00:00Final preparations are ongoing ahead of the launch of the European Union Enlargement Summit, organized by Euronews.
00:09Leaders from the European Union and candidate countries will meet in Brussels on Tuesday to discuss the future of European integration.
00:17Each candidate country will arrive armed with its own agenda, political constraints and timetable, with all hoping to join the bloc.
00:26Meanwhile, the EU will want to leverage the current political momentum, which favors enlargement.
00:32Ukraine and Moldova were the most recent countries to file applications to join the EU in 2022, following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
00:41In the Western Balkans, Montenegro and Albania are the favorites to join the EU in the next few years.
00:47North Macedonia and Serbia, on the other hand, still have some way to go before they can join the European project.
00:54This summit will be an opportunity to highlight the benefits of EU membership status, such as access to new markets,
01:01strengthening the EU's international influence and consolidating democracy in Europe.
01:06A special feature of this meeting is that the summit will be broadcast live on Euronews, allowing all Europeans to follow the content of these discussions in real time.
01:16Hundreds of riot police were deployed on Sunday as anti-government protesters clashed with loyalists of Serbia's President Aleksandr Vucic outside the Serbian parliament building in Belgrade.
01:32Tensions soared a day after tens of thousands of people joined a huge rally in the northern city of Novi Sat
01:39that marked the first anniversary of a train station disaster there, which killed 16 people.
01:44The disaster triggered a youth-led movement demanding political changes, which has challenged Vucic's grip on power.
01:51The protesters gathered in support of the mother of one of the Novi Sat station tragedy victims, who said she was launching a hunger strike near a tent camp outside the parliament building,
02:02which has been occupied by Vucic's loyalists since March.
02:06She said she was seeking accountability for the death of her son and the 15 other victims.
02:12She has also demanded that all detained protesters be released and that Vucic schedule an early parliamentary election,
02:19as sought by the university students at the forefront of the demonstrations.
02:23Both police and Vucic on Sunday accused anti-government protesters of attacking his supporters' camp.
02:30Protesters said most incidents were caused from within the camp.
02:35In an exclusive interview with Euronews, former NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen urged NATO allies to increase weapons deliveries
02:47to help Ukrainians defend themselves against Russian attacks.
02:51In my opinion, we should increase the delivery of weapons.
02:56For instance, the Germans should deliver long-range Taurus missiles.
03:03We should also help the Ukrainians defend themselves against Russian drones and missiles.
03:15Rasmussen did however welcome the US decision to sanction two major Russian oil companies, describing it as a positive step forward.
03:25It seems that gradually President Trump has lost patience with Putin and I think the Americans gradually realise that if they are to force Putin into a peace negotiation, they will have to put much more pressure on Russia.
03:48He called on the coalition of the willing to deploy a reassurance force to Ukraine as a security guarantee even before reaching a peace agreement.
03:57He warned that, quote, the coalition of the willing should not be a coalition of the waiting.
04:03Part of Torre dei Conti behind me collapsed at around 11.30 local time, followed by a second collapse shortly after just around 1pm.
04:22We are on Via dei Fori Imperiali next to the Colosseum, right in the heart of Rome's historic centre.
04:29We understand that the medieval tower had been abandoned for years and was undergoing renovation works.
04:36Three workers who were atop the tower right after the first collapse were rescued by Rome's fire brigade teams,
04:45while a fourth worker has been taken to hospital in serious conditions.
04:50Rome's mayor, Gualtieri and Italy's cultural minister both attended the scene.
04:54The local police sealed off the area, as you can see, warning both tourist passers-by and media crews to take their distance from the area amid fears of a further collapse.
05:06Prosecutors have opened an inquiry into what happened to establish the cause of the incident
05:13and who's to be held responsible.
05:15Giorgio Orlandi for Euronews in Rome.
05:43Huge workers, the people with human rights andThat.
05:44Thanks a lot, everyone!
05:45Thank you for watching the world!
05:46Thanks a lot!
05:50The world's life!
05:53The world's life!
06:08Thanks a lot!
06:11What I have done is that I have looked at the epochs, the years, but also the different objects and exhibits
06:35and looked at what role they had in the jeweiligen times, what was developed, what was discovered,
06:47what played a social role in society and I tried to present this with different technologies
06:54and experiences here.
07:05What do you think?
07:09Düfte sind rein emotional.
07:10Das ist der einzige Sinn des Reizes, der nicht rational gefiltert werden kann.
07:13Der geht also direkt ins limbische System.
07:15Das ist immer unmittelbar so, dass das Düfte eben Emotionen kriegen.
07:21Das ist der einzige Sinn des Reizes.
07:49I've heard so much about you, Mrs. Tesman.
07:55Hedda is fine.
07:57What have you heard?
07:59That before you were domesticated you were like fire.
08:04Could you tell us the events of the evening up to the insulate?
08:10Hedda?
08:12Yes?
08:13This is what you wanted, isn't it?
08:16The money and the house.
08:22Eileen.
08:27Why did you come here?
08:28To make sure I didn't love you.
08:30Change no big thing.
08:33To wait for the fair to win.
08:36Hedda?
08:37Hedda?
08:38In the heart of the Karakalpak desert, in northwestern Uzbekistan, far from the world's art capitals, stands a museum that changed the way we think about where culture can live.
09:01This is the Savitsky museum, known to many at the Louvre in the desert.
09:14Inside, every wall tells a story.
09:19From the bold lines of Russian avant-garde painters to the silent fragments of ancient Khwarezm.
09:27Here, forgotten art found its home.
09:30The museum was founded in 1966 by the Polish scholar of the Soviet Union.
09:37He was founded in the 1960s in the 1960s in the 1950s.
09:42He was founded in the 1960s by the century by the art of a artistic artist.
09:47The museum is second place in the world, the collection of Russian avant-garde after the famous Russian Museum of St. Petersburg.
09:55The collection of our museum includes more than 100,000 exhibits, and more than 80,000 of them
10:01will collect Igor Vítalievich Savitsky for his entire life, which he lived here in Karakal, Pakistan.
10:07Savitsky, a Moscow artist turned collector, fell in love with this remote region.
10:14What began as a modest effort to preserve local crafts became one of the world's greatest collections of suppressed and forgotten art.
10:25Among the museum's treasures are sculptural works carved from wood and stone, traditional jewelry, and handcrafted household items that reveal the artistry of everyday life in Karakal, Pakistan.
10:43Nearby vivid paintings capture local traditions and faces, scenes of people, nature, and color that echo through time.
10:53Together, these collections form a living dialogue between heritage and creativity.
10:58Savitsky's vision built a bridge between the past and modern identity.
11:03Конечно, ежегодно нас посещают много посетителей, как местные, так и зарубежные туристы.
11:10Интерес растет каждым днем, каждым годом, конечно.
11:15Если в прошлом году нас посетили свыше 60 000 человек, то уже за 9 месяцев посетили наш музей свыше 11 000 иностранных туристов и более 48 000 наших местных туристов.
11:32The Savitsky Museum is more than a gallery.
11:36The story of defiance, passion and rediscovery prove that even in the desert art can bloom and endure.
11:44And the ideas of a wider piece, the name ofbringeniembrguy. To the view of the purpose, the world has been done and extendedитиру.
12:05The Savitsky Museum of the Avenue Ent verstehen
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