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01:28
03/06/2025
French lawmakers back promoting Dreyfus 130 years after scandal
France
02/06/2025
France's upper house debates fast-fashion bill
France
01/06/2025
Macron hosts European Champions PSG at Elysée Palace and delivers speech
Europe
01/06/2025
PSG players and staff welcomed at the Elysée Palace by Macron
France
01/06/2025
Selina Sykes reporting live on les Champs-Elysées for France24
France
01/06/2025
PSG's Champions League triumph celebrated with a victory parade
France
01/06/2025
'The big day has finally come': Mbappé reacts to PSG's Champions League win
France
01/06/2025
Qatari PSG dream comes true explains our guest Simon Chadwick
France

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LeMonde
2 hours ago
- LeMonde
Leila Sansour, filmmaker: 'France's recognition of Palestine would summon others to follow'
On June 13, I stood among a group of Palestinian and Israeli delegates on the lawn of the Elysée Palace, listening to President Emmanuel Macron reiterate his commitment to recognizing the state of Palestine. Despite the gathering storms and the burdens of realpolitik, he seemed to be telling us he would stand firm. I, a Palestinian from Bethlehem, and a friend from Gaza stood at the edge of the crowd, clapping with everything we had – as if trying to breathe life into his words. In that moment, Macron looked rather presidential, especially against the backdrop of the managerial figures who now dominate global leadership. The spirit of the Republic was in the air – or so we chose to feel – amplified by the striking absence of overbearing security and Macron's willingness to freely mingle with the guests. My friend and I exchanged a glance. Could we dare believe that one world leader might still move by codes of honor, not cold calculation? We had long stopped hoping. Yet in that moment, the air was thick with fragile expectation. Foundational step But even as I write, history leans dangerously toward senseless ruin. The clash between Israel and Iran is unfolding before our eyes. And once again, the question of Palestine – the unfinished project – risks being pushed further into the margins of global attention. This war, horrific in its own right, is already obscuring the one conflict that has destabilized the region for decades. Yet, Palestine is not a sideshow. Its fate is a central node in the architecture of Middle Eastern peace. And, a nuclear Iran, should this become a reality, in a world where Palestine is free, is a very different equation than a nuclear Iran in a world where Palestinians still live under Israel's domination. It is with this in mind that I write – because we cannot wait. Postponing the recognition is not just illogical. It is dangerous. Western leaders have long argued that recognition should be the final act – the crowning achievement of a successful negotiation. The tragedy is: No real negotiation will ever begin without this foundational step. Recognition is what will make real talks possible. It defines the endgame and draws the map of an inevitable journey we must take – before the map is swallowed by chaos. It forces a reckoning with ambiguity and evasion. It tells all actors – Palestinians, Israelis, and the international community – what the future must include, so that the first steps can, at last, be taken.


Euronews
2 hours ago
- Euronews
Turkish President Erdogan warns against 'new Sykes-Picot order'
Speaking at the 51st Session of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), the Turkish leader also warned against a "new Sykes-Picot order" in the Middle East, in reference to a 1916 secret deal between Western powers to divide up the region. 'We will not allow the establishment of a new Sykes-Picot order in our region with borders to be drawn in blood,' said President Erdogan in Istanbul. In 1916, the English and French met in secret to define their mutually agreed spheres of influence and control if the Ottoman Empire was partitioned - an agreement dependent on an Allied victory during World War I. The agreement proposed France would have control or influence over modern-day Syria and Lebanon, and Britain over modern-day Iraq, Jordan and parts of Palestine. President Erdogan also today described the conditions in Gaza as worse than those of Nazi concentration camps during his speech at the OIC meeting. "2 million of our sisters and brothers in Gaza have been struggling to survive under these conditions for the past 21 months," the Turkish President said. His comments come as tensions continue to escalate in the Middle East, particularly between Iran and Israel as the conflict enters its second week. The OIC is set to hold a special closed-door session Saturday evening at the request of Iran, according to Turkish media Anadolu news site.

LeMonde
2 hours ago
- LeMonde
Five arrested over cryptocurrency kidnapping in France
French authorities have arrested five people on charges of kidnapping the father of an influencer and cryptocurrency entrepreneur, prosecutors said on Saturday, June 21. In recent months, France has seen several kidnappings and attempted abductions targeting cryptocurrency businesspeople and their families, and authorities have been under huge pressure to act. On December 31, 2024, five armed people attacked a man and a woman in their home in the eastern town of Saint-Genis-Pouilly near the Swiss border. In exchange for their release, the attackers demanded a ransom from their son, an influencer living in Dubai, prosecutors said at the time. When they did not receive the ransom, they abducted the father, who was found a few hours later in the boot of a car in the department of Sarthe, nearly 700 kilometres away. The 56-year-old man had been "assaulted, doused with petrol and transported in the boot of a car," prosecutor Karine Malara said in a statement. His wife was found tied up at her home in Saint-Genis-Pouilly. Five people were arrested on Tuesday as part of a criminal investigation. They were taken into custody on Friday on charges including kidnapping, armed robbery and aggravated assault, Malara said. The suspects are four adults aged 18 to 22 and a 17-year-old minor. Several recent cases The prosecutors have not released the name of the cryptocurrency entrepreneur, saying only that his "success was well known to the general public." Three of the adults in pre-trial detention have extensive criminal records, including for violence, theft, drug and currency trafficking, and possession of weapons. The minor has a record for aggravated theft. In May, 25 people, including six minors, were charged over several kidnappings and attempted abductions of cryptocurrency entrepreneurs and their family members. The most high-profile incident under investigation is that of a kidnapping attempt targeting the daughter and grandson of Pierre Noizat, the chief executive officer of crypto firm Paymium. The abduction bid was carried out in broad daylight in Paris in May. In June, five men were arrested in northern France, suspected of planning the kidnapping of a young man and his mother. They allegedly intended to cut off one of the woman's fingers to obtain a ransom from the son, who owned cryptocurrencies. Malara said that no link had so far been established between this week's arrests and the other kidnapping cases.