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Airbus confirms offer worth up to €1.8bn for Atos cyber security unit

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Airbus confirms offer worth up to €1.8bn for Atos cyber security unit

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Airbus is working on an offer worth up to €1.8bn for Atos’s prized big data and cyber security unit, as the French IT services company seeks to restructure and cut its debt load.

Atos announced on Wednesday that it had opened a due diligence process with the aerospace and defence company, confirming earlier reports from the Financial Times. An offer would place an enterprise value of between €1.5bn and €1.8bn on BDS, the French group’s big data and security unit, it said.

Atos’s negotiations to sell BDS mark a change in strategic direction under recently appointed chair Jean Pierre Mustier, as he works to find a solution to how the company deals with €2.25bn in debt that matures by 2025.  

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Atos shares rose as much as 8 per cent on Wednesday morning, but have slumped by 90 per cent in the past three years to a market value of €850mn. Standard & Poor’s downgraded the company’s credit rating in November citing increased liquidity risks.

Airbus has made no secret of its ambitions to expand its cyber activities. Airbus chief executive Guillaume Faury told the FT in November that the Toulouse-based company wanted to “grow in cyber”. 

Airbus said it had submitted a non-binding proposal to buy the unit. The acquisition could “significantly accelerate” its “digital transformation . . .[and] enhance the company’s defence and security portfolio with strong capabilities in cyber, advanced computing and artificial intelligence”, it said. 

The talks between Atos and Airbus for BDS are not exclusive, people familiar with the matter said. Atos said on Wednesday that it had received two expressions of interest for BDS, one of which concerned only part of the division, without disclosing the name of the other party.

French defence electronics group Thales, which has jet-fighter maker Dassault Aviation as its biggest shareholder, has been interested in BDS in the past as part of its effort to expand its cyber security business.

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Thales has been considering its options in recent weeks, one person briefed on the situation said. Thales did not respond to a request for comment. 

Airbus had been in talks last year to buy a minority stake in Atos’s Evidian division, which contains BDS and the French company’s cloud computing business. However, it pulled out after hedge fund manager Chris Hohn, whose fund TCI is one of the plane maker’s largest shareholders, objected to the plan.

At the time, people close to Airbus said it withdrew because it decided that buying a roughly 30 per cent stake would have been costly while not giving it much say over how Evidian was run.

Mustier’s predecessor as Atos chair, Bertrand Meunier, had resisted selling off parts of Atos to pay down debt, instead prioritising a plan to split the company into two.

He reached an agreement on selling Atos’s lossmaking legacy IT services business Tech Foundations to Czech billionaire Daniel Křetínský. The rest of Atos, using the name Evidian, would have remained listed, with Křetínský anchoring a €900mn capital raise that would have given him a 7.5 per cent stake. 

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However, many shareholders opposed the terms of the deal with Křetínský, arguing he was paying too little for Tech Foundations. Some politicians also objected to the idea of a foreign shareholder owning part of Evidian, which has technology that is used in France’s nuclear weapons arsenal. 

Under Mustier’s leadership, Atos is now renegotiating the terms of the agreement with Křetínský.

Atos indicated on Wednesday that the renegotiations were taking longer than expected, and were not guaranteed to end in an agreement. It also said the scale of the capital raise in Evidian would be reduced as it examined the “legal and financial conditions under which [Křetínský] could be released, in whole or in part, from its commitment to participate”.

Atos chief financial officer Paul Saleh said on Wednesday that talks with Křetínský were taking “a bit longer than expected”, and centred around the price and the structure of the operation, as well as the transfer of the liabilities attached to Tech Foundations.

People close to Křetínský have said talks would focus on him not being part of the Evidian leg of the deal. “This is a discussion we are happy to have and all the players are all more or less aligned on that,” said a person close to the Czech businessman. 

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Atos confirmed it was in talks with its banks to refinance its debt, including through asset sales of which BDS would be a part. The company was weighing selling assets “well beyond the €400mn mentioned in the press release of July 28 2023, in order to honour its financing obligations”, it said.

It added that if the transaction with Křetínský fell through, it would consider additional sales.

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Tehran says ‘no plans’ for new talks after US seizes Iranian cargo ship

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Tehran says ‘no plans’ for new talks after US seizes Iranian cargo ship

US negotiators to head to Pakistan and Iranian cargo ship seized – a recappublished at 00:37 BST 20 April

Image source, Reuters
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Tankers in the Strait of Hormuz on Saturday

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Here’s a recap of the latest developments.

US negotiators will head to Pakistan on Monday with the intention of holding further talks on ending the war, Trump says – but Iranian state media cites unnamed officials as saying Tehran has “no plans for now to participate”.

The prospect of further high-level negotiations – a White House official says Vice-President JD Vance will attend – comes amid reports of fresh attacks on commercial vessels.

Trump says the navy intercepted and took “custody” of an Iranian tanker attempting to pass through the US blockade, “blowing a hole” in the ship’s engine room in the process.

Earlier, in the same post announcing his representatives would travel for more talks, Trump renewed his threat to destroy Iranian energy sites and bridges if no deal is reached.

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Reports in Iranian media over the weekend suggest Iran is continuing to work on plans to potentially apply a toll to ships passing through the strait – although it’s unclear if such a move will be implemented.

Iranian state TV cites unnamed officials as saying that “continuation of the so-called naval blockade, violation of the ceasefire and threatening US rhetoric” are slowing progress in reaching an agreement.

Trump also accused Iran of violating the ceasefire, saying more commercial ships have been attacked by Iran in the Strait of Hormuz.

A UK maritime agency reported two commercial ships came under fire in the strait on Saturday.

Iran’s foreign minister had said on Friday that the strait would be opened – which was shortly followed by Trump saying the US naval blockade of Iranian ports would remain in place until a deal is reached. Iran has since said the strait is closed again.

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Video: 8 Children Killed in Louisiana Shooting, Police Say

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Video: 8 Children Killed in Louisiana Shooting, Police Say

new video loaded: 8 Children Killed in Louisiana Shooting, Police Say

A gunman shot 10 people, killing eight children, in a domestic violence shooting at multiple locations in Shreveport, La., the police said. The victims ranged in age from 1 to 14. The gunman was later fatally shot by officers.

By Christina Kelso

April 19, 2026

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Communities launch cleanup after severe weather and tornadoes churn across Midwest

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Communities launch cleanup after severe weather and tornadoes churn across Midwest

An aerial view shows damage from a tornado, on Saturday in Lena, Ill.

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Communities across the Upper Midwest are cleaning up after tornadoes and severe weather impacted the region over the weekend, damaging and destroying dozens of homes and knocking out power for tens of thousands.

“Numerous” severe storms were tracked across parts of Iowa, Illinois and Missouri on Friday, according to the National Weather Service. At least 66 tornado reports were submitted in multiple states including Oklahoma, Illinois, Missouri, Wisconsin and Iowa, the NWS Quad Cities IA/IL office said Sunday.

No deaths have been reported from the severe weather and tornado outbreak.

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In Marion Township in Minnesota, about 30 homes were damaged and a dozen have significant damage because of a tornado, according to the Olmsted County Sheriff’s Office. The tornado also damaged at least 20 homes in Stewartville and there is a temporary shelter in Rochester for people displaced by the storms, according to MPR News.

“Tornado disaster recovery continues to occur at full speed,” the Olmsted County Sheriff’s Office said on Saturday.

In Illinois, McClean County officials declared a disaster emergency because of severe storms in Bloomington. “At this time, no injuries have been reported, and emergency response agencies remain actively engaged to ensure public safety and continuity of essential services,” officials said in a statement.

But further north in the village of Lena, an EF-2 tornado caused the “most significant damage” where “many homes and outbuildings were damaged, trees uprooted, and power lines downed,” the NWS said. Numerous roads have also been blocked by debris, the Stephenson County Sheriff’s Office also said.

People continue to clean up following tornado on April 18, 2026 in Lena, Illinois.

People continue to clean up following a tornado, on Saturday in Lena, Ill.

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There have been no fatalities and no reports of serious injuries associated with the storm, Chief Deputy Andy Schroeder from the Stephenson County Sheriff’s Office told NPR on Sunday.

More than 43,000 customers lost power in Illinois but power was restored to almost all of them by Saturday night, according to electric utility ComEd.

Several tornadoes also occurred across Wisconsin, according to the NWS office in La Crosse. Twenty-six tornado warnings were issued by the office on Friday, the most in one day since the weather service office was built in 1995.

In one Marathon County town, 75 homes were destroyed by a tornado, according to Ringle Fire Chief Chris Kielman.

“It took out a whole residential area,” Kielman said, according to Wisconsin Public Radio.

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The American Red Cross of Wisconsin said volunteers are helping those impacted by the storm with meals, shelter and support.

Parts of the state are still dealing with multiple rounds of severe weather and tornadoes from earlier in the week that brought flooding to some communities.

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