Donald Trump's legal troubles in the United States, demonstrations against the pension reform, Sophie Binet at the head of the CGT, the women's football France team... Every day, find all the news through the work of photojournalists who travel the world. Thanks to the press agencies, always on the front line to cover major events, and to the journalists of the editorial staff of 20 Minutes, from Lille to Marseille, via Bordeaux and Strasbourg, here is another look, in pictures, on the information of the last 24 hours.


Director: Olivier JUSZCZAK

  • A fratricidal congress, and, at the end of the night, a surprise election in the form of a "happy ending"! Sophie Binet was elected Friday general secretary of the CGT, becoming the first woman to take the head of the union since its creation in 1895, with the heavy burden of bringing together an organization in crisis, in the midst of a battle over pension reform.

  • On Thursday, several hundred young people gathered at the Place du Panthéon in Paris at the call of the national student coordination, to denounce both "police repression and far-right gangs that attack the mobilization of young people". From Paris to Rennes via Montpellier, ultra-right activists have attacked in recent days students protesting against the pension reform in front of blocked universities, a phenomenon denounced by youth organizations, which regret the "absence of sanctions".

  • A well-known Russian military blogger and staunch supporter of the military offensive in Ukraine was killed Sunday and 25 others injured by an explosive device at a café in the northwestern Russian city of St. Petersburg, authorities said.

  • Thousands of Israelis gathered Saturday in Tel Aviv for the 13th consecutive week to protest the proposed justice reform, despite Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's "pause" in the legislative process.

  • Donald Trump, and America with him, is about to live a historic first: he will leave Florida on Monday to go to New York, where he must appear the next day in criminal court after being charged in connection with a payment to a porn star. For a former U.S. president to be brought before a judge like this is unprecedented.

  • The death toll from tornadoes and violent storms that hit several US states over the weekend reached at least 29 on Sunday, according to authorities. Two children and an adult were killed in Memphis, Tennessee, when trees fell on homes, local police told AFP on Sunday. This brings to 12 the death toll in this southern state of the country. The previous national death toll was 26.

  • Pope Francis, hospitalized this week for bronchitis, thanked the faithful for their prayers during Palm Sunday Mass, an important event in the Christian calendar marking the start of Holy Week.

  • The new coach Hervé Renard plunges into the big bath Monday with the discovery of his players and the castle of Clairefontaine, training center of a women's France team in full transformation four months of the World Cup. After five and a half years of gatherings led by Corinne Diacre, dismissed on March 9, the Blues enter a new era under the leadership of the charismatic coach of 54 years.

  • Japanese composer Ryuichi Sakamoto, pioneer of electronic music and author of many film scores, died on March 28 at the age of 71 from cancer detected in 2020, his team announced Sunday on its official website.

  • CGT
  • Slideshow
  • Donald Trump
  • Hervé Renard
  • Israel
  • Pape François
  • Russia
  • Society
  • Sophie Binet