola : trois choses qui rendent le stade des Martyrs de Kinshasa si mythique

BBC Afrique - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 11:39
Infrastructure très sollicitée pour les évènements sportifs et culturels, le plus grand stade de Kinshasa n’est pas que connu pour accueillir les grands événements. Ces dernières années, il s’illustre aussi par le nombre de morts lors des événements qu’il accueille.
Categories: Afrique

Annulation des concerts de Fally Ipupa et Ferre Gola : trois choses qui rendent le stade des Martyrs de Kinshasa si mythique

BBC Afrique - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 11:39
Infrastructure très sollicitée pour les évènements sportifs et culturels, le plus grand stade de Kinshasa n’est pas que connu pour accueillir les grands événements. Ces dernières années, il s’illustre aussi par le nombre de morts lors des événements qu’il accueille.
Categories: Afrique

Annulation des concerts de Fally Ipupa et Ferre Gola : trois choses qui rendent le stade des Martyrs de Kinshasa si mythique

BBC Afrique - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 11:39
Infrastructure très sollicitée pour les évènements sportifs et culturels, le plus grand stade de Kinshasa n’est pas que connu pour accueillir les grands événements. Ces dernières années, il s’illustre aussi par le nombre de morts lors des événements qu’il accueille.
Categories: Afrique

Foie gras de laboratoire : les agriculteurs de l’UE tirent la sonnette d’alarme

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 11:20
L’entreprise française Gourmey cherche à obtenir l’autorisation de vendre du foie gras cellulaire, produit à partir de cellules de canard cultivées en laboratoire. Une initiative dénoncée par le secteur européen de l’élevage comme « une porte ouverte » à toutes sortes d’autres produits cultivés en laboratoire.
Categories: Union européenne

Mauvaises récoltes de blé : la France pourrait solliciter la réserve européenne de crise

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 11:16
Les producteurs français demandent un déblocage de la réserve agricole européenne et un relèvement des aides « de minimis » pour faire face aux mauvaises récoltes, mais le gouvernement préfère attendre la fin des moissons pour s’engager.
Categories: Union européenne

Venezuela : l’UE demande la publication des résultats détaillés de la présidentielle

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 07/31/2024 - 10:53
Le chef de la diplomatie de l’Union européenne, Josep Borrell, a réclamé mercredi 31 juillet la publication des résultats détaillés de la présidentielle au Venezuela, faute de quoi la réélection de Nicolas Maduro « ne peut être reconnue ».
Categories: Union européenne

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