This Tuesday, January 2, unpublished recordings of Marvin Gaye resurface in Belgium, demonstrations against Benyamin Netanyahu and for a ceasefire in Gaza continue in Israel and the author of Harry Potter denounces a Scottish law against transphobic discrimination .
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“Hi it’s Leo, what does it say?”
This Tuesday, January 2, “That says what” makes you listen to an unreleased piece by Marvin Gaye, among the sixty pieces that are resurfacing in Belgium. The prince of soul lived in Ostend in the early 80s and left dozens of cassettes there. For the pieces to one day be marketed, an agreement will have to be reached with the heirs of Marvin Gaye.
Israeli opponents are demanding new elections and a ceasefire in Gaza. On Sunday, 100,000 gathered in Jerusalem and the demonstrations have continued since. The demonstrators believe that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyanahu is doing nothing to secure the release of the hostages.
And then with the new Scottish law increasing the penalties against perpetrators of discrimination, particularly transphobic ones, JK Rowling could be prosecuted. “Stop me,” replies the author of Harry Potter who is multiplying new transphobic messages on social networks.
“What does it say?”, a podcast to listen to from Monday to Friday from 7:30 a.m. on franceinfo.fr, on the franceinfo WhatsApp channel, on TikTok or on all podcast platforms:
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