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Orbán ally-turned-rival joins EPP group in European Parliament

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Orbán ally-turned-rival joins EPP group in European Parliament

The European Parliament’s centre-right faction has opened its arms to Péter Magyar, the thorn in Orbán’s side who is swapping Budapest for Brussels.

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Viktor Orbán’s fiercest political challenger Péter Magyar has joined the European parliamentary group that previously counted the Hungarian prime minister as one of their own.

The centre-right group of the European People’s Party (EPP) – which harboured Orbán’s Fidesz party until 2021 – opened its doors to Magyar’s Respect and Freedom (TISZA) party in a vote in Brussels on Tuesday, meaning the seven TISZA MEPs elected in June’s European elections will sit with the parliament’s biggest faction.

Magyar, a former insider within Orbán’s hard-right government, shocked the Hungarian nation earlier this year by blowing the whistle on what he described as a “mafia state,” unveiling his personal experience of the government’s corruption and propaganda machine.

He fronted TISZA’s campaign in the run-up to June’s ballot, securing an unprecedented 30% of the Hungarian vote and dealing a blow to Orbán’s Fidesz which, despite remaining the biggest party, scored less than half of the vote (44.8%) for the first time in an EU ballot since Orbán returned to power in 2010.

Magyar had previously said he would not take up his seat as Member of the European Parliament, but rowed back on Monday when he put the decision to a public vote on his Facebook profile.

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According to Magyar, a majority of 100,000 voters said he should switch Budapest for Brussels, prompting him to take up his seat in the hemicycle.

Magyar nonetheless vowed to continue to challenge Orbán’s grip on power back home: “I will work for change in Hungary,” he said.

“The change has started, and this is the beginning of the end for the Fidesz party,” Magyar also told reporters.

“I’m proud that we were led to the EPP, to the biggest group in the European Parliament, where we can really represent the interests of the Hungarian citizens. He (Orbán) is not so lucky,” Magyar said, adding that his TISZA MEPs would aim for positions of power in parliamentary committees in order to shape EU legislation in areas including industry and the environment.

Orbán’s Fidesz is currently politically homeless in the European Parliament and its lawmakers are therefore more limited in influence.

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But above all, Magyar pledged to take up the fight to restore the rule of law in his country, where democratic backsliding since Orbán’s entry into power is well-documented.

“Brussels didn’t really understand the situation in Hungary. Brussels and the European Parliament helped Prime Minister Orbán play this game in Hungary and use this article 7 procedure and the rule of law procedure for his own political purposes,” he said in a veiled stab at Brussels.

For years, the EU executive has held back funds from the government in Budapest in retaliation for persistent rule of law violations, which has allowed Orbán to nurture a fierce anti-EU campaign domestically.

Magyar also claimed this has held Hungary back economically.

“We are now the second poorest member state in Europe and the most corrupt one officially,” he said. “So the people are fed up with the corruption, with the lies and with the propaganda.”

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Speaking ahead of the meeting, EPP chairman Manfred Weber said: “It is great that a party asking the necessary questions in Hungary is joining the EPP.”

“This is a clear message from the Hungarian population that they want another political perspective,” Weber added, referring to TISZA’s solid performance in June’s European elections.

Magyar clarifies Ukraine position

Although now the most credible political challenger in Hungary, Magyar is himself deeply conservative and has emerged as an alternative opposition figure to the centrist and left-leaning parties that have tried to challenge Orbán’s rule.

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It means that he shares some of the Hungarian premier’s stance on the war in Ukraine.

“Putin is an aggressor. Ukraine is a victim. And the Ukrainian people have their own rights to defend their own territory,” he explained. “But we shared the position of the government. We will not send troops or weapons to Ukraine from Hungary.”

The EPP has repeatedly said that any partners, let alone group members, must be unwaveringly “pro-Ukraine.”

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The Hungarian Christian Democratic People’s Party (KDNP) – Fidesz’s junior coalition partner which holds a seat within the EPP group in the parliament – announced later on Tuesday it would leave the group.

KDNP claimed it could no longer tolerate what they described as the EPP’s “pro-war” stance.

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Magyar had previously said he would only join the EPP if the KDNP party left or was expelled. The choreography was likely dealt with by EPP chairman Manfred Weber, who visited Budapest last Friday to meet with both Magyar and KNDP chairman Zsolt Semjén.

The Tuesday meeting saw the EPP group welcome a total of fourteen new members, including seven lawmakers from Magyar’s TISZA as well as others representing the Dutch Farmer-Citizen Movement(BBB) and New Social Contract (NSC), the Danish Liberal Alliance, the Family Party of Germany, and the Czech Mayors and Independents party.

It consolidates its status as the biggest grouping in the European Parliament. Whilst these parties join the parliamentary group, they do not necessarily become members of the pan-European political party of the EPP.

TISZA’s entry into the European Parliament comes just three years after the EPP forced the lawmakers of Viktor Orbán’s hard-right Fidesz party out of their group amid controversy over democratic backsliding in Hungary – a country branded in a European Parliament resolution as an “electoral autocracy.”

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Team Races Against Time to Save a Tangled Sea Lion in British Columbia

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Team Races Against Time to Save a Tangled Sea Lion in British Columbia

A team of marine mammal experts had spent several days in Cowichan Bay, British Columbia, searching for a sea lion with an orange rope wrapped around its neck. As the sun set on Dec. 8, they were packing up, for good, when a call came in.

The tangled animal, a female Steller sea lion weighing 330 pounds, had been spotted on a dock in front of an inn, leading into the bay in southwestern Canada.

The rope was wrenched four times around her neck, carving a deep gash. Without help, the sea lion would die.

The team had been trying to find the sea lion for a month, and on that day, with daylight running out, the nine members that day knew they needed to work fast. They relaunched their boats and a team member loaded a dart gun and shot her with a sedative.

“Launching the dart is the easiest part of the whole operation,” said Dr. Martin Haulena, executive director of the Vancouver Aquarium Marine Mammal Rescue Society, which conducted the rescue alongside Fisheries and Oceans Canada. “It’s everything that happens after that, that you just have no control over.”

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Steller sea lions, also known as northern sea lions, are the largest such breed. They are found as far south as Northern California and in parts of Russia and Japan. A male Steller sea lion can weigh up to 2,500 pounds.

The Cowichan Tribes Marine Monitoring Team assisted the rescue society, calling it whenever the sea lion was spotted. The tribe named her Stl’eluqum, meaning “fierce” or “exceptional” in Hul’q’umi’num’, an Indigenous language, according to the rescue society.

After Stl’eluqum was sedated, she jumped from the dock into the water. Recent torrential rains and flooding had stirred up debris, making the water brown, and harder to spot the sea lion, Dr. Haulena said.

Several minutes after the sea lion dived into the bay, the drone spotted her and the team moved in.

The rope had multiple strands and it was wrapped so deeply that she most likely wasn’t able to eat, Dr. Haulena said. At first, the team had trouble freeing her.

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“You couldn’t see it because it was way dug in underneath the skin and blubber of the animal,” Dr. Haulena said.

After unraveling the rope, the team tagged her flipper, gave her some antibiotics and released her.

Freeing the sea lion was the culmination of weeks of searching and missed moments. The first call about the tangled marine mammal was made to the Fisheries and Oceans Canada hotline on Nov. 7, according to a news release from the rescue society. Then the society logged more calls.

The Vancouver Aquarium Marine Mammal Rescue Society, a nonprofit that works in partnership with the Vancouver Aquarium, searched for several days for the sea lion. The day they found her was the last of the rescue effort because bad weather was forecast for the area around the bay. The call that led them to Stl’eluqum came from the Cowichan Tribes, Dr. Haulena said.

The society, Dr. Haulena said, cares for about 150 marine mammals from its rescues every year — sea lions, otters, harbor seals and the occasional sea turtle. The group gives medical care to animals it takes in, such as Luna, an abandoned newborn sea otter who was three pounds when she was found and still had her umbilical cord attached.

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Many of the society’s rescues involve animals tangled in garbage or debris, Dr. Haulena said.

Stl’eluqum was tangled in nylon rope commonly used to tie boats or crab traps, he said. When sea lions get something caught around their necks it can grow tighter until it cuts into their organs, sometimes fatally, he said.

“It’s our garbage; it’s our fault,” Dr. Haulena said. “It’s a large amount of animal suffering and not a good outcome unless we can do something.”

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Poland foils ISIS-type bomb plot as Sydney attack triggers UK, Europe terror alerts

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Poland foils ISIS-type bomb plot as Sydney attack triggers UK, Europe terror alerts

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Polish authorities have foiled a suspected ISIS-inspired plot to attack a Christmas market, charging a student accused of preparing a mass casualty bombing, according to officials.

The case comes as Germany and the U.K. also raised security measures around religious and cultural events after the Sydney shooting Sunday in which 16 people were shot dead at a Jewish Hanukkah party on Bondi Beach.

Polish authorities say the suspect, identified as Mateusz W., 19, was detained in late November at an apartment in Lublin by officers from the Internal Security Agency (ABW).

According to Jacek Dobrzyński, a spokesperson for the Minister’s Coordinator of Special Services, investigators believe the teen had been studying how to make explosives and intended to join a terrorist organization to help carry out the attack.

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EUROPEAN CHRISTMAS MARKETS FORTIFY SECURITY MEASURES AS TERROR THREATS FORCE MAJOR OPERATIONAL CHANGES

Polish authorities foil an alleged ISIS Christmas market bombing plot targeting holiday shoppers. (Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

“The purpose of the crime was to intimidate many people, as well as to support the Islamic State,” Dobrzyński said in a statement shared on X.

Items linked to Islam and digital storage devices were seized, and the suspect has been remanded for three months as the Szczecin branch of ABW continues its investigation.

At a news conference, Dobrzyński also referenced a June case in which three 19-year-olds were charged over alleged extremist plots, including a reported plan to attack a school in Olsztyn.

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MOSSAD–EUROPEAN INTELLIGENCE OPERATION LAUNCHES SWEEPING CRACKDOWN ON HAMAS GLOBAL TERROR NETWORK

Authorities arrested five on suspicion of plotting a terror attack on a Christmas market in Bavaria.  (Juergen Sack/Getty Images)

“You are familiar with this issue from Olsztyn; now we have another example of preparing an attack before Christmas,” he told reporters, according to GB News.

In Germany, police in Lower Bavaria also arrested five men on Dec. 12 on suspicion of preparing an attack on a Christmas market, according to reports.

Authorities said an Egyptian national described as an Islamic preacher had allegedly called for an assault during gatherings at a mosque in the Dingolfing-Landau area, per Euronews.

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CANADIAN SPY CHIEF WARNS OF ALARMING RISE IN TEEN TERROR SUSPECTS, ‘POTENTIALLY LETHAL’ THREATS BY IRAN

In the U.K., counterterrorism officials have stepped up armed patrols and public alert messaging across London and other major cities. (Matthew Chattle/Future Publishing via Getty Image)

Special operations forces carried out the arrests, and investigators believe the group had begun early-stage preparations.

In the U.K., counterterrorism officials stepped up armed patrols and public alert messaging across London and other major cities on Tuesday.

“Sadly, as shown by the appalling attack on Sydney’s Jewish community during a Hanukkah event, we know they can also be a target for terrorist activity,” Deputy Assistant Commissioner Jon Savell said in a press release.

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He cited large festive gatherings, religious services and Christmas markets as potential targets.

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In the release posted Tuesday, he urged the British public to report anything that “doesn’t feel right” as part of the annual winter vigilance campaign.

Meanwhile, U.S. authorities say they separately disrupted a New Year’s Eve plot in Southern California.

Four alleged members of an extremist anti-capitalist, anti-government group suspected of rehearsing coordinated bombings against sites linked to two U.S. companies were arrested on Monday.

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Thousands of dinosaur footprints discovered on rock faces in northern Italy

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Thousands of dinosaur footprints have been found in a national part in northern Italy known as the Parco Nazionale dello Stelvio Branchi.

Experts say they are from enormous herbivores that lived there 210 million years ago in the Triassic period.

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