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AMENDMENTS 50 - 188 - Draft opinion The Commission’s 2025 Rule of Law report – annual report 2025 - PE781.488v01-00

AMENDMENTS 50 - 188 - Draft opinion The Commission’s 2025 Rule of Law report – annual report 2025
Committee on Foreign Affairs
Adrián Vázquez Lázara

Source : © European Union, 2026 - EP
Categories: Europäische Union

AMENDMENTS 50 - 188 - Draft opinion The Commission’s 2025 Rule of Law report – annual report 2025 - PE781.488v01-00

AMENDMENTS 50 - 188 - Draft opinion The Commission’s 2025 Rule of Law report – annual report 2025
Committee on Foreign Affairs
Adrián Vázquez Lázara

Source : © European Union, 2026 - EP
Categories: European Union

Face à Sébastien Lecornu, une droite partagée entre indulgence et méfiance

Le Figaro / Politique - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 17:11
DÉCRYPTAGE - À la reprise du débat budgétaire sur fond de « chantage » à la dissolution, Les Républicains entament 2026 avec prudence et sans beaucoup d’illusions à l’égard du premier ministre.

Le Niger révoque les permis des chauffeurs de camions-citernes qui refusent de se rendre au Mali en raison du blocus imposé par les djihadistes

BBC Afrique - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 17:08
Les djihadistes ont pris pour cible les camions-citernes entrant au Mali, aggravant ainsi la pénurie de carburant dans le pays.
Categories: Afrique

Le Niger révoque les permis des chauffeurs de camions-citernes qui refusent de se rendre au Mali en raison du blocus imposé par les djihadistes

BBC Afrique - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 17:08
Les djihadistes ont pris pour cible les camions-citernes entrant au Mali, aggravant ainsi la pénurie de carburant dans le pays.
Categories: Afrique

Europe eyes Ukraine and Balkans as drug production hubs

Euractiv.com - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 17:07
The study suggests the EU’s preparedness ambition may be ahead of its manufacturing reality
Categories: European Union

Hadj Moussa dans le viseur de Chelsea

Algérie 360 - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 17:02

Visiblement, Anis Hadj Moussa a de la côte. Deux clubs se le disputent lors du mercato hivernal. Il s’agit de Chelsea et l’Olympique de Marseille. […]

L’article Hadj Moussa dans le viseur de Chelsea est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique

En Ouganda, l’accès à Internet coupé pour une durée indéterminée avant les élections du 15 janvier

LeMonde / Afrique - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 16:43
L’exécutif avait pourtant affirmé à plusieurs reprises que le réseau ne serait pas bloqué pendant les élections présidentielle et législatives prévues pour jeudi.
Categories: Afrique

INTERVIEW - Ein Strafrechtler zum Fall Crans-Montana: «Die Walliser Staatsanwaltschaft hat unglaubliche Fehler gemacht»

NZZ.ch - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 16:22
Ohne einen Staatsanwalt aus einem anderen Kanton sei das Vertrauen verloren, sagt Alain Macaluso, Anwalt und Direktor des Lausanner Universitätszentrums für Strafrecht. Er stellt die Frage, ob die Beschuldigten nicht doch mit Vorsatz gehandelt hätten.
Categories: Swiss News

Commission writing ‘transitional’ AI guidelines to step in if standards miss 2027 deadline

Euractiv.com - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 16:22
The EU's executive is preparing a back-stop in case high risk AI Act standards aren't ready, according to a document seen by Euractiv
Categories: European Union

Vas Géza fotóművészre emlékezett a Kolozsvár Társaság

Kolozsvári Rádió (Románia/Erdély) - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 16:16

2025. december 18-án, születésnapja alkalmából kegyelettel emlékeztek Kolozsváron az augusztusban elhunyt Vas Gézára, az erdélyi népviselet és a természet szenvedélyes fotóművészére, a Kolozsvár Társaság választmányi tagjára, aki életének 91. évében távozott az élők sorából, jelentős fotóművészeti örökséget hagyva maga után. Az EME székhelyén lezajlott emlékest meghívottjai Farkas György természetfotós, nyugdíjas vegyész, egyetemi tanár és Csibi […]

Articolul Vas Géza fotóművészre emlékezett a Kolozsvár Társaság apare prima dată în Kolozsvári Rádió Románia.

The Algerian Case and the New Parade of Sovereignties

Foreign Policy Blogs - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 16:05
By Rachel Avraham   In the contemporary global debate on sovereignty, few countries embody the paradox of independence and unresolved historical justice as powerfully as Algeria. More than six decades after the end of French colonial rule, Algeria officially stands as a fully sovereign state — yet its political narrative, institutional memory, and diplomatic posture continue to be shaped not only by the trauma of colonization, but also by the unfinished moral and legal questions that surround it. Algeria’s story is not simply one of liberation; it is the story of a state that insists that sovereignty is incomplete without historical truth.   Across much of the post-colonial world, sovereignty has long been interpreted as a formal condition — the existence of borders, a national government, a flag, and a seat in international organizations. Algeria challenges this minimalist understanding. For Algiers, independence was never meant to be merely administrative separation from France; it was envisioned as a deeper, restorative process in which recognition of colonial crimes, acknowledgement of cultural erasure, and moral accountability would stand alongside political autonomy. What emerged instead is a long-term gap between legal sovereignty and historical justice — a gap that continues to inform Algeria’s strategic behavior at home and abroad.   The French colonial enterprise in Algeria was not a marginal episode of empire; it was one of the most entrenched settler-colonial projects of the twentieth century. Land confiscation, population displacement, systematic repression, and cultural assimilation policies were accompanied by mass violence during the war of independence. These realities explain why Algeria views memory not as a symbolic exercise, but as a sovereign right. Paris, on the other hand, has walked a cautious line — acknowledging suffering, yet often avoiding full juridical language such as “crime” or “responsibility.” This tension has produced what may be called a dual narrative: legal decolonization without comprehensive moral reckoning.   It is precisely within this contradiction that Algeria positions itself in the emerging global “parade of sovereignties,” where states increasingly link legitimacy not only to power or territory, but to ethical claims rooted in history. While many post-colonial states remain satisfied with nominal independence, Algeria argues that a sovereign nation cannot be fully whole so long as its past remains officially disputed or minimized. For Algiers, the struggle for independence did not end in 1962; it transformed into a campaign for recognition — archives, remains, apologies, compensation mechanisms, and the right to narrate its own history.   This posture is not without strategic consequences. Algeria’s insistence on historical justice shapes its diplomacy, fuels segments of its domestic political identity, and at times places it in friction with former colonial actors who prefer reconciliation without accountability. Critics argue that this approach can serve as a political instrument, reinforcing state legitimacy through memory narratives and allowing the ruling elites to frame sovereignty as a perpetual revolutionary project. Supporters counter that historical silence is the greater danger, because it leaves colonial violence unexamined and perpetuates structural asymmetries in international relations.   In a broader sense, Algeria exposes a deeper transformation underway in global politics: sovereignty is evolving from a purely territorial principle into a moral-political claim. From Africa to Latin America, states increasingly demand that independence be understood not as a single historical milestone, but as an ongoing process linked to dignity, memory, restitution, and epistemic autonomy — the right to define how history is written and whose suffering counts. Algeria stands at the forefront of this intellectual shift, presenting itself as both a survivor of empire and a claimant of historical truth.   Yet the challenge for Algeria, like for many post-colonial societies, lies in balancing memory with governance. The legitimacy derived from anti-colonial struggle must coexist with the responsibilities of economic reform, political accountability, and social development. A sovereignty narrative grounded solely in the past risks becoming static; one built on both justice and modernization can evolve into a constructive force. The country’s future relevance will depend on whether it can transform historical grievance into a forward-looking project that strengthens institutions rather than replacing them.   The Algerian case therefore invites a deeper reflection on the meaning of liberation in the twenty-first century. Independence may remove the colonial power, but it does not automatically resolve the ethical and psychological legacies of domination. Formal sovereignty establishes the state; historical justice completes it. Algeria’s insistence on this distinction is not merely an internal debate — it is a message to the international system that recognition, memory, and dignity are no longer peripheral themes, but foundational components of modern sovereignty.

Experts point to greening, slaughtering to counter milk price drop

Euractiv.com - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 16:03
Oversupply weighs on milk prices, crisis risk seen as limited
Categories: European Union

Japan-South Korea Summit: Why Middle Power Cooperation Matters More Than Ever in an Imperializing World

TheDiplomat - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 16:01
As the international order becomes more volatile and less rule-bound, Tokyo and Seoul must band together.

KOMMENTAR - Impfdiktat in St. Gallen: Wer die Leute gegen den Staat aufbringen will, muss genau so vorgehen

NZZ.ch - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 16:00
Exorbitant hohe Bussen für Personen, die sich nicht impfen lassen wollen: Die St. Galler Regierung zeigt, dass sie aus der Corona-Zeit nichts gelernt hat.
Categories: Swiss News

Germany and India plan closer defence industry cooperation

Euractiv.com - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 15:58
Merz hopes that bringing New Delhi close will reduce its dependence on Moscow for some of its military gear
Categories: European Union

Is Serbia Heading Toward a Serbo-Maidan?

Foreign Policy - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 15:52
Mass demonstrations against Aleksandar Vucic’s government could turn brutal in the year ahead.

Au Soudan, plus de 570 antiquités du Musée national, volées pendant la guerre, ont été retrouvées

LeMonde / Afrique - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 15:51
Le musée, qui réunissait toutes les collections trouvées par les archéologues sur les différents sites antiques du pays, a été pillé et détruit au printemps 2023, quand les paramilitaires des Forces de soutien rapide ont pris la capitale.
Categories: Afrique

Paris veut que le prêt de l’UE à Kiev serve à acheter prioritairement de l’armement européen. Berlin refuse

Zone militaire - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 15:50

Le 18 décembre, à l’exception de la Slovaquie, de la République tchèque et de la Hongrie, les États membres de l’Union européenne sont convenus d’accorder à l’Ukraine un prêt à taux zéro de 90 milliards d’euros pour les années 2026-2027, via un emprunt commun sur les marchés des capitaux. Une somme que Kiev n’aura à...

Cet article Paris veut que le prêt de l’UE à Kiev serve à acheter prioritairement de l’armement européen. Berlin refuse est apparu en premier sur Zone Militaire.

Categories: Défense

Incidents après Algérie – Nigéria, arbitrage scandaleux : le rapport accablant de la CAF envoyé à la FAF

Algérie 360 - Tue, 13/01/2026 - 15:48

Hier, la Confédération africaine de football a annoncé l’ouverture d’une enquête suite aux incidents ayant émaillé la fin du match Algérie-Nigéria (0-2), en quart de […]

L’article Incidents après Algérie – Nigéria, arbitrage scandaleux : le rapport accablant de la CAF envoyé à la FAF est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique

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