
US-NATO deal: How will US arms reach Ukraine?
15/07/2025
France's PM wants to scrap two public holidays to help fix public finances
15/07/2025
'The moment of truth': French PM Bayrou lays out budget cuts
15/07/2025
What's at stake in Syria's Sweida clashes?
15/07/2025
Gaza truce still out of reach after Doha talks as deadly strikes continue
15/07/2025
French prisoner who escaped in inmate's bag recaptured
15/07/2025
In Iraq, drought threatens water supply and ancient heritage
15/07/2025
Syria declares ceasefire after deadly clashes in Sweida
15/07/2025
Mexico: Femicide filmed by a surveillance camera
Americas
15/07/2025
French PM Bayrou stakes political survival on budget squeeze
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France 24
4 hours ago
- France 24
Paris dusts off statues of trailblazing women from 2024 Olympics
The 10 statues featured as part of the French capital's boundary-breaking opening ceremony for the Summer Games in July last year. They include Simone Veil, who spearheaded the legalisation of abortion in France, and the feminist writer Simone de Beauvoir. The first of them, a golden representation of the campaigning lawyer Gisele Halimi, was set up in the capital's northern La Chapelle district on Friday. Halimi, a Tunisian-born French lawyer who died five years ago aged 93, earned national fame for her role in a 1972 trial defending a minor who had an abortion after a rape. She ensured not only that the young woman, Marie-Claire Chevalier, was acquitted but also helped swing public opinion on the issue of reproductive rights. She was one of the most prominent of 343 women who in 1971 signed an open letter saying that they had had abortions. Michele Zaoui, an architect working for the city of Paris, said the plan was to keep the statues in the neighbourhood for a least a few more years until the opening of the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. During artistic director Thomas Jolly's Olympics opening ceremony, the statues surged up from the waters of the Seine. © 2025 AFP


France 24
4 hours ago
- France 24
50 days for Putin: 'Much ado about nothing?', UK Data Breach scandal, Israel bombs Damascus
Europe 48:25 Issued on: 48:25 min From the show A panel of Praris-based journalists review the week's international news: stories that made the headlines and also those the viewers may have missed. Putin's 50 days deadline: 'Much ado about nothing?', The Afghan leak & the UK super injunction, Why did Israel bomb Damascus?

LeMonde
7 hours ago
- LeMonde
EU increases pressure on Russia with 18th sanctions package
After six weeks of debate, the 27 EU member states reached agreement on Friday, July 18, on an 18 th package of sanctions against Russia for its war in Ukraine, targeting both the energy sector and the Russian banking system. This move increased pressure on Russia just days after Donald Trump announced on Tuesday, July 15, the sale of weapons to NATO countries for Ukraine and gave Vladimir Putin a 50-day ultimatum, threatening further sanctions. "The EU just approved one of its strongest sanctions package against Russia to date," said EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas on Friday morning. "We will keep raising the costs, so stopping the aggression becomes the only path forward for Moscow," she added. "We are striking at the heart of Russia's war machine," emphasized Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, who noted, when presenting the sanctions proposals, that Russian oil continued to generate substantial revenue for the country. "Done! This morning, we Europeans have adopted unprecedented sanctions against Russia and against the countries providing their support. France has played a key role in this decision. Together with the United States, we will compel Vladimir Putin to agree to a ceasefire," said French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot on X. French diplomats said they were behind half the measures adopted by the 27 member states. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky also welcomed the new European sanctions against Moscow, which he described as "essential and timely."