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French government resigns after political wrangling over immigration

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The centre-right government of French prime minister Élisabeth Borne has resigned, the presidential palace in Paris said on Monday.

The move comes in connection with political wrangling over a controversial immigration law aimed at tightening state controls on immigration and improving integration.

The legislation adopted last month caused controversy in President Emmanuel Macron‘s own party, with 20 voting against it and 17 abstaining.

Health Minister Aurélien Rousseau resigned in protest and other left-wing cabinet members had reportedly also considered leaving the government.

Borne has been prime minister since mid-May 2022.

It is initially unclear when a new government will be formed and who will lead it.

The outgoing government has found itself in the difficult situation of no longer having an absolute majority in the National Assembly for the past 18 months.

It has been dependent on votes from the opposition for its projects.

As prime minister, Borne tried tirelessly to find compromises. However, the government did not find a reliable partner in parliament.

Macron’s core project of pension reform was ultimately pushed through by the government without a final vote in the National Assembly.

It is expected that Macron will try to move forward with a new prime minister and fresh cabinet and hold his camp together with a view towards elections for the European parliament coming up in the spring.

The right-wing nationalist Rassemblement National party of Marine Le Pen looks set to do better than Macron’s Renaissance party in the European polls in June.

With the Olympic and Paralympic Games in Paris this summer, France also faces an organizational challenge – at a moment in which the country wants to appear united and capable of decisive action.

Elisabeth Borne, Prime Minister of France, gives a speech during the Congress of French Regions 2023. The centre-right government of French prime minister Élisabeth Borne has resigned, the presidential palace in Paris says. Damien Meyer/AFP/dpa

Elisabeth Borne, Prime Minister of France, gives a speech during the Congress of French Regions 2023. The centre-right government of French prime minister Élisabeth Borne has resigned, the presidential palace in Paris says. Damien Meyer/AFP/dpa

German football legend Franz Beckenbauer dies aged 78 | Football News

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Beckenbauer captained West Germany to a World Cup victory on home soil in 1974.

Franz Beckenbauer – one of Germany’s greatest football players, who captained the country’s team to World Cup victory in 1974 then won the tournament again as manager in 1990 – has died at the age of 78, his family said.

“It is with deep sadness that we announce that my husband and our father, Franz Beckenbauer, passed away peacefully in his sleep on Sunday, surrounded by his family,” his family said in a statement on Monday.

Known in football-obsessed Germany as “the Kaiser” meaning “the Emperor”, Beckenbauer played a central role in some of the country’s greatest sporting achievements.

Born in Munich in 1945, he helped establish Bayern Munich as his country’s strongest club.

He was a classy, dominant presence on the pitch for West Germany and Bayern Munich in the 1960s and 70s, using the calmness on the ball and effortless distribution that marked his midfield performances to virtually invent the central defensive sweeper role where he found most success.

He collected 103 caps for West Germany, winning the 1972 European championship and then the World Cup on home soil.

His Bayern Munich team was the best club side in the world during the mid-1970s, winning three successive European Cups and three successive Bundesliga titles, and Beckenbauer himself was twice named European footballer of the year.

When he was national team manager, his West Germany team lost in the 1986 World Cup final to Argentina but triumphed four years later in Italy as a combined German team.

After coaching, Beckenbauer moved into football administration. But in 2016 he was fined by FIFA’s ethics committee for failing to co-operate with an inquiry into corruption over the awarding of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.

Over the next few years, he was engaged in tending to health issues, and the last time he appeared at Bayern Munich’s Allianz Arena was in August 2022, when he attended a match of Bayern Munich against Borussia Monchengladbach.

‘We will miss him’

Tributes have poured in from across Germany and global the football community, honouring Beckenbauer’s legacy.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz mourned Beckenbauer’s death and said he was one of the greatest footballers in Germany and for many ‘the emperor’  because he “inspired enthusiasm for German football for generations”.

“We will miss him. My thoughts are with his family and friends,” Chancellor Scholz said in X.

“Franz Beckenbauer, one of European football’s greatest sons, has passed away aged 78. ‘Der Kaiser’ was an extraordinary player, successful coach and popular pundit who shaped German football like no other,” the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) said in a statement.

Germany’s Bundesliga called Beckenbauer “a true icon, then, now, and always” while the English Premier League said “‘Der Kaiser’ was as elegant as he was dominant. He will forever be remembered.”

Rudi Voller, World Cup winner in 1990 and director of the German national team, said it was “one of the great privileges” of his life to “have known and experienced Franz Beckenbauer”.

“Our time together with the national team was crowned with the 1990 World Cup title in Rome, a title that would never have been possible without his outstanding coaching performance,” he said.

“German football is losing its greatest personality; I am losing a good friend.”

French PM Élisabeth Borne resigns ahead of expected reshuffle

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France’s Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne is to leave office after less than two years in the job.

Her resignation comes with President Emmanuel Macron widely expected to reshuffle his top team ahead of European elections due later this year.

In a statement, Mr Macron said Ms Borne had shown “courage, commitment and determination” during her time in office.

It is not yet known who will be appointed as her successor.

Ms Borne will remain in post until a new prime minister takes over, a statement from the Élysée Palace said.

She was France’s second female prime minister and longest serving, outlasting Édith Cresson who served in the role under François Mitterrand from 1991-92.

Reports of an overhaul of the government have been rife in recent weeks as Mr Macron looks to boost his political fortunes ahead of June’s election and in a year when France will be centre stage when it hosts the Olympic Games.

With three years left of his presidency, commentators have said an overhaul is necessary to revive his government’s political impetus after a series of protests over controversial policies and legislative defeats.

His government suffered a significant defeat on a key piece of immigration legislation in December, which was widely seen as a moment of crisis.

The law eventually passed after concessions were made to right-wing opposition groups but Mr Macron’s party is still expected to face a strong challenge in the European poll.

Ms Borne’s departure will be seen as the beginning of that overhaul, with several key figures in government tipped to replace her.

The 34-year-old education minister Gabriel Attal, armed forces minister Sebastien Lecornu and ex-agriculture minister Julien Denormandie have all been tipped as potential replacements.

France’s prime minister is expected to manage the day-to-day business of the government and heads the Council of Ministers.

Mr Macron’s party lost its parliamentary majority in 2022, meaning the new prime minister will face an uphill struggle to turn the President’s policies into law.

When appointed, the new prime minister will become the fourth to hold office since Mr Macron was first elected as President in 2017.

Franz Beckenbauer, World Cup winner for Germany as both player and coach, dies at 78

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Franz Beckenbauer, who won the World Cup both as player and coach and became one of Germany’s most beloved personalities with his easygoing charm, has died. He was 78.

Beckenbauer’s death was first announced through a statement from his family to German news agency dpa and then confirmed by the German soccer federation.

“It is with deep sadness that we announce that my husband and our father, Franz Beckenbauer, passed away peacefully in his sleep yesterday, Sunday, surrounded by his family,” the family said in its statement. “We ask that we be allowed to grieve in peace and be spared any questions.”

The statement did not provide a cause of death. The former Bayern Munich great, who became affectionately known as the “Kaiser” — or “Emperor” — had struggled with health problems in recent years.

Beckenbauer was one of German soccer’s central figures. As a player, he reimagined the defender’s role in soccer and captained West Germany to the World Cup title in 1974 after it had lost to England in the 1966 final.

West German footballer Franz Beckenbauer beams with joy as he is embraced by coach Helmut Schon, after his team beat Holland 2-1 to win the 1974 World Cup.
West German footballer Franz Beckenbauer beams with joy as he is embraced by coach Helmut Schon, after his team beat Holland 2-1 to win the 1974 World Cup.

Keystone/Getty Images


He was the coach when West Germany won the tournament again in 1990, a symbolic moment for a country in the midst of reunification, months after the Berlin Wall fell.

“The ‘Kaiser’ was one of the best players our sport has ever seen,” German soccer federation president Bernd Neuendorf said. “With his lightness, his elegance and his vision, he set standards on the field. … Franz Beckenbauer leaves a great legacy for the federation and soccer as a whole.”

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz wrote on social media that Beckenbauer “inspired generations of enthusiasm for German soccer. We will miss him.”

Thomas Bach, president of the International Olympic Committee, called Beckenbauer “a sporting legend far beyond football.”

“For me personally, he was a close and loyal friend for more than four decades, someone you could always rely on,” Bach said in a statement posted to social media.

Beckenbauer’s death comes just two days after the announcement that Mario Zagallo, the Brazilian who became the first person to win the World Cup as a player and coach, had died at the age of 92. The only other person to achieve that feat is France’s Didier Deschamps.

Beckenbauer was also instrumental in bringing the highly successful 2006 World Cup to Germany, though his legacy was later tainted by charges that he only succeeded in winning the hosting rights with the help of bribery. He denied the allegations.

“We did not want to bribe anyone and we didn’t bribe anyone,” Beckenbauer, who headed the World Cup organizing committee, wrote in his last column for daily tabloid Bild in 2016.

Franz Beckenbauer, president of Germany's World Cup organizing committee, plays with a golden soccer ball during a presentation next to the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany, April 18, 2006.
Franz Beckenbauer, president of Germany’s World Cup organizing committee, plays with a golden soccer ball during a presentation next to the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany, April 18, 2006.

Reuters/Tobias Schwarz


Beckenbauer and three other members of the committee were formally made criminal suspects that year by Swiss prosecutors who suspected fraud in the true purpose of multimillion-euro payments that connected the 2006 World Cup with FIFA. But he was eventually not indicted in 2019 for health reasons and the case ended without a judgment when the statute of limitations expired in 2020 amid delays to the court system caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

Beckenbauer was in 2014 briefly suspended by FIFA’s ethics committee from all football-related activity for failing to cooperate with prosecutor Michael Garcia’s probe of alleged corruption in the 2018 and 2022 World Cup votes. The suspension was lifted during the 2014 World Cup in Brazil when he agreed to cooperate.

The allegations damaged Beckenbauer’s standing in public perception for the first time. Until then, Beckenbauer had seemingly been unable to say or do anything wrong. Germans simply loved him.

“He did everything that a German is not supposed to do,” former Bayern Munich teammate Paul Breitner once said of Beckenbauer.

“He got divorced, he left his children, took off with his girlfriend, got into trouble with tax collectors, left his girlfriend again.

“But he is forgiven for everything because he’s got a good heart, he’s a positive person and he’s always ready to help. He doesn’t conceal his weaknesses, doesn’t sweep his mistakes under the carpet,” Breitner said.

The son of a post official from the working-class Munich district of Giesing, Beckenbauer became one of the greatest players to grace the game in a career that also included stints in the United States with the New York Cosmos in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

Retired Brazilian soccer star Pele, left, welcomes German soccer player Franz Beckenbauer back to the New York Cosmos. Beckenbauer first signed with the Cosmos in 1977 and played with the team again in 1983.
Retired Brazilian soccer star Pele, left, welcomes German soccer player Franz Beckenbauer back to the New York Cosmos. Beckenbauer first signed with the Cosmos in 1977 and played with the team again in 1983.

Bettmann


Born on Sept. 11, 1945, months after Germany’s surrender in World War II, Beckenbauer studied to become an insurance salesman but he signed his first professional contract with Bayern when he was 18.

“You are not born to become a world star in Giesing. Football for me was a deliverance. Looking back, I can say: Everything went according to how I’d imagined my life. I had a perfect life,” Beckenbauer told the Sueddeutsche newspaper magazine in 2010.

Beckenbauer personalized the position of “libero,” the free-roaming nominal defender who often moved forward to threaten the opponent’s goal, a role now virtually disappeared from modern football and rarely seen before his days.

An elegant, cool player with vision, Beckenbauer defined as captain the Bayern Munich side that won three successive European Cup titles from 1974 to 1976.

In his first World Cup as a player in 1966, West Germany lost the final to host England as Beckenbauer chased Bobby Charlton around the field having been given the task of marking the England standout.

Four years later, with his arm strapped to his body because of a shoulder injury, Germany lost a memorable semifinal to Italy.

Finally, in 1974 at home, Beckenbauer captained West Germany to the title.

Beckenbauer left Bayern for New York in 1977 and later recalled fondly the time spent in the United States.

“From Munich-Giesing to New York City, that was a huge step,” Beckenbauer said.

Beckenbauer said the decisive step in luring him to the Cosmos was the helicopter ride club officials gave him from the roof of the Pan Am Building across Manhattan to the Giants’ stadium in New Jersey.

“That was then the most modern stadium in the world, with VIP boxes. We didn’t have that in Europe. As we flew over the stadium, I told them, ‘Fine, stop it, I am coming.'”

In that 2010 interview, Beckenbauer also recalled visits to famed nightclub Studio 54 with fellow Cosmos stars Pele and Carlos Alberto.

Beckenbauer missed the 1978 World Cup because the Germans decided not to invite players playing abroad. He returned to Germany in 1980, spent two seasons with Hamburger SV — and won another Bundesliga championship, his fifth — before returning for a final season at the Cosmos.

Although he had never coached before, Beckenbauer was hired to revive West Germany in 1984 after a flop at the European Championship.

West Germany made it to the final of the 1986 World Cup, losing to Diego Maradona’s Argentina in Mexico City. Although West Germany failed to win the 1988 Euros title at home, it went to the final of the 1990 World Cup and defeated Argentina in the final in Rome, another highlight in the year after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

The penalty goal came from Andreas Brehme, a defender Beckenbauer had once told to “play the piano, play the flute but not football.”

While his team celebrated, Beckenbauer cut a lonely figure walking and reflecting at the Olympic Stadium.

Later, at the news conference, he said he was “sorry for the rest of the world” because a united Germany would be unbeatable for years to come. But Germany had to wait 24 years before winning another World Cup title.

Once he left for New York, Beckenbauer never had a home in Munich. He lived just across the border in the Austrian Alpine resort of Kitzbuehel, where taxes were lower.

Beckenbauer was a voracious traveler and personally visited all 31 countries who had qualified for the World Cup in Germany in 2006.

Beckenbauer said he got the urge to travel as a child by collecting pictures for a sticker album. “There were photos from Africa, America. It got me interested … but I never thought I’d experience it personally.”

“There are many who travel but who see nothing because they are too busy. I was always curious.”

Beckenbauer retired from the West Germany job after coaching the team to the 1990 World Cup triumph. The Berlin Wall had fallen the year before and Germany was in the process of reunifying after the Cold War. The final was the last tournament game played by a West Germany-only team.

He didn’t have much success at coaching Marseille, but won the Bundesliga title with Bayern in 1994 and the UEFA Cup in 1996, both after taking over as coach late in the season. He later became Bayern’s president, until leaving most functions when he turned 65 in 2010.

Beckenbauer’s legal issues around the 2006 World Cup continued into his retirement, but he remained a much-loved figure in German soccer and society.

Advocates recoil as former state oil exec named COP29 president

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Azerbaijani Ecology Minister Mukhtar Babayev, a former executive at the country’s state-owned oil company, will serve as president of the United Nations COP29 climate summit this year, 2023 hosts the United Arab Emirates confirmed.

“We look forward to working alongside the COP29 and COP30 Presidencies, and the UNFCC [United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change] to build on the transformative and historic success of COP28 and keep 1.5°C within reach,” the COP28 UAE presidency tweeted.

Babayev’s appointment compounded the existing controversy among environmental advocates over the choice of a petrostate to host the summit for the second year in a row. The UAE’s Sultan al-Jaber, the head of the country’s national oil company, served as president of COP28 in 2023 and sparked backlash after saying there was “no science” behind calls to transition away from fossil fuels.

Despite this, the summit ended in an agreement to “transition away” from fossil fuels, even as the Organization of Petroleum-Exporting Countries lobbied its members to block such language.

The announcement of Babayev nonetheless sparked dismay from environmental advocates, who said it would make progress impossible.

“COP28 was run by oil lobbyists, so it’s no surprise that the final agreement committed the world to fossil fuels forever. There’s a sense of déjà vu setting in – we now have a former oil executive from an authoritarian petrostate in charge of the world’s response to the crisis that fossil fuel firms created,” Alice Harrison, Fossil Fuels Campaign Leader at Global Witness, said in a statement Friday.

“We again call for the UNFCCC to urgently intervene and kick big polluters out of climate talks, to ensure the talks are held in good faith, and to remove those people who want to make a profit at the expense of the world’s most vulnerable people.”

“It’s more than clear this gathering has been fully co-opted by fossil fuels,” tweeted Tara Houska, founder of the Indigenous climate advocacy group Giniw Collective. “Is directing our energy to fighting over a conference worthwhile?”

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

Gaza’s Al-Aqsa hospital under fire, residents flee as Blinken tours region

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CAIRO — Israeli attacks around central Gaza’s last remaining hospital caused hundreds of displaced civilians to flee over the weekend and forced most medical workers to evacuate, leaving wounded people with no good options for seeking care as fighting intensifies in the area.

Organizations including Doctors Without Borders, the International Rescue Committee and Medical Aid for Palestinians have pulled their staff from Al-Aqsa Hospital in recent days, after the surrounding areas in Deir al-Balah came under drone attacks and sniper fire, and residents received orders from the Israel Defense Forces to evacuate.

The heavy fire in the vicinity in recent days and the pullout of major international medical organizations sparked a panic among displaced civilians sheltering at the facility, prompting many of them to flee yet again in search of relative safety, eyewitnesses told The Washington Post.

Al Jazeera says Israeli strike killed another child of Gaza bureau chief

“Due to extreme fear, a large number of displaced people who were present in the hospital’s courtyards dismantled their tents yesterday evening and this morning, and headed toward the city of Rafah,” Ashraf Abu Amra, a freelance journalist stationed at the hospital, said in a voice message Monday. By evening, 35 bodies had arrived at the hospital, he said, “because it is the only one that covers the entire central regions.”

Hospitals have frequently been the focus of Israeli attacks in Gaza over the past three months of fighting. Israel began a gradual drawdown of troops in northern Gaza late last month, saying it had largely disabled Hamas operations in that part of the enclave. Widespread attacks continue throughout central and southern Gaza, where hundreds of thousands of civilians have taken refuge.

Israel is under growing international pressure to rein in its military campaign and facilitate the delivery of more aid to the besieged enclave as the situation becomes more dire.

Speaking to British and French counterparts at the start of Italy’s presidency of the Group of Seven wealthiest nations, Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said it was “an absolute necessity is to curb the number of Palestinian civilian casualties immediately,” according to a readout of the call. “A second objective is to put pressure on the Israeli government to end military operations” and push for the “difficult but inescapable” two-state solution.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken is touring the region this week to try to stave off a broader war, with stops in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates on Monday after meetings in Turkey, Greece, Jordan and Qatar. He is scheduled to head to Israel on Monday night.

Tensions along the Israeli-Lebanese border are simmering, with regular cross-border attacks between Israeli forces and militants in Lebanon stirring fears in the Biden administration about the opening of another front on Israel’s northern border.

Hezbollah, Lebanon’s most powerful militant group and political party, announced Monday the killing of one of its commanders in the south — the first disclosure of a top-ranking official being killed in the cross-border exchanges of fire. The IDF declined to comment on the strike.

Israel’s talk of expanding war to Lebanon alarms U.S.

The World Health Organization highlighted the plight of Palestinians in central Gaza as the last hospital performing surgeries looked set to go out of commission. In a statement Sunday, Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said only five doctors remained to treat the wounded, with no food, scant medical supplies and no assurance that they would be protected from attack.

The WHO “has received troubling reports of increasing hostilities and ongoing evacuation orders near the vital Al-Aqsa Hospital,” he wrote. A team from the WHO visited the hospital Sunday and “saw sickening scenes of people of all ages being treated on blood-streaked floors and in chaotic corridors.”

“An unidentified child lay dead, partially covered by a sheet, on a bed. Other injured were prostrate on the floor, being stepped over by the health staff and families. A man’s harrowing groans, either from pain or anguish, cut through the emergency ward’s commotion,” he added.

As of Jan. 3, before the exodus from Al-Aqsa Hospital, only 13 out of Gaza’s 36 hospitals were partially functional, according to the WHO — nine in the south and four in the north.

Bob Kitchen, vice president for emergencies and humanitarian action at the International Rescue Committee, told The Washington Post that IRC and MAP had decided to pull out their joint emergency medical team from Al-Aqsa Hospital after fighting in the area “got hotter and hotter” and bullets pierced the doctor’s room and the intensive care unit last week.

“We were able to make it through the end of that day, but it was evident … that the Israelis had placed the hospital in the red zone and were moving further south,” he said.

The number of casualties arriving there has surged in recent days as Israeli forces intensified their attacks on Deir al-Balah, a focal point over the past month in their drive toward southern Gaza. The hospital was still operating as of Monday, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

“There are patients clearly dying in the emergency department who could be saved if there were enough staff,” Nick Maynard, a surgeon and clinical lead for the IRC and MAP emergency medical team, said in a statement.

The IDF press office said it was “checking” on reports that fighting and bombardment in the vicinity had forced civilians and medical workers to flee Al-Aqsa Hospital.

Israeli forces have repeatedly targeted hospitals in Gaza, claiming Hamas militants use them to store weapons, command operations and hide hostages. In a highly scrutinized operation in November, Israeli forces besieged and raided the enclave’s largest medical complex, al-Shifa, in northern Gaza, which they alleged Hamas had used as a command and control hub.

The case of al-Shifa: Investigating the assault on Gaza’s largest hospital

U.S. intelligence officials last week offered fresh details which they said backed up their assessment that Hamas had used the facility as a command center. A Post investigation last month found that evidence presented by the Israeli government fell short of proving claims about the militants’ use of the facility.

The IDF has not issued evacuation orders for Al-Aqsa Hospital itself, Gazans at the hospital told The Post on Monday. But with the departure of the last surgeons in recent days, patients in central Gaza who need surgery will have to head miles away.

Hospitals in the south “have reached their capacity to accommodate the wounded in both departments and intensive care,” the Gaza Health Ministry said Monday. “There is massive overcrowding, with hundreds of injured individuals forced to sleep on the floors of corridors and squares.”

The Hamas-run government media office also reported that two more journalists, Abdullah Buris and Muhammad Abu Dayer, were killed by Israeli bombing in the Gaza Strip on Monday. At least 79 journalists and media workers have been killed since the start of the war on Oct. 7, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.

The death of Hezbollah commander Wissam Hasan Tawil on Monday is the latest casualty in the simmering clashes taking place along Israel’s northern border with Lebanon.

So far, 135 Hezbollah members have been killed since Oct. 7, a Washington Post tally found. Israeli bombardments have also killed at least 19 Hezbollah members in neighboring Syria, the organization told The Post.

Reuters reported that Tawil was the deputy head of a unit within Hezbollah’s elite Redwan force, adding that he was killed alongside another Hezbollah fighter when their car was hit in a strike on the Lebanese village of Majdal Selm. The Post could not verify the report.

Hasan Nasrallah, Hezbollah’s leader, warned Israel in two speeches last week that waging a war on Lebanon would be “very, very, very costly.”

Dadouch reported from Beirut, and Harb from London. Mohamed El Chamaa in Beirut, Steve Hendrix in Jerusalem and Hazem Balousha in Amman contributed to this report.

NTT DATA Named a Leader in NelsonHall’s NEAT Report for Advanced Digital Workplace Services 2023

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Company Recognized for Initiatives That Help Clients Build the Modern Digital Workplace

TOKYO & PLANO, Texas–(BUSINESS WIRE)–NTT DATA, a global digital business and IT services leader, today announced that NelsonHall has named the company a Leader in its NelsonHall NEAT Evaluation Report for Advanced Digital Workplace Services report for the fourth straight year. The company was recognized as a Leader for its overall ability to meet future client requirements as well as delivering immediate benefits to its Digital Workplace services clients.

GlobalLogo NTTDATA FutureBlue RGB
GlobalLogo NTTDATA FutureBlue RGB

The report highlighted NTT DATA’s ability to reduce operating costs through hyper-automation and business outcomes. The report cited NTT DATA’s strong focus on workplace-specific use cases on its proprietary Nucleus Intelligent Enterprise Platform, Digital experience management and Experience Level Agreements (XLA) maturity roadmap to enable employee and client experiences as its key strengths.

“NTT DATA has a robust portfolio of digital workplace services to deliver outcomes that clients are looking for to transform the way employees work, collaborate and innovate on any device, anywhere, anytime,” said John Laherty, Senior IT Services Research Analyst, NelsonHall. “It’s Nucleus Intelligent Enterprise Platform empowers employees to be their productive best through modern consumer-like experience and enable IT operations team to run efficient XLA-based operations.”

NelsonHall further cited NTT DATA’s ability to provide a comprehensive blend of culture, operations, and technology to elevate the engagement and productivity of employees, improve data-driven decision-making, operational efficiency, and retain and attract talent.

“Being named a Leader by NelsonHall in Advanced Digital Workplace Services for the fourth consecutive time is a testament to NTT DATA’s excellence in providing modern digital workplace environments,” said Kaz Nishihata, Director and Senior Executive Vice President, NTT DATA Group Corporation. “We are committed to making substantial investments in workplace platforms, conversational AI, digital experience management, and sustainability solutions to further enhance the digital workplace experience.”

The report also emphasized on NTT DATA’s integration with NTT Ltd. making it a $30 Billion IT powerhouse. The combination expands their workplace collaboration capabilities with Cloud Voice and Operator Connect services. Cloud Voice fills gaps in voice calls from Microsoft Teams and Cisco Webex, while Operator Connect allows organizations to easily activate NTT Calling Plans and Audio Conferencing services directly into Microsoft Teams.

“Generative AI has the potential to spur a new wave of innovation in digital workplace operations,” said Tanvir Khan, Chief Digital and Strategy Officer, NTT DATA Services. “As a leader in Digital Workplace services, NTT DATA is actively evaluating and implementing Digital Workplace specific Generative AI use cases to enable customers and service teams to achieve unparalleled efficiency, productivity, and overall experience.”

To learn more about NTT DATA’s Digital Workplace Services visit: https://us.nttdata.com/en/services/digital-workplace-services

About NTT DATA

NTT DATA is a $30 billion, trusted global innovator of IT and business services. They help clients transform through business and technology consulting, industry and digital solutions, applications development and management, managed edge-to-cloud infrastructure services, BPO, systems integration and global data centers. They are committed to their clients’ long-term success and combine global reach with local client service in over 80 countries. Visit nttdata.com or LinkedIn to learn more.

About NelsonHall

NelsonHall is the leading global analyst firm dedicated to helping organizations understand the ‘art of the possible’ in digital operations transformation. With analysts in the U.S., U.K., Continental Europe, and India, NelsonHall provides buy-side organizations with detailed, critical information on markets and vendors (including NEAT assessments) that helps them make fast and highly informed sourcing decisions. And for vendors, NelsonHall provides deep knowledge of market dynamics and user requirements to help them hone their go-to-market strategies. NelsonHall’s analysis is based on rigorous, primary research and is widely respected for the quality and depth of its insight.

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French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne resigns | Politics News

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The move paves the way for a cabinet reshuffle as President Emmanuel Macron aims to give his presidency new momentum.

French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne has resigned, the French presidency said, as President Emmanuel Macron prepared to unveil a long-awaited cabinet reshuffle in an attempt to give a new impetus to his presidency.

“Ms Elisabeth Borne today submitted the resignation of the government to the president, who accepted it,” the presidency said in a statement on Monday.

Macron thanked Borne for “work in the service of our nation that has been exemplary every day”, in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

Borne, appointed in May 2022, was only the second female prime minister in French history. She will act as caretaker until a new government is named.

The president had fuelled speculation of a government reshuffle in December by promising a new political initiative. This came after the year 2023 was bookended by political crises prompted by highly contested reforms of the pension system and immigration laws.

The move comes just five months before European Parliament elections, with Eurosceptics expected to make strong gains at a time of widespread public discontent over surging living costs and the difficulties European governments face in curbing migration flows.

Opinion polls show Macron’s party is trailing that of far-right leader Marine Le Pen by around eight to 10 points ahead of the June vote.

What next?

Among those cited as potential candidates to replace Borne are 34-year-old Education Minister Gabriel Attal and 37-year-old Defence Minister Sebastien Lecornu, either of whom would become France’s youngest-ever prime minister.

Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire and former Agriculture Minister Julien Denormandie have also been mentioned by pundits as possible options.

The change in prime minister will not necessarily lead to a shift in political tack, but rather signal a desire to move beyond the pension and immigration reforms and focus on new priorities, including hitting full employment.

Macron and his government, led by Borne, have struggled to deal with a more turbulent parliament to pass laws since losing their absolute majority shortly after Macron was re-elected for a second mandate in 2022.

The French president’s advisers say he has managed to pass the most challenging parts of his economic manifesto in the first year and a half of his second mandate, despite the lack of an absolute majority, and that future reforms, on education and euthanasia for instance, would be more consensual.

But Macron’s decision to use executive powers last year to pass a contested increase in the pension age to 64 triggered weeks of protests.

The reshuffle is likely to intensify the race in Macron’s camp to succeed him in the next presidential election in 2027, with Le Maire, former Prime Minister Edouard Philippe, and current Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin all seen as potential candidates.

The Maldives and India are feuding after Modi’s beach trip

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Semafor Signals

Insights from Mint, Indian Express, and India Today

NEWS

A tourism-related diplomatic feud between India and the Maldives escalated on Monday as a major Indian travel agency stopped flight bookings to the archipelagic nation and India summoned the Maldivian envoy while promoting its domestic beach destinations.

The dispute stems from antagonistic comments made by three Maldivian ministers about Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi this week, but has been simmering since the new president in the Maldives — which is heavily dependent on tourism from India — took office last year.

The deputy Maldivian ministers called Modi a “clown,” “terrorist,” and “puppet of Israel” on social media, after speculating that his trip to India’s Lakshadweep archipelago — during which he visited picturesque beaches and snorkeled — was a challenge to Maldivian tourism. The three have reportedly been suspended as the Maldivian government tried to distance itself from their comments.

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India and the Maldives have historically had close ties

Sources: India Today, Economic Times

Following the insulting comments about Modi, Indian celebrities and officials called for a boycott of trips to the Maldives, and instead promoted India’s islands. After the Indian Chamber of Commerce asked travel and tour agencies to stop booking trips there, large booking platform EaseMyTrip suspended all its Maldives flight bookings on Monday. It’s a marked shift from the “close and cordial” ties India and the Maldives have historically shared; Indians topped the Maldives’ tourist arrival figures last year, and India has been its “perfect neighbour” for decades in sectors beyond tourism, including infrastructure, defense, and disaster recovery, according to India Today.

Modi’s trip to Indian island destination kicked off latest row

Sources: Mint, Indian Express

Modi’s visit to Lakshadweep was more than just a New Year’s beach trip: In recent months, he’s urged Indians to choose domestic destinations for vacations and weddings. His address in Lakshadweep was also seen as a way for the prime minister to woo the Muslim-majority population there ahead of this year’s elections. Lakshadweep isn’t close to being an alternative to the Maldives, the Indian Express wrote in an editorial, and much of the reaction on Indian social media was over the top and exposed “hypernationalism on both sides.” Instead of boycotting, India should “double down on a firm but patient engagement with Maldives.”

Maldives’ ties to China contributed to diplomatic dispute

Sources: Hindustan Times, Reuters

Maldives President Mohamed Muizzu had an “India out” election pledge last year that pushed for the removal of the roughly 75 Indian military troops based in the Maldives. Both China and India are vying for influence in the Maldives, and Muizzu is seen as having a more pro-China tilt. He arrived in China on Monday for a multiple-day visit, breaking from the tradition of Maldivian leaders making New Delhi their first international destination. A New Delhi-based analyst told Reuters that Muizzu “seems disinclined to continue engaging India,” adding that “his actions seem directed at creating distance between Male and Delhi.” The close China ties, he said, should be “concerning to India.”

Pakistan SC nullifies lifetime disqualification of lawmakers

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Supreme Court on Monday declared the lifetime disqualification of lawmakers null and void, a ruling that paved the way for former three-time prime minister Nawaz Sharif to participate in the upcoming national elections slated to take place on February 8.
The SC declared that no person can be barred for his/her lifetime from running in elections if they are disqualified under Article 62 (1)(f) of the constitution, under which in 2017 Sharif was disqualifiedfor life from holding public office in the Panama Papers case.
Article 62(1)(f) sets a precondition for a member of parliament to be “sadiq and ameen (honest and righteous)”.The disqualification conundrum stems from the addition of Article 62(1)(f) to the constitution by former military ruler Gen Zia-ul-Haq.
A seven-member larger bench headed by Chief Justice Qazi Faez Isa and comprising Justices Syed Mansoor Ali Shah, Yahya Afridi, Aminuddin Khan, Jamal Khan Mandokhail, Muhammad Ali Mazhar, and Musarrat Hilali — conducted the hearings of the case, which were broadcast live on the apex court’s website.
The bench announced the verdict with a 6-1 majority as Justice Afridi disagreed with his fellow judges, backing the apex court’s previous judgment. While announcing the reserved verdict, the chief justice noted that since the election schedule was issued, it was “necessary” to release the order at the earliest.
With his main rival, former PM Imran Khan, in jail and barred from contesting the polls for five years, Sharif’s party, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), is considered a frontrunner to win the election.
In 2018, the apex court had ruled that disqualification handed down under Article 62(1)(f) was supposed to be “permanent”. In June 2023, however, an amendment was brought in the Elections Act of 2017 specifying that the period of electoral disqualification will be for five years, not for life.
Sharif, however, was not an applicant in the latest case; it was filed by a politician from Dera Ghazi Khan, Badshah Khan Qaisarani, who was disqualified for producing a fake graduation degree. The verdict makes him eligible to contest polls as more than five years have elapsed since his 2017 conviction.