Saturday, March 22, 2025

'Assassin's Creed' controversy: Dive into the debate surrounding the latest instalment


arts24 © FRANCE 24
Issued on: 20/03/2025 

Join us as we explore the heated discussions around the newest "Assassin's Creed" video game, praised for its beauty but sparking debates over character choices and historical accuracy. Plus, discover the incredible rescue of 18th-century French masterpieces from Los Angeles wildfires, now on display near Paris. Finally, don't miss the groundbreaking exhibition at the Pompidou Centre honouring Black artists, before the museum closes for a five-year renovation.

Play (12:08 min)




Explainer

For military staff across Europe, wargaming is all the rage

Once dismissed as frivolous, wargames have emerged as crucial strategic tools amid rising global tensions. A recent simulation at Paris's École Militaire, where 500 participants played out high-intensity conflict scenarios, reflects a growing international trend toward gamified military preparedness.

26/02/2025 
By:Lara BULLENS

Participants consult the wargame board during the February 11 event at the École Militaire in Paris. © Alexandre Colby, Les Jeunes IHEDN


Every person in the packed conference hall stands up as two French soldiers greet each other onstage with a military salute. Major General Bruno Baratz approaches the lectern and speaks into the microphones. “We are running five minutes behind schedule,” he says with a grin. “There was a queue to get in.”

On the podium from which he speaks are the words “Jeu de guerre” (Wargame), with the theme of the day written below. It is the year 2035 and France is on the brink of war.

A handful of young participants sit at a table in the middle of the stage. A map of central and eastern Europe is splayed across the top, littered with green and red markers. Sliding scales at the bottom of the map represent France’s economic, diplomatic, military power and political stability.

Then, a fictional news bulletin plays on the projector overhead, upping the stakes. Russian troops have reached the borders of Poland and the Baltic States. China is about to invade Taiwan. And while Europe holds its breath, France enters defence stage three – two steps below full-blown war.

wargame simulation gathered more than 500 people at the École Militaire military training base in Paris on February 11. While two teams engaged in high-intensity conflict on stage, the audience took part in each step of the decision-making process.


The event – organised by Future Combat Command (CCF), a branch of the French Armed Forces tasked with responding to new military threats, alongside two youth organisations – was a hit.

Outside the four walls of the conference hall, Paris remained at peace. Yet with war on Europe’s doorstep, the scenarios explored during the day-long wargame were not entirely implausible. Organisers stressed that the exercise was not meant to predict the future but the growing use of wargames among military personnel in France and beyond underscores an increasingly sharp focus on preparedness.
Wargames in vogue

France has only recently embraced the use of wargames as a serious military tool.

“The concept of gameplay was seen as light-hearted for a long time in French culture and therefore not suited to prepare for serious situations,” explained Laurent Ferrier, who sits on the steering committee of Les Jeunes IHEDN, a youth organisation sponsored by the armed forces ministry that helped organise the February 11 event.

But wargames are now widely being used in military facilities across the country, including the École de Guerre, a training establishment for senior officers. The head of the French agency for defence innovation, Emmanuel Chiva, even created a programme called the “Red Team” – an experiment in which screenwriters and science fiction writers imagine future scenarios to anticipate strategic surprises. And the armed forces ministry has had its own wargaming service provider since May 2022.

Their popularity has been on the rise worldwide. Each year since at least 2022, Germany, Italy and France have joined forces to organise a wargaming initiative for NATO. The United States accounted for 92 percent of global spending on the gamification of defence in 2022 – approximately $25 billion, according to GlobalData.

And the advent of AI has meant that wargames have become more accessible to lower-ranking strategists and analysts.

Read moreTwenty-four hours in Ukraine’s Kharkiv, where life goes on despite the war

“Wargaming has now been woven into the overall planning of many militaries,” said David Banks, a senior lecturer in wargaming at King’s College in London. “I have two hypotheses as to why that is. First, we have a strategic international environment which is extremely complicated … There is so much uncertainty that I think [militaries] are embracing everything. Any tool for forecasting gives them some sense of the future,” he explained.

“We also have a generation of people who grew up playing games. Those people have now entered leadership positions.”

“It’s funny, because some of the people I spoke to at NATO say they often have to be careful when trying to convince their superiors of the utility of wargames because the word ‘game’ turns them off,” Banks said, underlining a similar culture shift to the one Ferrier described in France. “But everyone is getting more involved than they were five years ago.”



A tool to prepare, not predict

Wargames are undeniably becoming more ingrained in military strategy and widely accepted as tools to test strategic responses, refine decision-making and anticipate potential threats. But Banks warns that many in the defence sector requesting wargames are hoping for “a crystal ball” to be able to predict the future – certainty that they are incapable of providing.

Wargames are adversarial simulations that use rules, data and procedures to model military conflicts. The scenarios they use are often based on real-life issues or possibilities – as was the case with the arrival of Russian forces on Baltic borders for the Paris wargame, for example. Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia are already ramping up real-life military preparations amid fears that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s imperialist ambitions will eventually extend from Ukraine elsewhere into Europe.

“You can invent any given situation and see how your stakeholders will respond,” Ferrier said of wargames scenarios. “The results and data you gather at the end are in no way reliable. There is no way [that it] could predict [the future]. But it does provide food for thought and create plausible situations to help military staff think about how the army could react.”

The origins of wargaming stretch all the way back to ancient civilisations. Its earliest forms include the Latrones, a two-person strategy board game played throughout the Roman Empire, and Chaturanga, an Indian board game that is believed to be the precursor of chess. It was only in the 19th century that wargames gained widespread recognition as military training tools. The Prussian Army’s Kriegsspiel revolutionised military exercises, laying the groundwork for modern tactical simulations like the ones we see today.

And although wargames have predicted global events like the Covid-19 pandemic, it is also believed that they may have mislead the US Navy to draw incorrect conclusions on Japan’s intentions during World War II.

“Making a wargame is all about asking the question, ‘What if?’” said Félix Rolland, who leads crisis simulations at the Panthéon-Sorbonne University youth defence group and helped organise the Paris wargame. “Asking that question allows us to overcome any intellectual hang-ups we may have about a real-life possibility.”

For Banks, wargames are most efficient when they ask questions about the physical, material world. “Questions about whether a long-range weapon will be able to penetrate defence screens of opponents, or power through a city, for example. Our existing scientific models of things like weapons, explosives or aerodynamics are … not that difficult to convert into smaller models for a game,” he explained. “It gets much harder to do that when you start to leave the material world.”

And there is also the human element to consider. Morale and solidarity play a huge role in wartime.

“In a tactical military game, one of the key factors to determine the outcome of the war in Ukraine is its national will. You cannot make a universal model of what national will looks like and how it operates. The same goes for imagining how democracies will respond to populist challenges in the future. None of those are empirical facts. They are all conceptual,” Banks added. “Participants haven’t experienced the actual phenomenon, so they are just guessing.”

While the École Militaire returned to normal after the February 11 wargame concluded, the questions it raised lingered in the minds of participants and observers alike. Wargames may not predict the future but they offer invaluable tools to test assumptions and stimulate critical thinking. At a time when geopolitical tensions are high, perhaps the way best to prepare for the unexpected is indeed to ask, “What if?”
French fishermen 'talk' to dolphins to save them

05:26  DOWN TO EARTH © FRANCE 24
Issued on: 11/03/2025


For the first time ever, fishermen in the Bay of Biscay are testing new high tech fishing gear that "speak dolphin language" to warn them of danger. The aim : reduce bycatch, after tens of thousands of dolphins drowned in fishing nets in recent years. Could ultrasound beacons save marine life and support the fishing industry ? FRANCE 24’s Aurore Cloé Dupuis and Alexandra Renard explain.


05:26 min
From the show



From fast fashion to fair fashion: The denim revolution

DOWN TO EARTH © FRANCE 24
Issued on: 21/03/2025 - 

Jeans are the most popular trousers in the world. Every year, over 2 billion pairs are made. But most travel one and a half times around the planet before reaching your wardrobe. With toxic dyes, chemical pollution and massive water waste, denim’s carbon footprint is anything but small. But change is happening. From cutting-edge tech to natural dyes, ancient weaving to local production, innovators are rethinking jeans for a more sustainable future. The Down to Earth team takes a closer look


05:11 min
From the show


US State Department confirms program tracking abducted Ukrainian children halted


Issued on: 19/03/2025 - 


President Donald Trump promised Wednesday to help Ukraine get back thousands of children allegedly abducted to Russia. But Yale University's Humanitarian Research Lab, which has been tracking the missing children, lost crucial funding from the US government as Trump made sweeping cuts into foreign aid. The Humanitarian Research Lab -- which is seeking donations to keep going -- says more than 19,000 children have been deported to Russia, with only 1,236 returned.


Video by: Florent MARCHAIS




A ‘50-50’ minerals deal with US suits Ukrainians in a graphite mining village


US President Donald Trump has said he expects a minerals deal with Ukraine to be signed “very shortly”, without providing details. The US is reported to be seeking more favourable return on investment terms in the country’s valuable minerals sector. In Zavallia, a central Ukrainian village near an open-air graphite mine, residents and mine officials say they welcome a deal, but it should benefit Ukraine, not just the US.


Issued on: 22/03/2025 - 
FRANCE23/AFP

By: Catherine NORRIS TRENT
Dmytro KOVALCHUK
James ANDRE
James ANDRÉ
Tarek KAI
03:00
The open-air Zavaliv mine in central Ukraine is rich in graphite. 
© Screengrab, FRANCE 24




Ihor Valeriiovych, the director of the open air Zavaliv mine in central Ukraine, points to a thick grey layer in the exposed rock and notes that it's “almost pure graphite”.

“It’s the only mine like it in Ukraine, the only one in Europe, and possibly the world, because this quarry contains three types of mineral resources,” Valeriiovych says.

Foremost among them: graphite, used in electric car batteries and the nuclear and defence sectors.

The details of any mineral deal brokered by Ukraine and the US are still being hammered out but Valeriiovych says he hopes this plant could be part of it.


“Personally, I would like it to be included in the deal because we need investment. Our equipment and facilities are outdated. However, any agreement should benefit Ukraine and our company, not just the United States.”

05:07
BUSINESS © FRANCE 24



Graphite extraction at the mine has slowed almost to a standstill due to the war and soaring electricity costs. Valeriiovych and his colleagues are trying to modernise and attract investors.

“Pure graphite is the future because it’s big money,” he says.

Ukraine’s vast mineral wealth includes around one-fifth of the world’s proven resources of graphite, a mineral classified as critical by the EU, and among those at the heart of the minerals deal drawn up by the US.

The nearby village of Zavallia is a portrait of industrial decline.

Locals, among them former miners, hope American money could inject new life.

A group of elderly residents say they're upbeat about the prospects of US investment in the local mine. “If there’s a good owner and good salaries, then people will stop leaving. Prices are rising, but the plant is standing still, nothing is working. Everything is idle. And there’s nothing for the youth,” says one man.

A woman adds: “If they take our resources but give us nothing in return, I am against it. If it’s a 50-50 deal, then I wouldn’t mind.”

Click on video player above to watch the report.
 

 

Image carrée
International report

Turkey braces for 

more protests 

over Istanbul

 mayor's arrest


Issued on:                  

Anger is mounting over the arrest of Istanbul's popular mayor Ekrem Imamoglu on corruption and terror charges. Seen as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's main political rival, Imamoglu was arrested on Wednesday, just days before he was due to be named as the candidate for the main opposition CHP party in the 2028 presidential election.

Supporters of the mayor of Istanbul demonstrate against his detention in Istanbul, 19 March, 2025. AFP - YASIN AKGUL

Imamoglu's opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) has denounced the detention as a "coup" and vowed to keep up the demonstrations, which by Thursday night had spread to at least 32 of Turkey's 81 provinces, according to a count by French news agency AFP.

Opposition leader Ozgur Ozel told supporters: "This is not the time for politics in rooms and halls but on the streets and squares."

Imamoglu was arrested in a pre-dawn raid on Wednesday, on corruption and terror charges, ahead of his expected election on Sunday as the CHP's candidate for Turkey's presidential elections in 2028. 

According to political analyst Mesut Yegen of the Reform Institute, an Istanbul-based think tank, Imamoglu is more than just a mayor. 

"Imamoglu is now [Erdogan's] main rival, it's obvious," Yegen told RFI, adding that as Istanbul's mayor he has a unique opportunity. "Istanbul is important for the resources it has, it's the biggest municipality. Here in Turkey, municipalities are important to finance politics."

Popular appeal

Opinion polls give Imamoglu – who defeated Erdogan's AK party three times in mayoral elections – a double-digit lead over Erdogan. This is because he is widely seen as reaching beyond his secular political base to religious voters, nationalists and Turkey's large Kurdish constituency. 

Some observers see Imamoglu's arrest as a sign that Erdogan is reluctant to confront the mayor in presidential elections.

"If Erdogan could beat him politically with regular rules, he would love that. But he cannot be doing that. Erdogan wants to take him out of the political sphere one way or the other," explained Sezin Oney, a commentator on Turkey's independent Politikyol news outlet. 

"The competitive side has started to be too much of a headache for the presidency, so they want to get rid of the competitive side and emphasise the authoritarian side, with Imamoglu as the prime target," she said.

Erdogan’s local election defeat reshapes Turkey’s political landscape

Turkey's justice minister Yilmaz Tunc has angrily rejected claims that Imamoglu's prosecution is politically motivated, insisting the judiciary is independent. 

Erdogan sought to play down the protests, saying on Friday that Turkey "will not surrender to street terror" and discouraged any further demonstrations.

"We, as a party and individuals, have no time to waste on the opposition's theatrics. We are focused on our work and our goals," Erdogan declared. 

Imamoglu's arrest comes as Turkey's crisis-ridden economy took another hit, with significant falls on the stock market and its currency falling by more than 10 percent as international investors fled the Turkish market.

'Out of sight, out of mind'

However, Oney suggests Erdogan will be banking on a combination of fear and apathy eventually leading to the protests dissipating, and that Imamoglu, like other imprisoned political figures in Turkey, will be marginalised.

"The government is counting on the possibility that once Imamoglu is out of sight, [he will be] out of mind," she predicts. "So he will just be forgotten, and the presidency will have its way [more easily]."

Turkey is no stranger to jailing politicians, even leaders of political parties. However, Oney warns that with Imamoglu facing a long prison sentence if convicted, the significance of such a move should not be underestimated.

"It's going to be extremely detrimental to Turkish democracy. You have jailing of politicians, but someone on the scale of Imamoglu will be unique," she said.

Despite Imamoglu's detention, the CHP vowed it would press ahead with its primary on Sunday, at which it would formally nominate him as its candidate for the 2028 race.

The party said it would open the process to anyone who wanted to vote, not just party members, saying: "Come to the ballot box and say 'no' to the coup attempt!"

Observers said the government could seek to block the primary, to prevent a further show of support for Imamgolu.


Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu's arrest sparks mass protests

Issued on: 22/03/2025 - 

After his third night in custody, Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu was to appear before prosecutors Saturday, just hours after hundreds of thousands hit the streets across Turkey in a massive show of defiance. It was the third straight night that protesters had rallied against the arrest of Imamoglu – the biggest political rival of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose arrest early Wednesday sparked Turkey's biggest street protests in more than a decade.

Video by: FRANCE 24


Turkey arrests protesters as detained Istanbul mayor faces second day of questioning

Turkish Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya on Saturday said 343 people were arrested following a third night of protests against the arrest of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoglu, a major opposition politician.


Issued on: 22/03/2025 
By: FRANCE 24

01:34
Protesters clash with Turkish anti riot police during a demonstration following the arrest of Istanbul's mayor in Ankara on March 21, 2025. © Adem Altan, AFP


Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu appeared before police for questioning on terror-related charges on Saturday, a day after his interrogation over corruption allegations. His arrest this week has sparked widespread protests across Turkey, with demonstrators rallying in multiple cities to voice their opposition.

Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya posted on social media that 343 suspects had been detained in protests in major cities on Friday night, adding “There will be no tolerance for those who seek to violate societal order, threaten the people’s peace and security, and pursue chaos and provocation.” The cities listed included Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir, Adana, Antalya, Çanakkale, Eskişehir, Konya and Edirne.

The mayor, who is a popular opposition figure and seen as a top challenger to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, was detained on Wednesday following a dawn raid on his residence over allegations of financial crimes and links to Kurdish militants. Dozens of other prominent figures, including two district mayors, were also detained.

01:55



Many view the arrest as a politically driven attempt to remove a popular opposition figure and key challenger to Erdogan in the next presidential race, currently scheduled for 2028. Government officials reject accusations that legal actions against opposition figures are politically motivated and insist that Turkey’s courts operate independently.


On Friday, police questioned Imamoglu for four hours over the corruption accusations, during which he denied all of the charges, Cumhuriyet newspaper and other media reported. He was expected to be transferred to a courthouse later on Saturday for questioning by prosecutors and to face possible charges.

His arrest has ignited protests that have steadily increased in intensity.

On Friday, police in Istanbul used pepper spray, tear gas and rubber bullets to push back hundreds of protesters who tried to break through a barricade in front of the city’s historic aqueduct while hurling flares, stones and other objects at officers. Police also dispersed groups that had rallied outside of the city hall for a third night running, after the opposition Republican People’s Party leader, Ozgur Ozel, delivered a speech in support of the mayor.

Simultaneously, police broke up demonstrations in Ankara, the capital, as well as in the Aegean coastal city of Izmir, resorting to forceful measures at times, according to television images. Thousands marched in several other cities calling on the government to resign.

03:35


Earlier, Erdogan said the government would not tolerate street protests and accused the opposition party of links to corruption and terror organizations. Authorities in Ankara and Izmir meanwhile, announced a five-day ban on demonstrations, following a similar measure imposed earlier in Istanbul.

“An anti-corruption operation in Istanbul is being used as an excuse to stir unrest in our streets. I want it to be known that we will not allow a handful of opportunists to bring unrest to Turkey just to protect their plundering schemes,” Erdogan said.

Imamoglu’s arrest came just days before he was expected to be nominated as the opposition Republican People’s Party’s presidential candidate in a primary on Sunday. Ozel has said that the primary, where around 1.5 million delegates can vote, will go ahead as planned.

The opposition party has also urged citizens to participate in a symbolic election on Sunday — through improvised ballot boxes to be set up across Turkey — to show solidarity with Imamoglu.

In a message posted on his social media account Saturday, Imamoglu described his arrest as a “coup” and accused the government of exploiting the judiciary and worsening the country’s troubled economy.

“With your support, we will first defeat this coup, and then we will send packing those who caused this,” he wrote on the social media platform X.

(FRANCE 24 with AP)
















Thousands protest for second night over Istanbul mayor's arrest



Issued on: 20/03/2025 - 


Turkish riot police fired teargas and rubber bullets on Thursday, as demonstrators protested for a second night outside Istanbul City Hall over the shock arrest of the Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu in a graft and terror probe. 




Riots break out at Ankara university campus after Erdogan rival detained

FRANCE24
Issued on: 20/03/2025 - 


Riots broke out at the campus of Ankara's Middle East Technical University as students protested against the detention of Istanbul mayor Ekrem Imamoglu. Thousands have been protesting in major Turkish cities for a second night in a row as Imamoglu, President Erdogan's main political rival, called for judges to take a stand against the Turkish government's misuse of the courts. FRANCE 24's Jasper Mortimer


  


Erdogan could use Imamoglu detention to extend the term limit to presidency, analyst says

Issued on: 19/03/2025 - 
FRANCE24
 Video by: Yinka OYETADE

Anger has erupted on the streets of Istanbul, with thousands of people rallying in the cold in front of the city hall on Wednesday evening, yelling: "Erdogan, dictator!" and "Imamoglu, you are not alone!", after the city's mayor and Erdogan's main political rival was detained. Şebnem Gümüşçü, Ass. Professor of Political Science at Middlebury College and Sabancı University, says that Erdogan could use the detention as leverage 'to negotiate opposition support for a third or fourth term'.


 


'Erdogan trying to play a bigger role internationally but he's not reliable, nor is he predictable'

Expert Analysis
Issued on: 20/03/2025 
FRANCE24

Turkish police detained Istanbul's powerful mayor, Ekrem Imamoglu, Wednesday over graft and terrorism allegations, prompting outrage from the opposition which slammed it as a politically-motivated "coup". For in-depth analysis and a deeper perspective, FRANCE 24's Mark Owen welcomes Dr. İlhan Uzgel, Professor of International Relations and Turkey's opposition CHP Deputy Chairperson.

Video by:Mark OWEN


 






From Lebanon refuge, trauma scars Syria's minority Alawites

Masaoudiyeh (Lebanon) (AFP) – When he arrived in the town of Masaoudiyeh in northern Lebanon earlier this month, fleeing massacres on Syria's Mediterranean coast, Dhulfiqar Ali had escaped death not once but twice.


Issued on: 22/03/2025 - 
FRANCE24

Syrians from the Alawite minority take shelter at a school in Lebanon's Masaoudiyeh village, after mass killings in their homeland © ANWAR AMRO / AFP


He is among thousands of Syrians who have fled across the border after armed groups descended on the Syrian coastal heartland of ousted president Bashar al-Assad's Alawite minority and killed hundreds of civilians, mostly Alawites.

"They didn't even speak Arabic... they knew only: 'Alawites, pigs, kill them'," Ali said of the gunmen.

A mobile phone shop owner who lived in an Alawite neighbourhood of Homs, Ali had already been attacked before, soon after Assad was toppled in a lightning offensive by Islamist-led rebels in December.

"They shot and killed my two brothers in front of me and they shot me and thought I was dead," said the 47-year-old father of two, who now lives with his family at a school in Masaoudiyeh.

He escaped to the mountains near Latakia in January to receive treatment, only to be forced to flee again, this time across the border.

Lebanon says nearly 16,000 Syrians have arrived since early March -- adding to the already substantial population of 1.5 million Syrians who sought refuge in the country during the nearly 14-year civil war.

Most are now in predominantly Alawite villages and towns in Lebanon's northern region of Akkar, including nearly 2,500 in Masaoudiyeh.

Masaoudiyeh Mayor Ali Ahmed al-Ali said the town was "above capacity".
'Extermination'

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor, security forces and allied groups in Syria killed at least 1,614 civilians, the vast majority of them Alawites, during the violence that erupted on March 6.

Still using a crutch to walk because of his gunshot injury, Ali said those who had descended on the coastal areas were "not Syrians".

The group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham that spearheaded the offensive that toppled Assad is an offshoot of the Syrian branch of Al-Qaeda, and is still proscribed as a terrorist organisation by countries including the United States.

Lebanon says nearly 16,000 Syrians have arrived since early March -- many of them, like these men, are sheltering in predominantly Alawite villages © ANWAR AMRO / AFP

After the massacres in Syria, a fact-finding committee was formed to investigate.

But Ali and many others told AFP the violence began well before March.

Samir Hussein Ismail, a 53-year-old farmer from Hama province, said his small village of Arzeh was attacked in late January, and nine people were killed.

He fled alone first, and only after the coastal killings did his family follow.

The armed groups "came to my village again on Friday morning, on March 7", Ismail told AFP.

"They exterminated everything," he said, adding that more than 30 men from Arzeh were killed.

Among them were six of his cousins, he said in the modest schoolroom with a tall pile of mattresses in a corner.

Like most now living in the school, he was among 10 people, or two families, sharing the space.

"We have to distinguish between massacres -- the massacres are still ongoing in Syria -- but everything that happened after March 7 is extermination, and not a massacre," Ismail said.
'No one dared leave'

Many people AFP spoke to described men being lined up and shot dead.

Almost unanimously, they called for "international protection" so they could return home.
Masaoudiyeh Mayor Ali Ahmed al-Ali said his Lebanese town, hosting nearly 2,500 Syrians, was 'above capacity' © ANWAR AMRO / AFP

Among those was Ammar Saqqouf, who said his cousin was taken by Syria's new security forces and found dead days later.

He said security forces began a sweep of his town. "Five or six days later, we found his body, decapitated."

One woman, who gave her name only as Mariam, arrived in Lebanon last week with her son after her husband, a conscripted soldier, was killed.

She fled her home town of Al-Qabu in Homs on foot, crossing the border by wading through the Al-Kabir River that divides it, like many others.

"They attacked us in Al-Qabu," she said from where she now lives alongside scores of others at a mosque in Masaoudiyeh.

"People began fleeing and my husband told me and my son, 'I will flee like those people.'"

He fled, she said, "so they killed him".

Mariam described living in fear before they finally left.

"No one dared leave to get a piece of bread. They surrounded the whole town.

"We don't even dare say we're Alawites any more."

Ismail, the farmer from Arzeh, said he felt "deprived of his humanity".

"What future do we have ahead of us?" he asked.

"We fled from hell."

Exclusive: Syria's Latakia province reels after massacre of Alawites

Issued on: 21/03/2025 - 


06:03 min
From the show


Our Syria correspondents travelled to the country's western coastal province of Latakia, which was the scene of the shocking massacre of civilians from the Alawite minority between March 7 and 9. They bring us this exclusive report.

On March 6 in Syria, factions loyal to the ousted regime of Bashar al-Assad launched an offensive against the new Islamist government's security forces. This led to several days of brutal violence, during which many Alawite civilians were targeted and summarily executed. Over 1,000 people were killed, according to NGOs. Bodies piled up and morgues were overwhelmed.

The region is now living in fear of a new cycle of violence. FRANCE 24's Dana Alboz and Yousef Gharibi bring us this exclusive report, with Lauren Bain.


Friday, March 21, 2025

In the name of the family: Yes, Europe could be headed for a ‘Project 2025’ too


In almost every election in Europe in recent years, a discreet but increasingly powerful force has been at play to help bolster the far right. Much like the architects behind “Project 2025”, a set of ultra-conservative networks are waging a campaign to dismantle progressive European policies and replace them with traditionalist Christian values – leaving little room for feminists, LGBTQ+ activists and other marginalised groups.


Issued on: 21/03/2025 -
FRANCE24
By: Louise NORDSTROM


IWD PROTEST BY FASCISTS IN POLAND
\
A bucket with a doll representing a newborn baby covered in red paint is displayed as pro-life activists protest in front of Poland's first activist-run abortion consultation point, on March 8, 2025. © Wojtek Radwanski, AFP


In the summer of 2017, a peculiar document was leaked and published on the whistle-blowing platform WikiLeaks. The secret document, labelled “Restoring the Natural Order: an Agenda for Europe”, outlined a detailed strategy on how to roll back progressive legislation including the right to divorce, women’s access to contraception and abortion, and equal rights for members of the LGBTQ+ community.

Behind the manifesto was a vast transatlantic network of more than 100 hard-line Catholic groups in 30 countries from all over the world called “Agenda Europe”.

Although the network was largely dispersed after a 2018 expose by Franco-German broadcaster Arte, the ideologies and ambitions that had brought them together in such an organised manner have not.

“Agenda Europe was just one of the many platforms on which they cooperate,” said Elzbieta Korolczuk, a Polish sociologist and associated professor at Sodertorn University in Sweden whose research interests involve gender, social movements and civil society and are funded by the European Commission.


Although some of the organisations, like the Brazil-based but European franchised Tradition, Family, Property (TFP), have been around for decades, others, like Ordo Iuris in Poland – which in large part engineered the country’s strict 2021 ban on abortion – have popped up in the last 10 years or so in the form of NGOs, think tanks and lobby groups.

And they are getting increasingly organised, convening conferences and meetings, and in some cases, even setting up universities to train a future ultraconservative elite of lawyers, journalists, teachers, and business- and political leaders.

Many of the groups, like European Dignity Watch (EDW), One of Us, and the European Centre for Law and Justice (ECIJ), are Brussels- or Strasbourg-based, with access to – and thereby the power to influence – the European Parliament.
Hooking up with the far right

One of the keys to their increased exposure to power, Korolczuk explained, is that these groups are increasingly cooperating with far-right political parties, riding on the wave of populism over issues, for example, like migration and economic hardship.

“It’s sort of an opportunistic synergy,” she said, noting that while far-right parties may be able to reach the upper echelons of power through their often vague ideological projects that are mainly aimed at “bringing down the elite”, the ultraconservatives can help them stay there, by lending them their rhetoric of protecting traditional family values.

“By adopting this ultra-conservative language they [the far right] can position themselves as protectors of the family and protectors of children, creating moral panics around issues such as transgender rights which people might not know much about and can be made to worry about,” she said. “Because who doesn’t want to protect children?”

In the meantime, the ultraconservatives are handed key positions in, for example, the government or the judiciary where they can enforce their traditionalist agenda. Like in Poland, where Przemyslaw Czarnek, an Ordo Iuris supporter, acted as the education minister while the conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party was still at the helm.

“They are very clear about what they want: They want to promote so-called family values, meaning that they want to reverse progressive, tendencies concerning LGBTQ+ rights, sexual and reproductive rights and minority rights,” Korolczuk said.












Surge in attacks against LGBTQ+ community


Minority groups are indeed already very much being targeted.

In mid-February, ILGA-Europe, the European chapter of the LGBT+ rights group, sounded the alarm by issuing a report warning that the LGBTQ+ community was being “weaponised to erode the foundations of freedom and democracy across Europe”.

In its 162-page annual review, ILGA-Europe warned of a new era where a growing number of European governments were fuelling anti-LGBTQ+ sentiment “to push laws that restrict freedom of expression, association, and fair elections”.

Chaber, ILGA-Europe’s executive director, who only goes by their surname, said that even more frighteningly, the group had seen – only in the past four to six weeks – “very similar proposals being raised by politicians in Albania, Slovakia, Latvia, Hungary. And they are around anti-trans, anti-propaganda and foreign agents laws”.

“They are all popping up essentially in the same language, with the same argumentation, obviously in different languages, but the same nomenclature, in different parts of the region where there is a strengthened far right presence.”

The direct consequence of this, they said, is a surge in anti-LGBTQ+ violence – “there has been a significant increase over the past year”, with as many as 17 attacks on Pride parades, including in Germany and France – but in the longer term, a severe weakening of democracy, as seen in Georgia recently.
Project 2025 a blueprint for Europe

Korolczuk is not surprised. “They [the ultraconservatives] are also producing knowledge. They publish papers, they publish amicus briefs for court proceedings and so on. And they share those,” she said.













The reason the LGBTQ+ is being targeted is no coincidence, she said. “Because they are a minority. They are going after the weakest. That's very clear.”

Korolczuk said she had no doubt that many European ultraconservative groups are also cooperating with like-minded peers in the US, like the Heritage foundation that authored “Project 2025”, the conservative governance plan that President Donald Trump appears to base at least some of his decisions on.

And, she said, “I think Project 2025 will be used as a blueprint in some European elections as well”.

She could be right. On March 11, the Heritage Foundation convened a “closed-door workshop” for hardline conservative groups, including Ordo Iuris and the Mathias Corvinus Collegium – the Hungarian conservative university that has received generous funding by Viktor Orban’s right-wing government – in Washington DC to discuss how they could dismantle the European Union.

Kenneth Haar, a researcher and campaigner at the transparency watchdog Corporate Europe Observatory, told DeSmog, an international journalism organisation that focuses on climate change, that it was “quite simply terrifying” to see the Heritage Foundation "moving its attention to Europe”.

“Most of the attacks made by the Trump presidency in recent weeks on civil rights, on migrants, on LGBTQ+ rights and more, can be traced back to Project 2025,” he said. “We should be worried about them building up ambitions and strength in Europe.”
Trump brand alternately loved, loathed worldwide

Paris (AFP) – His business is booming in India, but his golf courses have been vandalized in Ireland and Scotland, and he has had business setbacks in Indonesia: two months after his frenetic return to the White House, Donald Trump's brand has had mixed success worldwide.


Issued on: 22/03/2025 -

The Trump Turnberry golf resort in Scotland was recently splashed in blood-red paint, an immaculate green spray-painted with the words: "GAZA IS NOT 4 SALE" © Andy Buchanan / AFP/File


No stranger to blending business and politics, the US president got a taste of the hazards recently when the elegant clubhouse of the Trump Turnberry golf resort in Scotland was splashed in blood-red paint, an immaculate green spray-painted with the words: "GAZA IS NOT 4 SALE."

A pro-Palestinian group claimed the "act of resistance," saying it was in answer to Trump's proposal to take over the Gaza Strip, expel its inhabitants and turn it into the "Riviera of the Middle East."

Another Trump golf course in Ireland was targeted last week, when activists planted Palestinian flags on the greens.

But management at the property in the village of Doonbeg says the golf course is receiving record numbers of membership applications since its owner's re-election.

Luxury symbol

A world away, on the tropical island of Bali, weeds have overrun the Nirwana golf resort, which the Trump Organization and a local partner signed a deal in 2015 to develop a six-star destination.

The resort closed two years later, costing local workers their jobs. The Trump family empire has since then joined up with local partners in a large real estate project near Indonesia's capital Jakarta.

But that venture, a vast luxury development called Lido City, has also run into problems. In February, the Indonesian government halted the billion-dollar project over environmental violations.

Still, a Trump-branded golf course should soon open on the site in collaboration with a local group.

"Trump as a brand in Indonesia is not too famous, different than Trump as a president," Yoes Kenawas, a political scientist at Indonesia's Atma Jaya University, told AFP.

India is another story: there, flamboyant Trump towers already scrape the smoggy skies of Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata and Pune, making the country the most important overseas market for the Trump organization.

Like in the Philippines, Turkey, South Korea and Uruguay, the real-estate tycoon's family does not invest directly in the properties, which are built and managed by local developers.

Indian laborers work on the road leading to the under-construction Trump Tower in Kolkata in February 2018 © Dibyangshu SARKAR / AFP/File

Instead, the Trump family collects royalties, sometimes running into the millions of dollars, for licensing its brand -- which, to a newly wealthy Indian jet set, is widely seen as a byword for luxury and success.

"I think the brand has become much larger than life, particularly after he's come back for a second term," Anuj Puri, chairman of real-estate consultancy Anarock, told AFP.

"He's more in the newspapers than even any Indian politician."

Another Trump-branded office and retail project was announced this week in Pune, and there are plans for five new Trump towers around the country in the coming years.
Conflicts of interest?

As in his first term, Trump, 78, has officially ceded management of his business interests to his children during his presidency.

But that has not erased concerns over potential conflicts of interest.

"The Trump presidency is transactional, and is turning America into a more neo-patrimonial state, where there are blurred lines between the public and private space," said Deepanshu Mohan, a professor at India's OP Jindal Global University.

"This is how the Trump government operates and (what it) expects of its allies. India has also accordingly reacted to cozy up to Trump."

A blooming bromance between Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was on display during the latter's recent visit to Washington.

In January, the Trump Organization pledged it would engage in "no new transactions with foreign governments" during Trump's second term, except for "ordinary course transactions."

It said all money generated by transactions such as foreign dignitaries staying at Trump properties would be donated to the US treasury.

But the boundaries can be fuzzy.

A Trump-branded hotel and golf complex is currently under construction in Oman on government-owned land. The Trump family also has a deal with LIV Golf, the pro tour controlled by Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund.

The Trump Organization did not respond to requests to comment from AFP.

burs-sdu/jhb/gv

© 2025 AFP
Paris police evacuate hundreds of migrants from theatre after months-long occupation

Police forced their way into a 19th-century theatre in Paris on Tuesday morning, with the aim of evacuating hundreds of young migrants that have been occupying the venue for months. Demonstrators and migrants chanted slogans such as "we are all the children of migrants" as the police broke the cordons formed by activists.



Issued on: 18/03/2025
By: FRANCE 24
Police charged the historic building early Tuesday amid protests from pro-migrant activists. © Thibaud Moritz, AFP


Police on Tuesday evacuated hundreds of young migrants from a central Paris theatre they had occupied for months, AFP journalists said.

Police charged at the migrants, who had found shelter in the historic Gaite Lyrique venue, with batons as many people gathered outside to protest against the eviction, they said.

Shortly before 6am local time (5am GMT), members of the anti-riot CRS police forced their way through cordons that activists had formed to prevent them from entering the venue.

But in chaotic and turbulent scenes police forced their way into the 19th-century theatre, which is famous for performances of opera, operetta and ballet and which had cancelled all performances during the three-month occupation by migrants demanding food and shelter.




Many are underage and asked to be treated as such in their immigration process.
The police prefect gave the order for the eviction on Monday. © Alain Jocard, AFP

AFP reporters saw some migrants leaving the building carrying personal belongings, with several suitcases and bags left abandoned on the pavement.

Danielle Simonnet, a leftist lawmaker on site to protest against the police action, called it "extremely violent", telling AFP that officers had "hit and beaten" the migrants, who she said were behaving "peacefully".

Demonstrators and migrants chanted slogans such as "we are all the children of migrants" as they were surrounded by police in riot gear.

Read more

French authorities accused of ‘social cleansing’ of migrants and homeless before Paris Olympics

The eviction came a day after Paris police prefect Laurent Nunez gave the order to clear the building, occupied by up to 450 migrants, mostly from sub-Saharan Africa.

Nunez called the occupation of the theatre a threat to "public order". He promised that the young migrants would be offered shelter, and that their legal situation would be looked at.

Agents working for the Paris region's emergency shelter services were on site and talking to migrants, an AFP reporter said.

"I need to go to class at 10am today," said Adama, who said he was 15 and from Ivory Coast. "I don't know what to tell my teacher. I need to leave a message saying that I won't make it."

He added: "We haven't killed anybody, we don't steal. We came here to become integrated."
The Gaite Lyrique opened in the 19th century and has hosted many opera, operetta and ballet performances. © Thibaud Moritz, AFP

The occupation of the Gaite Lyrique began on December 10, 2024, with around 200 young migrants.

The theatre cancelled all planned performances a week later, saying it condemned the occupation but also "the inaction by authorities".

The following months became an illustration of a standoff between left-wing activists fighting for migrant rights, and the far right calling for their expulsion.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)