Tuesday, February 17, 2026

THE GLOBAL EPSTEIN CLASS

 


‘Get the files out’: Hillary Clinton slams Trump's Epstein cover-up

Former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton accused President Donald Trump of staging a "cover-up" over files related to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Days before her scheduled deposition before a Congressional committee, Clinton said the Republicans probing her are trying to deflect attention away from President Donald Trump, whose name is also mentioned in the files.


Issued on: 17/02/2026
By: FRANCE 24

Former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton speaks at "The World Forum 2026" in Berlin on February 16, 2026. © Carsten Koall, AP

Former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton has accused President Donald Trump of orchestrating a "cover-up" over files related to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, according to an interview with the BBC published Monday.

"Get the files out. They are slow-walking it," Clinton, who is due to testify before a Congressional committee on the issue, told the British broadcaster in an interview in Berlin.

The Justice Department last month released the latest cache of so-called Epstein files – more than three million documents, photos and videos related to its investigation into sex criminal Epstein, who died from what was determined to be suicide while in custody in 2019.

Clinton's husband, former president Bill Clinton, features regularly in the files, but no evidence has come to light implicating either Clinton in criminal activity.

The couple has been ordered to give closed-door depositions before the House Oversight Committee, which is probing the deceased financier's connections to powerful figures and how information about his crimes was handled.

"We will show up but we think it would be better to have it in public," Hillary Clinton told the BBC.

"I just want it to be fair," she said. "I want everybody treated the same way."

The former secretary of state said she and her husband "have nothing to hide. We have called for the full release of these files repeatedly."

The Department of Justice has said it has no more files to release, though lawmakers have criticised it for not publishing internal government memos, notes and emails on Epstein.

Clinton said the Republicans probing her are trying to deflect attention away from Trump, whose name is also mentioned in the files many times.

"Look at this shiny object. We're going to have the Clintons, even Hillary Clinton, who never met the guy," she said.

Trump denies any wrongdoing. Mere mention in the files is not proof of having committed a crime.

Former president Clinton has acknowledged flying on Epstein's plane in the early 2000s for Clinton Foundation-related humanitarian work, but said he never visited Epstein's private island.

Hillary Clinton, who ran against Trump for president in 2016, has said she had no meaningful interactions with Epstein, never flew on his plane and never visited his island.

In the interview with the BBC, she said she had met Ghislaine Maxwell, an Epstein associate who was convicted of conspiring with him to sexually abuse minors, "on a few occasions".

Responding to Clinton's comment that the congressional testimony was a bid to create a distraction, Trump denied it, telling reporters Monday evening he had been "totally exonerated".

Hillary Clinton will appear for her deposition on February 26, while Bill Clinton will appear on February 27.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)


INTERVIEW

Epstein files: ‘Releasing documents in their raw state can be counterproductive’


The release by the US administration of more than 3 million documents linked to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein has put dozens of high-profile figures under scrutiny over their correspondence with him. RFI spoke to Frédérique Sandretto, a professor of American civilisation at Sciences Po university, who says while this move was meant to dispel doubts, it has instead enabled conspiracy theorists.


Issued on: 14/02/2026 

A press conference to discuss the Epstein Files Transparency bill on Capitol Hill, Washington DC, 3 September, 2025. 
REUTERS - Jonathan Ernst

The United States Justice Department on 30 January published nearly 3 million government documents related to Epstein, who was convicted in 2008 for soliciting a minor and died by suicide in custody in 2019 while awaiting trial for sex trafficking.

The mention of a name in the files does not, in itself, imply wrongdoing by that individual. However, the material has shown how Epstein embedded himself in elite international circles – through introductions, group emails and investment activity.

While some of the public figures named have stepped down from their positions, others have downplayed or denied ties to Epstein.

For Frédérique Sandretto, a professor of American civilisation at Sciences Po university in Paris, the release of such a large number of documents could do more harm than good without proper analysis.

RFI: How has the publication of these documents by the US administration been received by the public?

Frédérique Sandretto: It was eagerly awaited. It was something [US President Donald] Trump had announced, but he had always backed down, fuelling conspiracy theories that there was something to hide. Finally, the Transparency Act was passed in 2025, with unprecedented consensus between Republicans and Democrats. When you see the documents, there are more than 3 million of them. And you don't know where to start. You feel like you have access to declassified data, which is true. So the gesture is good, but the question is: what do we do with this material?

RFI: How has their publication reignited conspiracy theories surrounding the Epstein case?

FS: It's very visible on social media. We are seeing a resurgence of old conspiracy theories, such as "Pizzagate", which claimed that the campaign manager of presidential candidate Hillary Clinton had organised child sex trafficking in a pizzeria.

On platforms such as Reddit, if you type in the word "pizza" you'll see all sorts of conspiracy theories pop up based on the idea of a network of elites working together against the people and a paedophile ring.

Why? Because in the files leaked in recent days, the word "pizza" appears 911 times. It is indeed strange. Some see it as a code word. And that's enough to revive “pizzagate”, a conspiracy theory that emerged nearly 10 years ago, leading some to say, ‘we told you so, that's what it was'.

RFI: What are the particulars of the Epstein case that fuel such conspiracy theories?

FS: Conspiracy theories surrounding Epstein really began after his death. Many people said to themselves: this man knew too much, he could have blown up the planet, he couldn't have committed suicide, it must have been a disguised suicide...

Added to this are his connections with powerful figures in Silicon Valley, Bill Gates, [the former] Prince Andrew and politicians in Europe. This fuels the idea of a transnational conspiracy, led by powerful elites against the people – especially since the victims were often young girls from disadvantaged backgrounds.

Here we see classic conspiracy theory patterns: the idea of a deep state, a radical opposition between elites and the people, and an anti-Semitic narrative superimposed on top of it all. This has led to theories claiming that Epstein was a Mossad agent.

Finally, the mass declassification of documents gives the impression of a vast web of connections, with new names emerging every day, further fuelling the conspiracy sphere.

RFI: Has the release of the documents, without full context, fuelled conspiracy theories, even if it was intended as a move towards transparency?

FS: There is a very strong desire for transparency, with the declassification of 3 million documents, which is a first in the United States. But what we are seeing is that releasing documents like this, in their raw state, can be counterproductive. It has also reignited all the conspiracy theories.

At the same time, everyone wanted these files and it is very good that the US Department of Justice has published them. They should have been sorted through. Now, anyone can log on and do a search. There are photos that may be shocking, and people whose names are mentioned who are not necessarily connected to Epstein. This can create an association between the name referenced and Epstein. And that can quickly turn into a witch hunt.

The fact that certain passages have been redacted also fuels the conspiracy theory: we are being given information, but not all of it. So we are really on the borderline between the US Congress's desire for transparency and the conspiracy theorists who say, ‘see, these documents prove we were right'. It's all very well to have a right to information, but we also have a right to be cautious. The question remains: what do we do with all this?

RFI: Is it still possible to dispel the climate of suspicion surrounding the Epstein case?

FS: Trump said that now that he has given everything he had, he hoped we could turn the page. I don't think that's the case.

On the contrary, I think this is the beginning of something much bigger. Everyone wants to find out, to tell themselves that it's not possible that all this has been published without there being something to discover.

I just think that what we're seeing is the tip of the iceberg, and that there will be many more names that will be [thrown about], much more evidence that will come out. It's just a matter of time. All these documents need to be analysed.

This article was adapted from the original version in French by Aurore Lartigue.



Former French culture minister's offices raided in Epstein files fallout

French investigators raided the offices of former Culture Minister Jack Lang, 86, on Monday, as prosecutors step up efforts to examine potential links between French nationals and the crimes of US financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.


Issued on: 16/02/2026 - RFI

Former French Culture minister Jack Lang in Paris on 26 March, 2024
. AFP - STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN

The national financial prosecutor’s office said it had opened a preliminary investigation into alleged aggravated tax fraud and money laundering involving Jack Lang and his daughter Caroline Lang.

Lang resigned earlier this month as president of the Arab World Institute, a position he had held for over a decade, after it was revealed that he had corresponded numerous times with the sexual predator.

Lang had previously requested favours from Jeffrey Epstein, including use of the financier’s car or private plane for himself or family members.The former minister's name also appeared in the statutes of an offshore company founded by Epstein in 2016.

Lang has denied any wrongdoing, saying he was “shocked” to learn of the news. The former minister has insisted that he had known nothing of Epstein’s 2008 conviction of "procuring a girl below the age of 18 for prostitution".

In a recent interview with a French newspaper, he described himself as “white as snow” and denounced what he called a “tsunami of lies.”

Journalists work in front of the Arab World Institute (Institut du Monde Arabe - IMA) as a search is being carried out by French police in connection with an investigation into its former head, ex French Culture Minister Jack Lang, and his ties with the late financier Jeffery Epstein, in Paris, France, 16 February, 2026. © Stephane Mahe / Reuters

Special team of judges


Monday's office raid comes as Paris prosecutors confirmed over the weekend that they are establishing a special team of judges to study material released by US authorities concerning Jeffrey Epstein’s network.

The Paris prosecutor’s office said the new team will work closely with the police and with prosecutors from the national financial crimes unit to determine whether any French citizens had committed crimes.

The aim, according to prosecutors, is to extract any piece of evidence from the Epstein files that could be reused in new investigations.

Members of France's political and cultural elite named in Epstein files

French prosecutors have also announced that they will revisit the case of Jean-Luc Brunel, a former modelling agency executive and close Epstein associate who died in custody in Paris in 2022 after being charged with raping minors. The case against him was dropped in 2023 in the wake of his death.

Prosecutors said Brunel had offered modelling jobs to young girls from disadvantaged backgrounds and had engaged in sexual acts with underage girls in multiple locations including the United States, the US Virgin Islands and France.

Ten women have brought accusations against him, including being subjected to forced sexual penetration.

Jeffrey Epstein died in a US prison in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges. US authorities ruled his death a suicide.

(with newswires)


DP World Changes Leadership Responding to Pressure Over Epstein Scandal

DP World
DP World replaced its Chairman and CEO as news of the ties to Jeffrey Esptein grew (DP World)

Published Feb 13, 2026 12:01 PM by The Maritime Executive


Port and logistics powerhouse DP World reported on Friday, February 13, that it is changing its management leadership as pressure grew from the investment community over its long-time chairman and CEO’s ties to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The company named one of the leaders of the Dubai financial community as its new chairman while elevating its Group Deputy CEO and Chief Financial Officer to the role of CEO.

The company simply stated that the long-time head of the company, Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, had “resigned from the company, effective immediately.” He had been in the leadership role first as Chairman since 2007 and Chairman and CEO since 2016.

He is one of the most prominent executives and political leaders to lose his position as the ties to Jeffrey Epstein emerged in the released documents from the U.S. Department of Justice. CNN reports bin Sulayem’s name appeared “thousands of times” in the most recent batch of documents, and he was referred to as a “best and trusted friend.” There were business discussions between him and Epstein, but much of it appears to be sexually explicit material. 

As more documents became public, it was revealed that the relationship between the two men had lasted well over a decade. Further, bin Sulayem continued the contact after Epstein’s 2009 conviction and until shortly before his death while in jail in New York.

Investors had increased pressure on the company to address “the situation and take the necessary actions.” The UK’s British International Investment said earlier this week that it was suspending its investment activity with DP World. Long-time partner and investor Canada’s La Caisse, operators of Quebec’s pension and the largest pension fund in Canada, also said it would pause additional capital deployment until the company responded.

Both investors reportedly told Reuters today that they welcomed the company’s actions. BII said it looked forward to continuing its partnership, and Caisse said it would work with the new leadership of the company.

One of the prominent leaders of the Dubai financial community, Essa Kazim, was named Chairman of DP World. Since 2014, he has served as Governor of the Dubai International Finance Center, which oversees the country’s business environment and closely interacts with all the companies in the emirate. He also serves as Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Legislation Committee in Dubai.

Long-time executive Yuvraj Narayan was elevated to the role of CEO. He has been with the company since 2004 and has been in the role of Group CFO since 2005. As such, he was working closely with bin Sulayem as DP World grew rapidly from the operator of the Jebel Ali port to one of the leaders in the industry.

DP World rose in prominence in 2006 when it acquired the venerable British shipping company P&O for $6.8 billion. The company also made investments, including Imperial Logistics and Syncreon, and recently announced it would be unifying its operations under the DP World brand.

The company’s profile says that it contributes more than 36 percent to the GDP of Dubai and about 12 percent to the GDP of the UAE. It operates in more than 80 countries. Last year, it reported nearly $20 billion in revenues.



French prosecutors announce special team to analyse Epstein files

The Paris prosecutor's office on Saturday announced it was setting up a special team to analyse files relating to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and investigate suspected crimes involving French nationals. As part of that initiative, they will be reopening their files on the late Jean-Luc Brunel, a former French modelling agency executive.


15/02/2026 
By: FRANCE 24

A photo of Epstein on a inmate report that was included in the US Department of Justice release of the Jeffrey Epstein files, photographed Tuesday, February 10, 2026. © Jon Elswick, AP

The Paris prosecutor's office on Saturday announced it was setting up a special team of magistrates to analyse evidence that could implicate French nationals in the crimes of the convicted US sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

With Epstein's known circle now extending to prominent French figures after the release of documents by the US authorities, the prosecutor's office said it would also thoroughly re-examine the case of a former French modelling agency executive Jean-Luc Brunel, a close associate of the American financier, who died in custody in 2022.

The new team will work closely with prosecutors from the national financial crimes unit and police with a view to opening investigations into any suspected crimes involving French nationals, the Paris prosecutor's office told AFP.

The aim is "to be able to extract any piece that could be usefully reused in a new investigative framework", it said.

Brunel was found dead in his cell in a Paris prison in 2022 after having been charged with raping minors. The case against him was dropped in 2023 in the wake of his death, with no other person charged.

Prosecutors said an investigation had showed Brunel was "a close friend of Jeffrey Epstein" who had offered modelling jobs to young girls from poor backgrounds.

He had engaged in sexual acts with underage girls in the United States, the US Virgin Islands, Paris and the south of France, they said.

Ten women had made accusations against Brunel, several describing how they had been led to drink alcohol and had been subjected to forced sexual penetration, according to the prosecutor's office.

New cases

Several French public figures feature in the latest US Department of Justice release of material from the Epstein files, though being mentioned there does not in itself mean any offence has been committed.

The prosecutor's office said it had been asked to look into three new specific cases involving a French diplomat, a modelling agent and a musician.

At the request of the French foreign ministry it was looking into the reported appearance of senior diplomat Fabrice Aidan in the cache of Epstein-related documents published by the US authorities.

"An investigation is underway to gather various pieces of evidence that could substantiate this report," the prosecutor's office stated.

© France 24
01:25



The prosecutor's office has also received a complaint filed by a Swedish woman against Daniel Siad, a model recruiter with close ties to Epstein. She accused him of "sexual acts that she describes as rape and that may have been committed in France in 1990".

The office has also received a complaint filed against French conductor Frédéric Chaslin alleging acts of sexual harassment allegedly committed in 2016, it said.

The latest release of Epstein files has led to French former minister Jack Lang resigning from his position as the head of a top cultural body, the Arab World Institute.

Lang has however denied any wrongdoing, saying he was "shocked" that his name appeared in the statutes of an offshore company Epstein founded in 2016.

The office of the national financial prosecutor said it had opened a preliminary investigation for "aggravated tax fraud and money laundering" against Lang and his daughter Caroline Lang.

Following this announcement, Lang resigned from the presidency of the Arab World Institute.

Epstein died in prison in 2019 while awaiting trial for trafficking children, in what the US authorities ruled was a suicide.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)


French police raid Paris's Arab World Institute in Epstein-linked probe into Jack Lang


⁠French police ​on Monday searched ​the Arab World Institute in Paris ​in ‌connection ⁠with an investigation into ‌its former head, France's ex-culture minister Jack Lang, and his alleged ​ties with the ‌late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.


Issued on: 16/02/2026
By: FRANCE 24
Video by:James ANDRE/


File photo of France's former culture minister Jack Lang taken outside the Arab World Institute in Paris on January 28, 2013. © Martin Bureau, AFP
02:47



French police conducted raids at various locations, including the Arab World Institute (IMA) in Paris, on Monday as part of the investigation into the institution's former head Jack Lang for his alleged financial ties to Jeffrey Epstein, Pascal Prache, head of the national financial prosecutor's office, said in a statement.

Lang, a former French culture minister under ​socialist president François Mitterrand, resigned earlier this month from ​the organisation which he ​had led since 2013.


The Arab World Institute is a ​Paris-based cultural and research institution under the supervision of France's foreign ministry that promotes understanding of the Arab world.

Lang, who corresponded ⁠with Epstein from 2012 and 2019, has denied any wrongdoing, saying he was "shocked" that his name appeared in the statutes of an offshore company Epstein founded in 2016.

Lang's daughter Caroline, who allegedly owned half the shares in the company, has resigned from two positions.

The raid, announced by the national financial prosecutor's office, occurred as he said goodbye to former colleagues in a ceremony at the institute after more than a decade as its president.

"I'm pleased to see the financial judiciary is at work," he said during his speech.

"I'm delighted because I have nothing to hide."
French prosecutors announce special team for Epstein files

The raids came after French prosecutors opened ‌a preliminary investigation ​into alleged tax fraud against Lang and his ​daughter following the ​release of documents ​by the US ​Department of Justice.

The Paris prosecutor's office on Saturday announced that it was setting up a special team of magistrates to analyse evidence that could implicate French nationals in the crimes of the convicted sex offender Epstein.

With Epstein's known circle now extending to prominent French figures after the release of documents by the US authorities, the prosecutor's office said it would also thoroughly re-examine the case of a former French modelling agency executive, Jean-Luc Brunel, a close associate of the American financier who died in custody in 2022.

The new team will work closely with prosecutors from the national financial crimes unit and police with a view to opening investigations into any suspected crimes involving French nationals, the Paris prosecutor's office told AFP.

The aim is "to be able to extract any piece that could be usefully reused in a new investigative framework", it said.

Brunel was found dead in his cell in a Paris prison in 2022 after having been charged with raping minors. The case against him was dropped in 2023 in the wake of his death, with no other person charged.

Prosecutors said an investigation had shown Brunel was "a close friend of Jeffrey Epstein" who had offered modelling jobs to young girls from poor backgrounds.

Brunel had engaged in sexual acts with underage girls in the United States, the US Virgin Islands, Paris and the south of France, they said.

Ten women had made accusations against Brunel, several describing how they had been led to drink alcohol and had been subjected to forced sexual penetration, according to the prosecutor's office.
Senior diplomat under scrutiny

Several French public figures feature in the latest US Department of Justice release of material from the Epstein files, though being mentioned there does not in itself mean any offence has been committed.

The prosecutor's office said it had been asked to look into three new specific cases involving a French diplomat, a modelling agent and a musician.

At the request of the French foreign ministry it was looking into the reported appearance of senior diplomat Fabrice Aidan in the cache of Epstein-related documents published by the US authorities.

READ MOREFrance demands investigation into diplomat cited in Epstein files

"An investigation is underway to gather various pieces of evidence that could substantiate this report," the prosecutor's office stated.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP and Reuters)




France names first woman to lead Institute du Monde Arabe after Lang exit

France has appointed a new leader for one of its most visible cultural bridges with the Arab world, the Institut du Monde Arabe (IMA) in Paris, 
following the resignation of its long-time president Jack Lang in connection with the Epstein affair.

 The move comes as the institute faces financial challenges and debate over its future role.


Issued on: 17/02/2026 - RFI

Anne-Claire Legendre is set to become the first woman to lead the Institut du monde arabe, a Paris-based cultural institution founded in 1980 to strengthen ties between France and the Arab world. 
AFP - GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT

Anne-Claire Legendre, a 46-year-old diplomat who advises President Emmanuel Macron on North Africa and the Middle East, was put forward on Tuesday by Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot to become the first woman to head the institute. She would replace Lang, 86, a former culture minister who had led the organisation for 13 years.

The institute's board of directors – made up equally of Arab ambassadors and figures chosen by the French foreign ministry – was expected to confirm the appointment.

Founded in 1980 through an agreement between France and the 22 member states of the Arab League, the IMA serves as both a museum and a cultural centre dedicated to Arab history, art and language.

"The aim was to present the Arab world to a French public that did not know it well enough," Gilles Gauthier, a former French ambassador and adviser to Lang, told RFI, adding that the IMA reflects France's long-standing cultural and diplomatic ties with the region.

"France exists in the Middle East through its culture, through its language, and so that was the basis for a policy on the Arab world."

The institute stands on the banks of the Seine in central Paris, near Notre-Dame cathedral. Its modern façade of glass and metal is covered with geometric moucharabieh patterns – delicate designs inspired by traditional Arab screens used to filter sunlight.

A front-line diplomat

Legendre has worked in the diplomatic unit of the Élysée Palace as an adviser to Macron since 2023. She previously served as France’s ambassador to Kuwait and as spokesperson for the foreign ministry.

In 2016 Legendre became the first woman to serve as France’s consul in New York, a post she held for four years. Fluent in Arabic, she studied the language at Inalco, the National Institute of Oriental Languages and Civilisations, and holds degrees from Sciences Po and the Sorbonne.

An ambassador who sits on the IMA's board of directors told the French news agency AFP that Legendre was “competent, substantial and committed, with a sharp knowledge of every country in the Arab world, whether in the Maghreb or the Middle East”.

Her diplomatic work has included responding to Russian disinformation campaigns while serving as foreign ministry spokesperson. She also travelled to Algiers in March 2025 to meet Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune in an attempt to ease tensions between France and Algeria.


Founded in 1980 through an agreement between France and the 22 member states of the Arab League, the Institut du monde arabe was created to strengthen cultural ties between France and the Arab world. 
AFP - DIMITAR DILKOFF

More than a museum

For the French state, the IMA occupies a special place among cultural institutions because its funding comes from the foreign ministry rather than the culture ministry. It hosts exhibitions, concerts, debates and educational programmes focused on the Arab world.

“It is becoming a centre for reflection, creation and intellectual relations between the Arab world and France, and even beyond, Europe,” Gauthier explained. “It is the only institution of this kind in Europe.”

The institute, he added, plays a role in long-term cultural diplomacy rather than day-to-day foreign policy. “It is not about resolving crises or daily diplomatic action. It is about participating in this strong cultural and human relationship. It is a tool for dialogue.”

Despite its ambitions, the institute faces financial challenges.

A 2024 report by the Court of Auditors, France’s public spending watchdog, found that Arab countries expected to contribute 40 percent of the operating budget had stopped paying – leaving the French state subsidy as the main source of funding.

“There was a misunderstanding at the start,” Gauthier told RFI, explaining that some Gulf countries were more familiar with a model where a single large contribution is invested and generates annual income. “But it did not work that way.”

However Arab countries still support the institute through specific projects and exhibitions. Saudi Arabia helped finance an exhibition on Al-Ula, while Kuwait funded the renovation of the institute’s library.

Under Lang, the number of exhibitions “increased considerably”, Gauthier said, adding that the institute expanded work on Arabic language learning and organised more conferences requiring simultaneous translation.


'Identity of millions'


Hakim El Karoui, founder of the Action Committee for the Mediterranean think tank, wrote in a column published in the daily Le Monde that the institute should become “not just an outward-facing showcase, but the beating heart of Franco-Arab culture in France”.

The issue, he said, was no longer only France’s view of the Arab world but also the identity of millions of French people whose history and culture are linked to it.

Gauthier agreed the IMA should also engage with France’s communities with roots in the Arab world, while maintaining its original mission.

“We must make the most of the existence of these significant minorities from the Arab world in our dialogue with the Arab world,” he said, warning against shifting the focus too far inward.

“The Institut du Monde Arabe must not focus mainly on France. That is not the objective”.

Article was written using quotes from this story in French by Guilhem Delteil

 


’Ready to govern’ Hungary: Former ally Magyar challenges Orban with Europe gun

EXPLAINER

“We’re standing on the threshold of victory,” Peter Magyar confidently declared to thousands of cheering supporters in Budapest this weekend, kicking off the centre-right Tisza party's campaign for Hungary’s April 12 parliamentary elections. The former far-right Fidesz party insider turned defector is now Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s biggest threat after 16 years in power. FRANCE 24 lists the key stakes in what is expected to become one of Europe’s most closely watched election races this year.


Issued on: 16/02/2026 
FRANCE24
By: Louise NORDSTROM



Peter Magyar, leader of the Hungarian opposition Tisza party, launches his election campaign in Budapest, Hungary, on February 15, 2026. © Denes Erdos, AP


Who is Peter Magyar?

Forty-four-year-old Peter Magyar burst onto Hungary’s political scene in February, 2024, after having broken ranks with Orban’s Fidesz party over a child sex abuse pardon scandal that led to the resignation of his ex-wife, then justice minister Judit Varga, and then president Katalin Novak.

Magyar, who up until then had been part of Orban’s inner circle, accused the government of walking free from responsibility after letting Varga and Novak take the blame. “I don’t want to be part of a system where the real culprits hide behind women’s skirts,” he said. Shortly afterward he launched his own centre-right party, Tisza (Respect and Freedom), and vowed to crack down on corruption and bring Hungary closer to Europe.

READ MOREHungary's Peter Magyar, Orban disciple turned fierce rival

“Step by step, brick by brick, we are taking back our homeland and building a new country, a sovereign, modern, European Hungary,” Magyar said shortly after founding his party.

Just a few months later, Tisza stunned Hungary’s political establishment by securing almost 30 percent of the votes in the European parliamentary elections – cementing Magyar’s role as Orban’s most serious challenger yet.

As both contenders launched their campaigns over the weekend, Magyar’s Tisza already held a comfortable 10-point lead over Orban’s Fidesz – and has done so over the past year, according to a combined poll by Politico.

“Tisza stands ready to govern,” Magyar said at his launch event.


Why is Orban’s rule in danger?

Aside from the Fidesz “family values” brand taking a serious hit with the 2024 pardon scandal – prompting some of the party’s conservative members to defect to Tisza – Orban has been unable to to get Hungary’s bleeding economy back on track. In 2023, a presidential pardon had been secretly granted to the deputy director of a children’s home convicted of covering up a case of child sex abuse.

In the wake of Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine – which pushed the country’s energy prices to the skies – Orban also introduced new income rebates, which in 2023 resulted in the worst inflationary surge in Europe, at a staggering 25 percent.

Although the worst of the financial crisis has since subsided, a Eurobarometer survey cited by Reuters last autumn showed that rising prices, inflation and cost of living still top Hungarians’ main concerns.

The state of the country’s economy has also been weighed down by the fact that the European Union has blocked some €20 billion in funds over corruption and the rule of law concerns.

The economy is in other words a sore point for Orban, and Magyar has taken every opoortunity to point that out.


Europe in focus

The real battleground in the April ballot will be the two candidates' opposing views on the EU.

While Orban last week declared that the real danger to Hungary is the EU, Magyar has gone the other way: “Hungary will once again be a full-fledged member of the European Union,” he told a Budapest rally last year, touting the EU as the answer to Hungary’s prayers, especially if it releases the withheld EU funds.

On Saturday, Orban told supporters that “Brussels … [is] a source of imminent danger”, adding that the April ballot is therefore a choice between “war and peace”, and that Fidesz, with its anti-EU stance, therefore is the only “safe choice”.

Orban's anti-establishment and nationalist views has won him support from US President Donald Trump, and on Monday US Secretary of State Marco Rubio paid him a symbolic visit, telling him "your success is our success".

READ MORERubio tells Orban ‘your success is our success’ during Hungary visit ahead of elections

Orban hopes his ties with Trump wil help him collect the votes needed to prolong his reign.

If he wins the elections, he has promised to "clear away" the "oppressive machinery of Brussels" in his country.


Views on Russia and Ukraine

Under Orban, Hungary has remained Russia’s closest EU ally throughout the war, routinely blocking any European sanction packages against what has remained – despite pleas from Europe – its main gas supplier.

He has equally tried to stonewall any military or financial aid to Ukraine. And at the end of last year, he even went as far as to say it was “unclear who attacked whom”.

Although Magyar has described Moscow as “the aggressor” in the conflict, and last year told the Financial Times he would push for an immediate ceasefire along with Hungary’s EU allies if he comes to power, he has also said he would not reverse Hungary’s current policy of non-support for Kyiv nor totally sever Budapest’s ties with Russia. He staunchly opposes fast-track EU accession for Ukraine.

"On Ukraine, Tisza’s manifesto is notably thin," an analyst note from the Brussels-based think-tank European Policy Center warned, adding that "EU leaders should not assume that a Magyar government would mark a clean break with Orban-era policies."


Rubio conveys Trump’s full support for Hungary's Orban, says bilateral ties are entering "golden age"

Rubio conveys Trump’s full support for Hungary's Orban, says bilateral ties are entering
Marco Rubio before a joint press conference with his host Viktor Orban in Budapest on February 16. / Facebook - Viktor Orban
By bne IntelliNews February 17, 2026
Greece experts to examine Nazi atrocity photos find

Athens (AFP) – Greece's culture ministry said Monday that a trove of photographs that appear to capture one of Nazi Germany's worst atrocities in the country appear to be authentic.


Issued on: 17/02/2026 - RFI

Skulls of victims of 1944 Distomo massacre, one of the most notorious carried out by the Nazis in Greece 
© ARIS MESSINIS / AFP

The ministry said it was sending experts to Ghent, Belgium to examine the photos and to talk to a collector of Third Reich memorabilia who had put them on sale on Ebay on Saturday.

"It is highly likely that these are authentic photographs," the ministry said.

It said the 12 photographs appear to show "the last moments" of 200 Greek Communists who were executed on May 1, 1944 in retaliation for the killing of a German general and his staff by Communist guerrillas a few days earlier.

The Communist-led Greek People's Liberation Army (ELAS) was among the most active resistance organisations in occupied Europe.

The execution of the 200 men at the Kaisariani shooting range in Athens is a seminal event of the 1941-1944 Nazi occupation of Greece, which was marked by several atrocities, mostly against Greek villagers.

Greece's Jewish community was also decimated during this period.

Some of the pictures show groups of the men marching through a field, and standing against a wall at the shooting range.

One photo appears to show the men being marched into the shooting range, after discarding their overcoats outside.

"This is the first time we have an image from inside the shooting range at the moment of the execution...a major moment of the Greek resistance movement," historian Menelaos Haralambidis told state TV ERT.

"And it confirms the testimony we have, that these men headed (to their deaths) with their heads held high, they had incredible courage," Haralambidis said.
'My death should not sadden you'


The photographer who took the pictures was working for Nazi propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels (centre)
 © - / THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES/AFP

Until now, the only testimony of the 200 victims' final moments were from handwritten notes they had thrown out of the trucks taking them to execution.

"My death should not sadden you but steel you even more for the struggle you are waging," one of the men, lawyer Mitsos Remboutsikas, had written to his family.

Another man wrote a message behind the picture of his young daughter, requesting that she become a teacher.

Most of the men had been arrested years earlier during anti-Communist raids by the police of Greek dictator Ioannis Metaxas.

The Greek Communist KKE party, which called the trove "priceless" on Monday said it had tentatively identified at least two of the men in the photographs.

"These documents belong to the Greek people," the party said.

"I feel grateful that we were given the opportunity for my grandfather’s story to become known to everyone, a man who remained faithful to his beliefs until the very end," Thrasyvoulos Marakis, the grandson of one of the men identified in the photographs, said in a letter to the 902.gr website Tuesday.

The Greek culture ministry said it was "highly likely" that the photographs were taken by Guenther Heysing, a journalist attached to Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels's unit.

"If the authenticity and lawful provenance of the collection are documented, the Ministry of Culture will immediately finalise measures for its acquisition," it said.

© 2026 AFP



BLACK HISTORY 
US civil rights leader Jesse Jackson dies at 84: family
REST IN POWER

Washington (United States) (AFP) – Veteran US civil rights activist Reverend Jesse Jackson, one of the nation's most influential Black voices, died peacefully Tuesday morning, his family said in a statement. He was 84.



Issued on: 17/02/2026 - RFI

Civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson addresses the "Fairness in Democracy" rally, 06 December 2000, at the State Capitol in Tallahassee, Florida. © Tim SLOAN / AFP/File

Jackson, a Baptist minister, had been a civil rights leader since the 1960s, when he marched with Martin Luther King Jr. and helped fundraise for the cause.

"Our father was a servant leader -- not only to our family, but to the oppressed, the voiceless, and the overlooked around the world," Jackson's family said.

"His unwavering belief in justice, equality, and love uplifted millions, and we ask you to honor his memory by continuing the fight for the values he lived by."

The family did not release a cause of death, but Jackson revealed in 2017 that he had the degenerative neurological disease Parkinson's.

He was hospitalized for observation in November in connection to another neurodegenerative condition, according to media reports.

A dynamic orator and a successful mediator in international disputes, the long-time Baptist minister expanded the space for African Americans on the national stage for more than six decades.

He was the most prominent Black person to run for the US presidency -- with two unsuccessful attempts to capture the Democratic Party nomination in the 1980s -- until Barack Obama took the office in 2009.
Long Battle

He was present for many consequential moments in the long battle for racial justice in the United States, including with King in Memphis in 1968 when the civil rights leader was slain.

He openly wept in the crowd as Obama celebrated his 2008 presidential election, and he stood with George Floyd's family in 2021 after a court convicted an ex-police officer of the unarmed Black man's murder.

Jackson was born Jesse Louis Burns on October 8, 1941, in Greenville, South Carolina, to an unwed teen mother and a former professional boxer.

He later adopted the last name of his stepfather, Charles Jackson.

"I was not born with a silver spoon in my mouth. I had a shovel programmed for my hands," he once said.

He excelled in his segregated high school and earned a football scholarship to the University of Illinois, but later transferred to the predominantly Black Agricultural and Technical College of North Carolina, where he received a degree in sociology.

In 1960, he participated in his first sit-in, in Greenville, and then joined the Selma-to-Montgomery civil rights marches in 1965, where he caught King's attention.

Jackson later emerged as a mediator and envoy on several notable international fronts.

He became a prominent advocate for ending apartheid in South Africa, and in the 1990s served as presidential special envoy for Africa for Bill Clinton.

Missions to free US prisoners took him to Syria, Iraq and Serbia.

He founded the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, a Chicago-based nonprofit organization focused on social justice and political activisim, in 1996

He is survived by his wife and six children.

© 2026 AFP
Madagascar’s ‘people of the forest’ confront life beyond the woods

The Zafimaniry people of Madagascar are confronting a difficult choice about their future as deforestation and globalisation reshape their way of life. Fewer than 15,000 members of this forest-based community live in the “land of mist” on the southern edge of the country’s central highlands, where decades of heavy deforestation have left many hills bare.



Issued on: 15/02/2026 - RFI

The Zafimaniry village of Ifasina in Fianarantsoa province, Madagascar, where woodcraft traditions remain central to community life. 
© Wikimedi Commons / Bernard Gagnon

Known for carved wooden homes and woodcraft recognised by Unesco as intangible cultural heritage in 2008, the Zafimaniry are being forced to adapt to survive.

For generations, forests shaped Zafimaniry homes, beliefs and daily life. Much of that environment has now disappeared, changing how communities live and work.

These questions were at the centre of a public debate organised in Antananarivo last month by the French Institute of Madagascar – a cultural organisation that promotes debate and the arts – on Zafimaniry identity in the face of globalisation.

Johnny Andriamahefarivo, the only magistrate from the Zafimaniry community and a former justice minister, remembers growing up surrounded by carved wood in his village.

“We are a people of the forest. We live from the forest, so you see wooden buildings everywhere,” he told RFI. “The door, the shutters, the windows, the chairs – everything is carved, and every carving has a particular meaning.”

These carvings express spiritual beliefs as well as knowledge and faith within the community, he explained.

Forest under pressure

Deforestation is forcing the community to rethink ways of living that once depended entirely on nearby woodland.

“Even though we stayed deep in the bush, today that bush has been cleared by deforestation,” Andriamahefarivo said. “We have to leave and try other ways of making a living.”

For this minority community living in relative isolation on the island, adaptation has become essential. Forest engineer and photographer TangalaMamy has worked alongside the Zafimaniry for more than 10 years, documenting their culture through photography.

“Thirteen years ago, there was no mobile network – you had to climb a mountain to get a signal,” he said. “Now everyone has a smartphone, everyone has a satellite dish. It’s a normal transformation. The world is changing and they are adapting.”

Practical realities are also changing housing. “They are not going to live permanently in wooden huts when wood now requires travelling kilometres to find,” TangalaMamy added.

Traditions endure

Despite these changes, TangalaMamy said many customs continue.

“Even in brick houses today, the ancestors’ corner is still there,” he said. “Offerings are made there. When a child is born, the name is only given after the umbilical cord falls off.”

The Zafimaniry are also known for distinctive cultural practices such as hair braiding, a silent form of communication. Seventeen types of braids have been identified, each carrying a meaning understood by the entire village.

The question now is how much of this heritage can survive as lifestyles evolve.

Some traditions are already disappearing, raising concerns about how to pass them on to future generations.

“We must safeguard part of this identity that is disappearing without us being able to pass its memory on to our children,” said Malagasy writer and newspaper columnist Vanf – calling on Madagascar’s culture ministry to support preservation efforts.

“We should create a visible space – even a ‘marketing’ space, and it’s not a problem to use that word – where one or more traditional houses can be restored and set apart,” he added.

“That way both Malagasy people and foreigners can help pass on this memory culture.”

This story was adapted from the original version in French by Sarah Tétaud.
France grants asylum to anti-Kremlin couple detained in US immigration crackdown

France has granted safe haven to an anti-Kremlin Russian activist couple, who had been held by the country's ICE agency that is leading US President Donald Trump's crackdown on immigration.



Issued on: 17/02/2026 
RFI

ICE agents in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States, on 4 February, 2026. 
© Getty Images via AFP/John Moore

France issued humanitarian visas to Alexei Ishimov, 31, and his 29-year-old wife Nadezhda to avoid them being deported to Russia from the United States.

Alexei Ishimov arrived in Paris from Seattle on Monday morning, correspondents from the French agency AFP said.

Nadezhda, a former volunteer for the late opposition leader Alexei Navalny, was expected to arrive on a separate flight from Miami, also on Monday morning.

But she did not show up at the Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport as planned.

"I am in shock," a visibly distressed Alexei, who had not seen his wife for more than 20 months, told AFP at the airport.

Olga Prokopieva, head of the Paris-based association Russie-Libertés, which has been assisting the young couple, said Nadezhda was not allowed on the flight because she had a temporary travel document called a laissez-passer instead of a passport.

Russie-Libertes and the Russian Antiwar Committee hope that Nadezhda will be allowed to travel to France soon.

The couple left Russia in 2022 as the Kremlin ramped up a crackdown on opponents following the invasion of Ukraine.

The couple eventually flew to Mexico and entered the United States in 2024. They were detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and sent to different detention centres as part of Trump's immigration crackdown.

Alexei had spent nine months in detention in California and later in the state of Washington. In January 2025, he was released with an ankle bracelet.

Nadezhda has been kept at the South Louisiana ICE Processing Center for around 21 months.

To avoid deportation to Russia, Alexei had contacted numerous countries.

"Starting from May 2025, I wrote letters to more than a hundred countries asking for help, and essentially no one responded except France," he said.
Gratitude to France

He said that French diplomats were "constantly in touch."

They "worked very closely with ICE representatives, contacted me regularly, and did everything possible to help us obtain a lawful path to safety and reunification," he said.

"It is hard for me to find the words to express the gratitude we feel," he added.

Tens of thousands of Russians have applied for political asylum in the United States since Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Many detainees have been subjected to arbitrary detention and not given a fair chance to defend themselves in court.

About 1,000 Russians, many of them asylum seekers, have been deported back to Russia from the United States since 2022. Some deportees were arrested on arrival.

Dmitry Valuev, head of the Russian America for Democracy in Russia (RADR) group which has followed the couple's case, said that a US judge had ordered that Nadezhda be deported to Russia. But activists hope she'll be allowed to fly to France.

Alexei said he would feel at ease only when he sees his wife.

"We are very tired: it has been almost two years of constant stress and pain, and separation is especially hard when you have no idea when it will end."

(with AFP)