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  • Did US novelist John Steinbeck spy for the CIA in Paris?

    International — Link

    In 1954, US novelist John Steinbeck, author of The Grapes of Wrath, Of Mice and Men and East of Eden, sojourned in Paris, when he wrote a short story published in the daily Le Figaro and which was re-published for the first time in English this week under the title The Amiable Fleas, but evidence suggests that during his stay in the French capital Steinbeck may also have been gathering intelligence for the CIA.

  • Amazon to make French businesses pay for new digital tax

    International — Link

    US e-commerce giant Amazon has said it will offset the cost of France's new tax on profits made by online sales of large tech companies by raising fees for French businesses that use its platform to find customers, warning that 'this could put smaller French firms at a competitive disadvantage to their peers in other countries'.

  • Bearded vultures successfully reintroduced to the Alps

    International — Link

    Once hunted to extinction and feared as predators of small children and sheep, bearded vultures have been successfully reintroduced to the French Alps in a multi-million-euro project that began 30 years ago and which has now established around 250 of the birds, including 50 breeding pairs with a record 35 chicks, in their mountain habitat.

  • French farmers dump manure on offices of MPs who voted Canada deal

    International — Link

    Farmers in south-west France angry at parliament's approval of the ‘CETA’ EU-Canada trade deal, which they claim will threaten their livelihoods by allowing the importation of agricultural products that do not meet current EU standards, have attacked the offices of MPs from President Emmanuel Macron’s LREM party by bricking up one and dumping manure outside another.

  • French court orders EDF firm to replace smart meters over health fears

    France — Link

    A plan to roll out millions of 'smart' meters across France to monitor household electricity consumption has suffered a setback after a court ordered EDF subsidiary Enedis, which manages the grid, to replace the connected 'Linky' meters at the homes of several of its customers after they complained of illnesses caused by the electronic field generated by the devices.

  • Indonesia commutes death sentence for French drug smuggler

    International — Link

    A 35-year-old French man who was handed a death sentence earlier this year after he was found guilty of smuggling a suitcase of drugs into the Indonesian island of Lombok has had his sentence commuted to 19 years in jail.

  • Facebook settles French 'censorship' case over post of vagina painting

    France — Link

    Facebook has settled a longstanding legal battle with teacher Frédéric Durand whose post with a link to a thumbnail image of Gustave Courbet's famous 1866 oil painting 'L'Origine du Monde', which shows a woman's vagina, was censored, prompting Durand's suit against the US tech giant for infringing on his freedom of expression.

  • French minister slams Trump over 'moronic' threat to French wine

    International — Link

    French agriculture minister Didier Guillaume has described US President Donald Trump's threat to increase tariffs on French wine imports in retaliation to France's 'foolishness' in deciding to tax sales of digital retail and commercial activities by tech companies, notably US giants like Amazone and Apple, as being 'completely moronic' and 'absurd'.

  • Corpse of music festival reveller Steve Caniço found in Loire river

    France — Link

    The body of a man found in the River Loire on Monday in the north-west town of Nantes has been confirmed as being that of Steve Maia Caniço who disappeared after falling into the waters from a quayside techno party after a police charge on revellers during France's national June 21st music festival celebrations, and which prompted a nationwide debate on policing methods.

  • Three dead in shooting at service station in southern France

    France — Link

    Gunmen opened fire on Sunday evening on suspected drug dealers at a service station close to Toulon, in south-east France, killing two men and a woman reported to be a passing tourist, and seriously wounding her husband.

  • French environmental group file suit over Notre Dame lead pollution

    France — Link

    Environmental protection NGO Robin des Bois has filed a lawsuit claiming 'the relevent authorities, including the diocese [...] neglected to assist residents, visitors and workers, allowing them to be exposed to the toxic fallout' of lead pollution caused by the fire that ravaged Notre Dame cathedral in April, following Mediapart's report earlier this month of high levels of lead contamination in the surrounding area.

  • Colombian Egan Bernal rides into history with Tour de France win

    International — Link

    Egan Bernal, 22, became the first Colombian to win the gruelling and prestigious three-week Tour de France cycle race on Sunday, and the youngest rider to win it in 110 years, while Australian Caleb Ewan came first in the traditional sprint finish on the Champs-Elysées.

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La rédaction de Mediapart

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