World
How is life back home for the Lithuanians who left the UK post-Brexit?

“Have you ever packed your luggage but?”
It was a joke from a colleague on the morning of the Brexit vote in 2016, but it surely left Julius Gunevičius questioning.
“I laughed on the time,” he mentioned. “However then I got here residence and thought: is that how they assume? Ought to I pack my luggage?
“Ultimately we did.”
Julius, who’s 33 and has labored in London as a chartered accountant for 14 years, is without doubt one of the 46,600 Lithuanians who’ve come residence because the 2016 Brexit vote.
The variety of Lithuanian returnees from the UK greater than doubled between 2017 to 2020, in line with figures printed by Lithuania’s Migration Data Centre.
‘We can’t complain’
“I’ve by no means seemed again,” mentioned Julius who returned to Lithuania final yr together with his spouse Vaida and seven-year-old son Benas.
“It has labored out significantly better than what we had been anticipating.”
Julius was “prepared to take the financial hit” of shedding greater than half of his revenue again in Lithuania simply to be together with his family members.
“I’m an enormous household man,” he mentioned. “It’s superb for us to be collectively once more. We’re again on a social community that’s actually necessary to us.”
Watching different returnees get pleasure from a greater high quality of life again residence inspired Julius to make the “troublesome resolution.”
“We noticed a great deal of folks do the identical and be very, very completely satisfied.
“It impressed us.”
His basketball group in London, which was made up of Jap Europeans, modified the identify of its Whatsapp group to ‘Evacuate the UK’ as a result of excessive quantity of people that had been leaving.
Nonetheless, there have been many issues Julius missed in regards to the UK, significantly its multiculturalism.
“It’s the little issues, the creature comforts. Close to our home was a French bakery the place we introduced sourdough, Chinese language eating places with correct Peking duck and naturally, fish and chips.
“We had an excellent life.”
He couldn’t discover something that “got here shut” in Lithuania, regardless of trying to find greater than six months.
‘Not the identical Lithuania’
But others confronted extra severe challenges coming residence.
“Alongside paperwork, pension and taxes, there have been so many issues to consider,” mentioned Dovydas Petrošius, 35, a self-described “pioneer of the remigration to Lithuania”.
“I actually struggled to adapt to life again in Lithuania.”
Such had been Dovydoas’s difficulties that he based ‘Eks Emigrantai, an organisation serving to Lithuanian emigres return residence.
Now he says greater than 70% of their enquiries are from Lithuanians who wish to depart the UK, a lot of whom have lived there for many years.
One of many foremost issues for Lithuanians coming residence Dvoydas discovered working at Eks Emigranti was that “quite a bit had modified” since they left.
“Many individuals have romantic notions of what Lithuania is like,” he mentioned. “They’ve this concept of their minds that life might be implausible, however usually most people they knew have left to different nations or now have their very own lives.
“Life strikes on,” he added.
‘Our pondering and appreciation of the world is completely different’
One other problem for returnees was that British tradition had left its mark on them.
“Individuals come residence, however quickly realise they’ve created a brand new life and new emotions again within the UK, ” says Dovydas. “They miss a tradition which was extra acceptable for them than Lithuania’s.”
He added: “When you lived in London, the place there’s plenty of motion, you possibly can come again to Lithuania and really feel that large distinction, there’s not a lot occurring right here.
“It’s an enormous shock.”
Dovydas knew a number of returnees from the UK who weren’t pleased with their lives again in Lithuania and had already left for nations like Spain.
“You are likely to miss your nation, however these emotions final just for a short while,” he mentioned.
‘These coming residence have their toes underneath the desk’
And these returnees are having an “overwhelmingly constructive” impression on Lithuania.
“Many returned Lithuanians are establishing new companies and implementing concepts they’ve seen within the UK,” says Arminas Jurgaits of the Worldwide Organisation for Migration in Vilnius. “Returnees are extra open-minded and tolerant.
“They slowly however certainly change the overall perspective in society,” he added.
However, Jurgaits believed this exodus from the UK in the end displays the altering fortunes of Lithuania.
“Individuals need entry to housing, schooling, well being, jobs, a secure surroundings, the power to specific themselves and do what they like,” he mentioned.
“These days, returnees can discover all this stuff in Lithuania and the standard of life has improved considerably,” he added.
Dovydas seconded this: “There isn’t any purpose to go for the higher life when you possibly can have the identical circumstances right here.”

World
Trump says Putin has 'gone absolutely CRAZY', considering more sanctions on Russia

World
New US-backed aid group begins distributing food in war-torn Gaza

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) — a U.S.-backed group that has Israel’s stamp of approval — said it has started distributing aid to the Gaza Strip despite being the subject of controversy and questions.
GHF did not specify how many trucks of food it was dealing with but said that the supplies made it to its hubs and were being distributed throughout the Strip. The organization also said there would be more trucks arriving on Wednesday.
“As part of the ongoing efforts to facilitate the entry of humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip, four aid distribution centers were established in recent weeks, in accordance with the directive of the political echelon and in close coordination with the United States,” the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said in a statement.
Gazans are seen going to and from an aid collection spot. (Amit Segal)
ISRAELI AMBASSADOR LASHES OUT AT UN OFFICIAL, CONDEMNS UK, FRANCE, CANADA STATEMENT ON AID
“Every day, thousands of Gazans will be able to come here, reach this third party and get the aid directly. We hope this will end Hamas’ abuse of the aid coming into Gaza, Hamas’s abuse of the people of Gaza, and that the people of Gaza will be able to receive the aid directly,” IDF spokesperson Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani said in a video about the aid.
The organization received considerable scrutiny before its distribution began, as well as a potentially major hurdle: just hours before it started distributing aid, the head of the organization resigned.
Jake Woods, who was the executive director of the GHF, resigned on Monday, citing the organization’s inability to “adhere to the humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence, which I will not abandon.”
“I urge Israel to significantly expand the provision of aid into Gaza through all mechanisms, and I urge all stakeholders to continue to explore innovative new methods for the delivery of aid, without delay, diversion, or discrimination,” Woods said in a statement obtained by Fox News. “I continue to believe the only sustainable path for the long-term is for Hamas to release all hostages, for there to be a cessation of hostilities, and a pathway for peace, security, and dignity for all people in the region.”

Humanitarian aid to be distributed to the people of Gaza. (IDF Spokesperson’s Office)
ISRAEL TURNS TABLES ON UN OFFICIAL CLAIMING ‘GENOCIDE’ IN GAZA WITH BASIC QUESTIONS
Prior to Woods’ resignation, GHF faced criticism over its distribution plan, which involved the aid arriving at hubs that are guarded by armed contractors, according to The Associated Press. The outlet also reported that the four hubs being set up are all close to Israeli military positions, saying that three are “far south where few Palestinians are located.”
The Associated Press reported that GHF said the flow of supplies to Palestinians in Gaza would be “increasing each day.”
Woods is not alone in his concern about GHF’s independence and impartiality, as the organization has faced backlash over Israel’s support for the organization. The United Nations and aid groups have voiced criticism of GHF.

Palestinians struggle to get donated food at a community kitchen in Jabalia, northern Gaza Strip on Monday, May 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi)
A spokesperson from the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) told Reuters that GHF is “a distraction from what is actually needed.”
“Our position remains firm: as Tom Fletcher, the under-secretary-general for Humanitarian Affairs, told the Security Council the other week, this is a distraction. Aid operations must be in line with the humanitarian principles and must be scaled up to stave off famine and meet the needs of all civilians, where they are in the Strip,” OCHA spokesperson Eri Kaneko told Fox News Digital.
Fox News Digital reached out to the State Department and the Red Cross for comment, but they did not immediately respond.
Trey Yingst contributed to this report.
World
Drone war, ground offensive continue despite new Russia-Ukraine peace push

Russia and Ukraine have launched a wave of drone attacks against each other overnight, even as Moscow claimed it was finalising a peace proposal to end the war.
Ukrainian air force officials said on Tuesday that Russia deployed 60 drones across multiple regions through the night, injuring 10 people. Kyiv’s air defences intercepted 43 of them – 35 were shot down while eight were diverted using electronic warfare systems.
In Dnipropetrovsk, central Ukraine, Governor Serhiy Lysak reported damage to residential properties and an agricultural site after Russian drones led to fires during the night. In Kherson, a southern city frequently hit by Russian strikes, a drone attack on Tuesday morning wounded a 59-year-old man and six municipal workers, officials said.
The barrage came days after Ukraine endured one of the heaviest aerial offensives of the war. On Sunday night alone, Ukraine’s air force claimed Russia launched 355 drones, a record number.
That escalation prompted United States President Donald Trump to declare that Vladimir Putin had “gone absolutely CRAZY” and to threaten new sanctions. The Kremlin brushed off the remarks, accusing Trump of suffering from “emotional overload”.
Russia said on Tuesday that its huge aerial assaults in recent days were a “response” to escalating Ukrainian drone attacks on its own civilians, accusing Kyiv of trying to “disrupt” peace efforts.
“Kyiv, with the support of some European countries, has taken a series of provocative steps to thwart negotiations initiated by Russia,” the Russian Ministry of Defence said in a statement.
The ministry said its forces had shot down 99 Ukrainian drones on Tuesday, including 56 over the Belgorod region, which borders Ukraine.
It claimed that from May 20 to 27, air defence units intercepted more than 2,300 Ukrainian drones – 1,465 of them outside active conflict zones.
Russia seizes more territory
In a further setback for Kyiv, Russian troops have captured four villages in Ukraine’s northeastern Sumy region, the local governor confirmed on Tuesday.
Oleh Hryhorov said Novenke, Basivka, Veselivka and Zhuravka were now under Russian control, though civilians had already been evacuated. “The enemy is continuing attempts to advance with the aim of setting up a so-called ‘buffer zone’,” he wrote on Facebook.
Russia’s Defence Ministry also claimed it had taken the nearby village of Bilovody, pointing to further advances near the border.
Though Moscow’s main offensive remains in Donetsk, its push into Sumy shows how Russian forces are stretching Ukraine’s army thin across multiple fronts.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warned again this week that new Russian offensives were likely in Sumy, Kharkiv and Zaporizhzhia.
Russian troops have been attacking in small groups on motorcycles, backed by drones. Ukrainian forces say they’re holding the line and targeting enemy positions with precision fire.
Military blog DeepState reported over the weekend that Russia now holds about 62.6 sq km (24 square miles) in the region – the first time it has secured a strip of border villages there.
Last month, a Russian missile killed 36 people in the city of Sumy.
Europe undermining peace talks, says Russia
Amid new territorial gains and escalating violence, Russia has shifted blame for the lack of diplomatic progress onto European leaders.
Putin met Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan on Monday to discuss efforts to end the war in Ukraine, according to a source from Turkiye’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Fidan also met Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Tuesday as part of his two-day trip to Moscow.
During the meeting, Lavrov took aim at German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, suggesting his recent comments on Ukraine’s use of Western weapons for strikes deep inside Russia reveal that the decision to greenlight such attacks was made long before it was made public.
Lavrov said Merz’s statement was telling – not only for what it implied about policy but for what it revealed about the current crop of Western leaders.
“This shows what sort of people have come to power in key European countries,” Lavrov said.
Merz had earlier stated that weapons supplied to Kyiv by the United Kingdom, France, Germany and the US were no longer bound by range restrictions, clearing the path for deeper attacks into Russian territory.

On Tuesday, while on an official visit to Finland, Merz said Western allies had lifted restrictions on the range of weapons sent to Ukraine. He warned the war could drag on, citing Russia’s refusal to engage in meaningful talks. “We may have to prepare for a longer duration,” he told reporters.
Meanwhile, Moscow accused Ukraine and its European allies of deliberately undermining efforts to revive peace talks. “Since 20 May, Ukraine has ramped up strikes on Russian territory using Western-supplied weapons, deliberately targeting civilian infrastructure,” it said.
Direct talks between Russia and Ukraine resumed on May 16 – the first in more than three years – but failed to result in a ceasefire. Russia has since insisted it is working on a serious draft agreement to end hostilities.
“This is a serious draft, a draft of a serious document that demands careful checks and preparation,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said, adding it had not yet been submitted.
Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said the draft would lay out key terms for a political settlement and potential ceasefire, and would be presented to Kyiv once finalised.
Moscow has accused Ukraine of escalating attacks in recent days to derail the negotiations. In response to media reports about possible new US sanctions, Peskov claimed Washington was trying to sabotage the diplomatic process.
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