00:00As Trump's 48-hour ultimatum nears its end, Tehran has threatened the U.S. and its regional allies with retaliatory
00:06strikes against their energy infrastructure.
00:10France's municipal run-off election delivers a mixed verdict for the country's main political forces after the left-held Paris
00:17and the far-right scoring a symbolic win.
00:21In Paris, the Grand Palais is hosting an exhibition tracing the final years of the French painter Henri Matisse.
00:30Tehran has threatened the U.S. and its regional allies with retaliatory strikes against their energy infrastructure, specifically targeting facilities
00:38powering American military bases.
00:40The warning comes as President Donald Trump's ultimatum regarding the opening of the Strait of Hormuz is set to expire
00:47by the end of Monday.
00:48The President previously warned that the U.S. would target Iranian power plants if the waterway, which has seen weekly
00:55tanker traffic plummet from 100 transits to just 7, remained close to shipping.
01:00Throughout the weekend and into early Monday, Iran's neighbors, including Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Kuwait, continued to intercept
01:08incoming ballistic missiles.
01:10While one missile struck an inhabited area near Riyadh, Israel launched what it called a wide-scale wave of strikes
01:17against Tehran.
01:18In Israel, during his visit to southern communities, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described it as a miracle that no lives
01:25were lost after an Iranian missile hit a secretive nuclear research site late Saturday.
01:30Speaking to a Farsi-language satellite network, U.S. Navy Admiral Brad Cooper confirmed that missile and drone manufacturing sites
01:37are being targeted to eliminate future threats.
01:40He suggested the Iranian public wait for a clear signal from the U.S. President before taking to the streets
01:46as projectiles continue to be launched from populated areas.
01:50The war launched by the U.S. and Israel on February 28 has now claimed over 2,000 lives.
01:59France's municipal elections have delivered one clear message tonight, and it's that the left is holding on to the major
02:06cities in France, including the capital, Paris, where I'm currently standing.
02:11And behind me, left-wing supporters have just finished celebrating the victory of socialist mayor Emmanuel Grégoire in the second
02:20largest city of France, Marseille.
02:22Well, socialist Benoît Payon was also re-elected, but the left remains divided.
02:28The hard-left France-unbowed party also made quite some significant gains this Sunday, even though they were excluded from
02:36alliances, especially by the socialists during the campaign, who accused France-unbowed of anti-Semitism.
02:44The far-right failed to win some of the major cities that it was targeting, including Marseille and the southern
02:50city of Toulon.
02:51But in Nice, Éric Ciotti, an ally of the far-right national rally, ended up winning.
02:59President Emmanuel Macron's Renaissance party also made some major gains, including the southwestern city of Bordeaux.
03:07But this Sunday is more than just about local politics.
03:11It is also an early sign of how the Battle of France's 2027 presidential election is beginning to take shape.
03:26With Donald Trump's victory, gender ideology and wokeness have been pushed back.
03:32One can proudly embrace Christianity and say no to migration.
03:36This is how Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban opened his speech at the fifth Conservative Political Action Conference in Hungary.
03:44Leaders of far-right parliamentary parties from Austria, the Netherlands, Germany and Spain also addressed the conference.
03:53If we succeed here, we will not only protect Hungary, but also break the progressives of the Brussels bridge.
04:05Orban also said that under the leadership of the United States, a new conservative world order is taking shape in
04:12which Hungary serves as the leading force in Europe.
04:16And despite all of the attacks, you have to understand, he keeps on winning.
04:21Participants arrived at the closed-door event in the utmost secrecy.
04:26But Turing News managed an interview with Moldova's former president, who says nowadays it is EU interference which should be
04:33feared.
04:47Several CPAC speakers also argued that the EU would be committing suicide by admitting Ukraine.
04:58Italians head to the polls to decide whether to approve or reject constitutional changes affecting the judiciary.
05:06The two-day referendum, led by the Conservative Prime Minister, Giorgia Maloney, has sharpened political divisions and unified the centre
05:15-left opposition.
05:16As of 7pm, according to the Interior Ministry, turnout stood at 38.90% of eligible voters.
05:23This is higher than in previous two-day referendums.
05:27In 2025, just over 16% had voted by 7pm.
05:32Maloney says the reform would make the justice system more efficient and less politicised.
05:38But critics argue it could undermine judicial independence and increase political influence over courts.
05:45The most controversial proposal would replace elections for most members of the Superior Council of the Judiciary,
05:52the body that governs judges' careers with a lottery system.
05:57The vote is seen by many commentators as a test for Maloney's government one year ahead of national elections.
06:08For many farmers in Germany, the war in Iran has now reached their fields.
06:13In March, when winter wheat, rapeseed and other crops urgently need nutrients,
06:18fertilizer is becoming scarcer and more expensive.
06:21One reason is the blocked Strait of Hummus.
06:24A large portion of the global fertilizer trade passes through it.
06:27At the same time, energy and transportation costs are rising.
06:31You know farmers, they have not only 1 kg of Stickstoff on their farm.
06:37They have of course a huge problem.
06:39Because the whole vegetation is thrown behind, the plants can't have a healthy child development.
06:45They will have a problem in supply and quality.
06:49Normally, fertilization proceeds according to plan during these weeks.
06:53But this time, things are very different.
06:54Since late February, markets have come under pressure, deliveries have stalled and prices are rising.
07:00But the Sonnabend, for 1,5 weeks, went through the drama with the Riesen-Diesel-Sprünge.
07:08Also, these Sprünge were in the Sprit market.
07:11And as our spirit said that he could not deliver us, because the pistols are not produced anymore,
07:19or just mass of hydrogen produced, I could imagine that this has a lot of influence on us.
07:27And a little bit is the Krieg here.
07:29The European agriculture is also heavily dependent on Russia for fertilizer.
07:34Around 20% of fertilizer imports into the EU still came from Russia in 2025.
07:40But for farmers, the question isn't where from.
07:42Their fears for their livelihoods are too great.
08:00Peters is still trying to mitigate the shortage with fermentation residues.
08:04But if fertilizer remains scarce, the crisis could soon affect consumers as well.
08:11The exhibition Matisse 1941-1954, which highlights the final years of French painter Henri Matisse,
08:20opens its doors at the Grand Palais in Paris.
08:22More than 300 paintings, drawings, books and cut-out gouaches trace this key period in the artist's life considered his
08:30most prolific.
08:32This period was for Matisse, who was still a old artist, since he was 70 years old, 1941, 84 years
08:40old, when he was in 1954 at Nice.
08:43And it was the most prolific, among the most prolific of his career as a painter.
08:48It's the moment where he will reinvent himself through a medium, which is the gouache découpé.
08:55And through this medium, he will create works that will be more and more monumental.
09:00And it's this aspect of Matisse that we will be able to discover at Paris.
09:03The exhibition spans two floors and the works are presented in an atmosphere inspired by the artist's working conditions.
09:23The exhibition brings together the painter's best-known works alongside pieces that remain little known in France and runs until
09:32July the 6th.
10:02The idea was, from the beginning, to, let's say, give back to the public the real proportions of the movement.
10:11And we have done that thanks to the fact that we have rebuilt the real perimeter, the Crepidine of the
10:20Colosseum,
10:21and at the same time the dimension of all the arcs of the furniture, which were covered by ground, that
10:30had been covered for centuries.
10:46We wanted to restrain the public a part of the two missing ambulances of the Anfiteatro Flavio,
10:57that have fallen from the VI sec.C. for several reasons.
11:02The main thing is that in this sector the ground is more stable.
11:22The only thing should be Panzer II.
11:24The main thing is that in this sector the sanctification itself is where we need a terminal,
11:27The main thing is that this is the same,
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