MEDI1TV Afrique : MEDI1 SOIR 20:00 - 15/11/2024
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00:00Good evening, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Medea TV.
00:18It's a pleasure to see you again for the Tour de l'Info.
00:21Here are the headlines.
00:22The 2025 Finance Bill, adopted by the majority by the House of Representatives,
00:28this Friday, the PLF received the approval of 171 deputies.
00:35New Israeli strikes cause dozens of deaths in Lebanon, Syria and in the Gaza Strip.
00:4023 deaths have been reported by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
00:43The electoral campaign in Senegal is coming to an end this Friday.
00:497.3 million voters are called on Sunday to elect 165 deputies of the National Assembly for the next five years.
01:01The House of Representatives adopted this Friday, during a plenary session,
01:05by the majority, the Budget 2025 Finance Bill.
01:08This project received the approval of 171 deputies, while 56 opposed it.
01:14And one deputy refused to vote, in the same configuration as the one adopted by the House for the second part of the PLF.
01:25The government has put in place concrete and proactive measures
01:28to mitigate the repercussions of the global situation on Moroccan citizens,
01:32which has reduced inflation by 1.1%.
01:35Ali Redbolle, President of the Center for Economic and Social Prospects,
01:38reminds us of the main lines of this Budget 2025 Finance Bill.
01:42The Budget 2025 Finance Bill is primarily a strategic vision,
01:48aligned with national priorities,
01:51such as the support for the purchasing power of citizens,
01:56through measures to limit the impact of inflation and strengthen social networks.
02:03Above all, by keeping the compensation box at an average level of 16.5 billion dirhams.
02:15Also, as regards employment,
02:20the government has put in place more than 14 billion dirhams
02:26in three areas to accelerate the pace of employment.
02:31There are also structural fiscal reforms
02:34aimed at alleviating fiscal pressure on taxpayers,
02:38in particular households and small businesses.
02:41There is also the promotion of public and private investment
02:46through incentives and adapted devices.
02:50There is also the reform of social justice.
02:54There is also the proactive management of public debt,
02:59while maintaining the downward trend of this public debt,
03:05especially at the international level.
03:08So I think these are the measures,
03:11the main measures for this Budget 2025 Finance Bill.
03:17Imported red meat arrives at its final destination, the Moroccan markets.
03:22A government measure calling for the market to open to imports
03:26will allow to stabilize and guarantee the reconstruction of the national shepherd.
03:30This is a report by Selwal Khaliwi and the story of Younes Benzino.
03:35For several months, the red meat market has been under increased pressure,
03:39exacerbated by economic and climatic factors.
03:43Consumers are forced to pay high prices for their meat supply,
03:47a situation that has pushed Morocco to open its borders to imports.
03:53It is news that has both positive and negative aspects.
03:58For us professionals,
04:01importation will strengthen supply and stabilize the market.
04:06However, I think that imported meat does not arouse the desire of consumers
04:11as much as local meat.
04:16In total, 10,000 tons of fresh or frozen red meat
04:21have already been processed,
04:24a large part of which comes from Spain.
04:27It is planned to import up to 20,000 tons by the end of the year.
04:31What to feed the fear of consumers about the quality of imported meat?
04:39Consumers have little information about imported meat,
04:43often frozen, which makes it difficult to assess its quality.
04:50Whether it is frozen or fresh meat,
04:53the government ensures that importers must follow a strict list of charges.
04:58Imports must be accompanied by health certificates and Halal,
05:02ensuring compliance with national standards.
05:07Pedro Sanchez thanked Morocco for its support
05:10in the areas affected by floods.
05:13The president of the Spanish government said
05:16that Moroccan, Portuguese and French rescue workers were on site.
05:19Following the floods that ravaged several Spanish regions,
05:22His Majesty the King Mohammed VI gave these very high instructions
05:25to speed up rescue teams and provide all the necessary aid to Spain.
05:29Thus, an exceptional Moroccan convoy,
05:32mobilizing 24 trucks, self-pumping pumps and 70 operators,
05:35arrived in Spain on Wednesday.
05:39The president of the region of Valencia admitted today
05:42that there had been mistakes in the management of the devastating floods of last month.
05:45Carlos Mazón apologized for the delays in the aid to the affected.
05:49I will not deny that there were mistakes,
05:52said the president of the region in a speech in front of the regional parliament,
05:55in order to account for the very criticized management of this unprecedented crisis.
06:00So the provisional balance is raised to 224 deaths.
06:05A new series of Israeli raids aimed this Friday at the southern border of Beirut.
06:09An Israeli strike caused the collapse of a several-story building
06:13near an animated crossroads of the capital.
06:16The Syrian agency SANA also reported an Israeli strike targeting Damascus.
06:20Sohail Jalil tells us more.
06:26New Israeli air strikes on the southern border of Beirut.
06:31Israeli fighter jets carried out a series of strikes early this Friday
06:35on the Rubery district in the southern border of the Lebanese capital.
06:39Over the past 24 hours, the Israeli army has called five times
06:43the inhabitants of the building located in the Rubery districts,
06:46Harit Harek and Borj el Brajne,
06:49whose southern border of the Lebanese capital has evacuated the sites.
06:52The head of the Lebanese government, Najib Mikati,
06:54and the president of the Nabi Ebri parliament
06:56received on Thursday Ali Larijani,
06:58the Iranian supreme leader's advisor,
07:00accompanied by an Iranian delegation.
07:03Discussions were held on the current situation in Lebanon,
07:06including the Israeli aggression, the crisis of displaced people
07:09and the implementation of the 1701 resolution.
07:13We know that it is our duty to support the Lebanese people.
07:23My visit seeks to show that we support the Lebanese nation and its leaders
07:26in all circumstances.
07:28We do not seek to disturb anything.
07:30We seek to solve problems and in all circumstances
07:33we support the Lebanese people.
07:35Those who create the disturbance are the Israeli prime minister,
07:38Benjamin Netanyahu and his spies.
07:42The Lebanese people are forced to leave the southern border.
07:49Tsar also targeted this Friday the Syrian capital, Damascus,
07:52the U.P. district of Mazé,
07:54announced by the Syrian official press agency SANA.
07:57The second raid of this type in two days.
07:59The day before, similar strikes targeted this same district
08:02as well as the Qudsaya locality in the suburbs of Damascus.
08:05These raids killed 23 people,
08:07according to an updated report from the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
08:11Bombings in Mazé destroyed three buildings on Thursday,
08:14killing 13 people,
08:16still according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
08:19In a year of violence,
08:21Lebanon has experienced economic losses of more than 5 billion dollars.
08:25The World Bank specifies that since October 8, 2023,
08:28the conflict has damaged about 99,200 homes.
08:32Damage estimated at 3.4 billion dollars,
08:35according to the World Bank,
08:37which also specifies that the Israeli army
08:39has also continued its strikes in the south and east of Lebanon,
08:42killing more than 40 people,
08:44including women and members of the civil defense.
08:49Hamas says it is ready to put out the fire in Gaza
08:51and calls on Donald Trump to put pressure on Israel.
08:54Israeli attacks have plunged the Palestinian enclave
08:56into a serious humanitarian crisis.
08:58Bassem Naim, a member of Hamas's political bureau,
09:00assured that the Palestinian movement
09:02is ready to conclude an agreement,
09:04provided that Israel respects it.
09:07Palestinian representatives call on the US administration
09:10and Donald Trump to put pressure on the Israeli government
09:13to stop the attack on the Gaza Strip.
09:19A UN special committee judged yesterday
09:22that the methods of war used by Israel in Gaza
09:25presented the characteristics of a genocide.
09:27Human Rights Watch estimates
09:29that the repeated forced displacements of Palestinians
09:32constitutes a crime against humanity.
09:34The United States has rejected these accusations
09:36and has still not commented on the conclusions
09:38of the UN Committee.
09:40The United States has, for their part,
09:42disapproved the conclusions of this report.
09:46Donald Trump appointed yesterday
09:48Robert Kennedy Jr. as Secretary of Health.
09:51The latter promised to make America
09:53its greatness and good health.
09:55Known for his skepticism of vaccines
09:57and his opposition to the addition of fluoride in water,
10:00Robert Kennedy Jr. will be at the head
10:02of an important department
10:04that oversees a range of programs related to health.
10:10Joe Biden and Xi Jinping
10:12participate at the Summit of Pacific Asian Countries
10:14organized in Lima.
10:16This summit brings together 21 countries
10:18representing 60% of the world's GDP.
10:20As part of this summit,
10:22the two heads of state planned a meeting
10:24in the midst of a tense climate
10:26before Donald Trump's return in January.
10:28The forum opened yesterday
10:30and Joe Biden and Xi Jinping
10:32are expected to meet tomorrow
10:34with the aim of reducing tensions.
10:40In Senegal, the election campaign is coming to an end.
10:42Candidates have until midnight
10:44to convince voters.
10:46The 7 million registered voters
10:48can confirm their choice last March
10:50by giving a parliamentary majority
10:52to the president and his prime minister.
10:54Senegalese are called on Sunday
10:56to elect 165 deputies for the next five years.
10:58The executive needs a majority
11:00of the three fifths
11:02to revise the constitution
11:04without going through the referendum.
11:08In Senegal, the election campaign
11:10has been marked by some tensions.
11:12What to retain from this campaign
11:14on multiple issues?
11:16We listen to the answer of Bachir Diab,
11:18journalist and public relations specialist.
11:20It's a very, very violent campaign.
11:22In any case, what comes back to us,
11:24I had the chance to spend
11:26a few days in Senegal last March
11:28during the campaign,
11:30in the heart.
11:32There are scenes of desolation everywhere.
11:34It's a violent campaign,
11:36physically.
11:38These are populations
11:40a little out of control
11:42and then turned white,
11:44permitting this expression,
11:46also by the political leaders.
11:48They really push to attack
11:50people who have nothing to do
11:52with politics in the end
11:54These are assets that have been
11:56plundered, cars that have been burned too.
11:58Today, when we talk to each other,
12:00there are 81 people arrested
12:02because, in the end,
12:04the police and the justice
12:06are in series.
12:08Everywhere, everywhere in Senegal,
12:10even in the most reputed cities,
12:12the calmest, because Senegal
12:14is a very peaceful country,
12:16it does not know violence.
12:18But today, Senegalese politics
12:20has embarked on us,
12:22maybe forced to fight
12:24physically.
12:26It's violence in the verb,
12:28it's physical violence,
12:30it's violence caused by good
12:32and by people.
12:34A little everywhere,
12:36the campaign was really marked by that.
12:38There were also political dynamics
12:40in the balance, if you will,
12:42in terms of coalitions that are formed
12:44here and there, in terms of rapprochement,
12:46in terms of what they call
12:48the transition, that is,
12:50political interests, simply.
12:52All this trivialized politics
12:54and it becomes a kind of
12:56physical and verbal
12:58competition campaign,
13:00before it becomes an idea campaign
13:02or a program.
13:04Eight months after the presidential election,
13:06Senegalese are called to the polls
13:08for anticipated legislative elections,
13:10a scrutiny announced after the dissolution
13:12in September of the parliament
13:14from the 2022 elections.
13:16Details with Alaa Bneni.
13:18As at the presidential election
13:20of March 24, 2024,
13:22there will be more than 7.3 million
13:24voters registered
13:26who will vote this Sunday
13:28to elect the 165 deputies
13:30who will sit in the National Assembly
13:32for five years.
13:34These anticipated legislative elections
13:36are held after the dissolution of the parliament
13:38pronounced in September by President
13:40Baciro Diomayfay.
13:42The main issue of these elections
13:44is to know if the voters
13:46will give an absolute majority
13:48to the National Assembly,
13:50to the regime embodied by the duo
13:52Diomay Sonko,
13:54or if they will make the choice
13:56to balance the powers
13:58by giving a majority to the opposition
14:00and in fact open the way
14:02to a cohabitation.
14:04The executive needs a majority
14:06of three-fifths
14:08to revise the constitution
14:10without going through the referendum.
14:12The opposition warns
14:14the electoral system
14:16that the 165 seats of the parliament
14:18will be distributed
14:20according to a parallel scrutiny mode
14:22that combines proportional national representation
14:24and a departmental majority scrutiny
14:26in turn.
14:28The seats are put at stake
14:30in 54 electoral circumstances
14:32distributed as follows.
14:3446 departments of Senegal
14:36and 8 circumstances of the diaspora.
14:38As for the political parties
14:40and coalitions,
14:42we can quote
14:44the patriots
14:46with as a leader
14:48the Prime Minister
14:50Ousmane Sonko,
14:52Takoua Lou Senegal
14:54with the former president
14:56Makisal,
14:58the coalition Sam Sakadou
15:00with the mayor of Dakar
15:02Barthélémy Dias
15:04and Jamak Njarine
15:06led by the former Prime Minister
15:08and presidential candidate
15:10to the problems of Senegalese
15:12especially the expensive life, housing,
15:14the employability of young people
15:16and health.
15:18Finally, the polling stations will open
15:20on Sunday at 8 p.m. and close at 6 p.m.
15:22In Côte d'Ivoire,
15:24the revision of the electoral list
15:26is in full swing.
15:28The review phase has been extended
15:30for a week, while some young people
15:32hesitate to register.
15:34Others see it as a civic duty.
15:36Mel Berchel and Herman Dogo tell us more.
15:38A few days after the end of the period
15:40of electoral review,
15:42some young people do not seem to be in a hurry
15:44to register for the electoral lists.
15:46I'm not interested.
15:50This year, I decided
15:52to enroll and vote.
15:54I don't have time to go there yet.
15:58If I had the time,
16:00I would go.
16:02However, in other centers,
16:04young people are mobilizing
16:06to fulfill their civic duty.
16:08For them, registering for the electoral lists
16:10is a crucial step
16:12to actively participate
16:14in the future of their country
16:16during the presidential election in 2025.
16:18Since 2010,
16:20I have voted since 2010
16:22and I am on the electoral list.
16:24In 2025, I will vote.
16:26When you are 18 years old,
16:28you must be happy to be able to choose your president.
16:30The future of tomorrow belongs to the youth.
16:32It is this youth who must anticipate
16:34and make decisions,
16:36who must choose their leader.
16:38To choose your leader,
16:40you must enroll.
16:42If you don't enroll,
16:44you can't participate in tomorrow's decisions.
16:46Your choice can't influence it.
16:48You have to enroll so that tomorrow,
16:50you can choose who is good for you or not.
16:54Approximately 40 new applicants
16:56are registered per day
16:58in this enrollment center.
17:00One question remains unanswered.
17:02Will the quota of 4.5 million new applicants
17:04escorted by the Independent Electoral Commission
17:06be met
17:08until the end
17:10of the extension date?
17:14Abamako Avocat Sans Frontières Canada
17:16organized a seminar
17:18in favor of victims of sexual violence
17:20linked to the conflict.
17:22The goal is to overcome the obstacles
17:24of judicial proceedings.
17:26This is a report by Mohamed Tagnoko.
17:28With the security crisis
17:30since 2012,
17:32in addition to deaths and injuries,
17:34a category of victims
17:36that we speak less of exists.
17:38These are victims of sexual violence
17:40linked to the conflict.
17:42Today, they are grouped
17:44within two large associations.
17:46Avocat Sans Frontières Canada
17:48wants to help them access justice.
17:50According to a report co-signed
17:52by the FIDH and Avocat Sans Frontières Canada,
17:54eight complaints
17:56representing
17:5817 survivors
18:00of sexual violence linked to the conflict
18:02only between 2012
18:04and 2013
18:06were still pending
18:08before the jurisdiction of Mali
18:10in September 2022
18:12and due to considerable delay
18:14in this procedure,
18:16it has not yet been decided.
18:18After three days of intense work,
18:20the victims hope that the recommendations
18:22formulated will allow them to overcome
18:24the judicial obstacles.
18:26We want a healthy,
18:28equitable justice
18:30that does not differentiate
18:32the victims,
18:34that takes the victims
18:36as they are and puts them
18:38in their place.
18:40Accessing justice for these victims
18:42is not only healing physical injuries,
18:44but also
18:46suffering trauma.
18:48Tunisian private radios
18:50are confronted with many economic problems
18:52that prevent them from continuing
18:54to broadcast their programs.
18:56The financial crisis that the country is experiencing
18:58has caused the closure of a number of stations
19:00and threatens to put hundreds of journalists
19:02and technicians unemployed.
19:04Najwa Bechat tells us more.
19:06The radios born
19:08of the revolution of January 14, 2011
19:10or at least a large number of them
19:12are no longer able
19:14to broadcast their programs.
19:16It is a situation that may seem shocking,
19:18but in the absence of quick solutions,
19:20it could become a reality
19:22and hundreds of journalists
19:24would be unemployed.
19:26To try to understand the situation,
19:28we headed
19:30north to Tunisia,
19:32where we met
19:34Oxygen FM
19:36covering the region of Bizerte,
19:38one of the first
19:40radios to start broadcasting
19:42on October 15,
19:442011.
19:46Oxygen FM
19:48was the first radio station
19:50to broadcast after the revolution.
19:52At first, the situation was good.
19:54We had a large editing room
19:56and a large studio
19:58and all the employees of this radio
20:00aspired to a good salary
20:02and financial and social stability.
20:04But this was difficult
20:06to achieve when the income
20:08of the radio came
20:10only from advertising.
20:12This made us lose many colleagues.
20:14At first,
20:16we were 48 journalists and technicians,
20:18but today,
20:20we are only 21.
20:22Today,
20:2410 regional radio stations
20:26obtained their authorization in 2011
20:28struggle to survive
20:30due to their debts
20:32accumulated with the
20:34National Television Office.
20:36The president of the National Union
20:38of Private Radio Owners,
20:40Kemel Robbena,
20:42raised the alarm
20:44about the dramatic financial situation
20:46According to Kemel Robbena,
20:48radios owe an average of 100,000 dinars
20:50to the National Union of Private Radio Owners
20:52for each frequency,
20:54a burden that weighs heavily
20:56on their finances.
21:00The financial situation
21:02of private radios is disastrous.
21:04Some radios are not able
21:06to pay the salaries
21:08of their employees for months.
21:10If the situation continues like this,
21:12radios will disappear.
21:14In addition,
21:16three radio stations have closed their doors.
21:18The cost of broadcasting
21:20must therefore be re-evaluated.
21:22We also demand a revision
21:24of the tax on the added value
21:26of 19% imposed on private radios.
21:30According to radio owners,
21:32the current situation requires
21:34a political will
21:36and immediate decisions
21:38that will serve as oxygen
21:40that will allow these radios
21:42to continue and overcome
21:44the obstacles.
21:46The media in Tunisia
21:48never felt so badly
21:50as they do today.
21:52This sector is sinister
21:54economically and completely abandoned
21:56by the state,
21:58according to the professionals
22:00of the sector.
22:02From Tunisia, Najwa Bechat,
22:04for Media.
22:06With these snowfalls
22:08planned for the end of the week
22:10strong gusts of wind
22:12will affect the provinces of
22:14Shishawa, Swera, Boulmen,
22:16Taurit and Figi.
22:18The same phenomenon is expected
22:20until tomorrow on the reliefs
22:22beyond 1,500 meters in the provinces
22:24of Midelt, Azilal, Alhaus and Ouarzazate.
22:30This is the end of this news.
22:32Thank you for following it.
22:34Stay with us.
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