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Rencontre-Lecture : « Hormis l'incendie de forêt » de Simona Dmitrović

Courrier des Balkans - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 23:59

La rencontre littéraire autour du recueil de poésie « Hormis l'incendie de forêt » de Simona Dmitrović aura lieu le mercredi 3 juin 2026 à 19h dans la bibliothèque du Centre culturel de Serbie. Entrée libre dans la limite des places disponibles.
Simona Dmitrović est née à Belgrade en 1999. Lauréate du prix « Mladi Dis » en 2024, elle a également remporté d'autres distinctions, notamment au Festival de Poésie des Jeunes de Vrbas en 2025, ainsi que le prix Branko en 2025 pour « Hormis (…)

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Pays-Bas 0 – Algérie 1 : Hadj Moussa allume Rotterdam sur un coup de génie

Algérie 360 - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 22:45

L’équipe d’Algérie réussit son premier test avant la Coupe du monde-2026 en réalisant une victoire et face à qui ? Face à la grande sélection […]

L’article Pays-Bas 0 – Algérie 1 : Hadj Moussa allume Rotterdam sur un coup de génie est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Latest news - AFET committee meetings - Committee on Foreign Affairs

Next ordinary AFET committee meeting will be held on:

Wednesday 24 and Thursday 25 June 2026, room ANTALL 4Q2, Brussels

Meetings are webstreamed with the exception of agenda items held "in camera".


AFET - DROI calendar of meetings 2026
Meeting documents
Webstreaming
Source : © European Union, 2026 - EP

Algérie Poste : Découvrez les nouveaux horaires d’été des bureaux de poste pour le Nord et le Sud

Algérie 360 - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 20:57

Dans le but d’adapter ses services aux fortes chaleurs estivales et de garantir une continuité de service optimale, l’établissement public Algérie Poste a publié ce […]

L’article Algérie Poste : Découvrez les nouveaux horaires d’été des bureaux de poste pour le Nord et le Sud est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

What the Sino-Russian Declaration Exposes

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 20:39

Credit: Dmitriy Prayzel / shutterstock.com

By Jordan Ryan
Jun 3 2026 (IPS)

 
The joint declaration issued by Russia and China on 20 May, Joint Declaration of the Russian Federation and the People’s Republic of China on the Establishment of a Multipolar World and a New Type of International Relations, has been read in sharply different ways. Some welcome its language of sovereign equality, multilateralism and a UN-centred international order. Others dismiss it as legal rhetoric deployed in bad faith. Both responses miss the more important point.

The declaration matters less for what it promises than for what it reveals. It shows how the language of the United Nations Charter has become a field of political struggle. Russia and China are challenging parts of the existing order in different ways. They are competing to shape the meaning of that order and to present themselves as its more authentic defenders.

That is why the declaration should be read closely. Its appeal to sovereign equality, indivisible security and the democratisation of international relations is not incidental. It is a claim to normative authority. The text seeks to occupy the language of legitimacy at a moment when the authority of the United Nations itself has weakened.

The gap between that language and the conduct of its authors is striking, though the two cases are not identical. Russia is waging a war in Ukraine in open violation of the principles it invokes. China presents a more complicated challenge. It should be criticised for internal repression, coercive pressure on Taiwan, its rejection of the 2016 arbitral ruling on the South China Sea, and its continuing support for Russia despite Moscow’s aggression. Yet China has also shown a degree of strategic restraint and continues to frame its global role in terms of sovereignty, non-interference and a state-based international order. That distinction does not absolve Beijing. It does suggest that any serious strategy for UN renewal should test China’s stated commitment to non-aggression and multilateral restraint against its actual conduct, especially in the South China Sea. None of this removes the hypocrisy. It makes the diplomacy more important.

Still, the erosion of the United Nations system cannot be laid only at the feet of Moscow and Beijing. Western governments have also weakened the authority of the rules they claim to defend. Broad unilateral sanctions on Venezuela were criticised by the United Nations Special Rapporteur on unilateral coercive measures for their severe humanitarian impact and for undermining the principles they purported to uphold. In February 2026, the Secretary-General condemned the use of force by the United States and Israel against Iran, and the subsequent retaliation by Iran across the region, as a military escalation that undermined international peace and security. When major powers treat Charter constraints as optional, they invite others to do the same.

This matters because hypocrisy alone does not explain the moment. Great powers have always said one thing about rules and done another in practice. The deeper problem is that the authority to define legitimate state conduct has weakened. The Charter remains the best available foundation for international order, but the institutional machinery built around it no longer commands the same confidence or compliance.

That is what gives the Sino-Russian message traction beyond its authors. Its critique of Western hegemony resonates across much of the Global South because it draws on real grievances. Many states remain underrepresented in global decision-making, face conditionality in external partnerships and see an international economic order that has not delivered equitable development. Moscow and Beijing are exploiting those frustrations, though not always in the same way and not with identical records under the Charter.

At the same time, many governments are watching carefully what Sino-Russian partnership actually offers in practice. Some Belt and Road projects have generated concerns about debt sustainability and strategic dependency, with Sri Lanka’s Hambantota port frequently cited, even if interpretations of that case differ. In parts of Africa, Russia’s growing security footprint through Wagner’s legacy structures and successor arrangements has reinforced authoritarian partners while securing access to strategic resources. The language of emancipation can easily mask new forms of dependency.

For the United Nations, this is not just a messaging problem. It is a structural one. The Security Council veto produces paralysis in the crises where collective action is most needed. Financing depends on obligations that major powers treat as politically negotiable. The relationship between the United Nations and regional organisations remains uneven and vulnerable to manipulation. A system designed in 1945 for 51 member states has not adapted adequately to a far more plural and contested world.

That is why the next Secretary-General will need more than administrative skill. The task is not simply to defend the Charter against selective or cynical misuse. It is to rebuild political confidence that the institution can apply its principles with greater consistency, broader legitimacy and stronger operational capacity. That will require coalition-building across regions, especially with states that want reform, without abandoning multilateral restraint.

The Sino-Russian declaration therefore sets a test that extends well beyond Russia and China. The question is not whether its authors believe in the Charter in the same way or violate it in identical forms. They do not. The real question is whether the United Nations still has the political authority and institutional capacity to make the Charter matter.

Related articles from this author:
Governing the Ungovernable
The Secretary-General This Moment Demands
From Reform to Reinvention: Reimagining the United Nations for the 21st Century
The UN’s Withering Vine: A US Retreat from Global Governance

Jordan Ryan is a member of the Toda International Research Advisory Council (TIRAC) at the Toda Peace Institute, a Senior Consultant at the Folke Bernadotte Academy and former UN Assistant Secretary-General with extensive experience in international peacebuilding, human rights, and development policy. His work focuses on strengthening democratic institutions and international cooperation for peace and security. Ryan has led numerous initiatives to support civil society organisations and promote sustainable development across Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. He regularly advises international organisations and governments on crisis prevention and democratic governance.

This article was issued by the Toda Peace Institute and is being republished from the original with their permission.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Categories: Africa, Afrique

Alerte météo : Vents violents et fortes vagues sur le littoral algérien dès ce mercredi soir

Algérie 360 - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 20:12

L’Office national de la météorologie (ONM) a émis un bulletin météorologique spécial (BMS) alertant sur des conditions maritimes particulièrement dégradées. De fortes rafales de vent […]

L’article Alerte météo : Vents violents et fortes vagues sur le littoral algérien dès ce mercredi soir est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Governments Falling 90 percent Short of Climate Adaptation Finance Needs

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 20:07

By Oxfam
BRUSSELS, Belgium, Jun 3 2026 (IPS)

Governments are falling 90 percent short of adaptation finance targets and leaving people in climate-vulnerable communities drastically under-equipped to cope with the devastating impacts of climate change, Oxfam warns ahead of Bonn climate talks (8-18 June).

According to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), as of 2024, governments mobilized $31 billion in adaptation finance – around 90 percent short of the $310 billion to $365 billion projected needs for developing countries by 2035. To bridge this gap, rich countries would have to increase their adaptation financing tenfold.

The total climate finance of $137 billion reached in 2024 is also just a fraction of what countries need to transition away from fossil fuels. This shortfall highlights a stark global inequality, that those who have done the least to cause the climate crisis are being hit by the heaviest damage and short-changed from the funding promised to help them deal with it.

People living across the Global South, women, girls and Indigenous groups are overwhelmingly bearing the costs of environmental devastation.

Meanwhile, super-rich corporations and individuals — largely based in the Global North — have seen their wealth skyrocket. The profits of the six biggest fossil fuel corporations are projected to hit $94 billion in 2026, continuing to attract mega-investors. Almost 60 percent of billionaire investments are classified as being in high climate impact sectors, such as mining or oil and gas corporations.

“For too long, governments have coddled a super-rich elite whose huge emissions and dirty investments in polluting industries are throttling climate action. At Bonn, leaders must tackle this unequal concentration of wealth and power. It’s time to make rich polluters pay, and channel that wealth into accessible, participatory climate finance in a way that reaches the communities who need it most,” said Mariana Paoli, Oxfam International’s Climate Lead. 

Recent polling commissioned by Oxfam across seven countries found that approximately two-thirds (68 percent) of the public support increasing taxes on the profits of large oil and gas corporations to help fund a fair transition to renewable energy.  

Oxfam urges governments to: 

• Slash the emissions of the super-rich and make the richest polluters pay, through taxation on extreme wealth, excess profits taxes on fossil fuel corporations, and a carbon capital levy on investments in polluting sectors. 
• Remove the financial barriers blocking a Just Transition by cancelling debt, phasing out fossil fuel subsidies and overhauling a financial architecture systemically skewed against Global South countries. 
• Substantially increase climate finance to support communities on the frontlines of the climate crisis. This means fulfilling the $300 billion annual target agreed at COP29, including tripling funding flows specifically for adaptation, and substantially increasing resources to address loss and damage. 

Footnote
According to the OECD, in 2024, wealthy countries mobilized $137 billion in total climate finance to support climate action in low- and middle-income countries. Of this, $102 billion came in the form of public finance, mostly as loans. Public finance for adaptation amounted to $32 billion.

The UNEP Adaptation Gap Report 2025 calculates that the cost of adaptation finance needed in low- and middle-income countries is $310 billion per year in 2035, when based on modelled costs. When based on extrapolated needs expressed in Nationally Determined Contributions and National Adaptation Plans, this figure rises to $365 billion a year.

Oxfam research finds that six of the biggest fossil fuel companies (Chevron, Shell, BP, ConocoPhillips, Exxon and TotalEnergies) are projected to earn $2,967 a second in profits in 2026. Download the methodology note.

Climate Plunder: How a powerful few are locking the world into disaster”, the executive summary and the methodology note. The report is also available in Spanish, French and Portuguese.

The global poll, conducted by market research company Norstat in April 2026, gathered responses from people in seven countries (UK, France, Brazil, Turkey, Australia, the Netherlands and Colombia).

The polling also showed that support for taxing oil and gas corporations to fund the renewable energy transition crossed party lines. In six of the countries, there were more far-right respondents who supported such a tax, than those who opposed it.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Categories: Africa, Afrique

Ces 5 enseignements à retenir de la composition du nouveau gouvernement au Sénégal

BBC Afrique - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 19:56
Bassirou Diomaye Faye a nommé un gouvernement boycotté par le PASTEF. Le nouveau gouvernement devra désormais composer avec une majorité parlementaire qui entend assumer pleinement son rôle, selon Ousmane Sonko, nouvellement élu à la tête de l'Assemblée nationale.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Urgent CNR : la Caisse annonce un changement de calendrier pour les pensions de juin

Algérie 360 - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 19:12

La Caisse nationale des retraites (CNR) vient de publier un communiqué officiel sur sa page Facebook pour annoncer une modification exceptionnelle du calendrier de versement […]

L’article Urgent CNR : la Caisse annonce un changement de calendrier pour les pensions de juin est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Shell a acheminé du pétrole via un oléoduc nigérian pendant des années malgré les preuves de pollution, révèlent des documents.

BBC Afrique - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 18:44
Le géant pétrolier affirme que les documents ne tiennent pas compte du contexte critique de l'environnement opérationnel complexe de l'époque.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

VIDEO. Il se déguise en femme (maquillage compris) pour le braquage de bijouterie le plus raté à Sétif

Algérie 360 - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 18:38

C’est une scène digne d’une sitcom qui s’est jouée en plein centre-ville d’El Eulma (Sétif). Un jeune homme de 25 ans a cru bon de […]

L’article VIDEO. Il se déguise en femme (maquillage compris) pour le braquage de bijouterie le plus raté à Sétif est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Video einer Ausschusssitzung - Mittwoch, 3. Juni 2026 - 15:15 - Ausschuss für auswärtige Angelegenheiten

Dauer des Videos : 75'

Haftungsausschluss : Die Verdolmetschung der Debatten soll die Kommunikation erleichtern, sie stellt jedoch keine authentische Aufzeichnung der Debatten dar. Authentisch sind nur die Originalfassungen der Reden bzw. ihre überprüften schriftlichen Übersetzungen.
Quelle : © Europäische Union, 2026 - EP

Four sentenced to death for killing worshippers at Catholic church in Nigeria

BBC Africa - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 18:12
A fifth man was discharged and acquitted by the court due to insufficient evidence against him.
Categories: Africa, Balkan News

Affaire Christophe Gleizes : la Cour suprême clôt son procès, vers une grâce présidentielle ?

Algérie 360 - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 17:54

Ce mercredi, la Cour suprême a validé le désistement du pourvoi en cassation de Christophe Gleizes. Cet acte marque la clôture définitive du volet judiciaire […]

L’article Affaire Christophe Gleizes : la Cour suprême clôt son procès, vers une grâce présidentielle ? est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

« Je pensais que ma famille avait résisté à Hitler, jusqu'à ce que je découvre que mon arrière-grand-père était nazi »

BBC Afrique - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 17:35
Des millions de documents du parti nazi ont été rendus publics cette année en Allemagne, obligeant les gens à se confronter à la réalité : leurs familles avaient soutenu le régime fasciste d’Adolf Hitler.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Video einer Ausschusssitzung - Mittwoch, 3. Juni 2026 - 12:45 - Ausschuss für auswärtige Angelegenheiten

Dauer des Videos : 150'

Haftungsausschluss : Die Verdolmetschung der Debatten soll die Kommunikation erleichtern, sie stellt jedoch keine authentische Aufzeichnung der Debatten dar. Authentisch sind nur die Originalfassungen der Reden bzw. ihre überprüften schriftlichen Übersetzungen.
Quelle : © Europäische Union, 2026 - EP

Après la trêve de l’Aïd, combien de dinars valent 100 € en ce début juin en Algérie ?

Algérie 360 - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 16:38

Alors que l’été pointe le bout de son nez, une période traditionnellement marquée par une forte demande sur les devises étrangères, le marché noir du […]

L’article Après la trêve de l’Aïd, combien de dinars valent 100 € en ce début juin en Algérie ? est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Video einer Ausschusssitzung - Mittwoch, 3. Juni 2026 - 13:00 - Ausschuss für Sicherheit und Verteidigung

Dauer des Videos : 90'

Haftungsausschluss : Die Verdolmetschung der Debatten soll die Kommunikation erleichtern, sie stellt jedoch keine authentische Aufzeichnung der Debatten dar. Authentisch sind nur die Originalfassungen der Reden bzw. ihre überprüften schriftlichen Übersetzungen.
Quelle : © Europäische Union, 2026 - EP

Le Niger et le Bénin entrevoient une sortie de crise

BBC Afrique - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 16:13
Le Niger et le Bénin ont annoncé le 2 juin la création d'un comité d'experts chargé d'identifier les obstacles et de proposer des solutions pour la réouverture de leur frontière commune dans un délai de 15 jours.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

GEF Pushes Innovation, Blended Finance Ahead of the Eighth Assembly

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Wed, 06/03/2026 - 15:59

Alexandre Pinheiro facilitates a GEF press conference at the conclusion of 71st GEF Council in Samarkand, Uzbekistan. The conference was addressed by Fred Boltz, Manager, Programming, Claude Gascon, Interim CEO and Chizuru Aoki, Manager, MEAs and Funds Division. Credit: Stella Paul/IPS

By Stella Paul and Kizito Makoye
SAMARKAND, Uzbekistan, Jun 3 2026 (IPS)

As the Global Environment Facility (GEF) steps into the starting blocks of its next financial cycle, the Interim CEO Claude Gascon reflects on what he termed a “moment of transition and delivery”.

He was speaking at a press briefing on the eve of the Eighth GEF Assembly, which is scheduled to begin tomorrow (June 4).

“We are looking towards the past successes of GEF-8 with very strong results as well as looking forward to the next four years launching GEF-9 with a “sharper focus on impact, speed and scale.”

The GEF-9 replenishment, which was approved in Council, will be presented in the Assembly tomorrow and sends a strong signal: “Multilateral collaboration still matters in the world,” Gascon said as the 71st Council of the GEF concluded in Samarkand, Uzbekistan.

Donor countries pledged an initial USD 3.9 billion to help developing countries accelerate their progress towards 2030 environmental goals.

“The USD 3.9 billion represents the initial set of pledges,” he said, adding that despite fiscal pressures globally, “In this climate, it is a very, very strong signal.”

Gascon emphasised that discussions with donor countries are still ongoing.

“We are confident that over the next six to 12 months, we will get significantly higher pledges,” he said, noting that these could be integrated into the GEF‑9 financial framework as they materialise.

Chizuru Aoki, Manager of the Multilateral Environmental Agreements and Funds Division, pointed to upcoming global environment meetings as likely venues for new commitments.

“We are expecting to hold pledging sessions on the occasion of CBD COP17 (the biodiversity COP), as well as other COPs (climate change and desertification),” she said. “The COPs tend to be a very good occasion for a new announcement to be made.”

With public finance under pressure, the GEF is placing greater emphasis on blended finance and other innovative mechanisms to stretch limited resources.

Fred Boltz, head of the Programming Division, said such instruments are “very much in demand” and increasingly central to GEF operations, though not a substitute for core funding.

Gascon clarified how blended finance is structured within GEF operations.

“The blended finance that the GEF puts in is, in fact, grants that we give to countries to develop blended finance projects,” he said. “The GEF portion… is not expected to be paid back by the country.”

He added that even if projects fail, “the GEF money basically is lost”, underscoring the institution’s role in absorbing risk.

This ability to take on risk is designed to attract private capital.

“GEF money can come in and decrease the interest rate or allow the technology to be adopted,” Gascon said, explaining that such support helps make projects commercially viable and encourages private sector participation.

Examples of innovative financing include biodiversity-linked instruments such as species bonds. These allow private investors to fund conservation efforts, with returns tied to measurable outcomes such as increases in wildlife populations. Such models avoid adding to public debt while expanding conservation funding.

The GEF-9 replenishment package introduces structural reforms to make the GEF faster, simpler, and more accountable, ensuring resources reach countries more efficiently, with key strategic priorities including:

  • Integrated Programs targeting systemic transformations across nature, food, urban, energy, and health systems to integrate the value of nature in production and consumption systems.
  • Blended finance at scale, with an aspirational target of programming 25 percent of resources to mobilize private capital.
  • Whole-of-government and whole-of-society engagement, deepening participation of civil society, youth, women, and the private sector.
  • Strengthened support for vulnerable countries, with 35 percent of resources directed to support LDCs and SIDS, and 20 percent to support Indigenous Peoples and local communities.

GEF-9 will also allocate USD 100 million to an Indigenous Peoples and local communities Conservation Initiative, four times more than in the previous GEF investment cycle. The initiative provides dedicated and direct funding to Indigenous-led organisations and contributes to their strengthening to enable their participation in GEF projects as executing agencies and funding intermediaries to enhance access.

Aoki highlighted that diversified funding approaches will complement, not replace, traditional sources. At the same time, she reiterated the importance of continued donor engagement.

“Please be on the lookout,” she said, referring to potential pledge announcements linked to upcoming COPs.

The stage is all set for the Eighth Assembly of the Global Environment Facility, which is scheduled to begin on June 4 at the Congress Center in Samarkand, Uzbekistan. Credit: Stella Paul/IPS

Eighth Assembly – a ‘Forward-Looking’ Forum

The financing discussion comes as the GEF prepares for its Assembly, which Gascon described as a “forward-looking” forum distinct from the Council’s administrative role.

“The assembly is much more to look forward – trying to bring new ideas and new thoughts,” he said.

Gascon stressed that the Assembly’s main task will be to consolidate emerging ideas into practical directions. “We want to distil those messages into a few key messages that the assembly can adopt,” he said, adding that these will guide implementation during the GEF‑9 cycle.

He also reiterated the GEF’s mandate within the broader global environmental governance system. “We are not here to decide what the COPs should do,” Gascon said. “We are here to implement the guidance that they give us.”

He added that COPs also review GEF performance and provide further direction.

Country Funding

Whatever funding was available, Gascon stressed that the GEF model ensures that recipient countries have 100 percent of the decision-making power in the use of their resources.

“And so, if you go to a restaurant, you have the choice of choosing different dishes on the menu. The same applies to countries; they have GEF programming directions, which serve as a menu for how they can spend their dollars,” said Gascon.

On country eligibility, Aoki confirmed that countries graduating from Least Developed Country (LDC) status will continue to receive support during a transition period.

They will have two more rounds of funding,” she said, describing the approach as a “soft landing”.

These countries include Vanuatu, which graduated from LDC to Developing Countries during the GEF-7 and Bhutan, which just graduated. She added that countries like Bangladesh that chose not to graduate despite being qualified remain unchanged in status.

“If they have not graduated, they have not graduated… nothing changes.”

Addressing suggestions raised informally during Council discussions, which included removing China from the list of GEF’s funding recipients and moving the Cali Fund from the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (UNCBD) to the GEF , Gascon made clear that the GEF does not independently consider proposals outside established governance processes.

“Our guidance comes from the COPs,” he said.

Looking ahead, Gascon identified adoption of the GEF‑9 package as the primary benchmark for Assembly success. “The most important [outcome] is for the Assembly to adopt the GEF‑9 package,” he said, calling it a key signal to the institution’s 186 member countries.

The overall message from GEF leadership is a recalibration rather than a shift: continued reliance on public pledges, expected to grow over the coming months, combined with a stronger push to use grant capital to unlock private and philanthropic investment.

“We are looking towards the past successes of GEF-8 with very strong results as well as looking forward to the next four years, launching the GEF-9 with a sharper focus on impact, speed and scale,” Gascon said.

IPS UN Bureau Report

Note: The Eighth Global Environment Facility Assembly is underway until June 6, 2026, in Samarkand, Uzbekistan.

This feature is published with the support of the GEF. IPS is solely responsible for the editorial content, and it does not necessarily reflect the views of the GEF.


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Categories: Africa, Afrique

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