“On ferme tout!” A travers la Lituanie à bord du train russe Moscou-Kaliningrad

“On ferme tout! Plus de toilettes!”, s’époumone Olga, la contrôleuse. Une demi-heure avant d’arriver en Lituanie, le train qui relie Moscou à l’enclave russe de Kaliningrad est hermétiquement fermé pour éviter que les passagers ne “s’évanouissent dans la nature”.Le train russe baptisé “Yantar” (ambre, en russe) est pour cela unique en Europe. Au cours des …

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A Gaza, une nuit de bombardements sur des habitants qui essayaient de reconstruire leur vie

Le visage déformé par la douleur, des femmes pleurent la mort de deux enfants tués lors d’une nouvelle vague de frappes israéliennes, penchées sur les petits corps gisant sur le sol à Khan Younès, dans le sud de la bande de Gaza.Ailleurs dans le territoire palestinien, se répètent des scènes similaires. Comme à Nousseirat, dans …

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Night of strikes brings grief to Gazans trying to rebuild

Their faces contorted with pain, relatives mourned two children killed in overnight Israeli strikes on Gaza, leaning over small bodies on the pavement wrapped in sheets, one stained blood red.In the Nuseirat camp in central Gaza on Wednesday, Palestinians combed through piles of broken cement in a house flattened by an air strike, trying to salvage what they could.”We had dinner and sat down, and then it was as if Judgment Day had come. All these stones were on top of us,” Muneer Mayman told AFP in the morning, pointing to a pile of cinder blocks and concrete under which he had been found.”We lay there for more than two hours while they were removing the rubble from over us.”Behind him, men and children were at work sifting through debris, hauling off belongings wrapped in blankets for lack of bags or wheelbarrows.In south Gaza’s Khan Yunis, an elderly woman held her face between her hands as she sat by a few utensils relatives had salvaged from rubble, an AFP journalist saw.Nuseirat’s Al-Awda hospital reported at least 31 people killed in the strikes that broke the relative peace brought by a ceasefire that began on October 10.Gaza’s civil defence agency said that 101 people including 35 children were killed since the strikes began, a figure confirmed by an AFP tally of medical officials in five hospitals.- ‘What we feared most’ -Jalal Abbas, a 40-year-old displaced man living in a tent in the central city of Deir al-Balah, told AFP he fears the war will return for good.”The return of war is what we feared most. I expected the escalation and bombardment to resume because Israel always creates pretexts,” he said.”Every day they threaten to bring back the war, using the issue of the bodies as an excuse — it’s all lies,” he added.Abbas was referring to Israel’s declaration that Hamas broke the terms of the US-brokered ceasefire deal by not returning the bodies of deceased hostages quickly enough.Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said Wednesday the military had launched the strikes “in response to the attack on soldiers and the blatant violation of the agreement to return the abducted missing”.At least one Israeli soldier was killed in clashes on Tuesday.In Khan Yunis, members of the civil defence, a rescue force acting under Hamas authority, had been searching by flashlight through the rubble through the night.Women wailed as the rescuers took away the bodies of deceased relatives on stretchers, before search and rescue teams moved on to the next site, a plot of land where two tents were struck.- ‘Rebuild our lives’ -In north Gaza’s Al-Shati camp too, bombardments tore through the night.”We had just started to breathe again, trying to rebuild our lives, when the bombardment came back — bringing war, explosions and death,” Khadija al-Husni, 31, told AFP.Husni also lives in a tent, having been displaced at least once like nearly all Gazans after two years of war.She deplored the ambiguity of the current ceasefire, which has been sporadically broken by Israeli air strikes or fighting with Hamas since its beginning.”Either there is a truce or a war — it can’t be both. The children couldn’t sleep; they thought the war was over,” Husni said.”Are we condemned to live in endless suffering?”

Le casse du Louvre va-t-il livrer tous ses secrets ?

Après l’interpellation de deux suspects, l’affaire du casse du Louvre, qui a fait le tour du monde, connaît une autre accélération ce mercredi, entre la fin imminente des gardes à vue et une conférence de presse de la procureure de Paris.Laure Beccuau s’exprimera au cours d’une conférence de presse programmée à 17H00 au tribunal judiciaire, a indiqué le parquet de Paris. Cette conférence de presse, en présence de représentants de la BRB (Brigade de répression du banditisme) et de l’OCBC (l’Office central de lutte contre le trafic de biens culturels), reviendra sur l’ouverture d’information judiciaire dans cette affaire.Cette prise de parole pourrait coïncider avec la fin des gardes à vue des deux suspects -débutées samedi soir et qui peuvent durer jusqu’à 96 heures- avant leurs possibles défèrement et mise en examen.  “C’est un dossier difficile pour tout le monde”, avec un “droit au procès équitable difficile” en raison notamment de son ultra-médiatisation, a souligné mercredi à l’AFP Nadia El Bouroumi, avocate d’un des suspects en garde à vue. Son client “ressent la pression, il est abattu”, a-t-elle déploré, confirmant des propos tenus auprès de TF1. Plus d’une semaine après le vol spectaculaire de huit joyaux de la couronne de France en quelques minutes au musée du Louvre, les bijoux restent introuvables.Les deux suspects sont âgés d’une trentaine d’années et originaires de Seine-Saint-Denis, selon une source proche du dossier. Ils sont connus des service de police pour des vols.- 88 millions d’euros -L’un des deux hommes a été interpellé samedi soir à l’aéroport de Roissy alors qu’il s’apprêtait à embarquer pour l’Algérie. Le butin de ce casse rocambolesque, qui a fait le tour de la planète, est estimé à 88 millions d’euros, avait indiqué Laure Beccuau.Vers 09H30 le 19 octobre, les membres du commando avaient installé un camion-élévateur au pied du musée, sur le quai François-Mitterrand, et deux d’entre eux, visages masqués, s’étaient hissés avec une nacelle jusqu’à la galerie Apollon.Après avoir brisé une fenêtre et les vitrines contenant les bijoux à l’aide de disqueuses, les voleurs étaient repartis à bord de deux scooters conduits par leurs complices.Le cambriolage a duré en tout moins de huit minutes.Les investigations, confiées à la BRB et à l’OCBC, mobilisent une centaine d’enquêteurs.Plus “de 150 prélèvements de traces ADN, papillaires et autres ont été réalisés” sur les lieux du cambriolage, selon Mme Beccuau.Dans leur fuite, les malfaiteurs ont laissé tomber la couronne de l’impératrice Eugénie, qui a été abîmée et qui devra être restaurée.- Sécurité en question -L’affaire a provoqué des débats fleuves sur la sécurité du Louvre, musée le plus visité du monde.Et a débouché sur un premier bras de fer. Le nouveau préfet de police de Paris, Patrice Faure, s’est dit mercredi “fermement opposé” à l’installation d’un commissariat au sein du musée du Louvre, demandée par la présidente du Louvre, Laurence des Cars, après le cambriolage.Dimanche déjà, le ministre de l’Intérieur Laurent Nuñez avait opposé une fin de non-recevoir à Mme des Cars concernant l’installation d’un tel commissariat.Le président de la commission de la Culture du Sénat, Laurent Lafon, a lui estimé mardi, à l’issue d’une visite des installations de sûreté du Louvre, que la sécurité de l’établissement n’était “pas conforme à ce qu’on peut attendre d’un musée aujourd’hui”. “Il y a de nombreuses améliorations à faire”, selon le sénateur centriste.”Si ce vol spectaculaire a eu lieu, c’est un échec, c’est un échec pour tout le monde”, a déclaré mardi la ministre de la Culture Rachida Dati, lors d’une audition devant cette même commission consacrée au projet de budget 2026. “Des failles sécuritaires ont bien existé (…) et donc il faudra y remédier.”Les conclusions de l’enquête administrative sur la sécurité du musée mondialement connu devrait être dévoilées mercredi soir.

Le casse du Louvre va-t-il livrer tous ses secrets ?

Après l’interpellation de deux suspects, l’affaire du casse du Louvre, qui a fait le tour du monde, connaît une autre accélération ce mercredi, entre la fin imminente des gardes à vue et une conférence de presse de la procureure de Paris.Laure Beccuau s’exprimera au cours d’une conférence de presse programmée à 17H00 au tribunal judiciaire, a indiqué le parquet de Paris. Cette conférence de presse, en présence de représentants de la BRB (Brigade de répression du banditisme) et de l’OCBC (l’Office central de lutte contre le trafic de biens culturels), reviendra sur l’ouverture d’information judiciaire dans cette affaire.Cette prise de parole pourrait coïncider avec la fin des gardes à vue des deux suspects -débutées samedi soir et qui peuvent durer jusqu’à 96 heures- avant leurs possibles défèrement et mise en examen.  “C’est un dossier difficile pour tout le monde”, avec un “droit au procès équitable difficile” en raison notamment de son ultra-médiatisation, a souligné mercredi à l’AFP Nadia El Bouroumi, avocate d’un des suspects en garde à vue. Son client “ressent la pression, il est abattu”, a-t-elle déploré, confirmant des propos tenus auprès de TF1. Plus d’une semaine après le vol spectaculaire de huit joyaux de la couronne de France en quelques minutes au musée du Louvre, les bijoux restent introuvables.Les deux suspects sont âgés d’une trentaine d’années et originaires de Seine-Saint-Denis, selon une source proche du dossier. Ils sont connus des service de police pour des vols.- 88 millions d’euros -L’un des deux hommes a été interpellé samedi soir à l’aéroport de Roissy alors qu’il s’apprêtait à embarquer pour l’Algérie. Le butin de ce casse rocambolesque, qui a fait le tour de la planète, est estimé à 88 millions d’euros, avait indiqué Laure Beccuau.Vers 09H30 le 19 octobre, les membres du commando avaient installé un camion-élévateur au pied du musée, sur le quai François-Mitterrand, et deux d’entre eux, visages masqués, s’étaient hissés avec une nacelle jusqu’à la galerie Apollon.Après avoir brisé une fenêtre et les vitrines contenant les bijoux à l’aide de disqueuses, les voleurs étaient repartis à bord de deux scooters conduits par leurs complices.Le cambriolage a duré en tout moins de huit minutes.Les investigations, confiées à la BRB et à l’OCBC, mobilisent une centaine d’enquêteurs.Plus “de 150 prélèvements de traces ADN, papillaires et autres ont été réalisés” sur les lieux du cambriolage, selon Mme Beccuau.Dans leur fuite, les malfaiteurs ont laissé tomber la couronne de l’impératrice Eugénie, qui a été abîmée et qui devra être restaurée.- Sécurité en question -L’affaire a provoqué des débats fleuves sur la sécurité du Louvre, musée le plus visité du monde.Et a débouché sur un premier bras de fer. Le nouveau préfet de police de Paris, Patrice Faure, s’est dit mercredi “fermement opposé” à l’installation d’un commissariat au sein du musée du Louvre, demandée par la présidente du Louvre, Laurence des Cars, après le cambriolage.Dimanche déjà, le ministre de l’Intérieur Laurent Nuñez avait opposé une fin de non-recevoir à Mme des Cars concernant l’installation d’un tel commissariat.Le président de la commission de la Culture du Sénat, Laurent Lafon, a lui estimé mardi, à l’issue d’une visite des installations de sûreté du Louvre, que la sécurité de l’établissement n’était “pas conforme à ce qu’on peut attendre d’un musée aujourd’hui”. “Il y a de nombreuses améliorations à faire”, selon le sénateur centriste.”Si ce vol spectaculaire a eu lieu, c’est un échec, c’est un échec pour tout le monde”, a déclaré mardi la ministre de la Culture Rachida Dati, lors d’une audition devant cette même commission consacrée au projet de budget 2026. “Des failles sécuritaires ont bien existé (…) et donc il faudra y remédier.”Les conclusions de l’enquête administrative sur la sécurité du musée mondialement connu devrait être dévoilées mercredi soir.

Sudan govt accuses RSF of attacking mosques in El-Fasher takeoverWed, 29 Oct 2025 11:50:40 GMT

Sudan’s army-aligned government accused paramilitaries on Wednesday of attacking civilians in mosques during their recent takeover of the western city of El-Fasher, where satellite images show evidence of “continuing mass killing”, Yale researchers say.The capture of El-Fasher on Sunday after an 18-month siege marked by starvation and bombardment has solidified the Rapid Support Forces’ (RSF) …

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Sudan govt accuses RSF of attacking mosques in El-Fasher takeover

Sudan’s army-aligned government accused paramilitaries on Wednesday of attacking civilians in mosques during their recent takeover of the western city of El-Fasher, where satellite images show evidence of “continuing mass killing”, Yale researchers say.The capture of El-Fasher on Sunday after an 18-month siege marked by starvation and bombardment has solidified the Rapid Support Forces’ (RSF) control over Darfur, sparking fears of ethnically motivated violence reminiscent of the region’s darkest days.El-Fasher was the last of Darfur’s five state capitals to fall to the paramilitaries, led by General Mohammad Hamdan Daglo, who have been at war with the regular army for more than two years.”More than 2,000 civilians were killed during the militia’s invasion of El-Fasher, targeting volunteers in mosques and the Red Crescent,” Mona Nour Al-Daem, humanitarian aid officer for the army-aligned government, said Wednesday at a press conference in Port Sudan.She added that the Adre border pass between Sudan and Chad has been “used to introduce weapons and equipment for the militias”.An analysis of satellite images by Yale’s Humanitarian Research Lab released Tuesday night “corroborates evidence of continuing mass killing in the past 48 hours since RSF took control”.”These mass killing events include corroboration of alleged executions around Saudi Hospital and a previously unreported potential mass killing at an RSF detention site at the former Children’s Hospital in eastern El-Fasher,” the group said, adding there was also ongoing “systematic killing” at one location outside the city.El-Fasher had been the last holdout in Darfur of army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan’s forces, and its fall has left the paramilitaries in control of a vast region covering a third of Sudan, with fighting now concentrated in the Kordofan region.Since the city was captured by the RSF — descended from the Janjaweed militias accused of genocide in Darfur two decades ago — the group has again been accused of carrying out atrocities against civilians, with brutal videos circulating on social media.The United Nations has warned of “ethnically motivated violations and atrocities” while the African Union condemned “escalating violence” and “alleged war crimes”. “Civilians being targeted based on their ethnicity underscore the brutality of the Rapid Support Force,” the EU’s foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said in a statement Wednesday.- Truce talks stalled -Since Sunday, more than 33,000 people have fled El-Fasher for the town of Tawila, about 70 kilometres (40 miles) to the west, which has already welcomed more than 650,000 displaced people, the UN says.Around 177,000 people remain in El-Fasher, which had a population of more than one million before the war, according to the latest figures from the world body.Satellite-based communications with El-Fasher remain cut off — though not for the RSF, which controls the Starlink network there — as are access routes to the city despite calls for humanitarian corridors.AFP images from Tawila showed displaced people, some of them with bandages, carrying their belongings and setting up temporary shelters.Sudan’s long-running war has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced millions and triggered the world’s largest displacement and hunger crisis, with both sides accused of widespread atrocities.The UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) said Wednesday that its two top staff in Sudan had been “designated as persona non grata” and given three days to leave the country by the foreign ministry.WFP and senior UN officials were engaging with Sudanese authorities to protest the decision, which came “at a pivotal time”, it said, noting humanitarian needs “have never been greater”.The so-called Quad group — comprising the United States, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia — has held talks over several months towards securing a truce. But those talks have reached an impasse, an official close to the negotiations said, adding that their proposals are facing “continued obstructionism” from the army-aligned government. 

Pakistan says peace talks with Afghanistan ‘failed’

Pakistan said Wednesday that peace talks with Afghanistan had failed, in a blow to hopes for a lasting truce after the South Asian neighbours’ deadliest border clashes in years.The violence, which killed more than 70 people and wounded hundreds, erupted following explosions in Kabul on October 9 that the Taliban authorities blamed on Pakistan.Both sides had been holding talks in Istanbul aimed at securing peace.”Regrettably, the Afghan side gave no assurances, kept deviating from the core issue and resorted to blame game, deflection and ruses,” Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said on X after four days of negotiations brokered by Qatar and Turkey.”The dialogue thus failed to bring about any workable solution.”Tarar said Pakistan engaged with Afghanistan in the spirit of peace, but accused Kabul of “unabated support to anti-Pakistan terrorists”.”We will continue to take all possible measures necessary to protect our people from the menace of terrorism,” he added.Hours later, Defence Minister Khawaja Asif warned on X that “any terrorist attack or any suicide bombing inside Pakistan shall give you the bitter taste of such misadventures”.Afghanistan has not commented so far.It is not clear whether negotiators from both sides remain in Istanbul, and the Turkish foreign ministry did not immediately respond to AFP’s request for comment.Abdul Mateen Qani, spokesman for Afghanistan’s interior ministry, told Afghan media outlet Ariana News on Tuesday that any attack would be met with a response “that will serve as a lesson for Pakistan and a message for others”.Relations between the one-time allies, who share a 2,600-kilometre (1,600-mile) frontier, have soured in recent years over accusations from Islamabad that Afghanistan harbours militant groups which stage attacks in Pakistan.Of particular concern is the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which Islamabad accuses the Taliban authorities of allowing to use Afghan territory as a “training-cum-logistic base and jump off point for terrorist activities”.The Taliban government has consistently denied the allegations.- Border shut -A Pakistani security source, who was not authorised to speak publicly, said Tuesday the Afghan delegation initially agreed to take “credible and decisive action” against the TTP, but “reversed its position repeatedly after instructions from Kabul”.After the October 9 explosions in the Afghan capital, which coincided with a visit to New Delhi by Afghan Foreign Minister Amir Muttaqi, the Taliban launched a retaliatory border offensive. Pakistan responded with strikes. An initial 48-hour ceasefire lapsed before a second truce emerged on October 19 following talks in Doha, also brokered by Qatar and Turkey.The border between the two neighbours has been closed for more than two weeks, and news of the state of the talks was met with despair.Abdul Jabbar, a vehicle spare parts trader in the Pakistani border town of Chaman, told AFP the closure was “very concerning” for businesses.”Trade suffers greatly. Both countries face losses — both are Islamic nations,” the 40-year-old said.A resident, Ehsanullah, told AFP he was disappointed the talks had failed.”May God make the talks successful so that peace, brotherhood, and trade can be restored,” the 26-year-old said.In Spin Boldak on the Afghan side, a driver had told AFP that “fruit is rotting” in trucks.”There are 50 to 60 trucks, some with apples, others with pomegranates and grapes,” said 25-year-old Gul, who only gave his first name. The violence killed at least 50 Afghan civilians and wounded 447 others in one week, the United Nations mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) told AFP on Monday.Pakistan’s military said on October 12 that 23 personnel had been killed and 29 wounded, without detailing civilian casualties.burs-abs/rsc

Protests erupt as Tanzania votes without an oppositionWed, 29 Oct 2025 11:25:30 GMT

Hundreds protested on Wednesday in Tanzania’s largest city, tearing down banners of President Samia Suluhu Hassan and burning a police station, as the East African country went to the polls in elections where the main challengers have either been jailed or barred from standing.Despite heavy security in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam, with tanks …

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Rain washes out 1st Australia-India T20 match

Persistent rain forced the opening Twenty20 clash between Australia and India to be abandoned on Wednesday, leaving Suryakumar Yadav stranded on 39 and Shubman Gill on 37.After being sent in on a chilly Canberra night, the visitors raced to 97-1 off 9.4 overs before being forced off for a second time by the weather with no more play possible.India got off to a solid start with their newest T20 sensation Abhishek Sharma signalling his intent immediately, advancing down the wicket to Josh Hazlewood on his first ball.He clobbered four boundaries in a quick-fire 19, but the gung-ho innings came to an end against Nathan Ellis, deceived by a slower ball and caught by Tim David at mid-off.Skipper Yadav slammed a giant six off Hazlewood before they were forced off by drizzle on 43-1 from five overs.When they returned after 45 minutes and with the game reduced to 18 overs, the runs began flowing for Yadav and Gill as they upped the ante. But the rain came back and they went off again having reached 97-1 and that proved the end of the match.The second game is at a sold-out Melbourne Cricket Ground on Friday.