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French fencers hoping for medal haul at Paris Olympics


Paris (AFP) – All eyes may be on 2024, but France’s fencers have a busy schedule this summer, when they’ll be taking part in the European Games in Krakow from 28 to 30 June, before heading to the World Championships in Milan from 22 to 30 July. It’s all part of their preparations for the Paris Olympics, where the French fencers “could win between seven and ten medals”, according to the federation’s president, Bruno Gares.

©AFP

Israeli volunteer helps Palestinians travel to hospital


Tel Aviv (AFP) – As dawn broke over the occupied West Bank, Mamoun Abu al-Rob and his son Adam cross into Israel, where the director of the “Road to Recovery” Israeli group Yael Noy was waiting to take them to a hospital where Adam is to receive follow-up treatment after suffering from eye cancer. The Israeli group takes dozens of Palestinians daily — mostly children — from West Bank and Gaza crossing points to Israeli hospitals for treatment unavailable in the Palestinian territories.

©AFP

Polish president Andrzej Duda says Wagner troops in Belarus could be ‘threat’ to region


Kyiv (Ukraine) (AFP) – The presence of Wagner troops in Belarus could pose a potential “threat” to nearby Baltic and eastern European countries, says Polish President Andrzej Duda during a visit to Ukraine. Belarus welcomed Wagner head Yevgeny Prigozhin into exile following an aborted rebellion against Russia, widely seen as the biggest threat to Kremlin authority in decades.

©AFP

Slow post-Covid recovery for Cuban tourism


Trinidad (Cuba) (AFP) – Despite the end of the pandemic, Cuba is still struggling to regain the flourishing tourism that is vital to its economy. The town of Trinidad, a major attraction, has been hard hit, with barely enough foot traffic nowadays to sustain its tourist industry.

©AFP

Clashes in Paris suburb after teen shot dead by police


Nanterre (France) (AFP) – The Paris suburb of Nanterre suffered a night of tension and urban violence after a 17-year-old was shot in the chest by a police officer who then appeared to lie about the circumstances of the killing. The government has said it will deploy 2,000 riot police to deal with any unrest.

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French President Emmanuel Macron says teen’s shooting by police ‘unforgivable’


Marseille (AFP) – A teen’s deadly shooting by police this week was “inexplicable” and “unforgivable”, French President Emmanuel Macron says during a visit to Mediterranean city Marseille after a night of violent. The teenager, named only as Nael M., was shot in the chest by a police officer who then appeared to lie about the circumstances of the killing.

©AFP

‘Not safe here’: Hong Kong exiles still living in fear in the UK


London (AFP) – In 2021, artists Lumli and Lumlong fled Hong Kong without telling anyone for fear of being reported and arrested. But even living in London, the couple still feel threatened by Beijing, like many other Hong Kongers in exile in the UK. “We’re not totally safe here” says Lumlong, “if the (UK) government don’t stand up strong against the CCP, we will never be safe”.

©AFP

Klimt’s last portrait sets European record in £74 million auction


London (AFP) – The last portrait painted by Gustav Klimt has been sold in London for £74 million ($94.3 million). The celebrated Austrian symbolist’s “Dame mit Facher” (Lady with a Fan) set a new European art auction record. Described as a “beautiful, rich and alluring portrait of an unnamed woman”, the portrait was found on his easel in his studio when he died unexpectedly in February 1918 aged 55.

©AFP

South Koreans get younger as traditional age system dropped


Seoul (AFP) – South Korea is the last East Asian country to officially still use a method of calculating age that determines babies are aged one at birth, counting their months in the womb as their first year of life. Under that system everyone gets a year older with the turn of the year rather than on their actual birthday, meaning a baby born on December 31 would be considered two years old on January 1 in Korean age. From Wednesday South Korea will use the international system that calculates age according to a person’s actual date of birth, meaning everyone will officially become a year or two younger.

©AFP

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