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Latest news bulletin | October 6th, 2025 – Evening

Catch up with the most important stories from around Europe and beyond this October 6th, 2025 - latest news, breaking news, World, Business, Entertainment, Politics, Culture, Travel.

READ MORE : http://www.euronews.com/2025/10/06/latest-news-bulletin-october-6th-2025-evening

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00:00France finds itself in a renewed period of political crisis after French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu handed in his resignation this Monday morning,
00:12making him the shortest-serving prime minister since 1958, less than one month.
00:20He was appointed beginning of September to try to steer next year's budget plan through a deeply fragmented parliament and tackle a ballooning deficit that stands at 5.8% of GDP in 2024, well above the EU limit of 3%.
00:41His cabinet, that was announced on Sunday night, faced fierce criticism for its lack of renewal.
00:5012 out of the 18 ministers had already served in the previous government.
00:56So what's next?
00:58Well, looking ahead for French President Emmanuel Macron, it looks like the president faces difficult choices.
01:05He can either appoint a new prime minister, ideally from outside his camp.
01:11At this time, or he could call for a new snap parliamentary elections.
01:17But this option doesn't guarantee a less fractured parliament.
01:22And new elections could also give some advantage and more seats in parliament to the far right or the left, which is something that Macron does not want.
01:31And the last option is that Macron could also step down.
01:35But this remains a highly unlikely decision.
01:39Sophia Katzenkova reporting from Paris for Euronews.
01:45German Chancellor Friedrich Mertz says Germany should boycott next year's Eurovision Song Contest if Israel is excluded.
01:52In an interview with public broadcaster ARD, Mertz called it a scandal that Israel's participation is even being questioned.
02:06Germany is part of Eurovision's so-called Big Five, alongside France, Italy, Spain and the UK, the contest's biggest financial contributors.
02:14Spain has said it will withdraw from next year's competition if Israel is not banned.
02:19Broadcasters in the Netherlands, Ireland, Iceland and Slovenia have also threatened to pull out.
02:24Faced with increasing pressure, the European Broadcasting Union said it would hold an online vote in November on whether Israel should take part.
02:32Last year, Israel's involvement sparked numerous pro-Palestinian protests.
02:39Rescue teams in Slovenia found on Sunday the body of one of three Croatian mountaineers who had been swept away in an avalanche.
02:46The group had been climbing the Tosk mountain in northwestern Slovenia when the avalanche struck.
02:53Four members had stopped to rest, while the other three continued and were caught in the debris.
02:59Police say the search for the remaining two climbers has been suspended until Monday because of worsening weather and further risk.
03:07Slovenia has been hit by sudden cold weather, bringing early snow, strong winds and freezing temperatures.
03:16U.S.-based scientists Mary E. Branko and Fred Ramsdell and their Japanese peer Shimon Sakaguchi have won the 2025 Nobel Prize in Medicine.
03:30The three were awarded for their groundbreaking discoveries in peripheral immune tolerance,
03:35which is one way the body helps keep the immune system from attacking its own tissues instead of foreign invaders,
03:42a symptom of autoimmune diseases.
03:45The award is the first of this year's Nobel Prize announcements and was announced by a panel at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm.
03:53Nobel Prize announcements will continue throughout the week, with the Peace Prize announced on Friday.
04:12The data that we collect provides authorities with good insights to optimize traffic arrangements and
04:28good infrastructure development, drone-based traffic monitoring will help reduce congestion, improve traffic management and promote more sustainable urban planning.
04:42This year there have been just under 60 encounters of orcas ramming into boats off the coast of Portugal.
05:03In recent years, the number of incidents has multiplied.
05:06No injuries have so far been reported.
05:11However, the orcas have sunk in multiple vessels.
05:29Scientists believe that the goal of the orcas, which can weigh up to 11 tons, is to play and not attack.
05:35We can see this almost as a game, almost as a game that one puts it to one side, the other puts it to the other.
05:41Why? Because the lemme is, effectively, a fundamental piece for directing the embarcations.
05:47And, at the fact that they have to play with the lemme, they are, effectively, to move the direction of the embarcations
05:52and it seems to be able to get the interest.
05:55We can't say that these are comportments agressivos.
05:58At the moment, these animals are of great importance.
06:02If they want to be aggressive, it would be of another intensity, of another scale.
06:08The science community believes the ramings are likely a learned behavior among the animals.
06:13And what started with just a few juvenile orcas has now spread to a larger number of individuals in the population.
06:19The Institute for Nature Conservation and Forest created a safety protocol on how to react in the event of orcas approaching boats.
06:41There are two situations possible.
06:44One is to stop, parar as machines, re-re-engage as velas, not to stop the animals and wait until the animals fall.
06:55Another situation, and back to the water, since the river allow, it's to place machines in the air.
07:02Engender machines in the air.
07:03All right.
07:33We were trying to study how fast is the rate of material getting into the object.
07:39And what we suddenly found is that there was a very strong growth of material that was impacting the central object.
07:46And when we saw this, it's when we realized that it was a very special phenomenon.
07:52This is the first time that this kind of phenomena has been observed in such a low mass object.
08:03In astronomy, when we talk about quick things, for instance, we say the star formation happens quickly.
08:18And quickly, we mean a million years.
08:21OK, so quickly is very bad.
08:25But this object went from gaining material at a very different rate.
08:34So at a low level, let's say, to gaining material hundreds of times more efficiently in days.
08:43That is like something that happens in a matter of days and months in astrophysics is crazy.
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