Vue lecture
New Russian law criminalizes online searches for controversial content
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Qui sont les Druzes, cette minorité du Proche-Orient, au cœur du conflit actuel en Syrie ?
Sirens and evacuations as Taipei rehearses to counter China invasion threat
Rescuers Seek American Hiker Missing for Days in the Pyrenees
© Sergi Reboredo/VW Pics, via Universal Images Group, via Getty Images
Prince Harry Follows Diana’s Footsteps in Angola as Specter of Land Mines Returns
© Ampe Pedro/The Halo Trust, via Reuters; Tim Graham Photo Library, via Getty Images
US says 'specific steps' agreed to end Syria violence after Israeli strikes hit Damascus
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L'armée française quitte le Sénégal et met fin à sa présence permanente en Afrique de l'Ouest
US says 'specific steps' agreed to end Syria violence after Israeli strikes hit Damascus
La Canadienne Olivia Smith à Arsenal pour une somme record
L’attaquante passe de Liverpool à Arsenal pour 1,85 M$ CA, selon la presse britannique, une somme record.
Saint-Simon : grande foire de l’art imprimé

L’Expozine de Saint-Simon-de-Rimouski revient pour une 4e année, les 19 et 20 juillet dans l’église de Saint-Simon, avec une grande foire de l’art imprimé.
L’événement est devenu si populaire que le nombre d’exposants atteint la limite de la cinquantaine. Des artistes des Basques et d’ailleurs au Québec se retrouveront dans l’église pour présenter leurs pratiques et vendre leurs œuvres.
Parmi les artistes présents, notons les bédéistes Julie Rocheleau et Jimmy Beaulieu, les artistes visuels Christian Bujold et Émilie Bernard ainsi que La maison du notaire de Trois-Pistoles, la revue Liberté et la Coop pistoloise La Seiche.

« La foire est commerciale, mais elle se veut surtout un lien de rencontres, de découvertes et d’échanges. Six ateliers créatifs seront offerts au public durant le week-end par des exposants et un micro ouvert aura lieu samedi, à 17 h », mentionnent les organisateurs.
« Chaque année, l’événement prend de l’ampleur et on est super fiers de ça », lance le fondateur Sébastien Lépine (SLEP) affichiste et sérigraphe.
Profiter de la région
M. Lépine affirme que les artistes viennent à Saint-Simon pour profiter de la beauté de la région.
« Ils veulent voir le fleuve. Ça fait partie du périple. L’ambiance est incroyable. C’est super dans l’église pour les artistes, mais aussi pour les visiteurs. J’ai parlé avec deux personnes âgées qui m’ont dit qu’elles n’étaient jamais rentrées dans l’église. Ça fait partie des objectifs initiaux de l’événement de faire connaître cette superbe église, tout en contribuant à la vie culturelle des Basques », indique celui qui possède un chalet à Saint-Simon-sur-Mer.
Ukraine, Poland, and Lithuania form new alliance to counter Putin’s weaponized historic narratives amid war of attrition
Ukraine, Poland, and Lithuania have agreed to establish a Historians’ Forum within the Lublin Triangle framework to deprive Moscow of any opportunity to manipulate shared history and sow discord among partners.
The forum is a direct response to Russia’s attempts to exploit historical events to fuel tensions between the countries amid its war against Ukraine. It concerns particularly the 1943–44 Volyn tragedy, when nearly 80,000 Poles and 10,000 Ukrainians were killed. Poland classifies it as genocide committed by the Ukrainian Insurgent Army. Kyiv sees the complex motives behind its actions.
“We must seek understanding, resolve sensitive issues, and thus deny Moscow any opportunity to undermine our unity,” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said in Lublin.
On 16 July, he visited the Lublin Triangle’s conference with Lithuanian Foreign Minister Kęstutis Budrys and Polish Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski. The main objective of these annual meetings, established in 2020, is to strengthen mutual military and cultural ties between the three countries and to support Ukraine’s integration into the EU and NATO.
The Ukrainian foreign minister added that the parties agreed such meetings of foreign ministers will be held regularly, at least twice a year.
Russia systematically manipulates and distorts historical facts to justify its aggression against Ukraine and to construct a narrative of the war’s “legality” and “necessity.” For instance, on 14 July, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said that Russian President Vladimir Putin sent not negotiators, but a “historian” to the last peace talks in Istanbul.
The head of the Alliance was referring to Vladimir Medinsky, who began recounting Russian history starting in 1250 and tried to force Ukraine into capitulation. He also said that Moscow is ready to fight forever, mentioning the 21-year war against Sweden.
In 2024, during a high-profile interview with American propagandist Tucker Carlson, Putin began the conversation with a long historical monologue in which he attempted to justify his aggression against Ukraine.
Yulia Svyrydenko becomes Ukraine’s first female PM in 15 years — don’t mistake it for change
Ukraine’s parliament has confirmed Yulia Svyrydenko as Prime Minister, with 262 lawmakers voting in favor on Thursday. At 39, she becomes the first woman to lead Ukraine’s government in 15 years—and only the second in the country’s history after Yulia Tymoshenko.
But while the face has changed, the power structure remains the same. With elections suspended under martial law and political life shaped by Russia’s full-scale invasion, Ukraine’s governance remains highly centralized. Svyrydenko’s appointment is seen as reinforcing the wartime system—where real decisions are made inside the Presidential Office, not by parliament or Cabinet.
Centralized power under martial law
Svyrydenko’s elevation underscores Ukraine’s current political reality: executive power concentrated in President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s circle, limited institutional checks, and governance by loyal proxies.
She is viewed as a close ally of Presidential Chief of Staff Andriy Yermak, widely considered one of the most powerful figures in the country.
“We don’t have a proper functioning Cabinet of ministers. Instead, we have some quasi-Cabinet of ministers headed by Yermak, who controls access to the president’s agenda and to the president himself,” said anti-corruption activist Daria Kaleniuk in Politico earlier this year.

Strong support from ruling party, opposition pushback
Svyrydenko was backed almost unanimously by Zelenskyy’s Servant of the People party and several independents. Opposition factions—including European Solidarity, Batkivshchyna, and Holos—voted against or abstained, warning that the reshuffle deepens executive control.
Former President Petro Poroshenko summed up their position:
“Replacing Shmyhal, who was ‘Yermak in a shirt,’ with Svyrydenko, who will be ‘Yermak in a skirt,’ changes nothing.”
From regional official to Presidential insider
A native of Chernihiv, Svyrydenko began in regional government before rising to key roles in Kyiv. She joined the Presidential Office in 2020, and later served as First Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Economy.
She has led international negotiations on peace efforts, EU accession, and postwar recovery. In May 2025, she co-signed a US–Ukraine reconstruction agreement with US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, signaling her role in Ukraine’s international outreach.

Ethics questions over teaching income
Her appointment triggered scrutiny over her income. In 2024, she reported earning over 3 million UAH (about $75,000) in six months of teaching at the Kyiv School of Economics (KSE)—more than her government salary.
Ukraine’s anti-corruption agency launched a probe into a possible conflict of interest, since KSE received international grants overseen by her ministry.
Svyrydenko said she taught multiple courses under separate contracts and worked outside government hours.

End of Shmyhal’s record-long tenure
Svyrydenko replaces Denys Shmyhal, who resigned after over five years—the longest serving Ukrainian PM. Sources say he has now been nominated as Defence Minister—a major shift amid war.
At the same time, it’s unclear who will replace Oksana Markarova as Ukraine’s ambassador to the US Reports suggest current Defense Minister Rustem Umerov and presidential adviser Ihor Zhovkva are among the frontrunners; no official successor has yet been confirmed.
Flames engulf Tomorrowland’s main stage 2 days before festival starts
Why Israel Attacked Syria
© Ali Haj Suleiman/Getty Images
Several injured after Gaza church struck, patriarchate says
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Syria leader vows to protect Druze after sectarian violence prompts Israeli strikes
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Ukraine returns 1,000 more bodies of deceased as part of repatriation efforts
Watch live: UK and Germany sign treaty on migrant smuggling crackdown
Watch live as Sir Keir Starmer meets with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz at Downing Street on Thursday (17 July).
© PA Wire
L’armée française quitte le Sénégal et met fin à sa présence permanente en Afrique de l’Ouest
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They Grew Up on Mexican Coke. Trump’s Cane Sugar Plan Makes Them Uneasy.
© Isabelle Souriment/Hans Lucas, via Reuters
They Grew Up on Mexican Coke. Trump’s Cane Sugar Plan Makes Them Uneasy.
© Isabelle Souriment/Hans Lucas, via Reuters
Zelensky orders boost in Ukrainian-made weapons on front to 50%
No demobilization until Ukraine wins – Zelensky calls for quality rotations
What are Patriot missiles and why does Ukraine need them?
The US will send an undisclosed number of Patriot air defence systems to Kyiv, to be paid for by the EU
© AFP via Getty Images
Pour freiner son déficit fiscal, la Malaisie s'attaque aux produits et services non-essentiels
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Morning Update: The condo market has cratered
Good morning. Canada built a boatload of new condos that nobody wants to buy now – more on that below, along with Mark Carney’s hopes for a deal on softwood lumber and Genie Bouchard’s last tennis match. But first:
Today’s headlines
- Carney cracks down further on cheap steel imports in a bid to protect domestic mills
- A federal judge halts the deportation of a non-binary American because of Trump’s gender edicts
- 7-Eleven’s owner staves off a Canadian takeover, but its struggles remain as its shares fall
© Sammy Kogan
Lithuania to Belarus: Stop letting Russian war drones cross into NATO skies
Lithuania protests to Belarus over a Russian drone that entered from its territory and crashed just inside NATO airspace. The Lithuanian Foreign Ministry called the incursion a serious violation in an official statement on Facebook and demanded urgent explanations from Minsk.
Lithuania cites airspace violation in formal protest to Belarus
On 16 July, Lithuania summoned the acting chargé d’affaires of Belarus and handed over a diplomatic note of protest. The protest came after a Russian-made Gerbera drone illegally entered Lithuania and crashed roughly one kilometer from the border.
In a post published on its official Facebook page, the Lithuanian Foreign Ministry wrote that the drone had crossed from Belarusian territory into Lithuanian airspace on 10 July and demanded a prompt explanation from Minsk. It described the incident as an illegal intrusion by a Russian-made, multifunctional unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV).
The Ministry called on Belarus to take “all necessary measures” to ensure that similar incidents do not happen again.
Belarus held responsible for Russian drone’s NATO incursion
Lithuania’s Secretary of National Security Kęstutis Budrys, quoted by Delfi, said Belarus is fully responsible for allowing the drone to cross into Lithuania. “This is a serious violation,” Budrys stated. He noted that the object could have been part of a UAV group used in Ukraine.
“It’s likely this drone was used in the war,” he said, suggesting the Gerbera UAV might have been part of Russia’s combat operation before it reached NATO airspace.
The Lithuanian Foreign Ministry emphasized that Belarus must explain the incident immediately and prevent any future drone violations from its territory.
Defense Minister Dovilė Šakalienė told LRT that authorities are still investigating the intent behind the drone’s entry.
“We can confirm it was a Gerbera,” she said. “Its use could vary — we are trying to establish why it was flown here.”
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