Les orthodoxes roumains d'Ukraine sont pris en tenaille dans le conflit entre les Églises de Kiev et de Moscou. Ils voudrait se rattacher au patriarcat de Bucarest, ce que refuse l'Ukraine. En juin, des incidents ont éclaté à Tchernivtsi, en Bucovine.
- Articles / orthodoxie, Roumanie, Religions, Relations régionales, Courrier des BalkansDepuis le début de l'invasion de l'Ukraine par la Russie, des dizaines de ressortissants russes, souvent liés au Kremlin, ont obtenu la citoyenneté serbe par décret. Une enquête du site d'investigation IStories.
- Le fil de l'Info / Ukraine, Poutine et les Balkans, Serbie, Russie Balkans, Défense, police et justice, Relations internationales‘‘Je suis la résurrection et la vie. Celui qui croit en moi vivra, même s'il meurt ; et celui qui vit et croit en moi ne mourra jamais.'' (Jean 11 :25- 27)
La grande famille KPAGNAWNE à DANO Gbièlgane , DANO, Ouaga, Bobo ;
La famille allié ZAW à DANO DAZOUBOPOUO, DANO, Ouaga, Bobo, Yaoundé, Rouan ;
Les parents, les frères et sœurs HIEN Eloge, HIEN Victory, KOMPAORE Yvette, Abbé HIEN Ignace, Abbé HIEN Hilaire, HIEN Françoise, Jean Edouard DABIRE, Hélène DABIRE, Kisito DABIRE, Jeanne d'Arc DABIRE, Sèbar DABIRE, Arsène Armand HIEN, Marius SOME, Dar Innocent SOME
La veuve Rose HIEN/DABIRE ;
Les enfants DABIRE Inès, DABIRE Elodie, DABIRE Kevin, DABIRE cynthia,
Les petits enfants : Gloria, Fabiola, Urielle et Nathan
Vous réitèrent leurs sincères remerciements pour vos nombreuses marques d'amitié, de sympathie, de compassion, de soutien spirituel, moral, matériel, financier et vos soutiens multiformes lors du rappel à Dieu de leur fils, père, frère, oncle, grand-père :
Ferdinand DABIRE, journaliste à la retraite ;
Décès survenu le jeudi 03 juillet 2025 suivi de l'inhumation et des obsèques le samedi 06 juillet 2025 à DANO Gbièlgane.
Ils remercient les autorités nationales et provinciales, les parents, voisins, jeunes de DANO, les collègues de services, amis et connaissances de la famille.
La famille se garde de citer de noms de peur d'en oublier.
Que le seigneur dans sa miséricorde divine, vous rende au centuple vos prières et bienfaits.
Union de prière
L'Ambassade du Danemark à Ouagadougou et l'ensemble du personnel ont la profonde douleur de vous annoncer le décès de Mme Fatoumata IDE/CISSE, précédemment Coordonnatrice du Secteur Résilience Agriculture - Secteur Privé, survenu le vendredi 11 juillet 2025 à Ouagadougou des suites de maladie.
L'Ambassade présente ses condoléances les plus attristées à la famille éplorée.
Un livre de condoléances est ouvert à l'Ambassade du 15 au 17 juillet 2025 de 9h00 à 14h00 pour recueillir les messages d'hommages qui seront transmis à la famille.
La levée du corps est prévue pour le mercredi 16 juillet à 5h du matin à la morgue du CHU Bogodogo suivie du transfert de la dépouille mortelle à l'Aéroport International de Ouagadougou pour Bamako au Mali où se dérouleront les obsèques.
Unions de prières.
Ambassade du Danemark au Burkina Faso
Our paper examined the impact of economic sanctions on food prices and security. Anecdotal evidence suggests that food security is threatened in nations subject to sanctions. However, the causal link has not been proven. We employ a two-way fixed-effects approach and leverage the entropy balancing technique to ascertain the existence of a causal link. Our analysis relies on the Global Sanctions Database for sanctions and the FAOSTAT database for food security proxies: food prices and prevalence of undernourishment (PoU). Sanctions increase food prices: during the sanctions period, real food prices are higher by 1.24 percentage points compared to the non-sanctions period. Although the increase in food prices is marginal, overall food security is threatened, as the PoU is 2.1 percentage points higher during sanctions compared to periods without sanctions.
Our paper examined the impact of economic sanctions on food prices and security. Anecdotal evidence suggests that food security is threatened in nations subject to sanctions. However, the causal link has not been proven. We employ a two-way fixed-effects approach and leverage the entropy balancing technique to ascertain the existence of a causal link. Our analysis relies on the Global Sanctions Database for sanctions and the FAOSTAT database for food security proxies: food prices and prevalence of undernourishment (PoU). Sanctions increase food prices: during the sanctions period, real food prices are higher by 1.24 percentage points compared to the non-sanctions period. Although the increase in food prices is marginal, overall food security is threatened, as the PoU is 2.1 percentage points higher during sanctions compared to periods without sanctions.
Our paper examined the impact of economic sanctions on food prices and security. Anecdotal evidence suggests that food security is threatened in nations subject to sanctions. However, the causal link has not been proven. We employ a two-way fixed-effects approach and leverage the entropy balancing technique to ascertain the existence of a causal link. Our analysis relies on the Global Sanctions Database for sanctions and the FAOSTAT database for food security proxies: food prices and prevalence of undernourishment (PoU). Sanctions increase food prices: during the sanctions period, real food prices are higher by 1.24 percentage points compared to the non-sanctions period. Although the increase in food prices is marginal, overall food security is threatened, as the PoU is 2.1 percentage points higher during sanctions compared to periods without sanctions.
We study peer effects in consumption patterns and their associated welfare implications among rural farm households in northern Ghana using a panel data set. We construct a social interaction network based on household-specific locations and employ a spatial econometric approach that leverages the structure of the peer networks to identify peer effects. The results indicate that peers' consumption patterns significantly influence individual consumption decisions, with the magnitude of this effect varying across farm households depending on their resource endowments. We also find that information exchange and partial risk-sharing behaviors drive these peer effects. Overall, our findings suggest that government interventions aimed at enhancing household consumption through transfers would be more effective if targeted at households with relatively large peer networks. In addition, anti-poverty and income-improvement programs can leverage peer networks to enhance their overall impact.
We study peer effects in consumption patterns and their associated welfare implications among rural farm households in northern Ghana using a panel data set. We construct a social interaction network based on household-specific locations and employ a spatial econometric approach that leverages the structure of the peer networks to identify peer effects. The results indicate that peers' consumption patterns significantly influence individual consumption decisions, with the magnitude of this effect varying across farm households depending on their resource endowments. We also find that information exchange and partial risk-sharing behaviors drive these peer effects. Overall, our findings suggest that government interventions aimed at enhancing household consumption through transfers would be more effective if targeted at households with relatively large peer networks. In addition, anti-poverty and income-improvement programs can leverage peer networks to enhance their overall impact.
We study peer effects in consumption patterns and their associated welfare implications among rural farm households in northern Ghana using a panel data set. We construct a social interaction network based on household-specific locations and employ a spatial econometric approach that leverages the structure of the peer networks to identify peer effects. The results indicate that peers' consumption patterns significantly influence individual consumption decisions, with the magnitude of this effect varying across farm households depending on their resource endowments. We also find that information exchange and partial risk-sharing behaviors drive these peer effects. Overall, our findings suggest that government interventions aimed at enhancing household consumption through transfers would be more effective if targeted at households with relatively large peer networks. In addition, anti-poverty and income-improvement programs can leverage peer networks to enhance their overall impact.
This study investigates the trade impacts of trade facilitation (TF) and computes ad-valorem tariff equivalents of trade facilitation for Africa. Its contribution is twofold. First, a structural gravity model is used to estimate the impact of TF on trade at a disaggregated level. We also extend our results using different indices that measure TF. Second, in a partial equilibrium framework and using some counterfactuals, it simulates the impact of TF in African countries. Our findings indicate that time to trade has a strong and negative impact on trade, whereas logistics performance and the trade-enabling index positively and significantly impact trade. The analysis suggests that African countries benefit most from TF improvements, particularly those with long delays and weak infrastructural and logistics performance. We find that a one-day custom delay has a 0.9% tariff equivalent. At the product level, the agriculture, food, and some manufacturing sectors, which are the leading African imports, benefit the most from implementing TF. In contrast, mining-related products, which are the major export components of Africa, benefit the least. An ambitious and realistic TF implementation of reducing trade delay by half enhances Africa’s exports and imports by 30.2% and 12.7% respectively.
This study investigates the trade impacts of trade facilitation (TF) and computes ad-valorem tariff equivalents of trade facilitation for Africa. Its contribution is twofold. First, a structural gravity model is used to estimate the impact of TF on trade at a disaggregated level. We also extend our results using different indices that measure TF. Second, in a partial equilibrium framework and using some counterfactuals, it simulates the impact of TF in African countries. Our findings indicate that time to trade has a strong and negative impact on trade, whereas logistics performance and the trade-enabling index positively and significantly impact trade. The analysis suggests that African countries benefit most from TF improvements, particularly those with long delays and weak infrastructural and logistics performance. We find that a one-day custom delay has a 0.9% tariff equivalent. At the product level, the agriculture, food, and some manufacturing sectors, which are the leading African imports, benefit the most from implementing TF. In contrast, mining-related products, which are the major export components of Africa, benefit the least. An ambitious and realistic TF implementation of reducing trade delay by half enhances Africa’s exports and imports by 30.2% and 12.7% respectively.
This study investigates the trade impacts of trade facilitation (TF) and computes ad-valorem tariff equivalents of trade facilitation for Africa. Its contribution is twofold. First, a structural gravity model is used to estimate the impact of TF on trade at a disaggregated level. We also extend our results using different indices that measure TF. Second, in a partial equilibrium framework and using some counterfactuals, it simulates the impact of TF in African countries. Our findings indicate that time to trade has a strong and negative impact on trade, whereas logistics performance and the trade-enabling index positively and significantly impact trade. The analysis suggests that African countries benefit most from TF improvements, particularly those with long delays and weak infrastructural and logistics performance. We find that a one-day custom delay has a 0.9% tariff equivalent. At the product level, the agriculture, food, and some manufacturing sectors, which are the leading African imports, benefit the most from implementing TF. In contrast, mining-related products, which are the major export components of Africa, benefit the least. An ambitious and realistic TF implementation of reducing trade delay by half enhances Africa’s exports and imports by 30.2% and 12.7% respectively.