EU says ready to facilitate return to Iran nuclear talks

EU says ready to facilitate return to Iran nuclear talks
European Union High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Kaja Kallas, speaks at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France, June 18, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 11 sec ago

EU says ready to facilitate return to Iran nuclear talks

EU says ready to facilitate return to Iran nuclear talks
  • Brussels is willing to facilitate a return to negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program after US and Israeli strikes
  • EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas held a phone call with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi on Tuesday

BRUSSELS: The EU’s top diplomat told Iran’s foreign minister Tuesday that Brussels is willing to facilitate a return to negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program after US and Israeli strikes.
“Negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program should restart as soon as possible” and “cooperation” with the International Atomic Energy Agency must resume, EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas wrote on X after a phone call with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi.
“The EU is ready to facilitate this.”
Kallas further warned Tehran that “any threats to pull out of the non-proliferation treaty don’t help to lower tensions.”
The call came after Aragchi ruled out a quick resumption of talks with the United States and said Tehran will first need assurances it will not be attacked again.
The United States and Iran were holding nuclear talks when Israel hit Iranian nuclear sites and military infrastructure. The United States joined the assault by bombing three nuclear sites — Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan — on June 21.
The EU has long sought to play a mediation role with Iran.
The 27-nation bloc was a signatory — and facilitator — of a 2015 deal between Iran and international powers over Tehran’s nuclear program.
US President Donald Trump abandoned that deal in 2018.


Putin, Macron hold first phone call since 2022, talked about Ukraine, Iran

Putin, Macron hold first phone call since 2022, talked about Ukraine, Iran
Updated 9 sec ago

Putin, Macron hold first phone call since 2022, talked about Ukraine, Iran

Putin, Macron hold first phone call since 2022, talked about Ukraine, Iran

MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin and French counterpart Emmanuel Macron held their first known telephone conversation since 2022, the Kremlin said on Tuesday.
“Vladimir Putin held a telephone conversation with French President Emmanuel Macron,” the Kremlin said in a statement, making it their first such conversation since September 2022, several months after Russia launched its full-scale offensive on Ukraine.
Macron urged Putin on Tuesday in a two-hour call to agree to a ceasefire in Ukraine “as soon as possible”.
Macron “emphasised France’s unwavering support for Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity” and “called for the establishment, as soon as possible, of a ceasefire and the launch of negotiations between Ukraine and Russia for a solid and lasting settlement of the conflict,” the Elysee Palace said.
On Iran, “the two presidents decided to coordinate their efforts and to speak soon in order to follow up together on this issue,” the French presidency added.


Italy boosts legal work visas, as union says policy falls short

Italy boosts legal work visas, as union says policy falls short
Updated 18 min 25 sec ago

Italy boosts legal work visas, as union says policy falls short

Italy boosts legal work visas, as union says policy falls short
  • Meloni has sought to reduce the number of undocumented migrants to Italy
  • Her government has also increased pathways for legal migration for non-EU workers

ROME: Italy’s hard-right government has agreed to issue 500,000 visas for non-EU workers over the next three years, but a top trade union warned Tuesday that only structural change would tackle labor shortages.

The government of far-right Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said a total of 497,550 workers would be allowed in over the 2026-2028 period, starting with around 165,000 in 2026.

This is up from the 450,000 quota set by Meloni’s government for 2023-2025 period — itself a sharp increase on the 75,700 quota for 2022 and around 70,000 for 2021.

Meloni, the leader of the far-right Brothers of Italy party, has sought to reduce the number of undocumented migrants to Italy.

But her government has also increased pathways for legal migration for non-EU workers to tackle labor shortages in an aging country with a sluggish birth rate.

The greatest number of visas over the next three years — some 267,000 — will be given for seasonal work in the agricultural and tourism sectors.

Italy’s main agricultural lobby, Coldiretti, welcomed the new visa plan as an “important step forward to ensure the availability of workers in the fields, and with it, food production.”

But a top official in the CGIL trade union — Italy’s oldest and largest — said Tuesday the new quotas did not address migration dynamics and labor needs.

Maria Grazia Gabrielli pointed to the number of applications that were far lower than the available quotas, with the exception of domestic work.

In 2023 and 2024, only 7.5-7.8 percent of the quotas actually resulted in a residence permit, she said in a statement, pointing to their ineffectiveness.

Gabrielli criticized the government’s policy of prioritising applicants from countries who discourage their nationals from illegally migrating to Italy.

A 2023 decree allowed preferential quotas from countries, such as those in North Africa, who help Italy fight human traffickers and conduct media campaigns warning of the dangers of crossing the Mediterranean.

She called it a system “that takes no account whatsoever of the reasons for migration dynamics and the need for a response that does not focus on punitive logic and rewards for some countries.”

Italy’s foreign worker policy is fraught with loopholes and possibilities for fraud, with criminal gangs exploiting the system and even foreign workers already in Italy applying for visas.

The union leader said structural work was needed — including regularising workers already in Italy — to help employers struggling to find labor and to try to keep foreign workers out of irregular situations.


Trump hails new ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ migrant detention center

Trump hails new ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ migrant detention center
Updated 40 min 17 sec ago

Trump hails new ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ migrant detention center

Trump hails new ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ migrant detention center
  • “I wouldn’t want to run through the Everglades for long. It will keep people where they’re supposed to be,” said Trump
  • The Florida detention center is part of the Trump administration’s tough optics for its crackdown on undocumented migrants

OCHOPEE, USA: US President Donald Trump reveled in a new Florida migrant detention center dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz” Tuesday, joking that any escapees would be taught to run away from the reptiles to avoid being eaten.

Critics of Trump’s harsh immigration crackdown have called the site in the Everglades swamp inhumane, but the Republican embraced the controversy as he attended its official opening.

“A lot of cops in the form of alligators — you don’t have to pay them so much,” Trump told reporters in Ochopee, Florida.

“I wouldn’t want to run through the Everglades for long. It will keep people where they’re supposed to be.”

The Florida detention center is part of the Trump administration’s tough optics for its crackdown on undocumented migrants since the 78-year-old returned to power in January.

The site on an abandoned airfield in the Everglades conservation area will cost an estimated $450 million and house 1,000 people, Florida authorities say.

Florida’s Republican Governor Ron DeSantis, who greeted Trump on the tarmac, said “we want to cut through bureaucracy... to get the removal of these illegals done.”

Trump, who has cracked down on undocumented migrants since returning to power, riffed on the idea of people running away from Florida wildlife as he left the White House earlier.

“I guess that’s the concept,” Trump told reporters when asked if the idea behind the detention center was that people who escaped from it would get eaten by alligators or snakes.

“This is not a nice business. Snakes are fast, but alligators... we’re going to teach them how to run away from an alligator, okay?

“If they escape prison, how to run away. Don’t run in a straight line. Run like this. And you know what? Your chances go up about one percent.”

But Trump later embarked on one of his dark diatribes about immigration in a news conference at the site, describing an influx of undocumented migrants under Democratic predecessor Joe Biden as “disgusting” and falsely conflating most migrants with “sadistic” criminal gangs.

The name “Alligator Alcatraz” is a reference to Alcatraz Island, the former prison in San Franciso that Trump recently said he wanted to reopen.

That plan has apparently stalled after officials said it would cost too much and be too impractical to reopen the prison surrounded by shark-infested waters.

As it seeks to look tough on migration, the Trump administration is also sending some undocumented migrants to the former “War on Terror” prison at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.

Protesters against Trump’s immigration policies have demonstrated outside the new Florida facility in recent days.

Environmentalists have also criticized the creation of the camp in a conservation area.

The Everglades National Park is particularly known as a major habitat for alligators, with an estimated population of around 200,000. They can reach up to 15 feet in length when fully grown.

Attacks by alligators on humans are relatively rare in Florida.

Across the entire state there were 453 “unprovoked bite incidents” between 1948 and 2022, 26 of which resulted in human fatalities, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

But authorities have played up the risk.

Trump’s “Alligator Alcatraz” visit comes as he tries to push a huge tax and spending bill through Congress this week.

The “One Big Beautiful Bill” contains funding for Trump’s immigration crackdown including an increase in places in detention centers.

The deportation drive is part of a broader campaign of harsh optics on migration, including raids in Los Angeles that sparked protests against the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency.


Berlin summons Iranian ambassador over arrest of alleged spy

Berlin’s landmark Television Tower is seen next to the Berlin Cathedral and the rebuilt Berlin Palace.
Berlin’s landmark Television Tower is seen next to the Berlin Cathedral and the rebuilt Berlin Palace.
Updated 58 min 30 sec ago

Berlin summons Iranian ambassador over arrest of alleged spy

Berlin’s landmark Television Tower is seen next to the Berlin Cathedral and the rebuilt Berlin Palace.
  • The Danish suspect, identified only as Ali S., was arrested in the city of Aarhus by local police on Thursday
  • The man was “strongly suspected of having worked for an intelligence service,” they said

BERLIN: Iran’s ambassador to Germany was summoned by the foreign ministry on Tuesday after the arrest in Denmark of a man suspected of spying on Jewish targets in Berlin for Tehran.
“We will not tolerate any threat to Jewish life in Germany,” the ministry said in a post on X announcing the summoning.
It added that the allegations needed to be “thoroughly investigated.”
The Danish suspect, identified only as Ali S., was arrested in the city of Aarhus by local police on Thursday, the German federal prosecutor’s office said in a statement earlier on Tuesday.
The man was “strongly suspected of having worked for an intelligence service,” they said.
Ali S. had in early 2025 “received an order from an Iranian intelligence service to collect information on Jewish localities and specific Jewish individuals in Berlin.”
To this end, he allegedly scoped out three properties in June.
The suspected reconnaissance work was “presumably in preparation of further intelligence activities in Germany, possibly including terrorist attacks on Jewish targets,” the statement said.
Speaking on a visit to Odesa in Ukraine, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said that, if confirmed, the incident “would once again underline that Iran is a threat to Jews all over the world.”
According to German weekly Der Spiegel, the suspect had taken photos of buildings including the seat of the German-Israeli Society in Berlin.
Investigators believe Ali S. was working on behalf of the Quds Force, the foreign operations arm of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, Der Spiegel reported.
Germany has been on high alert for possible attacks against Jewish people since Palestinian militant group Hamas’s assault on Israel on October 7, 2023, which triggered the war in Gaza.
In September, German police shot dead a young Austrian man known to have had ties to radical Islam as he was preparing to carry out an attack on the Israeli consulate in Munich.
German authorities have also been on alert for potential Iranian espionage activity on their soil.
A German-Iranian national was jailed in late 2023 over a plot to attack a synagogue in the western German city of Bochum in 2022.
Authorities said the plot was planned with the help of “Iranian state agencies.”


Greece starts charging tourist tax on cruises

Greece starts charging tourist tax on cruises
Updated 01 July 2025

Greece starts charging tourist tax on cruises

Greece starts charging tourist tax on cruises
  • Cruise ships docking at the popular islands of Santorini and Mykonos will pay $23.62 per passenger
  • Cruise ships to smaller islands will pay a tax of five euros per passenger

ATHENS: Greece on Tuesday began charging a tax on island cruise ships, the latest European effort to tackle soaring visitor numbers to the continent’s most popular destinations.

Cruise ships docking at the popular islands of Santorini and Mykonos will pay 20 euros ($23.62) per passenger.

“In accordance with the law, the tax will be applied in Santorini, Mykonos and other islands in lesser measures,” a finance ministry spokesman told AFP.

Cruise ships to smaller islands will pay a tax of five euros per passenger, according to the new regulations.

Greece hopes to bring in up to 50 million euros a year with the tax, which will apply during the high tourism season, from June 1 to September 30.

Greece adopted the legislation last year in an effort to curb soaring tourist numbers to often-overcrowded destinations, the latest country in Europe to take such measures.

Italian authorities in Venice, one of the world’s top tourist destinations, last year introduced payments for day visitors, who must pay an access fee of five euros ($5.90) on certain days.

In Spain, the government has cracked down on illegal short-term tourist rentals, with sites like Airbnb and Booking.com ordered to take down thousands of ads amid local alarm about increasingly scarce and unaffordable housing.

The hugely popular island of Ibiza in June began limiting the number of incoming tourist cars and caravans because of the increasing numbers of visitors.

Locals in Barcelona and elsewhere in Spain, the world’s second most-visited country, have held protests against over-tourism.

Greece plans to use the money raised to upgrade over-strained infrastructure on the islands, including their ports, which are often too small to receive multiple cruise ships at once.

Tourism, and the cruise industry in particular, is booming in Greece.

Cruise ship passenger numbers surged 13.2 percent last year to 7.9 million, according to the Hellenic Ports Association, which predicts the trend will continue.

Mykonos, known as a party destination for international jet-setters, received nearly 1.3 million visitors last year, up 8.4 percent from the previous year.

Perched on a volcano, Santorini received more than 1.3 million passengers last year, up four percent.

The island last year limited cruise ship arrivals to 8,000 passengers per day, yet on the first day of the tax, four ships with around 8,400 passengers were scheduled to dock in Santorini, according to port authority figures.

Famed for its sunsets, the island is saturated with tourists in some areas, causing traffic jams, water shortages, waste management headaches and other problems.

Some residents also complain about the pollution generated by the ships, while local businesses say passengers often stay just a few hours and spend little.

But not everyone is happy with the new tax.

The head of the local port authority, Athanasios Kousathanas-Megas, demanded on Friday that the government delay the rollout, complaining the tax creates “unfair competition” between highly taxed islands and the rest.

The cruise industry has hit back at criticism, saying cruise passengers are a small minority of total tourists and generate $2 billion in revenues per year for Greece.

Last year, 40.7 million tourists visited Greece, up 12.8 percent from 2023, according to official figures.