Wednesday, June 24, 2026

‘I don’t have a choice’: Paris workers struggle under historic heatwave

As France swelters under a deadly heatwave, thousands of labourers continue to work in the streets and construction sites of Paris with little respite from the stifling heat. From the near-deserted streets around Châtelet to the naked asphalt of the Champs-Élysées, FRANCE 24 spoke to the workers keeping the city going despite record-breaking temperatures.



Issued on: 24/06/2026 - FRANCE24

By: Hamza HABHOUB
Video by: Juliette Brown

Cover image: Workers spread asphalt on a street during a heatwave set to intensify across much of Europe, forcing warnings and special measures, in Paris on June 22, 2026. © Joel Saget, AFP
01:11



It’s not even 11am and the temperature has already climbed into the 30s (over 85°F). Looking across the baking expanse of Châtelet square in the heart of Paris on Tuesday, the city is almost unrecognisable.

The crowds have melted away. Instead, the empty square gives off a suffocating stillness, as though the city has folded in on itself and sought shelter in its own shade.

The streets and cafés are nearly deserted. Only a street-cleaner doggedly carries out his work like the last living witness of the city’s lost rhythm, broken by the weight of the heatwave.

Abdelkrim, a Paris street-cleaner. © Hamza Habhoub, FRANCE 24

Now in his 60s, Abdelkrim has already been working for hours as the sun creeps higher in the sky.

“We started work at five o’clock in the morning to try and get some of our tasks done before the temperatures rose even further,” he said, taking a few moments to catch his breath in the shade. “It’s expected to reach 37°C today. The longer the day goes on, the harder and more gruelling the work becomes.”
Hostile work environment

In an age where some people can work in air-conditioned offices or leave the sweltering city to work remotely until the heatwave passes, others have no choice but to keep working under worsening conditions. For them, the summer heat is not a passing cause for complaint but a daily ordeal that puts their bodies at risk.


Cover image: © France 24
01:32


France’s labour ministry said in a report released in May that heatwaves had become “a growing occupational risk” – especially in the construction, agriculture and outdoor service industries. The report noted a rise in incidents of fainting, decreased alertness and accidents linked to operating heavy machinery, leading the ministry to reinforce preventative measures during periods of high temperatures.
Construction workers labour under the rising temperatures.
 © Hamza Habhoub, FRANCE 24

For its part, the Regional Directorate for the Economy, Employment, Labour and Social Solidarity (DREETS) for the Île-de-France department in and around Paris published a statement the same month reminding employers that they have been legally obliged since July 2025 to give their employees access to fresh water, adapt their work hours as needed and limit their exposure to direct sunlight during the hottest stretches of the day.

The guide to preventing heat-related work accidents, updated in 2026 by French health and workplace safety authorities, also stresses that prolonged exposure to high temperatures can cause symptoms ranging from headaches to heatstroke, which can be a potentially serious medical emergency. Outdoor workers are among those most at risk.


‘I don’t have a choice’

Throughout the heatwave, many labourers start their workday before the sun rises in the hope of avoiding the worst of the day’s heat. It’s not always enough.

On the Champs-Élysées, Safiullah, an Afghan gardener employed by one of the many restaurants lining the famous boulevard, struggles to keep the plants fresh in heavy and humid conditions.

“I sweat a lot and always feel tired,” he said as he dragged a hand across his forehead. “But I have no choice. My social circumstances, my professional circumstances, mean I have to keep working, whatever the conditions. I’m just trying to get by, day after day.”

Safiullah, a gardener. © Hamza Habhoub, FRANCE 24

Shade is even harder to come by among the concrete-and-steel construction sites rising up across the city. Alexandre, a worker from Georgia, said that working under the sun could be brutal.

“The heat is extremely strong and the work sometimes becomes almost unbearable,” he said. “We try to cool down by splashing water over ourselves, and we start as early as six o’clock in the morning to make the most of the relative coolness of the early hours. But in the end, we have no choice but to keep going.”

In a statement published earlier in June, the General Confederation of Labour (CGT) union estimated that the lack of sufficient restrictions continued to expose thousands of construction workers to “barely tolerable” working conditions.

The union stressed that heatwaves could no longer be seen as the exception in France but the reality, with long-term repercussions for the country’s working conditions.
State of emergency

France’s healthcare system is trying to prepare itself for this new reality. Faced with mounting pressure on emergency rooms caused by extreme heat, the Greater Paris University Hospitals network said it was installing more air-conditioning units, fans and misters, improving temperature monitoring in hospital rooms, and setting up air-conditioned “refuge areas” in senior facilities and long-term care centres.

Official figures show a spike in emergency room visits since the start of the week. On the night of the annual Fête de la musique outdoor music festival on Sunday, the number of people taken to emergency rooms in and around the capital was almost double the daily average, a spokesperson for the hospitals network said. Paramedics received over 30 percent more calls compared with the previous week.


Cover image: © France 24
02:06



On a quiet Paris street, Youssef continues his work as a street-cleaner in a city wilting under the summer heat.

“I’ve just come back from holiday and I wish I’d stayed a bit longer,” he said. “It’s a good thing the summer holidays are coming up. I try to take regular breaks, sometimes sitting in a café or somewhere with air conditioning to recharge my batteries a bit, and I drink cold drinks to help me get through the rest of the day.”


On the other side of the road, Paul, a postman, is struggling to push his mail cart along. A bottle of water and a wet towel are his sole arms against the heat. He said it wasn’t enough.

“It would be useful to provide more portable fans or other ways of cooling down, as well as bicycles better suited to when it gets so hot,” he said.


Ahmed, a delivery driver. © Hamza Habhoub, FRANCE 24

As smothering temperatures drive more people indoors, the delivery drivers that hurtle every day through the Paris streets are more overworked than ever.

Ahmed, originally from the Ivory Coast, leans on his bike outside a fast-food restaurant in Paris’s 2nd arrondissement (district) as he waits for the staff to prepare the order.

“I work from nine in the morning until midnight, more or less,” he said. “I’ve got no choice. I don’t have a residence permit, and if I stop working, I risk ending up on the streets. My family depends on me.”

He looks exhausted.

“Sometimes I feel like I’m suffocating, so I look for a cool, shady spot before I keep going,” he said. “I don’t want to go through what happened to some of my friends, who ended up in the emergency room because of this heatwave.”

This article has been translated from the original in Arabic.




Blood minerals and memory: the Great Lakes in focus


Issued on: 23/06/2026  
RFI


SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICA
Play - 28:34


This week, Spotlight on Africa turns to the Great Lakes region. First, a new Global Witness report reveals how coltan is being smuggled out of the Democratic Republic of Congo, amid the ongoing conflict in the east, through Rwanda and on to companies worldwide. Then, artist Grada Kilomba discusses her journey to create a unique monument for Paris commemorating the 1994 Rwandan genocide.


Grada Kilomba esteve em Paris para inaugurar o memorial às vítimas do genocídio dos tutsis no Ruanda. © Melissa Chemam

This month, a new report from the NGO Global Witness has revealed how coltan is being smuggled out of the Democratic Republic of Congo and sold to companies worldwide via Rwanda, amid the devastating conflict in the country's eastern provinces.

Coltan, short for columbite-tantalite, is a mineral from which the metals tantalum and niobium are extracted, both classified as critical raw materials by companies from the United States, the European Union, China and Japan.

The report finds that conflict minerals from the war-torn east of the DRC are present in everyday technology products made by major global companies. It also links the illegal trade to Rwandan firms and to leading international brands including Amazon, Ericsson and Sony, which source minerals from eastern DRC.

The trafficking is linked to the M23 militia, accused of widespread sexual violence, summary executions and torture.

Survivors of a landslide at an open pit coltan mine in Rubaya are seen at home on 30 January, 2026. AFP - -

It took the British non-governmental organisation more than a year of documentary and field research to establish the exploitation network.

A separate Global Witness investigation from April 2025 had already revealed that coltan linked to the conflict in eastern DRC had likely entered the European Union market through international commodities trader Traxys. Earlier reports had also implicated companies including Apple, dating back to 2022.

For this latest investigation, the NGO spent months cross-referencing its findings with surveys conducted by the United Nations and other non-governmental organisations.

Alex Kopp, the report's author and an expert at Global Witness, is our first guest.



Rwanda monument

The artist Grada Kilomba was commissioned to create a monument for the city of Paris commemorating the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

The monument comprises two black brass steles bearing an engraved tribute to the hundreds of thousands of men, women and children massacred between April and July 1994.

It was unveiled in the heart of Paris on 2 June 2026, in the presence of the two countries' presidents, Emmanuel Macron and Paul Kagame.


French President Emmanuel Macron, Rwandan President Paul Kagame and Rwanda's First Lady Jeannette Kagame during the inauguration ceremony of a double stele artwork by artist Grada Kilomba, a new memorial site paying tribute to the victims of the Rwanda's genocide at the Habib-Bourgiba esplanade along the River Seine, in Paris, France, on 2 June, 2026. REUTERS - Sarah Meyssonnier

Kilomba is a Portuguese artist of African heritage, with roots in São Tomé and Angola.

Raised in Portugal, she has worked in Germany, Brazil, England and beyond, using performance and installation to explore the history of African and black people across centuries and continents, including the slave trade.

She was selected through a rigorous process to design this monument, the first of its kind in France. She travelled to Rwanda to meet survivors and conduct her own research before completing the project, titled "The Archive".

Her creative process led her to reflect on France and Europe's responsibility in the tragic events.

Grada Kilomba is the second guest in this episode.

This episode was mixed by Vincent Pora.
INVESTIGATION

Sexual violence surges in Mozambique's Cabo Delgado as war grinds on


Sexual violence is surging in Mozambique's Cabo Delgado province, where women and girls are trapped between insurgents and soldiers after nearly a decade of conflict. Rich in natural gas, precious stones and lithium, the northern province has been scarred by attacks from Islamist militants and reprisals by Mozambique's armed forces. This seventh instalment of Mozambique Exposed – an investigation coordinated by Forbidden Stories to which RFI contributed – examines how women have paid the price.


Issued on: 19/06/2026 - 

An unpublished 2024 report by the United Nations Population Fund found a surge in sexual violence in Mozambique's Cabo Delgado province since conflict began in 2017. © Studio FMM


Just before dawn one morning in March 2021, gunfire woke Olessa Ibrahimou as armed men stormed her village near Palma in northern Mozambique.

The 41-year-old was pregnant at the time. She tried to flee with her five children, but they were captured.

"They separated the children from the adults," she recalled. "When they saw me, my three youngest children ran towards me. The bandits spared us because I was pregnant. But they took away my two daughters, who were 15 and 17."

Olessa has not seen her daughters since


Now living in poverty in Pemba, the provincial capital, the only news she has received came from another woman who escaped captivity.

"I found a neighbour who had been kidnapped and managed to escape," she told RFI. "She told me my youngest daughter had a child."

Olessa's story is one of dozens recorded in a 2024 report by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) titled The Voices of Mozambique.

The report, which has never been made public, documents widespread gender-based violence in Cabo Delgado. UNFPA said it was not published because of quality concerns, without giving further details.

Between January and April 2024, the agency interviewed more than 100 people in seven of Cabo Delgado's 16 districts.

Victims, relatives, aid workers, community leaders and religious leaders all described the same pattern: sexual violence has risen sharply since the conflict began in 2017.

Abduction and enslavement


The report says large numbers of women and girls have been abducted and trafficked by armed groups.

It also documents torture, extrajudicial killings and the use of women and children as human shields by a terrorist group known locally as Al-Shebab and linked to the Islamic State (although with no connection to the Somali militant group of the same name).

"Once the girls are kidnapped, they are put online and the armed men make their choice," a social worker in Mocimboa da Praia, who asked not to be named, told RFI.

"Those who are chosen are forced into marriage. The others become slaves of the group."

Women are forced to carry fighters' equipment, cook and collect firewood. Some are also subjected to sexual slavery.

"When they wanted to punish us, they tied our hands behind our backs and left us like that for three days," one survivor told UNFPA.

"During that time, any man who wanted to could come and rape us."

Escaping captivity does not always end the ordeal. Women who return home often face rejection from their own communities.

"In towns occupied by the terrorists, such as Palma and Mocimboa da Praia, pregnant women can be discriminated against because communities suspect the father is one of the fighters," a gender-based violence specialist told UNFPA.

Soldiers and impunity

The UN report also accuses Mozambique's armed forces (FADM) of committing widespread sexual violence. It documents numerous cases of sexual assault and rape.

"Yesterday, an officer bought drinks for a girl aged 15 or 16," one witness told UNFPA. "He asked her to repay him. When she said she had no money, he forced her to sleep with him. There's a motel right next door. You could hear her screaming and crying."

People interviewed by RFI in Cabo Delgado also described repeated abuses by government soldiers.

"They have no respect," said Saviana Talessa, president of the health committee in Mocimboa da Praia's 30 June neighbourhood. "They often come at night. They drink. They fire their weapons into the air. We're afraid of them."

The report says members of the armed forces also harass women in public.

"At the markets, they touch women's breasts and buttocks," one UNFPA source said. "They take whatever they want without paying."


Two women stand in Paquitequete, a neighbourhood of Pemba where thousands of people displaced by attacks in Mozambique's Cabo Delgado province sought refuge. The conflict has left women and girls especially vulnerable to sexual violence and exploitation. @ AFP - ALFREDO ZUNIGA

The report points to almost complete impunity for members of the armed forces, even though those responsible could often be identified.

"That creates an additional risk for victims, who regularly come face to face with their attackers," the report says.

The conflict has also driven a rise in sex work, particularly among displaced communities.

"Some women have lost their husbands, their land and their livelihoods, and they have children to feed," the social worker in Mocimboa da Praia said.

Displaced women are especially vulnerable to abuse by soldiers, community leaders and even aid workers, the report says.

It describes numerous cases in which women were forced to exchange sex for humanitarian assistance and warns of a growing number of children involved in sex work.

Poverty and exploitation

The delayed development of Cabo Delgado's gas industry has also contributed to the problem.

One of the world's largest natural gas discoveries was made off the coast of Palma in 2012.

An international consortium led by French energy company TotalEnergies had planned to begin production in 2017, but the Mozambique LNG project was suspended for several years because of the deteriorating security situation.

According to the UNFPA report, "businessmen have been accused of taking part in sexual exploitation". It says they work for private companies and that some witnesses described them as Mozambicans from outside Cabo Delgado.

Most of the reported cases took place in Palma.

"They tell women and girls that if they sleep with them, they'll get a job," one UNFPA source said. "But the job never comes."

Although The Voices of Mozambique was never made public, UNFPA said the findings were nevertheless used to develop humanitarian programmes aimed at tackling gender-based violence.

"It remained in draft form because of quality reasons," an agency spokesperson said.

UNFPA confirmed that the study followed the same methodology as similar reports carried out in Cameroon and Sudan that were later published.

"In 2024, there were many things happening in the country and many programme needs," the spokesperson said. "Finalising this report for an external audience was not a priority."

The same year also saw the withdrawal from Cabo Delgado of troops from the Southern African Development Community Mission in Mozambique, which had been supporting Mozambican forces in their fight against the insurgency.

Conflict-monitoring organisation ACLED said the number of deadly attacks in 2024 rose by 36 percent compared with the previous year.



This article has been adapted from the original version in French by Gaëlle Laleix, reporting from Cabo Delgado.

It is the fourth instalment of Mozambique Exposed, an investigation coordinated by Forbidden Stories, a global non-profit network of investigative journalists. The project is based on nearly 100 interviews and five months of reporting by 30 journalists from 10 media organisations, including RFI and Les Observateurs de France 24 (France), Evident Media (United States), Expresso (Portugal), M28 Investigates (Rwanda), Paper Trail Media (Germany), SourceMaterial (United Kingdom), ZDF (Germany) and Zitamar News (Mozambique).
WAR IS FEMICIDE

UN warns of an 'imminent risk of mass atrocities' in Sudan's Kordofan

In Sudan, NGOs and the UN have warned of an "imminent risk of mass atrocities" in El-Obeid, a major city in North Kordofan. This comes as the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) step up their campaign against the regular army in the region.


Issued on: 22/06/2026 - RFI

Safaa Zakaria, 29, a Sudanese refugee from El-Fasher, Sudan, at the Tine transit camp in eastern Chad, on 22 November, 2025. REUTERS - Amr Abdallah Dalsh

The majority-Muslim southern city, in the Kordofan region, has been under siege for several months by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), led by General Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, also known as Hemedti.

The war began in April 2023 after tensions between the RSF and the regular army run by Abdel Fattah al-Burhan.

The United Nations Security Council expressed its "grave concern" on Saturday, regarding reports of the deployment of significant military reinforcements by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) around the city and spoke of an "imminent risk of mass atrocities" in El-Obeid, North Kordofan.

It also called on all parties to cease hostilities and urged UN member states to refrain from any interference that could fuel the violence.

The Sudan Doctors Network has been warning in recent weeks of an increase in drone attacks against schools, hospitals, health centres, displacement camps, and, most recently, a power plant in El-Obeid, plunging the town into darkness and disrupting the water pumping system.

"El Obeid is not just a large city, it is a nerve center for commercial and humanitarian activities," Elias Abu Ata, advisor for the Norwegian Refugee Council in Sudan, told RFI.

The region is considered a buffer zone between the territory captured by RSF in Darfur and the areas controlled by al-Burhan's army in eastern Sudan.



Fear of El-Fasher repeat

The UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy for Sudan, Pekka Haavisto last week called on Hemedti to spare El-Obeid.

Prior to that, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres had also warned of the "imminent" risk of an attack. "We must not allow the horrors of El-Fasher to be repeated in El-Obeid," Guterres warned.

The UN fears a repeat of the scenario experienced in El-Fasher where, last October, the RSF launched an offensive against this major city in Darfur after a 500-day siege, committing massacres and mass rapes, atrocities which presented the distinctive signs of genocide, the UN fact-finding mission found.


The European Union also called on the RSF to immediately cease the massacres of civilians, violence against ethnic groups, and attacks on civilian infrastructure.

The conflict has killed at least 59,000 people, displaced around 13 million and left more than 30 million in need of humanitarian assistance.
Paris court rejects bid to reopen probe into Caribbean chlordecone contamination

The Paris appeals court has upheld a decision not to reopen a criminal investigation into the use of chlordecone, a toxic pesticide that has been linked to cancer and other health problems in around 90 percent of the adult population in Guadeloupe and Martinique.


Issued on: 22/06/2026 - RFI

The area around Gourbeyre and Saint-Claude in southern Guadeloupe, an agricultural area that is the most polluted by Chlordecone on the island. © Agnès Rougier/RFI

After 20 years of legal proceedings, the court confirmed the dismissal of the case, effectively closing the door to any future criminal investigations.

Christophe Lèguevaques, a lawyer representing the civil parties called the ruling a "dark day for justice".

Chlordecone, also known as Kepone, was used on banana plantations to combat weevils in the two French Caribbean islands from 1972 to 1993. France banned the pesticide on the mainland in 1990 but continued to allow its use in Guadeloupe and Martinique for three more years, despite warnings about its dangers.

More than 90 percent of adults in the two islands have been contaminated by chlordecone, according to France's National Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health and Safety (Anses).

5 questions about chlordecone pesticide use in French Antilles

A judicial investigation was opened in Paris in 2008 after complaints filed by farmers, consumer and environmental organisations and public health advocates.

The case reached the courts after years of proceedings, and it was dismissed in 2023 by two investigating judges, who ruled that too much time had elapsed to secure criminal convictions.

However, the judges, in their ruling, acknowledged a "health scandal" and "environmental damage" that would "affect the daily lives" of the overseas territories' residents concerned "for many years to come".

Lawmakers earlier this month unanimously acknowledged the state's role the chlordecone scandal, setting the goal of decontaminating land and water and compensating victims of the contamination.

(with newswires)
'Poison in your coffee' report sounds alarm over widespread pesticide use

Coffee production around the world depends heavily on pesticides, leaving millions of farm workers exposed to harmful chemicals while pesticide residues are also found in exported coffee beans, a report published on Monday warned.


Issued on: 22/06/2026 - RFI

A farm worker harvests coffee beans at a plantation in Porciúncula, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, on 17 July 2025. A new report says millions of coffee workers are exposed to hazardous pesticides. AP - Bruna Prado

The report's authors say the biggest concern is not what ends up in consumers' cups, but the health and environmental damage linked to intensive coffee farming.

"Poison in Your Coffee", was compiled by Coffee Watch, an NGO, and draws on several hundred scientific studies examining the health and environmental impacts of intensive coffee farming.

"Our report is our effort to sound the alarm," Etelle Higonnet, one of the report's authors, told RFI.

"There are traces of pesticide residues in one in five cups of coffee that consumers drink. But the real catastrophe is that workers are being poisoned."

Coffee is one of the world's most pesticide-intensive crops, the report said. In Kenya, for example, coffee farming accounts for nearly one-quarter of all pesticides used even though it covers only about 1 percent of agricultural land.



Banned substances

Researchers identified 159 active substances approved for coffee production in the main countries studied. Among them are pesticides classified as probable carcinogens, neurotoxic substances or chemicals that can harm reproduction.

"What is even more striking is that 59 to 60 percent of pesticides used in coffee are banned in Europe because they are considered too dangerous," Higonnet said.

The report cites chlorpyrifos, banned in the European Union since 2020 because of concerns about its effects on children's neurological development, and imidacloprid, a neonicotinoid insecticide whose impact on pollinators has been widely documented.

The report also examines pesticide residues found in coffee sold on international markets. Between 2020 and 2024, pesticides were the most frequently reported risk for coffee in the European Union's rapid food alert system.

Data analysed by PAN Europe, the Pesticide Action Network, found that 23 percent of coffee samples tested in Europe contained pesticides banned in the EU.

"When residues are found in coffee, they are often a cocktail of pesticides rather than a single substance," Higonnet said.

The combined effects of these mixtures remain poorly understood, she said.



Workers bear burden

Coffee Watch said the report's main concern is agricultural workers.

Around 25 million producers and 100 million workers worldwide depend on the coffee sector, yet access to protective equipment remains limited in many producing regions.

In the Dominican Republic, 87 percent of producers surveyed said they do not wear gloves or masks when applying pesticides. In India, two thirds of workers reported using no specific protection.

"Most farmers and workers have absolutely no access to training or protective equipment," Higonnet said.

Immediate effects of pesticide exposure include nausea, vomiting, dizziness, skin irritation and breathing problems, the report says. The authors say long-term exposure also carries serious health risks.

Some 14 percent of pesticides used in coffee production are classified as probable or confirmed carcinogens, the report found, while almost two thirds may be toxic to reproduction.

The report also points to links between some substances and neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson's, as well as effects on fertility and on the development of children exposed before birth.

"Cancers, fertility problems, reproductive disorders and cases of Parkinson's disease are being observed. These are not minor consequences," Higonnet said.



Labels under scrutiny


Coffee brands increasingly promote labels and certifications that claim to meet environmental and social standards. But the report questions how effective those schemes are.

"When you drink certified coffee, it does not necessarily mean it is free of pesticides," Higonnet said.

Certification standards vary widely, making them difficult for consumers to compare.

No certification currently guarantees a decent income for all producers and workers in the coffee sector, Higonnet said.

The report said proven alternatives already exist. It points to agroforestry systems and agroecological farming methods that can greatly reduce dependence on pesticides while protecting biodiversity.

"We know perfectly well how to produce coffee that respects nature. Organic coffee exists. The solutions exist too. The question now is whether the coffee industry is ready to adopt them more widely," Higonnet said.

This article was adapted from the original version in French by Simon Rozé
WTF 

EU gambles on Taliban talks to fast-track Afghan deportations

A Taliban delegation is due to fly into Brussels on Tuesday, having been granted a one-day visa to hold talks with the EU on returning failed asylum seekers to Afghanistan. However, human rights groups have warned that the scheme runs counter to the bloc's values.


Issued on: 23/06/2026 - RFI

Migrants line up at a registration centre for asylum seekers in Berlin, Germany. AP - Markus Schreiber

The European Commission has invited the officials for discussions under a push to crack down on irregular migration and boost deportations – despite it not formally recognising the Taliban administration.

The EU outreach to the Taliban authorities has drawn fierce pushback, with rights groups urging the commission to back out of the planned meeting.

A spokeswoman for the foreign minister of Belgium, which issued the documents in its capacity as host country to the European institutions, told AFP the five requested visas were granted Monday afternoon "after a security assessment".

They were just valid for Belgium and not the broader free-movement Schengen area and for one day only, she said.

Belgium declined to disclose the date of the delegation's arrival, citing security reasons, but multiple sources as well as Afghan media reports suggested the talks should take place Tuesday.

The delegation was understood to be flying in and out of the country via Turkey.

EU's push to deport Afghan refugees brings the Taliban back to the table

Brussels and EU countries have denied that hosting Taliban officials is tantamount to recognising the government in Kabul, but critics including leading rights groups say it would renege on the bloc's values.

"EU countries are undermining their credibility by condemning Taliban abuses and pursuing accountability on one hand, while cooperating with the Taliban to forcibly return Afghans on the other," said Fereshta Abbasi of Human Rights Watch.

European governments shut their embassies in Kabul when the Taliban authorities returned to power in 2021 and imposed their strict interpretation of Islamic law.

Women must be almost entirely covered when they leave home and are banned from a host of public places, including parks and gyms, while girls' education stops at age 12.

‘All they dream of is leaving’: the reality of life for women under the Taliban


Right-wing push

This month the European Union's migration chief Magnus Brunner defended the outreach, saying Brussels had no other option than to talk to the Taliban government about returning irregular migrants from Afghanistan.

European governments have sought a tougher stance on migration as public opinion has hardened, fuelling far-right electoral gains across the continent.

EU countries received about a million asylum applications filed by Afghans between 2013 and 2024, according to the bloc's data agency. About half as many were approved over the period.

Thousands of Afghan refugees return from Pakistan as border tensions boil over

Around 20 of the EU's 27 member states expressed interest in returning some migrants without a right to stay, particularly those with criminal convictions, to Afghanistan in a letter last year.

"The focus for member states is very much on persons who have committed serious crimes or who pose a security threat," commission spokesman Markus Lammert told journalists Monday.

Rights groups have questioned the legality and ethics of returning migrants to a country that is in the midst of a severe humanitarian crisis, with millions facing hunger and economic hardship, according to the United Nations.

(with AFP)





















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UNAIDS warns Trump's HIV funding cuts to South Africa could cost lives


By Leticia Batista Cabanas
Updated
\

The Trump administration says the phased withdrawal is linked to policy disputes with Pretoria, which rejects the allegations and says it is pursuing greater self-reliance.

The United States has decided to withdraw all funding for South Africa's HIV and AIDS response through the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), a programme that has contributed about $400m (€340m) a year to the country's fight against the disease.

The move comes as relations between Washington and Pretoria continue to deteriorate.

The head of the United Nations HIV agency, Winnie Byanyima, warned that the decision could have serious consequences for public health in South Africa, which has the world's largest HIV-positive population with more than eight million people living with the virus.

Speaking ahead of a UN meeting, she said: "Please do not take money away because you are taking lives away."

Byanyima said the loss of US funding risks undoing years of progress in preventing new infections and supporting vulnerable communities. According to UNAIDS, PEPFAR has been providing around 17% of South Africa's total HIV response funding.

She said: "Taking it away is taking life-saving support from the most vulnerable people."

South Africa does not depend on US funding to buy antiretroviral medicines, as those are financed by the government. However, American support has been crucial for prevention programmes, testing services, community outreach and assistance for groups most at risk of contracting HIV.

The US State Department said the funding withdrawal is part of a "phased drawdown" linked to what it described as South Africa's "failure to make demonstrable progress on policy requests by the administration". US officials have also said the decision was influenced by concerns over the treatment of the country's white Afrikaner minority.

The South African government has rejected those allegations. Pretoria says its Black Economic Empowerment policies are designed to address deep inequalities that persist from the apartheid era. It has also dismissed claims by US President Donald Trump that a "white genocide" is taking place in the country, saying there is no evidence to support the accusation.

South Africa's health ministry said it had not been formally informed of the funding decision but added that it had "long been working on a self-reliance plan". Officials maintain that the country is prepared to assume greater responsibility for financing its HIV response, although experts warn that replacing lost prevention funding will be difficult.



INTERVIEW


'One injection protects up to six months': what is new HIV drug lenacapavir?


As South Africa becomes the ninth African country to introduce the use of new long-acting drug lenacapavir for HIV prevention, RFI spoke with infectious disease specialist Ndong Essomba Bitchoka about how the treatment works, whether the supply will meet demand and why developing an HIV vaccine remains a challenge.


Issued on: 21/06/2026 -  RFI

Lenacapavir is administered as an injection twice a year. © AFP - IHSAAN HAFFEJEE

New long-acting antiretroviral treatment lenacapavir requires just two injections a year, reducing the need for daily pills. But questions remain over access, cost and whether enough doses will be available to meet demand in the country with the world's largest HIV-positive population.

Ndong Essomba Bitchoka oversees the HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis care unit at the District Deido hospital in Douala, Cameroon.

RFI: South Africans living with HIV can now benefit from lenacapavir. Can you explain how this new treatment works?

Ndong Essomba Bitchoka: Lenacapavir is an antiretroviral drug. It prevents the assembly of the HIV virus's RNA molecules, which stops new HIV viruses from forming. That is essentially how it works.

[It] can be used to treat HIV infection and help control the virus in certain patients. Instead of taking tablets every day, patients receive injections that limit the virus's replication in the body for around six months.

The patient must first have their condition controlled with oral medicine, meaning tablets. Lenacapavir then supports the action of the antiretroviral drugs already being used to control the virus. The same level of control can then be maintained over a longer period when combined with other medicines.

Fiji fears crisis as WHO warns it has world's fastest growing HIV epidemic

RFI: Do you have any idea how much the treatment costs?

NEB: I do not know the exact cost, so I cannot give a precise answer.

In many countries, such as Cameroon where I am from, lenacapavir is not yet available. In many cases, however, governments and financial partners work to subsidise these medicines. So, patients do not have to pay.

But in South Africa, I don't yet know whether that will be the case, but I believe the government is working to see how it can subsidise access to these antiretroviral drugs, or at least in part.

RFI: For now, only 40,000 doses have been made available in South Africa. President Cyril Ramaphosa has announced that 1 million doses will be supplied within 18 months. However, the organisation Health Gap believes twice that number is necessary to meet the country's needs. If there is a shortage, could patients who start the treatment find themselves in a difficult situation if it later becomes unavailable? What would the consequences be?

NEB: It is a good idea to begin with a certain number of doses and prioritise patients who need lenacapavir the most.

Then, depending on how patients respond to the treatment, it may be possible to increase the number of available doses and expand access to more people.

The risk is that if many doses are distributed and the state is later unable to obtain more, treatment could be interrupted. That could lead to resistance to this antiretroviral drug, which is otherwise very beneficial for patient care.


RFI: Can you explain why there has been more research into HIV treatments than into a vaccine for the virus? Is it really that difficult to develop one?

NEB: HIV is a particularly tricky virus because it mutates a great deal. You can think of it like a burglar who breaks into different houses but changes the way he operates each time.

Perhaps in one house the burglar is 1.8 metres tall, but in the next house he is 1.5 metres tall. That allows him to get through openings that would not have been possible before. He changes his route, he changes his approach. HIV behaves in a similar way because it has many mutations.

Scientists have not yet been able to develop a vaccine that can block all these different mutated strains of HIV. That is what makes creating a vaccine so difficult.

However, there are trials that offer some hope. In particular, the Brilliant 011 trial currently under way in South Africa is giving researchers reason to be optimistic. We hope to see positive results within the next few years.

This interview has been adapted from the original version in French and edited for clarity.

GUINEA PIGS

US releases experimental Ebola drug for DR Congo outbreak trials

Experimental Ebola drugs are being shipped to Democratic Republic of Congo as the United States releases doses of a treatment for clinical trials in a widening outbreak that has caused more than 1,000 cases and over 250 deaths, the World Health Organization and US officials have said.


Issued on: 24/06/2026 - RFI

Health workers care for an Ebola patient at the Rwampara treatment centre in Ituri province, Democratic Republic of Congo, on 18 June 2026. © AP/Moses Sawasawa


The US Department of Health and Human Services confirmed it will provide doses of MBP134, an antibody drug developed by California-based Mapp Biopharmaceutical, for compassionate use in the DRC and to support a clinical trial in the outbreak region.

"The drug is being made available for compassionate use in Congo as well as to advance a clinical trial in the outbreak region," a department spokesperson told Reuters.

Washington had previously said doses of the drug would only be made available to its own citizens considered at high risk after exposure to the virus.

Trial data could help support future regulatory review and possible US approval, the spokesperson added, declining to say how many doses were being provided.

No approved vaccines or treatments exist for the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, which is responsible for the outbreak.

The DRC has recorded more than 1,000 confirmed cases since the outbreak was confirmed on 15 May. The number of cases has risen faster than in any previous Ebola outbreak on record, the Africa Centre for Strategic Studies warned.

Drugs on route

Shipments of MBP134 and other treatments intended for trials are already on their way, the WHO said. The agency is working with health partners to prepare trial enrolment at treatment facilities in the affected region.

Trials of the Mapp drug and two antivirals developed by US pharmaceutical company Gilead Sciences are due to begin in the coming weeks, according to information provided by the WHO and scientists involved in the testing.

MBP134 will be tested both on its own and alongside Gilead's remdesivir, also known as Veklury, which was widely used during the Covid-19 pandemic. A second Gilead drug, obeldesivir, will be tested as a possible preventive treatment.

Ethics committees and regulators in the DRC and Uganda are reviewing trial protocols. Earlier studies found the treatments to be safe, but they have not been tested against the Bundibugyo strain.

Experimental drugs and vaccines should still be tested in clinical trials before widespread use, despite the urgency of the outbreak, the WHO has said.



Trials in a war zone

The Ebola outbreak is concentrated in the northeastern DRC, with more than 97 percent of cases in Ituri, North Kivu and South Kivu provinces. A small number of cases and deaths have also been reported in neighbouring Uganda.

Running trials and delivering care in the eastern DRC will be difficult, global health officials said. Disease testing and contact tracing are challenging, supply chains have been disrupted, mistrust is widespread and health workers have faced attacks.

The outbreak may have circulated for weeks – possibly months – before it was confirmed. Laboratories in the remote region only had tests for more common strains of Ebola, delaying confirmation until blood samples were sent to Kinshasa.

The WHO has since rolled out a decentralised testing network with new devices that can return results within an hour.

(with newswires)



DRC announces free healthcare for all illnesses in Ituri as Ebola gains ground

The government of the Democratic Republic of Congo has announced the introduction of free healthcare for all diseases in Ituri – a pilot project that authorities hope to extend nationwide. This comes as the country struggles to contain an Ebola outbreak, with confirmed cases now at over 1,000.



Issued on: 22/06/2026 - RFI

A fourth orphan died from Ebola virus disease at an orphanage in Bunia, Ituri Province, and was buried on 19 June, 2026. AFP - JOSPIN MWISHA

The free healthcare measure was announced on Sunday by the Congolese Minister of Health, Samuel Roger Kamba, during his visit to Ituri – the province at the epicenter of the latest Ebola epidemic.

Kamba visited the provincial capital Bunia and is due to travel to the mining town of Mongbwalu, where the epidemic started.

The government's objective is to ensure that Ebola does not relegate other health emergencies to the background.

The pilot programme in Ituri includes free medical consultations and treatment for all illnesses.

It is to be financed with the tax for health promotion which came into effect last March, as well as the mandatory health insurance announced for the coming weeks.

Doctor wearing personal protective equipment tend to a patient in the red zone of the Ebola treatment centre of Rwampara General Reference Hospital in Rwampara, Ituri Province, Democratic Republic of Congo, on 12 June, 2026. AFP - JOSPIN MWISHA


Financial incentives

Meanwhile, the fight against the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola is at its peak, mobilising significant resources in the region.

Authorities said Monday that confirmed cases have risen to 1,003 and 254 deaths have been reported.

Regarding healthcare workers, authorities have promised compensation to the families who have lost someone, as has already been done for about ten of them. For doctors involved in the response, their risk allowance will be doubled.

During his visit to Ituri, Kamba also announced that Ebola patients will soon no longer be sent to general hospitals, but to specialised treatment centres, still being established, with the aim of improving their care and limiting the spread of infection.

The government is keen to restore the public's confidence in healthcare facilities and counter the numerous misinformation campaigns on social media.

Spreading 'fast'


The fatal outbreak is spreading rapidly in the DRC, the World Health Organization (WHO) warned on Friday.

"The outbreak remains serious" and is "evolving so fast", said Marie-Roseline Belizaire, the WHO Africa emergencies chief.

"However, I have seen a response that is growing stronger every day," she told reporters in Geneva, speaking from Bunia.

The outbreak was declared on 15 May, though transmission had been going undetected for some time beforehand.

Belizaire said the response teams were racing to keep pace with the virus, which spreads by close contact and infected bodily fluids.

The number of treatment beds available for Ebola patients had gone from zero to more than 500, she said.

And surveillance teams were now investigating nearly 400 alerts and were capable of administering more than 2,000 tests a day, she added.

Belizaire also highlighted that efforts to trace contacts of known Ebola cases had ramped up, with 75 percent of all contacts now being reached.

The WHO has said 95 percent of contacts must be traced to get on top of the outbreak.

(with newswires)



France confirms first Ebola case in doctor returning from DR Congo mission

France on Wednesday announced its first confirmed case of Ebola identified on its territory, a doctor who had returned from DR Congo. The health ministry said the patient had a "very low" viral load and had been placed in isolation.


Issued on: 24/06/2026 -
By: FRANCE 24

Cover image: This undated electron micrograph image provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on May 11, 1995 shows the Ebola virus. AP
01:29



France on Wednesday announced the first confirmed case of Ebola identified on its territory, a doctor who had flown back from DR Congo, which is fighting a major outbreak.

The case is the first of the deadly haemorrhagic fever identified outside the African continent during the current outbreak, which has also affected Uganda.


It is the first time France has detected Ebola. In 2014, during an outbreak in west Africa, two patients were transported to France, but they had been diagnosed abroad.

The health ministry said it had identified "a first positive case of Ebola virus disease on national territory".

The patient, who arrived in Paris on Tuesday, "boarded a commercial flight from Kinshasa and was almost asymptomatic – except for headaches", the ministry said.
Air France flight

The doctor's condition "slightly deteriorated during the flight", after which the patient was immediately isolated and taken into care upon landing in Paris, even before the disease was officially identified, the ministry added.

The patient was in a "stable condition" with a "very low" viral load, the ministry added.

The doctor travelled on an Air France flight, the airline said, adding that it had provided the passenger list to the authorities.

"Contact with these passengers is being handled by the health authorities," Air France said.

Health minister Stéphanie Rist later said five other passengers had been identified as possible contacts and put in isolation as a precaution.

Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu's office said he was monitoring the situation "very closely", but the health ministry stressed that the risk of transmission remained low.

The World Health Organization (WHO) chief, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said Wednesday the global risk "remains low".

ALIMA (The Alliance for International Medical Action), an international medical humanitarian organisation, said the patient was one of its doctors.

The group said it was seeking to "understand how the contamination could have occurred".

Humanitarian workers are normally required to undergo a three-week quarantine after contact with infected cases.

According to diplomatic sources, meetings will be held later Wednesday to discuss an appropriate course of action, particularly regarding movement restrictions.
US surgeon recovered

DR Congo's 17th Ebola outbreak was declared on May 15 after several unexplained deaths in the mineral-rich eastern Ituri province plagued by armed groups.

According to the latest official figures, more than 1,000 cases have been recorded, including 267 deaths, representing a fatality rate of around 25 percent.

Many experts consider it likely that the scale of the outbreak has been underestimated, as it is affecting remote regions.

The Bundibugyo strain of the virus that has caused the outbreak has no approved vaccine or treatment.

Existing Ebola vaccines, developed between 2018 and 2019, are only effective against the Zaire strain, which caused previous major outbreaks.

In May, an American surgeon who contracted Ebola in DR Congo was flown to Germany for treatment.

A Berlin hospital discharged the missionary earlier this month, saying he had recovered following 17 days of medical care.

The doctor, identified as Peter Stafford of the Serge charity, had received care that included "experimental therapies currently being trialled for this type of virus", said the hospital.

Public health experts estimate that the risk of the outbreak spreading worldwide remains low, due to the relatively low contagiousness of the Ebola virus.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)