Hungary PM Orban to meet French president for talks on Ukraine on Wednesday
Hungary PM Orban to meet French president for talks on Ukraine on Wednesday/node/2592403/world
Hungary PM Orban to meet French president for talks on Ukraine on Wednesday
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Updated 04 March 2025
Reuters
Hungary PM Orban to meet French president for talks on Ukraine on Wednesday
Orban also said that he sees more chance to find ways to cooperate on common EU security
Updated 04 March 2025
Reuters
BUDAPEST: Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said on Tuesday that he would meet French President Emmanuel Macron to talk about Ukraine on Wednesday ahead of an extraordinary summit of European Union leaders scheduled for Thursday.
Orban also said that he sees more chance to find ways to cooperate on common EU security than on Ukraine at Thursday's summit. Replying to a reporter's question Orban confirmed that he had a phone call with U.S. President Donald Trump in Sunday and that they discussed 'everything.'
âNo amnesty!â Brazilians protest against bid to pardon Bolsonaro
The conservative-majority Congress had fast-tracked an amnesty bill that could include the far-right leader
Bolsonaro was convicted of plotting to bar Lula from taking office, a plan that failed due to a lack of support from military top brass
Updated 14 sec ago
AFP
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil: Tens of thousands of Brazilians protested Sunday against âshamelessâ lawmakers seeking an amnesty that could benefit former president Jair Bolsonaro, while pushing to shield themselves from criminal charges.
Bolsonaro was sentenced last week to 27 years in jail for plotting a coup, and within days, the conservative-majority Congress had fast-tracked an amnesty bill that could include the far-right leader.
âNo amnesty,â crowds roared in dozens of Brazilian cities, holding up signs and wearing stickers reading âShameless Congress.â
Protesters were also outraged by what they dubbed the âBanditry Billâ passed this week. The law would require Congress to vote by secret ballot to give the go-ahead for one its own to be charged or arrested.
âThis protection they seek is to camouflage corruption, impunity,â said Giovana Araujo, 27, a psychology student clad in a blue bikini top in the sweltering heat at a âmusical protestâ on Rio de Janeiroâs Copacabana beach.
Iconic octogenarians of Brazilian music, Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, and Chico Buarque, took to a truck-mounted stage alongside palm trees to sing resistance songs from Brazilâs dictatorship era.
Tens of thousands sang along as a blow-up doll of Bolsonaro wearing black-and-white prison stripes bobbed next to one of US President Donald Trump, who has punished Brazil with tariffs in retaliation for the prosecution of his ally.
Veloso, 83, said musicians âcould not fail to respond to the horrors that have been creeping in around us.â
The artists âwere literally boycotted during the military dictatorship, and seeing them here is synonymous with resistance,â said Araujo, describing their appearance as ârevolutionary.â
âOnce again, artists are mobilizing the people to demand justice in this country,â said Yasmin Aimee Coelho Pessoa, a 20-year-old sociology student, with gold glitter around her eyes.
âChoking pointâ
In the megalopolis Sao Paulo, protesters unfurled a giant Brazilian flag, in response to a US flag displayed at a pro-Bolsonaro march earlier this month.
The Political Debate Monitor at the University of Sao Paulo estimated crowds of 42,000 in the economic heartland, and a similar figure in Rio de Janeiro â the biggest turnout for the left since President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was re-elected in 2022.
Lulaâs razor-thin victory set off a series of political crises that still reverberate in Brazil today.
Bolsonaro was convicted of plotting to bar Lula from taking office, in a plan that judges said only failed due to a lack of support from military top brass.
Congress is pushing to offer amnesty to 700 of his supporters who were convicted of storming government buildings a week after Lula took office in January 2023, a bill that could include a pardon for Bolsonaro.
Further stoking public anger, lawmakers passed the bill to boost their immunity, citing the need for protection against judicial overreach.
âThe left is reorganizing in the face of all these atrocities. And I feel like weâve reached that choking point â itâs stuck in our throats, ready to come out as a scream,â said Henrique Marques, a 42-year-old environmental engineer, who was among thousands protesting in the capital Brasilia.
Several deputies took to social media to apologize for voting for the controversial âShielding Billâ saying they had faced pressure to do so in a fragmented parliament.
One state deputy, Pedro Campos, said he had voted for the bill to âprevent the boycott of important agendasâ for the government of President Lula.
Both bills face an uphill battle in the Senate. Lula has vowed to veto the amnesty bill.
He also said the âShielding Billâ was not the kind of âserious matterâ that lawmakers should be dealing with.
At Charlie Kirk memorial, Trump rallies MAGA against political opponents
Kirkâs friends and fellow conservatives praised him as an inspirational Christian who founded a political movement they promised to nurture
Wife offered forgiveness to the 22-year-old man who has been charged with Kirkâs murder
Updated 10 min 28 sec ago
Reuters
GLENDALE, Arizona: President Donald Trump hailed slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk as a âmartyr for American freedomâ on Sunday and vowed at his memorial service to carry on his work, while again accusing what he called the âradical leftâ for Kirkâs murder.
âThe violence comes largely from the left,â Trump said without citing any evidence, in remarks that downplayed political violence from the right and often turned starkly partisan in contrast to the more solemn tone that most other speakers adopted.
Trump has been blaming the left for the deadly shooting before a suspect was even detained. His messaging reflected the dual nature of Kirkâs memorial, which had the feel of a religious revival mixed with a âMake America Great Againâ rally.
The memorial, organized by Kirkâs conservative youth advocacy organization Turning Point USA, drew tens of thousands of mourners dressed in red, white and blue who filled State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona.
Kirkâs friends and fellow conservatives praised him as an inspirational Christian who founded a political movement they promised to nurture.
His wife, Erika, who has taken the helm of Turning Point, delivered an emotional tribute to her late husband, looking up at the heavens and mouthing, âI love you,â before speaking about his devotion to Christianity, his family and his activism. The Kirks have two young children.
âI want all of you to know, while Charlie died far too early, he was also ready to die,â she said. âHe left this world without regrets. He did 100 percent of what he could every day.â
She also offered forgiveness to the 22-year-old man who has been charged with Kirkâs murder, citing the Bibleâs account that Jesus Christ urged his followers to forgive his tormentors while on the cross.
âMy husband Charlie wanted to save young men, just like the one who took his life,â she said, before adding tearfully, as the crowd applauded solemnly.
Some political figures cast Kirkâs death as a pivotal moment in the conservative movement, exhorting followers to finish the work he began in sometimes aggressive language.
âWe will carry Charlie and Erika in our heart every single day, and fight that much harder because of what you did to us,â Stephen Miller, the powerful White House adviser, said in a fiery speech. âYou have no idea the dragon you have awakened. You have no idea how determined we will be to save this civilization, to save the West, to save the republic.â
Vice president, other Cabinet members speak
The memorial featured a number of leading Christian rock artists, giving it the air at times of a megachurch Sunday service. As music filled the arena, some men and women closed their eyes and swayed with their arms in the air, tears rolling down their cheeks.
The arena, which normally has a capacity of 63,000, appeared completely full. Crowds of people, many wearing MAGA attire, arrived before dawn to secure seats inside the stadium, where they encountered metal detectors amid tight security.
Other speakers included Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, more evidence of Kirkâs political influence.
Vice President JD Vance credited Kirk with helping get Trump elected last year by mobilizing young voters.
âOur whole administration is here, but not just because we love Charlie as a friend, even though we did, but because we know we wouldnât be here without him,â Vance said.
Trumpâs speech was the most openly divisive, repeatedly attacking the âradical leftâ and leaning into campaign-style grievances. While some speakers, including Miller, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, and conservative influencer Jack Posobiec, veered into politics, most kept their remarks focused on honoring Kirk without assigning blame.
At one point, the president contrasted Kirkâs support for public debate â he often challenged students with opposing views to âprove me wrongâ at college events â with his own scorched-earth politics.
âHe did not hate his opponents,â Trump said. Thatâs where I disagreed with Charlie. I hate my opponents.â
Following his speech, Trump brought Erika Kirk onstage, who embraced him as âAmerica the Beautifulâ played over the stadium speakers.
Rising fears of violence
Kirk, 31, was killed with a single bullet as he answered an audience memberâs question at a campus event in Utah. A 22-year-old Utah technical college student has been charged with Kirkâs murder. Investigators are still probing for a motive, which remains unclear. They have been scrutinizing his alleged texts to a friend and messages engraved into four bullet casings. Experts have said they could reference left- or right-leaning groups.
Civil rights groups criticized Kirk for rhetoric, pointing to numerous examples they described as racist, anti-immigrant, transphobic and misogynistic. His backers say he was a defender of conservative values and a champion of free speech.
His death has raised fears about the growing frequency of US political violence across the ideological spectrum, while also deepening partisan divides.
Trumpâs speech on Sunday is unlikely to quell fears from critics that he intends to use Kirkâs murder to intensify a crackdown on his political opponents.
During her remarks, Gabbard tied Kirkâs killing to what she described as a historical pattern in which âpolitical fanaticsâ eventually turn to violence to defend their ideals.
âThey kill and terrorize their opponents, hoping to silence them,â she said. âBut in this evil that we have experienced â that Charlie faced â their flawed ideology is exposed, because by trying to silence Charlie, his voice is now louder than ever.â Last week, Walt Disneyâs ABC network pulled late-night talk-show host Jimmy Kimmel off the air after Trumpâs head of the Federal Communications Commission threatened the network over comments Kimmel made about Kirkâs death that some conservatives found offensive.
Evacuees in Philippines, Taiwan take shelter as super typhoon nears
Philippine weather bureau says the typhoon was focused on the northern tip of the Philippines
In Taiwan, small-scale evacuations were ongoing in mountainous areas near Pingtung
Updated 24 min 57 sec ago
AFP
MANILA: Hundreds of families sheltered in schools and evacuation centers on Monday as heavy rains and gale-force winds from Super Typhoon Ragasa lashed the northern Philippines and southern Taiwan.
The typhoon, named Nando by the Philippine weather bureau PAGASA, is gaining strength as it proceeds on a collision course with southern China, and was expected to make landfall over the Philippinesâ Babuyan Islands by around midday.
The sparsely populated islands lie about 740 kilometers (460 miles) south of Taiwan in the Luzon Strait.
As of 8:00 a.m. (0000 GMT), maximum sustained winds of 215 kilometers per hour were reported at the stormâs center, with gusts reaching up to 265 kph as it moved toward the archipelago nation, the national weather service said.
âWe are now experiencing strong winds here in northern Cagayan,â provincial disaster chief Rueli Rapsing told AFP, saying they were prepared for âthe worst.â
âSince the super typhoon will traverse Calayan, we are very focused on that area,â he said of a town in the far north province.
In Taiwan, small-scale evacuations were ongoing in mountainous areas near Pingtung, local fire department officer James Wu told AFP.
âWhat worries us more is that the damage could be similar to what happened during Typhoon Koinu two years ago,â he added, describing a storm that saw utility poles collapse and sheet-metal roofs sent flying into the air.
Schools and government offices were closed Monday in the Manila region and across 29 Philippine provinces in anticipation of heavy rainfall.
Government weather specialist John Grender Almario said Sunday that âsevere flooding and landslidesâ could be expected in the northern areas of the main island Luzon.
The threat of flooding from Ragasa comes just a day after thousands of Filipinos took to the streets to protest a growing corruption scandal involving flood control projects that were shabbily constructed or never completed.
A day of largely peaceful demonstrations turned violent in the afternoon and early evening as rock-throwing protesters clashed with police, leading to more than 70 arrests.
The Philippines is the first major landmass facing the Pacific cyclone belt, and the archipelago is hit by an average of 20 storms and typhoons each year, putting millions of people in disaster-prone areas in a state of constant poverty.
Scientists warn that storms are becoming more powerful as the world warms due to the effects of human-driven climate change.
US lawmakers push for military dialogue in a rare China visit
Premier Li Qiang welcomed the delegates led by Rep. Adam Smith and called it an âicebreaking trip that will further the ties between the two countriesâ
US-China relations have taken a downturn since Trumpâs first term and have been hobbled by trade tensions, Taiwan, Russia and South China Sea issues
Updated 22 September 2025
AP
BANGKOK: A bipartisan group of US lawmakers pushed for more military-to-military dialogue in a meeting Sunday with Chinaâs Premier Li Qiang, a rare congressional visit since the US-China relations soured.
The last trip by a group of senators was in 2023, and Sundayâs delegation was the first from the House of Representatives to visit Beijing since 2019.
Li welcomed the delegates led by Rep. Adam Smith and called it an âicebreaking trip that will further the ties between the two countries.â
âIt is important for our two countries to have more exchanges and cooperation, this is not only good for our two countries but also of great significance to the world,â Li said.
Smith, a Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, said both sides were in agreement on the overarching aim of the visit.
âCertainly, trade and economy is on the top of the list ... (but also) weâre very focused on our military-to-military conversations,â he said in opening remarks. âAs a member of the Armed Services Committee, Iâm deeply concerned that our two militaries donât communicate more.â
The delegation also included Michael Baumgartner, a Republican member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, as well as Ro Khanna and Chrissy Houlahan, both Democrats on the House Armed Services Committee. The lawmakers are in China until Thursday.
US-China relations have taken a downturn since President Donald Trumpâs first term and have been hobbled by trade tensions, the status of the self-ruled island of Taiwan, which China claims as its own territory, Beijingâs support for Russia and Chinaâs vast claims in the disputed South China Sea.
âChina and the US are the two most powerful and influential countries in the world, itâs really important that we get along, and we find a way to peacefully coexist in the world,â Smith said. âI really welcome your remarks about wanting to build and strengthen that relationship.â
Trump said he would meet Chinese leader Xi Jinping at a regional summit taking place at the end of October in South Korea and will visit China in the âearly part of next year,â following a lengthy phone call between the two on Friday.
S.Sudan opposition says misidentified prisoner as leaderâs bodyguard
The opposition says Kiir is seeking to consolidate power and has effectively destroyed a 2018 power-sharing deal that ended a devastating five-year civil war in which some 400,000 people died
Updated 22 September 2025
AFP
NAIROBI: South Sudanâs opposition said Saturday it had misidentified a prisoner in a photograph as a bodyguard of its leader who died in custody amid widespread arrests of their supporters.
In a statement, the opposition said the leaderâs office had been given an old photo and wrongly believed it showed the death in custody of Luka Gathok Nyuon.
The opposition had previously identified Nyuon as a bodyguard to the opposition leader and ex-vice president Riek Machar.
âIt has come to my attention that this photo was in fact taken few years back in Rumbek prison and does not... (show) our fallen comrade,â opposition SPLA-IO party spokesman Lam Paul Gabriel said in a statement, without giving details on the bodyguardâs current circumstances.
The statement on X said Nyuon âpassed on in detention in Juba.â
The government of President Salva Kiir has locked up dozens of opposition members in recent months, accusing them of fomenting violence.
The opposition says Kiir is seeking to consolidate power and has effectively destroyed a 2018 power-sharing deal that ended a devastating five-year civil war in which some 400,000 people died.
Machar, Kiirâs long-time rival, has been stripped of his position as vice president in the unity government and will appear in court from Monday on charges of treason and crimes against humanity.
He is accused of coordinating an attack on a military base by the White Army, a militia group from his ethnic Nuer community, which his party denies.
His supporters accused the government of locking up more than 100 âofficials and officersâ from Macharâs entourage âunder very harsh conditions including torture, starvation and denial of medical care.â
South Sudan, one of the poorest countries in the world, has suffered chronic instability since it became independent from Sudan in 2011.