Oiseaux protégés: la justice ordonne l’arrêt temporaire du parc éolien d’Aumelas dans l’Hérault

Le tribunal de Montpellier a ordonné lundi l’arrêt pendant quatre mois des 31 éoliennes du parc d’Aumelas (Hérault), période correspondant à la présence du faucon crécerellettes, jugeant EDF Renouvelables et neuf de ses filiales responsables de la mort de 160 individus d’espèce protégées.”Avec ces éoliennes à l’arrêt, il n’y aura pas de nouvelle mortalité cette année, puisque les faucons crécerellettes arrivent en avril d’Afrique pour la nidification et repartent à la fin de l’été”, s’est réjoui juste après le jugement Simon Popy, président France Nature Environnement (FNE) Occitanie Méditerranée, l’association à l’origine de la plainte contre EDF Renouvelables et ses filiales.Dans un jugement qui représente une première au niveau pénal contre des exploitants d’éoliennes, le tribunal a également condamné chacune de ces sociétés à 500.000 euros d’amende (dont 250.000 avec sursis) et l’ancien PDG d’EDF Renouvelables, Bruno Bensasson, à six mois de prison avec sursis et 100.000 euros d’amende (dont 30.000 avec sursis).Elles devront également publier, à leurs frais, dans les journaux Le Monde, et Midi Libre et dans le media en ligne Reporterre, le jugement les reconnaissant coupables de la “destruction de 160 individus d’oiseaux et chauve-souris, nomment de faucons crécerellettes”, a indiqué la présidente du tribunal.Outre les 2,5 millions d’euros d’amende ferme, les 10 sociétés sont condamnées à verser, au titre du préjudice moral, un total de 114.000 euros à France Nature Environnement Occitanie-Méditerranée, ainsi que la même somme de 114.000 euros à sa maison-mère, France Nature Environnement. Enfin, elles devront, au titre de réparation du préjudice écologique, verser à l’État 74.087 euros, qui devra les affecter au plan national de sauvegarde du faucon crécerellette.Le parquet avait réclamé 750.000 euros d’amende (dont 500.000 avec sursis) pour chacune de ces sociétés et six mois de prison avec sursis et 150.000 euros d’amende (dont 100.000 avec sursis) contre M. Bensasson, ainsi qu’une suspension de l’activité du parc éolien.France Nature Environnement Occitanie-Méditerranée (FNE-OccMed) avait introduit en 2022 une citation directe pour “destruction d’espèces protégées” contre ces sociétés exploitant les 31 éoliennes implantées depuis une vingtaine d’années sur le Causse d’Aumelas, un plateau dominant la Méditerranée à l’ouest de Montpellier.Selon FNE-OccMed, elles ont causé la mort de 150 à 300 faucons crécerellettes, une espèce migratoire menacée de disparition. Ces petits faucons, tout comme des busards cendrés et des chauves-souris, elles aussi espèces protégées, viennent régulièrement se fracasser sur les pales malgré les dispositifs d’effarouchement mis en place. EDF Renouvelables, société mère des autres entreprises concernées, avait plaidé la relaxe.

ICC confirms 52 mn euros for victims of Ugandan LRA warlordMon, 07 Apr 2025 13:30:06 GMT

The International Criminal Court Monday confirmed the award of 52 million euros to victims of a Ugandan warlord who pressed a brutal reign of terror as part of the Lord’s Resistance Army commanded by fugitive Joseph Kony.Dominic Ongwen, whose nom de guerre was “White Ant”, is currently serving a 25-year jail sentence for 61 charges, …

ICC confirms 52 mn euros for victims of Ugandan LRA warlordMon, 07 Apr 2025 13:30:06 GMT Read More »

Honda executive resigns over ‘inappropriate conduct’

Honda’s executive vice president resigned on Monday over “an allegation of inappropriate conduct”, the Japanese automaker said.The incident occurred “during a social gathering outside of work hours”, Honda said in a statement without specifying what accusations were made against Shinji Aoyama, who is also the company’s director.”It is deeply regrettable that an individual positioned as a leader in the management of the company, and who is expected to set an example for the respect of human rights… has become the subject of an allegation of conduct contrary to these principles,” the company statement said.Honda declined to reveal details of Aoyama’s conduct, citing privacy concerns for the victim, Kyodo news agency reported.The firm’s audit committee had investigated the incident and presented a disciplinary action plan to the board of directors, who were “scheduled to make a decision”.However, Aoyama submitted his resignation letter before the board had made any move, the statement said.”The Company’s Board of Directors has determined that it is appropriate for Mr. Aoyama to resign from his position,” it said.Honda President Toshihiro Mibe will voluntarily return 20 percent of his monthly compensation for two months due to “the seriousness of this matter”, the company said.”The company sincerely apologises for any discomfort caused by such conduct, and for the significant disturbance and concern it has caused to all stakeholders.”

Macron rejects any Hamas role in post-war Gaza

French President Emmanuel Macron said on Monday that Palestinian militant group Hamas should have no role in governing the Gaza Strip once its war with Israel is over.On a visit to Cairo to discuss the war, Macron said he was strongly opposed to any displacement of Palestinians, throwing his weight behind a Gaza reconstruction plan endorsed by the Arab League to counter a US proposal to send the war-ravaged territory’s inhabitants elsewhere.Speaking alongside President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in the Egyptian capital, Macron hailed his government’s “crucial work on this plan, which offers a realistic path to the reconstruction of Gaza and should also pave the way for new Palestinian governance” in the territory.The French president said Gaza’s post-war governance should be “led by the Palestinian Authority”, dominated by Hamas’s rival party Fatah and based in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.”Hamas must have no role in this governance, and must no longer constitute a threat to Israel,” Macron said.Israel has vowed to destroy Hamas and strongly rejected any future role for the Islamist group in the Gaza Strip after its unprecedented October 7, 2023 attack triggered the war, now in its 19th month.Hamas has recently signalled willingness to cede power in Gaza, which the Iran-backed group has ruled since 2007.After a two-month truce, Israel resumed intense bombardment across the Gaza Strip and restarted ground operations, killing at least 1,391 Palestinians since March 18, according to the territory’s health ministry.Macron said both France and Egypt “condemn the resumption of Israeli strikes on Gaza”, warning of a “dramatic” worsening in the situation on the ground.Both Macron and Sisi voiced support for “an immediate return” to the ceasefire and the resumption of aid access into Gaza, which Israel blocked shortly before renewing its offensive.- ‘Realistic path’ -Macron commended Egypt’s “tireless efforts” as mediator in the conflict, having brokered along with Qatar and the United States the January truce.The deal collapsed when Israel sought to extend the deal’s first phase but Hamas insisted on talks for a second phase, as originally outlined by then-US president Joe Biden.Macron and Sisi were joined on Monday by Jordan’s King Abdullah II for a summit on the war and humanitarian efforts to alleviate the war-induced suffering of Gaza’s 2.4 million people.The visit is a show of support for Egypt and Jordan, the proposed destinations in United States President Donald Trump’s widely criticised idea to move Gazans out of the territory.Macron said that “we are firmly opposed to the displacement of populations and to any annexation of both Gaza and the West Bank”, which Israel has occupied since 1967.He said the Arab League’s plan was a “realistic path for Gaza’s reconstruction” without forcing Palestinians to leave.Sisi warned that without a “just solution” for the plight of Palestinians there will not be “lasting peace and permanent stability in the Middle East”.King Abdullah stressed the need for “a just and comprehensive peace based on the two-state solution”, a Palestinian state alongside Israel.