Allemagne: le Bayern prolonge son joyau Jamal Musiala jusqu’à l’été 2030

Joyau du football allemand, le milieu de terrain offensif Jamal Musiala (21 ans) sera le visage du Bayern jusqu’à l’été 2030, avec une prolongation de son contrat de quatre saisons annoncée par le club munichois, vendredi.Les détails de l’accord n’ont pas été donnés par le Bayern, mais la presse allemande évoque une double clause libératoire (175 millions d’euros deux ans avant la fin du contrat et 100 M EUR un an avant) et une hausse considérable du salaire annuel, plaçant Musiala au niveau de Harry Kane autour de 25 M EUR.Le contrat de Jamal Musiala courait jusqu’à l’été 2026 et le Bayern avait fait de sa prolongation l’une des priorités de l’hiver, concluant l’accord à un jour d’un choc de Bundesliga sur la pelouse du Bayer Leverkusen, qui peut permettre au club munichois de s’envoler en tête du championnat.”Le Bayern est l’un des clubs les plus importants au monde. C’est ici que j’ai fait mes premiers pas dans le football professionnel et je suis convaincu de pouvoir réaliser de grandes choses avec lui dans les années à venir”, a réagi Musiala cité dans le communiqué du Bayern.”Jamal Musiala marque le présent et l’avenir, et est un visage de notre nouvelle génération. Nous avons convaincu l’un des joueurs les plus convoités au monde de rester au Bayern à moyen terme”, s’est félicité le directeur sportif du club Max Eberl.Né à Stuttgart d’un père originaire du Nigeria et d’une mère allemande, Musiala a débuté le foot à Lenherz près de Fulda (centre de l’Allemagne). Il a ensuite suivi sa mère, partie en Angleterre pour ses études, et a intégré le centre de formation de Chelsea en avril 2011.En raison des perspectives d’avenir assombries en Angleterre à la suite du Brexit, la mère de Musiala a décidé de rentrer en Allemagne et le Bayern a sauté sur l’occasion pour recruter à l’été 2019 le jeune talent, qui a évolué dans les sélections anglaises de jeunes avec Jude Bellingham.Contrairement à Bellingham, qui est resté avec les Three Lions, Musiala a fait le choix de la sélection allemande, où il forme un duo redoutable avec Florian Wirtz, milieu offensif de Leverkusen également convoité par les plus grands clubs au monde.

O’Rourke’s 4 wickets limit Pakistan to 242 in tri-series final

New Zealand pace bowler Will O’Rourke took four wickets to restrict Pakistan to a modest 242 runs in the tri-series final in Karachi on Friday.O’Rourke finished with 4-43 and was ably supported by spinners Mitchell Santner (2-20) and Michael Bracewell (2-38) as Pakistan were dismissed in 49.3 overs after they won the toss and batted.Skipper Mohammad Rizwan top-scored with a 76-ball 46, while Salman Agha hit 45 off 65 balls, with slow and variable bounce on the National stadium pitch proving tough for batting.The final is a dress rehearsal for the opening match of the Champions Trophy between the same teams at the same venue on Wednesday.Pakistan lost opener Fakhar Zaman to O’Rourke in the fourth over for 10 and then Saud Shakeel for eight.Babar Azam looked good for his 29 runs, hitting four boundaries and a six, and reached 6,000 runs scored in one-day internationals when he was on 10.He was playing his 123rd innings, the joint fastest to reach the 6,000-runs milestone with South African Hashim Amla.Azam fell to a miscued shot off Nathan Smith, leaving Pakistan struggling at 54-3.Rizwan and Agha, who shared a match-winning 260-run partnership against South Africa on Wednesday, then revived the innings with an 88-run stand.Rizwan hit four boundaries and a six but he and Agha fell within 19 runs of each other to end any hope of a big total.Tayyab Tahir hit a 33-ball 38, also with four boundaries and a six, while Faheem Ashraf (22) and Naseem Shah (19) added 39 invaluable runs to get Pakistan past 240.

Orques de Marineland: Pannier-Runacher veut un sanctuaire européen

La ministre de la Transition écologique, Agnès Pannier-Runacher, a annoncé vendredi son intention de proposer à ses homologues espagnol, italien et grec la création d’un sanctuaire marin européen, alors que l’avenir des orques et des dauphins du Marineland d’Antibes fait polémique.La direction du parc zoologique, qui a définitivement fermé début janvier, a annoncé cette semaine qu’elle s’apprêtait à déposer une demande de transfert de ses deux orques, Wikie (23 ans) et son fils Keijo (11 ans), vers le delphinarium de Loro Parque à Tenerife, dans l’archipel espagnol des Canaries.Cette annonce a provoqué la colère des associations de défense des animaux. One Voice a ainsi dénoncé les conditions de vie des orques de Loro Parque, assurant qu’elles seraient pires qu’à Marineland.Pour Sea Shepherd France, la poursuite de leur exploitation commerciale dans ces conditions constituerait une “trahison fondamentale de l’esprit” de la loi de 2021 sur le bien-être animal, qui interdit à partir de décembre 2026 les spectacles et le maintien en captivité des cétacés en France. Au printemps 2024, le ministère de la Transition écologique avait reçu cinq propositions de sanctuaires à l’occasion d’un appel à déclaration d’intérêt pour trouver une solution pour Wikie et Keijo. En relevant qu’aucun n’était prêt, le rapport du ministère avait laissé entrevoir un départ vers Loro Parque, faute de mieux.En novembre, lorsqu’elle s’était opposée à un départ vers un parc japonais, Mme Pannier-Runacher avait évoqué la possibilité d’un parc respectant “la réglementation européenne”. Mais vendredi elle a assuré qu’elle s’opposerait “à tout transfert dans un site qui n’est pas adapté pour accueillir des dauphins ou des orques”.”Je vais saisir mes homologues espagnol, italien et grec pour leur proposer de travailler sur un projet de sanctuaire”, a-t-elle poursuivi, dans une vidéo sur les réseaux sociaux. “La Grèce a un projet de sanctuaire, l’Italie a un projet de sanctuaire, et je crois que tous les quatre ensemble, on peut peut-être y arriver. Je ne vous dis pas que ça va marcher, mais qui ne tente rien n’a rien”.Nées et élevées en captivité, les deux orques ne sont pas en mesure de survivre seules en pleine mer.Sea Shepherd France assure avoir proposé un site en France, sur lequel le ministère des Armées a mis son veto. L’ONG travaille aussi avec d’autres associations et experts internationaux à des alternatives en Europe, où des projets “déjà bien avancés” se heurtent surtout à des verrous administratifs.

Orques de Marineland: Pannier-Runacher veut un sanctuaire européen

La ministre de la Transition écologique, Agnès Pannier-Runacher, a annoncé vendredi son intention de proposer à ses homologues espagnol, italien et grec la création d’un sanctuaire marin européen, alors que l’avenir des orques et des dauphins du Marineland d’Antibes fait polémique.La direction du parc zoologique, qui a définitivement fermé début janvier, a annoncé cette semaine qu’elle s’apprêtait à déposer une demande de transfert de ses deux orques, Wikie (23 ans) et son fils Keijo (11 ans), vers le delphinarium de Loro Parque à Tenerife, dans l’archipel espagnol des Canaries.Cette annonce a provoqué la colère des associations de défense des animaux. One Voice a ainsi dénoncé les conditions de vie des orques de Loro Parque, assurant qu’elles seraient pires qu’à Marineland.Pour Sea Shepherd France, la poursuite de leur exploitation commerciale dans ces conditions constituerait une “trahison fondamentale de l’esprit” de la loi de 2021 sur le bien-être animal, qui interdit à partir de décembre 2026 les spectacles et le maintien en captivité des cétacés en France. Au printemps 2024, le ministère de la Transition écologique avait reçu cinq propositions de sanctuaires à l’occasion d’un appel à déclaration d’intérêt pour trouver une solution pour Wikie et Keijo. En relevant qu’aucun n’était prêt, le rapport du ministère avait laissé entrevoir un départ vers Loro Parque, faute de mieux.En novembre, lorsqu’elle s’était opposée à un départ vers un parc japonais, Mme Pannier-Runacher avait évoqué la possibilité d’un parc respectant “la réglementation européenne”. Mais vendredi elle a assuré qu’elle s’opposerait “à tout transfert dans un site qui n’est pas adapté pour accueillir des dauphins ou des orques”.”Je vais saisir mes homologues espagnol, italien et grec pour leur proposer de travailler sur un projet de sanctuaire”, a-t-elle poursuivi, dans une vidéo sur les réseaux sociaux. “La Grèce a un projet de sanctuaire, l’Italie a un projet de sanctuaire, et je crois que tous les quatre ensemble, on peut peut-être y arriver. Je ne vous dis pas que ça va marcher, mais qui ne tente rien n’a rien”.Nées et élevées en captivité, les deux orques ne sont pas en mesure de survivre seules en pleine mer.Sea Shepherd France assure avoir proposé un site en France, sur lequel le ministère des Armées a mis son veto. L’ONG travaille aussi avec d’autres associations et experts internationaux à des alternatives en Europe, où des projets “déjà bien avancés” se heurtent surtout à des verrous administratifs.

Drugs, weapons in Syria borderland where Hezbollah held sway

In a desolate area of Syria where Lebanese militant group Hezbollah once held sway, security forces shot open the gates to an abandoned building and found a defunct drug factory.Syria’s new authorities launched a security campaign last week around Qusayr at the porous Lebanese border, cracking down on drug and weapons smugglers.They have also accused Lebanon’s Hezbollah, which for years propped up Bashar al-Assad, of firing at them in clashes in the weeks since his ouster.”We’ve begun to comb factories used by Hezbollah and remnants of the defunct regime,” said Major Nadim Madkhana, who heads Syria’s border security force in Homs province near Lebanon.Before Syria’s war erupted in 2011, Syrians and Lebanese lived side by side in the border area — a mostly tribal region long renowned for smuggling.In April 2013, Hezbollah announced it was fighting alongside Assad’s forces and leading battles in the Qusayr area, a rebel stronghold at the time.After weeks of battles that displaced thousands of Syrians, Hezbollah seized control of the area, establishing bases and weapons depots and digging tunnels — which Israel repeatedly targeted in subsequent years.Hezbollah’s support for Assad was as much an act of loyalty for its fellow member of the “axis of resistance” as it was a necessity for its own survival, with Syria acting as its weapons conduit from Iran.”Under the defunct regime, this area was an economic lifeline for Hezbollah and drug and arms traders traffickers,” Madkhana said.In the building raided by Syrian border security, AFP correspondents saw large bags of captagon pills — a potent synthetic drug mass-produced under Assad that sparked an addiction crisis in the region.Both the sanctions-hit ousted government and Hezbollah, which is proscribed as a terrorist organisation, have faced accusations of using the captagon trade to finance themselves.In the months leading up to Assad’s December 8 ouster, Hezbollah pulled many of its militants back to Lebanon to fight an all-out war with Israel.But it was only after his overthrow that it rushed the majority of its forces and allies out of the country.Attesting to the speed of the pullout, plates of food were left to rot in the kitchen of one facility.- Drug traffickers -Snow-speckled dirt tracks leading to the facilities still bear marks left by barricades that smugglers had set up “to delay our advance”, Madkhana said.In recent days, Syrian forces have clashed with “Hezbollah loyalists and regime remnants” in the area, some of them armed with rocket launchers, he added.Charred vehicles lay by the side of the road, near damaged luxury villas built by drug traffickers, residents told AFP.Hezbollah provided cover for Lebanese and Syrian smugglers operating at the border, according to residents of the area.After more than five decades of rule by the Assads, the rebels that once fought his army are now running the country, and that has had a knock-on effect on neighbouring Lebanon.Earlier this week, Madkhana told AFP Syrian forces had started coordinating with the Lebanese army at the border.Last week, the Lebanese army said it was responding to incoming fire from across the Syrian border.Syria shares a 330-kilometre (205-mile) border with Lebanon, with no official demarcation, making it ideal turf for smugglers.- ‘Banned from returning’ -Since Assad’s ouster, Syrians displaced during the war have started returning home to Qusayr.After spending almost half of his life as a refugee in northern Lebanon, Hassan Amer, 21, was thrilled to return.”I was young when I left, I don’t know much about Qusayr,” he said, painting the walls of his house with help from neighbours and families.”We returned the day after the regime fell,” he said, beaming with pride.Hezbollah “took over Qusayr and made it theirs while its people were banned from returning,” he said, adding that schools and public institutions had been turned into bases.In 2019, Hezbollah said residents of Qusayr could return home, citing a decision by Assad’s government.Mohammed Nasser, 22, and his mother were among the lucky ones allowed back in 2021.”My elderly grandfather was alone here… and I was under 18,” he said, meaning he was not yet due for conscription.His father stayed in Lebanon, fearing arrest.For years, Nasser’s family and a couple of others were the only Syrians living in the area, he said, while Lebanese “loyal to Hezbollah lived in the less-damaged houses”.Nasser’s 84-year-old grandfather, also named Mohammed, recalled the day Assad and his family fled.”On liberation day, they fled… and the town’s people came back at night, before sunrise, to the sound of the call to prayer,” he said.

Israel says received names of 3 hostages to be freed Saturday

Israel said Friday it had received the names of three hostages to be freed by militants this weekend, after a crisis in the ceasefire threatened to plunge Gaza back into war.The hostages due for release Saturday are Israeli-Russian Sasha Trupanov, Israeli-American Sagui Dekel-Chen and Israeli-Argentinian Yair Horn, the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement.One of them is being held by Hamas’s militant ally Islamic Jihad, which participated in the October 7, 2023 attack on Israel that sparked the war in Gaza.Israel had warned Hamas that it must free three living hostages this weekend or face a resumption of the war, after the group said it would pause releases over what it described as Israeli violations of the Gaza truce.The January 19 ceasefire has been under massive strain since President Donald Trump proposed a US takeover of the territory, under which Gaza’s population of more than two million would be moved to Egypt or Jordan.Arab countries have come together to reject the plan, and Saudi Arabia will on February 20 host the leaders of Egypt, Jordan, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates for a summit on the issue.- Red Cross calls for access -The releases of Israeli hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners, as agreed under the terms of the truce, have brought much-needed relief to families on both sides of the war, but the emaciated state of the Israeli captives freed last week sparked anger in Israel and beyond.”The latest release operations reinforce the urgent need for ICRC access to those held hostage,” the International Committee of the Red Cross, which has facilitated the exchanges, said in a statement Friday. “We remain very concerned about the conditions of the hostages.”Following Hamas’s handover ceremony last week, during which the captives were forced to speak, the ICRC appealed for future handovers to be more private and dignified.Israeli-American hostage Keith Siegel, who was released in a previous exchange nearly two weeks ago, described mistreatment during his captivity in a video message.”I am a survivor. I was held for 484 days in unimaginable conditions, every single day felt like it could be my last,” he said.”I was starved and I was tortured, both physically and emotionally.”- ‘Power games’ -Trump, whose proposal to take over Gaza and move its 2.4 million residents to Egypt or Jordan sparked global outcry, warned this week that “hell” would break loose if Hamas failed to release “all” remaining hostages by noon on Saturday.Israel later insisted Hamas release “three living hostages” on Saturday.”If those three are not released, if Hamas does not return our hostages, by Saturday noon, the ceasefire will end,” said government spokesman David Mencer.If fighting resumes, Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said it would not just lead to the “defeat of Hamas and the release of all the hostages”, but also “allow the realisation of US President Trump’s vision for Gaza”.US Secretary of State Marco Rubio was due in Israel, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to discuss the ceasefire after attending the Munich Security Conference, where he will hold talks on Ukraine.Katz last week ordered the Israeli army to prepare for “voluntary” departures from Gaza, and the military said it had already begun reinforcing its troops around the territory.Mairav Zonszein of the International Crisis Group said despite their public disputes, Israel and Hamas were still interested in maintaining the truce and have not “given up on anything yet”.”They’re just playing power games,” she said.- ‘God almighty?’ – Arab countries have put on a rare show of unity in their rejection of Trump’s proposal for Gaza.After the Riyadh summit, the Arab League will convene in Cairo on February 27 to discuss the same issue.Trump has threatened to cut off a vital aid lifeline to long-standing allies Jordan and Egypt should they refuse to come on board.Jordan is already home to more than two million Palestinian refugees. More than half of the country’s population of 11 million is of Palestinian origin.Egypt put forward its own proposal for the reconstruction of Gaza under a framework that would allow for the Palestinians to remain in the territory.Palestinians in Gaza have also voiced opposition to the plan.For Palestinians, any forced displacement evokes memories of the “Nakba”, or catastrophe — the mass displacement of their ancestors during Israel’s creation in 1948.”Who is Trump? Is he God almighty? The land of Jordan is for Jordanians, and the land of Egypt belongs to Egyptians,” said Gaza City resident Abu Mohamed al-Husari.”We are here, deeply rooted in Gaza — the resilient, besieged and unbreakable Gaza.”Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,211 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of official Israeli figures.Militants also took 251 hostages, of whom 73 remain in Gaza, including at least 35 the Israeli military says are dead.Israel’s retaliatory campaign has killed at least 48,239 people in Gaza, the majority of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory that the UN considers reliable.burs-ser/smw