World
Brussels terror threat ‘unlikely’ after Commission gets alarming email
A terrorist assault in Brussels is “unlikely”, based on the Belgian Federal Police, after the European Fee acquired two threatening emails, warning of an “explosion” on the town’s metro.
When approached by Euronews on Wednesday, each the Federal Police and Federal Prosecutor’s Workplace stated that the “risk was taken significantly”, however that “nothing was discovered” throughout a sweep of the Brussels underground line.
This got here after the US embassy in Belgium launched a safety alert warning of a “risk of a attainable metro assault to be carried out as we speak”. They urged folks to “use warning when travelling in and round Brussels and keep away from crowds.”
In response to native media studies, the Fee was contacted on two separate events, as soon as on February 16 and a second time on March 3, after which it alerted the authorities late on Tuesday. Each emails have been written in Russian.
Belgian newspaper Le Soir studies that the warning from the sender stated: “In gentle of the EU’s continued aggressive insurance policies I hereby warn you of main terrorist assaults on EU territory.”
An announcement seen by Euronews from the European Parliament to its MEPs stated that it was “monitoring the state of affairs carefully” alongside the nationwide authorities.
The federal police say that whereas the danger of an assault is low, they’re remaining vigilant. An investigation is now ongoing to seek out the particular person accountable.
World
Taylor Swift drops 15 new songs on double album, 'The Tortured Poets Department: The Anthology'
NEW YORK (AP) — Could there be a Taylor Swift new album rollout without a few additional surprises?
No.
On Friday, the pop star released her 11th album, “The Tortured Poets Department,” an amalgamation of her previous work and reflecting the artist who — at the peak of her powers — has spent the last few years re-recording her life’s work and touring its material, filtered through synth-pop anthems, breakup ballads, provocative and matured considerations.
But that was midnight. At 2 a.m. Eastern, she released “The Tortured Poets Department: The Anthology,” featuring 15 additional songs.
“I’d written so much tortured poetry in the past 2 years and wanted to share it all with you, so here’s the second installment,” Swift wrote in an Instagram caption. “And now the story isn’t mine anymore… it’s all yours.”
The songs are a natural continuation of the first half of the album; many return to her “evermore” and “folklore” sound, with an assist from her collaborator Aaron Dessner.
This is not Swift’s first time surprising her fans, and certainly not her first time doing so with a surprise album release. A few months after “folklore” was released in 2020, she announced “evermore” would arrive at the midnight the same day. And speaking of midnight, she dropped a “3am” edition of “Midnights” featuring seven new tracks in 2022 a handful of hours after the original release.
World
Iranian 'nuclear energy mountain' is 'fully safe' after Israeli strike: state media
Iranian nuclear sites are “fully safe” and have not been impacted by Israeli strikes, the country’s regime says.
Israel carried out limited strikes on areas of Iran early Friday in retaliation for Tehran firing a barrage of missiles and drones at Israel last Saturday.
The region surrounding the city of Isfahan — home to the country’s “nuclear energy mountain” — was among the areas targeted in the strike.
ISRAEL STRIKES SITE IN IRAN IN RETALIATION FOR WEEKEND ASSAULT: SOURCE
Isfahan is home to Iran’s Uranium Conversion Facility and three research reactors. The country’s underground Natanz enrichment site is also in the region.
Iranian state media stated following the attack that the nation’s atomic sites were “fully safe” and not struck by the missiles.
“The explosion this morning in the sky of Isfahan was related to the shooting of air defense systems at a suspicious object that did not cause any damage,” Iranian army commander Gen. Abdolrahim Mousavi said.
REPORTS OF ISRAEL’S RETALIATORY STRIKES AGAINST IRAN PROMPT REACTIONS FROM LAWMAKERS: ‘RIGHT TO DEFEND ITSELF’
The International Atomic Energy Agency, a United Nations affiliate watchdog organization, later confirmed “there is no damage to Iran’s nuclear sites.”
The agency said it “continues to call for extreme restraint from everybody and reiterates that nuclear facilities should never be a target in military conflicts.”
Details surrounding the intended target of the strike – if there was one – were not immediately available, but Fox News was previously able to confirm the target was “not nuclear or civilian.”
A senior Iranian official allegedly told Reuters that Iran has no plans to immediately respond to the Israeli strike, which was described differently in Iranian state media. The explosions heard in Isfahan were allegedly a result of the country’s air defense systems activating and not a missile attack, the official told Reuters.
Former Israel Defense Forces spokesman Jonathan Conricus wrote on X that while Iran appears to downplay the strike, he “think[s] they’ve gotten the message.”
Fox News Digital’s Bradford Betz, Jennifer Griffin and Elizabeth Pritchett contributed to this report.
World
No, the head of the World Economic Forum is not dead
Rumours have emerged online that the WEF’s executive chairman and founder, Klaus Schwab, has been hospitalised, arrested, and may even be dead. The Cube takes a look at where the false claims have come from.
Social media users have been claiming that the World Economic Forum (WEF) executive chairman and founder, Klaus Schwab, was recently admitted to hospital in a serious condition.
A large number of posts on X spreading the rumours have been seen and shared thousands of times. Some of them link his supposed condition to a cardiac incident after running, while others even go as far as claiming he may be dead.
None of these claims is true.
It seems like the allegations stemmed from satirical articles, such as this one from the website Weekly Crier.
It doesn’t provide any details about Schwab’s supposed hospitalisation, nor does it cite any sources.
The website’s own “About Us” page says that it posts “satire and comedic opinion pieces and editorials”, alongside supposedly “reliable and unbiased news and information”.
Not only that, the WEF has confirmed that Schwab is in perfectly good health.
The organisation has said that the claims are “entirely baseless and unfounded” and that Schwab’s health is “excellent”.
It added that, like many high-profile individuals and organisations, he has routinely been the target of conspiracy theories and misinformation campaigns.
They’re not wrong: the claims about Schwab’s health came in lockstep with other misleading allegations that the US Delta Force arrested Schwab at his home in Switzerland.
An article by website Real Raw News said that a Delta Force strike team apprehended Schwab after a “deadly firefight” in his house, and that he was found in bed connected to an adrenochrome infusion machine.
Once again, this appears to be an attempt at satire.
Real Raw News’s “About Us” page also says that the website contains “humour, parody and satire”, but that hasn’t stopped the claims from also doing the rounds on social media.
Various posts on X, Reddit and Facebook have all shared the allegations out of context, although some of them at least with a dose of scepticism.
The WEF hasn’t made any reference to an arrest, and a quick Google search for the story from more reliable news outlets doesn’t yield any results.
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