00:00The United Nations is referring to the three-year conflict in Sudan as an abandoned crisis,
00:05warning the scale of atrocities as so far failed to make the world react.
00:10U.S. President Donald Trump refuses to apologize after his attacks on Poplio XIV
00:15after the pontiff had called the Iran war unacceptable.
00:20Greenpeace has warned that the potential collapse of the inner protective shell
00:24at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant could have a catastrophic impact.
00:30The U.N. is referring to the three-year conflict in Sudan as, quote, an abandoned crisis,
00:36warning that the scale of atrocities as so far failed to make the world react.
00:41Briefing reporters virtually from Khartoum, the U.N. resident and humanitarian coordinator for Sudan,
00:47Dennis Brown, said the situation has become a cycle of suffering with no end in sight,
00:53particularly for women and girls.
00:55A plea from me, please don't call this a forgotten crisis.
00:58I'm referring to this as an abandoned crisis.
01:01The warning comes as Sudan marks three years since sliding into chaos
01:06when a power struggle between the military and paramilitary rapid support forces broke out into a civil war.
01:13According to the World Food Programme, some 21.2 million people are facing acute hunger.
01:19Three years of war in Sudan have created the world's largest humanitarian crisis.
01:24The conflict has ravaged livelihoods, uprooted communities and driven millions of people into hunger.
01:31Famine still stalks parts of this country.
01:34Aid workers, trucks and warehouses continue to come under attack,
01:38putting the lives of our colleagues at risk and disrupting our assistance.
01:43The WFP warns that Sudan's hunger crisis now risks being worsened by the escalation of the conflict in the Middle
01:50East,
01:51as disruptions in the Red Sea delay critical imports and push up the cost of food, fill and fertilizer.
02:02U.S. President Donald Trump refuses to apologize for his attacks on Pope Leo XIV after the pontiff had called
02:09the Iran war unacceptable.
02:11Trump has faced widespread backlash for his criticism of the Pope,
02:15including by Italian Prime Minister Giorgio Malone, who issued a statement supporting the pontiff.
02:22No, I don't because Pope Leo said things that are wrong.
02:26He was very much against what I'm doing with regard to Iran and you cannot have a nuclear Iran.
02:33Pope Leo would not be happy with the end result.
02:36You have hundreds of millions of people dead and it's not going to happen.
02:40So I can't. I think he's very weak on crime and other things.
02:46Pope Leo XIV pushed back on Trump, telling reporters he doesn't fear the Trump administration
02:51and reiterating the Vatican's stance on peace and reconciliation.
02:55I do not look at my role as being a political politician.
02:59I don't want to get into a debate with him.
03:02I don't think that the message of the gospel is meant to be abused in the way that some people
03:07are doing.
03:07And I will continue to speak out loud. This is against war. It will be a total of peace.
03:14Meanwhile, Trump caused further backlash over an image posted on his true social depicting himself as a Jesus-like figure.
03:22The post has since been deleted as the U.S. President claims the image was supposed to depict him as
03:27a doctor.
03:32Greenpeace has warned that a potential collapse of the inner radiation shelter at the defunct Chernobyl nuclear power plant
03:40could trigger a catastrophic release of radioactivity into the environment.
03:45The warning comes just days before the 40th anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster.
03:50In 1986, a reactor at the plant exploded, releasing radioactive clouds across much of Europe in what remains the worst
03:58nuclear disaster in history.
04:01Following the disaster, an inner steel and concrete structure was built around the destroyed reactor to prevent further radiation leaks.
04:10Years later, a high-tech dome was built around the structure for additional protection.
04:15However, last year, a Russian drone struck this outer shell, and Greenpeace said that despite some works, the protective shield
04:23could not yet be fully repaired.
04:26The organization has now warned that this increases the risk of radioactivity release, especially in the case of a collapse
04:33of the internal structure.
04:34But further works to the site have been impeded by Russia's ongoing attacks.
04:39In addition to Greenpeace's warning, the plant's director has also warned that if a rocket were to land near the
04:45facility, the structure could be at risk of collapsing due to the impact.
04:54Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz have announced a strategic defense partnership on Tuesday.
05:02The agreement focuses on deepening military cooperation, including drone technology, as Europe seeks to learn from Ukraine's battlefield experience in
05:11its war with Russia.
05:12,
05:13Ukrainian President Vнич razzar.date.
05:26Vladimir Putin
05:28has run out of space for the nuclear Control выступ, including drone defense units, and the flamers are made for
05:34virtual security.
06:00Ukraine has already signed
06:0310-year agreements with Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE.
06:07It is also in talks with Kuwait, Oman, Turkey as well as Syria.
06:17According to Ukrainian foreign minister, Sunday's Hungarian elections produced a positive European
06:23result that opens up new opportunities for the two countries.
06:35Ukrainian political scientist Petro Olichuk believes that the new Hungarian government will soon lift its veto on the EU loan
06:43intended for Ukraine.
06:44This is information about the fact that the new government should block the credit for Ukraine on 90 billion euros,
06:50and also not block the new package of anti-rosis sanctions.
06:55He will do it with a pretty pragmatic answer.
06:58After the election, Madyar, before the election, announced that his main goal is to restore relations with the European Union,
07:07and to block all the costs that were given by the European Union, but to break through the policy of
07:14the Orban's government.
07:14Russia expects that the extremely pragmatic bilateral relations will continue with the new Hungarian leadership,
07:22the Russian president's press secretary stated.
07:25Dmitry Peskov told the Russian news portal Life that the Kremlin will not congratulate Peter Magyar on his victory.
07:35At Milan's Linate Airport on Sunday, only 34 passengers boarded an easy jet flight to the UK, leaving 122 people
07:43behind in Italy,
07:44watching their plane depart without them.
07:47This travel chaos was the result of the EU's new entry-exit system being introduced at airport border control over
07:54the weekend.
07:56There were queues of up to three hours and reports of stranded passengers missing flights.
08:02The biometric control system was officially introduced across the Schengen area on Friday and is now in place in 29
08:08European countries.
08:11For non-EU travelers on short stays, the system replaces manual passport stamping with digital records.
08:17It collects facial images and fingerprints along with passport details.
08:23Airlines for Europe has called three hours of queuing at border control a systemic failure.
08:28The interest group called on the European Commission to suspend the system until the end of summer.
08:38Fatou, the world's oldest gorilla living in captivity, has celebrated her 69th birthday with a feast on Monday,
08:44munching on cherry tomatoes, beets, leeks and lettuce at the Berlin Zoo.
08:49There was no birthday cake as sugar isn't healthy for the aging primate.
08:54A western lowland gorilla, Fatou arrived in what was then West Berlin in 1959.
09:00She was believed to be about two years old at the time.
09:03Gorillas can live for around 40 years in the wild and longer in captivity.
09:08Fatou was likely born in the wild in western Africa, but the story goes that a French sailor captured and
09:13bartered her to cover his bar tab in Marseille, France,
09:16according to the Guinness World Records.
09:19A French animal trader then reportedly sold her to the zoo.
09:22These days, Fatou lives in an enclosure of her own and prefers to keep her distance from the zoo's other
09:27gorillas.
09:28She has lost her teeth and she suffers from arthritis and hearing loss.
09:33She's friendly with the zookeepers but can be a bit stubborn at times.
09:36Well, after a life of captivity for the entertainment of humans, let's say she's earned it.
10:23It's a piece of paper that is painted on a small boat.
10:26It builds a boat atelier.
10:28It puts it on the boat atelier.
10:29He's painted on the Seine and painted on his boat.
10:32It's why we have a very immersive aspect in the islands of Port-Villet.
10:35We are really at the level of the water.
10:37It's a piece of paper that is painted with a large touch, very spontaneity,
10:41which is very characteristic of the beginning of the impressionism.
10:59It's very characteristic of the art of Monet, which is a lot of the system of the series.
11:04We saw it with the Nymphéas, the Cathedral of Rouen, the Meules.
11:08He's painted exactly at the same place.
11:10He paints the same subject but with a different atmosphere, with a different horaire.
11:16Here, we have a view painted on the morning.
11:19So we have a very specific light.
11:20We have a very specific light with beautiful tones in the water.
11:23It's beautiful made of mauves and roses.
11:24It's beautiful made of mauves and roses.
11:30It's beautiful made of mauves and roses.
11:37It's beautiful made of mauves and roses here.
11:39You
Comments