“L’industrie est laminée”: quelques milliers d’ouvriers manifestent près de la Commission européenne

“L’heure est grave”, “nos usines ferment”: quelques milliers d’ouvriers de toute l’Europe se sont rassemblés mercredi à Bruxelles, près de la Commission européenne, pour réclamer des garanties sur l’avenir de l’industrie et de leurs emplois.Des salariés de la sidérurgie, de l’automobile ou de la chimie – 3.000 manifestants selon la police belge – se sont réunis sur une place bruxelloise à l’appel d’IndustriALL, une confédération de syndicats.”Il est temps que l’Europe se réveille. L’industrie européenne traverse une crise profonde”, a souligné à la tribune Judith Kirton-Darling, secrétaire générale de cette fédération.”Union européenne, réveille-toi !”, “sauvez notre acier”, pouvait-on lire sur les pancartes. Des intervenants ont dénoncé le “dumping” de l’industrie chinoise et mis en garde contre la potentielle hausse des tarifs douaniers aux Etats-Unis, après l’arrivée au pouvoir de Donald Trump.Au milieu des fumigènes et des drapeaux d’une série de syndicats européens, le sidérurgiste tchèque Lukas Borota explique être venu à Bruxelles pour appeler à “protéger les emplois”.”Il n’y a pas assez de boulot”, abonde l’Italien Oreste Nardoianni, qui n’a que “deux ou trois jours de travail” par semaine à Cassino (sud de l’Italie) chez le constructeur automobile Stellantis.”L’Europe doit porter de toute urgence une stratégie industrielle”, plaide la syndicaliste française Christèle Khelf, de la CFDT métallurgie. “Les constructeurs européens ont traîné des pieds à enclencher la transition vers les voitures électriques”, estime-t-elle.”L’industrie est en train de se faire laminer”, dénonce le Belge Jean-Luc Lallemand (FGTB Métal). “En Europe, il faut toujours un laps de temps infini pour protéger l’industrie”, peste-t-il.Une délégation syndicale a été reçue à la mi-journée à la Commission européenne, à quelques encablures de ce rassemblement.Il y a eu un “accord sur l’urgence et la nécessité de préserver la capacité industrielle et les emplois”, a assuré IndustriALL à l’issue de ce rendez-vous avec les commissaires européens Stéphane Séjourné (Stratégie industrielle) et Roxana Minzatu (Droits sociaux et emploi). “Nous avons exigé que tout soutien à l’industrie soit assorti de conditionnalités sociales” pour maintenir l’emploi, a ajouté la fédération de syndicats.Selon l’entourage de Stéphane Séjourné, “le message principal des syndicats était sur le coût de l’énergie qui grève la compétitivité de l’industrie européenne”. Et la “question des investissements et de la conditionnalité sociale a également été abordée”.L’équipe du commissaire français souligne “un accord total sur le fait qu’il y a urgence pour maintenir le tissu industriel et le savoir faire européens. Car il est très difficile de revenir en arrière et de reconstruire”.L’exécutif européen a promis de faire de la compétitivité économique l’axe principal des cinq ans qui viennent. La Commission doit présenter le 26 février un “pacte pour une industrie propre” associé dans les semaines ou les mois qui viennent à des “plans d’action et d’urgence sectoriels” pour l’automobile, l’acier et la chimie.

S.Africa’s unity govt stays the course after stormy startWed, 05 Feb 2025 15:22:06 GMT

South Africa’s unlikely unity government has been stretched and cracked in the seven months since it was formed but remains intact under the leadership of President Cyril Ramaphosa, who delivers its first state of the nation address Thursday.Several loud quarrels have erupted over sticking points such as language education in schools and Ramaphosa’s warm words …

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Nissan shares fall as reports say Honda merger talks off

Nissan shares plunged on Wednesday as reports said the struggling Japanese carmaker was walking away from merger talks with rival Honda.The Nikkei business daily and other local media earlier said Honda had proposed making Nissan its subsidiary, instead of the previous plan to integrate under a new holding company.”Strong opposition” within Nissan to this proposal was behind its decision to withdraw from the talks, the Nikkei said. Private broadcaster TBS published a similar report.Discussions on setting up a holding company were launched in December but faltered as the two companies disagreed on the integration ratio and other conditions, the newspaper added.Nissan said in a statement it had not announced anything officially, but the two companies “are in the stage of advancing various discussions, including the contents of the report”.”We plan to establish a direction and make an announcement around mid-February.” The company’s shares plunged 4.8 percent before the Tokyo Stock Exchange suspended their trading, saying the media reports on the merger’s cancellation needed to be verified.Honda, however, closed 8.2 percent higher, having soared nearly 12 percent at one point.Nissan and Honda agreed in December to start talks on joining forces to create the world’s third-largest automaker — seen as a bid to catch up with Tesla and Chinese electric vehicle firms.Honda’s CEO insisted at the time it was not a bailout for Nissan, which last year announced thousands of job cuts after reporting a 93 percent plunge in first-half net profit.Business has been tough for foreign brands in China, where electric vehicle manufacturers such as BYD are leading the way as demand grows for less polluting vehicles.China overtook Japan as the biggest vehicle exporter last year, helped by government support for EVs.Honda and Nissan are Japan’s number two and three automakers after Toyota.They already agreed last year to explore a partnership on EV software and components among other technologies, an initiative joined by Mitsubishi Motors in August.But the smaller automaker’s chief said this week it would make a final decision on whether to join the Honda-Nissan merger talks in mid-February or later.In December, reports said Taiwanese electronics behemoth Foxconn had unsuccessfully approached Nissan to acquire a majority share.It then reportedly asked Renault to sell its 35 percent stake in Nissan — a pursuit that was put on hold before the merger talks were announced.A Renault spokesman told AFP that “the information relayed by the press does not indicate that a decision has been made”.”But they suggest that the planned operation is a takeover of Nissan by Honda. And this does not include a control premium (financial incentive) for Nissan shareholders,” the spokesman said, adding that Renault “will continue to defend the interests of the group and its shareholders”.Nissan has weathered a turbulent decade, including the 2018 arrest of former boss Carlos Ghosn, who later jumped bail and fled Japan concealed in a music equipment box.The company is also saddled with billions of dollars of debt that will reportedly mature over the next two years.nf-kaf-jug-hrc/lth/rl

US trade gap swells as Trump renews scrutiny of deficits

The US trade gap swelled last year to its second-largest on record, government data showed Wednesday, as deficits come under the spotlight with President Donald Trump’s return to the White House.In 2024, the overall US trade deficit grew to $918.4 billion, widening 17 percent from 2023 as imports ballooned more than exports, said the Commerce Department.The trade deficit in goods also reached a new record for the year, in official data going back to 1960.The high figures could attract renewed scrutiny under the new US administration, with Trump already threatening tariffs on major US partners over trade imbalances and other issues.Over the weekend, Trump announced fresh duties on the United States’ three biggest trading partners in goods — Canada, Mexico and China — before reaching deals with Canada and Mexico to halt the levies for a month as talks continued.Chief among his justifications were concerns over illegal immigration and the flow of deadly fentanyl across US borders, but he has previously also pointed to America’s trade deficits with its neighbors.Stock markets wavered as tariffs targeting Beijing came into effect Tuesday, with an accompanying suspension of duty-free exemptions for low value parcels sparking worry.With Beijing’s announced retaliation, economies are on edge over the prospect of broadening trade wars.For all of last year, imports jumped by 6.6 percent or $253.3 billion while exports increased 3.9 percent by $119.8 billion.Driving the growth in goods exports were products like computer accessories and semiconductors, while travel was a key factor behind services exports growth.Imports surged on the back of goods like consumer goods, computers and semiconductors, as well as foods.- Uncertain path ahead -“Looking forward, the path for trade remains uncertain due to the capricious nature of the Trump administration’s tariff policies,” said Matthew Martin, senior economist at Oxford Economics.”While Mexico and Canada may be spared, the tariffs on China stuck and we expect the European Union to be next in the cross-hairs,” he added in a note.Martin expects computer and electronic products from China would likely be impacted the most, adding that there are risks involving chemicals and manufacturing equipment from the EU.For all of 2024, the goods deficit with China — a major issue during Trump’s first administration — came in at $295.4 billion.This was wider than values for the trade gap with North American neighbors Canada and Mexico combined, and more than the gap with the EU as well, according to government numbers.In December alone, the US deficit rose by nearly 25 percent to $98.4 billion, said the Commerce Department.The figure was slightly above the consensus estimate by Briefing.com of $98.0 billion.Imports rose 3.5 percent to $364.9 billion while exports slipped 2.6 percent to $266.5 billion for the month.”The jump in import volumes may reflect companies efforts to accelerate imports to beat Trump import threats,” said Carl Weinberg and Mary Chen, of High Frequency Economics.But they added it was hard to prove, given that strong exports also indicate “a fast-growing economy that is near its full potential level of output.”Trump has threatened tariffs on the EU, previously saying they had treated Washington “very badly.”

‘People are going to die’: USAID cuts create panic in AfricaWed, 05 Feb 2025 15:10:35 GMT

President Donald Trump’s decision to freeze foreign assistance has sent aid staff in Africa into “panic mode”, with even HIV experimental treatment programmes stopped dead in their tracks.Trump last week ordered a suspension of foreign assistance, while his billionaire ally Elon Musk has boasted he is putting the vast US humanitarian agency USAID “through the …

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UK says ‘no change’ to terms in Chagos US base dealWed, 05 Feb 2025 15:03:32 GMT

The British government was grilled in parliament on Wednesday as it denied claims by Mauritius that a new deal to return the Chagos Islands changes the lease terms for a key US military base.The foreign ministry hit back at reports that Britain would pay Mauritius up to £18 billion ($22 billion) to use Diego Garcia …

UK says ‘no change’ to terms in Chagos US base dealWed, 05 Feb 2025 15:03:32 GMT Read More »

M23, Rwanda troops launch fresh east DR Congo offensiveWed, 05 Feb 2025 15:02:11 GMT

The M23 and Rwandan forces on Wednesday launched a new offensive in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, seizing a mining town in South Kivu province, as they resumed their advance towards the regional capital Bukavu.Just days after capturing the strategic city of Goma in neighbouring North Kivu, the M23 armed group had declared a unilateral …

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S.Africa president raises US ‘disinformation’ with MuskWed, 05 Feb 2025 14:59:55 GMT

South Africa’s president has raised concerns to Elon Musk about “disinformation” after US President Donald Trump claimed the government was “confiscating land”, his spokesman said Wednesday.President Cyril Ramaphosa spoke with South African-born Musk on Tuesday, following the comments from Trump who appeared to be referring to a land expropriation act signed last month.”We flagged our …

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