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Europe Today: febre do Mundial, nova era migratória na UE e mensagem do Papa a Espanha
Copa do Mundo mais longa de sempre arranca: México bate África do Sul e Coreia do Sul surpreende primeira equipa europeia. Na Europa entra hoje em vigor o Pacto de Migração e Asilo da UE, enquanto o papa Leão XIV encerra a visita a Espanha com missa em Tenerife.
LEIA MAIS : http://pt.euronews.com/2026/06/12/europe-today-febre-do-mundial-nova-era-migratoria-na-ue-e-mensagem-do-papa-a-espanha
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Copa do Mundo mais longa de sempre arranca: México bate África do Sul e Coreia do Sul surpreende primeira equipa europeia. Na Europa entra hoje em vigor o Pacto de Migração e Asilo da UE, enquanto o papa Leão XIV encerra a visita a Espanha com missa em Tenerife.
LEIA MAIS : http://pt.euronews.com/2026/06/12/europe-today-febre-do-mundial-nova-era-migratoria-na-ue-e-mensagem-do-papa-a-espanha
Subscreva, euronews está disponível em 12 línguas.
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NotíciasTranscrição
00:00Transcrição e Legendas Pedro Negri
00:53Transcrição e Legendas Pedro Negri
01:05Transcrição e Legendas Pedro Negri
01:10O que é isso?
01:39O que é isso?
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04:51O que é isso?
04:55O que é isso?
05:01O que é isso?
05:03É um momento que é isso?
05:06Não tem quemOR.
05:09O que é isso?
05:12So...
05:15Tem!
05:15Tem!
05:15O que é isso?
05:15na cidade de Mexico City.
05:17On o outro lado, você conhece,
05:19essa é a longa e a maior World Cup ever.
05:23Nós temos 104 games até a final,
05:26fechado até o dia 19 de julho.
05:28Nós temos três países austinados,
05:31Mexico, of course,
05:32os Estados Unidos e Canadá.
05:34E nós temos 12 grupos
05:36com 48 equipamentos de todo o mundo.
05:39Por favor, eu me desculpe que Irlanda não está lá.
05:43Bom, eu me desculpe, não é Itali.
05:46Mas eu estava falando que você está em boa empresa.
05:50Eu posso perguntar quem você está apoiando?
05:52Porque eu estou curioso agora.
05:53Bom, países como a Alemanha,
05:54a Belém e a Spain.
05:55São países que têm uma especialidade em meu coração.
05:57Eu vou estar shouting para eles.
05:58Ok, eu não posso dizer.
06:00Eu estou totalmente neutral,
06:01por ser italiano e por ser o correspondente de este programa.
06:05Talvez eu vou dizer no próximo episódio
06:07que eu não quero ganhar este World Cup,
06:10mas, jokes apart, vamos para os jogos.
06:13François antecipou o resultado de México.
06:16Nós tínhamos dois jogos.
06:18Nós tínhamos dois jogos.
06:18Nós tínhamos dois jogos.
06:19Nós tínhamos 2-0 South Africa.
06:22E nós tínhamos South Korea,
06:24a República da República da República 2-1,
06:27Chequia.
06:28Então, a primeira equipada para jogar este World Cup
06:32começou com a desfeitação.
06:35Então, a ranking,
06:36a ranking,
06:37a ranking.
06:38A ranking,
06:38a mexico,
06:39a Korea,
06:40a leading.
06:41A group A,
06:42a 3 points.
06:43A Chequia e a South Africa,
06:440 points.
06:46May I be honest,
06:47did you watch the games?
06:48I did not.
06:49I confess I did not,
06:50mas eu vou watch the ones
06:51quando eu estou interessada em todos os jogos.
06:52Ok.
06:53There were 2 diferentes,
06:55very diferentes games,
06:56e podemos ver
06:57algumas fotos.
06:57dos outros.
06:59Mexico really dominated
07:01its game
07:02with one goal in the first half,
07:05one goal in the second half,
07:07and basically no risk,
07:10no occasion from South Africa.
07:12There was a record in this game
07:15because it was,
07:16we got 3 red cards.
07:18So South Africa ended the game
07:20with down to 9 players,
07:22Mexico ended with down to 10 players,
07:24and this is the most red cards
07:28in an opening game
07:30in a World Cup ever,
07:32while the most red cards
07:34in a single match
07:35in a World Cup was in 2006
07:37in Germany,
07:38Portugal versus the Netherlands,
07:40the famous Battle of Nuremberg.
07:42This is another story.
07:43Let's get back to America.
07:46For South Korea,
07:46Czech Republic was very much
07:50closely contested.
07:53South Korea conceded the first goal,
07:55but then there was a comeback
07:56and they scored in the minute 80
07:59for a final result of 2-1.
08:02We have seen,
08:04we watched some goals
08:05yesterday night.
08:06We will watch others.
08:08We have very great players
08:10in this World Cup.
08:10We have, of course,
08:11Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo,
08:14the two greatest players
08:16of our time,
08:18I would say,
08:18of this century so far.
08:20They are both at their last dance,
08:23probably in a World Cup at least.
08:25We will have Kylian Mbappé,
08:27Florian Wirtz,
08:29many other players,
08:30rising stars such as Arda Gouler,
08:33other seasonal players like Harry Kane,
08:36many players to watch.
08:38We also have some issues
08:40in this World Cup
08:41and we have a big elephant in the room.
08:44The participation of Iran.
08:46Of course,
08:46we know that Iran is one of the team playing
08:49and Iran is at war
08:51with one of the host countries,
08:53the United States.
08:55And Iran has to play
08:57its three games of the group stage
09:00in the United States,
09:02two in Los Angeles and one in Seattle.
09:04This, of course, is complicated.
09:06Let's listen to Gianni Fantino,
09:08the president of FIFA, on this matter.
09:10When people were saying,
09:11well, it would be impossible for Iran
09:13to come to the World Cup,
09:16I told them and I promised them
09:18that they would come
09:19and if I had to go with a bus to Tehran
09:23and drive them here,
09:25I would do that.
09:27Their answer was,
09:28we will take the bus ourselves
09:29and drive it if need be.
09:31We qualified and we want to play.
09:33And this is the spirit of football.
09:35Of course, there are challenges.
09:38Of course, it's not easy.
09:40Chill, relax, everything is under control,
09:43said Gianni Fantino in another part
09:45of this conference.
09:46But indeed, there were some consequences.
09:49The first one is that Iran had to move
09:53its training base from the US to Mexico.
09:57There are also some concerns
09:59for other aspects of the tournament.
10:03Another one is the US policy
10:06on migration and stricter border controls.
10:09For example, the first victim
10:10was this referee Omar Artan.
10:12He's a Somalian referee.
10:14He's one of the most prominent
10:17African referees.
10:18He was said to be part of the World Cup.
10:21But it was denied the entry in the US.
10:24He was stopped at the Miami airport.
10:27And he had to come back to Somalia.
10:29In Mogadishu he was welcomed as an hero.
10:32And by the way, the UEFA,
10:33the European football body,
10:34picked him up for the Super Cup game.
10:39Paris Saint-Germain versus Aston Villa.
10:42So a very great gesture, I would say,
10:45from the Europeans.
10:46But let's back to America.
10:47And let's back to the upcoming games.
10:50because there are games every day,
10:53literally every day.
10:54Today, 9pm Brussels time, of course.
10:58Group B, Canada versus Bosnia and Herzegovina
11:01and other European countries.
11:03So it's not part of the EU.
11:05And always on Sunday, I would say,
11:09because it's 3am United States versus Paraguay.
11:14the debut of the long-awaited debut of the US team.
11:17And then on 9pm Brussels time on Sunday,
11:20Qatar, Switzerland.
11:22So these are the games.
11:24Maeve, get ready if you are not ready.
11:27I'm ready.
11:28And Brussels is ready in such an international city.
11:30It'll be noisy.
11:31It'll be noisy.
11:31Because we have citizens from all the countries participating.
11:33In Bratis, everyone is ready, even Ursula von der Leyen.
11:37The president of the EU Commission posted this picture
11:40in her social media.
11:42And this is a tribute.
11:43This picture is a tribute of another one
11:46from a former president of the Commission,
11:48Jacques Delors, who was a massive football supporter
11:52of the French team, Lille.
11:54Do you think you can do that?
11:56I could try.
11:57I'm good at football.
11:58And she's brilliant too.
11:59Okay, let's try.
12:01I want a picture of you to be posted in the next episode.
12:05But while waiting for the next games,
12:09please take a look to our FIFA World Cup coverage
12:11on euronews.com and see you on Monday.
12:14Ciao.
12:15Thank you so much, Vincenzo Gineveva,
12:16for bringing all those details and all that passion
12:19about the football.
12:20We're so excited about all the games and the coverage
12:22here as well on euronews.com.
12:24But now back to business.
12:25European finance ministries are continuing today
12:27their two-day gathering in Luxembourg
12:29after the European Central Bank warned
12:32in its latest monetary policy decision on Thursday
12:34that, quote,
12:35the war in the Middle East is generating inflationary prices,
12:38justifying an increase in interest rates.
12:41For more, we can bring in our very own Europe editor,
12:43Maria Tadeo, who's been in Luxembourg
12:44for the last couple of days following the meeting
12:46and is still there for us this morning.
12:48Over to you, Maria.
12:49Yes, Maeve, indeed.
12:50It is day two here in Luxembourg
12:52where European finance ministers are gathering
12:54with energy very much in focus.
12:56This is their biggest concern.
12:58They're having to deal with the European economy
13:00in which the growth outlook,
13:02the growth expectations have been dented
13:04as a result of the instability in the Middle East
13:07and the situation in Iran.
13:08But inflation is going up as a result of the energy crisis
13:12and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
13:15That instability now pushing the European Central Bank yesterday
13:18to increase interest rates by 25 basis points to 2.25 percent.
13:23Up until now, for the most part,
13:24the European Central Bank had kept interest rates steady.
13:28Also in attendance yesterday in this meeting,
13:30the head of the International Monetary Fund, Kristalina Georgieva,
13:34who told finance ministers at this stage they have to be careful
13:38in the way that they deal with the energy crisis.
13:41Measures have to be tailored and they have to be targeted.
13:44Otherwise, there is a risk that they could contribute
13:46to inflationary pressures.
13:48And that is exactly what the European Central Bank is trying to avoid.
13:52The head of the IMF also told me that at this point,
13:56and this is critical and it is relevant,
13:58as conversations around the next European common budget are about to begin,
14:02that Europeans should and they must invest together collectively
14:06in areas that are fundamental for the 27, meaning energy and defense.
14:11So, once again, the IMF reiterating an endorsement of joint public borrowing
14:17when it comes to the European Union doing it together.
14:21Let's take a look at this conversation.
14:23Unfortunately, conditions have worsened since we put out our projections
14:29for European growth and inflation in April, growth down, inflation up.
14:36It is now even worse.
14:38So, we are downgrading once again our growth projections for the Eurozone
14:44and uplifting once again our inflation projections.
14:49It is a very difficult balancing act for Europe to manage.
14:54And just a quick word on this point, you are the head of the IMF,
14:58but you are also a commissioner and you are from Bulgaria.
15:01And you like to repeat that you are a European above all.
15:04The European talks around the budget, they are about to begin.
15:07This is going to be a difficult fight.
15:09What would you advise to everyone sitting around the table,
15:11the capitals, but also the commission?
15:14Concentrate on European competitiveness.
15:16This is to make sure that the European budget has the strength
15:20to lift up productivity and growth in Europe.
15:26And that means fund together where together you would be more impactful.
15:34Defence, energy security and of course do it with the recognition that in exchange,
15:42the European Commission has to demonstrate value for money.
15:48So, go at it together, that's your message still, with the joint debt?
15:51When you don't have much money, spend it wisely, put it together, invest wisely.
15:57Just in energy, if we invest jointly, it would be 7% cheaper for the European taxpayer.
16:08Now, moving on, after years of bitter political wrangling,
16:12the European Union's new migration and asylum pact takes effect today.
16:16The reforms are designed to reshape how Europe handles asylum seekers and migrants,
16:21but they remain deeply controversial.
16:23For more, I'm joined now by our EU correspondent, Angela Scugins.
16:26Good morning, Angela.
16:27Just tell us, what kind of tone is Brussels trying to strike with this overhaul?
16:32Good morning. So, it's firm but fair.
16:34This is the rhetoric that we've heard ricocheting across the European Union in the run-up to today.
16:38In a nutshell, the 27 EU member states have had two years to implement the Migration and Asylum Pact.
16:44This aims to overhaul the EU's rules when it comes to new arrivals.
16:48Now, they've had those two years and they've implemented them to varying degrees.
16:53But in a nutshell, this spans 10 major legislative files,
16:56but the most important being the border checks, the safe third country concepts and the return hubs.
17:01This is shorthand for deportation centres set up outside of the European Union.
17:07This has got NGOs particularly up in arms.
17:09They're concerned that these individuals will not be regulated properly as it sits outside the confines of the EU rules,
17:16with some NGOs such as Amnesty International describing this as potentially punitive and cruel.
17:21And remind us why this reform was necessary.
17:24Yeah, so if we look at the data, there does seem to be a problem when it comes to returning
17:27some of these individuals.
17:29The most up-to-date information that we have from the European Commission highlights that only 29% of individuals
17:35in the last quarter were actually returned to their country of origin once the courts deemed them illegal to stay.
17:41So clearly this puts a strain on communities as well as social services.
17:44But Frontex also has some interesting data stating that arrival levels have fallen for the last four years.
17:51So it's important to hold those facts side by side.
17:54But clearly the EU member states are crying out for help.
17:57We know the Polish Prime Minister, Donald Tusk, which is a country that has accommodated a large amount of Ukrainian
18:02refugees.
18:03They've stated they don't want any new arrivals as part of this scheme.
18:06But then we look at Spain, which sits on the band of those Mediterranean countries, that country's Prime Minister, Pedro
18:12Sanchez, only last month gave 500,000 undocumented migrants the legal ability to stay.
18:19So clearly this is a polarising issue, a political flashpoint, clearly.
18:23I spoke to the man of the hour, the European Commissioner for Migration, Magnus Brunner, in exclusive comments to Euronews.
18:30I put to him the first question that I asked him was about this division.
18:33I asked whether migration was a problem or an opportunity for Europe.
18:39It's both, I would say.
18:40It used to be a problem, definitely.
18:43Ten years ago we did take a lot of responsibility as a European Union, but we didn't have a system.
18:48We didn't have the rules, the fitting rules, and we didn't have control over what is happening in the European
18:53Union.
18:54So it used to be a problem.
18:55It became a problem.
18:56But it can also be an opportunity in the future if we have control, if we manage to fight the
19:04illegal migration, then there is room.
19:07Can you explain how the Migration and Asylum Pact gives the control back to the 2017 member states?
19:12Yeah, we have firm but also fair new rules.
19:17This is the first time we have actually a comprehensive system, a European-wide comprehensive system with better border controls,
19:26border checks at the external European border,
19:29asylum procedures at the border, being more efficient, effective, quicker also with the asylum procedures.
19:37So it's a whole set of new rules, of reforms also.
19:43Do you think Europe is ready for the change in mindset?
19:46Of course it is.
19:47And we are ready to do the reforms and we have to bring our European house in order.
19:53That's the first thing.
19:54That's what we're doing with the reforms.
19:56And the next step will be to get more engaged with third countries outside the European Union to work together
20:02with them on readmission, for instance, on returns also.
20:07And that's where we have to put the leverage we have as a European Union on the table, always together
20:12with migration, be it visa policy, be it trade policy.
20:16And if we look at the most up-to-date data from the European Commission, only 29% of individuals
20:22that were ordered by the courts to go back to their country of origin were actually deported.
20:27Is the EU migration and asylum pact the silver bullet that will fix this?
20:32It's not about the asylum pact, actually.
20:35That's about the return regulation.
20:37And the return regulation will improve the situation, of course, as well, because, as you said, it's just not acceptable.
20:42It's only that only one out of four at the moment who have no right to stay in the European
20:47Union are being returned.
20:48So that's why we have the return regulation.
20:50That's that was a missing piece from the pact, actually.
20:54Pope Leo is visiting the Canary Islands.
20:57This is a major Spanish migration hotspot.
20:59He received a standing ovation from the Spanish parliament earlier this week, calling for love and dignity for some of
21:05the most fragile individuals.
21:07Do you think that the views of the pope in terms of migration are compatible with Brussels?
21:13Definitely.
21:14Yes, I would say I had the chance to meet the pope myself some months ago and I had a
21:20conversation with him exactly on that topic.
21:24And yes, of course, I mean, human dignity, international law.
21:29So this is all in the center also of of the reforms.
21:33We're not talking we're not negotiating about about these these facts that that is really important for us also as
21:40as lawmakers, as a European Commission altogether.
21:44And we have set standards also and we have to differentiate between illegal migration, where we have to do everything
21:50to fight against, because it's about the business of the smugglers and the human traffickers and legal migration as a
21:57second part.
21:59And the third part is protection, of course.
22:01And that's where the pope comes into play.
22:03And we have to do everything and we have a responsibility also as a European Union to protect those people
22:09whose life is under threat in their home countries.
22:11And that's what we try to do, fighting illegal migration, pathways for legal migration and, of course, protection.
22:21Well, as you heard there, Pope Leo is in the Canary Islands, where he's wrapping up his visit to Spain
22:25with a special mass at the port of Tenerife.
22:28For more, we can bring in Paloma García Ovejero, a former Vatican spokesperson and now the head of communications for
22:34the NGO Mary's Meals International.
22:37Good morning, Paloma. Thanks so much for bringing us up to speed on the pope's visit.
22:41Just tell us first, what were the main takeaways from his visit and how have locals been reacting?
22:46Well, definitely. Dignity has no passport.
22:51And from the port of shame to the port of hope, those are, for me, the main highlights of yesterday's
22:59speech.
23:01But the emotion, the hugs, the tears, that was a historic moment, not only for the port of the Abinagin,
23:12but for the Canary Islands and for everyone involved in the Mediterranean Sea, in the migration negotiations.
23:24This is not about the present. This is about the future and also, of course, the future of Europe.
23:31Well, you just heard there from Magnus Pruner, the European Commissioner for Migration, on the very topic of migration.
23:36And the pope alluded to what European governments are doing when it comes to this migration pact.
23:41He talked about their indifference to the plight of migrants.
23:44Let's just take a listen together to Pope Leo.
23:48We cannot grow accustomed to counting the dead.
23:51Human dignity has no passport and does not lose its value when crossing a border.
23:57Tell us more, Paloma, about what you have to say about this.
24:01Well, don't forget that Pope Leo has just started his pontificate.
24:07Donald Trump will disappear.
24:10Ursula von der Leyen will disappear.
24:12Many of us will disappear.
24:14And probably he will stay as a pope because he will stay there until he dies.
24:22So his words come from the gospel 2,000 years ago.
24:27This is not about politics.
24:29This is about human beings.
24:32And this is also about the new era.
24:36This is the pope for a new era.
24:39And probably he will stay with us.
24:42He will come back to Spain.
24:44And he will repeat once and again.
24:47This is about being human and trying not to flee from their countries.
24:56Paloma, Garcia, Ovejero.
24:58Thank you so much for bringing your point of view there on the Pope's visit to Spain.
25:02You can read more, of course, on that visit on Euronews.com.
25:05Or you can reach out to us with your thoughts or views.
25:08Europetoday at Euronews.com.
25:09That is our email address.
25:11In the meantime, though, stay tuned for more news and analysis here on Euronews.
25:14Take care and see you very soon.
25:42Euronews.
26:09A CIDADE NO BRASIL
26:13A CIDADE NO BRASIL
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