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  • France's teachers strike, piling pressure on education minister

    France — Link

    The walkout was "a warning to the government" about teachers' "daily life, their suffering at work and the lack of recognition, especially in their pay," said primary school teachers' union FSU-Snuipp.

  • French farmers call off protest after PM makes concessions

    France — Link

    Two major farmers unions on Thursday suspended protests and lift road blockades across the country on the back of a set of new government measures.

  • French farmer protests: dozens arrested at Rungis food market

    France — Link

    The French government has warned that disruption by protesting farmers  at Rungis, a food distribution hub which feeds 12 million people, would cross a red line.

  • Brussels backs delay to rules fuelling farmers’ protests

    France — Link

    Delay to rules on setting aside land to encourage biodiversity offered as concession amid continuing protests in France and elsewhere.

  • French PM vows to cut red tape, taxes as farmers protest

    France — Link

    New premier Gabriel Attal makes appeal to farmers and the middle class, echoing Emmanuel Macron’s rightward shift. 

  • Tractors block roads to Paris, farmers warned off food market

    France — Link

    French farmers protesting low prices paid for their produce, administrative bureaucracy and environmental regulations used tractors to block road access to Paris on Monday, vowing to continue the action for days to come, while the government has mobilised around 15,000 police and gendarmes, some in armoured vehicles, to keep airports and the major Rungis food market operating. 

  • Protestors inside Louvre museum throw soup at Mona Lisa

    France — Link

    Two women protestors wearing T-shirts that read  'food counterattack' threw pumpkin soup at Leonardo da Vinci's 16th-century painting Mona Lisa at the Louvre on Sunday morning, but the museum afterwards confirmed no damage was caused because of protective glass around the canvas.

  • French memorial to those freed from slavery divides opinion

    France — Link

    A plan to build a National Memorial for the Victims of Slavery in the Trocadéro Gardens in central Paris, which will display the names of around 224,000 people freed from slavery by France in 1848 is criticised by some as glorifying France for abolishing slavery, and not atone for holding some four million people in bondage over two centuries.

  • Sacked asset manager details Monaco royals' lavish spending

    France — Link

    Claude Palmero, who for 22 years was asset manager for the Monaco royal family until he was sacked last year, has detailed to the French media their alleged transactions that include a 600,000-euro settlement in 2017 of an overdraft of ruling Prince Albert's South African wife Princess Charlene, that she spent 15 million euros over a period of eight years, and that she enjoys a yearly allowance of around 1.5 million euros.

  • Mixed reactions as French PM makes concessions to farmers

    France — Link

    France's Prime Minister Gabriel Attal has announced a series of measures in an effort to defuse a growing protest movement by the country's farmers, including the scrapping of a move to phase out tax breaks on diesel fuel for farm vehicles, the simplification of administrative procedures, aid for farmers whose cattle are affected by epizootic hemorrhagic disease, and an emergency fund for winegrowers and organic farms.

  • Posy Simmonds wins top French graphic novel prize

    France — Link

    Posy Simmonds, author of such works as Tamara Drewe and Gemma Bovery, has become the first Briton to win the grand prix at the Angoulême international graphic novel festival.

  • French court scraps large section of hardline immigration law

    France — Link

    France's Constitutional Council has rejected more than a third of the articles of hardline legislation on immigration which was approved by parliament in December after it gained support from the Right and far-right.

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La rédaction de Mediapart (avatar)

La rédaction de Mediapart

Mediapart Journalist

576 Posts

29 Editions

  • En hommage au photographe Antoni Lallican

    Blog post

    Le journaliste français est mort vendredi 3 octobre en Ukraine, victime d’un tir de drone. Il couvrait cette guerre depuis le début de l’invasion russe et avait collaboré avec Mediapart à de nombreuses reprises.

  • Jugement Sarkozy : la piteuse diversion contre Mediapart

    Blog post

    Depuis l’annonce de la condamnation à cinq ans de prison ferme avec mandat de dépôt différé de Nicolas Sarkozy, l’ancien président de la République et ce qu’il lui reste de proches multiplient les attaques contre notre journal, à l’origine des premières révélations dans cette affaire. Mise au point de la direction éditoriale.

  • De mi-juillet à mi-août, on se calme et on lit au frais nos séries d’été !

    Blog post

    Pour oublier les vicissitudes de la vie politique française comme les désordres climatiques et géopolitiques du monde, rien de tel que de plonger dans nos séries d’été, compagnonnes idéales du farniente au bord de l’eau ou des pauses rando, ou complices de survie quand on est bloqué au bureau ou dans son appart’ trop chaud. Une série d’histoires, enquêtes et portraits qui sauront renouveler à merveille les discussions de l’apéro.

  • « Personne n’y comprend rien » arrive en VOD

    Blog post

    Le film sur l’affaire libyenne est accessible sur Mediapart à partir du 8 mai. À un tarif avantageux.

  • Podcasts : Mediapart lance un appel à projets

    Blog post

    Mediapart a décidé d’étoffer son offre de podcasts en achetant cette année plusieurs séries d’épisodes. Nous lançons un appel à projets sur le thème de l’addiction.