Author: Press Room
Published on 22/05/2026 – 6:11 GMT+2•Updated 6:15 The European Union’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs Kaja Kallas said on Thursday that the modernisation of its commercial agreement with Mexico will eliminate trade barriers as the world’s economies lean towards protectionism. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT Mexico and the EU will sign the update to the agreement on Friday. The signing takes place as the Mexican government negotiates the revisions to the USMCA free trade agreement with its largest trade partner the United States as well as Canada. “This agreement will remove the remaining barriers to trade and investment, and these include strategic sectors…
The European Union has vowed to stand firm with its strategy to squeeze Russia’s war economy, as the United Kingdom scrambles to reassure its allies that its latest decisions fall short of lifting sanctions. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The British government caused confusion and dismay on Tuesday when it published an open-ended licence allowing the import of diesel and jet fuel made from Russian crude oil in other countries, such as Turkey and India, where the oil is purchased at discounted prices. A separate licence enables the provision of short-term service contracts with Russia’s Sakhalin-2 and Yamal LNG projects until January 2027.…
For the first time, researchers have managed to detect and track in wastewater all the main viruses associated with the development of tumours. A discovery that could open up new prospects for prevention, health surveillance and monitoring of oncogenic infections in the population. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The study, coordinated by Anthony Maresso and Justin Clark of the Baylor College of Medicine and published in the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology, was carried out in collaboration with the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. The researchers analysed wastewater samples collected between May 2022 and May 2025 at more than 40…
Published on 21/05/2026 – 7:00 GMT+2 NATO foreign affairs ministers are meeting in Sweden for a two-day summit amid uncertain times for the alliance. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT Top of ministers’ minds is an announcement by the Trump administration that it will incrementally withdraw the US from European security, meaning its support will not be guaranteed even in times of war. The attendees will also discuss how the alliance can ramp up its defence production as the war in Iran drains its stockpile of advanced US-made weapons. The exact details of where US support and capabilities will be withdrawn is due to…
When the EU’s Artificial Intelligence Act entered into force in August 2024, it was hailed as the world’s strictest AI law. Almost two years later, Europe has already agreed to change it. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT On May 7, EU governments and European Parliament lawmakers struck a deal on the so-called “AI omnibus”, a package of targeted amendments within a broader digital simplification drive. The goal is to cut red tape, fix overlapping rules, and give businesses more breathing room without dismantling the law’s core risk-based logic. The result is a retooled rulebook that extends deadlines, narrows obligations, and reshapes how the…
Published on 21/05/2026 – 9:03 GMT+2•Updated 9:49 Friedrich Merz recently chose the bold strategy of scolding Germany’s workforce for taking too many sick days, dismissing part-time jobs as a lazy “lifestyle choice”, and even telling Germans to look to Greece to learn how to work hard. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT A staggering historical plot twist from a leader whose country spent years lecturing Europe on efficiency, isn’t it? But a year ago, Merz promised a conservative pro-market renewal, but his centre-right and centre-left coalition is paralysed by internal fighting. Germany’s economic recovery has completely stalled, with growth projections for 2026 halved to…
Published on 21/05/2026 – 9:51 GMT+2•Updated 10:31 A day after Lithuania’s capital of Vilnius was ground to a halt due to a drone incursion, which comes off the back of at least half a dozen similar incidents in three weeks throughout the region, Lithuania’s defence minister Robertas Kaunas has reiterated that Europe must be prepared for the high probability that more will come. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT “This is the new reality of what the Baltic states face,” he said in exclusive comments to the Europe Today news programme. “We need to adapt because the possibility of repeated similar scenarios is very…
By Nina Borowski with AFP Published on 21/05/2026 – 10:00 GMT+2•Updated 12:09 In France, the investigation into sexual violence at an after-school care centre in Paris is gathering pace. On Wednesday evening, 16 people who worked at the Saint Dominique state nursery school in the capital’s 7th arrondissement had their police custody extended. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The suspects, aged between 18 and 68, are being questioned for offences ranging from rape to behaviour described as excessive or violent. In total, the Paris public prosecutor’s office is investigating possible violence in 84 nursery schools, around twenty elementary schools and around ten crèches. Since the beginning…
Published on 21/05/2026 – 10:17 GMT+2 The EU’s digital chief has told Euronews that the much-debated concept of “technological sovereignty” means building capacity in critical sectors and reducing risky dependencies, not retreating from the world. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT “Technological sovereignty doesn’t mean that we are planning to work somehow in isolation in the future,” said Henna Virkkunen, the European Commission’s Executive Vice-President for Technological Sovereignty, Security, and Democracy. “It’s very important that we have a certain capacity in a critical field. And then we are also working, of course, with like-minded partners to make sure that we don’t have risky dependencies…
A French appeals court convicted Air France and Airbus of involuntary manslaughter on Thursday over the 2009 crash of a Rio-Paris flight that killed 228 people, the worst disaster in France’s aviation history. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The Paris Court of Appeal ruling was a dramatic reversal of a lower court decision. The appeal court said that the French flag carrier and Europe’s leading aerospace manufacturer were “solely and entirely responsible for the crash of flight AF447”, ordering each to pay €225,000, the maximum fine for corporate manslaughter. While the penalties are symbolic, the ruling is seen as significant reputational damage for…














