Missing Picasso painting found in Madrid weeks after vanishing

Missing Picasso painting found in Madrid weeks after vanishing
Spanish police said on Friday they had recovered a 1919 Pablo Picasso painting that went missing earlier this month ahead of its planned display at a temporary exhibition in southern Spain. (X/@nexta_tv)
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Missing Picasso painting found in Madrid weeks after vanishing

Missing Picasso painting found in Madrid weeks after vanishing
  • The small framed “Still Life with Guitar” was part of a larger shipment of artworks moved to Granada
  • Police said the painting may not have been loaded onto the transport truck

MADRID: Spanish police said on Friday they had recovered a 1919 Pablo Picasso painting that went missing earlier this month ahead of its planned display at a temporary exhibition in southern Spain.
The small framed “Still Life with Guitar” was part of a larger shipment of artworks moved from Madrid to Granada. The exhibit’s organizers filed a police complaint on October 10 once they noticed it missing after the crates were unpacked.
In a post on X, police said the painting may not have been loaded onto the transport truck before the shipment left Madrid. The historical heritage brigade was continuing its investigation, the statement said, without indicating whether police believed any crime had been committed.
Police released pictures of forensic experts examining the painting while wearing full sterile bodysuits and masks.
The police had registered the painting, which is owned by a private collector, in Interpol’s global database of Stolen Works of Art containing nearly 57,000 items.
The CajaGranada Foundation holding the exhibition said its security camera footage showed only 57 works being unloaded from the vehicle when it arrived, instead of the 58 expected.


At least 14 dead as migrant boat sinks off Turkiye

At least 14 dead as migrant boat sinks off Turkiye
Updated 56 min 26 sec ago

At least 14 dead as migrant boat sinks off Turkiye

At least 14 dead as migrant boat sinks off Turkiye
  • At least 14 migrants died when their inflatable dinghy capsized in the Aegean Sea off the Turkish resort of Bodrum, the governor's office said Friday, raising an earlier toll of seven dead

ISTANBUL: At least 14 migrants died when their inflatable dinghy capsized in the Aegean Sea off the Turkish resort of Bodrum, the governor’s office said Friday, raising an earlier toll of seven dead.
“The lifeless bodies of 14 irregular migrants were recovered,” the office of the Mugla governorate said on X, saying the coast guard was alerted to the emergency in the early hours of Friday morning.
It said they had found two survivors, one of whom said the boat had been “carrying 18 people” when it started letting on water, sinking just 10 minutes later. One survivor managed to swim to Celebi Island.
One of the survivors was an Afghan national, the governor’s office said without saying where the others were from.
It said four coast guard boats backed by a helicopter and a specialist diving team were looking for the two remaining migrants who were unaccounted for, it said.
Migrant boats are often lost on the short but perilous route between the Turkish coast and the nearby Greek islands of Samos, Rhodes and Lesbos that serve as entry points to the European Union.
Bodrum lies close to the Greek island of Kos.
According to the Missing Migrants Project run by the International Organization for Migration (IOM), nearly 1,400 migrants have died trying to reach Europe via the Mediterranean Sea this year.


Families search Mexican forest for remains of over 100 missing

Families search Mexican forest for remains of over 100 missing
Updated 24 October 2025

Families search Mexican forest for remains of over 100 missing

Families search Mexican forest for remains of over 100 missing
  • The groups involved in the operation estimate that there could be between 130 and 150 bodies buried or hidden in the area
  • Nationwide, there are more than 127,000 missing persons, with an uptick in reported disappearances linked to a rise in drug-related violence since the government launched a major operation targeting crime groups in December 2006

MEXICO CITY: Families of dozens of Mexicans feared killed and buried in the woods south of the capital on Thursday joined a colossal search operation for their loved ones alongside activists, authorities and forensic experts.
They began combing a large wooded area in Ajusco, a volcanic hill south of Mexico City, searching for human remains.
The groups involved in the operation estimate that there could be between 130 and 150 bodies buried or hidden in the area.
Mothers dug the ground with pitchforks and shovels, while others used machetes and heavy machinery to clear vegetation, AFP images showed.
Araceli Olmedo Cruz, 40, told AFP she was searching for her son Benjamin who went missing from a nearby neighborhood in April 2024.
“Since it’s a secluded area, it makes it easier for people to come and dump the bodies,” she said.
Nationwide, there are more than 127,000 missing persons, with an uptick in reported disappearances linked to a rise in drug-related violence since the government launched a major operation targeting crime groups in December 2006.
Bodies have been discovered across the country.
In Bartolina, in the northeastern state of Tamaulipas, authorities unearthed about 1,100 pounds (500 kgs) of human remains between 2017 and 2021.
Arnulfo Garcia is searching for his mother, Placida, who he hasn’t heard from in a year but hopes is still alive.
“We had searched in urban areas of the city, put up posters,” he said.
Garcia said he decided to join the Ajusco search in the hopes of connecting with authorities who may be able to locate his mother.
Local media said the search, involving some 430 people, will continue until October 31.


EU preliminarily finds Meta, TikTok in breach of transparency obligations

EU preliminarily finds Meta, TikTok in breach of transparency obligations
Updated 24 October 2025

EU preliminarily finds Meta, TikTok in breach of transparency obligations

EU preliminarily finds Meta, TikTok in breach of transparency obligations
  • In a statement, the Commission also said that Meta’s Facebook and Instagram do not appear to provide a user-friendly and easily accessible mechanism for users to flag illegal content, such as child sexual abuse material and terrorist content

BRUSSELS: The European Commission said on Friday that US Big Tech giant Meta and Chinese-owned social media app TikTok breach their obligation to grant researchers adequate access to public data under the Digital Services Act (DSA) according to its preliminary findings.
In a statement, the Commission also said that Meta’s Facebook and Instagram do not appear to provide a user-friendly and easily accessible mechanism for users to flag illegal content, such as child sexual abuse material and terrorist content.
The EU has cracked down on Big Tech companies with the Digital Services Act, which requires large platforms such as social media sites and search engines to have robust measures to mitigate the spread of illegal and harmful content.
“The Commission’s preliminary findings show that Facebook, Instagram and TikTok may have put in place burdensome procedures and tools for researchers to request access to public data,” the EU executive said about the transparency issue.
“Allowing researchers access to platforms’ data is an essential transparency obligation under the DSA, as it provides public scrutiny into the potential impact of platforms on our physical and mental health.”
On Meta hindering the reporting of illegal content, the Commission said the company currently has mechanisms that impose several unnecessary steps and additional demands on users and use “deceptive interface designs.”
“Such practices can be confusing and dissuading. Meta’s mechanisms to flag and remove illegal content may therefore be ineffective. Under the DSA, ‘Notice and Action’ mechanisms are key to allowing EU users ... to inform online platforms that certain content does not comply with EU or national laws,” it said.
The Commission added the companies now have the possibility to examine its findings and take measures to remedy the breaches, adding that the preliminary findings do not prejudge the outcome of the investigation.
But if the findings of the Commission are confirmed by relevant consultations, it may impose a fine on the companies of as much as 6 percent of their annual global sales.


Rapid early spread of bird flu in Europe raises fears of fresh crisis

Rapid early spread of bird flu in Europe raises fears of fresh crisis
Updated 24 October 2025

Rapid early spread of bird flu in Europe raises fears of fresh crisis

Rapid early spread of bird flu in Europe raises fears of fresh crisis
  • The spread of highly pathogenic avian influenza, commonly called bird flu, is a concern for governments and the poultry industry due to the devastation it can cause to flocks, the possibility of trade restrictions and a risk of a new pandemic
  • This is the first time it has spread to 10 countries this early in the season for at least a decade, although the total number of outbreaks remains lower than in 2022 when the bloc recorded its worst ever bird flu crisis

PARIS: Bird flu is spreading rapidly in Europe, with the highest number of countries in at least a decade reporting early outbreaks, raising concerns about a repeat of past crises that led to the culling of tens of million birds and higher food prices.
The spread of highly pathogenic avian influenza, commonly called bird flu, is a concern for governments and the poultry industry due to the devastation it can cause to flocks, the possibility of trade restrictions and a risk of a new pandemic.
The disease, mainly spread by migrating wild birds, caused 56 outbreaks in 10 EU countries and Britain from August to mid-October, mostly in Poland — the top EU poultry producer — Spain and Germany, France’s animal health surveillance body ESA said.
This is the first time it has spread to 10 countries this early in the season for at least a decade, although the total number of outbreaks remains lower than in 2022 when the bloc recorded its worst ever bird flu crisis.
Last year there were 31 outbreaks in nine countries during the same period.
“All these cases in Europe show that the virus is far from gone,” said Yann Nedelec, director of French poultry industry group Anvol.

POULTRY ORDERED INDOOR AS VIRUS SPREADS
Since ESA’s latest report, Belgium and Slovakia this week reported their first bird flu cases of the season, the World Organization for Animal Health said on Wednesday, which prompted Belgium to order that all poultry be kept indoors.
Two other outbreaks also emerged in France, another major poultry producer, the farm ministry said on Tuesday as it ordered that birds be confined, citing rising outbreaks in Spain and Germany. Last year the order came in November and in December the year before.
The risk of bird flu for humans remains low, with most people infected having been in close contact with infected animals, but the virus needs to be monitored as it increasingly spreads to mammals, the World Health Organization said.
France has begun its third annual bird flu vaccination campaign for farm ducks, making it the first major poultry exporter to do so nationwide. It has credited the policy with curbing the disease.
Bird flu has also hit the US and Asia. Over 180 million birds were culled in the US, affecting egg prices and infecting dairy cows and people.
Brazil, the world’s largest poutry exporter, faced an outbreak but is now free of bird flu. Japan reported its first case of the season this week.


Milei promises ‘Argentina will change’ after elections

Milei promises ‘Argentina will change’ after elections
Updated 24 October 2025

Milei promises ‘Argentina will change’ after elections

Milei promises ‘Argentina will change’ after elections
  • Argentina is in the throes of an economic meltdown, and earlier this week the Trump administration signed off on a $20 billion lifeline in support of ally Milei
  • Milei’s party is targeting the Rosario area in a bid to secure votes to offset an almost certain defeat in other major provinces like Buenos Aires

ROSARIO: Argentina’s President Javier Milei concluded his mid-term election campaign on Thursday with a promise for change as a persistent financial crisis weighs on the country.
“We are on the right path, which is why I ask you to continue supporting us this Sunday,” Milei told a rally in Rosario, in the country’s north, promising that “Argentina will change.”
The legislative elections will determine whether the budget-slashing incumbent, whose party is in the minority, will wield more power in parliament in the second half of his term.
“Let’s not stop halfway... this election is so important,” he said.
Thousands cheered Milei, who performed a capella for the crowd as they waved Argentine and violet flags of his La Libertad Avanza party.
Alejandra Paso, a Milei fan was dressed head-to-toe in violet and enthusiastically applauded and chanted her support.
“If he hasn’t done more, it’s because he doesn’t have the money,” the 67-year-old retiree told AFP.
Her demographic was hardest hit by Milei’s austerity policy and budget cuts, but she has faith “in this man who speaks the language of the streets and can make the changes that no one ever dared to make before.”
The rally took place in Rosario, the country’s third most populous city on the banks of the Parana River and the main grain exporting port of Argentina — one of the world’s biggest food producers.
Like many of Milei’s rallies, the thunderous rock and roll music and stage setup felt more like a concert than a traditional political event.

- Protest march -

Argentina is in the throes of an economic meltdown, and earlier this week the Trump administration signed off on a $20 billion lifeline in support of ally Milei.
Milei’s party is targeting the Rosario area in a bid to secure votes to offset an almost certain defeat in other major provinces like Buenos Aires.
Merchant Mariano Reyes, 48, said he struggles to believe Milei’s party can repeat its 2023 victory in Rosario.
“But it’s not a presidential election,” he told AFP, expressing hope for a “celebration so he can govern without obstacles in Congress.”
Before arriving in Rosario, Milei was forced to cancel at least four rallies elsewhere after crowds shouted insults and threw stones in response to an alleged bribery scandal involving his sister.
The ruling party’s campaign faced even more scandal when its main candidate resigned following allegations of ties to drug trafficking.
Protest signs called Milei a “persona non grata in Rosario” and called for “decent salaries” and an end to pension cuts.
A few blocks from Milei’s rally, several hundred people joined a protest march.
“In Rosario, the city that exports cereals to the world, there is hunger,” activist Eduardo Delmonte told AFP.
“We see the ships leaving the port loaded up with goods and wonder how we will eat tomorrow.”
Leonardo Gresso, a street vendor of tortillas, said he voted for Milei in 2023 but on Sunday will not choose any party.
“I had hope, today I don’t even have that.”