
Iran says usual cooperation with UN nuclear watchdog cannot go forward
01:58
30/06/2025
France's public broadcasting reform: What would its impact be?
30/06/2025
New York mayoral candidate Mamdani defends campaign despite Democratic unease
30/06/2025
Police inquiry after anti-Israel speech at Glastonbury
30/06/2025
'We have to do more with less' - international development challenges after USAID cuts
30/06/2025
Israeli settlers rampage at a military base in the West Bank
30/06/2025
Nations meet in Spain for UN effort to raise trillions to combat poverty without the US
30/06/2025
Iran: France, Britain and Germany condemn 'threats' made against head of IAEA watchdog
30/06/2025
UK PM condemns 'death to the IDF' chants at Glastonbury Festival
30/06/2025
Anti-Israel chants spark controversy at the Glastonbury music festival
Middle East
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France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
Trump cuts to foreign aid looms large at UN conference on international development
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France 24
3 hours ago
- France 24
Trump administration accuses Harvard of anti-semitism, threatens more cuts
US President Donald Trump 's administration said on Monday that an investigation had concluded Harvard University violated federal civil rights law for failing to address harassment of Jewish and Israeli students, though critics and some faculty say such probes are a pretext to assert federal control over schools. The announcement could lay the groundwork for further action against the school, which has already seen billions of dollars in grant money frozen by the administration as part of a broader campaign against Harvard and other universities across the country. Universities have said Trump's actions threaten academic freedom and free speech, as well as critical scientific research. The Department of Health and Human Services' Office of Civil Rights accused Harvard of "deliberate indifference" toward discrimination against Jewish and Israeli students, according to a notice from the administration. The department outlined a series of harassment incidents and faulted Harvard's response for being "too little, too late." "Failure to institute adequate changes immediately will result in the loss of all federal financial resources," lawyers for the administration wrote in a separate letter to Harvard President Alan Garber that was viewed by Reuters. The result of the probe was first reported by the Wall Street Journal. In a statement, Harvard said it had taken "substantive, proactive steps" to address antisemitism on campus, including updating its disciplinary processes and expanding training on antisemitism. "Harvard is far from indifferent on this issue and strongly disagrees with the government's findings," the school said. Monday's letter is the latest in a multi-pronged assault that Trump has waged against Harvard, the nation's oldest and wealthiest university, after it rejected sweeping demands to alter its operations. The administration has frozen some $2.5 billion in federal grant money to Harvard, moved to block it from enrolling international students and threatened to remove its tax-exempt status. Harvard has filed lawsuits challenging those moves. In addition to targeted funding freezes at specific schools, the administration's cutbacks at agencies such as the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health have also resulted in terminated grants to research universities. The president has taken particular aim at Harvard and Columbia, two of the nation's most prominent universities. Earlier this year, the administration said it had terminated grants and contracts to Columbia University worth $400 million, accusing the school of not protecting students from antisemitic harassment during massive campus protests against the Israel-Gaza war, which included some Jewish organizers. Civil rights groups in response have said the contract cancellations lacked due process and were an unconstitutional punishment for protected speech. However, Columbia agreed to negotiate with the administration over demands that the school tighten its protest rules. The school's interim president, Katrina Armstrong, stepped down days later. 01:38 In May, the Trump administration concluded that Columbia had violated civil rights law by failing to address antisemitism, just as it did on Monday regarding Harvard. Earlier this month, Trump's Department of Education said Columbia had failed to meet accreditation standards by allegedly failing to protect Jewish students from harassment. Other schools have also become targets for the pressure campaign. On Friday, the president of the University of Virginia, James Ryan, resigned under pressure from the Trump administration over the school's diversity, equity and inclusion policies. Last week, the Trump administration announced it would investigate hiring practices at the massive University of California system - which enrolls nearly 300,000 students - to examine whether they run afoul of anti-discrimination law.
LeMonde
6 hours ago
- LeMonde
Netanyahu to visit White House as Gaza truce pressure mounts
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will visit the White House next week for talks with President Donald Trump, a US official said Monday, June 30, as Washington ramps up the pressure for a ceasefire in Gaza. The July 7 visit – Netanyahu's third since Trump returned to power in January – comes after Trump said that he hoped for a truce in the war-ravaged Palestinian territory within a week. A Trump administration official confirmed the visit to AFP on condition of anonymity. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said earlier that Netanyahu had "expressed interest" in a meeting with Trump and that both sides were "working on a date." "This has been a priority for the president since he took office, to end this brutal war in Gaza," Leavitt told reporters in a briefing. "It's heartbreaking to see the images that have come out from both Israel and Gaza throughout this war, and the president wants to see it end." A senior Israeli official, Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, is due to visit the White House this week for talks to lay the ground for Netanyahu's visit, Leavitt said. 'Going to get a ceasefire' Netanyahu became the first foreign leader to visit Trump in his second term in February, when the US president surprised him by suddenly announcing a plan for the United States to "take over" Gaza. The Israeli premier visited again in April. The end of Israel's 12-day war with Iran has provided a window of opportunity for a deal, with Trump keen to add another peace agreement to a series of recent deals he has brokered. "We think even next week, we're going to get a ceasefire," Trump told reporters on Friday. He followed up by pressing Israel in a post on his Truth Social network on Sunday to "make the deal in Gaza." But on the ground, Israel has continued to pursue its offensive across the Palestinian territory in a bid to destroy the militant group Hamas. Gaza's civil defense agency said Israeli forces killed at least 51 people on Monday, including 24 at a seafront rest area. Trump, meanwhile, appeared to leverage US aid to Israel over the weekend as he called for that country's prosecutors to drop corruption charges against Netanyahu. "The United States of America spends Billions of Dollar a year, far more than any other Nation, protecting and supporting Israel. We are not going to stand for this," Trump posted.