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Armenia, Azerbaijan trade barbs ahead of new peace talks

Euractiv.com - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:43
Armenia and Azerbaijan hurled fresh accusations at each other two days before new talks aimed at clinching a peace accord to resolve decades of disputes over the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.
Categories: European Union

Plastic pollution: Treaty talks get into the nitty-gritty

Euractiv.com - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:40
Countries grappling with the "immense" task of ending plastic pollution began a new round of talks in Paris on Monday (30 May), amid protests and warnings of the urgency to act.
Categories: European Union

Czech intelligence: Russia wants to prevent US-Czech defence treaty approval

Euractiv.com - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:39
Russia will likely try to prevent the approval of the security cooperation agreement between the US and the Czech Republic, Czech Security Information Service Director Michal Koudelka said at a conference in the lower chamber of the Czech parliament on...
Categories: European Union

Der Konflikt erklärt: Das passiert aktuell im Kosovo

Blick.ch - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:39
Seit Ende letzter Woche kommt es im Norden des Kosovos zu Ausschreitungen. Was die Hintergründe dafür sind, erfährst Du in diesem Video.
Categories: Swiss News

Agrifood Podcast: Parliament battles over votes & CAP environmental exemptions

Euractiv.com - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:35
This week, EURACTIV’s agrifood team walks you through two key votes in the European Parliament on the nature restoration law and EU rules to slash industrial emissions.
Categories: European Union

«Kosovo ist das Herz Serbiens»: Hier schreibt Djokovic seine Botschaft auf die Kamera

Blick.ch - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:35
Nicht der Sieg, eine Kamera-Botschaft von Novak Djokovic sorgt bei seinem 1. Runden-Match bei den French Open für Aufregung. Der Serbe äusserte sich indirekte zu den neuesten Konflikten im Kosovo.
Categories: Swiss News

Des sénateurs veulent rendre imprescriptibles les crimes sexuels sur les mineurs

Euractiv.fr - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:34
Une quinzaine de sénateurs de plusieurs groupes souhaitent durcir la législation sur les crimes sexuels commis envers des mineurs et leur non-révélation, notamment en matière de prescription, selon un document consulté par EURACTIV.
Categories: Union européenne

Nach Haft für Journalisten: Polen verhängt Sanktionen gegen Belarus

Euractiv.de - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:31
Polen hat Sanktionen gegen 365 belarussische Staatsbürger verhängt, die mit dem Staatsapparat in Verbindung stehen, nachdem der Oberste Gerichtshof von Belarus eine achtjährige Haftstrafe für Andrzej Poczobut bestätigt hat, einen Journalisten und Anführer der polnischen Minderheit.
Categories: Europäische Union

Albanian president signs in laws increasing his wage to highest in region

Euractiv.com - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:30
Albanian President Bajram Begaj on Monday signed three new laws for increasing salaries, including that of his own, making him the highest-paid head of state in the region with a wage of €3860 a month. The government recently tabled laws...
Categories: European Union

Romania sees increase in worker protests

Euractiv.com - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:23
As teachers enter their second week of strikes and protests, the healthcare and railway transport unions prepare for protests of their own unless the government meets their demands for increased salaries and better working conditions. The teachers’ strike began on...
Categories: European Union

Sánchez kämpft gegen Zusammenbruch der spanischen Linken

Euractiv.de - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:22
Angesichts der Aussicht auf einen künftigen Erdrutschsieg der Rechten und Rechtsextremen hat der spanische Ministerpräsident Pedro Sánchez einen taktischen Schachzug vollzogen: Er rief vorgezogene Neuwahlen aus, um die Linke wieder aufzubauen und einen totalen Zusammenbruch zu verhindern.
Categories: Europäische Union

Automobile : la France prend un virage électrique avec sa première usine de batteries

Euractiv.fr - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:20
La première usine produisant en France des batteries pour voitures électriques est inaugurée mardi (30 mai) dans le nord du pays, étape clé vers une profonde métamorphose industrielle visant à rattraper le retard sur les constructeurs chinois.
Categories: Union européenne

Internationals react, Belgrade bristles amid NATO troop injuries in Kosovo

Euractiv.com - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:19
At least 34 NATO peacekeepers, along with members of Kosovo’s police force and members of the public, have been injured during clashes with Serbian protestors, leading to frantic calls for calm from Pristina and internationals. For its part, Belgrade has...
Categories: European Union

Kfor-Soldaten verletzt: Video zeigt heftige Ausschreitungen im Kosovo

Blick.ch - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:19
Bei Zusammenstössen im serbisch bewohnten Norden des Kosovos sind zahlreiche Soldaten der Nato-geführten Kosovo-Schutztruppe Kfor verletzt worden. Uniformierte aus Italien und Ungarn erlitten bei Angriffen von Serben im Ort Zvecan Knochenbrüche und Verbrennungen
Categories: Swiss News

Endspiel-Affiche steht fest: Las Vegas zieht in den Stanley-Cup-Final

Blick.ch - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:15
Noch zwei NHL-Teams sind im Kampf um den Stanley Cup übrig. Die Florida Panthers bekommen es mit den Vegas Golden Knights zu tun.
Categories: Swiss News

France to open its first electric car battery factory

Euractiv.com - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:15
France will launch its first battery factory for electric cars on Tuesday (30 May), taking a big step in its race to build up a sector dominated by China.
Categories: European Union

Wien: Pro-Erdogan-Feiern sorgen für Empörung

Euractiv.de - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:14
Tausende Menschen mit türkischem Migrationshintergrund sind am Sonntag in Wien auf die Straße gegangen, um die Wiederwahl des türkischen Präsidenten Recep Tayyip Erdogan zu feiern, was scharfe Kritik von rechts und Besorgnis von links ausgelöst hat.
Categories: Europäische Union

Élections municipales italiennes : la victoire du centre droit renforce le gouvernement

Euractiv.fr - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:13
La coalition de centre droit au pouvoir a remporté les élections locales, confirmant sa majorité dans le pays, alors que le centre gauche réfléchit à d’éventuelles alliances en vue des élections européennes.
Categories: Union européenne

Urgency for a Global Fund for Media & Journalism

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:12

By Simone Galimberti
KATHMANDU, Nepal, May 30 2023 (IPS)

There have been an array of proposals to sustain journalism around the world– from tax incentives and subsidies to the idea of allocating 1% of governments’ GDP to a drastically increased ODA for independent journalism in the global South.

The debate has been intense and rightly so.

What is needed is a long-term project that would put together a global architecture supporting serious and reliable journalism regardless of the size and business model of the outlets producing it. Amid such calls for governments and philanthropies to do more, something finally is moving.

Yet the needs require real ambition and farsightedness that in practice means a coherent global governance to safeguard trustworthy media worldwide. The International Fund for Public Interest Media, initially announced by France during the Paris Peace Forum in 2022, is taking shape and an initial pilot cohort of media outlets already got selected.

Because of its hybrid form of governance, independent but backed by governments and major philanthropies alike, the IFPIM could become the biggest source of funds for media around the world.

As per the information provided on its website, it has already raised $50 million USD from more than 15 governments, philanthropies, and corporate entities but the ambition is much bigger.

The Center for International Media Assistance (CIMA), an initiative of the bipartisan National Endowment for Democracy, an entity funded by the American Congress, estimates that global spending to support independent media globally should be $1 billion a year.

The reality on the ground– considering also how many legacy media houses are struggling with revenues and a declining readership– might require a much bigger figure.

If the situation was already dire before the pandemic, COVID was the knockdown blow for many media around the world that were already assaulted by the damaging impacts of big tech companies and their social media platforms. And now we also have to deal with an even more threatening and disruptive use of artificial intelligence.

While AI-based technologies can offer some positive elements on how media engage with public, the risks are enormous. “AI-based technologies also have an enormous potential to harm our information ecosystems and threaten the fundamental human rights on which robust, independent media systems, and free societies” reads a resolution recently passed at the International Press Institute General Assembly just held in Vienna.

With this gloomy scenario, the public interest media landscape is rapidly turning into what experts define as “news desert. We should be all very weary of the perils associated with its consequences. After all, as explained by the World Trends Report published by UNESCO, it is a vital issue because journalism is a public good that must be protected at any costs.

In such a scenario the fact that the IFPIM aims to reach $500 million USD, itself a milestone in this quest, is a relief. Still, it is not enough.

An issue to be taken into account is the fact that we are dealing with a fragmented landscape in this line of sector. There are already a small but increasingly more visible and impactful ecosystem, still in construction that is made up of blended agencies supporting independent media around the world.

Some of the most significant among them are the Media Development Investment Fund, MDIF that takes a more investor like approach then what seems the still in construction approach of IFPIM, has been already able to provide a variety of funding options.

With also a mixed lineup of investors, MDIF has already invested $300 million USD in 148 media outlets from 47 different countries. In addition, there is an increasing number of “intermediary” organizations.

Some of them like Pluralis acts more like investors (among its own backers there is MDIF). Others offer a blended package, financial and capacity building like Free Press Unlimited IMS, International Media Support while United for News takes a market approach of linking ads with local online news outlets.

BBC Media Action and Internews, on other hand, are intermediary closer to the field.

Though each of these represent a different model of support, are different from each other, they are all aimed at enhancing the viability of robust, independent media.

Interestingly we are seeing a crosspollination of such initiatives because their backers are often interlinked to each other with a major philanthropic foundation or bilateral donor supporting multiple initiatives at the same time.

And we are not mentioning the mechanisms that several bilateral institutions in the West are putting together only exclusively to safeguard and protect journalists in danger.

For example, the recently announced Reporters Shield, an undertaking of USAID, is particularly designed on tackling SLAPPs, the strategic lawsuits against public participation.

Undoubtedly the IFPIM is going to be a standout catalyst but it is rightly showing commitment to partner with other key stakeholders.

The recent MoU signed with Reporters without Frontiers, RSF and the Forum on Information and Democracy, the latter itself a global initiative leading the debate on safeguarding journalism that is housed at RSF, is promising but it is not enough.

If the ambitions of IFPIM is to become a global fund for media and journalism support akin to the funding mechanisms being used to fight HIV and Tuberculosis, all the actors investing in independent media must truly come together.

The fact that some of the major philanthropic organizations are putting resources in different baskets could be a positive element in a yet to establish globally coordinated multilayered approach promoting journalism and media houses.

Such common intent would enable a truly global ecosystem allowing media to return to prominence they used to command and becoming, once again, a central pillar of public debate.

First governments with adequate fiscal capacity should do whatever it takes to support their own media industry. Some of them in Europe are already doing so and also in the USA there are discussions for a new legislation and other financial tools, including cash vouchers for the citizens to buy subscriptions.

Yet if we want to safeguard journalism and media around the world, it is essential to boost public and private media working with integrity in the North, including legacy newsrooms.

It is not just about providing incentives, rebates or other financial support or ensuring that big tech owned platforms pay what is due to the newsrooms like it is slowly starting to happen.

It is also about re-persuading people, including the youths, to read news, on and off line.
Massive awareness initiatives involving schools and universities should also be prioritized in a way that a common user of news, can also turn into a citizen journalist or opinion writer.

Second, a truly global and truly massive funding for media and journalism should be established even by merging existing entities. The result could become mega funder or donor of donors, a true Global Fund for Media and Journalism.

All major governments and philanthropic organizations would inject financial resources and know-how that would then trickle to other smaller actors in the supply chain.

In a potential ecosystem protecting media and journalism, there would be enough spaces for intermediary organizations like the ones already operating close to media houses on the ground, especially in the global South.

It might be that entities like IFPIM and MDIF, each with its unique identity and features but united in their intents, one day might come together or might themselves act as at the upper level of a pyramid sustaining journalism and media, just a step below what would be a Global Fund for Media and Journalism.

Journalism and the thriving of media should also become a central area of focus of the United Nations. Despite the obvious resistance that might come from certain camps, the United Nations Secretary General António Guterres should include it in its ambitious Our Common Agenda.

Two of its twelve strategic pillars, “promote peace and prevent conflict” together with “build trust” should be strengthened with initiatives focused on media. A global code of conduct that promotes integrity in public information, one of the milestones under “build trust” should be accompanied by other bolder actions.

Let’s not forget that UNESCO has been already involved in the promotion of media with two programs, like the International Programme for the Development of Communication (IPDC) on the top of the narrower, journalist focused protection tool Global Media Defense Fund.

Positively, at the present, the momentum to save the media is gaining strength.
Yet it is indispensable to ensure that the focus is going to be on medium and long term measures rather than on a short term fixes.

Without a global design and ambition, it’s certain that the situation is only going to be worse. All global actors, together with the professionals and activists on the ground, must come together. The level and speed of discussions around the future of media must step up.

It is only with profound changes in the funding mechanisms of journalism that serious and reliable news outlets both in North and South, either legacy or startups thriving on internet, will be able to continue to operate and thrive.

There is no firewall to stop the journalism’s decadency. Only urgency and bold actions offer the best chance to ensure a “New Deal” for global media and journalism.

Simone Galimberti is the co-founder of ENGAGE and The Good Leadership. He writes mostly about youths’ involvement in the UN, social development and human rights.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Categories: Africa

Dans l’Atacama, le stress hydrique met l’industrie du lithium sous surveillance

Euractiv.fr - Tue, 05/30/2023 - 07:12
Dans le désert de l'Atacama au Chili, les études divergent encore sur les conséquences environnementales et hydriques de l’utilisation de la ressource en eau dans la région. Le gouvernement a décidé de reprendre le sujet en main, tandis que les industriels affichent des objectifs de durabilité très ambitieux.
Categories: Union européenne

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