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  • ✇El País in English
  • A red star in the sky over the banlieue of Paris Daniel Verdú
    Street vendors and market stalls begin to pack up by mid-afternoon on Saturday. In the narrow streets there is the smell of roast lamb and on the terraces locals from the neighborhood, retired laborers, and third-generation immigrants mix with groups of young people with a hipster look wearing expensive clothes and drinking IPA beers. Saint-Ouen marks the first boundary between that Haussmannian Paris, already unaffordable for many family budgets, and its famous banlieue, until recently known fo
     

A red star in the sky over the banlieue of Paris

31 May 2026 at 04:00

Street vendors and market stalls begin to pack up by mid-afternoon on Saturday. In the narrow streets there is the smell of roast lamb and on the terraces locals from the neighborhood, retired laborers, and third-generation immigrants mix with groups of young people with a hipster look wearing expensive clothes and drinking IPA beers. Saint-Ouen marks the first boundary between that Haussmannian Paris, already unaffordable for many family budgets, and its famous banlieue, until recently known for youth unrest, episodes of jihadist terrorism, and large concrete apartment blocks. But it is also the product of investment from the Olympic Games, a symbol of the gentrification of the Paris periphery and the home of the city’s oldest and most charismatic soccer club: Red Star.

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© SOPA Images (SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Red Star players applaud their fans after a match on April 24.

Failure of European fighter jet program exposes the weakness of EU defense

The European Future Combat Air System (FCAS), a joint project led by France and Germany with participation from Spain, has failed because of disagreements between Airbus, the German representative, and Dassault, the French firm. It was the most ambitious European project at a time when the EU says it wants to increase and coordinate military spending to develop shared defense technologies, programs, and platforms — like the one that collapsed on Monday, June 8. What happened with FCAS casts doubt on whether Europe can ever reconcile national sovereignty with the demands of building next-generation, complex weapons systems, at a moment when the EU is trying to bolster its defense sovereignty and the United States is beginning to withdraw its security umbrella. It also adds pressure and lessons for other projects trying to move forward.

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© NurPhoto (NurPhoto via Getty Images)

An FCAS fighter during the Paris Air Show in 2023.

Europe fears US pullback ordered by Trump will open the door to a reconfiguration of NATO

22 May 2026 at 17:27

Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw thousands of U.S. troops from Germany, review a planned deployment to Poland, and freeze a project to station Tomahawk missiles on German soil has set off alarm bells in European capitals. In the Old Continent, fears are growing that those moves could be the first step toward a structural reconfiguration of NATO — or even a deeper U.S. pullback within the alliance.

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© Tom Little (REUTERS)

NATO secretary general Mark Rutte on Thursday in Revinge, Sweden.

‘Hacks’ Was Only Allowed To Have 10 People In Louvre For Final Day Of Filming: “That Was It”

29 May 2026 at 03:14
SPOILERS: This post contains details about the Hacks series finale With Hacks bidding au revoir in tonight’s series finale, the cast and creators looked back at their final day of filming, which took place at an iconic locale. In the HBO Max series’ post-show Bit by Bit, Jean Smart recalled only being allowed to work […]

  • ✇Malay Mail - All
  • France imposes RM101m in fresh penalties on Shein for consumer‑law breaches
    PARIS, June 3 — French authorities said today that they had imposed two fines on Shein totalling more than €22 million (RM101 million), citing problems with product traceability, environmental labelling and delivery times.The new penalties bring the total fines imposed by France against the Asian fashion giant to more than €210 million.Shein said it was contesting the “disproportionate” penalties, arguing that no consumer harm had been established.The Singapore-b
     

France imposes RM101m in fresh penalties on Shein for consumer‑law breaches

3 June 2026 at 12:18

Malay Mail

PARIS, June 3 — French authorities said today that they had imposed two fines on Shein totalling more than €22 million (RM101 million), citing problems with product traceability, environmental labelling and delivery times.

The new penalties bring the total fines imposed by France against the Asian fashion giant to more than €210 million.

Shein said it was contesting the “disproportionate” penalties, arguing that no consumer harm had been established.

The Singapore-based company has been under fire since it established operations in France. Last year, the discovery of childlike sex dolls on the Shein platform caused outrage in France and prompted greater scrutiny.

Trade Minister Serge Papin said e-commerce platforms “avoid complying with our rules”.

“This is unfair competition, and I am fighting against it,” he said on X.

“Since the discovery of child pornography dolls on Shein, we have decided not to let these platforms get away with it, and we will continue until they completely change their practices — or abandon our market.”

The government’s consumer protection agency DGCCRF imposed the penalties following an investigation targeting several e-commerce platforms, primarily based outside Europe, including Shein.

The first fine of €5.77 million targets Infinite Style Ecommerce Co Ltd (ISEL), which handles sales for Shein.

The DGCCRF accuses Shein of failing to comply with a 14-day period required for consumers to be able to reconsider certain purchases and return them free of charge.

The watchdog also accuses the company of omitting mandatory traceability information, such as the countries where its clothing is woven, dyed and manufactured, and of failing to disclose the presence of microplastics in its fabrics.

Microplastics, primarily found in polyester, are released into the water with every machine wash, posing a serious environmental threat.

The agency also slapped a fine of €16.73 million on Shein’s subsidiary Infinite Styles Services Limited (ISSL), accusing it of violations of consumer law.

“We dispute these findings and consider the fines manifestly disproportionate,” Shein said.

“There has never been any doubt about the fairness of transactions on our platform, or the quality and safety of the products and services offered,” it said.

Following the uproar over the sex dolls, Shein said it immediately removed the products from its marketplace—the section of its website selling third-party products—and banned sex dolls from its site globally.

Campaign groups and politicians accuse Shein of generating environmental pollution, practising unfair competition, selling goods that fail to comply with basic regulations and imposing poor working conditions in its Chinese factories.

In July, France slapped Shein with a €40 million fine, saying it misled customers on price deals and on its environmental impact. — AFP

 

Photographer Jack Davison’s challenge: Three days in London and 111 portraits (37 per day)

At the latest edition of Paris Photo, held in November 2025, a series of black-and-white portraits caught the attention of both the public and the media. Their public display followed a large-scale installation from the 2024 edition, dedicated to the complete works of the German portrait photographer August Sander (1876-1964). That year, the newly-renovated Grand Palais had welcomed visitors with his celebrated project, People of the 20th Century.

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© Jack Davison (EL PAÍS)

Image from the book "13–15 November. Portraits: London", published by Helions. Courtesy of Cob Gallery.

© Jack Davison

Image from the book "13–15 November. Portraits: London", published by Helions. Courtesy of Cob Gallery.

© Jack Davison (EL PAÍS)

Image from the book "13–15 November. Portraits: London", published by Helions. Courtesy of Cob Gallery.

© Jack Davison

Image from the book "13–15 November. Portraits: London", published by Helions. Courtesy of Cob Gallery.

© Jack Davison

Image from the book "13–15 November. Portraits: London", published by Helions. Courtesy of Cob Gallery.

© Jack Davison

Image from the book "13–15 November. Portraits: London", published by Helions. Courtesy of Cob Gallery.

© Jack Davison

Image from the book "13–15 November. Portraits: London", published by Helions. Courtesy of Cob Gallery.

© Jack Davison (EL PAÍS)

Image from the book "13–15 November. Portraits: London", published by Helions. Courtesy of Cob Gallery.

© Jack Davison (EL PAÍS)

Image from the book "13–15 November. Portraits: London", published by Helions. Courtesy of Cob Gallery.

© Jack Davison

Image from the book "13–15 November. Portraits: London", published by Helions. Courtesy of Cob Gallery.

© Jack Davison

Image from the book "13–15 November. Portraits: London", published by Helions. Courtesy of Cob Gallery.

Double spread from the book "13–15 November. Portraits: London", published by Helions. Courtesy of Cob Gallery.

Double spread from the book "13–15 November. Portraits: London", published by Helions. Courtesy of Cob Gallery.
  • ✇El País in English
  • Jean-Luc Mélenchon: ‘The right no longer has anything to offer except fear’ Daniel Verdú
    Jean-Luc Mélenchon, 74, electrified the streets on Sunday at the launch of his campaign. It was in Saint-Denis, land of kings, a Paris suburb turned epicenter of immigration and multiculturalism. But also where he gets the narrative material that weaves the idea of the New France that the leader of the far-left party La France Insoumise (LFI, or France Unbowed) has put forward to win over the suburbs in the presidential election of spring 2027. And, incidentally, to capture the roughly 400,000 v
     

Jean-Luc Mélenchon: ‘The right no longer has anything to offer except fear’

11 June 2026 at 17:01
Jean-Luc Mélenchon in his Paris office last Tuesday.

Jean-Luc Mélenchon, 74, electrified the streets on Sunday at the launch of his campaign. It was in Saint-Denis, land of kings, a Paris suburb turned epicenter of immigration and multiculturalism. But also where he gets the narrative material that weaves the idea of the New France that the leader of the far-left party La France Insoumise (LFI, or France Unbowed) has put forward to win over the suburbs in the presidential election of spring 2027. And, incidentally, to capture the roughly 400,000 votes that were missing last time to reach the runoff.

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