Le Journal

Métropole de Lyon. « Pour maintenir nos acquis » : la grève de General Electric-Villeurbanne fait tache d’huile
Les salariés villeurbannais de General Electric sont en grève depuis lundi 19 janvier. Déçus par les propositions de leur direction dans le cadre des négociations annuelles obligatoires, leur mouvement s’étend au site d’Aix-les-Bains, qui compte plus du double de salariés.

Football - Finances. Entre l’ex-président de l’OL John Textor et Iconic, un procès aura bien lieu

‘A new aristocracy’: Jonathan Anderson muses on eccentricity at Dior menswear show

Roanne. « Permettre une meilleure lisibilité des femmes dans le monde de l’entreprise »
La nouvelle présidente de FCE Roannais, Carine Montoya-Sérol, a pris ses fonctions à l’issue de l’assemblée générale de l’association du 13 janvier, à la CCI. À la tête, avec Stéphane Sérol du domaine viticole de Renaison qui compte 12 salariés en équivalent temps plein, elle poursuit on engagement militant et bénévole. Entretien.

Feurs. Un bilan des soldes contrasté pour les commerçants du centre-ville

Loire. Entreprises en défaillance : cette association garantit le versement des salaires

Le Chambon-Feugerolles. Pour ses 60 ans, le magasin de meubles Peyron - l’Ameublier s’offre une cure de jouvence

Aston Villa consider move for Loftus-Cheek with fears over Kamara knee injury
Villa thought to favour loan for Milan midfielderClub also in market for striker, with Mateta among targetsAston Villa are exploring a move for Milan’s Ruben Loftus-Cheek, as they seek to absorb the absence of Boubacar Kamara amid fears he will miss the rest of the season with a knee injury.Villa are poised to step up interest in the former Chelsea midfielder, who in September was recalled to the England squad after a six-year absence but was omitted from Thomas Tuchel’s most recent camp in November. Continue reading...

Europe’s moment of truth over Greenland looms, as leaders ditch appeasement of Trump

WVU football to play eight straight before bye week in 2026

I risked my life to cross the Channel because I believed in British justice. But Britain is abandoning me | Anonymous
The government has been trying to send me back to France under the ‘one in, one out’ policy. The threats to my life there don’t seem to matterThe writer is an asylum seeker in the UKI did not come to the UK on a small boat because I was reckless, desperate or careless with my life. I came because every legal door was closed to me. And the danger I faced at home left me with no real choice. Now, however, I am staring down the barrel of a British government policy that could put me in harm’s way again. In my home country, I had a stable job helping manage an oilfield. I was not a failure and was not running towards Europe for a better salary or an easier life. I was running away from power, corruption and injustice. I had to flee because of a powerful, influential individual who targeted me. Where I am from, when someone like that decides to destroy you, there is no protection, no court you can rely on and no future. I tried many times to leave my country legally, but no other country would accept my case. The situation became urgent. Staying meant serious harm or death.I first went to France – but even there I did not feel safe. I knew the person I was running from could reach me. The power of smugglers, human trafficking networks and organised crime in France is well known to asylum seekers. I received threats and my family received threats as well. I lived in constant fear. That is why I made the most dangerous decision of my life: to cross the Channel on a small boat. After I left France to travel to the UK, my family received a call from a French number threatening to harm me. They said that they hadn’t managed to catch me while I was in France – but that if I returned there, they would get me.The writer is an asylum seeker in the UK. As told to Diane TaylorA Home Office spokesperson said, “We cannot be clearer: migrants arriving in the United Kingdom illegally on a small boat can expect to be sent back to France.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

