French PM survives no-confidence votes after making pension concession

French PM survives no-confidence votes after making pension concession
French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu survived two no-confidence votes in parliament on Thursday, winning crucial backing from the Socialist Party thanks to his pledge to suspend President Emmanuel Macron’s contested pension reform. (AFP/File)
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French PM survives no-confidence votes after making pension concession

French PM survives no-confidence votes after making pension concession
  • Lecornu’s offer to mothball the pension reform until after the 2027 presidential election helped sway the Socialists
  • The French bond market remained steady after the back-to-back votes

PARIS: French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu survived two no-confidence votes in parliament on Thursday, winning crucial backing from the Socialist Party thanks to his pledge to suspend President Emmanuel Macron’s contested pension reform.
The two motions presented by the hard-left France Unbowed and the far-right National Rally (RN) secured just 271 and 144 votes respectively — well short of the 289 votes needed to bring down Lecornu’s days-old government.
Lecornu’s offer to mothball the pension reform until after the 2027 presidential election helped sway the Socialists, giving the government a lifeline in the deeply fragmented National Assembly.
Despite the reprieve, the motions underscored the fragility of Macron’s administration midway through his final term.
“A majority cobbled together through horse-trading managed today to save their positions, at the expense of the national interest,” RN party president Jordan Bardella wrote on X.
The French bond market remained steady after the back-to-back votes, with the government victory widely expected by investors.

LECORNU FACES ARDUOUS BUDGET NEGOTIATIONS
By putting the pension reform on the chopping block, Lecornu threatens to kill off one of Macron’s main economic legacies at a time when France’s public finances are in a perilous state, leaving the president with little in the way of domestic achievements after eight years in office. There are 265 lawmakers in parliament from parties that said they would vote to topple Lecornu, and only a handful of rebels from other groups joined their cause. If Lecornu had lost either vote, he and his ministers would have had to immediately resign, and Macron would have come under huge pressure to call a snap parliamentary election, plunging France deeper into crisis. But despite the outcome of Thursday’s votes, Lecornu still faces weeks of arduous negotiations in parliament over passing a slimmed-down 2026 budget during which he could be toppled at any point.
“The French need to know that we are doing all this work... to give them a budget, because it is fundamental for the future of our country,” said Yael Braun-Pivet, the president of the National Assembly and an ally of Macron.
“I am pleased to see that today there is a majority in the National Assembly that is operating in this spirit: work, the search for compromise, the best possible effort,” she added.
After winning the pension concession, the Socialists on Wednesday set their sights on including a tax on billionaires in the 2026 budget, underlining just how weak Lecornu’s hand is in the negotiations.

POLITICAL KRYPTONITE France is in the midst of its worst political crisis in decades as a succession of minority governments seek to push deficit-reducing budgets through a truculent legislature split into three distinct ideological blocs.
Reforming France’s generous pension system has been political kryptonite ever since Socialist President Francois Mitterrand cut the retirement age to 60 from 65 in 1982. In France, the average effective retirement age is just 60.7, compared to the OECD average of 64.4.
Macron’s reform raised the statutory retirement age by two years to 64 by 2030. Although that only brings French policy into line with other European Union member states, it chips away at a cherished social benefit beloved by the left.


Greta Thunberg says she was tortured in Israeli custody

Swedish activist Greta Thunberg said Israeli guards had “no empathy or humanity” toward the detainees. (File/Reuters)
Swedish activist Greta Thunberg said Israeli guards had “no empathy or humanity” toward the detainees. (File/Reuters)
Updated 16 October 2025

Greta Thunberg says she was tortured in Israeli custody

Swedish activist Greta Thunberg said Israeli guards had “no empathy or humanity” toward the detainees. (File/Reuters)
  • Swedish activist: Guards had ‘no empathy or humanity’ toward detainees
  • She was detained earlier in October aboard aid flotilla trying to breach Gaza blockade

LONDON: Swedish activist Greta Thunberg has accused Israeli personnel of torturing her and other detainees after being arrested aboard an aid flotilla heading for Gaza.

Thunberg said she was “hit, kicked, starved and tortured” in custody, and guards took selfies with her and defaced her property with lewd graffiti.

She was arrested earlier this month in international waters as part of the Global Sumud Flotilla trying to bring aid into Gaza.

The 22-year-old said she and others were taken to a “dystopian” detention area, telling Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet: “I saw maybe 50 people sitting in a row on their knees with handcuffs and their foreheads against the ground.”

She added: “They dragged me to the opposite side from where the others were sitting, and I had the (Israeli) flag around me the whole time. They hit and kicked me.”

Thunberg said the guards had “no empathy or humanity” toward the detainees, and she had to “beg” for water while being kept in conditions of 40 degrees Celsius.

“There’s a lot I don’t remember. So much is happening at once. You’re in shock, you’re in pain, but you go into a state of trying to stay calm,” she said.

“When people fainted, we banged on the cages and asked for a doctor. Then the guards came and said: ‘We’re going to gas you.’ It was standard for them to say that. They held up a gas cylinder and threatened to press it against us.

“During the nights, guards regularly came by and shook the bars, shining flashlights, and several times a night they came in and forced everyone to stand up.”

Thunberg was detained after the flotilla was halted on Oct. 2, and she was deported on Oct. 6. The flotilla was intercepted in what its organizers said was an “illegal attack on unarmed humanitarians in international waters” after refusing to change course when ordered to by the Israeli military.


Afghan suspect in knife attack that killed toddler goes on trial in Germany

Afghan suspect in knife attack that killed toddler goes on trial in Germany
Updated 16 October 2025

Afghan suspect in knife attack that killed toddler goes on trial in Germany

Afghan suspect in knife attack that killed toddler goes on trial in Germany
  • Prosecutors allege the suspect fatally stabbing a German man and a 2-year-old boy of Moroccan descent
  • The attack also left a 2-year-old Syrian girl, a teacher and a 72-year-old man injured

ASCHAFFENBURG: The trial of a 28-year-old Afghan national accused of killing two people, including a toddler, during a knife attack in Aschaffenburg began on Thursday, more than eight months after the incident that shocked the nation.
Prosecutors allege the suspect - named only as Enamullah O. to protect his privacy - attacked a kindergarten group, fatally stabbing a German man and a 2-year-old boy of Moroccan descent in a city park in January.
The attack also left a 2-year-old Syrian girl, a teacher and a 72-year-old man injured, authorities said.
Prosecutors say Enamullah O. had paranoid schizophrenia at the time the crimes were committed.
The attack, which happened a month before Germany's federal election in February, prompted the now Chancellor Friedrich Merz to promise a crackdown on migration and to tighten border controls.
It was one of a string of violent attacks in Germany that have boosted concerns over migration and fuelled support for the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), which is vying for top spot in opinion polls with Merz's conservatives.
The suspect had an asylum application turned down and had said he would voluntarily leave Germany last December, but did not leave and remained under treatment.
Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt has announced plans to allow deportations of illegal immigrants to Afghanistan and other countries, reversing previous restrictions on doing so under the previous government.
Supporters of these measures say the changes are necessary to address security concerns and public unease.


Trump due in South Korea on October 29 for APEC summit

Trump due in South Korea on October 29 for APEC summit
Updated 16 October 2025

Trump due in South Korea on October 29 for APEC summit

Trump due in South Korea on October 29 for APEC summit
  • US President Donald Trump is expected to arrive in South Korea on October 29 for the upcoming APEC summit, South Korea’s presidential office said Thursday

SEOUL: US President Donald Trump is expected to arrive in South Korea on October 29 for the upcoming APEC summit, South Korea’s presidential office said Thursday.
The US president is expected to be “arriving on the 29th,” an official from the office told AFP.
US officials maintain that Trump may meet Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, which runs until November 1.
Seoul has also said a meeting on the sidelines between the United States and North Korea “cannot be ruled out.”
South Korean media cited the national security adviser as saying that Trump is expected to stay in the southern city of Gyeongju until October 30.
A meeting with the South Korean President Lee Jae Myung will likely take place around that time, according to the reports.
Last week, Trump threatened to scrap a planned meeting with Xi at the forum, in retaliation for Beijing imposing export curbs on rare-earth technologies.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, however, told CNBC on Wednesday that Trump still planned to meet Xi.
Trump has also said he hopes to meet North Korean leader Kim Jong Un again, possibly this year, while Pyongyang has said Kim is open to future talks under certain circumstances.
The pair met three times during Trump’s first term, but ultimately failed to secure a lasting agreement on North Korea’s nuclear program.
Since then, Pyongyang has declared itself an “irreversible” nuclear state.
Geopolitical shift
The forum comes against a shifting geopolitical backdrop, with Kim emboldened by the war in Ukraine.
The North Korean leader has secured critical support from Russia after sending thousands of troops to fight alongside Moscow’s forces.
Last month, Kim appeared alongside Xi and Russian President Vladimir Putin at an elaborate military parade in Beijing.
Pyongyang also showed off its “most powerful” intercontinental ballistic missile at its own parade attended by top officials from Russia and China.
Staging that “massive display of force just before South Korea hosts a major international summit is a calculated move to create anxiety and project strength,” Seong-Hyon Lee, a visiting scholar at the Harvard University Asia Center, told AFP.
“It aims to undermine confidence and highlight the new, harsher strategic reality on the peninsula.”


At least 18 killed, 360 wounded in Pakistan-Afghanistan clashes so far, UN says

At least 18 killed, 360 wounded in Pakistan-Afghanistan clashes so far, UN says
Updated 16 October 2025

At least 18 killed, 360 wounded in Pakistan-Afghanistan clashes so far, UN says

At least 18 killed, 360 wounded in Pakistan-Afghanistan clashes so far, UN says

ISLAMABAD: At least 18 people have been killed and more than 360 wounded in Afghanistan in military clashes between Pakistan and Afghanistan since Oct. 10, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said in a statement on Thursday.
“UNAMA calls on all parties to bring a lasting end to hostilities to protect civilians,” the statement added.


Uruguay legalizes euthanasia

Uruguay legalizes euthanasia
Updated 16 October 2025

Uruguay legalizes euthanasia

Uruguay legalizes euthanasia
  • The vote came after 10 hours of debate on an issue several lawmakers called “the most difficult”
  • Uruguay’s ruling party, leftist Frente Amplio, was behind the initiative, which was met with fierce opposition mainly from the religious right

Montevideo: Uruguay on Wednesday legalized euthanasia, becoming one of the first countries in Latin America and among a dozen worldwide to allow assisted suicide.
The small South American country has a long history of passing socially liberal laws, legalizing marijuana, same-sex marriage and abortion long before most others.
On Wednesday, euthanasia was added to the list with the Senate approving the so-called “Dignified Death” bill.
Twenty out of 31 legislators present voted in favor, passing a law approved by the lower Chamber of Representatives in August.
The vote came after 10 hours of debate on an issue several lawmakers called “the most difficult.”
The discussion was largely respectful and often emotional, though some onlookers watching the debate cried out “murderers” after the vote passed.
“I feel relief and joy,” Florencia Salgueiro told AFP after celebrating in the gallery alongside other euthanasia advocates.
Salgueiro had witnessed her father’s struggle to receive assistance to end his life when ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, made his days unbearable. He died without fulfilling his wish.
Elsewhere in Latin America, courts in Colombia and Ecuador have decriminalized euthanasia without passing laws to legalize the practice, while Cuba allows for terminal patients to refuse being kept alive artificially.
Uruguay’s ruling party, leftist Frente Amplio, was behind the initiative, which was met with fierce opposition mainly from the religious right.
A recent poll showed more than 60 percent of Uruguayans support legal euthanasia, with only 24 percent opposed.
The law allows assisted suicide for adult Uruguayan citizens or residents who are mentally competent and in the terminal stage of an incurable disease that causes them suffering.
Beatriz Gelos, a 71-year-old Uruguayan who has battled neurodegenerative ALS for two decades, told AFP the law was “compassionate, very humane.”
In a wheelchair and speaking with a faltering voice, she said opponents “have no idea what it’s like to live like this.”
Another advocate is Monica Canepa, whose son Pablo, 39, has been paralyzed by an incurable disease.
“Pablo is not living. This is not life,” she told AFP.
Uruguay’s Medical Association has not taken a stance on euthanasia, allowing its doctor members to follow their own conscience.
The Catholic Church, for its part, has expressed “sadness” at the decision.