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MEDI1TV Afrique : Midi infos - 30/06/2024

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00:00We are still together on Median TV. Thank you for remaining faithful to us. Here are the titles of your newspaper.
00:20Sad news in Morocco. We learned yesterday the death of Lalla Latifa, mother of His Majesty the King Mohammed VI. She was the widow of the late King Hassan.
00:34The first round of legislative elections in France after the territories of other mayors. We vote this Sunday in the metropolis. The participation rate is close to 26% at noon.
00:46In Tunisia, the decline of political parties on Kayseri worries the approach of the presidential election. How to explain it? Answers in this newspaper.
00:55Sad news in Morocco. We learned yesterday the death of Lalla Latifa, mother of His Majesty the King Mohammed VI. She was the widow of the late King Hassan.
01:08The announcement of his farewell was made by the spokesman of the Royal Palace.
01:17The official speech in the name of the palace of the king. With all sadness and sorrow.
01:26The official speech in the name of the palace of the king. With all sadness and sorrow.
01:56The official speech in the name of the palace of the king. With all sadness and sorrow.
02:16The official speech in the name of the palace of the king. With all sadness and sorrow.
02:46The official speech in the name of the palace of the king. With all sadness and sorrow.
03:02The official speech in the name of the palace of the king. With all sadness and sorrow.
03:27The official speech in the name of the palace of the king. With all sadness and sorrow.
03:55The official speech in the name of the palace of the king. With all sadness and sorrow.
04:25The official speech in the name of the palace of the king. With all sadness and sorrow.
04:55The official speech in the name of the palace of the king. With all sadness and sorrow.
05:17The official speech in the name of the palace of the king. With all sadness and sorrow.
05:47The official speech in the name of the palace of the king. With all sadness and sorrow.
05:57The official speech in the name of the palace of the king. With all sadness and sorrow.
06:04The issues are multiple. The first issue is to know what are the results that will come out of the polls.
06:15In the state of three blocks or two blocks. A block around the new Popular Front.
06:24Another block around the National Assembly. And a third block with the presidential majority.
06:33With an uncertainty or at least a question on the distribution of the votes, the suffrage between these three blocks.
06:44The latest polls give a strong will to vote in favor of the National Assembly and in second place of the new Popular Front.
06:57Can we expect a surprise?
07:00We can expect everything. Polls are sometimes not reliable. So we can expect surprises.
07:07The question is whether the development of the electorate of the National Assembly will be as strong as the polls indicate.
07:19Will this development give an important majority to the Assembly, allowing it to be in a position to govern?
07:30The question will be to know what will be the number of suffrages awarded to the new Popular Front and to the parties of the presidential majority.
07:41According to several observers, the risk of a National Assembly being blocked is flat on the political scene in France.
07:47What are the possible alliances between very polarized camps?
07:53Everything is possible because we have seen in recent years that parties or personalities that were previously rather opposed have rallied to majorities that have just been created.
08:09So the field is quite open.
08:14We can hardly imagine that there is an alliance between the National Assembly and the new Popular Front.
08:21Now there may be alliances between the groups constituted around the National Assembly and certain members of the Republicans to eventually give a majority.
08:33As there may be alliances between the new Popular Front and the presidential majority to also constitute a majority.
08:41It will all depend on the number of suffrages that one or the other will have collected.
08:46And we will be able to dig up hypotheses at the end of this first round that will allow us to identify the balance of power.
08:55Jean-François Poli, thank you for all these details. Thank you for answering our questions.
09:00You're welcome. Goodbye.
09:04Our special envoy in Paris, Bassam Najjar, has toured a few polling stations in France.
09:09Together we listen to him. He comes back on the participation rate at noon, which we spoke about earlier.
09:15More than 49.5 million voters are called to the polls this Sunday, June 30, to elect their representatives in the National Assembly, which was dissolved on June 9, after President Emmanuel Macron's decision to dissolve the National Assembly after the victory of the National Assembly in the European elections.
09:40One of the major issues in today's election remains, of course, the participation rate that many polls predict will reach 67%, recalling that in 2022 this same participation rate did not exceed the 47% mark in the first round and 46% in the second round.
10:014,000 candidates are running for this legislative election, with 577 seats in the National Assembly.
10:13Of course, the final results are only known after a week in the second round, when it is predicted that there will be a lot of triangles in about 250 constituencies, which shows the difficulty of today's elections and the blur that appears so far on the French political landscape.
10:36And what is the particularity of these anticipated legislations? How could they permanently shake the political horizon of France? Answer in this story by Oswell Jennings.
10:46The hour of truth is approaching. On Sunday, millions of French were called to the polls to elect their deputies, less than a month after the dissolution of the National Assembly by President Emmanuel Macron.
11:02The main blocs, the Union of the Left of the New Popular Front, the Centre d'Ensemble for the Republic and the National Assembly on the far right, quickly had to develop and present programs.
11:13During a fast-paced campaign, the Left quickly united within a New Popular Front, despite the tensions related to the accusations of anti-Semitism that aim at French insomnia.
11:24In the centre, the presidential majority led by Prime Minister Gabriel Attal campaigned under the banner Ensemble for the Republic.
11:32On the right, the Republicans tore themselves apart after the announcement of their president, Éric Ciotti, of an alliance with the National Assembly.
11:40These main political forces did not all present candidates whose 577 circumscriptions have national or local alliances.
11:49Once elected, the deputies will find their seat in the National Assembly and for the newcomers, will discover their role within the Parliament.
11:57Faced with a historical scrutiny, the polls anticipate a rise in participation.
12:01The enthusiasm is measured by the large number of registered procurations.
12:05To be qualified for the second round, the candidates must obtain a score at least equal to 12.5% of the registrants.
12:12This means that three or four candidates can qualify for the second round on July 7, a situation that could multiply.
12:19In his daily study for LCI, Le Figaro and Sud Radio, IFOP estimates Friday that the National Assembly,
12:26reinforced by the Republican fringe allied to Éric Ciotti, would have 36.5% of the votes.
12:32The Gauche would be relegated to 29% of the suffragettes when the Macronist camp would get only 20.5% of the votes.
12:39High numbers for the far-right party, even if it does not automatically ensure it has the 289 deputies necessary for the absolute majority at the end of the second round on July 7.
12:53And tonight, do not miss our special edition on these legislative in France, it will be at 7pm GMT plus 1.
13:10In Mauritania, we have already voted yesterday, it was the presidential election, the time is still at hand.
13:16So far, nearly 80% of the results have been compiled on the website of the Electoral Commission.
13:22The outgoing president is in charge with 55% of the suffragettes.
13:25He is followed by the human rights activist, Biram Dahabed, with nearly 23%.
13:30The final results will be known by tonight or later on Monday.
13:36268th day of war in Gaza and still no respite.
13:41The Palestinian enclave continues to be the target of intense Israeli strikes.
13:46The fighting rages in the north of the enclave, forcing thousands of people to flee their homes to escape the Israeli war machine, which has so far killed more than 37,800 Gazans.
13:59At the moment, negotiations to put an end to the pietine fire, according to Hamas officials, are at a deadlock.
14:07Just as the American proposal, a plan presented at the end of May by President Joe Biden,
14:15which planned to put an end to the six-week fire accompanied by an Israeli withdrawal from the densely populated areas of Gaza,
14:21in addition to the liberation of some Palestinian hostages detained by Israel.
14:28In Tunisia, there is a huge gap in relations between the Tunisian political class and those in power.
14:48Today, and in a few months from the presidential elections, special organizations in electoral affairs say that political parties,
14:57which are in principle the guarantors of diversity and political alternation, shine in Tunisia through their absence.
15:04The absence of political parties will certainly have a significant impact on the participation rates in the next elections.
15:13All the more so since it is the parties that mobilize, that push citizens to the polls and carry out the candidacy.
15:21This is why the absence of parties today has created a great void, whether in terms of presidential elections or in terms of the discussion of decrees and laws.
15:35On the other hand, political analysts say that the problem of the political class is the black decade that has made it lose its credibility.
15:49The absurdity of the parties over the last decade is the reason that led them to this stage and to this situation.
15:57No party has proceeded to a process of self-criticism or revision.
16:02No law prevents the people from supporting the parties.
16:07But there is today a gap between the Tunisian people and the parties in historical break with them.
16:14There are more than 220 political parties in Tunisia.
16:19But it would be difficult for anyone to name more than a dozen parties, most of which were created by adventurers after the revolution,
16:30taking advantage of the climate, freedom and revolutionary credulity.
16:35But almost all of the parties that exist today are the parties that already existed before the revolution
16:42or that emerged after the takeover of power by Press Assaid on July 25, 2021.
16:48These parties owe their notoriety to their media presence.
16:53On the ground, they are non-existent.
16:58In the news also, this attack took place yesterday in Nigeria.
17:01At least 18 people were killed and dozens were injured in several suicide attacks in the city of Gwaza, in the state of Borno.
17:10The attack, which has not yet been claimed, was perpetrated during a baptism,
17:14thus recalling the operational mode taken by the terrorist group Boko Haram.
17:21In Sudan, paramilitaries have announced that they have taken control of a Singa base in the capital of the state of Senar,
17:28located in the southeast of the country.
17:30This seizure of territory has caused the flight of thousands of inhabitants.
17:34In addition, with this new breakthrough, the paramilitaries are tightening the reins around the city of Port-Sudan, in the state of the Red Sea.
17:46In Senegal, we are approaching winter, synonymous with heavy rain, which often haunts the sleep of the inhabitants of Dakar, but not only.
17:54To prevent the capital from being under water, the government has been activating its response plan and prevention plan against floods for two months.
18:02This is what we are going to see in this report from Marème Diop and Sanousi Sade.
18:07Tiamegen, a district of the Dakar suburb. In this area, as in others, the red alert has been launched.
18:16Here, it is an area at high risk of flooding.
18:19SAMAT has been fighting the phenomenon for 18 years.
18:23It welcomes us in one of the reservoirs of the rainwater of the district.
18:29We are currently at the level of SAMSAM 3, in the SAMSAM basin.
18:33Because there are projects that are currently under way, but which are not yet finished.
18:38At the level of Tiamegen, you saw at the level of Talimam, they started the reprofiling.
18:45At our level, we also started almost two months ago, the curing and drainage of certain areas.
18:54This year, an innovation has been brought by the new government in the flood management policy.
19:01This is the community approach.
19:04The technical services, the ONANS, the DPGI, have associated the actors.
19:09Because we cannot fight this phenomenon.
19:12Because it is a recurring phenomenon that has been hurting the population for so many years.
19:15To face this phenomenon, we need a unitary dynamic.
19:19On the ground, works are also underway for the drainage of the canoes and the storage of the basins.
19:26As part of the prevention for a reduction in the risk of flooding.
19:32Here, within the management, we are developing a large project called the integrated flood management project in Senegal.
19:41With four components.
19:43One of the components is the implementation of a geographical information system
19:52applied to the mapping of the risk of flooding and areas.
19:56Flooding on a mass communication and an institutional communication.
20:02The Director of the Prevention and Management of Flooding of Completed.
20:07We will make available to the territorial authorities, the administrative authorities,
20:13all these maps that we are producing, and especially the digital terrain model
20:18that allows us to see the dormant hydrographic networks,
20:22that is, the waterways, the lakes, which do not exist today, but which can reappear on the occasion of an exceptional flood.
20:29The head of the Senegalese state has also launched the CETAL Sounouréo program,
20:35a national cleaning initiative to facilitate the evacuation of rainwater everywhere in Senegal.
20:42The next day is scheduled for July 6, 2024.
20:48In Gabon, authorities are mobilizing against the use of brightening cosmetics containing mercury.
20:54Awareness campaigns against depigmentation have been launched in the country
20:59after a recent visit by experts from the World Health Organization.
21:03Kevin, Oswaldo Kaga.
21:06In Gabon, thousands of people, mainly women, do everything to get a clearer shade.
21:13Those who can't do it are sometimes stigmatized.
21:16I was a little touched by the skin problem
21:21because I have my last daughter who is very dark, she is very black.
21:25She is studying in an institution.
21:27Her classmates, she is 7 years old.
21:30So her classmates blame the child by saying that she is too black, she is brown.
21:36So every time we follow the child in recreation.
21:39Changing the shade despite the potential health risks,
21:42the government wants to make a stop.
21:45Awareness campaigns on the ground have just been launched.
21:48Mercury is a product that is highly toxic to human beings.
21:53And persistent products contain mercury.
21:57And this mercury is really dangerous.
22:00Gabon is speeding up by consolidating the regulatory base.
22:06We have taken a decree and two arrests.
22:12In the sense of consolidating the regulatory base
22:16for the possible ban or the fight against the use of these mercury-based products.
22:26Gabon is a country that has made great strides.
22:31And today it was about coming to make an evaluation in mid-course.
22:37And the fact of evaluation to support the progress in these projects in Gabon.
22:44The global skin enlightenment industry weighed 4.8 billion dollars in 2017.
22:52And it should almost double to reach 8.9 billion dollars in 2027.
22:59The demand mainly comes from consumers of the middle class in Asia and Africa.
23:07This concludes this news report.
23:09Thank you for following it.
23:10The information continues on Mediain TV and Mediain TV Afrique.