Espagne: Mbappé et le Real Madrid punissent le Barça et creusent l’écart

Au terme d’un Clasico bouillant, le Real Madrid de Kylian Mbappé, encore buteur, a profité dimanche des faiblesses défensives du FC Barcelone pour s’imposer (2-1) et prendre le large en tête de la Liga.C’est une petite revanche pour le géant madrilène, après quatre défaites douloureuses la saison dernière. Et peut-être déjà un tournant, dans la saison de Liga.Sur sa pelouse du stade Santiago Bernabéu, le Real (1er, 27 points) a creusé l’écart en tête en repoussant son éternel rival, champion en titre, à cinq longueurs, grâce à un Mbappé une nouvelle fois décisif (22e, 1-0) même s’il a manqué la balle du doublé sur penalty (52e), et à l’Anglais Jude Bellingham (43e).Ce premier Clasico s’est terminé comme il avait débuté: dans le chaos, et la polémique, une de plus, après le carton rouge logique de Pedri pour un deuxième jaune (90e+9), suivi de deux échauffourées, symboles de la tension ambiante.Ce contexte enflammé autour de l’arbitrage, qu’il avait pourtant participé à générer, a semblé emporter le jeune prodige barcelonais Lamine Yamal, copieusement sifflé et auteur d’une performance à oublier.Dès la deuxième minute de jeu, l’ailier de 18 ans avait failli plomber son équipe en concédant un penalty pour une faute maladroite sur Vinicius Junior dans la surface, finalement annulé après l’intervention de l’arbitrage vidéo (2e).Visiblement pas à 100% physiquement après des douleurs récurrentes au pubis, Yamal a tenté de répondre aux sifflets – et aux critiques – mais ses frappes ont fui le cadre (9e, 64e), sans danger pour le gardien belge Thibaut Courtois.- Le Barça pris à son propre piège -Systématiquement sur un fil défensivement avec sa ligne très haute pour jouer le piège du hors-jeu, le Barça s’est fait punir par une volée des 20 mètres pleine d’audace de Mbappé, alors qu’il avait pris le contrôle du jeu (12e).Mais ce but a lui aussi été annulé pour un hors-jeu d’un bout de pied, privant l’attaquant français d’un “golazo” qui avait fait rugir le Bernabéu.Face à une défense catalane en souffrance, Mbappé, lancé dans la profondeur par Jude Bellingham, n’a pas tremblé face au gardien polonais Wojciech Szczesny pour ouvrir le score, pour de bon (22e, 1-0), inscrivant son onzième but de la saison en Liga.Le portier de 35 ans, titulaire en l’absence de Joan Garcia et Marc-André ter Stegen, a ensuite permis aux hommes d’Hansi Flick, suspendu, de rester dans le match en s’interposant à plusieurs reprises devant Mbappé (29e), Dean Huijsen (30e), Vinicius (34e) et Bellingham (37e).Les Catalans, même privés de plusieurs joueurs majeurs, dont Raphinha et Robert Lewandowski, sont restés fidèles à leur idée de jeu offensive et ont été récompensés, le milieu espagnol Fermin Lopez profitant d’une perte de balle du jeune Arda Güler pour égaliser (38e 1-1).Battus dans les airs deux fois sur la même action, ils ont vite été ramenés sur terre, trahis à nouveau par leurs errances défensives, en laissant Bellingham seul face au but sur un centre de Vinicius remisé de la tête par Eder Militao (43e, 2-1).Les Blaugranas, à l’agonie à l’image de Jules Koundé face à “Vini”, sont parvenus à rentrer à la mi-temps menés seulement 2-1, après un nouveau but hors-jeu de Mbappé (45e) et un tacle salvateur de Cubarsi devant le Brésilien (45e+6).Le capitaine des Bleus a eu la balle de break au retour des vestiaires sur un penalty pour une main d’Eric Garcia, mais il a buté sur Szczesny, auteur d’une superbe parade (52e) pour maintenir le champion en titre en vie.Les supporters merengues, qui l’ont acclamé à sa sortie à la 90e minute, lui ont rapidement pardonné. Car il a assuré l’essentiel: marquer une nouvelle fois, et sortir vainqueur de ce choc planétaire, enfin.

India and China resume direct flights as ties improve

India and China resumed direct flights on Sunday after a five-year suspension, a move important both for trade and a symbolic step as Asia’s giants cautiously rebuild relations.Data from tracking website Flightradar24 showed the flight, operated by India’s largest commercial airline IndiGo, took off from Kolkata’s Subhash Chandra Bose International Airport in eastern India at 10:00 pm (1630 GMT) for Guangzhou in China.The neighbours — the world’s two most populous nations — remain strategic rivals competing for regional influence, but ties have eased gradually since a deadly Himalayan border clash in 2020.India’s government said the resumption of flights will boost “people-to-people contact” and aid the “gradual normalisation of bilateral exchanges”.Warming relations with Beijing come as India’s ties with key trade partner Washington falter, following US President Donald Trump’s order imposing punishing 50 percent tariffs.Trump’s aides have accused India of fuelling Russia’s war in Ukraine by buying Moscow’s oil.There are already regular flights between India and Hong Kong, while additional services from the capital New Delhi to Shanghai and Guangzhou will begin in November.”The direct air link will reduce logistics and transit time,” said Rajeev Singh, head of the Indian Chamber of Commerce in Kolkata, telling AFP it would benefit businesses.India’s eastern port city of Kolkata has centuries-old ties with China dating back to British rule, when Chinese migrants arrived as traders. Indo-Chinese fusion food remains a beloved staple of the city’s culinary identity.”It’s great news for people like us, who have relatives in China,” said Chen Khoi Kui, a civil society leader in Kolkata’s Chinatown district of Tangra. “Air connectivity will boost trade, tourism and business travel.”- ‘Long-term challenge’ -India runs a significant trade deficit with Beijing, relying heavily on Chinese raw materials for industrial and export growth.The thaw between New Delhi and Beijing followed meetings between their leaders in Russia last year and in China in August.India’s imports from China surged to more than $11 billion last month, up more than 16 percent compared with September 2024, according to New Delhi’s commerce ministry.Exports from India to China were $ 1.47  billion, modest by comparison, but up around 34 percent year-on-year.Direct flights between the two countries were suspended during the Covid-19 pandemic, halting roughly 500 monthly services.Relations then plummeted after the 2020 border skirmish between the nuclear-armed nations, when at least 20 Indian and four Chinese soldiers were killed.New Delhi responded by tightening restrictions on Chinese investments and banning hundreds of apps, including TikTok.India then deepened ties with the US-led Quad alliance — also including Japan and Australia — aimed at countering China’s influence in the Asia-Pacific.Both sides have troops posted along their contested 3,500-kilometre (2,175-mile) high-altitude frontier.But this month, soldiers on each side exchanged gifts of sweets on the Hindu festival of Diwali, “marking a gesture of goodwill”, said Yu Jing, the spokesperson of the Chinese Embassy in India.The Indian Express, in an editorial after Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and China’s President Xi Jinping met in August, said improving ties with Beijing “sends an appropriate signal” to Washington.But relations still have far to go.”Managing an increasingly assertive China remains India’s long-term challenge,” the newspaper added. “These fundamental realities remain unchanged, regardless of Trump’s whimsical diplomatic actions.”

Police fire teargas as protesters defy bans in Cameroon ahead of election resultsSun, 26 Oct 2025 17:36:53 GMT

Police fired teargas to disperse hundreds of people in Cameroon who on Sunday defied protest bans to support opposition candidate Issa Tchiroma Bakary, who claims he won the recent presidential elections and who called on his supporters to march peacefully.The Constitutional Council is due to announce results of the October 12 vote on Monday, and …

Police fire teargas as protesters defy bans in Cameroon ahead of election resultsSun, 26 Oct 2025 17:36:53 GMT Read More »

US Fed will likely cut again despite economic murkiness from shutdown

The Federal Reserve is expected to announce its second rate cut of the year on Wednesday, despite a lack of clarity over the health of the US economy due to the ongoing government shutdown.The US central bank’s second-to-last rate meeting of the year is taking place against the backdrop of a weeks-long standoff between Republicans and Democrats over health care subsidies, resulting in a suspension of publication of almost all official data. Without these key insights into the US economy, Fed officials will be forced to set interest rates without the full spectrum of data they normally rely upon.Analysts and traders expect the bank will plow ahead with a quarter percentage-point cut, lowering its key lending rate to between 3.75 percent and 4.00 percent, without giving too much away about the final rate cut of the year in December.The lack of official information complicates the ongoing debate at the Fed over whether to cut rates swiftly in order to support the weakening labor market, or to stand firm in the face of inflation, which remains stuck stubbornly above the bank’s long-term target of two percent, fueled by Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs on top trading partners.The US central bank has a dual mandate from Congress to act independently to tackle both inflation and unemployment, which it does by raising, holding, or cutting its benchmark lending rate. “They’ll have to decide how much (inflation) is still to come versus how much is just never going to come, and that’s the big question right now,” former Fed official Joseph Gagnon told AFP. Asked Sunday why consumer prices remain high, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent blamed the “affordability crisis” on the previous administration of Democrat Joe Biden and said he was confident that inflation would ease “in the coming months.” “We will see a drop in inflation back towards the Fed’s two percent target,” Bessent told NBC’s “Meet the Press.”- ‘Blunt tool’ -The only major data point to be published since the shutdown began on October 1 was the US consumer inflation data, which came in hot at 3.0 percent in the 12 months to September, according to delayed Labor Department data published on Friday. But the figure came in slightly below expectations, cheering the financial markets, which closed at fresh records on the news.The Fed uses a different measure to gauge inflation, but that guideline also remains stuck well above target, according to data published before the shutdown.On the other side of the mandate, employment has slowed sharply in recent months, with just 22,000 jobs created in August, even as the unemployment rate hugged close to historic lows at 4.3 percent. “The goal is to get it just right, and that’s a hard thing to do with such a blunt tool,” KPMG chief economist Diane Swonk told AFP, referring to the Fed’s key interest rate.  Swonk expects the Fed to cut twice more this year, and to announce an end to its program of shrinking its balance sheet next week — known as quantitative tightening — in the face of rising liquidity risks. – Fed under political pressure -The Fed has been rocked this year by relentless attacks on personnel directed from the White House, with Trump often taking to his Truth Social network to criticize Fed chair Jerome Powell, who steps down next year. The Trump administration has also gone after Fed governor Lisa Cook, attempting to remove her from her post on accusations of mortgage fraud. Cook fought back against the legal challenge to remove her, with the case going all the way up to the US Supreme Court, which has said it will hear the arguments against her in January next year.The timing of that decision means the Supreme Court is unlikely to rule on whether Cook can remain in her post before the end of February, the deadline for when the US central bank’s board must decide whether to reappoint regional Fed presidents — a process that only happens once every five years. “It seems like the odds that he could do this maneuver are greatly diminished,” said Gagnon from PIIE. 

US Fed will likely cut again despite economic murkiness from shutdown

The Federal Reserve is expected to announce its second rate cut of the year on Wednesday, despite a lack of clarity over the health of the US economy due to the ongoing government shutdown.The US central bank’s second-to-last rate meeting of the year is taking place against the backdrop of a weeks-long standoff between Republicans and Democrats over health care subsidies, resulting in a suspension of publication of almost all official data. Without these key insights into the US economy, Fed officials will be forced to set interest rates without the full spectrum of data they normally rely upon.Analysts and traders expect the bank will plow ahead with a quarter percentage-point cut, lowering its key lending rate to between 3.75 percent and 4.00 percent, without giving too much away about the final rate cut of the year in December.The lack of official information complicates the ongoing debate at the Fed over whether to cut rates swiftly in order to support the weakening labor market, or to stand firm in the face of inflation, which remains stuck stubbornly above the bank’s long-term target of two percent, fueled by Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs on top trading partners.The US central bank has a dual mandate from Congress to act independently to tackle both inflation and unemployment, which it does by raising, holding, or cutting its benchmark lending rate. “They’ll have to decide how much (inflation) is still to come versus how much is just never going to come, and that’s the big question right now,” former Fed official Joseph Gagnon told AFP. Asked Sunday why consumer prices remain high, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent blamed the “affordability crisis” on the previous administration of Democrat Joe Biden and said he was confident that inflation would ease “in the coming months.” “We will see a drop in inflation back towards the Fed’s two percent target,” Bessent told NBC’s “Meet the Press.”- ‘Blunt tool’ -The only major data point to be published since the shutdown began on October 1 was the US consumer inflation data, which came in hot at 3.0 percent in the 12 months to September, according to delayed Labor Department data published on Friday. But the figure came in slightly below expectations, cheering the financial markets, which closed at fresh records on the news.The Fed uses a different measure to gauge inflation, but that guideline also remains stuck well above target, according to data published before the shutdown.On the other side of the mandate, employment has slowed sharply in recent months, with just 22,000 jobs created in August, even as the unemployment rate hugged close to historic lows at 4.3 percent. “The goal is to get it just right, and that’s a hard thing to do with such a blunt tool,” KPMG chief economist Diane Swonk told AFP, referring to the Fed’s key interest rate.  Swonk expects the Fed to cut twice more this year, and to announce an end to its program of shrinking its balance sheet next week — known as quantitative tightening — in the face of rising liquidity risks. – Fed under political pressure -The Fed has been rocked this year by relentless attacks on personnel directed from the White House, with Trump often taking to his Truth Social network to criticize Fed chair Jerome Powell, who steps down next year. The Trump administration has also gone after Fed governor Lisa Cook, attempting to remove her from her post on accusations of mortgage fraud. Cook fought back against the legal challenge to remove her, with the case going all the way up to the US Supreme Court, which has said it will hear the arguments against her in January next year.The timing of that decision means the Supreme Court is unlikely to rule on whether Cook can remain in her post before the end of February, the deadline for when the US central bank’s board must decide whether to reappoint regional Fed presidents — a process that only happens once every five years. “It seems like the odds that he could do this maneuver are greatly diminished,” said Gagnon from PIIE. 

Nigeria refinery aims to be world’s biggest with expansionSun, 26 Oct 2025 16:16:22 GMT

Nigeria’s Dangote oil refinery, already the largest in Africa, aims to become the biggest in the world in three years’ time with an expansion doubling its capacity, its owner said on Sunday.”We are more than doubling the barrels (per day)… to 1.4 million from 650,000,” said Aliko Dangote, a Nigerian businessman who is Africa’s richest …

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