Latest news bulletin | November 10th, 2025 – Evening
Catch up with the most important stories from around Europe and beyond this November 10th, 2025 - latest news, breaking news, World, Business, Entertainment, Politics, Culture, Travel.
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00:01The former French president Nicolas Sarkozy has been released from prison.
00:06A Paris appeals court has ordered him to be placed under judicial supervision pending his appeal.
00:13The decision comes less than three weeks after he began serving a five-year sentence for criminal conspiracy
00:19in a scheme to finance his 2007 election campaign with funds from Libya.
00:26The former president left the Paris prison in a car with tinted windows escorted by police on motorcycles.
00:34According to one of Sarkozy's lawyers, being in prison had been very hard for the former French president
00:41and his detention had caused him great suffering.
00:46Another of Sarkozy's legal team argued that Sarkozy would be safer out of prison than inside.
00:53The 70-year-old Sarkozy became the first former French head of state in modern times to be sent to prison after his conviction in September.
01:03Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that he wants to order 25 Patriot air defense systems from the U.S. on Monday.
01:15Russian attacks have caused more damage to its power infrastructure, resulting in scheduled blackouts in most of the country's regions.
01:25Zelensky acknowledged that the Patriot systems are expensive and that such a large batch could take years to manufacture.
01:33The Ukrainian president suggested that European countries could give their patriots to Ukraine and await replacements.
01:41Zelensky acknowledged last week that Ukraine had received more Patriot systems from Germany,
01:47as the German Defense Ministry said that Berlin has been Kyiv's biggest donor of the air defense systems.
01:53The Trump administration is not donating any arms to Ukraine, unlike the previous Biden administration.
02:02It is not known how many patriots are in Ukraine.
02:06The trial of Taleb al-Abdülmussen accused of killing six people and wounding over 300 others in a 2024 Christmas market attack in Magdeburg, Germany, began on Monday.
02:24The suspect is a doctor from Saudi Arabia with German residency since 2006.
02:30According to the indictment, Abdülmussen drove through the Magdeburg Christmas market on the 20th of December 2024, zigzagging at speeds of up to 48 kilometers per hour.
02:43If found guilty, Abdülmussen faces life imprisonment for murder.
02:48A special hall has been set up to host the trial, with space for over 140 co-plaintiffs and 400 witnesses expected to attend.
02:58He has described himself as an activist who is critical of Islam and a Saudi atheist.
03:04He has voiced support on social media for the far-right Alternative for Germany party, praising it for fighting the same enemy as him.
03:14He also ran a website offering to help people flee his home country.
03:19The trial is expected to continue for several months under high security measures.
03:29The European Commission and the European Parliament continue to work on the EU's next long-term budget.
03:35On Monday, the presidents of the two institutions met with the Danish Prime Minister, whose country currently holds the rotating presidency of the EU.
03:44The aim is to iron out differences.
03:47Lawmakers are particularly opposed to merging the common agriculture policy and regional cohesion policy into a single fund.
03:54A parliamentary majority believes this would dilute the European scope of these programs.
04:00The Commission is therefore proposing adjustments.
04:03These proposals concern three areas.
04:05So you have the reinforcement of the identity of the common agriculture policy.
04:10You've got the strengthening of the role of the regions.
04:13And the last point concerns, enhancing governance.
04:16In concrete terms, the Commission is therefore proposing to introduce a rural target to ensure minimum funding for agriculture.
04:24It also plans to give regional authorities more say in determining how cohesion funds are used.
04:29In the next budgetary architecture, the cluster comprising agriculture and regional policy accounts for 44% of the total budget, estimated at almost 2 trillion euros.
04:44The U.S. Senate took the first step to end the longest-ever government shutdown, after a group of moderate Democrats agreed to proceed with an agreement to fund the government.
04:56In a test vote held on Sunday, the Senate voted 60-40 to move toward passing compromise legislation without a guaranteed extension of healthcare subsidies, as Democrats have demanded for almost six weeks.
05:10They agreed to hold a later vote on extending Affordable Care Act tax credits that expire on January 1st.
05:17I expect Republicans to be at the table in the next few weeks.
05:20I expect the White House to be at the table.
05:22And if they do choose not to come to the table, they can own the disastrous premium increases that will continue to rise.
05:31The agreement includes bipartisan bills to fund parts of the government like food aid, veterans programs and the legislative branch.
05:39But other funding would be extended until the end of January, giving lawmakers more than two months to finish additional spending bills.
05:47It also includes a reversal of the mass firings of federal workers by the Trump administration since the shutdown began, and would ensure they receive back pay.
06:00As this year's UN Climate Summit kicks off in Brazil, the stakes are higher than ever.
06:07Taking place at the edge of the Amazon rainforest, this year's summit is set to spotlight indigenous peoples and land stewardship in addressing climate change.
06:16Over 3,000 indigenous delegates are set to participate this month as both members of civil society and negotiators.
06:25Also in the spotlight is the ambitious Tropical Forests Forever facility, a financial incentive championed by Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva,
06:35which already drew $5.5 billion in pledges by Friday.
06:40A notable absence this year is the United States, which will send no high-level officials to the summit.
06:47U.S. President Donald Trump has called climate change a hoax and withdrew the U.S. from the Paris Climate Accords the day he entered office.
06:56The historic Paris Agreement was signed 10 years ago, aimed at limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
07:04And while the world has made progress, many scientists now say it's unlikely countries will stay below that threshold.
07:11At least four people have been killed and 1.4 million displaced in the Philippines, where Super Typhoon Fong Wong made landfall late on Sunday.
07:24The tropical storm, with winds of 185 kilometers per hour and torrential rain, passed through Manila by dawn on Monday, causing flash floods and landslides along its path.
07:36It comes just days after Typhoon Kalmegi caused at least 224 deaths, and the search for 135 missing people had to be suspended due to the new typhoon.
07:49The Philippine State Weather Agency warns that a large portion of the country still faced heavy rains and severe winds, along with storm swells in coastal areas.
08:01Over 400 flights have been cancelled since Sunday, the civil aviation regulator said.
08:07The Philippines is battered by about 20 typhoons and storms each year.
08:12The country is also often hit by earthquakes and has more than a dozen active volcanoes, making it one of the world's most disaster-prone countries.
08:22Rescuers in Malaysia have recovered the bodies of seven migrants from Myanmar and found 13 survivors from a capsized boat.
08:33Some of those rescued are believed to be Rohingya Muslims.
08:37The UN High Commissioner for Refugees has urged regional governments to enhance search and rescue efforts.
08:43Nearly 600 Rohingya refugees have been reported missing or dead this year.
08:52Azerbaijan celebrated the anniversary of reclaiming control of the Karabakh region, marking a historic moment of the country and the whole region by closing the tragic chapter of decades of bloody conflict and starting a new chapter of peace and stability.
09:06President Ilham Aliyev celebrated the victory day as a mantis achievement for the country, which is breaking from its past, crediting the victory to strategic economic and military development while highlighting ongoing reconstruction in Karabakh.
09:20Aliyev also highlighted Azerbaijan's strategic partnerships with Pakistan and Turkey as their servicemen participated in the parade in Baku.
09:29Speaking alongside Aliyev, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Azerbaijan's Karabakh victory reshaped the geopolitical balances across Asia and Europe.
09:41As Baku and Ankara are now rebuilding the diplomatic and economic relations with Armenia and for the region as a whole.
09:48As the whole.
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10:10a sector of the Colosseum space that we can still be sure could be the
10:17amphitheater. The covered corridor was covered in paintings, paintings, stucs and in a first phase
10:26also from marmi and was certainly traversed by the emperor and his family that arrived
10:32so on the imperial floor without being seen and like a kind of epiphany.
10:37The lighting of this gallery is marked by two different systems, a warm light that indicates
10:44the path to visitors and enhances the beautiful marble of the walls and a colder light recalling
10:54the natural light that used to seep through the holes on the ceiling.
11:07This is my fourth time to the Colosseum. I've never been on the night tour and I do have to say that
11:13it is amazing down there at night, an entirely different vibe than it is during the day when
11:19it, you know, there are so many people. The night tour, you get to sort of feel the history a little
11:25more down there. You definitely, the quietness, the stillness, it is an excellent tour. I would highly
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