World
EU nations condemn Israeli ministers’ call to resettle Gazans
EU nations have denounced two Israeli far-right ministers’ calls for the ‘voluntary emigration’ of Palestinians from Gaza and the building of Israeli settlements in the besieged territory.
The comments were made Monday by Israel’s firebrand National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich. Both are known for their hardline, religious-conservative stances.
Israel should “concentrate on encouraging the migration of the residents of Gaza,” Ben-Gvir told reporters, adding that Israel would “permanently control” the Gaza strip.
Ben-Gvir, known as one of the most hardline members of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s cabinet, also endorsed the rebuilding of Jewish settlements in the besieged Palestinian territory.
The EU’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs, Josep Borrell, responded on Wednesday evening on social platform X, condemning the “inflammatory and irresponsible statements.”
“Forced displacements are strictly prohibited as a grave violation of international humanitarian law,” Borrell added.
The EU condemnation has also been echoed by member states including France, Germany, Spain and the Netherlands.
France’s Foreign Affairs Minister Catherine Colonna denounced the statements as “provocative” and “irresponsible.”
In a statement on X, the Dutch foreign ministry said that the Netherlands “rejects any calls for Palestinian displacement from Gaza or reduction of Palestinian territory,” adding that the Israeli ministers’ proposals does not “fit a future two-state solution, with a viable Palestinian state alongside a secure Israel.”
The criticism from EU governments follows similarly scathing condemnation from the United States and the United Nations.
Israeli extremism threatens to upend peace proposals
The hardline position of the far-right ministers is highly problematic for the European Union, which is aiming to spearhead international efforts to find a long-term peaceful solution to the conflict.
Josep Borrell, who said Wednesday that an international solution “imposed from the outside” was the only viable route to a peaceful resolution between Israelis and Palestinians, has said Israeli occupation of Gaza cannot be contemplated.
The EU executive’s President Ursula von der Leyen – who has consistently defended Israel’s right to self-defence since the outbreak of the war against Hamas – has also blatantly rejected the forced displacement of Palestinians or the long-term presence of Israeli security as part of her five principles for Gaza’s future.
The EU has mulled plans to sanction extremist Israeli settlers in the West Bank, where a fresh bout of attacks on Palestinian communities has been seen since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war following Hamas’ deadly attack on Israel on 7 October.
Documents seen by Euronews in December showed the European bloc could issue sanctions such as visa bans against Israeli settlers responsible for such attack. The US and the UK issued such measures in December.
The EU has repeatedly condemned Israeli settlers’ attacks against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank but has steered clear of issuing sanctions.
World
Pro-life leader criticizes ‘insane’ UK bill that would decriminalize certain abortions up until birth
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EXCLUSIVE: The leader of an international pro-life group is criticizing a bill being considered in the United Kingdom that would protect women from criminal liability for abortions up until birth.
In an interview with Fox News Digital, 40 Days for Life CEO Shawn Carney said British lawmakers are following efforts by Democrats in the U.S. in seeking to allow abortion in these instances, which he described as “absolutely absurd.”
“They haven’t really lobbied for this,” Carney said. “Typically, Europe is far more conservative on abortion than the United States. Most European countries regulate abortion to 12 weeks. England has 16. In some cases, they do late term, up to 24 weeks. But now they want abortion through all 40 weeks. And this just seems sort of out of nowhere.”
Carney said he fears this bill, if enacted into law, would “start an unfortunate trend throughout Europe.”
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A bill is being considered in the U.K. that would protect women from criminal liability for abortions to end their own pregnancies up until birth. (Wiktor Szymanowicz/Anadolu via Getty Images)
The Crime and Policing Bill includes a provision, Clause 208, that would remove criminal penalties for women in England and Wales who end their own pregnancy at any stage. The bill is now in its final stages in the House of Lords and is expected to receive a vote as early as Wednesday. If the House of Lords approves the clause, the bill would return to the House of Commons for any final changes before receiving Royal Assent to become law.
Under the provision, a woman can no longer be investigated, arrested or prosecuted for ending her own pregnancy at any gestation, even though the current standard legal threshold for most abortions in England and Wales is 24 weeks.
While women who terminate their pregnancies would be exempt from criminal liability, doctors and others who assist in an abortion after 24 weeks without medical necessity can still face prosecution.
As lawmakers consider Clause 208, several amendments have been offered, including removing it entirely, modifying it to exclude late-term abortions and adding an in-person requirement for medical consultations to end so-called “pills-by-post” services.
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Under the provision, a woman can no longer be investigated, arrested or prosecuted for ending her own pregnancy at any gestation. (Wiktor Szymanowicz/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Carney argued that the latter two amendments should still be unacceptable, stating that the clause appears to represent “a desire to kill.”
“I think it’s insane,” he said. “I know what they’re trying to do, but you need to combat the laws by saying we’re not aborting children at 40 weeks. The left built an entire movement on being able to survive outside the womb with viability. Then, as science and medicine progressed, viability changed because we could do a lot for unborn children. So they said at first it was 24 weeks, and then it was 22 weeks. Some say it’s 20 weeks. Others say it’s still 22 weeks. Nobody’s ever said it was 40 weeks. They’ve all said, of course, you can survive outside the womb. This is just a desire to kill, it seems, at 40 weeks.”
“I understand the idea of trying to make a legal compromise,” he continued. “But the compromise would be that you people have lost your minds. You want to abort a child the day before he or she is born. And it’s not medically necessary. The baby’s completely viable … so that’s how I think that you have to defeat these bills.”
Carney also said that “people don’t want to celebrate abortion” and “certainly don’t want to brag about how they can have an abortion up to 40 weeks,” adding that opponents of the U.K. bill are “missing common sense responses” to efforts to allow any abortion up until birth.
He added that while most people are not “monsters” seeking abortions at 40 weeks, removing legal liability for women at that point could make abortion more socially acceptable.
“I think what it does is it takes a little bit of a stigma away from abortions at 8, 10, 12, 16 weeks, because typically what we’ve seen in the U.S. is when you have states that say, hey, you’re going to have an abortion through all 40 weeks, what they do is say, well, okay, I’m not that bad. My abortion is not that bad because it’s only at 10 weeks, it’s only at 12 weeks, it’s only at 16 weeks,” Carney said.
The bill is now in its final stages in the House of Lords and is expected to receive a vote as early as Wednesday. (Jason Alden/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
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“It’s not that you’re going to see a lot of abortions at 40 weeks. It’s the mentality that abortion is not a big deal. You can even do it the day before birth, and so it’s more acceptable to most people,” he continued.
“People aren’t monsters,” he added. “The monsters write these bills, which are typically very liberal White people who say, you know what, we need to be able to have an abortion the day before your birthday. And most people look around at a party and say that person’s clinically insane.”
The left “has just married themselves to this,” Carney said.
“They believe you need unfettered abortion at all times in order to be a free and just society,” Carney said. “But nobody’s actually really medically needing that whatsoever.”
World
Ukraine ‘informally’ opens all six clusters in EU membership bid
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The European Commission informally kept the process of membership for Ukraine in an effort to keep talks going despite Budapest’s firm opposition to Kyiv joining the 27-member bloc.
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The technical progress under clusters necessary to complete steps in line with EU reforms has been blocked by Hungary for more than a year, meaning Ukraine has barely advanced in the process since it received candidate status. Still, the Commission said Tuesday it would continue technical talks even if informally.
The move is designed to keep momentum going but does not change the structural hurdles faced by Ukraine in the face of staunch opposition from Hungary.
“At a time when Europe is under pressure from both East and West, we cannot afford to lose time. And we are not,” European Commissioner for Enlargement Marta Kos said on Tuesday morning after a meeting in Brussels.
“Now all six clusters are informally open,” she added. “Now have a clear to-do list.”
Last year, in its annual enlargement process report, the Commission suggested Ukraine was ready to open the clusters of fundamentals but failed to get these talks going.
Now, the Commission says it will open all six clusters, albeit informally, covering internal reforms, budget and justice. Each cluster includes several chapters. In total, the EU accession negotiations are structured around 35 different policy chapters.
According to Kos, the informal approach will allow Ukraine to continue all necessary reforms to align with EU norms and standards despite the complex political landscape. The goal is to advance as many steps as possible to allow the formal approval once the veto is lifted, even if a date is not guaranteed.
“We should differentiate between the two pillars of the accession process,” Kos said. “One is the technical work, which we will do now. The rest is the decision-making process in the member states.”
Ukraine’s Deputy Prime Minister for European Integration Taras Kachka said that even though “informal” this is a “de facto” position of all EU members.
“This step is a really revolutionary step in a very European way,” he said, adding that it comes in line with the “with the current reality” and shows the EU’s “creativity while maintaining the rules”.
Ukraine is pushing for the EU to commit to an entry date as soon as 2027 to join the bloc as part of its ongoing peace negotiations, with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy calling membership an “essential” pillar of its future security guarantees package.
Still, Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said last month the EU cannot guarantee a date and member states, whose unanimous approval is required, have called for more realistic options.
World
Suspected meteor falling over Cleveland could be seen several states away
CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) — A suspected meteor that fell over the Cleveland area on Tuesday shook homes and startled residents who heard a boom that some compared to an explosion.
People hundreds of miles (kilometers) away reported seeing the bright fireball even though it was 9 a.m. The American Meteor Society said it received reports from Wisconsin to Maryland.
“This one really does look like it’s a fireball, which means it’s a meteorite — a small asteroid,” said astronomer Carl Hergenrother, the group’s executive director.
“So much stuff is being launched that a lot of times what you see burning up is just reentering satellites. But usually those don’t get especially bright,” he said.
He estimated that Tuesday’s fireball might have been the size of a softball or basketball, or perhaps even larger, and that it would have hit the atmosphere at “many tens of miles per second.”
Staff at the National Weather Service in Cleveland also heard the boom and felt the vibrations, and suspected it was a meteor. They had no early reports of any debris being found.
“There could be some small fragments, but a lot of it would have burned up in the atmosphere,” NWS meteorologist Brian Mitchell said.
Meteors typically fall somewhere in the U.S. about once a day, while smaller pieces of space dust might fall 10 times an hour, Hergenrother said. Scientists track meteors through a network of special cameras that help capture the night sky, but more members of the public are catching them on cellphones and security cameras of their own.
“Now we’re seeing them, and there’s dozens of videos popping up all the time,” Hergenrother said.
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