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Latest news bulletin | June 15th, 2026 – Evening

Catch up with the most important stories from around Europe and beyond this June 15th, 2026 - latest news, breaking news, World, Business, Entertainment, Politics, Culture, Travel.

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00:01European leaders have welcomed the framework deal to end war reached between the United States and Iran.
00:10Russia fired a barrage of missiles at Ukraine, killing at least 11 people and setting Kiev's historic Dormition Cathedral on
00:18fire.
00:21European leaders have welcomed the framework deal to end war reached between the United States and Iran.
00:27On X, the president of the European Council, António Costa, said that he was looking forward to an end to
00:34this costly war.
00:35I commend the tireless diplomatic efforts of all those who made this deal possible, he added.
00:41The EU's top diplomat is on the same page.
00:45There is the deal that has been announced now by the US and Iran that is much welcomed by everybody.
00:51It is the first phase to open the Strait of Mousse and then move on to the negotiations on the
01:00critical topics like the nuclear issue,
01:02but also other critical issues that are important for the stability and peace in the region.
01:12For the British Prime Minister, this is an encouraging announcement and an opportunity to be seized.
01:18This is a hugely significant moment.
01:23We have long called for de-escalation and it is vital that all parties seize this opportunity
01:30to secure stability in the region and restore freedom of navigation in the Strait of Mousse.
01:37In a joint statement, the UK, together with France, Germany and Italy,
01:42have pledged to play their part in ensuring the free and unrestricted flow of traffic along the Strait of Mousse.
01:49British Prime Minister Kirstammer, French President Emmanuel Macron,
01:53German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni
01:56referred to a strictly defensive and independent mission aimed at reassuring commercial traffic
02:02and carrying out mine-clearing operations.
02:10Russia fired a barrage of missiles at several major Ukrainian cities overnight into Monday,
02:16killing at least 11 people and setting Kiev's historic Dormition Cathedral on fire.
02:22Five rescue workers were killed during the firefighting operations in the northeast Ukrainian city of Kharkiv
02:29and another five were killed in the capital.
02:31One more person was killed in the frontline southeastern city of Kherson.
02:36The roof of the centuries-old Kiev-Petersk Lavra Cathedral, a UNESCO World Heritage Site,
02:42caught fire and sustained substantial damage in the attack,
02:45and Ukrainian officials accused Russia of deliberately targeting it.
02:50Russia's defense ministry said it carried out a strike on military-industrial facilities in Kiev, Kharkiv, and Dnipro,
02:57but denied targeting the cathedral.
03:01In Kharkiv, authorities said Russian forces used a double-tap tactic,
03:05launching four additional drone strikes on the site of an earlier attack after emergency crews had arrived.
03:12Ukraine's Air Force said Russia launched 70 missiles and 611 drones overnight.
03:17Air defenses intercepted 50 missiles and 582 drones,
03:22while preliminary data showed 20 ballistic missiles and 27 attack drones hit 42 locations across the country.
03:35An Oslo court on Monday sentenced Norwegian crowned Princess Metemarit's son to four years in prison
03:42on two counts of rape and other offenses in a high-profile scandal that has rocked the monarchy.
03:48Marius Borg Hojbi was accused of 40 charges from rape to traffic violations,
03:54carrying a maximum possible sentence of 16 years in prison.
03:57Hojbi, who is not formally part of the royal household and has no steady job,
04:02was acquitted for two other counts of rape
04:05and convicted of repeated domestic abuse against an ex-girlfriend,
04:09traffic violations, issuing threats, and other offenses.
04:13Hojbi had denied the most serious allegations,
04:16including the rape charges, although during the trial he acknowledged that jealousy sometimes made him lose control.
04:23The rapes of which he was accused occurred between 2018 and 2024.
04:29The women themselves did not file rape charges against Hojbi.
04:33Instead, police investigating the August 2024 incident discovered videos on his phones and computers,
04:39which they said constituted rapes and contacted the women who were unaware of the events depicted.
04:46His defense team had called for him to serve 18 months for the other charges to which he pleaded guilty,
04:52including transporting 3.5 kilos of marijuana, physical assaults, and threats.
05:00Children under the age of 16 won't be able to access a range of social media platforms in the UK
05:07from next year,
05:08British Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced on Monday.
05:12According to Starmer, the ban, aimed at protecting young people from harmful content and excessive screen time,
05:19will affect a range of social media apps, including TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook.
05:27YouTube kids and messaging apps will not be affected.
05:31Because today is a big moment for our country.
05:35This is a big step.
05:37Real change for our children and our future.
05:41Because today I can announce that the government will ban access to social media for all children under...
05:51Starmer said that it will fight back if technology companies resist the move
05:55and acknowledged some teens will try to find their way around the ban.
06:00The decision follows a public comment period in which the government got around 116,000 responses from parents,
06:07the tech industry, and children.
06:09According to the UK government, more than 90% of the respondents said they wanted an under-16 ban.
06:16The measure, which will come into force early next year,
06:19follows similar bans and age restrictions for children and teens' access to social media
06:24in Australia, Canada, Brazil, and Indonesia.
07:08The European Union
07:12We are the only country in Spain that has now recognized the international community,
07:16not only in Spain, but also in the Iberian Peninsula,
07:19the 5th of Europe occidental and 196th of the world.
07:42We have a local geologist with a trascendence of space,
07:47which is very important because it will serve to see
07:50how the materials are varying from outside the Earth.
08:19This bólido, when it comes to temperatures greater than 2.000 grados, 7.000 to 8.000 grados,
08:27in that moment, the cuarzo cristalino with structure,
08:30loses the structure, becomes amorphous,
08:33and form a series of superficies,
08:36very straight, very rectas and very indefinidas,
08:40which are produced only by two causes,
08:43the impact of a meteorite or a bomb atómica.
08:45Here we don't have any constancy of a bomb atómica,
08:48but it will have to be the impact of a meteorite.
09:13The
09:14professional fishermen and critters are in despair.
09:16Pufferfish and invasive species that enter the Mediterranean through the Suez Canal,
09:20continue to devastate marine biodiversity.
09:24The pufferfish problem affects many Mediterranean countries,
09:27particularly Cyprus and Greece,
09:28where this poisonous and highly opportunistic predator
09:31has become dominant in recent years.
09:34In addition to containing a powerful toxin
09:37that makes them deadly if consumed,
09:39these fish have exceptional strong jaws,
09:41capable of biting through wood and metal.
09:44I took the fish, I took the fish.
09:47Look at the fish.
09:49The fish are useless.
09:50The fish.
09:50The fish.
09:51In 5 days, I will get the fish.
09:53It's a very difficult fish.
09:55The fish.
09:55It's a fish.
09:56It's apple.
09:59The fish.
10:01True insects is too soft.
10:03It can kill each one too,
10:09but it does not kill anybody.
10:12This
10:12These fishermen are calling on the government to immediately implement a subsidy program for the removal of these fish, allowing
10:18fishermen to cut them and reduce their population, while limiting the enormous damage that puffer fish are causing to their
10:24livelihoods.
10:26We have done research and we have seen that there is a big impact on the population of the population.
10:33We have identified this issue around 8.500€ for every ship.
10:40Puffer fish were first recorded in Greece in 2005, in Crete and the Dodecanese Islands.
10:47Twenty years later, they are now found throughout the country, with scientists warning that consuming them can be fatal.
10:55The Dodecanese Islands is a very dangerous toxin, since it is a disease. It causes brain damage, the brain stops.
11:08In general, it is a very big concern.
11:09Research is also underway to find ways to neutralize the feces toxin so that it may eventually become commercially viable
11:16or at least useful for other purposes.
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