Benin’s women, pillars of voodoo celebrationsSat, 11 Jan 2025 17:24:11 GMT
Clad in white and pink, Deborah Bossou, 25, blends vibrant song with dance as she immerses herself with fellow practitioners in Vodun, traditional voodoo celebrations in Benin.This weekend brought the traditional Vodun Days annual festival encompassing arts, culture and voodoo spirituality to the southern town of Ouidah, centre on the Sakpata Zoungbodji religious convent.”This religion, …
Benin’s women, pillars of voodoo celebrationsSat, 11 Jan 2025 17:24:11 GMT Read More »
LA fires expand as winds forecast to pick up
The largest of the Los Angeles’ fires spread toward previously untouched neighborhoods Saturday, forcing new evacuations and dimming hopes that the disaster was coming under control.Across the city, at least 11 people have died as multiple fires have ripped through residential areas since Tuesday, razing thousands of homes in destruction that US President Joe Biden likened to a “war scene.”Despite huge firefighting efforts, the Palisades fire’s expansion prompted evacuation orders in ritzy neighborhoods along its eastern flank, which include the famous Getty Center art museum.Winds were forecast to pick up again on Saturday after a brief lull, posing the risk of new fires as embers are blown into dry brush.Los Angeles residents have increasingly demanded to know who is at fault for the disaster as they grapple with the ruin and local anger rises over officials’ preparedness and response.Residents like Nicole Perri, whose home in the upscale Pacific Palisades burnt down, told AFP that officials “completely let us down.””I don’t think the officials were prepared at all,” said James Brown, a 65-year-old retired lawyer across the city in Altadena.California Governor Gavin Newsom on Friday ordered a “full independent review,” describing the lack of water supplies during the initial fires as “deeply troubling.””We need answers to how that happened,” he wrote in an open letter.As reports of looting grew, a sunset-to-sunrise curfew was imposed in evacuated areas.Around two dozen arrests have already been made across Los Angeles, where some residents have organized street patrols and kept armed watch over their own houses.The National Guard has been deployed to bolster law enforcement.- 12,000 buildings gone -Five separate fires have so far burned more than 37,000 acres (15,000 hectares), destroying around 12,000 buildings, California’s fire agency reported.The Los Angeles County medical examiner’s office confirmed an additional fatality on Friday, bringing the overall death toll so far to 11, though the figure is expected to rise.”It reminded me of more of a war scene, where you had certain targets that were bombarded,” said Biden, as he received a briefing at the White House.Winds had calmed Friday, providing a fleeting window of opportunity for firefighters battling blazes around the clock for a fourth consecutive day.”Braveheart” actor Mel Gibson was the latest celebrity to reveal his Malibu home had burned down, telling NewsNation the loss was “devastating.”Paris Hilton, Anthony Hopkins and Billy Crystal were among a long list of celebrities who lost houses, while Prince Harry and his wife Meghan — who quit royal life in 2020 and moved to California — were seen comforting survivors.The Palisades fire was only eight percent contained on Saturday morning and spreading east after burning 21,600 acres.Emergency chiefs warned the situation was still extremely dangerous.The winds “are going to increase again in the coming days,” said Deanne Criswell, administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).Authorities have said it was too early to know the cause of the blazes.- Blame game -Biden on Friday took a veiled swipe at incoming president Donald Trump, who has spread misinformation over the fires that has then been amplified on social media.”You’re going to have a lot of demagogues out there trying to take advantage,” the president said.Newsom, who has been blamed for the disaster by the president-elect, invited Trump to visit Los Angeles and survey the devastation with him.”We must not politicize human tragedy or spread disinformation from the sidelines,” said Newsom.Los Angeles fire chief Kristin Crowley pointed to recent funding cuts of the service, saying her department was chronically under-resourced and short of staff.Wildfires occur naturally, but scientists say human-caused climate change is altering weather and changing the dynamics of the blazes.Emergency managers apologized Friday after false evacuation alerts were erroneously sent to millions of mobile phones, sparking panic.
François Bayrou salue le “courage” d’Anne-Marie Comparini lors de ses obsèques à Lyon
Le Premier ministre François Bayrou a loué le “courage” d’Anne-Marie Comparini samedi à Lyon lors des obsèques de l’ancienne présidente de la région Rhône-Alpes et son alliée de longue date, décédée à 77 ans.Au sortir la cathédrale Saint-Jean dans le Vieux-Lyon, le Premier ministre a salué la mémoire d’une femme “formidablement courageuse et formidablement généreuse”.”Que je me trouve dans cette responsabilité au moment où elle effectue son dernier voyage, (…) ça a du sens” a-t-il ajouté devant la presse après cette cérémonie durant laquelle il a rendu hommage à sa fidèle alliée. Il n’a pas voulu répondre à d’autres questions. Le maire de Lyon Grégory Doucet ainsi que le ministre chargé des relations avec le Parlement, Patrick Mignola étaient aussi présents à la cérémonie religieuse. Née le 11 juillet 1947 à Orange (Vaucluse), Anne-Marie Comparini était encartée à l’UDF (centre-droit) et avait occupé les fonctions d’assistante parlementaire de l’ancien Premier ministre Raymond Barre, dont elle a également été l’adjointe à la politique de la Ville à la mairie de Lyon.En 1999, elle est devenue la première femme élue à la présidence du conseil régional Rhône-Alpes, dont elle sera à la tête jusqu’en 2004.Députée du Rhône depuis 2002, elle s’est présentée aux législatives de 2007 sous l’étiquette d’union UDF et Modem, mais a été battue dès le premier tour.Elle avait annoncé son retrait de la politique peu après les législatives de 2007, mais a néanmoins soutenu Emmanuel Macron, dont elle a présidé le comité de soutien lyonnais en 2022.
Sudan army says enters key paramilitary-held Al-Jazira state capitalSat, 11 Jan 2025 16:09:52 GMT
The Sudanese military and allied armed groups launched an offensive Saturday on key Al-Jazira state capital Wad Madani, entering the city after more than a year of paramilitary control, the army said.In a statement, the armed forces “congratulated” the Sudanese people on “our forces entering the city of Wad Madani this morning”.Sudan’s army and Rapid Support …
France hands over second army base in Chad amid withdrawalSat, 11 Jan 2025 15:45:22 GMT
France on Saturday handed over its second army base in Chad as part of an agreement with the country’s authorities to withdraw its military forces.The central African country in late November abruptly ended military cooperation with its former colonial ruler, and French troops began leaving the country in late December.”Today… marks the handover of the …
France hands over second army base in Chad amid withdrawalSat, 11 Jan 2025 15:45:22 GMT Read More »
Malala Yousafzai at Muslim girls’ education summit snubbed by Taliban
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai on Saturday joined a global summit on the education of Muslim girls that was snubbed by Afghanistan’s Taliban government.The two-day conference hosted by Pakistan has brought together education officials from dozens of Muslim-majority countries, but without Afghanistan — the only country in the world where girls are banned from school.”The Muslim world including Pakistan faces significant challenges in ensuring equitable access to education for girls,” Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said at the opening of the summit in the capital Islamabad. “Denying education to girls is tantamount to denying their voice and their choice, while depriving them of their right to a bright future.”Pakistan Education Minister Khalid Maqbool Siddiqui told AFP that Islamabad had extended an invitation to Kabul, “but no one from the Afghan government was at the conference”.Muhammad al-Issa, a Saudi cleric and secretary general of the Muslim World League — which has backed the summit — said religion was no grounds for blocking girls from school.”The entire Muslim world has agreed that girls’ education is important, and those who say that girls’ education is un-Islamic are wrong,” he said. Roza Otunbayeva, the head of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), urged leaders of Islamic countries to support Afghan girls.”I really call on all these ministers … who came from all over the world, to offer scholarships, to have online education, to have all sorts of education for them. This is the task of the day,” she told a panel. Yousafzai, who was shot by Pakistan Taliban militants in 2012 when she was a schoolgirl, is due to address the conference on Sunday.”I’m truly honoured, overwhelmed and happy to be back in Pakistan,” she told AFP as she arrived at the conference with her parents. She earlier posted on social media that she would speak about “why leaders must hold the Taliban accountable for their crimes against Afghan women & girls”.Since returning to power in 2021, the Afghan Taliban government has imposed an austere version of Islamic law that the United Nations has called “gender apartheid”. Yousafzai’s father Ziauddin Yousafzai, a teacher who pushed against cultural norms for his daughter to go to school in Pakistan, told AFP he had not seen “any serious step or serious action from the Muslim world” on the cause of girls’ education in Afghanistan. – ‘At last’ -Pakistan is facing its own severe education crisis, with more than 26 million children out of school, according to government figures, one of the highest numbers in the world. Sharif said “inadequate infrastructure, safety concerns, as well as deeply entrenched societal norms” were barriers to girls’ education. Zahra Tariq, a 23-year-old studying clinical psychology who attended the opening of the summit, told AFP: “At last we have a good initiative on Muslim girls’ education.” But, Tariq added, “Those in rural areas are still facing problems. In some cases their families are the first barrier.”Yousafzai became a household name after she was attacked by Pakistan Taliban militants on a school bus in the remote Swat valley in 2012.Militancy was widespread in the region at the time as the war between the Afghan Taliban and NATO forces raged across the border in Afghanistan. The Pakistan and Afghan Taliban are separate groups but share close links and similar ideologies, including a strong disbelief in educating girls.Yousafzai was evacuated to the United Kingdom after her attack and went on to become a global advocate for girls’ education and, at the age of 17, the youngest Nobel Peace Prize winner.Â