
Chicago-born Pope Leo XIV offers a few words in English at his first Mass
05:45
09/05/2025
Putin uses Victory Day to legitimize the war in Ukraine
09/05/2025
Mixed reactions to election of Pope Leo XIV
09/05/2025
Pope Leo XIV celebrates his first Mass in the Sistine Chapel
09/05/2025
Victory Day highlights the warming of relations between China and Russia
09/05/2025
War in Ukraine: Donald Trump calls for a 30-day ceasefire
09/05/2025
World leaders congratulate Pope Leo XIV on his designation
09/05/2025
Putin-Xi alliance: The ripple effect on life in China
09/05/2025
Pope Leo XIV: Donald Trump praises Robert Prevost's election
09/05/2025
What challenges await Pope Leo XIV?

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Euronews
20 minutes ago
- Euronews
Far-right leaders join National Rally 'Victory Day' in French village
Thousands of supporters of the French National Rally party (RN) are converging in the village of Mormant-sur-Vernisson on Monday for a rural rally organised by the far-right party, exactly one year after its historic victory in the European elections. The celebration in the village of some 130 inhabitants in the Loiret region, dubbed "Victory Day", is meant to mark last year's record-breaking result for the RN, when the Jordan Bardella-led list won 31.37% of the vote on 9 June 2024. On Monday, more than 5,000 people were to gather amid food trucks and ice cream stands to celebrate the party's European success. In the ensuing French parliamentary elections, however, the far-right party did not achieve the significant victory it had hoped for, notably coming up against the New Popular Front left-wing alliance. The RN won 120 of the 577 seats in the French National Assembly, becoming the largest party in the chamber but failing to secure a majority that would have allowed Jordan Bardella to claim the Matignon premiership. With this meeting, the RN leaders also intend to close the ranks of the Patriots for Europe, one of the three far-right groups in the European Parliament, which currently has 85 of the 720 MEPs sitting in Strasbourg. Le Pen and Bardella invited Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, a fervent opponent of the European Union whose anti-LGBTQ+ measures and Moscow-friendly stance have been roundly condemned by the EU. "The Brussels bureaucrats [want] submission and decline ... whether it's settling migrants, financing war or sharing the debt", Orbán said in a post on social media the day before the rally, while calling for "occupying Brussels". Other European far-right leaders expected to attend Monday's rally include Italy's Deputy Prime Minister and Lega party chief Matteo Salvini, the president of Spain's Vox party Santiago Abascal, and the leaders of parties allied with the RN in the Czech Republic, Greece, Poland, and Belgium. A counter-demonstration is also planned in the neighbouring town of Montargis, which is expected to be attended by French lawmakers Philippe Brun and Chloé Ridel from the Socialist Party, Ian Brossat of the Communist Party, Manon Aubry and Louis Boyard from the left-wing France Unbowed (LFI), as well as trade union leaders. Monday's rally is also intended to demonstrate the unity between Marine Le Pen and Jordan Bardella, three months after a court handed down a five-year ineligibility sentence to the former in connection with the corruption scandal involving European parliamentary assistants. While the polls had her well ahead in the polls for the 2027 presidential election, this sentence - which was accompanied by provisional execution, as requested by the prosecutors - will prevent Le Pen from running for president, unless the decision is overturned by the Court of Appeal hearing, scheduled for the summer of 2026. At the time, the leader of the RN denounced "a political decision" and described the immediate application of her ineligibility as a "violation of the rule of law". The party's president Bardella immediately echoed the criticism, referring to "a democratic scandal" and claiming that "part of the justice system" was trying to"prevent (Le Pen's) accession to the Elysée by any means necessary." While the 30-year-old has continued to show his support for Le Pen since the court ruling, the man who was seen as the RN's "Plan B" for the presidential election is now considered a serious candidate for 2027 by many of the party's supporters - particularly among young people - as well as by parts of the French press. According to a recent Ifop poll, Bardella would get 34% of the presidential vote if he faced Horizons president Édouard Philippe, compared with 36% for Le Pen if the latter were allowed to run. The Elabe personalities ranking for "Les Echos", published on Friday, also gives the RN president "35% positive image among the French as a whole, behind Édouard Philippe (39%) but still ahead of Marine Le Pen (34%)". Poland and NATO nations scrambled fighter jets early Monday to secure Polish airspace following Russian airstrikes near its border with western Ukraine, authorities said. The Polish armed forces stated on X that these measures were to ensure security in regions next to at-risk areas over concerns that Russian stray missiles might veer into Poland. "In connection with the intensive air attack of the Russian Federation on the territory of Ukraine, activity of Polish and allied aircraft in the Polish airspace began in the morning hours," the Polish Armed Forces Operational Command said on Monday. The Polish military activated "all available forces and means at his disposal (including) on-call fighter pairs ... and ground-based air defence." No violation of Poland's airspace has been reported. "The Polish military is continuously monitoring the situation on Ukrainian territory and remains on constant alert to ensure the safety of Polish airspace. We thank the NATO Air Force for its allied support," the army command press release said. The Ukrainian Air Force reported that Russian drones targeted the Sumy, Chernihiv, Kyiv, Poltava, Kharkiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Donetsk, Zhytomyr and Zaporizhzhia regions overnight on Monday.


France 24
an hour ago
- France 24
Iran says to submit own nuclear proposal to US soon
Tehran and Washington have held five rounds of talks since April to thrash out a new nuclear accord to replace the deal with major powers that US President Donald Trump abandoned during his first term in 2018. The longtime foes have been locked in a diplomatic standoff over Iran's uranium enrichment, with Tehran defending it as a "non-negotiable" right and Washington describing it as a "red line". On May 31, after the fifth round talks, Iran said it had received "elements" of a US proposal, with Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi saying later the text contained "ambiguities". Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei criticised the US proposal as "lacking elements" reflective of the previous rounds of negotiations, without providing further details. "We will soon submit our own proposed plan to the other side through (mediator) Oman once it is finalised," Baqaei told a weekly press briefing. "It is a proposal that is reasonable, logical, and balanced, and we strongly recommend that the American side value this opportunity." Iran's parliament speaker has said the US proposal failed to include the lifting of sanctions -- a key demand for Tehran, which has been reeling under their weight for years. 'Strategic mistake' Trump, who has revived his "maximum pressure" campaign of sanctions on Iran since taking office in January, has repeatedly said it will not be allowed any uranium enrichment under a potential deal. On Wednesday, Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said the US offer was "100 percent against" notions of independence and self-reliance. He insisted that uranium enrichment was "key" to Iran's nuclear programme and that the US "cannot have a say" on the issue. Iran currently enriches uranium to 60 percent, far above the 3.67-percent limit set in the 2015 deal and close though still short of the 90 percent needed for a nuclear warhead. Western countries, including the United States, have long accused Iran of seeking to acquire atomic weapons, while Iran insists its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes The United Nations nuclear watchdog will convene a Board of Governors meeting from June 9-13 in Vienna to discuss Iran's nuclear activities. The meeting comes after the International Atomic Energy Agency released a report criticising "less than satisfactory" cooperation from Tehran, particularly in explaining past cases of nuclear material found at undeclared sites. Iran has criticised the IAEA report as unbalanced, saying it relied on "forged documents" provided by its arch foe Israel. Britain, France and Germany, the three European countries who were party to the 2015 deal, are currently weighing whether to trigger the sanctions "snapback" mechanism in the accord. The mechanism would reinstate UN sanctions in response to Iranian non-compliance -- an option that expires in October. On Friday, Araghchi warned European powers against backing a draft resolution at the IAEA accusing Tehran of non-compliance, calling it a "strategic mistake". On Monday, Baqaei said Iran has "prepared and formulated a series of steps and measures" if the resolution passed.

LeMonde
2 hours ago
- LeMonde
How Donald Trump is exploiting tensions in Los Angeles to toughen his immigration policy
Donald Trump decided, on the evening of June 7, to deploy the National Guard in response to highly localized scenes of urban violence in two cities in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, in a calculated and premeditated overreaction, a legally questionable one with unpredictable consequences. The controversial move allowed the president to bypass the Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, leading to the deployment of the first 300 soldiers on Sunday, June 8, to proactively protect federal buildings. On Sunday, several gatherings – initially peaceful, later marred by a few clashes – took place in the city and on Highway 101 amid heightened tensions. The narrative sought by the White House was clear: federal order versus chaos, with the pursuit of undocumented migrants hampered by what it called lax Democratic officials and extremist rioters. "They spit, we hit," Trump summed up on Sunday. The blunt phrase was intended to convey toughness, but it also underscored how the real threat was being exaggerated in the social media echo chamber, despite dramatic footage of driverless Waymo taxis set on fire and covered in graffiti.