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Suisse: inquiétudes sur la formation d’un lac après un gigantesque éboulement

Les autorités suisses s’inquiètent jeudi de la formation d’un lac artificiel, et d’une possible inondation, après l’éboulement de millions de mètre cubes de glace et de roches qui ont détruit la quasi totalité d’un village dans le sud du pays.Le lac artificiel qui s’est créé après la destruction du glacier du Birch tend à grossir heure par heure et le blocage de la rivière Lonza qui passe au fond de la vallée du Lötschental fait craindre des inondations en aval. “Nous allons essayer, aujourd’hui, de nous rendre compte de ses dimensions”, explique Antoine Jacquod, un responsable de la sécurité civile et militaire du Canton du Valais, à l’agence de presse Keystone-ATS.”Un gros risque d’embâcle existe qui pourrait inonder la vallée en contrebas”, selon le responsable, faisant allusion à l’accumulation de roches, de glace et de terre qui obstrue la rivière.Par précaution, seize personnes ont été évacuées dès mercredi soir dans deux villages situés en aval de la zone sinistrée. “L’embouteillage est d’environ 2 kilomètres de long sur la Lonza (…) et c’est comme une montagne, et bien sûr, cela crée un petit lac qui devient de plus en plus grand”, a expliqué mercredi soir le responsable cantonal en charge de la gestion des dangers naturels, Raphaël Mayoraz.Un barrage artificiel a été préventivement vidé pour contenir l’eau refoulée par le mur de glace, de terre et de gravats.Si l’eau devait déborder de ce barrage artificiel il faudrait alors songer à évacuer la vallée. Le gouvernement cantonal du Valais a demandé à l’armée de fournir des pompes pour sécuriser le lit de la rivière et des appareils de déblaiement. “Savoir quand on pourra concrètement intervenir demeure actuellement une grande inconnue”, admet Antoine Jacquod.L’éboulement du glacier du Birch a détruit en grande partie le petit village de Blatten et fait un disparu, ont indiqué les autorités.L’effondrement du glacier était attendu depuis plusieurs jours, de nombreux éboulements de roche s’étant déjà produits dans la partie montagneuse qui le surplombe.La personne portée disparue est un habitant de la région, âgé de 64 ans, qui, selon les informations de la police cantonale du Valais, se trouvait dans la zone concernée au moment de l’événement. Des images diffusées sur YouTube montrent un immense nuage de glace et de gravats dévalant la pente de la montagne surplombant la vallée.  La force et la vitesse du nuage étaient telles qu’il a poursuivi sa course sur la pente opposée de la vallée.Et le phénomène a été enregistré par toutes les stations sismiques du pays.Selon Raphaël Mayoraz, ce sont “3 millions de mètres cubes de roches qui sont tombés d’un coup sur le glacier, l’emportant avec eux” dans la vallée. 

Suisse: inquiétudes sur la formation d’un lac après un gigantesque éboulement

Les autorités suisses s’inquiètent jeudi de la formation d’un lac artificiel, et d’une possible inondation, après l’éboulement de millions de mètre cubes de glace et de roches qui ont détruit la quasi totalité d’un village dans le sud du pays.Le lac artificiel qui s’est créé après la destruction du glacier du Birch tend à grossir heure par heure et le blocage de la rivière Lonza qui passe au fond de la vallée du Lötschental fait craindre des inondations en aval. “Nous allons essayer, aujourd’hui, de nous rendre compte de ses dimensions”, explique Antoine Jacquod, un responsable de la sécurité civile et militaire du Canton du Valais, à l’agence de presse Keystone-ATS.”Un gros risque d’embâcle existe qui pourrait inonder la vallée en contrebas”, selon le responsable, faisant allusion à l’accumulation de roches, de glace et de terre qui obstrue la rivière.Par précaution, seize personnes ont été évacuées dès mercredi soir dans deux villages situés en aval de la zone sinistrée. “L’embouteillage est d’environ 2 kilomètres de long sur la Lonza (…) et c’est comme une montagne, et bien sûr, cela crée un petit lac qui devient de plus en plus grand”, a expliqué mercredi soir le responsable cantonal en charge de la gestion des dangers naturels, Raphaël Mayoraz.Un barrage artificiel a été préventivement vidé pour contenir l’eau refoulée par le mur de glace, de terre et de gravats.Si l’eau devait déborder de ce barrage artificiel il faudrait alors songer à évacuer la vallée. Le gouvernement cantonal du Valais a demandé à l’armée de fournir des pompes pour sécuriser le lit de la rivière et des appareils de déblaiement. “Savoir quand on pourra concrètement intervenir demeure actuellement une grande inconnue”, admet Antoine Jacquod.L’éboulement du glacier du Birch a détruit en grande partie le petit village de Blatten et fait un disparu, ont indiqué les autorités.L’effondrement du glacier était attendu depuis plusieurs jours, de nombreux éboulements de roche s’étant déjà produits dans la partie montagneuse qui le surplombe.La personne portée disparue est un habitant de la région, âgé de 64 ans, qui, selon les informations de la police cantonale du Valais, se trouvait dans la zone concernée au moment de l’événement. Des images diffusées sur YouTube montrent un immense nuage de glace et de gravats dévalant la pente de la montagne surplombant la vallée.  La force et la vitesse du nuage étaient telles qu’il a poursuivi sa course sur la pente opposée de la vallée.Et le phénomène a été enregistré par toutes les stations sismiques du pays.Selon Raphaël Mayoraz, ce sont “3 millions de mètres cubes de roches qui sont tombés d’un coup sur le glacier, l’emportant avec eux” dans la vallée. 

Cholera outbreak in Sudan capital kills 70 in two daysThu, 29 May 2025 09:19:48 GMT

A cholera outbreak in Sudan’s war-ravaged capital has claimed 70 lives in two days, health officials said Thursday, as Khartoum faces a mounting health emergency after more than two years of brutal conflict.The health ministry for Khartoum state said it recorded 942 new infections and 25 deaths on Wednesday, following 1,177 cases and 45 deaths …

Cholera outbreak in Sudan capital kills 70 in two daysThu, 29 May 2025 09:19:48 GMT Read More »

Macron decorates Indonesia leader, announces cultural partnership

French President Emmanuel Macron bestowed Indonesia’s leader with France’s top award on Thursday, before announcing a new cultural partnership with Jakarta on a visit to the world’s largest Buddhist temple.Macron’s trip to Indonesia is the second stop of a three-nation, six-day tour of Southeast Asia that began with Vietnam and concludes in Singapore.After meeting for talks in the capital Jakarta, Macron and his counterpart Prabowo Subianto flew by helicopter on Thursday from Javan city Yogyakarta to a military academy in Magelang, a city in Central Java surrounded by mountains.The pair attended a military parade and Macron gave Prabowo the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour, France’s highest military or civil award.Prabowo is an ex-general accused of rights abuses under dictator Suharto’s rule in the late 1990s. He was discharged from the military over his role in the abductions of democracy activists but denied the allegations and was never charged.Macron rode in a jeep driven by Prabowo with the pair welcomed by a marching band and hundreds of students waving Indonesian flags.Macron then visited Borobudur, a Buddhist temple built in the 9th century that is the world’s largest, where the pair announced they were boosting cultural ties.”In front of this temple, we are taking an important step by launching a new cultural partnership,” said Macron.”The first pillar is heritage and museum cooperation. The second pillar is cultural and creative industries,” he said.Macron said the basis of the new partnership would be cinema and fashion, as well as video games, design and gastronomy.The French leader will now depart for Singapore where he will deliver the opening address Friday at the Shangri-la Dialogue, Asia’s premier security forum.On Wednesday, the pair called for progress on “mutual recognition” between Israel and the Palestinians at a key meeting next month as Macron brought the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation into his diplomatic efforts.”Indonesia has stated that once Israel recognises Palestine, Indonesia is ready to recognise Israel and open the diplomatic relationship,” said Prabowo.Indonesia has no formal ties with Israel and support for the Palestinian cause among Indonesians runs high.The nations also signed a series of agreements on cooperation in a range of fields including defence, trade, agriculture, disaster management, culture and transport.

S.African woman gets life term for selling 6-year-old daughterThu, 29 May 2025 09:03:51 GMT

A South African court on Thursday sentenced a woman to life in prison for kidnapping and selling her six-year-old daughter, in a case that horrified the country. Joshlin Smith went missing in February last year from her home in Saldanha Bay, a fishing town 135 kilometres (85 miles) north of Cape Town, and has never been …

S.African woman gets life term for selling 6-year-old daughterThu, 29 May 2025 09:03:51 GMT Read More »

Harvard to hold graduation in shadow of Trump ‘retribution’

Harvard is due to hold its annual graduation ceremony Thursday as a federal judge considers the legality of punitive measures taken against the university by President Donald Trump that threaten to overshadow festivities.Thursday’s commencement comes as Trump piles unprecedented pressure on Harvard, seeking to ban it from having foreign students, shredding its contracts with the federal government, slashing its multibillion-dollar grants and challenging its tax-free status.Harvard is challenging all of the measures in court.The Ivy League institution has continually drawn Trump’s ire while publicly rejecting his administration’s repeated demands to give up control of recruitment, curricula and research choices. The government claims Harvard tolerates antisemitism and liberal bias.”Harvard is treating our country with great disrespect, and all they’re doing is getting in deeper and deeper,” Trump said Wednesday.Harvard president Alan Garber, who told National Public Radio on Tuesday that “sometimes they don’t like what we represent,” may speak to address the ceremony.Garber has acknowledged that Harvard does have issues with antisemitism, and has struggled to ensure that a variety of viewpoints can be safely heard on campus.”What is perplexing is the measures that they have taken to address these (issues) don’t even hit the same people that they believe are causing the problems,” Garber told NPR.Basketball star and human rights campaigner Kareem Abdul-Jabbar addressed the class of 2025 for Class Day on Wednesday.”When a tyrannical administration tried to bully and threaten Harvard to give up their academic freedom and destroy free speech, Dr. Alan Garber rejected the illegal and immoral pressures,” he said, comparing Garber to civil rights icon Rosa Parks.Madeleine Riskin-Kutz, a Franco-American classics and linguistics student at Harvard, said some students were planning individual acts of protest against the Trump policies.”The atmosphere (is) that just continuing on joyfully with the processions and the fanfare is in itself an act of resistance,” the 22-year-old said.- Legal fightback -Garber has led the fight-back in US academia after Trump targeted several prestigious universities including Columbia which made sweeping concessions to the administration in an effort to restore $400 million of withdrawn federal grants.A federal judge in Boston will on Thursday hear arguments over Trump’s effort to exclude Harvard from the main system for sponsoring and hosting foreign students.Judge Allison Burroughs quickly paused the policy which would have ended Harvard’s ability to bring students from abroad who currently make up 27 percent of its student body. Harvard has since been flooded with inquiries from foreign students seeking to transfer to other institutions, Maureen Martin, director of immigration services, said Wednesday. “Many international students and scholars are reporting significant emotional distress that is affecting their mental health and making it difficult to focus on their studies,” Martin wrote in a court filing.Retired immigration judge Patricia Sheppard protested outside Harvard Yard on Wednesday, sporting a black judicial robe and brandishing a sign reading “for the rule of law.””We have to look at why some of these actions have been filed, and it does not seem to me seemly that a president would engage in certain actions as retribution,” she told AFP.Ahead of the graduation ceremony, members of the Harvard band sporting distinctive crimson blazers and brandishing their instruments filed through the narrow streets of Cambridge, Massachusetts — home to the elite school, America’s oldest university.A huge stage had been erected and hundreds of chairs laid out in a grassy precinct that was closed off to the public for the occasion.Students wearing black academic gowns also toured through Cambridge with photo-taking family members, AFP correspondents saw.

US trade court blocks tariffs in major setback for Trump

A US federal court blocked most of President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs from going into effect, boosting markets on Thursday even as the White House appealed against the decision by “unelected judges.”The opinion marks a significant setback to Trump as he bids to redraw the US trading relationship with the world by forcing governments to the negotiating table through tough new tariffs.Trump’s global trade war has roiled financial markets with a stop-start rollout of import levies aimed at punishing economies that sell more to the United States than they buy.Trump argued that the resulting trade deficits and the threat posed by the influx of drugs constituted a “national emergency” that justified widespread tariffs.But the three-judge Court of International Trade ruled Wednesday that Trump had overstepped his authority, barring most of the duties announced since he took office in January.The White House slammed the ruling, arguing that “unelected judges” have no right to weigh in on Trump’s handling of the issue.”President Trump pledged to put America first, and the administration is committed to using every lever of executive power to address this crisis and restore American greatness,” Trump’s spokesman Kush Desai said.Attorneys for the Trump administration promptly filed to appeal against the ruling Wednesday.- China: ‘cancel wrongful tariffs’ -The ruling comes as Trump has used the tariffs as leverage in trade negotiations with friends and foes, including the European Union and China.Beijing — which was hit by 145 percent tariffs before they were sharply reduced to give space for negotiations — reacted to the court ruling by saying the United States should scrap the levies.”China urges the United States to heed the rational voices from the international community and domestic stakeholders and fully cancel the wrongful unilateral tariff measures,” said commerce ministry spokeswoman He Yongqian. Japan’s tariffs envoy Ryosei Akazawa said as he left for a fourth round of talks in Washington that Tokyo — reeling from tariffs on cars — would study the ruling.Trump unveiled sweeping import duties on nearly all trading partners on April 2, at a baseline 10 percent, plus steeper levies on dozens of economies, including China and the European Union.The ruling also quashes duties that Trump imposed on Canada, Mexico and China separately using emergency powers.Some of the turmoil was calmed after he paused the larger tariffs for 90 days and suspended other duties, pending negotiations with individual countries and blocs.Asian markets rallied on Thursday and US futures pointed to early gains, but Europe was mixed, with London in the red while Paris and Frankfurt rose.The ruling “throws into disarray several trade deals that have already been agreed, and those that are still in the negotiation phase,” said Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB brokerage firm.- ‘Extraordinary threat’ -The federal trade court was ruling in two separate cases — brought by businesses and a coalition of state governments — arguing that the president had violated Congress’s power of the purse.”The question in the two cases before the court is whether the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 (“IEEPA”) delegates these powers to the president in the form of authority to impose unlimited tariffs on goods from nearly every country in the world,” the three-judge panel wrote in an unsigned opinion.”The court does not read IEEPA to confer such unbounded authority and sets aside the challenged tariffs imposed thereunder.” The judges stated that any interpretation of the IEEPA that “delegates unlimited tariff authority is unconstitutional.” The IEEPA authorizes the president to impose necessary economic sanctions during an emergency “to combat an unusual and extraordinary threat,” the bench said.The ruling gave the White House 10 days to complete the bureaucratic process of halting the tariffs.Gregory Meeks, the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said the ruling confirmed that “these tariffs are an illegal abuse of executive power.””Trump’s declaration of a bogus national emergency to justify his global trade war was an absurd and unlawful use of IEEPA,” he said.White House aide Stephen Miller took to social media to decry a “judicial coup” that he said was “out of control.”burs-stu-lth/ach 

Saudis in ‘difficult’ talks to keep Ronaldo next season: PIF source

Saudi officials are in “difficult” talks to keep Cristiano Ronaldo in the country, a source with knowledge of the negotiations told AFP on Thursday, after the star footballer suggested he was leaving Al Nassr.The Portuguese superstar, whose arrival in 2023 heralded a rush of late-career players to the oil-rich country, could transfer to Al Hilal and feature at the upcoming Club World Club, the source said.”There is an ongoing difficult negotiation to convince Ronaldo to stay and play” in the Saudi Pro League next season, said the source from the Public Investment Fund (PIF), a major investor in Saudi football.”First option is a transfer to Al Hilal with an opportunity to feature in the FIFA Club World Cup or to Asia champion Al Ahli,” the source added.The oil-funded PIF, the sovereign wealth fund behind a number of big-ticket Saudi investments, controls a group of Pro League clubs including Al Nassr, Al Hilal and Al Ahli.Ronaldo posted “This chapter is over” hours after the Saudi Pro League wrapped up this week with Al Nassr finishing third and trophyless once again. A special transfer window opens from June 1-10 to allow the 32 teams involved in the newly expanded Club World Cup to sign players.Last week, FIFA president Gianni Infantino said “there are discussions” over the former United, Real Madrid, Juventus and Sporting Lisbon star playing at the tournament in the United States from June 14.Portuguese forward Ronaldo, 40, joined Al Nassr in early 2023 from Manchester United and his contract expires at the end of next month.”Ronaldo’s presence is a key factor in developing the Saudi league in the last two years and a half. He opens the door for elite and young players to come to Saudi Arabia,” the PIF source said. – ‘Ronaldo might play’ -Ronaldo’s announcement comes just months after Brazilian star Neymar ended his injury-plagued 18-month stay in January, after playing just seven times for Al Hilal — on a reported salary of around $104 million a year.Although Ronaldo was the Pro League’s top scorer with 25 goals, he has been unable to win a Saudi or continental trophy with Al Nassr, who lost in the Asian Champions League semi-finals last month.Last year, the five-time Ballon d’Or winner said he could end his career with Al Nassr, the Riyadh team favoured by a number of Saudi royals.Meanwhile, Ronaldo’s great rival Lionel Messi will play at the Club World Cup with Inter Miami.During a recent interview with YouTuber and streamer IShowSpeed, Infantino said: “And Ronaldo might play for one of the teams as well at the Club World Cup.”There are discussions with some clubs, so if any club is watching and is interested in hiring Ronaldo for the Club World Cup… who knows, who knows.”Saudi Arabia has shaken up football by spending heavily on stars from Europe, starting with Ronaldo’s move, and the desert nation will host the World Cup in 2034.

La Bourse de Paris en hausse après la décision d’un tribunal américain de bloquer les droits de douane de Trump

La Bourse de Paris évolue en forte hausse jeudi après la décision d’un tribunal américain de bloquer les droits de douane américains imposés par l’administration Trump depuis avril, profitant aussi des résultats du géant américain de la technologie Nvidia, meilleurs qu’attendu.L’indice vedette CAC 40 avançait nettement de 1,01% vers 09H50, s’octroyant 78,84 points pour s’établir à 7.866,94 points. Mercredi, le CAC 40 avait terminé en baisse de 0,49% (-38,69 points).Trois juges du tribunal de commerce international des Etats-Unis (ITC) ont estimé que les surtaxes que l’administration Trump impose sur ses importations relevaient d’une prérogative du Congrès et que le président américain avait ainsi outrepassé les pouvoirs dont il dispose.”Le monde entier suivra de près les efforts déployés par le système judiciaire des États-Unis pour que la plus haute fonction de l’État soit tenue de rendre des comptes”, écrit dans une note Derren Nathan, responsable de la recherche sur les actions de Hargreaves Lansdown.Les juges considèrent que le président ne peut pas invoquer la loi d’urgence économique de 1977, utilisée pour justifier l’usage de décrets présidentiels, afin d’instituer ces droits de douane massifs, pour “imposer une surtaxe illimitée sur les produits provenant de quasiment tous les pays”, selon le jugement que l’AFP a pu consulter.Cela concerne tant les surtaxes douanières liées au fentanyl imposées par Donald Trump au Canada, au Mexique et à la Chine, que les droits de douane dits “réciproques” d’au moins 10% imposés le 2 avril sur l’ensemble des produits entrant aux Etats-Unis, et jusque 50% selon le pays d’origine.Ces droits de douane, d’une ampleur inédite, font craindre aux marchés qu’une guerre commerciale affecte la croissance mondiale.”Cette décision jette le trouble sur plusieurs accords commerciaux déjà conclus et sur ceux qui sont encore en phase de négociation”, commente Kathleen Brooks, directrice de la recherche économique chez XTB.”Ironiquement, c’est un groupe conservateur représentant les petites entreprises qui a porté plainte contre les droits de douane, accusant le président d’imposer des taxes commerciales en invoquant une +situation d’urgence+ sans fondement”, a relevé l’économiste.Le gouvernement Trump a interjeté appel mercredi, selon un document judiciaire consulté par l’AFP.A la Bourse de Paris, les secteurs du luxe et de l’automobile, particulièrement exposés aux conséquences d’une guerre commerciale entre la Chine et les Etats-Unis, profitaient de la nouvelle pour reprendre de la hauteur.Kering gagnait 2,98% à 178,42 euros vers 09H50, LVMH 1,82% à 492,45 euros et Hermès 1,76% à 2.423 euros.Stellantis s’offrait 2,96% à 9,28 euros l’action. STMicroelectronics profite de l’effet NvidiaLes titres des firmes technologiques sont soutenus par les solides résultats publiés par le champion américain des semi-conducteurs Nvidia, baromètre du secteur.Le groupe est allé au-delà des attentes pour les résultats du premier trimestre de son exercice décalé, grâce notamment à un impact moindre que prévu des restrictions américaines à l’exportation de ses puces vers la Chine.A Paris, le groupe franco-italien de composants électroniques STMicroelectronics bondissait de 3,80% à 23,20 euros. Soitec, spécialiste de la conception de matériaux semi-conducteurs, prenait 6,86% à 47,53 euros, au lendemain d’une violente chute de plus de 20% de son action après l’annonce du retrait de l’ensemble de ses prévisions de résultats pour l’année fiscale en cours.