Larcher (LR) ne veut “ni suspension ni abrogation” de la réforme des retraites

Le président du Sénat, Gérard Larcher, ne veut “ni suspension ni abrogation” de la réforme des retraites, affirme-t-il dans une interview au Parisien samedi, alors que le Premier ministre François Bayrou prononcera mardi sa déclaration de politique générale, et pourrait faire un geste en direction de la gauche sur cette réforme.”Le message est clair: ni suspension ni abrogation ! Mardi, le Premier ministre fera le choix. Au Sénat, je ne conduirai pas une procédure de suspension ou d’abrogation”, dit le responsable LR, qui prévient: “participation (au gouvernement) ne veut pas dire renoncement”.”Si nous abrogions la réforme des retraites, le coût serait de 3,4 milliards d’euros en 2025, et près de 16 milliards en 2032″, dit M. Larcher, se fondant sur les estimations de l’Assurance retraite. Le président du groupe PS au Sénat, Patrick Kanner, a lui estimé que le gel de la réforme pendant six mois coûterait “entre 2 et 3 milliards d’euros”, qui pourraient être puisés dans le fonds de réserve pour les retraites.”Je fais confiance au Premier ministre. Qu’il soit ouvert et qu’il dialogue avec la gauche, je n’ai aucun problème avec cela. Simplement, sur le régalien et sur le budget, il y a des choses auxquelles la droite ne renoncera pas”, prévient le sénateur des Yvelines.Interviewée sur France 2 samedi matin sur une éventuelle suspension de la réforme des retraites, la porte-parole du gouvernement, Sophie Primas (LR), a affirmé “qu’aujourd’hui tout (était) sur la table”. “Toutes les demandes ont été entendues”, mais “il faut trouver le chemin qui permette de ne pas dégrader les finances publiques et même de les améliorer”, a-t-elle dit.”Le premier ministre décidera ce week-end et annoncera cela dans la discussion générale”, a-t-elle précisé à propos d’un éventuel aménagement du report de l’âge légal de départ à 64 ans.Mais, s’exprimant “à titre personnel”, elle a affirmé qu’une pause lui paraissait “extrêmement difficile”. “Pour faire une pause, il faut un acte législatif, on va reperdre du temps”, a-t-elle observé.Auprès du Parisien, M. Larcher dit attendre de la déclaration de politique générale de M. Bayrou “une ligne, un cap et des engagements”, et, s’agissant du budget, “que l’on poursuive la réduction du déficit et de la dépense publique avec des actes concrets, notamment sur les agences de l’Etat et la simplification” – il cite notamment l’Agence de l’environnement et de la maîtrise de l’énergie (Ademe) et ses “plus de 4 milliards de budget”.”Nous demandons qu’il n’y ait pas de fiscalité supplémentaire en dehors de ce qui avait déjà été débattu au Sénat, à savoir la surtaxe sur les grandes entreprises et la taxation des plus hauts revenus”, ajoute-t-il.Interrogé sur la proportionnelle, M. Larcher ne s’y dit “pas naturellement enclin”, mais propose d’ouvrir le débat sur son instauration “dans certains départements à condition que le lien entre député et territoire soit sauvegardé”, en permettant de nouveau aux parlementaires d’avoir en sus un mandat exécutif local, “maire par exemple”.

LA city, fire officials deny rift as infernos rage

Los Angeles city and fire officials put on a united front Saturday following reports of a furious row over the handling of devastating wildfires raging throughout the city.In an at-times tense press conference, Los Angeles mayor Karen Bass denied a report that she had been planning to fire Los Angeles City Fire Department Chief Kristin Crowley.Crowley, standing alongside Bass, meanwhile said the city’s political leaders, fire and police departments were “all on the same page” as they battled the devastating infernos that have left at least 11 people dead.Crowley had appeared to direct a barb at city leaders on Friday when she said her department was underfunded.”My message is the fire department needs to be properly funded,” Crowley told Fox television’s local network. “It’s not.”Hours later, Crowley met Bass in a private meeting at city hall which ran so late that Bass was forced to miss a scheduled news briefing. The Daily Mail later reported on its website that Bass had fired Crowley.Yet on Saturday Bass and Crowley denied the reported rift as they stood alongside Los Angeles Police Department chief Jim McDonnell.”As you see here, the chief and I are lockstep in our number one mission, and that mission is to get us past this emergency,” Bass told reporters. “We want to make sure that we save lives, we save housing, we save businesses, and if there are differences that we have, we will continue to deal with those in private.”Asked if she had been planning to fire Crowley, Bass replied emphatically: “No.”Crowley reiterated that the city’s leaders were united as they battle the disaster.”We are both focused on our urgent needs to mitigate these devastating wildfires, our top priority remains saving lives and protecting property,” Crowley said.Bass insisted that the city’s fire department would be given all resources necessary to combat the flames.”If Chief Crowley calls me and tells me this is what we need, then that’s what we’ll do,” she said.

Braced with fire defenses, Getty art center faces LA flames

After ripping through thousands of buildings, wildfires in Los Angeles were looming Saturday toward the celebrated Getty Center and its priceless collection.Nestled in the mountains above Los Angeles, the famed art museum is within a new evacuation warning zone as the Palisades Fire roars east toward populated areas.Dubbed a “beautiful fortress” and constructed of fire-resistant travertine stone, as well as cement and steel, the center has drawn museum experts from around the world to observe its safety system.Its roofs are covered with crushed stone to prevent embers igniting, and even in the gardens, resilient plants were chosen.Inside, the galleries can be closed off with a vault-like double door that, museum officials say, is practically impenetrable.”Getty staff, the art collections and buildings remain safe from the Palisades Fire,” the museum said Friday, hours before the evacuation warning.”The threat is still happening,” Getty added in an X post.The museum’s unique collection comprises 125,000 artworks — including paintings by Rembrandt, Turner, Van Gogh and Monet — and 1.4 million documents. It also houses a research hub and a foundation.Museum officials have previously said the collection is protected within the center’s fireproof structure, made up of 300,000 travertine blocks and 12,500 tons of steel bars.”The Getty was constructed to house valuable art and keep it very safe from fires, from earthquakes, from any type of damage,” said Lisa Lapin, communications vice president now and when Getty was threatened by fire in 2019.”We are really built like a beautiful fortress, and everything inside is quite safe,” she told AFP at the time.- Getty shuts its doors -Built more than two decades ago by architect Richard Meier, at a cost of $1 billion, the center’s protection measures also include a million-gallon (3.8-million liter) water tank feeding its irrigation system.The building’s ventilation system has an internal recycling system, similar to those found in cars, preventing smoke from entering rooms from the outside.Despite such extensive measures, Getty announced its closure earlier this week “out of caution and to help alleviate traffic.”When the 2019 fire threatened the center, it served as a base for firefighters battling the blaze. Caused by a tree branch falling on power lines, that fire burned 745 acres (300 hectares) and destroyed 10 homes.A fire two years prior also triggered safety measures at Getty, although it affected only the far side of an adjacent freeway.”In both cases, we’ve been very confident that the center is fine,” said Lapin in 2019.The Palisades Fire has ravaged more than 22,000 acres since erupting on Tuesday, and is just 11 percent contained as a series of fires burn through Los Angeles neighborhoods.The fire threatened the separate Getty Villa, which also has special flame resistant protections, earlier in the week.Trees and vegetation around the coastal villa were burned, but the structure and collections — including Greek and Roman antiquities — were spared.

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.