France: Journalists Yield As New Editor-in-Chief Embarks on First Day
The reason for the forty-day journalism strike was not the new editor-in-chief’s professional shortcomings but his ideological beliefs: Lejeune is of a decidedly rightist bent.
The reason for the forty-day journalism strike was not the new editor-in-chief’s professional shortcomings but his ideological beliefs: Lejeune is of a decidedly rightist bent.
The deal would be an “effective contribution to the food security of the world,” Ukraine’s foreign minister said.
Critics note that the NHS, struggling enough with a lack of funding, critical staff shortages, and long waiting lists for patients, has bigger fish to fry.
Goodwill towards France is dwindling precipitously in the post-coup Niger. French flags were burned at the French embassy, while locals shouted anti-French slogans.
An advisory body for the Council of Europe has come out strongly against the law, noting that its approval this close to Poland’s general elections this fall would create an uneven playing field.
While President Nayib Bukele’s hard-line approach to the notorious Barrio 18 and MS-13 gangs has consistently garnered him approval from Salvadorean voters, he has been painted as a dangerous authoritarian figure, whose emergency measures constitute various human rights violations, including arbitrary arrests and mistreatment.
Moldova’s decision, which reflects its markedly cooled relations with Moscow, comes on the heels of a recent investigation, which showed that the number of satellite dishes and communication devices on the Russian embassy’s rooftop had been steadily increasing, sparking espionage fears.
In two separate jihadi suicide bombings, at a metro station in the EU Quarter and Brussels Airport in Zaventem, 32 people lost their lives.
A stone in the EU’s shoe is a Poland-led loose alliance of five nations bordering Ukraine that, in a bid to protect their farmers, wish to extend a ban on the sale of Ukrainian grain, a demand that if not met, some warn they will satisfy unilaterally.
Besides mass protests to contend with, Israel faces the risk of its public sector being crippled. The head of Israel’s main public sector union said he would meet with other union officials to discuss the possibility of declaring a “general labor dispute in the economy,” which they would activate “if necessary until a complete shutdown is achieved.”
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