
US administration to pause arms supplies to Ukraine
02/07/2025
Macron urges Ukraine ceasefire in first Putin talks since 2022
02/07/2025
French PM Bayrou survives latest no-confidence motion
02/07/2025
Dalai Lama pledges he won't be the final leader of Tibetan Buddhism
02/07/2025
France protects vulnerable populations amid extreme heat
02/07/2025
US President seeking truce ahead of Netanyahu visit
02/07/2025
Trump says Israel agreed to 60-day Gaza ceasefire, but Israel has not confirmed
Middle East
02/07/2025
'Society totally collapsing': Civilians in war-torn Gaza 'desperate, they feel alone and abandoned'
Middle East
02/07/2025
US weapons: 'Ukraine is turning towards its other allies'
Europe
02/07/2025
'Horrific': Ailing author Sansal 'caught up' in ever-escalating Franco-Algerian diplomatic fallout
Africa

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LeMonde
4 hours ago
- LeMonde
Equitorial Guinea sues France over luxury Paris mansion in international court
The west African nation asked the top United Nations court to issue emergency orders against France over a building seized after the conviction of Vice President Teodorin Obiang for corruption. It asked the court to order France not to sell the mansion, located on the upscale Avenue Foch near the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, over which the two countries have been squabbling for several years. French authorities seized the property, which boasts a cinema, hammam and marble and gold water taps, after convicting Obiang under a law targeting fortunes fraudulently amassed by foreign leaders. In 2021, France's top appeals court gave Obiang, the eldest son of the long-standing president of Equatorial Guinea, Teodoro Obiang, a three-year suspended sentence and €30 million in fines. France also confiscated assets, including the luxurious Avenue Foch building with an estimated value well above €100 million. In its latest complaint to the ICJ, dated Thursday, July 3 but published by the court on Friday, Equatorial Guinea says French police entered the property last month and changed the locks on several of the doors. Equatorial Guinea called on the court to order France to give it "immediate, complete and unhindered access" to the building. Embassy or luxury residence The mansion was also at the center of an earlier case filed by Equatorial Guinea in 2016 at the ICJ, which rules on disputes between UN member states. Equatorial Guinea argued the building served as the country's embassy in France and that France had broken the Vienna Convention, which safeguards diplomats from interference by host countries. But the UN court sided with France, which said the building was merely Teodorin Obiang's residence and served no diplomatic purpose. The ICJ upheld France's objections that Equatorial Guinea had only tried to designate it as such after the investigation began into Obiang, and that the country already had an embassy in Paris.

LeMonde
4 hours ago
- LeMonde
World Immigration In France, asylum seekers navigate labyrinth of Europe's Dublin Regulation By Julia Pascual and Samuel Gratacap Published today at 8:30 pm (Paris) 7 min read Lire en français Subscribers only Share Share on Messenger Share on Facebook Share by email Share on Linkedin Copy link Investigation '2015-2025: Europe's migration crisis' (3/5). In the 1990s, the European Union established the Dublin Regulation, aiming to prevent asylum seekers from filing applications in multiple countries. The massive influx of refugees over the past 10 years has shattered the system, which is no longer implemented in all EU member states. source https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/doc_happens/asile/2506-asile-00-texts-en.txt source https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/doc_happens/asile/2506-asile-00-structure.txt source https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/doc_happens/asile/2506-asile-00-styles.txt source https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/doc_happens/asile/2506-asile-03-texts-en.txt source https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/doc_happens/asile/2506-asile-03-structure-en.txt source https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/doc_happens/asile/2506-asile-03-styles.txt style https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/redacweb/lm-styles/lm-styles.v1.0.1.css The plane touched down on the tarmac of Marignane airport, near the southern French city of Marseille. Around 30 plainclothes police officers stood on the runway, ready to board five men. Turks and Afghans, they were escorted one by one, their wrists bound by handcuffs, their heads buried in their shoulders. As one of them prepared to board, he collapsed on the tarmac. The officers, used to seeing this happen, were unfazed. Mechanically, they turned the man on his side and strapped one belt around his ankles, another around his knees. Bound, the man was carried horizontally into the cabin. Within a few hours, he would land in Zagreb. His offense: applying for asylum in France, while according to his fingerprints, he had entered the European Union (EU) via Croatia. Under the Dublin Regulation, asylum applications are to be examined in the country of first entry, or the member state in which an asylum seeker initially sets foot in the EU. A few hours earlier, another of the five escorted passengers, an Afghan, had fainted and collapsed in the parking lot next to the prefecture in Marseille. His eyes rolled back and his body went stiff. "Come on, breathe, it's going to be all right," assured one of the officers, all of whom requested anonymity. "It's the fear of leaving," another said empathetically. You have 87.11% of this article left to read. The rest is for subscribers only.
World Immigration In France, asylum seekers navigate labyrinth of Europe's Dublin Regulation By Julia Pascual and Samuel Gratacap Published today at 8:30 pm (Paris) 7 min read Lire en français Subscribers only Investigation'2015-2025: Europe's migration crisis' (3/5). In the 1990s, the European Union established the Dublin Regulation, aiming to prevent asylum seekers from filing applications in multiple countries. The massive influx of refugees over the past 10 years has shattered the system, which is no longer implemented in all EU member states. The plane touched down on the tarmac of Marignane airport, near the southern French city of Marseille. Around 30 plainclothes police officers stood on the runway, ready to board five men. Turks and Afghans, they were escorted one by one, their wrists bound by handcuffs, their heads buried in their shoulders. As one of them prepared to board, he collapsed on the tarmac. The officers, used to seeing this happen, were unfazed. Mechanically, they turned the man on his side and strapped one belt around his ankles, another around his knees. Bound, the man was carried horizontally into the cabin. Within a few hours, he would land in Zagreb. His offense: applying for asylum in France, while according to his fingerprints, he had entered the European Union (EU) via Croatia. Under the Dublin Regulation, asylum applications are to be examined in the country of first entry, or the member state in which an asylum seeker initially sets foot in the EU. A few hours earlier, another of the five escorted passengers, an Afghan, had fainted and collapsed in the parking lot next to the prefecture in Marseille. His eyes rolled back and his body went stiff. "Come on, breathe, it's going to be all right," assured one of the officers, all of whom requested anonymity. "It's the fear of leaving," another said empathetically. You have 87.11% of this article left to read. The rest is for subscribers only.


Euronews
7 hours ago
- Euronews
Zelenskyy and Trump agree on joint defence efforts in key phone call
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy spoke on Friday with US President Donald Trump, in what the Ukrainian leader said was a "very important and fruitful" phone call. "Today we discussed the current situation, including Russian airstrikes and the broader frontline developments," Zelenskyy wrote in a post on X. "President Trump is very well informed, and I thank him for his attention to Ukraine. We spoke about opportunities in air defence and agreed that we will work together to strengthen protection of our skies. We have also agreed to a meeting between our teams." He added that they also discussed in detail the prospects for joint defence production. "We - in Ukraine - are grateful for all the support provided. It helps us protect lives, safeguard our freedom and independence." "We have achieved a lot together with America and we support all efforts to stop the killings and restore just, lasting, and dignified peace. A noble agreement for peace is needed," Zelenskyy pointed out. The Ukrainian leader added they discussed the possibility of joint defence production, mutual purchases, and investments. Neither the White House nor Trump himself have said anything about the call. Trump speaks to Putin That conversation comes a day after Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed Ukraine, Iran and other issues in a call the Kremlin described as "frank and constructive." It was their sixth publicly disclosed talk since Trump returned to the White House. On the war in Ukraine, Putin's foreign affairs adviser Yuri Ushakov said Trump emphasised his push for a quick halt to the fighting, and Putin voiced Moscow's readiness to pursue talks with Kyiv, noting the previous rounds in Turkey yielded humanitarian results. At the same time, the Russian leader said Moscow will seek to achieve its goals in Ukraine and remove the "root causes" of the conflict, Ushakov said. "Russia will not back down from these goals," Ushakov told reporters after the call. Also on Thursday, Trump complained that the United States provided too many weapons to Ukraine under the previous administration, his first public comments on the pause in some shipments as Russia escalates its full-scale invasion. On Tuesday, the US said it was halting shipments of some air defence missiles and other weapons previously promised to Kyiv amid concerns that its own stockpiles had declined too much, according to officials. Certain munitions were previously promised to Ukraine under the Biden administration to support its defences. However, the administration appears to have revised some of those decisions due to concerns for US interests. "This decision was made to put America's interests first following a review of our nation's military support and assistance to other countries across the globe," White House spokesperson Anna Kelly said in a statement.