You are here

France

À son procès, Sophia Chikirou accusée d’avoir cherché à «usurper» sa qualité de présidente du Média auprès du Crédit du Nord

Le Figaro / Politique - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 09:12
COMPTE RENDU D’AUDIENCE - La députée LFI comparaissait ce mardi devant le tribunal correctionnel de Paris, dans une tentative d’escroquerie de plus de 67.000 euros. Le parquet a requis une amende, mais aucune peine d’inéligibilité.
Categories: Defence`s Feeds, France

FIREPOWER: Kubilius convenes Defence Union commissioners

Euractiv.com - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 08:57
In today's edition: Kallas frustration, UNIFIL, drones, and EPF
Categories: European Union, France

HARVEST: Mercosur hangover

Euractiv.com - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 08:26
In today's edition: Brazilian meat, food safety package, fertilisers
Categories: European Union, France

The Global Epidemic of Violence in an Age of Impunity

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 07:46

A residential building in Beirut, Lebanon, lies in ruins. Credit: UNICEF/Fouad Choufany

By Alon Ben-Meir
NEW YORK, May 13 2026 (IPS)

Violence has metastasized into humanity’s baseline condition. Yet international institutions remain paralyzed by vetoes and rivalry, offering hollow declarations while dehumanization becomes normalized. Coordinated action, not gestures, is desperately needed.

Global violence today is metastasizing, not contained; over 180,000 violent events reported globally by the International Institute for Strategic Studies signal a world in which conflict has become a baseline condition rather than an exception. More than 130 armed conflicts now rage—over twice the number of 15 years ago—shattering infrastructure, tearing apart social fabric, and normalizing dehumanization as a political weapon.

Women and children bear the brunt: hundreds of millions live within range of armed clashes, with millions of preventable deaths and lifelong trauma caused not only by bullets and bombs but by hunger, disease, and gender-based violence unleashed by war’s chaos.

Yet the UN system and the world’s democracies appear increasingly paralyzed—trapped in vetoes, geopolitical rivalries, and hollow declarations—offering gestures of concern rather than the coordinated, enforced accountability this modern plague of violence so desperately demands.

The global escalation of violence is a structural crisis rather than an aberration—one that reveals the failure of international institutions, exposing the normalization of suffering across political, economic, and societal dimensions.

The proliferation of violence signals not just an increase in armed confrontations but a breakdown in the very mechanisms meant to constrain conflict, rendering dehumanization a routine tool of power, as demonstrated in the following.

The Philosophical Angle

Violence represents the collapse of legitimate political authority and the rise of impotence masquerading as force. Hannah Arendt’s foundational insight remains essential: “Power and violence are opposites; where the one rules absolutely, the other is absent. Violence appears where power is in jeopardy, but left to its own course, it ends in power’s disappearance” (On Violence, 1970).

This speaks directly to today’s proliferation of conflicts, which indicate not state strength but institutional failure, where violence substitutes for the consent and legitimacy governments can no longer command. The resort to violence signals the exhaustion of political dialogue and the absence of legitimate power structures capable of resolving disputes.

Economic Disenfranchisement

Economic drivers are critical accelerants of contemporary violence through resource competition, commodity exploitation, and systemic inequality. Slavoj Žižek’s concept of systemic violence captures the pervasive economic roots: “Therein resides the fundamental systemic violence of capitalism, much more uncanny than the direct pre-capitalist socio-ideological violence: this violence is no longer attributable to concrete individuals and their ‘evil’ intentions, but is purely ‘objective,’ systemic, anonymous.”

The greed-driven exploitation of natural resources—from diamonds in Sierra Leone to oil in Venezuela and cobalt and other conflict minerals in the Democratic Republic of Congo—finances rebellions and turns conflict into a profitable enterprise. Economic deprivation, geoeconomic confrontation through weaponized tariffs and sanctions, and commodity price shocks directly shape military capacity and conflict outcomes.

The Political Compulsion of Violence

Political violence emerges not merely from divergent interests but from the deliberate choice to pursue objectives through coercion rather than negotiation. The paralysis of the UNSC and democratic institutions reflects what Arendt identified as bureaucratic tyranny: “In a fully developed bureaucracy, there is nobody left with whom one can argue, to whom one can present grievances, on whom the pressures of power can be exerted. … everybody is deprived of political freedom, of the power to act… where we are all equally powerless, we have a tyranny without a tyrant.”

This captures the international community’s inability to enforce accountability—vetoes and geopolitical rivalries create a structural void where violence thrives unchecked. Political fragility and weakening institutions, seen in Syria and Myanmar, make societies vulnerable to breakdown, radicalization, and violent dissent.

Societal Fragmentation

Societal conditions create climates where violence becomes normalized through inequality and the erosion of social cohesion. Thomas Hobbes’s bleak assessment of unconstrained human nature remains relevant: in the state of nature, “the life of man [is] solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.” While Hobbes described a pre-political condition, his insight applies to societies where governance collapses and fear dominates, conditions now afflicting millions living within range of armed clashes.

Social norms that accept violence as conflict resolution, combined with economic inequalities and a lack of community participation, create environments where aggression flourishes. This normalizes dehumanization, where, as in Nigeria, Israel and South Africa, gendered violence, ethnic tensions, and historical grievances fuel recurring cycles of brutality.

Nationalism, Repression and State Complicity

State-level factors amplifying violence include the failure to address ethnic marginalization, resource competition, and the absence of functional governance. Walter Benjamin warned of violence’s relationship to law and state power: “There is no document of civilization which is not at the same time a document of barbarism” (On the Concept of History, 1940).

This observation underscores how national institutions perpetuate violence through their foundational structures and exclusionary practices. Nations repeatedly falling victim to civil and international wars demonstrate governments’ inability to recognize and address destabilizing issues like political, religious, or ethnic marginalization. The weaponization of state apparatus through totalitarian mobilization of violence destroys the very space where political thinking and resistance might occur, as demonstrated in China and Eritrea.

Religious Instrumentalization

Religion, when co-opted by political actors or stripped of its ethical core, becomes a potent catalyst for violence, sanctifying exclusion and legitimizing brutality. Sectarian divides—whether in the Middle East, South Asia, or parts of Africa—transform identity into a battlefield where compromise is heresy and annihilation becomes duty. René Girard’s insight is instructive: “Religion shelters us from violence just as violence seeks shelter in religion.” When faith is manipulated to justify power or grievance, such as in India, Israel or Iraq, it ceases to restrain violence and instead consecrates it, deepening cycles of retribution and rendering conflicts existential rather than negotiable.

The convergence of these dimensions explains why violence has become a baseline condition rather than an exception. Several measures must be considered to de-escalate global violence. Although effecting change is extremely difficult, every effort must still be made, provided the public leads the charge through sustained protest, continuous advocacy, and relentless pressure on policymakers to enact change.

Reform UN Security Council Veto Power

Governments must constrain veto authority by restricting its use in cases involving genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. Permanent members should abstain when directly involved, transforming the veto from obstruction into accountability and addressing institutional paralysis that enables unchecked violence.

Establish Functional Early Warning Systems

International bodies should implement systems linking detection to preventive action, closing the warning-response gap. These must integrate predictive analytics, local expertise, and cross-border coordination to anticipate violence months before eruption, enabling timely diplomatic and humanitarian intervention.

Address Economic Inequality and Insecurity

Governments should implement policies that reduce income inequality—including wage increases, tax reform, and financial assistance—aimed at addressing violence triggers. Targeted lending, job creation, and redistributive policies alleviate financial strain that fuels conflict and crime, making structural prevention more effective than reactive measures.

Dr. Alon Ben-Meir is President of the Institute for Humanitarian Conflict Resolution.

IPS UN Bureau

 


!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');  

  

 

Categories: Africa, France

Will the Socialists stop Metsola?

Euractiv.com - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 07:24
Also, in Wednesday’s edition: Rama drama, train booking, Brazil grill
Categories: European Union, France

Histoire militaire moderne : comment les conflits ont transformé les stratégies de défense

Aumilitaire.com - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 07:12
La guerre change. Elle a toujours changé. Mais depuis le XXe siècle, le rythme de cette transformation s’est accéléré à une vitesse sans précédent. Les conflits modernes ne ressemblent plus aux batailles rangées d’autrefois — ils mettent en jeu des technologies, des doctrines et des menaces que les générations précédentes n’auraient pas pu imaginer. Des […]
Categories: Défense, France

US set to become the EU’s top gas supplier this year

Euractiv.com - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 06:01
Europe has 'failed on both counts' in pursuit of diversification and security of supply, analyst warns
Categories: European Union, France

Starmer is a symptom of Britain’s deeper malaise

Euractiv.com - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 06:00
Britain must decide whether it prefers substantially lower public spending or substantially higher taxes. Without clarity on these core questions, it will remain stuck in economic limbo
Categories: European Union, France

INTERVIEW: EU “shouldn’t provoke a trade war” over pesticides residues, says MEP

Euractiv.com - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 06:00
The Parliament co-lead negotiator for the food safety simplification plan warns against the trade impact of a blanket cut in pesticide residues
Categories: European Union, France

Brussels launches public consultation on core nature laws

Euractiv.com - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 06:00
Environmentalists fear Birds and Habitats Directives could fall victim to the war on red tape
Categories: European Union, France

EU eyes new Lebanon mission ‘radically different’ from UN peacekeeping model

Euractiv.com - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 06:00
An EEAS fact-finding mission is expected in Beirut in the coming days to test the ground
Categories: European Union, France

New Hungarian cabinet to make sharp break with Orbán era

Euractiv.com - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 06:00
The hearings marked the first detailed presentation Peter Magyar's political programme ahead of his government formally taking office
Categories: European Union, France

Europe’s energy ministers shun crisis meeting

Euractiv.com - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 06:00
Major EU economies send only junior officials to informal summit in Cyprus
Categories: European Union, France

Immer weniger, aber immer grössere Bauernhöfe – opfert der Bundesrat bewusst Betriebe?

NZZ.ch - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 05:29
Jeden Tag geben in der Schweiz zwei Landwirtschaftsbetriebe auf. Nun fordern Kleinbauern eine Abkehr von der «Wachse oder weiche»-Strategie.
Categories: France, Swiss News

Procès libyen en appel : sept ans de prison requis contre Nicolas Sarkozy

France24 / France - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 03:55
Le parquet général a requis mercredi une peine de sept ans de prison à l'encontre de Nicolas Sarkozy dans le procès libyen en appel, comme en première instance. Ce dossier a déjà valu à l'ancien président de la République un passage de 20 jours à la prison parisienne de la Santé.
Categories: France

Bulgarian study finds cancer patients with mRNA COVID-19 jabs live longer [Advocacy Lab]

Euractiv.com - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 02:26
The next phase of the research will examine the impact on other chronic conditions, such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases
Categories: European Union, France

Trump announces departure of food and drug regulation chief

Euractiv.com - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 00:44
Marty Makary resigned following weeks of political tumult at the powerful agency
Categories: European Union, France

La fortune de Rebrab recule de 1,5 MDS $ : le nouveau classement Forbes 2026 du seul milliardaire algérien

Algérie 360 - Wed, 13/05/2026 - 00:17

Le nouveau classement Forbes 2026 des plus grandes fortunes d’Afrique révèle une montée en puissance du bloc arabe. Avec 10 milliardaires originaires d’Égypte, du Maroc […]

L’article La fortune de Rebrab recule de 1,5 MDS $ : le nouveau classement Forbes 2026 du seul milliardaire algérien est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique, France

Guillaume Tabard : «Sous la présidentielle percent déjà les législatives»

Le Figaro / Politique - Tue, 12/05/2026 - 23:28
CONTRE-POINT - Tout président élu dissoudra l’Assemblée issue des législatives de 2024. Si Sébastien Lecornu tient depuis huit mois et tiendra douze mois encore, c’est en raison de cette perspective d’une remise des compteurs à zéro.
Categories: Defence`s Feeds, France

Pages