Vous êtes ici

Agrégateur de flux

Game Changer: Trump Approves South Korea’s Nuclear Submarine Ambition 

TheDiplomat - ven, 31/10/2025 - 12:53
The decision will have major implications for the South Korea-U.S. alliance and beyond. 

Hogyan támogassuk a kutatókat a Horizont Európa 2026-2027. évi felhívásain való részvételben? Onboarding webinárium kutatásmenedzserek részére (2025. december 8.)

EU Pályázati Portál - ven, 31/10/2025 - 12:52
Az NKFIH NCP csapata abban nyújt útmutatást kutatásmenedzserek részére, hogyan tudják támogatni intézményük kutatóit a pályázati rendszerben való eligazodásban, konzorciumi partnerkeresésben. A webináriumra elsősorban a Horizont Európa programban kezdő kutatásmenedzsereket várjuk.
Catégories: Africa, Pályázatok

Que va-t-il arriver à Sarah Ferguson et aux princesses maintenant qu'Andrew perd ses titres ?

BBC Afrique - ven, 31/10/2025 - 12:40
Le langage utilisé dans la déclaration du palais de Buckingham est "très brutal", a déclaré l'historienne royale Kelly Swaby à la BBC.
Catégories: Afrique

« J'ai vu des corps sans tête, des corps complètement défigurés » : le photographe qui a suivi pendant 24 heures l'opération policière qui a fait 121 morts à Rio

BBC Afrique - ven, 31/10/2025 - 12:35
Le photographe Bruno Itan, qui a grandi dans le Complexe du Alemão, a suivi l'opération la plus meurtrière jamais enregistrée dans la région métropolitaine de Rio.
Catégories: Afrique

Le Monténégro est devenu une terre d'immigration et a du mal à s'y faire

Courrier des Balkans / Monténégro - ven, 31/10/2025 - 12:24

Podgorica a été le théâtre de véritables pogroms anti-turcs, alors que pour la première fois de son histoire, le Monténégro, traditionnelle terre d'émigration, devient pays d'immigration, accueillant notamment des Serbes, des Russes, des Ukrainiens et des Turcs. Non sans tensions sur le marché de l'emploi ou du logement.

- Articles / , , , ,
Catégories: Balkans Occidentaux

Nepal Counts the Economic Cost of the Gen Z Uprising

TheDiplomat - ven, 31/10/2025 - 12:21
The new government has tried to woo businesses, but it will take more than tax cuts and easy loans to convince them to make long-term bets.

Hearings - SEDE Public hearing: EU strategic Defence and Security Partnerships - 5 November 2025 - 05-11-2025 - Committee on Security and Defence

On 5 November, the SEDE Committee will hold a public hearing on "EU strategic Defence and Security Partnerships", where experts will assess the current CSDP defence partnerships and put forward recommendations for the future, in line with the Strategic Compass and in view of strengthening the European Defence Union and relations with key defence partners. This hearing will be followed by the presentation of a draft report on "EU Strategic Defence and Security Partnerships".
Location : SPAAK 1A2
Programme
Poster
Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP
Catégories: Europäische Union

Hearings - SEDE Public hearing: EU strategic Defence and Security Partnerships - 5 November 2025 - 05-11-2025 - Committee on Security and Defence

On 5 November, the SEDE Committee will hold a public hearing on "EU strategic Defence and Security Partnerships", where experts will assess the current CSDP defence partnerships and put forward recommendations for the future, in line with the Strategic Compass and in view of strengthening the European Defence Union and relations with key defence partners. This hearing will be followed by the presentation of a draft report on "EU Strategic Defence and Security Partnerships".
Location : SPAAK 1A2
Programme
Poster
Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP

Highlights - SEDE Public hearing: EU strategic Defence and Security Partnerships - 5 November 2025 - Committee on Security and Defence

On 5 November, the SEDE Committee will hold a public hearing on "EU strategic Defence and Security Partnerships", where experts will assess the current CSDP defence partnerships and put forward recommendations for the future, in line with the Strategic Compass and in view of strengthening the European Defence Union and relations with key defence partners. This hearing will be followed by the presentation of a draft report on "EU Strategic Defence and Security Partnerships".
Programme
Poster
Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP
Catégories: Europäische Union

Highlights - SEDE Public hearing: EU strategic Defence and Security Partnerships - 5 November 2025 - Committee on Security and Defence

On 5 November, the SEDE Committee will hold a public hearing on "EU strategic Defence and Security Partnerships", where experts will assess the current CSDP defence partnerships and put forward recommendations for the future, in line with the Strategic Compass and in view of strengthening the European Defence Union and relations with key defence partners. This hearing will be followed by the presentation of a draft report on "EU Strategic Defence and Security Partnerships".
Programme
Poster
Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP

As Civil Society Is Silenced, Corruption and Inequality Rise

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - ven, 31/10/2025 - 11:59

Mandeep Tiwana, Secretary General, CIVICUS Global Alliance. Credit: CIVICUS

By Busani Bafana
BULAWAYO & BANGKOK, Oct 31 2025 (IPS)

From the streets of Bangkok to power corridors in Washington, the civil society space for dissent is fast shrinking. Authoritarian regimes are silencing opposition but indirectly fueling corruption and widening inequality, according to a leading global civil society alliance.

The warning is from Mandeep Tiwana, Secretary General of CIVICUS Global Alliance, who points to a troubling trend: civil society is increasingly considered a threat to those in power.

That is a sobering assessment from CIVICUS, which reports that a wave of repression by authoritarian regimes is directly fueling corruption and exploding inequality.

“The quality of democracy on hand around the world is very poor at the moment,” Tiwana tells IPS in an exclusive interview. “That is why civil society organizations are seen as a threat by authoritative leaders and the negative impact of attacking civil society means there is a rise in corruption, there is less inclusion, there is less transparency in public life and more inequality in society.”

His comments come ahead of the 16th International Civil Society Week (ICSW) from 1–5 November 2025 convened by CIVICUS and the Asia Democracy Network. The ICSW will bring together more than 1,300 delegates comprising activists, civil society groups, academics, and human rights advocates to empower citizen action and build powerful alliances. ICSW pays tribute to activists, movements, and civil society achieving significant progress, defending civic freedoms, and showing remarkable resilience despite the many challenges.

The ICSW takes place against a bleak backdrop. According to the CIVICUS Monitor, a research partnership between CIVICUS and over 20 organizations tracking civic freedoms, civil society is under attack in 116 of 198 countries and territories. The fundamental freedoms of expression, association, and peaceful assembly face significant deterrents worldwide.

Protests at COP27 in Egypt. Mandeep Tiwana, Secretary General of CIVICUS Global Alliance, is hopeful that COP30, in Belém, Brazil, will be more inclusive. Credit: Busani Bafana/IPS

“It is becoming increasingly dangerous to be a civil society activist and to be the leader of a civil society organization,” Tiwana tells IPS. “Many organizations have been defunded because governments don’t like what they do to ensure transparency or because they speak out against some very powerful people. It is a challenging environment for civil society.”

Research by CIVICUS categorizes civic freedom in five dimensions: open, narrowed, obstructed, repressed, and closed. Alarmingly, over 70 percent of the world’s population now lives in countries rated in the two worst categories: ‘repressed’ and ‘closed.’

“This marks a regression in democratic values, rights, and accountability,” Tiwana noted, adding that even in the remaining 30% of nations, restrictions on civic freedoms remain.

Repression Tools in Tow

The ICSW, being held under the theme ‘Celebrating citizen action: reimagining democracy, rights, and inclusion for today’s world,’ convenes against this backdrop.

Multifaceted tools are used by governments to stifle dissent. Governments are introducing laws to block civil society organizations from receiving international funding while simultaneously restricting domestic resources. Besides, laws have also been enacted in some countries to restrict the independence of civil society organizations that scrutinize governments and promote transparency.

For civil society activists, the consequences are sobering.

“If you speak truth to power, uncover high-level corruption and try to seek transformative change in society, whether it’s on gender equality or inclusion of minorities you  can be subjected to severe forms of persecution,” Tiwana explained. “This includes stigmatization, intimidation,  imprisonment for long periods, physical attacks, and death.”

Multilateralism Tumbles, Unilateralism Rises

Tiwana said there is an increasing breakdown in multilateralism and respect for international laws from which civil society draws its rights.

This erosion of civic space is reflected in the breakdown of the international system. Tiwana identified a surge in unilateralism and a disregard for the international laws that have historically safeguarded the rights of civil society.

“If you look at what’s happening around the world, whether with regard to conflicts in Palestine, in the Congo, in Sudan, in Myanmar, in Ukraine, in Cameroon, and elsewhere, governments are not respecting international norms,” he observed, remarking that authoritarian regimes were abusing the sovereignty of other countries, ignoring the Geneva conventions, and legalizing attacks on civilians, torturing and persecuting civilians.

This collapse of multilateralism has enabled a form of transactional diplomacy, where narrowly defined national interests trump human rights. Powerful states now collude to manipulate public policy, enhancing their wealth and power. When civil society attempts to expose these corrupt relationships, it becomes a target.

“They are colluding to game public policy to suit their interests and to enhance their wealth.  The offshoot of this is that civil society is attacked when it tries to expose these corrupt relationships,” said Tiwana, expressing concern  about the rise in state capture by oligarchs who now own vast swathes of the media and technology landscapes.

Citing countries like China and Rwanda, which, while they have different ways of functioning, Tiwana said both are powerful authoritarian states engaging in transactional diplomacy and are opposed to the civil society’s power to hold them to account.

The election of Donald Trump as US President in 2025 has shattered the foundation of the US as a democracy, Tiwana noted. The country no longer supports democratic values internationally and is at home with  attacks on the media and defunding of civil society.

The action by the US has negative impacts, as some leaders around the world are taking their cue from Trump in muzzling civil society and media freedoms, he said, pointing to how the US has created common cause with authoritarian governments in El Salvador, Israel,  Argentina, and Hungary.

The fight Goes On

Despite facing repression and threats, civil society continues to resist authoritarian regimes. From massive street protests against corruption in Nepal, and Guatemala  to pro-democracy movements that have removed  governments in Bangladesh  and Madagascar,

“People need to have courage to stand up for what they believe and to speak out when their neighbors are persecuted,” Tiwana told IPS. “People still need to continue to speak the truth and come out in the streets in peaceful protest against the injustice that is happening. They should not lose hope.”

On the curtailing of civil society participation in climate change negotiations, Tiwana said the upcoming COP30 in Brazil offered hope. The host government believes in democratic values and including civil society at the table.

“Past COPs have been held in petro states—Azerbaijan, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt—which are all authoritarian states where civil society has been attacked, crushed, and persecuted,” he said. “We are hopeful that there will be greater inclusion of voices and the commitments that will be made to reduce emissions will be ambitious but the question is really going to be after the COP and if those commitments will be from governments that really don’t care about civil society demands or about the well-being of their people.”

Young people, Tiwana said, have shown the way. Movements like Fridays for Future  and the Black Lives Matter have demonstrated the power of solidarity and unified action.

But, given the massive protests, has this resistance led to change of a similar scale?

“Unfortunately, we are seeing a rise in military dictatorships around the world,” Tiwana admitted, attributing this to a fraying appetite by the international community to uphold human rights and democratic values.

“Conflict, environmental degradation, extreme wealth accumulation, and high-level corruption are interlinked because it’s people who want to possess more than they need.”

Tiwana illustrated what he means by global priorities.

“We have USD 2.7 trillion in military spending year-on-year nowadays, whereas 700 million people go to bed hungry every night.”

“As civil society, we are trying to expose these corrupt relationships that exist. So the fight for equality, the struggle to create better, more peaceful, more just societies—something CIVICUS supports very much—are some of the conversations that we will be looking to have at the International Civil Society Week.”

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


!function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],p=/^http:/.test(d.location)?'http':'https';if(!d.getElementById(id)){js=d.createElement(s);js.id=id;js.src=p+'://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js';fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js,fjs);}}(document, 'script', 'twitter-wjs');   Related Articles

Kihívások a Horizont Európa keretprogramban: pályázás, projektmegvalósítás – Tájékoztató webinárium haladó kutatásmenedzserek részére (2025. november 13.)

EU Pályázati Portál - ven, 31/10/2025 - 11:33
Közkívánatra az NKFIH NCP csapata megszervezi a „feketeöves” kutatásmenedzser webináriumot! Az online találkozón alkalmat biztosítunk a pályázás és a projektmenedzsment olyan kérdéseiben való elmélyülésre, jógyakorlatok megosztására, amely néha még a tapasztalt kutatásmenedzsereket is kihívások elé állítja, például a költségvetés tervezése, az Annotated Grant Agreement értelmezése, vagy egy Systems and Process Audit. Az NKFIH NCP csapata tájékoztatást ad a jogi és pénzügyi NCP-k aktuális ülésének témáiról.
Catégories: Africa, Pályázatok

EU-Bürgerbeauftragte befördert engen Vertrauten in höchste Verwaltungsposition

Euractiv.de - ven, 31/10/2025 - 11:19
Die Entscheidung von Teresa Anjinho, eine derart sensible Position mit einem engen Vertrauten zu besetzen, könnte Fragen nach möglichen Mängeln im Auswahlverfahren und dem Eindruck von Begünstigung aufwerfen.
Catégories: Europäische Union

Voici la liste des pays les plus démocratiques d'Afrique selon un rapport

BBC Afrique - ven, 31/10/2025 - 11:16
Sur les 55 pays du continent, 28 sont des autocraties électorales, 12, des régimes autocratiques fermés, seuls 13 sont des démocraties électorales et 2 uniquement (Seychelles et Afrique du Sud) sont considérés comme des démocraties libérales.
Catégories: Afrique

L’imbroglio sur les zones maritimes en Méditerranée peut-il être résolu ?

Euractiv.fr - ven, 31/10/2025 - 10:56

Les pays que le premier ministre grec espère réunir autour de la table sont Chypre, l'Égypte, la Turquie et la Libye. L'objectif étant d'explorer des solutions aux désaccords de longue date sur les zones maritimes, qui sont cruciales pour l'exploration des réserves de gaz et de pétrole.

The post L’imbroglio sur les zones maritimes en Méditerranée peut-il être résolu ? appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Catégories: Union européenne

Un an de révolte en Serbie : historique du mouvement et revendications

Courrier des Balkans / Serbie - ven, 31/10/2025 - 10:30

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. Rappel de la chronologie et des revendications, non satisfaites, des étudiant.e.s, désormais relayés par les citoyen.ne.s

- Le fil de l'Info / , , , , ,
Catégories: Balkans Occidentaux

Reports of mass killings in Sudan have echoes of its dark past

BBC Africa - ven, 31/10/2025 - 10:20
Some are warning of a genocide unfolding in Darfur - violence that is linked to killings there 20 years ago.
Catégories: Africa

Wahl in den Niederlanden zeigt: Die politische Mitte Europas lebt

Euractiv.de - ven, 31/10/2025 - 10:13
Für Rob Jetten krönt das Ergebnis seinen Versuch, den Liberalismus unter dem Schlagwort „positiver Realismus“ neu zu definieren – als Mischung aus Optimismus und pragmatischem Realismus.
Catégories: Europäische Union

Quatre des huit groupes politiques au Parlement menacent de bloquer les négociations sur le budget de l’UE

Euractiv.fr - ven, 31/10/2025 - 10:07

Les eurodéputés ont adressé une lettre à Ursula von der Leyen et menacent de bloquer les négociations si des changements ne sont pas apportés d'ici le 12 novembre.

The post Quatre des huit groupes politiques au Parlement menacent de bloquer les négociations sur le budget de l’UE appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Catégories: Union européenne

Pages