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MEDI1TV Afrique : Revue de presse - 17/03/2025

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00:00Hello everyone, welcome to Mediantv for your press review.
00:15The recent rainfall recorded in the Ben Slimane region has given hope to farmers after a period of drought that has severely affected crops and farming.
00:24According to the 360, vegetable growers, in particular lentils, beans and chickpeas, are also benefiting from this improvement in climatic conditions, as indicated by the information portal in its report.
00:36This positive dynamic is not limited to seasonal crops.
00:39Fruit trees, including olive trees, peach trees, apricot trees and vines, should also benefit from this rainfall.
00:46In addition, these rains are also contributing to the recharge of pre-attic taps and wells, a crucial element for the continuity of local agriculture.
00:55And if optimism is in place, farmers remain careful as to the evolution of the season.
01:00Everyone agrees that a regularity of rainfall will be essential to guarantee abundant harvest and ensure the economic stability of the families living from agriculture in the region.
01:12The new Rabat development plan aims to position the city among the world's capitals, responding to the expectations of its inhabitants and visitors, the brief indicates.
01:25During a press conference dedicated to the presentation of this plan, the president of the council of the municipality of the capital, Fatih Al Moudni,
01:33insisted on the fact that Rabat deserves the best possible development, especially since it is not only an administrative capital, but also cultural and touristy, attracting growing investments.
01:44She also highlighted the importance of the major projects underway in the city, highlighting their positive impact on Rabat and neighboring cities, especially in terms of job creation.
01:54Regarding public utility expropriations in the five districts, the president explained that the goal is to widen the roads to facilitate traffic, especially on the main axis, concludes the information portal in his article.
02:09The United States now wants to pursue this world tour. Donald Trump challenges justice and expels 238 people, the New York Times indicates.
02:19A judge ordered last Saturday that the planes carrying Venezuelan immigrants to El Salvador turn around.
02:26This judge from the District of Columbia estimated that the law put forward by the Trump administration, the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, to justify these rapid expulsions, could not be applied in peacetime, writes the American Daily.
02:40The planes landed on Sunday in El Salvador. Oops, too late to irony Naïd Boukelech, the Salvadoran president, on his social networks.
02:49He was also publicly thanked for his collaboration by Mark Rubio, the Secretary of State.
02:55The precise moment when the planes were actually informed of the decision is not clear, but whatever the timing, the order of the judge seems to have been ignored by the Trump administration, indicates the New York Times.
03:06Le Quotidien suggests that this refusal of the White House to follow the directives of the judiciary brings Washington closer to an unconstitutional crisis.
03:15When Senegalese fashion wears sovereignty, title Le Soleil to put in exergue, the choice of the country's leaders preferred made-in-Senegal outfits to the tie costume of the predecessor, Makisal.
03:27Indeed, President Bassirou Djomayfay, his Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko and even the First Lady inspire a new vision of elegance and value local fashion.
03:37This approach, far from being trivial, makes Senegalese creators central actors of the country's cultural and economic renewal, explains the publication.
03:45According to a stylist interrogated on the subject, the new authorities claim a new vision of fashion, a fashion that speaks to the heart and minds.
03:53This choice of style is not a fashion that is consumed, it is a fashion that thinks, that lives and that through the body becomes a vector of social transformation, writes Le Soleil.
04:03However, the challenge remains of size for the local textile industry, because the narrative of made-in-Senegal aims at macroeconomic realities, because all fabrics, or almost, are imported, explains the newspaper.
04:16The beautiful story of the day comes to us from Peru, where a local fisherman made an unexpected return to the country's coasts.
04:22More than three months after his disappearance, we are told by La Repubblica, Maximo Napa Castro took to the sea on December 7 last year, from Marcona, south of the capital Lima.
04:32Despised in a storm, his boat, without a radio beacon, broke down and drifted for hundreds of kilometers.
04:38His provisions being too lean, Maximo fed on cockroaches, birds and turtles to survive.
04:44And on March 11th, an Ecuadorian ship spotted him more than 1,000 kilometers from his starting point, says La Repubblica.
04:51After being taken care of by the Peruvian Navy, he was hospitalized in the city of Paita, where part of his family was waiting for him for terribly moving reunions, before being transferred by plane to Lima.
05:03He hopes to soon find his mother, who lives in Pisco, and his two-month-old daughter, who he has never seen before, concludes the Peruvian newspaper.
05:13And it is with this beautiful story that we conclude this press release. Thank you all for following it. Have a good rest of the program.