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Donald Trump steps back, charges against Fed Chairman Jerome Powell dropped

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The President of the United States, Donald Trump, and the Chairman of the American Federal Reserve, Jerome Powell, during a visit to the headquarters of the institution under construction, in Washington, July 24, 2025.

After threatening with all the fires of hell, Donald Trump has once again backed down. The American Department of Justice announced on Friday April 24 that the investigation into Jerome Powell, Chairman of the Federal Reserve (Fed), was suddenly abandoned. This turnaround paves the way for the confirmation in the Senate of Kevin Warsh, the White House candidate, to become the next president of the central bank of the United States, from mid-May, at the end of Jerome Powell’s mandate.

Read also | Article reserved for our subscribers Kevin Warsh, Donald Trump’s candidate to head the Fed, faces the Senate test

The Trump administration actually didn’t have many options after finding itself in a bind, of its own making. The confirmation of Kevin Warsh has been blocked for several weeks at the Senate banking committee stage, because of a Republican elected official, Thom Tillis, attached to the independence of the institution. The North Carolina senator, whose vote is decisive, has vowed not to vote as long as the investigations against Jerome Powell continue.

The investigation in question concerns the spiraling costs of work on the historic Fed buildings in Washington. She is widely seen as politically motivated. Donald Trump has fierce hatred for Jerome Powell, who did not comply with the demands of the White House in terms of lowering the institution’s key rates. The current administration has made prosecutions a weapon of intimidation against anyone it perceives as adversaries. The American president himself had asked in a message addressed to former Attorney General Pam Bondi, published – probably by mistake – on his social networks, to take action against several of his opponents.

You have 66.39% of this article left to read. The rest is reserved for subscribers.

Originally published at Almouwatin.com

In the United Kingdom, the assisted dying bill in England and Wales fails in Parliament

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An assisted dying bill in England and Wales failed to pass Parliament on Friday after its review failed to be finalized on time after being stalled for months in the House of Lords.

In a historic vote in June 2025, the House of Commons approved the legalization of assisted dying in England and Wales for certain terminally ill patients. But the bill stalled in the House of Lords, where more than 1,200 amendments had been tabled, making it impossible to pass it in time. The last debate on the text was held on Friday in this upper and unelected house, and concluded with the abandonment of the text.

Lord Charlie Falconer, who brought this law into the upper house, denounced during a press conference “pure obstructionism on the part of a small group” of peers. At the opening of the session on Friday, he was keen to emphasize that this “bill, so important for so many people”, was not going to be “rejected on the merits, but due to procedural maneuvers”.

Both chambers must approve the bill for it to take effect. It is customary for texts still under discussion at the end of a parliamentary session to be generally abandoned.

Read also | Article reserved for our subscribers In the United Kingdom, the House of Commons passes a law on assisted dying

Labor MP Kim Leadbeater, who presented the text at the end of 2024, said on Friday morning on [ses] colleagues, activists and families to ensure that the issue is brought up again in the next parliamentary session.” Lord Falconer accused a “small minority” of Lords of having “disrespected” those who supported the bill by multiplying the amendments, echoing the same regret expressed Thursday in a letter signed by more than 200 members of the upper house.

Strong mobilization

A handful of supporters of the text gathered again Friday morning in front of Parliament to denounce the blockage. Among them Rebecca Wilcox, daughter of a television star in the United Kingdom, Esther Rantzen, who has terminal lung cancer. She deplored to Agence France-Presse a “denial of democracy”.

The debate on assisted dying has given rise to lively and often emotional exchanges since 2024, both in Parliament and outside, where supporters and detractors of the text have mobilized on numerous occasions. Supporters of the law argue that it could have provided more dignity and freedom of choice over the end of life for people with incurable illnesses.

According to the text, a patient’s request had to be validated by two doctors and a panel of experts, and the person concerned had to be able to administer the lethal substance themselves. The Lords opposed to the bill assured that they had only carefully examined its contents.

The president of Care Not Killing, Gordon Macdonald, welcomed the failure of a text that he considered “both dangerous and inapplicable”, “riddled with gaps”. If it had been adopted, it would have “left the most vulnerable, including people suicidal or under financial pressure, dangerously exposed” to pressure, he said in a press release.

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The Isle of Jersey and the Isle of Man, dependencies of the British Crown with their own government, have already approved similar texts, which are still awaiting the royal seal before they can come into force. In Scotland, Parliament rejected in mid-March, with a fairly narrow majority (69 against 57), a similar project aimed at legalizing assisted dying.

Read also | Article reserved for our subscribers Despite promises, the too slow growth of palliative care in France

The World with AFP

Originally published at Almouwatin.com

Faced with the ravages of bovine tuberculosis, Annie Genevard, the Minister of Agriculture, announces an increase in compensation for breeders

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The Minister of Agriculture, Annie Genevard, announced on Friday April 24 the increase in compensation granted to breeders forced to slaughter their animals affected by bovine tuberculosis. This infectious disease, mainly carried by wild animals and transmissible to humans, finds a reservoir in the cattle herd.

“When the arrival of this disease on a farm leads to the slaughter-diagnosis of herds, we compensate,” underlined Ms. Genevard, who announced an increase of 850 euros in the compensation paid per cattle over 24 months old, during the congress in Avignon of health defense groups, departmental associations of breeders dedicated to animal health.

“We are therefore going from 2,500 euros to 3,350, with a retroactive effect,” she said, adding that “the revaluation and retroactivity were eagerly awaited by breeders. And despite the budgetary context that each of us is experiencing, the government has decided to respond favorably to this request from breeders which will bring great relief.”

Around 7,000 animals slaughtered in 2024, according to the FNSEA

The minister announced that she was working on this revaluation during the congress of the National Federation of Farmers’ Unions (FNSEA), whose president questioned her on the subject.

In mid-March, 50 outbreaks of tuberculosis had been detected in France, according to the latest report available on the ministry’s website.

In 2025, 93 outbreaks had been detected, especially in the South-West and Corsica, and 81 outbreaks in 2024, i.e. an incidence rate of less than 0.1%, which allows France to maintain the “free” status conditioning the animal trade.

Read also | Article reserved for our subscribers “We have slaughtered 140 animals, I hope it will stop there”: in Orne, bovine tuberculosis is putting farms and the raw milk sector under pressure

According to the National Bovine Federation, a specialized association of the FNSEA, around 7,000 animals were slaughtered in 2024 and 5,000 in 2025. That is more than the approximately 3,500 slaughtered due to contagious lumpy skin disease which appeared in June 2025.

The selective culling of herds in the event of tuberculosis infection is possible by derogation and was relaxed in November 2025, contrary to the protocol in force for dermatosis.

Read also | Article reserved for our subscribers Agricultural Show: cattle breeders from Lot-et-Garonne recount nearly twenty years of regular slaughter of their herd

The World with AFP

Originally published at Almouwatin.com

“I am convinced that it was someone who knew”: a collector had 300,000 euros of Pokémon cards stolen in Dordogne

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Usually, they are in a bank safe… It was during the few hours that they were not there that Myke Petel had his Pokémon cards that he was collecting stolen, in Dordogne. Amount of damage? Nearly 300,000 euros, according to him.

This enthusiast told his story to Sud-Ouest and Ici (formerly France Bleu). The events occurred on Tuesday April 21, at his home in Prigonrieux (Dordogne). “A man rang the doorbell and pretended to be a delivery man,” he explains to Sud-Ouest, before recounting how this fake delivery man overpowered him before “bringing an accomplice” into his home.

The criminals then head into the room where he stores his Pokémon cards. He had taken them out of the safe he rented from a bank during a convention, organized two days earlier, during which he had exhibited them. “I am convinced that it is someone who knew very well what was there, and I even wonder if it is not someone who has already come to my house”, asks Ici the collector, also well known on social networks.

Damage worth 300,000 euros

According to Myke Petel, several cards as well as a case of trading cards were stolen. The damage is estimated by the young man at 300,000 euros.

The Bergerac public prosecutor’s office confirms “the opening of a flagrant investigation into the counts of armed theft, and the complaint of the victim who deplores damage of 300,000 euros”.

The attraction of Pokémon cards has attracted criminals for several years, while their value continues to rise (some can be worth several hundred thousand euros, depending on their rarity).

At the beginning of April, a man was sentenced to one year in prison and to pay 160,000 euros in damages for having stolen 150,000 euros of Pokémon cards in October 2024 during a burglary in Essonne. The cards were never found.

Originally published at Almouwatin.com

Despite ceasefire, Hormuz tensions continue to throttle supply chains worldwide

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Despite ceasefire, Hormuz tensions continue to throttle supply chains worldwide

The UN Secretary-General has welcomed the extension, calling it “an important step toward de-escalation and creating critical space for diplomacy and confidence-building,” while urging all sides to refrain from actions that could undermine the truce and to engage constructively toward a lasting settlement.

Yet even as diplomatic efforts continue, security incidents in and around the Strait of Hormuz – one of the world’s most critical maritime chokepoints – underscore the fragility of the situation.

Reports of vessels being fired upon or seized by both Iranian and US forces highlight ongoing risks to shipping through the narrow waterway, which carries roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply and a significant share of global fertilizer inputs.

Maritime insurance costs have surged, vessel traffic has dropped sharply since late February, and nearly 20,000 seafarers remain stranded amid the uncertainty.

© NASA/GSFC/Jacques Descloitres

The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow but vital shipping route linking the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and the wider Arabian Sea. It lies between Iran to the north and Oman and UAE to the south.

Shockwaves beyond the region

The disruption is triggering what UN agencies describe as a widening humanitarian and economic shock far beyond the Middle East.

Rising oil prices and reduced maritime traffic are driving up transport, electricity and agricultural input costs across import-dependent economies in Asia – including Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal and the Philippines – with direct consequences for aid delivery and access to essential services.

These pressures are layering onto pre-existing vulnerabilities – from high food insecurity to economic fragility – leaving millions of households and already overstretched response systems with little capacity to absorb further shocks.

Across Asia, an estimated 45.5 million people are already in need of humanitarian assistance, with response plans targeting 27.2 million people and requiring $3.6 billion in funding.

Food security risks mounting

One of the most immediate concerns is the impact on food systems.

Up to one third of global trade in fertilizer raw materials passes through the Strait of Hormuz, and disruptions to ammonia and nitrogen shipments are beginning to constrain supply at a critical time.

In Bangladesh, the shutdown of several state-run fertilizer factories has disrupted domestic production during the winter rice season, creating immediate pressure for farmers.

Higher fuel and transport costs are also feeding into food prices. In Nepal, diesel – the primary fuel for lorries and heavy machinery – has risen sharply, pushing up costs across the economy.

If the crisis persists, UN estimates warn that 9.1 million additional people in Asia could face acute food insecurity.

Worries for next planting season

The timing is especially concerning, coinciding with key crop planting windows.

Farmers facing higher costs and uncertain access to fertilizers may reduce input use, plant less or shift crops – decisions that could lower yields and tighten food supplies in the months ahead.

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has warned that delays in key inputs risk disrupting planting cycles, with impacts extending into the next harvest season.

If we don’t have the inputs in the time that is needed…producers will have to produce with less inputs…and therefore they could have lower yields,” the agency’s Chief Economist Máximo Torero cautioned recently.

Humanitarian operations under pressure

For humanitarian agencies, the crisis is already translating into operational constraints.

Rising fuel costs, disrupted shipping routes and higher insurance premiums are making it more expensive and difficult to deliver assistance – particularly in hard-to-reach and landlocked settings.

In several countries, response plans were already underfunded before the escalation, leaving little room to absorb rising operational costs.

In Afghanistan, logistics costs have risen by around 20 per cent, and up to half of humanitarian commodities risk pipeline breaks. These pressures come as return movements from neighbouring countries continue and humanitarian needs remain acute.

In Myanmar, where 90 per cent of fuel is imported, supply disruptions have led to rationing measures, including vehicle restrictions, complicating the delivery of aid in conflict- and earthquake-affected areas where access was already fragile.

In Bangladesh, fuel-sale limits and scheduled blackouts are affecting energy access and service continuity, while higher freight costs are disrupting supply chains. Across the region, humanitarian actors report reduced operational flexibility and growing difficulty sustaining assistance at scale.

A father and son clear rubble following an earthquake in early September in Kunar province, Afghanistan.

Houses destroyed in an earthquake that struck eastern Afghanistan in August 2025. More than 2,200 people lost their lives and several thousands more were injured.

Squeezed from both sides

The crisis is affecting both sides of the humanitarian equation: needs are rising, while the cost of reaching people is increasing.

Unless additional and flexible funding is mobilised, UN agencies and humanitarian partners warn they may be forced to scale back assistance just as demand accelerates.

The ceasefire extension this week offers a chance to ease tensions. But with uncertainty persisting in the Strait of Hormuz and its effects rippling through supply chains, food systems and aid operations, the risk remains that a temporary shock could metastasise into a deeper and prolonged humanitarian crisis.

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In portfolio: Precia, GTT and ID Logistics – 04/24

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In portfolio: Precia, GTT and ID Logistics – 04/24

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In portfolio: Precia, GTT and ID Logistics - 04/24
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In portfolio: Precia, GTT and ID Logistics – 04/24

La Verdière: an animal shelter forced to close?
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La Verdière: an animal shelter forced to close?

Provence: a petition to cancel Patrick Bruel's tour
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Provence: a petition to cancel Patrick Bruel’s tour

Disappearance of sailor Léo Soulas: one year later, the family files a complaint against 2 sailors from Forbin
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Disappearance of sailor Léo Soulas: one year later, the family files a complaint against 2 sailors from Forbin

Belem: The 3 masts stops at La Seyne this weekend
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Belem: The 3 masts stops at La Seyne this weekend

War in the Middle East: the analysis of Bruno Tertrais of the Foundation for Strategic Research
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War in the Middle East: the analysis of Bruno Tertrais of the Foundation for Strategic Research

Sailing: French Olympic week is in full swing in Hyères
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Sailing: French Olympic week is in full swing in Hyères

Live from the markets: The CAC40 opens slightly lower, to follow STM, L'Oréal, Tesla and EssilorLuxottica - 04/24
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Live from the markets: The CAC40 opens slightly lower, to follow STM, L’Oréal, Tesla and EssilorLuxottica – 04/24

Hit and run in Gap: 5 months in prison
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Hit and run in Gap: 5 months in prison

A 400% increase for the representation costs of the mayor of Lyon
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A 400% increase for the representation costs of the mayor of Lyon

The scout: Activity slows down in Europe - 04/24
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The scout: Activity is stalling in Europe – 04/24

The war in the Middle East "is illegal, it's a big mistake"reaffirms the head of the Spanish government Pedro Sánchez
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The war in the Middle East “is illegal, it’s a big mistake”, reaffirms the head of the Spanish government Pedro Sánchez

Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu announces a draft law on housing this Thursday in Marseille
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Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu announces a draft law on housing this Thursday in Marseille

Boulevard Urbain Sud, Cleanliness, Prado-Carénage tunnel, OM... Benoît Payan's announcements
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Boulevard Urbain Sud, Cleanliness, Prado-Carénage tunnel, OM… Benoît Payan’s announcements

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Originally published at Almouwatin.com

VIDEO. In the red armchairs of “Additional investigation”: Fabrice Toledano, marketing director of Trenitalia France

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After the broadcast of an issue of “Additional investigation” devoted to the SNCF and its derailing prices, Tristan Waleckx questioned the number 2 of its main competitor: Trenitalia, which already provides some journeys on the French network and claims to offer lower prices. Is this really the case?

This text corresponds to part of the transcription of the interview above. Click on the video to watch it in full.

Tristan Waleckx: We’re back at Gare de Lyon, where the SNCF trains depart, but also those of a new addition, Trenitalia, of which you are number 2. Fabrice Toledano, good evening. Trenitalia are these red trains that we see just behind us. You have launched three lines: Paris-Lyon, Paris-Marseille, Paris-Milan. Ultimately, will you be present throughout France?

Fabrice Toledano: You are right, we started at the end of 2021, and it turns out that we have further developed the offer in 2025, since we opened a line between Paris and Marseille with 4 round trips per day. And in December 2025, we intensified the Paris-Lyon line, since we now operate 14 round trips per day during the week between Paris and Lyon. We have already announced, in fact, a project for the end of 2029-beginning of 2030, to connect Paris and London. For that, obviously, we launched a new train order.

We see that there is a new train leaving from Gare de Lyon. Ultimately, how many Trenitalia trains will there be per day?

We plan to add 10 round trips per day between Paris and London at the end of 2029. We have placed an order for new trains. We also launched the construction of a maintenance workshop near Paris, precisely to be able to be autonomous in the maintenance of our trains.

You put forward prices that are cheaper. We looked on your website for the month of May. You know that there are going to be many long weekends this month… If you want to leave the day before May 1st from Paris to Marseille, for example, to get the best Trenitalia rate, you have to wake up early, at 6 a.m., for 72 euros. And we looked on the SNCF website, at the same time, we found the same train for 45 euros. We looked for the following week, another public holiday, the day before Friday May 8. The best price is still 72 euros for Trenitalia, compared to 59 euros for SNCF, officially supposed to be the most expensive company. How is it done?

Prices, in fact, are obviously linked to the filling of our trains, so the more the trains are filled, the more obviously the prices rise.

Does that mean that it’s perhaps a bit of PR, that is to say that we have an average of cheaper tickets, but obviously for dates that don’t really interest travelers?

On the contrary, our Paris-Lyon prices, for example, start from 23 euros. You have to understand that there are 97% of customers who are satisfied with the quality-price ratio because, indeed, they find the prices very attractive.

There, why are bridge watches ultimately cheaper at SNCF than at Trenitalia?

You take an example where, indeed, the day before the bridges, the trains are already full. So that’s when the prices are the most expensive. But when we look overall during the week or a normal weekend, it’s true that the quality-price ratio is often more attractive.

In any case, these are particularly interesting dates, and they are less expensive with your SNCF competitors…

Afterwards, it’s a question of supply and demand. From the moment there are few places available and the demand is there, prices can indeed be higher. Now, we still have to realize that if we take the lines where we are present, for example Paris-Lyon and Paris-Marseille, last year we know that on the Paris-Lyon, on average, prices fell by 10% thanks to competition. On the Paris-Marseille route, prices have fallen by up to 30%.

It’s falling for everyone, for your company, but including the SNCF.

Yes, because competition also allows prices to fall, whereas on lines where there is no competition, prices have not really fallen.

(…)

This text corresponds to part of the transcription of the interview broadcast in “Complément d’investigation” on April 23, 2026, following “SNCF: when prices go off the rails!” “. Click on the video to watch it in full.

Originally published at Almouwatin.com

Devastation at every turn greets UN aid mission to south Lebanon

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Devastation at every turn greets UN aid mission to south Lebanon

“I came here two weeks ago and we’ve come back today again with a convoy… but what is different today is the whole street in front of the hospital is completely destroyed,” said UN Children’s Fund spokesperson, Christophe Boulierac.

In an exclusive video interview with UN News while on mission, Mr. Boulierac showed that although the hospital was still standing, much of what had been around it was not. 

Beside heaps of rubble, collapsed houses lay in ruins, amid burnt-out cars at every turn.

‘Completely destroyed’

The hospital is “kind of functional, but they were running out of water, out of medicine, out of energy. I don’t know about the generator, but it’s likely not working properly,” the UNICEF official continued, before pointing to the large solar panel generator system installed by the agency beside the medical facility that appeared to have been blown up.

“All the buildings in the streets just near the hospitals, they were normal two weeks ago and today they are completely, completely destroyed,” Mr. Boulierac stressed.

“You can see over there the first house, the second house, the third house, the fourth house, the fifth house, sixth, seventh…at least eight houses completely destroyed.”

Desperate measures 

As a fragile ceasefire with Israel beginning 16 April still holds, an unknown number of people are streaming back to their homes in the south, only for some to find them simply flattened. 

The situation remains “very dangerous, especially for civilians”, Mr. Boulierac said, noting major challenges over the provision of water, electricity, health and education. 

“It is still very unstable and still very uncertain, especially for the people, the over one million people who had to leave their homes on 2 March,” the date when Hezbollah attacks on Israel prompted Israeli airstrikes across Lebanon, sparking the latest crisis. 

“And out of them, let’s not forget the 400,000 children who need everything,” the UNICEF worker stressed.

Tributes to fallen ‘blue helmets’ 

In related news, the continued support of UN Member States to Lebanon will be “indispensable” to boost the country’s national armed forces and provide humanitarian assistance with more than one million people still uprooted by the Middle East war, the UN’s peacekeeping chief said on Wednesday.

“Israel will have to do what it takes to create the space and the political and practical and security conditions for that to happen,” said Jean-Pierre Lacroix, Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations, speaking in Geneva.

In an update on the situation in Lebanon, he noted that some 80,000 civilians have remained south of the Litani River despite widespread airstrikes and evacuation orders issued by the Israeli military. 

Many civilians have already headed back to the south, despite the dangers and difficulties of crossing bombed bridges. “It’s going to be challenging to them, they will need support. UNIFIL has recently stepped up its activity in support of humanitarian assistance,” the peacekeeping chief said.

Israeli forces violating Security Council resolution

He noted that the continued presence of the Israeli forces in Lebanese territory “is a violation of resolution 1701” – the Security Council text adopted in 2006 calling for Israeli forces and Hezbollah militants to exit southern Lebanon, and a total end to hostilities.

Mr. Lacroix also paid tribute to the five UNIFIL peacekeepers killed in the south in recent days, three from Indonesia and two from France.

The death of French caporal-chef Anicet Girardin, 31, was announced on Wednesday. It follows an attack on a UNIFIL convoy which came under fire on 18 April while clearing a road in southern Lebanon to re-establish access to isolated UNIFIL positions.  

An initial UN assessment found that the peacekeepers came under fire from non-state armed groups, presumably Hezbollah.

“I reiterate my condolences to France and Indonesia and to the families of the deceased peacekeepers,” he said, insisting that “our peacekeepers are really making a true difference and they’re doing this against the backdrop of an increasingly dangerous environment”.

The situation for the UN’s peacekeepers in southern Lebanon remains uncertain, but it has improved since the force’s headquarters at Naqoura was hit in late March by “a non-state actor”, amid intense Israeli exchanges of fire with Hezbollah fighters. 

“The headquarters, of UNIFIL Naqoura is now in an area where there is a presence of the Israel Defense Forces. That doesn’t mean that UNIFIL is not able to move and operate, even within limits and constraints,” Mr. Lacroix said. 

“Those limits have somewhat loosened up since the beginning of this what I call the relative ceasefire, not full, but still better than during these active hostilities over the past couple of weeks.”

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The crowdfunding crisis calls into question its model

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“Economically, nothing is viable anymore,” says Erwann Le Guilcher, founder of the crowdfunding platform CrowdyBee, while the real estate crowdfunding sector is shaken by the market downturn. “There is a structural problem,” he continues. It’s all about the volume of transactions, but there are fewer good files. The players are hyper-regulated, while the public is poorly educated about crowdfunding. We need to clean all floors! »

Until then, however, this type of investment intended to finance concrete projects (construction of housing, investment in renewable energies, assistance for start-ups, etc.) attracted a growing number of individuals. At the height of its glory, in 2022, crowdfunding financed operations worth 2.4 billion euros, including 1.6 billion for real estate. But the rise in interest rates hit their growth, resulting in an explosion of repayment delays of more than six months. In 2024, 9.5% of real estate projects financed via bonds encountered repayment difficulties; in 2025, this proportion increased to 30%. Collective procedures logically followed. To date, a quarter of the real estate operations financed would be affected.

Read also | Article reserved for our subscribers Crowdfunding remains penalized by the real estate crisis

This violent reversal has lifted the veil on the fragility of the platforms financing real estate projects. The first players in this sector, launched in the mid-2010s, started with a model without fees for savers. The majority of them are paid exclusively by the project leaders they finance, by imposing an interest rate much higher than the 11% which will accrue to savers and pocketing the rest for their operation.

The platforms today pay a high price for the absence of subscription or management fees, which do not exist for any other investment except regulated savings, because they themselves advance the costs of recovery procedures against bad payers. However, these prove to be very costly in terms of lawyer or expert fees. “Savers were made to believe that they could collect 11% returns for free. It is illusory to think that this market anomaly can continue,” warns a professional in the sector.

You have 57.33% of this article left to read. The rest is reserved for subscribers.

Originally published at Almouwatin.com

Live: Oil prices rise again as Trump maintains pressure on Iran

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04/24/2026 – 05:28

Oil prices continue to rise

Oil prices rose further in Asia on Friday morning, with WTI above $97 and North Sea Brent near $107.

Nearly two months after its outbreak on February 28 by Israel and the United States, the war against Iran continues to weigh on energy markets and the global economy, despite the entry into force of a ceasefire on April 8. Traffic is at a standstill in the Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) transited before the conflict, and is now subject to a double Iranian and American blockade.

Donald Trump assured that time was against Tehran as its oil exports were reduced. “I have all the time in the world, but Iran doesn’t,” he wrote on Truth Social on Thursday.

04/24/2026 – 05:27

Latest developments

Donald Trump announces extension of ceasefire in Lebanon by “three weeks”

Donald Trump announced on Thursday an extension of the ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, which expired on Sunday, by “three weeks”, following talks between Israel and Lebanon at the White House. The American president then affirmed that there was a “very good chance” of reaching a peace agreement between the two countries this year.

Explosions in Tehran, air defense system activated

Explosions rang out Thursday evening in Tehran, where the air defense system was activated, Iranian media reported for the first time since a ceasefire with the United States came into force on April 8. An Israeli security source assured AFP that the Israeli army was not attacking Iran.

Oil prices jump more than 5% with renewed tensions in Iran

Oil prices split on Thursday to finally end higher, after new explosions in Tehran and in the absence of any prospect of resuming discussions between Americans and Iranians.

Donald Trump claims to have “all the time in the world” regarding Iran

Donald Trump assured that he had “all the time in the world” regarding the war in the Middle East, unlike Iran according to him, in a message on his Truth Social network. “There will only be an agreement when it is relevant and good for the United States, our allies and, indeed, the rest of the world,” the American president wrote.

Iran’s new supreme leader ‘seriously injured’ but ‘quick-minded’

Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei was seriously injured in an Israeli strike early in the war that killed his father, but is “sharp-minded and active,” the New York Times reports. In a message on

Originally published at Almouwatin.com