Conquérir un territoire, c’est avant tout soumettre sa population. Il faut bien distinguer cette notion de celle d’«occupation», un terme juridique spécifique qui régit les relations entre une «puissance occupante» étrangère et la nation occupée en vertu du droit international, en particulier la quatrième Convention de Genève.
The debate on migration has calmed down a bit in the news media. However, this does not mean that the issue has been ‘solved’. Quite the opposite.
In most discussions about migration, we tend to start with numbers. Understanding the scale changes, emerging trends and demographic shifts associated with global social and economic transformations, such as migration, helps us understand the changing world we live in and plan for the future. According to a global estimate by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) there were approximately 281 million international migrants in the world in 2020, representing 3.6 percent of the world’s population. The estimated number of international migrants has increased significantly over the past five decades, from 128 million in 1970 to 153 million in 1990. The latest figures for 2024 indicate 303,936,274 migrants.
Lebanon Tells Iran to Abide by Diplomatic Norms: Lebanese Foreign Minister Youssef Raggi had rejected “foreign interference” following criticism from Iranian Ambassador Mojtaba Amani over evolving plans that may lead to the disarmament of Tehran’s Hezbollah proxy. Amani, who was wounded during Israel’s “exploding pager” operation in September 2024, called the initiative “a clear conspiracy against nations.” Raggi responded that Lebanon “reject[s] any foreign interference in our internal affairs. We support positive neutrality, mutual respect for sovereignty, and shared Arab interests.”
Aoun Says State Monopoly Arms ‘Fundamental’ to Peace: Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said on April 20 that a state monopoly on bearing arms, which would necessarily preclude Hezbollah from operating, is a “sensitive, delicate issue” but one “that is fundamental to preserving civil peace.” The Lebanese army announced on April 20 that it had thwarted a rocket attack against Israel — the first such publicized intervention since the November 2024 ceasefire between the two countries.
Congressman Meets With Syrian Transitional President: The interim government in Syria — which, like its Lebanese neighbor, is also facing Iranian proxies operating on its territory — has cracked down on Hezbollah terrorists who backed the deposed regime of former President Bashar al-Assad. Following a meeting in Damascus with interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa, U.S. Rep. Cory Mills (R-FL) said the Syrian leader had told him that “under the right conditions,” Damascus would be prepared to join the “Abraham Accords” bloc of Arab states that have normalized relations with Israel. Mills said that he presented Sharaa with a list of conditions the new Syrian government must fulfill for the United States to lift sanctions, including the destruction of chemical weapons left over from the Assad regime.
Les assauts contre l’armée béninoise se sont intensifiés ces derniers mois dans le nord du pays, où une attaque djihadiste a fait 54 morts le 17 avril dans les rangs des militaires.
Le nord du Bénin, confronté à des attaques djihadistes de plus en plus meurtrières, paie le prix fort d’une coopération sécuritaire défaillante entre ce pays du golfe de Guinée et ses voisins sahéliens, le Burkina Faso et le Niger, qui ouvre la voie aux islamistes, selon des experts interrogés par l’Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Des unités de la garde nationale ont mis le feu aux tentes installées dans des oliveraies du centre-est du pays, sur fond d’accélération des retours « volontaires » des migrants dans leurs pays.
Les autorités tunisiennes ont de nouveau démantelé jeudi 24 avril des camps de fortune de migrants originaires d’Afrique subsaharienne, installés dans des oliveraies dans le centre-est du pays, sur fond d’accélération des retours « volontaires » de personnes migrantes dans leurs pays. Des unités de la garde nationale ont mis le feu aux tentes dans ces camps, selon un journaliste de l’Agence France-Presse (AFP) sur place.
On April 23, 2025, Jordan has outlawed the Muslim Brotherhood, its most prominent opposition group, following the discovery of members’ involvement in a sabotage plot aimed at Jordanian authorities.
Interior Minister Mazin Fraya declared a complete ban on the group’s activities, stating that anyone promoting its ideology would face legal consequences.[1]
On April 16, 2025, the Muslim Brotherhood’s Grand Mufti of Libya, Sheikh Sadiq Al-Ghariani, condemned Arab countries like Egypt, Morocco, and the UAE for welcoming Israeli soldiers on leave for Passover as tourists, in a video posted on X. In the video, Al-Ghariani called on Muslims in Egypt and Morocco to kill Israeli soldiers vacationing in these countries during the holiday. He claimed that Israeli soldiers are “blood-shedding murderers” and not civilian tourists.
Algerian authorities rounded up more than 1,800 migrants and left them at the Nigerien border in a record expulsion earlier this month, a Niger-based migrant rights group said Thursday.
Alarmphone Sahara, which monitors migration across the region, said the migrants were bused to a remote desert area known as “Point Zero” after being apprehended in Algerian cities.
Plus de 100 cas de profanation de monuments soviétiques ont été recensés en Europe en l’espace d’un an, notamment en Pologne et dans les pays baltes, où les autorités ferment les yeux sur cette dérive préoccupante.
Au cours des douze derniers mois, plus de 100 actes de vandalisme visant des monuments soviétiques ont été recensés dans les pays européens, a déclaré ce 25 avril le ministère russe des Affaires étrangères. L’ambassadeur itinérant du ministère russe des Affaires étrangères Mikhaïl Vanine a précisé que les pays les plus touchés étaient la Pologne et la Lituanie.
In-depth: From Beirut’s razed downtown to reconstructing its southern suburbs, war in Lebanon has long served as a pretext for elite-led urban transformation.
Lebanon, reeling from a war that inflicted an estimated $5.1 billion in economic losses, now faces the daunting task of reconstruction.