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Reçu aujourd’hui — 29 novembre 2025

La démission d’Andriy Yermak suscite la stupeur en Europe, mais arrange les Etats-Unis

29 novembre 2025 à 06:00
Avec le départ du bras droit de Volodymyr Zelensky, les Vingt-Sept perdent un interlocuteur incontournable en Ukraine, au beau milieu de la négociation d’un éventuel accord de paix. L’administration Trump, au contraire, compte profiter de la crise politique à Kiev pour promouvoir ses vues.

© SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP

Lors d’un rassemblement anticorruption sur la place de l’Indépendance à Kiev, réclamant la démission d’Andriy Yermak, le 22 novembre 2025.

The week Europe realised it stands alone against Russian expansionism

29 novembre 2025 à 06:00

Washington’s Putin-appeasing plan for peace in Ukraine has failed, but many heard death knell sounded for European reliance on US protection

Kaja Kallas, the European Union foreign policy chief, asked her officials this week to dig up the number of times Russia had – in its various guises – invaded other states in the 20th and 21st centuries. The answer that came back was 19 states, on 33 occasions. Kallas, the former Estonian prime minister, was not just indulging in some form of historical mathematics. She was seeking to make a point that lies at the heart of the dispute between the US and Europe over Ukraine’s future, a dispute that has again revealed the chasm across the Atlantic about the true nature of the Russian regime.

Kallas reads history books as a leisure activity and – drawing on her own country’s history of Soviet occupation – has long maintained that the Soviet Union fell, but its imperialism never did. “Russia has never truly had to come to terms with its brutal past or bear the consequences of its actions,” she has said, arguing that the nature of the Russian regime means “rewarding aggression will bring more war, not less”: Putin will come back for more.

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© Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

Celebrity crib sheet: Katy Perry has spent all year in the headlines – here are the six things you need to know

29 novembre 2025 à 06:00

She made a short, and much-ridiculed, trip to space. She tried to buy a house and fell foul of public opinion. And she’s found love, apparently, with Justin Trudeau. Time to get up to speed before this singer next hits the headlines

Do you ever feel like a plastic bag, drifting through the wind, wanting to start again? No? Just Katy Perry then. Seven months since her sense-defying jaunt into space, life on planet Earth hasn’t let up for the embattled hitmaker. She’s back in the headlines this week, implied to be raiding the pockets of a “disabled veteran” while facing scrutiny for her somewhat inexplicable new romance with Justin Trudeau. Yes, that Justin Trudeau. Shall we?

1. Perry wins in court, but loses online
By one metric, such as “relative to the rest of 2025”, this might have been a good week for Katy Perry. Since 2020, she has been embroiled in a legal battle against Carl Westcott, who sold her an eight-bedroom, 11-bathroom mansion in Montecito for $15m. Westcott then attempted to renege on the deal, claiming to have been incapacitated by painkillers (prescribed after a back operation) when signing the paperwork. A judge ruled in Perry’s favour in May last year, finding that Westcott was sound of mind when the sale went through. This week, another judge ruled that Perry was owed $1.8m in damages. This sounds like a win, you might think – except Perry had pushed for Westcott to pay $4.7m, and it’s been widely written up as Perry money-grubbing from an “85-year-old disabled veteran”. To give military.com’s headline, from earlier in the dispute in 2023: “Katy Perry Is Fighting a Dying, Elderly Veteran to Force Him to Sell His Home.” It is true that Westcott served in the 101st Airborne Division, is 85 years old and seriously ill with incurable Huntington’s disease. But the insistent framing may say more about Perry’s unenviable position as pop culture’s preferred punching bag.

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© Composite: Guardian Design; Blue Origin

© Composite: Guardian Design; Blue Origin

© Composite: Guardian Design; Blue Origin

Le Voyageur : que vous réserve l'épisode “Le jardin du diable” diffusé ce soir sur France 3 ?

29 novembre 2025 à 06:00

Le Jardin du diable

Yann Kandinsky rempile pour une nouvelle enquête. Toujours interprété par Bruno Debrandt, ce capitaine de police aux méthodes particulières sillonne la France pour résoudre des meurtres. Il parvient de temps à autre à tisser certains liens avec les enquêteurs locaux, lesq…

Article original publié sur AlloCiné

La démission d’Andriy Yermak, bras droit de Volodymyr Zelensky, un séisme politique pour l’Ukraine

29 novembre 2025 à 05:30
Le tout puissant chef de l’administration présidentielle était très impopulaire en Ukraine. Mais le départ du principal homme de confiance du président ukrainien tombe au plus mauvais moment, alors que Kiev est sommé par les Etats-Unis de conclure un accord de paix avec la Russie.

© Gleb Garanich/REUTERS

La démission d’Andriy Yermak, bras droit de Volodymyr Zelensky, un séisme politique pour l’Ukraine

29 novembre 2025 à 05:30
Le tout puissant chef de l’administration présidentielle était très impopulaire en Ukraine. Mais le départ du principal homme de confiance du président ukrainien tombe au plus mauvais moment, alors que Kiev est sommé par les Etats-Unis de conclure un accord de paix avec la Russie.

© Gleb Garanich/REUTERS

Le président ukrainien, Volodymyr Zelensky, et le chef du cabinet présidentiel, Andriy Yermak, à Kiev, le 22 janvier 2024.

Les centres municipaux de santé, derniers recours face à la pénurie de médecins

29 novembre 2025 à 05:30
Pour remédier aux départs à la retraite de praticiens et aux déserts médicaux, de plus en plus de villes, y compris de droite, ont recours à la médecine publique.

© Romain ETIENNE/item pour « Le Monde »

Au centre municipal de santé, la docteure Natchez reçoit en consultation la famille Chaib, pour la vaccination de leurs enfants, à Montélimar (Drôme), le 25 novembre 2025.
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