Sécurité routière: les très grands excès de vitesse deviennent un délit
Les excès de vitesse de plus de 50 km/h au-delà de la vitesse maximale autorisée deviennent un délit et non plus une contravention à partir du 29 décembre, “une réponse judiciaire plus ferme”, a salué mercredi la Sécurité routière. Ces très grands excès de vitesse pourront être punis d’une peine de trois mois d’emprisonnement et jusqu’à 3.750 euros d’amende, “avec inscription au casier judiciaire”, d’après le décret publié mercredi au Journal officiel, “en application de la loi du 9 juillet 2025 portant création de l’homicide routier et visant à lutter contre la violence routière”, a précisé la délégation interministérielle à la sécurité routière dans un communiqué. Ils étaient auparavant punis d’une contravention de 5e classe, la plus élevée, sauf en cas de récidive, une sanction qui “n’est plus adaptée à la gravité des faits et à leur recrudescence”. Rouler bien au-delà de la vitesse maximale autorisée “constitue un comportement particulièrement dangereux, susceptible de causer de lourds dommages en cas d’accident”, indique la Sécurité routière. “La vitesse excessive réduit le temps de réaction, allonge la distance de freinage, diminue le contrôle du véhicule et augmente les forces d’impact lors d’une collision”, ajoute le communiqué. En 2024, la Sécurité routière a relevé 63.217 excès de vitesse “supérieurs ou égal à 50 km/h au-dessus de la vitesse maximale autorisée”, soit une hausse de 69% par rapport à 2017.”En classant désormais ce très grand excès de vitesse comme un délit, avec une réponse judiciaire plus ferme, nous envoyons un message clair : la violence routière n’est plus tolérée”, a souligné Marie-Pierre Vedrenne, ministre déléguée auprès du ministre de l’Intérieur, citée dans le communiqué.Les automobilistes roulant trop vite verront aussi leur véhicule confisqué et leur permis suspendu pendant trois ans. Ils auront interdiction “de conduire certains véhicules terrestres à moteur” pendant cinq ans ou plus et devront suivre un stage de sensibilisation à la sécurité routière.
Festive lights, security tight for Christmas in Damascus
Christmas lights illuminate Damascus’s Old City while government forces patrol its shadows as security fears haunt Syria’s Christian community.They recall the shooting and suicide attack in June at the Saint Elias church in the Syrian capital that killed 25 people and wounded dozens more.”People are going home early, and are afraid,” said Tala Shamoun, 26, a university student who was visiting a Christmas market with family and friends.Damascus has seen crime including robberies and kidnappings, she said, but the attack on the church “was the biggest tragedy”, she told AFP.Syria’s authorities blamed the Islamic State jihadist group, while a little-known Sunni Muslim extremist group claimed responsibility.The Islamists that ousted ruler Bashar al-Assad last year have reaffirmed their commitment to coexistence among all of Syria’s religious groups, vowing to involve everyone in the transition.But earlier this year, the country’s Alawite heartland saw sectarian massacres, while Druze-majority areas in the south were hit by major clashes.- ‘Security plan’ -Interior ministry forces searched some pedestrians or stopped people on motorbikes in the Old City.At one of the district’s main entrances, an armed member of the government security forces was holding a walkie-talkie and a map of where his personnel were deployed.”We’ve put a security plan in place that includes several districts and areas in the capital, in order to ensure the safety of all citizens,” he said on condition of anonymity.”It is the state’s duty to protect all its people, Christian and Muslim, and today we are doing our duty to protect the churches and secure people’s celebrations,” he added.Ousted ruler Assad, himself an Alawite, had long presented himself as a protector of minorities, who were the target of attacks during Syria’s war, some of which were claimed by jihadists.Syria’s Christian community is believed to have shrunk from one million in 2011, when the war began, to around 300,000 today, with many seeking refuge abroad.In the Old City, home to a small but vibrant Christian community and several important churches, red baubles hang from some trees, shopkeepers have put up Christmas decorations and street vendors peddle warm chestnuts.So-called neighbourhood committees are also providing additional security, with dozens of local Christians protecting churches in coordination with government forces.- ‘Syria deserves joy’ -Fuad Farhat, 55, from the area’s Bab Touma district, was supervising the deployment of several unarmed, black-clad Christian men with walkie-talkies in front of the churches.Many people fear that Christmas crowds could heighten security risks, but with the additional measures “they feel safer and are more comfortable going out”, he said.”We have been taking steps to protect those celebrating in the Christian neighbourhoods” to avoid any problems, in coordination with the security forces, he said.University student Loris Aasaf, 20, was soaking up the Christmas atmosphere with her friends.”Syria deserves joy and for us to be happy, and to hope for a new future,” she said.”All sects used to celebrate with us, and we hope to see this in the coming years, in order to rebuild Syria,” she added.Near the Saint Elias church which saw June’s deadly attack, government security forces cordoned off entry and exit areas with metal barriers, while heavily armed personnel were searching anyone entering.Church-goers lit up a tree decorated with stars bearing the image of those killed in June.”Christmas this year is exceptional because of the pain and sorrow we went through,” said housewife Abeer Hanna, 44.”The security measures are necessary because we are still afraid,” she said.Nearby, Hanaa Masoud lit a candle for her husband Boutros Bashara and other relatives who were among those killed in the attack.”If we go to church and get blown up, where can we find safety?” she said, choking back tears.
Aux temples d’Angkor, la “peur” du conflit avec la Thaïlande fait chuter la fréquentation
Bordées de statues majestueuses, les allées du temple d’Angkor Wat, fierté du Cambodge, sont inhabituellement clairsemées à cette période de l’année. Le conflit à la frontière avec la Thaïlande, à moins de deux heures de route, fait “peur” à certains touristes.Bun Ratana court après les clients autour des vestiges centenaires de l’empire khmer, lentement grignotés …
Appels à évacuer à Los Angeles face au risque d’inondations pour Noël
Les autorités de Los Angeles ont ordonné l’évacuation de centaines de personnes en raison du risque de dangereuses inondations posé par les pluies torrentielles attendues sur la Californie mercredi lors du réveillon de Noël.Un énorme couloir de pluies dit “rivière atmosphérique”, transportant de la vapeur d’eau emmagasinée dans les tropiques, doit traverser le sud de …
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Murree, la brasserie historique du Pakistan, se réjouit d’avoir obtenu une licence d’exportation
Un arôme capiteux de malt et de levure de bière flotte dans la plus ancienne et grande brasserie du Pakistan, qui se prépare à s’agrandir à la faveur d’une autorisation de vendre à l’étranger après près de 50 ans d’interdiction.Fondée en 1860 pour étancher la soif des soldats britanniques et de la communauté coloniale, Murree …
“Stranger Things” tire sa révérence: 5 choses à savoir sur la série phénomène
La série fantastique américaine à succès “Stranger Things” revient vendredi sur Netflix pour trois nouveaux épisodes de la cinquième et dernière saison, avant le grand final le 1er janvier.Voici cinq choses à savoir sur cette série lancée en 2016 qui raconte l’histoire d’adolescents d’une petite ville américaine confrontés à des créatures surnaturelles et un univers …
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El Salvador defends mega-prison key to Trump deportations
El Salvador’s leader Nayib Bukele on Tuesday defended a huge prison that has become key to deportations from the United States under President Donald Trump, after drawing criticism for alleged rights abuses.The Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT) is a maximum security facility lauded by Bukele as part of his attempts to rid the Central American country of prolific narco-gangs.US broadcaster CBS News had been due to air an investigation Sunday about alleged abuses at CECOT on its flagship “60 Minutes” program, but it was pulled at the last minute, leading to accusations of political meddling. Bukele fired back Tuesday against allegations about the prison’s conditions, saying that “if you are convinced that torture is taking place at CECOT, El Salvador is ready to cooperate fully” by releasing the entire prison population to any country willing to take them.”The only condition is straightforward: it must be everyone,” Bukele said in the social media post, specifying that this would include “all gang leaders and all those described as political prisoners.”Bukele’s post follows former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton labeling the prison “brutal” on social media Monday.”Curious to learn more about CECOT? Hear Juan, Andry, and Wilmer share firsthand how the Trump administration branded them as gang members without evidence and deported them to the brutal El Salvadoran prison,” Clinton said in the post in which she also shared an 11-minute video of the PBS Frontline documentary titled: “Surviving CECOT.”- Centuries-long sentences – CECOT has also been at the center of a major US legal case since March, when the Trump administration sent hundreds of Venezuelan and other migrants there despite a judge’s order that they be returned to the United States.Several deportees who have since been released have made claims of repeated abuse at the facility, with human rights groups echoing these allegations.According to rights group Socorro Juridico Humanitario, 454 Salvadorans have died in prisons since Bukele’s crackdown began.Since March 2022, Bukele has been cracking down on gangs under a state of emergency that allows for arrests without warrants.More than 90,000 people have been detained, and some 8,000 have been released after being found not guilty, according to official sources.On Sunday, El Salvador announced prison sentences for hundreds of convicted gang members, with some of them receiving centuries-long terms.The Salvadoran government says gang violence is responsible for 200,000 deaths over the past three decades.
US says China chip policies unfair but will delay tariffs to 2027
US trade officials determined that China should be punished for employing unfair tactics to dominate the semiconductor industry, but will wait 18 months to impose tariffs, American authorities said Tuesday.A US Trade Representative (USTR) investigation concluded China’s targeting of semiconductors “for dominance is unreasonable and burdens or restricts US commerce and thus is actionable,” the agency said in a public notice.The current tariff level of zero will be increased “in 18 months on June 23, 2027 to a rate to be announced not fewer than 30 days prior to that date,” USTR said.Beijing said Wednesday it “firmly opposes” the move and accused Washington of abusing tariffs to “unreasonably suppress Chinese industries”.This “disrupts the stability of the global supply chain, hinders the development of all countries’ semiconductor industries and harms others while hurting itself”, foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian.”We urge the United States to quickly correct its erroneous practices,” Lin said at a regular press briefing.USTR officials launched the probe in December 2024 in the final weeks of Joe Biden’s presidency, extending the initiative when US President Donald Trump took office in January.Trump has been a prolific purveyor of tariffs, unveiling sector-specific levies on steel, autos and other items as well as broader measures to achieve a variety of policy objectives.The White House has jousted with Beijing but reached a broad truce with China after a major escalation in the spring.The USTR’s “Section 301” probe concluded that China had employed “increasingly aggressive and sweeping non-market policies” to dominate semiconductors that have included “massive and persistent” state support of private actors and “wage-suppressing labor practices.”The USTR did not respond to an AFP query on the reason for the 18-month timeframe on tariffs.








