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‘Important moment for Moldova’ as country hosts European summit

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‘Important moment for Moldova’ as country hosts European summit

European leaders are gathering in Moldova on Thursday for a political summit spotlighting a country heavily impacted by Russia’s war in Ukraine.

This second summit of the European Political Community will see nearly 50 leaders discuss peace and security issues as well as energy and climate.

French President Emmanuel Macron first called for the new forum for diplomacy in a speech at the European Parliament on 9 May 2022 as a way of discussing security challenges such as the war in Ukraine with non-EU countries.

“The European Union, given the level of its integration and ambition, cannot be in the short term the only means of structuring the European continent,” Macron said.

“It’s our historic obligation to respond to that today and to create what I would call a European political community.”

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He described it as an organisation that would allow democratic nations to cooperate on a number of key issues.

The inaugural meeting of the new community took place last October in Prague, with leaders saying the summit provided an opportunity to discuss common challenges on the continent.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said ahead of the second summit that Moldova is the “heart of Europe” and that the EU supports the country “every step of the way”.

An EU official said in a briefing ahead of the second summit that they were impressed by Moldova’s preparations for the European Political Community meeting.

Those include security considerations including NATO surveillance flights guarding the skies above the country.

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‘Important moment for Moldova’

“Organising (the summit) in Chișinău is a strong symbolic support, that in these difficult times, Moldova is not alone,” Vadim Pistrinciuc, director of the Moldovan think tank the Institute for Strategic Initiatives and a former member of the country’s parliament, told Euronews.

“It is a message with strong security implications: regardless of the Russian aggression in Ukraine, the security challenges Russia generates in Moldova – Moldova is not alone, a small country can be in the centre of European support,” he added.

He said it was also a moment for Moldova, a former Soviet country bordering Ukraine and Romania, to convince EU governments about the seriousness of their goal of joining the bloc.

Moldova was granted EU candidate status in June 2022 along with Ukraine a few months after Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine.

The country’s pro-Western government has repeatedly warned of Russian interference since the beginning of the war in Ukraine.

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Missiles have crossed into Moldova’s airspace and debris has landed there due to the war.

Pistrinciuc said the summit will also be a forum where Moldova can draw attention to its security challenges.

“For Moldova, the photo opportunity is equally valuable to shore up flagging public morale, in the context of tense social and political situation,” wrote CSIS experts Ilke Toygur and Mathieu Droin in an article ahead of the summit.

“The country has never received such a high-profile event in its history; therefore, the summit will be a live resilience test.”

Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar said: “We think Moldova’s future is in the European Union,” upon arriving for the summit, adding that it was his first visit to the country.

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One of the important side meetings of the summit will include the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan with other EU leaders. European Council President Charles Michel said he hoped the meeting would “be the occasion to find a common political will to normalise the relationship between the two countries.”

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American Idol Remembers Mandisa: Watch Danny Gokey, Melinda Doolittle and Colton Dixon’s Emotional Tribute

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American Idol Remembers Mandisa: Watch Danny Gokey, Melinda Doolittle and Colton Dixon’s Emotional Tribute


‘American Idol’ Mandisa Tribute: Singer Dead At 47 — Watch Performance



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A Colombian army helicopter has crashed in a rural area of the country's north, killing 9 soldiers

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A Colombian army helicopter has crashed in a rural area of the country's north, killing 9 soldiers

An army helicopter carrying supplies to troops crashed in a rural area in northern Colombia on Monday, killing nine soldiers on board, the country’s armed forces said.

In a statement, the Colombian military said the helicopter was taking the supplies to the municipality of Santa Rosa del Sur, an area that has recently experienced fighting between the National Liberation Army guerrilla group and the drug trafficking group known as the Gulf Clan.

TENS OF THOUSANDS OF COLOMBIANS PROTEST AGAINST LEFTIST PRESIDENT’S AGENDA

The military statement described the helicopter crash as an accident.

Nine members of Colombia’s military lost their lives when their helicopter crashed in a rural area of northern Colombia. (Photo by LUIS ROBAYO/AFP via Getty Images)

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“I regret the death of the nine passengers on board the army’s helicopter” Colombian president Gustavo Petro wrote on X on Monday. “It was supplying troops…that were conducting operations against the Gulf Clan.”

The military said the helicopter crashed around 1:50 pm local time. It was an MI-17 Russian-built chopper that is often used to carry troops and supplies.

Two officers were among the victims of the crash, which also included two sergeants and three privates. None of the passengers on the helicopter survived.

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Strack-Zimmermann blasts von der Leyen's defence policy

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Strack-Zimmermann blasts von der Leyen's defence policy

Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann, one of the lead candidates in the European elections, has issued a blistering verdict of Ursula von der Leyen’s first term in office.

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Strack-Zimmermann, who hails from the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE), is part of a three-candidate team representing the liberal forces in the bloc-wide poll between 6 and 9 June. Currently a member of the Bundestag, where she chairs the Defence Committee, she is vying for a seat in the European Parliament.

In a wide-ranging interview with Euronews, the contender denounced the policies of Ursula von der Leyen, the sitting president of the European Commission, in the fields of defence, economy and fundamental rights. Von der Leyen is running for a second mandate and is widely considered the frontrunner.

“I’m absolutely disappointed,” Strack-Zimmermann said on Monday, speaking in Maastricht hours before a debate with all lead candidates.

The liberal assailed the incumbent for taking too long to put defence at the very top of the EU agenda, only doing so, she said, after Russian troops broke through the borders of Ukraine and unleashed the largest armed conflict in the continent since World War II.

The wait, she added, was particularly striking considering von der Leyen had previously served as defence minister under the government of Chancellor Angela Merkel.

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“I have no idea why she didn’t talk about military security when she started to be the president of the Commission because she knows the topic, she has an idea of what happened,” she said, referring to the 2014 annexation of Crimea.

“I was surprised that didn’t say: ‘Come on, we have to do more in Europe,’ because she has the experience.”

When Russia’s invasion began in February 2022, von der Leyen’s executive was still dealing with the shockwaves sent by the COVID-19 pandemic and the roll-out of the recovery fund, built up by record-breaking amounts of joint borrowing and beefed up with stringent spending conditions to accelerate the green and digital transitions.

But in Strack-Zimmermann’s view, this does not cut it as an excuse for procrastination.

“I know the pandemic situation was terrible for everybody. But even then, you could see what (was happening) in Russia. And it was not this or that, it was both. I think if you are the head of the Commission, there is not one (single) topic,” she told Euronews.

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“It’s not a very sexy topic talking about weapons, talking about war. It sounds nicer if you are talking about the Green Deal, it’s a softer topic.”

The failure to provide 1 million rounds of artillery shells by March 2024, as the bloc famously promised to Kyiv, underlines the overall fiasco, she added. “It’s a question of time. It’s a question (of) if you say we will deliver it, we have to do it.”

On the economic front, the contender warned environmental policies and excessive bureaucracy put a damper on growth, scared entrepreneurs away and killed “every moment to have ideas to stay in Europe as a company.”

Regarding the protection of fundamental rights, Strack-Zimmermann said it was “unbelievable” that the Commission had unfrozen €10.2 billion in cohesion funds for Hungary one day before a crucial summit that Viktor Orbán had threatened to blow up.

Brussels argued the release was inevitable after Budapest approved a reform to address long-standing concerns about judicial independence. But the overhaul was deemed insufficient by the European Parliament, which filed a lawsuit against the Commission.

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“Everybody was very irritated,” Strack-Zimmermann said. “She’s responsible for it. And you could see that the Parliament is not amused about this situation.”

Despite her harsh assessment, the liberal admitted that being a Commission president was a “hard job.”

This interview is part of an ongoing series with all the Spitzenkandidaten. The full interview with Strack-Zimmermann will air on Euronews over the weekend.

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