
Did US strikes 'finish the job' of destroying Fordow plant?
08:58
23/06/2025
Turkey braces for refugees as Iranian flock to borders
23/06/2025
EU urges 'all sides to step back' after US strikes Iran, but can bloc find unified response?
23/06/2025
US warns against Iran retaliation as Trump raises 'regime change'
23/06/2025
Will US strikes be enough to derail Iran's nuclear programme?
23/06/2025
Residents shelter in Tel Aviv as Israel, Iran trade strikes
23/06/2025
How successful were US strikes on Iran?
23/06/2025
'I never expected he would be freed', wife of Belarus opposition leader tells FRANCE 24
23/06/2025
US reveals details of 'Operation Midnight Hammer'
22/06/2025
Iran: How is the war with Israel affecting civil society?
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Euronews
25 minutes ago
- Euronews
Vaccine pact, Newsletter
Key diary dates In spotlight On Wednesday international vaccine alliance Gavi will stage a 'high-level pledging summit' co-hosted by the EU and the Gates Foundation, set to feature appearances from the presidents of the Parliament, Commission and Council – Roberta Metsola, Ursula von der Leyen and Antonio Costa – alongside tech royalty Bill Gates. Gates will be in the headlights in Brussels this week, since on Tuesday – before the Gavi event – he's set to participate in a debate with MEPs on the European Parliament's Development Committee. The Gavi fund raiser event aims to raise at least US$ 9 billion (€7.8 billion) from donors to fund vaccinations, predominantly in the global south. In February, President Trump took executive action to dismantle USAID, the US Agency for International Development, eliminating 90% of all American foreign aid contracts. The agency provided to impoverished and third-world countries around the world, with missions primarily concentrated in Africa and Asia, with vaccinations against diseases such as HIV. Given that the United States is estimated to have provided 26% of all aid supplied to African continent, it's expected that the impact of the funding freeze could cut total aid to Africa by 20%. The EU has provided €3.2 billion in financing to Gavi since 2003. There was enhanced cooperation between the two during the coronavirus pandemic in the COVAX programme. EU institutions together with individual member states have also contributed €2.55 billion to Gavi's programmes, amounting to one third of the budget of the campaign. There'll be a focus on EU pledges and the extent to which Europe is able or willing to take up the baton from US contributions, or at least signal its willingness to do so. Policy newsmakers A coalition of EU health ministers wants to set international limits on the number of children a single sperm or egg donor can produce, putting an end to the "super sperm donor" phenomenon. The proposal was introduced in Luxembourg last week by Sweden and Belgium during a meeting of EU health ministers, and it is backed by four other countries: France, Hungary, the Netherlands, and Spain. A Dutch sperm donor suspected of fathering over 550 children worldwide and other similar cases raise "new concerns about the potential psychosocial impact on donor-conceived children and donors,' Swedish Health Minister Acko Ankarberg Johansson said. Belgian Health Minister Frank Vandenbroucke said that international limits would only be practical if supported by a comprehensive cross-border donor register. 'We badly need a Europe-wide quota supported by an EU register to ensure proper implementation,' he said. Policy Poll Data brief

LeMonde
30 minutes ago
- LeMonde
Tehran's allies keep distance from Iran-Israel conflict
In the aftermath of US airstrikes on its nuclear sites during the night of Saturday, June 21 to Sunday, June 22, Iran appeared very much alone to retaliate. Most of Tehran's allies showed great caution towards Donald Trump's surprise initiative, seeming eager to keep a war with an uncertain outcome at a distance. Just hours after 14 US GBU-57 bombs hit the nuclear sites at Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan, China "strongly condemned" the attack, which aimed to decisively support the offensive Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu launched 10 days earlier. "China calls on the parties to the conflict, Israel in particular, to reach a ceasefire as soon as possible," the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement released on June 22. At the same time, Narendra Modi, prime minister of Iran's trading partner India, called for "an immediate de-escalation" in talks with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian. However, the US entry into the war had all the potential to be viewed as yet another affront by the West against the somewhat nebulous entity of emerging or non-aligned nations known as the Global South. The US and Israeli attack on Iran was, after all, a violation of international law. "Legally, it's an aggression," said Antoine Madelin, advocacy director at the International Federation for Human Rights. Furthermore, it comes in addition to the war crimes committed during Israel's operations in Gaza over the past 21 months.


France 24
32 minutes ago
- France 24
NATO to take 'quantum leap' with 5% summit pledge: Rutte
The 32 members of the alliance will pledge to boost defence expenditure to five percent of gross domestic product, a key demand of President Donald Trump, who has long grumbled that the US pays too much for NATO. NATO's members have thrashed out a compromise deal to dedicate at least 3.5 percent of GDP to core military needs by 2035, and 1.5 percent to broader security-related items like cybersecurity and infrastructure. "The defence investment plan that allies will agree in The Hague introduces a new baseline, five percent of GDP to be invested in defence," Rutte told reporters at a pre-summit news conference. "This is a quantum leap that is ambitious, historic and fundamental to securing our future." The focus at the summit in the Hague will be on keeping Trump happy after his return to power sparked fears he could blow a hole in the seven-decade-old alliance. In the run-up to the meeting, Spain had sparked fears of undermining a carefully choreographed unity by refusing to commit to the headline figure of five percent. But Rutte stressed that Spain had not been granted an "opt-out" from the pledge. "NATO does not have as an alliance opt-outs, side deals, etcetera, because we all have to chip in," Rutte said. The NATO chief said that the increase in spending would see the alliance boost its air defences five-fold and add thousands more tanks and armoured vehicles to its arsenals. "Our focus is ensuring that we have all we need to deter and defend against any threat," he said. "Of course, the most significant and direct threat facing this alliance remains the Russian Federation." Iranian 'stranglehold' Rutte insisted that the summit would also send a strong signal of support to Ukraine -- despite Trump upending the West's stance towards Russia's war on Kyiv. Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky will attend a state dinner with the Dutch king but he has largely been sidelined from the summit's main event. Rutte said that Europe was stepping up already to fill the gap left by Washington pulling back from supporting Ukraine. He said that Europe and Canada had already pledged 35 billion euros ($40 billion) to help arm Kyiv so far this year. Dismissing the idea that the fresh conflict between Israel and Iran could deflect attention from the summit, Rutte stressed that Tehran should not be permitted to possess a nuclear weapon. He said his "greatest fear" was that Iran would secure access to a nuclear bomb, giving it a "stranglehold" over Israel, the region, and the wider world. Over the weekend, Trump said that US warplanes had used "bunker buster" bombs that had "obliterated" Iran's nuclear capabilities. Other officials said it was too soon to assess the true impact on Iran's nuclear programme, which Israel and some Western states consider an existential threat. Pressed over the legality of Washington's strikes against Iran, the NATO chief replied: "I would not agree that this is against international law, what the US did." © 2025 AFP