From France 24. Reaction to Trump's screech at the UN, plus some other snippets:
'Deranged', 'incoherent', 'staggering'.
US President
Donald Trump's speech at the UN General Assembly is a cover story for many international papers. The British media
The Daily Mirror calls the speech "deranged". It summarises what the US president talked about for 56 long minutes –
climate,
migrants, Gaza, escalators, marble floors and teleprompters. French left-wing paper
Libération has a strong headline that says "Trump is pissing off the world". It calls the speech "staggering", "violent" and "incoherent". Spanish daily
El País believes Trump's aim is to "blow up the rules of the international game".
Die Zeit agrees. The German magazine says that Trump's accusations are "becoming crazier every minute".
On the sidelines of the General Assembly, Trump also said that
NATO countries should shoot down Russian aircraft violating their airspace. In the case of
Denmark, authorities have not identified who is responsible for the drone incursion earlier this week. But Danish daily newspaper
Politiken reports that the country has warned of the risk of hybrid attacks from
Russia. "Is Denmark sufficiently prepared for war?" asks the newspaper. An analysis in
Borsen, another Danish daily, says that due to Denmark's "unconditional" and "total" support for Ukraine, Copenhagen is an obvious target for Russia's hybrid warfare.
Turning to
religion, French Catholic paper
La Croix reports that northwestern
Syria is reviving its Christian villages, 10 months after the end of the Assad regime. People there now can live without fear of persecution. The article reminds us that during Syria's civil war, half of the country's
Christians – or around 700,000 people – were forced to flee.
The Catholic church, however, is facing a big problem, writes
The Wall Street Journal: there are fewer priests every year. The paper says young men fear celibacy and are "paralysed" by "endless options", making committing to one path much harder.
Meanwhile, some TikTokers believe that the world was supposed to end this week, on September 23 or 24. But
The Washington Post is sceptical. "If you’re reading this, the rapture probably didn’t happen (again)," reads its headline. TikTokers named the trend #RaptureTok – rapture is the prophecy that true believers will be taken to heaven before the end of the world comes.
The Guardian reports on how they prepare for the apocalypse and some useful tips and tricks. Some sold their cars or even requested "eternity leave" from their employer.