
-
Trump admin proposes redefining 'harm' to endangered animals
-
Australia's Mary Fowler set for long lay-off after ACL injury
-
Rubio to meet French leaders for talks on Ukraine
-
Webb spots strongest 'hints' yet of life on distant planet
-
Arteta's Arsenal come of age with Madrid masterclass
-
None spared in Nigeria gun, machete massacre: survivors
-
'No problem' if Real Madrid replace me: Ancelotti
-
Inter dreaming of treble glory after reaching Champions League semis
-
'No limits' for treble-hunting Inter, says Pavard
-
Inter off Bayern to reach Champions League last four
-
Rice 'knew' Arsenal would dethrone Real Madrid
-
US stocks fall with dollar as Powell warns on tariffs
-
Arsenal oust holders Real Madrid to reach Champions League semis
-
Arsenal defeat Real Madrid to reach Champions League semis
-
AMD says US rule on chips to China could cost it $800 mn
-
Inter hold off Bayern to reach Champions League last four
-
El Salvador rejects US senator's plea to free wrongly deported migrant
-
Newcastle thrash Crystal Palace to go third in Premier League
-
Zuckerberg denies Meta bought rivals to conquer them
-
Starc stars as Delhi beat Rajasthan in Super Over
-
Weinstein asks to sleep in hospital, citing prison 'mistreatment'
-
Amorim asks McIlroy to bring Masters magic to Man Utd
-
Ruud keeps Barcelona Open defence on course
-
Trump tariffs could put US Fed in a bind, Powell warns
-
CONCACAF chief rejects 64-team World Cup plan for 2030
-
Putin praises Musk, compares him to Soviet space hero
-
Son to miss Spurs' Europa League trip to Frankfurt
-
US senator in El Salvador seeking release of wrongly deported migrant
-
Trump tariffs could put the US Fed in a bind, Powell warns
-
US judge says 'probable cause' to hold Trump admin in contempt
-
India opposition slams graft charges against Gandhis
-
Nate Bargatze to host Emmys: organizers
-
US Fed Chair warns of 'tension' between employment, inflation goals
-
Trump touts trade talks, China calls out tariff 'blackmail'
-
US judge says 'probable cause' to hold govt in contempt over deportations
-
US eliminates unit countering foreign disinformation
-
Germany sees 'worrying' record dry spell in early 2025
-
Israel says 30 percent of Gaza turned into buffer zone
-
TikTok tests letting users add informative 'Footnotes'
-
Global uncertainty will 'certainly' hit growth: World Bank president
-
EU lists seven 'safe' countries of origin, tightening asylum rules
-
Chelsea fans must 'trust' the process despite blip, says Maresca
-
Rebel rival government in Sudan 'not the answer': UK
-
Prague zoo breeds near-extinct Brazilian mergansers
-
Macron to meet Rubio, Witkoff amid transatlantic tensions
-
WTO chief says 'very concerned' as tariffs cut into global trade
-
Sports bodies have 'no excuses' on trans rules after court ruling: campaigners
-
Zverev joins Shelton in Munich ATP quarters
-
The Trump adviser who wants to rewrite the global financial system
-
US senator travels to El Salvador over wrongly deported migrant

Other governments 'weaponising' Trump language to attack NGOs: rights groups
Language used by President Donald Trump and his government to slash US-funded foreign aid is being adopted by other governments to attack NGOs and independent media, rights groups warn.
Civil society groups in parts of Eastern Europe and beyond -- long targeted by discredit-and-defund campaigns because of the light they shone on corruption and lack of transparency -- are now also dealing with Trumpian rhetoric, they said.
Trump administration statements "are being weaponised in real-time by autocrats and dictators across Eastern and Southeastern Europe to justify and deepen their crackdown on independent media, NGOs, and human rights defenders," Dave Elseroad, of the Human Rights House Foundation, told AFP.
From Hungary to Serbia, to Georgia and Bosnia, non-governmental organisations and independent media outlets working to bolster democratic norms are hearing officials borrow White House phrases to justify officials' stances against them.
The range of expressions available is broad and growing.
It includes Trump's claim that the US Agency for International Development (USAID) was "run by radical lunatics", and his billionaire advisor Elon Musk's calling the agency a "criminal organisation" that needed to be put "through the woodchipper".
Such terms are "seriously encouraging language used in Budapest or in Belgrade or in Bratislava or Banja Luka," said Miklos Ligeti, head of legal affairs at Transparency International's Hungary chapter.
- Verbal ammunition -
In some countries, the verbal ammunition comes on top of a sudden funding gap wrought by the dismantling of USAID, which is hitting the NGO sector hard.
USAID had been providing funding to a vast array of independent organisations in countries like Hungary where such groups have been "financially suffocated domestically," Ligeti told AFP.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has hailed the crackdown on USAID by his ally Trump as a "cleansing wind". He says he plans to outlaw NGOs that receive US funds.
Orban -- also Russian President Vladimir Putin's closest ally in the European Union -- has vowed to "eliminate the entire shadow army" he says is made up of his political enemies, judges, the media and NGOs.
The UN rights office in Geneva slammed "escalating attempts worldwide to weaken and harm domestic and international human rights systems, including defunding and delegitimising civil society".
It said that "it is all the more worrying to see these trends also emerging in established democracies".
In some countries there is a direct line between utterances in Washington and action to undermine civil society.
In Georgia, for example, the ruling Georgian Dream party last month called for the country to adopt its own version of the US Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) -- which observers warn could be turned against NGOs receiving foreign funding.
And in Serbia, which has been rocked by months of protests over government corruption, authorities referred to statements made by Trump and other top US officials to justify raiding a number of NGOs.
The Serbian government saw the Trump administration's labelling of USAID as a "criminal organisation" as "a fantastic opportunity to basically punish civil society", said Rasa Nedeljkov, programme director at the Center for Research, Transparency and Accountability (CRTA).
CRTA's offices were raided in February by heavily armed police. The operation took 28 hours because prosecutors had CRTA staff manually copy documents related to USAID-funded projects to hand to them, rather than accepting digital versions.
Serbian authorities have explicitly referred to statements by Trump and other US officials to justify raids on a number of NGOs.
Uros Jovanovic, public policy programme manager at another raided NGO in Serbia, Grandjanske, said that "this is just an excuse to crack down on civil society," adding: "They are trying to intimidate people to stay silent."
- 'Intimidation' -
Pavol Szalai, head of the EU-Balkans desk at Reporters Without Borders (RSF), said leaders in a string of countries were using "the suspension of USAID by Trump to attack media which had received USAID funds".
He said such groups were being doubly punished: they "lost their funding from one day to the next" while also increasingly being "targeted by intimidation".
In Republika Srpska, Bosnia's ethnic Serb statelet, "this is the worst situation ever for civil society organisations (since) the after-war period," said Bojana Mijic, project manager at Capital.Ba, an independent online daily.
"Independent voices are being lost," with many organisations closing from evaporated USAID funding and swelling attacks, she said.
The RSF's Szalai said: "We fear that this public-interest journalism in some countries will not survive the blow."
He warned that, "as these media retreat.. they will be replaced by propaganda".
L.Wyss--VB