La presse réagit à la mort de Brigitte Bardot, “diva rebelle” et “militante controversée”

“Plus grand sex-symbol du cinéma français”, “diva rebelle” mais aussi “militante controversée”: la presse française et internationale rend hommage lundi à l’actrice et “pasionaria de la cause animale” Brigitte Bardot, décédée dimanche à l’âge de 91 ans, “libre dans ses choix et sa parole, jusqu’à l’excès”.”Devenue une icône malgré elle, Brigitte Bardot avait mis fin très rapidement à une carrière sans grand éclat pour se consacrer entièrement aux animaux”, rapporte La Croix.”C’était sans doute la dernière de cette poignée de figures nouvelles et libres dans lesquelles la France a aimé se reconnaître au tournant des années 60″, note le quotidien Libération, évoquant une “actrice à la carrière fulgurante” et parlant d’elle comme le “plus grand sex-symbol du cinéma français”.Sous le titre “Brigitte Bardot, une icône qui ne voulait pas être star”, Le Parisien souligne que “BB (de son surnom) a été à la fois la première et la dernière, en France, condensé de Hollywood dans un bagou de Française éternelle”.”Cette tornade blonde déboula sur les écrans dans un pays d’après-guerre et  qui n’avait pas encore goûté aux Trente Glorieuses”, rappelle Le Figaro. “Elle bousculait les codes, dansait le mambo sur les tables de Saint-Tropez.”Pour la BBC, elle est “un cocktail français de charme félin et de sensualité continentale” qui “révolutionna le cinéma dans les années 1950”. Des photos de la star s’étalent en Une de l’ensemble des quotidiens britanniques: “Et Dieu créa Bardot…”, titre le Sun, tandis que le Daily Telegraph rend hommage à cette “légende du siècle” et que le Daily Mirror dit adieu à “La Belle Bardot”.C’est un “mythe national français, la seule de nos jours capable de réconcilier toutes les âmes querelleuses de la nation”, écrit l’agence de presse nationale italienne Ansa.Le journal transalpin La Repubblica évoque, lui, “une diva rebelle” qui “a choisi la liberté jusqu’au bout”.- “Elle ne cachait rien” -Elle était “Libre dans ses choix et sa parole, jusqu’à l’excès”, écrit La Croix.En Espagne, El Pais se souvient d’une “militante controversée”.”A sa manière, elle ne cachait rien. Ni les rides, ni son caractère de plus en plus radical ou ses convictions idéologiques”, souligne le quotidien.Libération rappelle qu’elle a quitté le grand écran “pour se réinventer en pasionaria de la cause animale, proche de l’extrême droite” et qu’elle a suscité “de nombreuses controverses”.”Sa réputation a été ternie lorsqu’elle a proféré des insultes homophobes et a été condamnée à plusieurs reprises pour incitation à la haine raciale”, explique la BBC.En Allemagne, le Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung préfère “oublier, même si cela peut être difficile, la Bardot politique des dernières années le temps de cette nécrologie”, et “se souvenir de LA Bardot” à la place.Mais pas le New York Times, qui titre sans équivoque “Du sex-appeal à l’extrême droite”.Le quotidien américain estime que, loin d’être “une figure consensuelle”, elle représente l’une des premières stars problématiques de l’époque moderne”.”Elle n’a d’ailleurs eu besoin de personne pour se faire +cancel+: d’une certaine manière, elle l’a fait elle-même, en quittant le cinéma en 1973 à 38 ans”, critique-t-il.

Myanmar pro-military party claims huge win in first phase of junta-run poll

Myanmar’s dominant pro-military party claimed an overwhelming victory in the first phase of the country’s junta-run elections, a senior party official told AFP, after democracy watchdogs warned the poll would entrench military rule.The armed forces snatched power in a 2021 coup, but on Sunday opened voting in a phased month-long election they pledge will return power to the people.”We won 82 lower house seats in townships which have finished counting, out of the total of 102,” a senior official of the Union Solidarity and Development Party told AFP.The party won all eight townships in the capital Naypyidaw, they added, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to officially disclose the results.At the last poll in 2020 the USDP was trounced by Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD), which was dissolved after the coup and did not appear on Sunday’s ballots.The Nobel laureate has been in detention since the putsch, which triggered a civil war.Campaigners, Western diplomats and the United Nations’ rights chief have condemned the vote — citing a stark crackdown on dissent and a candidate list stacked with military allies.Official results have yet to be posted by Myanmar’s Union Election Commission and two more phases are scheduled for January 11 and 25.”My view on the election is clear: I don’t trust it at all,” Yangon resident Min Khant said on Monday.”We have been living under a dictatorship,” said the 28-year-old. “Even if they do hold elections, I don’t think anything good will come of them because they always lie.”Many analysts describe the USDP as a civilian proxy of the military, saying former officers serve in senior leadership roles.After voting on Sunday military chief Min Aung Hlaing — who has ruled by diktat for the past five years — said the armed forces could be trusted to hand back power to a civilian-led government.”We guarantee it to be a free and fair election,” he told reporters in Naypyidaw. “It’s organised by the military, we can’t let our name be tarnished.”The military’s coup triggered a civil war as pro-democracy activists formed guerrilla units, fighting alongside ethnic minority armies which have long resisted central rule.Sunday’s election was scheduled to take place in 102 of the country’s 330 townships — the most of the three phases of voting.But amid the war, the military has acknowledged that elections cannot happen in almost one in five lower house constituencies.

Egyptian activist sorry for ‘hurtful’ posts after UK uproar

A British-Egyptian activist apologised Monday for resurfaced social media posts in which he called for violence against Zionists and police, as opposition lawmakers urged the UK government to revoke his citizenship.The posts, dating back to 2010, came to light just days after Alaa Abdel Fattah returned to Britain following years of diplomatic efforts by London to secure his release from detention in Egypt.British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he was “delighted” Abdel Fattah had been reunited with his loved ones, but the opposition Conservatives and hard-right Reform UK party called for the activist to be deported.”Looking at the tweets now — the ones that were not completely twisted out of their meaning — I do understand how shocking and hurtful they are, and for that I unequivocally apologise,” Abdel Fattah said in a statement.”I must also stress that some tweets have been completely misunderstood, seemingly in bad faith,” he added.Abdel Fattah was a leading voice in Egypt’s 2011 Arab Spring uprising.He was detained in Egypt in September 2019, and in December 2021 was sentenced to five years in prison on charges of spreading false news.  He went on hunger strike this March while behind bars and was later released after being pardoned by Egyptian president Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi.- ‘Abhorrent’ posts condemned -The UK foreign ministry condemned Abdel Fattah’s earlier posts on Sunday, describing them as “abhorrent” in a statement.But it added that it had been “a long-standing priority under successive governments” to work for his release.Abdel Fattah was granted UK citizenship in December 2021 when the Conservatives were in power. He obtained it through his British-born mother.The Conservatives’ justice spokesman, Robert Jenrick, called for Starmer to look into stripping Abdel Fattah of the citizenship.”If the Prime Minister really was unaware that El Fattah was an extremist, he should immediately retract his comments expressing ‘delight’ at his arrival and begin proceedings to revoke his citizenship and deport him,” Jenrick posted on X.Anti-immigrant firebrand Nigel Farage, leader of Reform, wrote a letter to interior minister Shabana Mahmood urging her to “order” the deportation of Abdel Fattah.”It should go without saying that anyone who possesses racist and anti-British views such as those of Mr el-Fattah should not be allowed into the UK,” Farage wrote.Abdel Fattah received the presidential pardon in September. He arrived in the UK last Friday after Egypt’s attorney general lifted an apparent travel ban.The Freedom for Alaa campaign said the activist had been reunited with his 14-year-old son, who lives in the southern city of Brighton.Abdel Fattah was nominated for the European Parliament’s Sakharov Prize in 2014 but the group backing him withdrew the nomination for the human rights award, saying they had discovered a tweet from 2012 in which he called for the murder of Israelis.

Egyptian activist sorry for ‘hurtful’ posts after UK uproarMon, 29 Dec 2025 09:43:41 GMT

A British-Egyptian activist apologised Monday for resurfaced social media posts in which he called for violence against Zionists and police, as opposition lawmakers urged the UK government to revoke his citizenship.The posts, dating back to 2010, came to light just days after Alaa Abdel Fattah returned to Britain following years of diplomatic efforts by London …

Egyptian activist sorry for ‘hurtful’ posts after UK uproarMon, 29 Dec 2025 09:43:41 GMT Read More »