France 24 marks IDAHOBIT with Jean Jaurès Foundation expert
Flora Bolter, co-director of the LGBTI+ Observatory at the Paris-based think tank, appears on France 24 International to discuss the International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, and Transphobia.

France 24 International broadcast a segment on 17 May 2026 to mark the International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, and Transphobia (IDAHOBIT). The programme featured Flora Bolter, co-director of the LGBTI+ Observatory at the Jean Jaurès Foundation in Paris, as a guest.
The Jean Jaurès Foundation is a French think tank based in Paris, and its Observatory monitors LGBTI+ rights. The broadcast was issued on 17 May 2026 at 11:32, with metadata modifications recorded shortly after at 11:35 on the same day.
The segment was hosted on YouTube, with platform metadata indicating that advertisement tracking and audience measurement must be enabled for the content to display. Technical barriers, such as browser extensions blocking the video player, were noted as potential access issues for viewers.
May 17 is recognised internationally as the day against homophobia, biphobia, and transphobia. The broadcast focused on LGBTI+ rights, aligning with the observatory’s mandate to monitor developments in this area.
While the source package included background information regarding unrelated political events, such as a US state visit and legislation H.R. 7147, these items are not part of the LGBTI+ rights segment. The core event remains the discussion on IDAHOBIT featuring Bolter.
The specific topics discussed during the interview are not detailed in the provided text. Claims about the content of the interview are inferred solely from the guest's title and the event theme, as the source material is a video description and metadata rather than a full transcript.
The broadcast serves as a media marker for the international observance of IDAHOBIT, highlighting the role of French policy institutes in monitoring LGBTI+ rights. The technical requirements for viewing the content remain a constraint for some audiences.


