-
Italy set for Winter Olympics opening ceremony as Vonn passes test
-
England's Jacks says players back under-fire skipper Brook '100 percent'
-
Carrick relishing Frank reunion as Man Utd host Spurs
-
Farrell keeps the faith in Irish still being at rugby's top table
-
Meloni, Vance hail 'shared values' amid pre-Olympic protests
-
Olympic freestyle champion Gremaud says passion for skiing carried her through dark times
-
US urges new three-way nuclear deal with Russia and China
-
Indonesia landslide death toll rises to 74
-
Hemetsberger a 'happy psychopath' after final downhill training
-
Suicide blast at Islamabad mosque kills at least 31, wounds over 130
-
Elton John accuses UK tabloids publisher of 'abhorrent' privacy breaches
-
Lindsey Vonn completes first downhill training run at Winter Olympics
-
Digital euro delay could leave Europe vulnerable, ECB warns
-
Feyi-Waboso out of England's Six Nations opener against Wales
-
Newcastle manager Howe pleads for Woltemade patience
-
German exports to US plunge as tariffs exact heavy cost
-
Portugal heads for presidential vote, fretting over storms and far-right
-
Suicide blast at Islamabad mosque kills at least 30, wounds over 130: police
-
Russia says Kyiv behind Moscow shooting of army general
-
Greenland villagers focus on 'normal life' amid stress of US threat
-
Iran, US hold talks in Oman after Trump military threats
-
Stocks waver as tech worries build
-
Dupont, Jalibert click to give France extra spark in Six Nations bid
-
'Excited' Scots out to prove they deserve T20 World Cup call-up
-
EU tells TikTok to change 'addictive' design
-
India captain admits 'there will be nerves' at home T20 World Cup
-
Stellantis takes massive hit for 'overestimation' of EV shift
-
'Mona's Eyes': how an obscure French art historian swept the globe
-
Iran, US hold talks in Oman
-
Iran, US hold talks in Oman after deadly protest crackdown
-
In Finland's forests, soldiers re-learn how to lay anti-personnel mines
-
Israeli president visits Australia after Bondi Beach attack
-
In Dakar fishing village, surfing entices girls back to school
-
Lakers rally to beat Sixers despite Doncic injury
-
Russian pensioners turn to soup kitchen as war economy stutters
-
Japan taps Meta to help search for abuse of Olympic athletes
-
As Estonia schools phase out Russian, many families struggle
-
Toyota names new CEO, hikes profit forecasts
-
Next in Putin's sights? Estonia town stuck between two worlds
-
Family of US news anchor's missing mother renews plea to kidnappers
-
Spin woes, injury and poor form dog Australia for T20 World Cup
-
Japan's Liberal Democratic Party: an election bulldozer
-
Hazlewood out of T20 World Cup in fresh blow to Australia
-
Japan scouring social media 24 hours a day for abuse of Olympic athletes
-
Bangladesh Islamist leader seeks power in post-uprising vote
-
Rams' Stafford named NFL's Most Valuable Player
-
Japan to restart world's biggest nuclear plant
-
Japan's Sanae Takaichi: Iron Lady 2.0 hopes for election boost
-
Italy set for 2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony
-
Hong Kong to sentence media mogul Jimmy Lai on Monday
French Pacific archipelago divided over shark hunt
After killing seven people in the past five years, sharks are enemy number one in France's Pacific archipelago of New Caledonia where the authorities have declared open season on the species in the hope of making beaches safe again.
But environmentalists are on the side of the sharks, saying the local government's order to cull the animals has led to indiscriminate killing and harm to marine life.
The population of New Caledonia, a French overseas territory about 1,200 kilometres (750 miles) east of Australia, is divided between those who want the problem removed by force, and those urging caution.
Nobody is sure what prompted the sharks to arrive in unusually high numbers in the bays around the capital Noumea, and to attack humans in 10 incidents registered since 2018.
The local authorities have been running fishing campaigns targeting sharks since 2019, but after closing several beaches as a precaution this year, mayor Sonia Lagarde stepped up the fight.
- 'Not anti-shark' -
The authorities say the wellbeing of their country's tourism sector is at stake, just as visitors are returning after years of Covid-19 restrictions.
"We're not anti-shark," said Romain Paireau, Noumea's secretary-general. "But we must reduce the risk."
The local authorities say they are targeting tiger sharks and bulldog sharks -- considered to be among the most dangerous shark species -- but Martine Cornaille, president of the association Ensemble pour la Planete (Together for the planet, EPLP) said that the collateral damage among even harmless shark types is unacceptable.
"Culling as a response to attacks on humans is irresponsible in environmental terms," she said in a letter to the journal Nature.
The city has promised to release any fish caught accidentally, but Cornaille told AFP she believed that collateral deaths of the campaign which has killed 250 tiger and bulldog sharks since 2019 amounted to "a massacre".
- 'To attack, to kill' -
Even some shark attack victims have urged the authorities to back off.
"Often the first response of humans is to attack, to kill, to show that we are superior to everything around us," said Brigitte Do, who spent several months in an Australian hospital after a shark attack in January.
"What we should do instead is try to figure out what is going on," she told a local television station last month. "Why was this or that shark present, why are there so many in the Noumea bays. There must be a scientific explanation," she said.
New Caledonia's indigenous Kanak people are also opposed to the anti-shark campaigns because the species has a sacred status in their culture which sees sharks as an integral part of the eco system, said Kanak assembly president Yvon Kona.
City officials are meanwhile planning to install a giant net in the sea to protect an area of some 10 hectares from shark incursions.
This, they say, will allow the hunt for sharks outside the parameter to continue at a lower intensity.
The EPLP association has filed legal complaints against the authorities, accusing them of hunting sharks without an official mandate, hunting in protected areas, and dropping tiger sharks and bulldog sharks from a list of protected species.
But while environmentalists have won support among the population, they say the political authorities will not even grant them a meeting.
"Despite our formal requests, there is a communication blackout," said Cornaille.
U.Shaheen--SF-PST