
-
Pro-Trump US senator meets Chinese vice premier
-
On Khartoum front line, Sudan women medics risk all for patients
-
Beijing simplifies marriages to encourage Chinese to wed
-
Holloway wins third successive world indoor 60m hurdles gold
-
Appeal of Vietnam death row tycoon to begin in separate case
-
Pole vault king Duplantis sees off Karalis for third world indoor gold
-
Girl among two dead as Israel strikes Lebanon after cross-border rocket fire
-
In-demand Hoeness extends deal as Stuttgart coach
-
England Women's captain Knight leaves role after Ashes whitewash
-
Ingebrigtsen wins 3,000m gold to keep world indoor double bid alive
-
Russia hopes for 'progress' at Saudi talks: negotiator
-
Protests intensify as South Korean court prepares to rule on impeached president
-
Sudan army advances in central Khartoum after retaking palace
-
Pope to make first public appearance Sunday since hospitalisation
-
One dead as Israel strikes Lebanon after cross-border rocket fire
-
More than 340 held after mass protests in Turkey
-
Hamilton off the mark for Ferrari before Piastri takes China GP pole
-
Snoopy the fashion icon celebrated in Paris exhibition
-
Bayern goalie Neuer suffers setback in injury recovery
-
Pro-Trump senator set to meet Chinese premier
-
Pakistan detains leading Baloch rights activist: police
-
Israel reports rocket fire from Lebanon, warns of severe response
-
US revokes legal status for 500,000 immigrants
-
Piastri on Chinese GP pole after Hamilton takes first Ferrari win in sprint
-
Last of six foreign hikers missing in Philippines rescued
-
Heavyweight boxing great George Foreman dead at 76
-
Bonnin wins world indoor pole vault gold, Holloway cruises
-
Hamilton hails 'really special' first Ferrari win at China GP sprint
-
Durant scores 42 as Suns eclipse Cavs
-
Japan, China, and South Korea agree to promote peace, cooperation
-
Goffin sends Alcaraz packing in Miami
-
Hamilton dominates Chinese GP sprint for first Ferrari win
-
Heavyweight boxing great George Foreman dead at 76: family
-
Argentina on brink after Almada strike sinks Uruguay
-
Trump brand alternately loved, loathed worldwide
-
Venezuelan migrant dreams of US national amputee soccer stardom
-
Aid freeze silences Latin America media scrutiny of US foes
-
Prospect of copper mine reopening revives tensions in Panama
-
Bridgeman leads Valpar by one at halfway
-
Raducanu savours winning feeling after troubled months
-
Bear Grill Announces Official Sponsorship of KB Titan Racing and Pro Stock Driver Matt Latino
-
Families say tattoos landed Venezuelan migrants in Salvadoran mega-jail
-
Tuchel era off to winning World Cup start, Poland beat Lithuania
-
'We have to do better': Tuchel urges England to improve on winning start
-
Former Dodgers pitcher Urias suspended over domestic violence case
-
Tuchel makes winning start as laboured England beat Albania
-
World's glacier mass shrank again in 2024, UN says
-
Osimhen strikes twice to give Nigeria World Cup boost
-
Global stocks mostly slump as Trump tariffs hit confidence
-
Vonn determined to enjoy possible US farewell at Idaho World Cup finale

France cancels modern 'Beauty and the Beast' for schoolkids
France's education ministry has cancelled an order for "Beauty and the Beast" with modern illustrations, saying a cartoonist's 21st-century version including a police sniffer dog and smartphones was inappropriate for tweens.
Julien Berjeaut, whose pen name is Jul, had been asked to illustrate an 18th-century version of the famous fairy tale for a government scheme to give 800,000 primary school graduates a revamped classic to read for the summer holidays.
A digital copy of the book intended for publication showed the original 1756 text by Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont.
Jul's accompanying cartoons depicted the heroine with dark Mediterranean features, the Beast as a comic toothy hair ball, and her selfish sisters as addicted to their smartphones.
To illustrate Beauty's father exploring the Beast's castle after "a few glasses of wine", according to the 18th-century text, Jul draws him drunk, clutching a bottle and singing a famous French song.
Beside the book recounting his business woes and him being "put on trial for his goods", he draws a ship arriving from abroad and police officers with a sniffer dog inspecting boxes unloaded from his car.
"It's a modern rewriting. We have a father coming from Algeria, who must have committed fraud and is stopped by police," Education Minister Elisabeth Borne said on Thursday.
"Perhaps in a setting with teachers, we could explain this," she told the CNews/Europe1 broadcaster. "But it's a book that is supposed to be read on holiday with the family.
"It is certainly an interesting work, but not for this educational setting," she added.
- 'Complex realities' -
Jul said he received a letter from the education ministry on Monday explaining the themes of his illustrations -- such as alcohol and social media -- "would be more appropriate for older pupils at the end of middle school or start of high school".
The ministry on Thursday said these "complex realities" included "trafficking counterfeit goods" and "police controls".
The illustrator criticised what he called "a political decision" and "censorship".
"The only explanation seems to lie in disgust at seeing a world of princes and princesses who looks a little more like that of schoolchildren today," Jul said.
Alluding to far-right conspiracy theories about non-white immigration into Europe, he asked whether he had crossed a boundary for the ministry in "the 'great replacement' of blond princesses by young Mediterranean girls".
France's president and government have borrowed talking points from the far right in recent years, especially on immigration, in an apparent bid to appeal to the right.
Jul drew a parallel with US President Donald Trump's administration moving to prevent alleged "radical, anti-American ideologies" -- such as discussions on privilege or gender -- being taught in schools.
"Why look at Donald Trump with alarm, when we are step by step heading down the same path?" the French cartoonist asked.
burs-ah/as/jj
B.Torres--AT