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French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu speaks during a debate before votes on two no-confidence motions at the National Assembly in Paris, Wednesday. French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu survived two no-confidence votes in parliament Wednesday, clearing the way for the government to focus on yet another budget showdown in the coming days.The no-confidence motions, filed by the far-right National Rally (RN) and hard-left France Unbowed (LFI), aimed to protest the European Union’s trade agreement with the Mercosur bloc.Despite French opposition, EU member states last week approved the signing of the long-debated deal with Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. The RN and LFI accused the government of not doing enough to block it.”Inside the country, you are a government of vassals serving the rich. Outside, you are humiliating our nation before the European Commission and the U.S. empire,” chief LFI lawmaker Mathilde Panot told the government, speaking in parliament ahead of Wednesday’s no-confidence motion votes.The Socialist Party had ruled out backing the no-confidence motions and the conservative The Republicans also said they would not vote to censure the government over Mercosur.As a result, both motions failed. The one tabled by LFI received only 256 votes in favour, 32 votes short of what was needed for the motion to pass. The second motion, put forward by the far right, received 142 votes in favour and also failed.Lecornu said time spent on the no-confidence votes was further delaying fraught debates on the country’s 2026 budget, which he said political leaders should instead focus on.”You are acting like snipers lying in wait, firing into the executive’s back at the very moment when we must confront international disruptions,” he said.Now, one of several options regarding the 2026 budget would be for Lecornu to invoke Article 49.3 of the Constitution to push through the finance bill without a vote, after negotiating a text with all groups except the RN and LFI, one government source said. That would almost certainly lead to more motions of no-confidence.Lawmakers are eager to end weeks of wrangling over the budget, even if it means the country’s deficit remains near 5%, sources said.President Emmanuel Macron, according to his entourage, wants a budget adopted in January and is “neutral” on how to achieve that.Government spokeswoman Maud Bregeon said on Tuesday that “nothing is excluded” to pass the budget.France’s political situation has been fragile since 2022, when Macron lost his majority in parliament.His problems worsened when he unexpectedly called early legislative elections in mid-2024, only to deliver a hung parliament split between three distinct ideological blocs: his centre-right alliance, the left, and the RN. Related Story Source…
The Global Carbon Council (GCC) and the Asian Forest Co-operation Organisation (AFoCO) have signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to strengthen co-operation in addressing global climate change by promoting Nature-based solutions and fostering an enabling, high-integrity carbon market ecosystem across Asia.The MoU was signed during a formal ceremony by Dr Yousef Alhorr, founding chairman of GCC and Dr Chongho Park, executive director of AFoCO.The partnership was initiated not only in response to UNEP’s inaugural State of Finance for Forests report, which highlights the significant global shortfall in forest and environmental finance, but also to align with broader international efforts aimed at forest restoration, resilience, and long-term sustainability. The partnership seeks to leverage carbon-based incentives in line with the Paris Agreement, particularly Article 6, as a means to mobilise private sector engagement through internationally aligned carbon market mechanisms.According to the report, annual forest investments must more than triple from $84bn in 2023 to $300bn by 2030 to meet global climate and biodiversity targets. Currently, the world faces a forest finance gap of $216bn per year, underscoring the need for scalable and credible market-based solutions. To this end, the agreement between GCC and AFoCO establishes a co-operative framework to support sustainable, verifiable, and impactful forestry and climate initiatives across the region.Through this MoU, the two organisations will promote collaboration on Public–Private Partnership based Nature-based Solutions carbon incentive programmes, aligned with the Land Use, Land-Use Change and Forestry initiatives implemented by AFoCO to strengthen climate change mitigation, adaptation, and resilience.The partnership aims to ensure that outcomes from nature-based solutions projects are transparent, credible, and aligned with international standards, while contributing to community resilience and long-term sustainability through AFoCO’s member country cooperation platform, where relevant and appropriate.Dr Alhorr stated: “Forests are our most effective natural defense against global warming. Recent data shows that Asian forest sinks are already removing nearly one billion tonnes of CO2 every year, making the region one of the most productive carbon absorbers on the planet. By scaling Nature-based solutions through our partnership with the Asian Forest Co-operation Organisation, we are bringing together technical expertise, strong governance, and innovative carbon market frameworks to deliver measurable, high-integrity outcomes that benefit both people and the planet.”Dr Chongho Park, executive director of AFoCO, added: “Our collaboration with the Global Carbon Council strengthens our ability to provide member countries with the tools, knowledge, and capacity needed to systematically scale sustainable forestry and nature-based projects. Together, we aim to create long-term positive impacts for communities, ecosystems, and the climate.”Following the signing of the MoU, the two organisations will establish a joint working group to identify priority initiatives, co-ordinate technical support, and progressively implement the co-operation framework through targeted events, workshops, and joint activities. Source link
Al Gharafa players at a training session. In a high-profile showdown league leaders Al Gharafa take on a resurgent Al Arabi in the Qatar Stars League Thursday at Al Thumama Stadium.Gharafa sit top of the standings on 28 points and will be aiming for a second successive win to preserve their five-point cushion over closest challengers Al Sadd and Al Rayyan. Pedro Martins’ side responded strongly to a shock 3-0 defeat to Al Shahaniya by edging Umm Salal 3-2 in the previous round, a result that restored belief as they continue their long pursuit of the league title.However, Al Arabi arrive full of confidence after a remarkable resurgence under Romanian coach Cosmin Contra. The Dream Team are unbeaten in their last six matches, recording five wins and a draw against Al Rayyan, and occupy fifth place on 20 points. They returned to winning ways last round with a hard-fought 1-0 victory over Al Wakrah.“We have prepared well and the atmosphere is very positive after our last win,” said Martins. “Al Arabi have strong qualities and are performing very well under their coach. This is one of the most important matches of our season.”Contra, meanwhile, urged caution. “The match is very important at this stage of the league,” he said. “It will not be easy, but we are ready and ambitious to win and continue progressing.”Today’s action also features a key mid-table battle between Al Wakrah and Al Duhail at Saud bin Abdulrahman Stadium, with both sides looking to bounce back after disappointing results. Al Wakrah slipped to eighth on 16 points after a 1-0 defeat to Al Arabi, while seventh-placed Al Duhail were held to a goalless draw by Al Shahaniya.Al Duhail coach Djamel Belmadi expects a tough contest but welcomed the return of several key players. “We are expecting a difficult match and must give everything to achieve a positive result,” he said, confirming the return of Adel Boulbina, Karim Boudiaf, Marco Verratti and goalkeeper Salah Zakaria.Vicente Moreno, coach of Al Wakrah, echoed those sentiments. “Al Duhail are a great team and the points are close, so we must give our best to win and take the three points,” he said.Friday, defending champions Al Sadd will look to extend their revival when they host Al Ahli at Jassim bin Hamad Stadium. Al Sadd have won four matches in a row, including a thrilling 3-2 victory over Qatar SC last round, lifting them to second place on 23 points, level with Al Rayyan but ahead on goal difference. Al Ahli enter the match boosted by a 4-2 win over Al Shamal, which lifted them to 15 points and ninth place after a difficult spell.Al Rayyan host Al Shamal on Saturday at Ahmed bin Ali Stadium in another high-stakes encounter. Al Rayyan strengthened their title hopes with a 3-1 win over Al Sailiya to reach 23 points, while Al Shamal slipped to fourth on 21 points after losing to Al Ahli.Elsewhere, Umm Salal face bottom side Al Shahaniya tomorrow at Al Khor Stadium, with both teams desperate for points. Umm Salal remain tenth on nine points after their narrow defeat to Al Gharafa, while Al Shahaniya sit last on goal difference despite earning a point against Al Duhail.In another tie, Al Sailiya meet Qatar SC at Hamad bin Khalifa Stadium. Qatar SC have lost five matches in a row and sit sixth on 17 points, while Al Sailiya are second from bottom on eight points following their defeat to Al Rayyan. Related Story Source link
Michael O’Leary, chief executive of Ryanair. Low-cost airline Ryanair Wednesday announced it is mulling a cut to flights in Belgium, especially at its major European hub of Charleroi Airport, because of Belgian authorities’ “stupid” taxes.”What’s extraordinary about the stupidity of the Belgian government is that they’ve come up with this visionary idea to raise taxes on passengers, at a time when almost every other European country is abolishing travel and environmental taxes,” chief executive Michael O’Leary told reporters in Brussels.O’Leary pointed to European countries cutting taxes to fuel growth, such as Hungary, Slovakia and Sweden.Charleroi authorities is demanding three euros ($3.50) per passenger departing from the airport in the city.”The aircrafts can move, the jobs can move, the passengers can move, and they will move to those countries who are abolishing taxes and lowering airport fees,” O’Leary said.The Irish no-frills airline said it would reduce its capacity at Charleroi airport by 1.1mn seats by the end of 2026. The hub serves several destinations especially in the warmer Mediterranean region.Ryanair says it was the leading airline in the Belgian market with 11.6mn passengers travelling with the airline in 2025.The company warned this figure would fall by around 10 percent if the city of Charleroi maintains its plan to impose the tax on airports.At the national level, the Belgian government led by Prime Minister Bart De Wever raised taxes on air transport in 2025, including on passengers departing via Brussels-Zaventem, the country’s main airport.Belgium is also engaged in a massive effort to consolidate its public finances.Contacted by AFP, the prime minister’s office did not wish to comment.Ryanair called on De Wever in a statement “to reverse these silly tax rises, which will damage Belgium’s competitiveness, and cost Belgium millions of passengers, thousands of flights, and thousands of jobs in tourism”.The new tax will cost the airport around 16 million euros a year “without us being able to pass this (money) onto the airlines as our contracts don’t allow for it”, Brussels South Charleroi Airport (BSCA) spokeswoman Nathalie Pierard told AFP.She said the tax risked limiting the airport’s investments, especially a planned expansion from which Ryanair was set to benefit. Related Story Source link
A senior Ugandan official Wednesday defended the Internet blackout imposed ahead of elections, saying it was necessary to prevent riots and misinformation.The east African country goes to the polls today in a vote widely expected to secure President Yoweri Museveni his seventh term, due to his total control over state and security bodies.The authorities shut off access to the Internet on Tuesday, despite repeated promises not to do so, adding to fears of renewed repression and manipulation on election day.Presidential advisor Hajat Hadijah Namyalo Uzeiye defended the move, saying: “Internet creates wars, riots, misinformation.”They had to shut down the Internet because of the misinformation from different stakeholders,” she said.The UN human rights office said the shutdown — as well as a ruling this week to suspend 10 rights NGOs — was “deeply worrying”.Uzeiye told AFP they expected a landmark win of “at least 70 percent” in the election.”We are not ready for him to leave,” she said.She rejected allegations from opposition leader Bobi Wine, analysts and rights groups that he is a military dictator who has violently repressed the opposition during his four-decade rule.”I won’t call it dictatorship,” she said.”What they are trying to portray to the world is the element of dictatorship without giving any version of the why, the who, the where, and the what.” Related Story Source link
People attend the funeral of the security forces who were killed in the protests that erupted over the collapse of the currency’s value in Tehran, Iran,…
LIV Golf has signed Thomas Detry, who last year became the first Belgian to win on the PGA Tour. Major winners Bryson DeChambeau, Jon Rahm and Cameron Smith all committed to stay with LIV Golf in 2026 on Tuesday, turning down the chance to follow Brooks Koepka back to the US PGA Tour.Five-time major winner Koepka announced his return to the US circuit on Monday under a new program that created a pathway back for stars who joined the Saudi-backed LIV Golf circuit. It was open to those players who had won either a major or the Players Championship between 2022 and 2025, meaning American DeChambeau, Spain’s Rahm and Australian Smith would have been eligible to make the move back from LIV. But none of them were interested.”Look, I’m contracted through 2026, so I’m excited about this year,” said two-time US Open champion DeChambeau at a LIV Golf media day in Florida.Asked if he shared the sentiment, Rahm, who won the US Open in 2021 and the Masters two years later, replied: “I’m not planning on going anywhere. Very similar answer to what Bryson gave. I wish Brooks the best.”Smith, the 2022 Open winner, was similarly keen to stay with the breakaway tour. “I’m going to stay,” he told reporters. “I have made my bed and I’m gonna sleep in it. I feel like I am in a really good place in my career and my life, my family life, and I don’t need to change it.”PGA Tour chief executive Brian Rolapp said this week Koepka’s decision to leave LIV last month had prompted officials to consider how they handled the issue of embracing players who wanted to rejoin.The result was the PGA Tour’s new “Returning Member Program”, which came with “severe and justified consequences”.That included a five-year forfeiture of rights to participation in the PGA Tour’s player equity program, while Koepka had agreed to make a $5 million charitable contribution to a recipient which will be determined jointly by Koepka and the PGA Tour.Launched in 2022, LIV Golf’s emergence led to bitter divisions throughout the sport as several of golf’s biggest names left the PGA Tour after signing big-money deals.LIV Golf signs Belgian Detry, re-signs twice major winner JohnsonLIV Golf has signed Thomas Detry, who last year became the first Belgian to win on the PGA Tour, to its roster while former world number one Dustin Johnson has re-signed with the league, the Saudi-funded circuit said.World number 58 Detry, who picked up his lone PGA Tour victory at last February’s Phoenix Open, is joining the 4Aces team captained by two-time major champion Johnson, who signed a multi-year extension with LIV.Detry is arguably the biggest LIV signing since Rahm and Englishman Tyrrell Hatton joined the league ahead of the 2024 season. “There’s an amazing vibe around the 4Aces that you feel right away,” said Detry. “You can see they play with confidence and there’s a definite swagger coming from all the guys… feeling like you belong on the biggest stages. That’s exactly the type of environment I want to be a part of.”The 33-year-old Detry is coming off a career year during which he made the cut in 19 of the 24 events he played, including at the Phoenix Open where he romped to a seven-shot victory.For the first time, Detry also played every major in the same calendar year in 2025, missing the cut at the Masters and PGA Championship before earning a share of 23rd at the U.S. Open and finishing joint 45th at the British Open. Johnson, who did not meet the criteria for PGA Tour reinstatement under a new and limited program announced this week by the U.S.-based circuit, has been with LIV Golf since its launch in June 2022.He was LIV’s first season-long individual champion in 2022 and his 4Aces also won that year’s team championship. The 41-year-old American, whose peak years are behind him, missed the cut in the first three majors of 2025 before earning a share of 23rd at the British Open. Related Story Source link
Newly-appointed Defence Minister Mykhailo Fedorov addresses lawmakers during a session of Ukrainian parliament, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Wednesday. Ukraine’s parliament appointed young technocrat Mykhailo Fedorov as defence minister Wednesday as the government seeks to drive innovation to strengthen the military during a difficult phase of the nearly four-year war.President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said he had ordered Fedorov, 34, to implement fast decisions to protect Ukraine’s skies, strengthen supplies to the front line and introduce other technological solutions to stop Russian advances.”We immediately identified the first priorities for the ministry of defence. The main one is air defence,” Zelenskiy said in a post on X after meeting Fedorov.The exhausted Ukrainian army is outmanned and outgunned on the battlefield after Russia’s invasion in February 2022. Russian forces are steadily grinding forward in the eastern Donetsk region and trying to punch through defence lines in the south and northeast.With diplomatic efforts to end the war failing to produce tangible results, Kyiv needs to strengthen its armed forces, which total around 1 million personnel.Zelenskiy said “much broader changes” were needed in the system for mobilising troops for the war.”Decisions have already been made to ensure a more equitable distribution of personnel among combat brigades,” he said.Parliament voted to extend martial law and mobilisation until May, the 18th time since Russia’s full-scale invasion.Fedorov has already played an important role in shaping Ukraine’s high-tech response to Russia’s invasion in previous roles as the first deputy prime minister and digital transformation minister.”Today, it is impossible to fight with new technologies using an old organisational structure,” Fedorov told lawmakers before the vote, promising sweeping changes.”Our goal is to change the system: to reform the army, improve infrastructure on the front lines, eradicate lies and corruption, and make leadership and trust a new culture.”Fedorov was instrumental in creating a “drone line” – a defensive line of drones meant to inflict maximum damage on Russian troops. He also helped improve connectivity for Ukraine’s forces at the front line by deploying Starlink terminals.Along with strengthening its defence efforts, Ukraine needs to implement big changes to stabilise the battered energy sector. Parliament appointed Denys Shmyhal, a former prime minister, as the new energy minister.Shmyhal, one of the country’s most experienced government officials, faces the dual challenge of keeping Ukraine’s lights on despite heavy Russian attacks while also cleaning up the energy sector.His predecessor was dismissed in November after anti-corruption agencies uncovered a scheme to skim $100mn from Ukraine’s state nuclear energy company.Both new ministers take up their positions weeks after a corruption scandal in the energy sector that caused Ukraine’s biggest wartime political crisis and led to widespread public anger at Zelenskiy’s government. Following that, Zelenskiy replaced several security officials and placed a popular spy chief at the centre of his administration as his chief of staff. Related Story Source link
Annalena Baerbock noted that the New Year began with crises in Venezuela and Iran, with the international community “at an even more urgent make-or-break moment” than when the landmark session began in…
A displaced Palestinian woman sits near damaged tents, amid a windstorm, in Gaza City, Tuesday. A rainstorm swept across the Gaza Strip Tuesday, flooding hundreds of tents, collapsing homes sheltering families displaced by two years of war and killing at least six people, local health officials said.Medics said five people, including two women and a girl, died when homes collapsed near Gaza City’s beach, while a one-year-old boy died of extreme cold in a tent in Deir Al-Balah in central Gaza.Tents were torn from their stakes, some flying dozens of meters before crashing to the ground. Others lay crumpled in muddy pools as families scrambled to salvage what they could. Residents tried to resecure remaining shelters, hammering in loosened pegs and stacking sandbags around the edges to keep floodwaters from pouring inside.”We didn’t realise what was happening until the wall started collapsing – an eight-metre-high wall, a strong concrete wall. Because of the speed and force of the wind, the wall fell on top of us, onto three tents,” said Bassel Hamuda, a displaced man in Gaza.”The elderly man, 73 years old, was martyred. His son’s wife was killed, and his son’s daughter was killed,” he said.Three months since a ceasefire halted major combat, Israeli forces have ordered the near-total depopulation of nearly two thirds of Gaza, forcing its more than 2mn people into a narrow strip near the coast where most live either in makeshift tents or damaged buildings.Dozens of relatives gathered at a hospital morgue Tuesday for special prayers over bodies laid on medical stretchers before the funerals.The Hamas-run Gaza government media office said at least 31 Palestinians had died since the start of the winter season from exposure to cold or the collapse of unsafe buildings damaged by previous Israeli strikes.It said about 7,000 tents were damaged in the past 48 hours, most of whose occupants have no alternative shelter.Municipal and civil defence officials said they were unable to cope with the storm because of fuel shortages and damaged equipment. During the war Israel had destroyed hundreds of vehicles needed to respond to the weather emergency, including bulldozers and water pumps.In December, a UN report said 761 displacement sites hosting about 850,000 people were at high risk of flooding, and thousands had moved in anticipation of heavy rain.UN and Palestinian officials said at least 300,000 new tents were urgently needed for the roughly 1.5mn people still displaced. Related Story Source link