Christophe Hondelatte quitte Europe 1 et lance son podcast en janvier

Le journaliste Christophe Hondelatte a annoncé vendredi quitter Europe 1 après 10 ans au sein de la radio et lancer sa plateforme de podcasts, “100% Hondelatte”, le 12 janvier.”Je quitte ce soir mon bureau à Europe 1 avec un petit pincement au coeur”, a-t-il déclaré dans une vidéo postée sur X.Il propose de le “suivre” dans son nouveau podcast, “100% Hondelatte”, qui “sera disponible sur toutes les plateformes à partir du 12 janvier”.Le journaliste, qui va aussi monter sur scène à partir du 20 janvier, avait déjà quitté l’antenne d’Europe 1 à la rentrée tout en continuant les podcasts pour la radio.”Ca me plaît beaucoup plus de faire du podcast que de la radio. Il n’y a pas de contraintes horaires et je touche un autre public, beaucoup plus jeune. Cela permet aussi de créer d’autres liens”, avait-il expliqué au Parisien fin août.Le sexagénaire avait présenté pendant plus de dix ans l’émission de faits divers “Faites entrer l’accusé” sur France 2, avant d’intégrer Europe 1 en 2016.

Report de l’accord UE-Mercosur: le Paraguay s’impatiente

Le Paraguay a averti vendredi l’Union européenne que le temps n’était pas “infini” pour signer l’accord commercial avec le Mercosur, lors d’une réunion du bloc sud-américain bousculée par le report de la signature de ce texte qui attise la colère des agriculteurs européens.L’Argentine, le Brésil, le Paraguay et l’Uruguay, réunis dans la ville brésilienne de …

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MAGA civil war erupts into the open at Turning Point meeting

The first major gathering of Turning Point USA since the murder of its influential founder was supposed to bring America’s right-wing activists together to celebrate the life of Charlie Kirk. Instead, it is laying bare the divisions of a fractious conservative coalition, increasingly worried about its electoral prospects and about President Donald Trump’s fraying popularity.Key figures in the Make America Great Again movement took to the stage in Phoenix on Thursday to tear into each other, blasting opponents for cozying up to fascists or accusing them of besmirching the memory of a man who acted as a unifying force.Influential podcaster Ben Shapiro came straight out of the gate, attacking former Fox News host Tucker Carlson for an uncritical interview with self-described white nationalist Nick Fuentes.”The conservative movement is… in danger from charlatans who claim to speak in the name of principle, but actually traffic in conspiracism and dishonesty,” he said.Shapiro said Carlson should never have given oxygen to Fuentes, whose views are described as antisemitic, misogynistic and racist. Kirk had “despised” Fuentes, Shapiro added.”He knew that Nick Fuentes is an evil troll and that building him up is an act of moral imbecility, and that is precisely what Tucker Carlson did.”Carlson shot back, mocking Shapiro for suggesting censorship, which he claimed was anathema to the Turning Point founder.”Deplatforming and denouncing people at a Charlie Kirk event. I’m like, what? It’s hilarious,” he told the audience a few hours later.The brewing MAGA civil war is over who will take the reins when Trump — who cannot run for the White House again — steps back.- JD Vance -No one has formally declared their candidacy for the 2028 Republican presidential nomination, but a number of names are being bandied around as pretenders to the throne.They include Fuentes and firebrand congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, who last month broke with Trump, saying his second term agenda was a betrayal of his voters.Vice President JD Vance, who is due to speak at the gathering on Sunday, got a significant boost Thursday when Erika Kirk endorsed him for a 2028 White House run.”We are going to get my husband’s friend JD Vance elected for 48 in the most resounding way possible,” she said to cheers from the thousands-strong crowd. The next US president will be the country’s 48th leader.Former presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy, who ran for the Republican nomination in 2024, did not comment directly on Kirk’s endorsement.”We’re at a fork in the road, and I think that there are competing visions for the future of the right,” Ramaswamy told AFP. “I think it’s great for us to have that conversation.”The Vance endorsement from Turning Point’s new CEO is why Shapiro is annoyed, hinted Carlson, whose newsletter on Friday gloated “Sorry, Ben Shapiro, JD is America First.””Trump created this amazing coalition, bringing in people who had never voted Republican before…and that coalition took over the most powerful government in the history of the world,” Carlson told the audience on Thursday.”So there’s a lot of blood at stake here, as the question becomes, who gets to run it after, who gets the machinery when the President exits the scene.”There are a lot of people in Washington, maybe even in this room, who aren’t quite sure what they want, but they know they don’t want — JD Vance.”The spat between two of the loudest voices in the conservative mediasphere comes as former Daily Wire host Candace Owens continues to cause waves with a series of provocative claims.Owens, whose YouTube channel has 5.7 million subscribers, is involved in a bizarre fight with French President Emmanuel Macron over wild claims his wife Brigitte is actually a man.She is also in a quarrel with Erika Kirk over unsubstantiated claims of a conspiracy involving the US and Israeli governments in the killing of her husband.Kirk on Thursday sought to tamp down the divisions on the right, which she said had appeared after Charlie’s death.”When he was assassinated, we saw infighting. We’ve seen fractures,” she said.”We’ve seen bridges being burned, that shouldn’t be burned.”

US Afghans in limbo after Washington soldier attack

Afghans who worked alongside US troops during almost two decades of war were once promised a home in the United States to shelter them from the extremist intolerance of the Taliban.But after two National Guard soldiers were shot — one of them fatally — in Washington last month, allegedly by an Afghan national, their fates have been put on hold, and many are now terrified about what the future might bring.”Everybody is scared,” a 31-year-old Afghan green card holder told AFP.”We are scared that we will be judged by people for the crimes committed by one individual from Afghanistan.”West Virginia National Guard Specialist Sarah Beckstrom, 20, died from her wounds after what officials described as an “ambush-style” attack that also left fellow Guardsman Andrew Wolfe, 24, fighting for his life.The following day President Donald Trump announced he was halting all migration from what he called “third world countries,” including Afghanistan, as his administration announced a review of all residency grants for people from 19 countries — around 1.6 million people, according to an AFP tally.Now Afghans fear they might be sent back to a nation run by the Islamist extremists who they once worked to defeat.”I made my home in America, now this is my home. If I leave here where I have to go then?” sobbed Maryam.Like all Afghan nationals AFP spoke to for this story, Maryam did not want to be identified for fear of angering US immigration authorities.”When I sleep my chest feels very painful, empty,” she said. “I feel like I belong to nowhere.”- Collapse -The 27-year-old worked on projects for the US embassy in Kabul, where she helped produce education materials that she says cast the Taliban in a bad light.When the American-led international force was there, her country began to modernise, giving rights to women that their mothers did not have.”I did education, I had a big dreams for my country, for myself,” she said from her home outside Los Angeles.But in August 2021, the last US troops hurriedly withdrew from Afghanistan as the Taliban ran riot, taking over the institutions that American taxpayers had spent billions of dollars to prop up.Hundreds of thousands of Afghans scrambled to leave the country, terrified that the Islamists would exact revenge on anyone who had helped the West.”It was so difficult to get into the airport,” said Khan, who describes printing out dozens of documents, including proof that his wife was a US citizen living in California.”There was no water, no food, nothing. And we spent four days in there,” he said. “It was too cold during the night.”Khan, who worked in a university and at a government bank, finally got a plane to Qatar, then on to Germany before being flown to New Jersey, where he underwent two months of background checks and processing.”We truly thank United States. They helped us a lot to come… and rebuild our life here.”- Scared -Khan says he worked day and night in Anaheim, California to save money, often doing two jobs, and now has his own used car dealership.He has also bought a triplex, part of which he rents out to provide a source of income, and secured his green card for permanent US residency.”I was about to apply to my citizenship by the end of December, but unfortunately, after the incident in Washington DC, everything is paused,” he said.”Everybody is scared, whoever is having like a green card, a parole status, or they have applied for asylum or whatever status they have, all of them are scared.”We had a lot of dreams,and now every day everything becomes more difficult, and our dreams are, like, going the other way.”For Maryam, who works for an NGO in California’s Orange County, all she wants is to be able to get her green card application back on track, and for her community to be treated fairly.”What the person did does not represent us,” she said of the shooter in Washington.”We are all committed to America; we are not the traitor, we are the survivor.”

Burkinabe teen behind viral French ‘coup’ video has no regretsSat, 20 Dec 2025 01:16:50 GMT

A Burkinabe teenager who used artificial intelligence to post fake news of a French coup on Facebook got more than he bargained for.As well as millions of views and tens of thousands of “likes”, he also acquired a certain notoriety — and French President Emmanuel Macron, for one, was not amused.And what he had planned …

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US strikes over 70 IS targets in Syria after attack on troops

US forces struck more than 70 Islamic State group targets in Syria on Friday in what President Donald Trump described as “very serious retaliation” for an attack that killed three Americans last weekend.Washington said a lone gunman from the militant group carried out the December 13 attack in Palmyra — home to UNESCO-listed ancient ruins and once controlled by jihadist fighters — that left two US soldiers and a US civilian dead.In response, the United States “struck more than 70 targets at multiple locations across central Syria with fighter jets, attack helicopters, and artillery,” US Central Command (CENTCOM) said in a statement.”The operation employed more than 100 precision munitions targeting known ISIS infrastructure and weapons sites,” CENTCOM said, using an acronym for the Islamic State group.Trump said in a post on his Truth Social network that the United States is “inflicting very serious retaliation, just as I promised, on the murderous terrorists responsible,” and that those who attack Americans “WILL BE HIT HARDER THAN YOU HAVE EVER BEEN HIT BEFORE.”CENTCOM said that US and allied forces have “conducted 10 operations in Syria and Iraq resulting in the deaths or detention of 23 terrorist operatives” following the Palmyra attack, without specifying which groups the militants belonged to.- ‘No safe havens’ -Syria’s foreign ministry, while not directly commenting on the Friday strikes, said in a post on X that the country is committed to fighting the Islamic State (IS) group and “ensuring that it has no safe havens on Syrian territory, and will continue to intensify military operations against it wherever it poses a threat.”The Americans killed in the Palmyra attack last weekend were Iowa National Guard sergeants William Howard and Edgar Torres Tovar, and Ayad Mansoor Sakat, a civilian from Michigan who worked as an interpreter.Trump, Hegseth and top military officer General Dan Caine were among the US officials who attended a somber ceremony marking the return of the dead to the United States on Wednesday.The attack was the first such incident since the overthrow of longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad in December last year, and Syrian interior ministry spokesman Noureddine al-Baba said the perpetrator was a security forces member who was due to be fired for his “extremist Islamist ideas.”The US personnel who were targeted were supporting Operation Inherent Resolve, the international effort to combat IS, which seized swaths of Syrian and Iraqi territory in 2014.The jihadists were ultimately defeated by local ground forces backed by international air strikes and other support, but IS still has a presence in Syria, especially in the country’s vast desert.Trump has long been skeptical of Washington’s presence in Syria, ordering the withdrawal of troops during his first term but ultimately leaving American forces in the country.The Pentagon announced in April that the United States would halve the number of US personnel in Syria in the following months, while US envoy for Syria Tom Barrack said in June that Washington would eventually reduce its bases in the country to one.US forces are currently deployed in Syria’s Kurdish-controlled northeast as well as at Al-Tanf near the border with Jordan.

Trump’s name added to Kennedy Center facade, a day after change

US President Donald Trump’s name was affixed to the Kennedy Center in Washington on Friday, one day after his hand-picked board members voted to rename the arts venue in spite of legal questions.Workmen on scissor lifts added metal lettering to the building’s facade, before dropping a blue tarpaulin to reveal the sign saying “The Donald J. Trump and the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center For the Performing Arts.”But family members of president Kennedy, who was assassinated in 1963, have criticized the move as “beyond wild” and said an act of Congress is needed to alter the name of the US national cultural center.Trump said Thursday that he was “surprised” by the rebranding — even though he personally purged the board of the center after calling it too woke, and had already talked about having his name added to it.The 79-year-old Republican even appointed himself as its chairman of the board earlier this year.”Today, we proudly unveil the updated exterior designation — honoring the leadership of President Donald J. Trump and the enduring legacy of John F. Kennedy,” the center said on its newly rebranded X account, along with photos of the lettering.Naming a national institution after a sitting president is unprecedented in US history. Landmarks like the Washington Monument, Lincoln Memorial and indeed the Kennedy Center were all named after their deaths.But Trump, who long emblazoned his name on his skyscrapers and casinos during his career as a property magnate, has shown little hesitation about doing the same thing as president.He has stamped his mark on the Kennedy Center since the start of his second term as part of an assault on cultural institutions that his administration has accused of being too left-wing.During his second term he has given his name to a Washington peace institute, trust funds for children he has branded “Trump accounts” and a “Trump Gold Card” for high-paying immigrants that he showed off on Friday.Trump has also embarked on a huge overhaul of the White House, knocking down the East Wing to build a $400 million ballroom and this week putting up plaques rewriting the history of his presidential predecessors.