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UE concede prestito da 3 miliardi all'Ucraina, colloqui USA-Iran restano fragili

L'Ucraina ha ricevuto 3,2 miliardi di euro come prima tranche del prestito di sostegno da 90 miliardi dell'UE. Intanto, molti iraniani smentiscono che l'ONU visiterà gli impianti di arricchimento nucleare nel Paese.

ALTRE INFORMAZIONI : http://it.euronews.com/2026/06/26/ue-sblocca-prestito-da-3-miliardi-allucraina-negoziati-usa-iran-restano-fragili

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00:15Buongiorno, è friday, 26 Juni.
00:18You're watching Euronews, and this is Europe Today.
00:22Welcome to the program, I'm Stefan Grobe.
00:25Coming up, solidarity with Ukraine.
00:28The country has received 3.2 billion euros as the first disbursement under the European Union's 90 billion euro support
00:36loan.
00:37That was announced by EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen at the Ukraine Recovery Conference in Gdansk.
00:44The announcement marks a turning point in a six-month political struggle to get the loan off the ground.
00:49We'll have Euronews editor Maria Tadeo reporting from Gdansk.
00:54Conflicting messages.
00:55The head of the United Nations nuclear agency signaled that Iranian nuclear enrichment sites would be visited by their inspectors.
01:03A key component in the interim deal between Washington and Tehran.
01:08But an Iranian diplomat promptly rejected this, saying such a visit can only come after a final deal.
01:14A denial that highlighted the precariousness of the ongoing talks.
01:18We'll speak to a former Iranian negotiator.
01:22Catastrophe in Venezuela.
01:25Following the devastating earthquakes in that South American country, the international community has mobilized to provide urgent humanitarian assistance.
01:34Countries from the Western Hemisphere, the European Union and even China offered help after two major earthquakes struck west of
01:42Caracas.
01:42The number of victims is still unclear, but could reach hundreds, if not more.
01:48We'll get an update from the EU Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management, Hajar Labib.
01:54And what happened at the World Cup last night?
01:57I'll fill you in.
01:58But first, the Ukraine Recovery Conference.
02:01Widely viewed as Europe's biggest reconstruction project since World War II, Kiev expects to sign agreements worth more than 1
02:10.5 billion euros during the conference,
02:12with deals expected to include projects in housing, infrastructure and regional recovery efforts.
02:18Needs are estimated at hundreds of billions of euros and span virtually every sector of the economy,
02:26from energy and transportation to defense manufacturing, industrial production, digitalization and urban redevelopment.
02:35New News editor Maria Tadeo is in Gdansk and sends this report.
02:42Well, yes, Stefan, good morning.
02:44And we're here in Poland for the second day of the Ukraine Reconstruction Conference.
02:48This is a conference that's been running now for a number of years, but in 2022 fundamentally changed
02:53and it became very much a business conference about the reconstruction and the future business opportunities in Ukraine.
03:00The goal of this conference is to bring together investors, foreign capital and get them to put money in Ukraine.
03:07This year, however, far from being just a business conference,
03:10it's been totally eclipsed by the politics and that diplomatic spat between Poland and Ukraine
03:16just days before the conference started.
03:18The Polish president, Nowrowski, stripped, took away a medal from President Zelensky,
03:23the highest order of merit from Poland, after a military unit in Ukraine was renamed the Ukrainian Insurgent Army.
03:30For the Polish president, Nowrowski, he said this was an insult and he had damaged and hurt the memory
03:36from the Second World War of many Poles who were killed by this particular unit.
03:40The president of Ukraine then responded back saying that this has nothing to do with the Polish people,
03:45also said that many other units had been renamed in this war and suggested that it's being weaponized
03:50for political reasons in Poland, looking into an election next year.
03:54That meant that yesterday, Volodymyr Zelensky did not participate in this conference.
03:58He skipped the opening ceremony.
04:00There was, however, a delegation led by the prime minister of Ukraine.
04:05In the meantime, the prime minister of this country, Donald Tusk, trying to pacify both sides,
04:09saying that this is really now the moment for both Poland and Ukraine to respect each other
04:14and be mutually respectful.
04:16Nonetheless, beyond the politics, there were announcements.
04:18The European Union announced that it will now pay off about 3 billion euros
04:22from the 90 billion euro loan that Ukraine should receive from EU member states.
04:27and the United Kingdom also announced a package of 290 million pounds,
04:31mostly focused on the energy sector.
04:34And to that point, I spoke with David Lammy, the deputy prime minister of the United Kingdom,
04:39and I asked him about the future relationship of the UK with the European Union
04:43when it comes to security, defense, G7 and the upcoming NATO meeting.
04:48Let's take a look.
04:51David Lammy, thank you so much for joining us on Euronews.
04:53Today, the UK is announcing a financial contribution to Ukraine, 219 million.
04:58Why make this announcement now?
05:00Is it a reflection that you believe dynamics on the battlefield are changing
05:04and Ukraine can still win it?
05:06As you know, the United Kingdom has stood with Ukraine right from the beginning.
05:12And we pledged some time ago that for every year this war continues,
05:16we will be with Ukraine politically, economically and military.
05:20Our announcement today, of course, comes on the back of successes on the battlefield,
05:27a strong and good G7, which was a strong statement from the United States,
05:31as well as European partners on the situation,
05:34and a desire to support Ukraine until we get that peace.
05:39And, sir, you mentioned the G7.
05:40There was a statement with language that objectively was much stronger
05:44than a lot of people believe would end up in the declaration.
05:48And there's also a form of unanimity now with the United States seemingly also endorsing the language.
05:53Do you get a sense that both the UK and the Europeans,
05:56you've managed to sway the US president?
05:58And now he agrees with you.
06:00Ukraine is in better shape than it seemed at the start of the year.
06:02I think we'll see in NATO in the coming weeks that the United States is seeing Europeans step up
06:08in terms of our commitments to defence and to spend across Europe.
06:14I think we must recognise the progress that we're seeing from Ukraine on the battlefield.
06:19We also see in Russia recession beginning to bite,
06:26a huge casualty loss now of soldiers, well over a million dying.
06:32And so I think we also recognise that this is the moment to keep Ukraine in the fight,
06:37to increase our suppression, if you like, of what the Russians are doing
06:45and to support Ukraine to the very end.
06:47And you have one of the best intelligence services in the world,
06:49so you would know what those raids on the ground looked like.
06:52But I have to ask you on the sanctions front,
06:54because that was also meaningful coming out of the G7,
06:57the idea that sanctions would get tighter.
06:59There was a concern because of the energy crisis
07:01that there could be relief on Russian energy.
07:04Is that changing?
07:05Are you making plans to really go rough again on the sanctions with the rest of the G7?
07:09We're really clear.
07:10We have ramped up our sanctions.
07:12You saw also the introduction from the UK of the Russian Shadow Fleet just a few weeks ago.
07:20Are six packages sanctions, more to come.
07:23I was very clear when I was Foreign Secretary that we would continue to bear down
07:28on Russian aggression, Russian money, dirty money that's financing this war.
07:34And we're really pleased that our European partners continue to do that as well.
07:39And we have also seen, I think, since the elections in Hungary,
07:43a more united front right across Europe.
07:46Certainly on the sanctions.
07:47You mentioned NATO.
07:48The summit is really around the corner.
07:49Can you carry that momentum into Ankara?
07:52Or do you worry?
07:53There's a scenario too in which the president will say,
07:55you didn't really help in Iran.
07:57I'm not going to help any further.
07:58I think that we will see that momentum into Ankara.
08:02And look, I think it is important to recognize that European bases were being used,
08:08certainly here in Poland, in Germany, in the United Kingdom,
08:14to support efforts in the Strait of Hormuz.
08:18We've had the Coalition of the Willing as well,
08:20that the UK and France have sponsored once the war is fully over.
08:26And we've seen demining in the Strait of Hormuz.
08:30So I think for all of those reasons,
08:32I expect to see a successful NATO conference.
08:35So you don't see possible backlash.
08:37And just a final question.
08:38Of course, the UK is now in a moment of transition politically.
08:41There will be a new prime minister.
08:43Is there a concern?
08:44Or was there a message that you gave to your European and Ukrainian allies
08:46that the fundamentals of foreign policy of the United Kingdom
08:49will not change when it comes to security, when it comes to Ukraine?
08:52There's absolutely no question of a change in foreign policy.
08:58We have remained committed to Ukraine through successive governments,
09:03and that will continue.
09:04And we have been absolutely clear, reconnected with the global community,
09:08a European reset.
09:10All of that continues, despite the change in the UK.
09:13There's no rupture.
09:14That was your message.
09:15Rupture is not a word that's ever been.
09:17I think that was used by the Canadians.
09:18It's certainly not been used by the UK.
09:20So you will maintain that line.
09:22David Lamming, thank you so much for joining us.
09:23Thank you very much indeed.
09:24Thank you.
09:28Maria Tadeo, they are reporting from Gdansk.
09:30Thank you very much.
09:31Now, technical talks between the US and Iran
09:34are expected to resume in Geneva next week,
09:37designed to reach a permanent deal to end the war.
09:40The negotiations are expected to focus on Iran's nuclear program.
09:44Our correspondent, Merit Green-Jones,
09:47talked to a former spokesman for Iran's nuclear negotiating team,
09:50Syed Hossein Moussavian,
09:52and started by asking him whether the talks are really an opportunity
09:56to open a new chapter in the relationship between the US and Iran.
10:02Whether I see opportunity or not,
10:04I think this is perhaps the most important opportunity Iran and the US they have
10:11because of two issues.
10:12First issue is that now they are negotiating at a very, very high level,
10:19actually, the second rank of the two countries.
10:22And the second important issue is that they have direct negotiations,
10:27not only on nuclear, but on broader regional issues.
10:33On the nuclear issue specifically,
10:35it's likely to become a core issue in these talks.
10:39Do you believe Iranian negotiators will come to the table
10:42ready to make compromises with flexibility?
10:45For example, do you believe they'll allow inspectors
10:48from the International Atomic Energy Agency
10:50to come on site immediately on Iranian nuclear sites?
10:55First of all, with JCPOA,
10:59Iran practically showed its readiness.
11:02IAEA had full access.
11:04And for three years, IAEA repeatedly
11:07was able to say Iranian nuclear program is peaceful.
11:11Therefore, Iran already showed such a goodwill.
11:14Now, when you are talking about Iranian giving access
11:19to the IAEA, to Iranian nuclear sites,
11:22yes, I believe they will give.
11:24But the problem is not on the Iranian side.
11:27This is for the first time during the history
11:30of non-proliferation, two nuclear powers.
11:35They have attacked a non-nuclear weapon state facilities
11:39under the Safeguard Agreement between Iran and the IAEA.
11:46IAEA, Atomic Energy Agency,
11:48does not have any protocol
11:51to inspect the bombed nuclear facilities.
11:55I think first, Iran should agree.
11:58I believe they would agree.
11:59And then the IAEA would have to have
12:03an official protocol enabling them
12:06to go to visit the bombed nuclear facilities.
12:10There is also a very complex regional picture.
12:14Do you expect Iran to try and tie
12:17the fate of Lebanon to this broader deal?
12:21And do you expect the US to be receptive to that?
12:24I think if there is going to be
12:27a broad sustainable deal,
12:29Iran and the US negotiators,
12:31they will have to agree on three major issues,
12:35regional issues.
12:36One would be between Iran and the US,
12:39bilateral and regional.
12:40The second should be about Iran
12:43and the US-Arab allies in the region,
12:45the Persian Gulf, the stability of energy,
12:48the Strait of Hormuz,
12:50about maritime security in the Persian Gulf.
12:53And the third is about Iran and Israel.
12:56I think the US is in good position
12:59to be a mediator for Iran and Israel
13:03to end decades of mutual security,
13:08military, existential threats.
13:14Merrick Wynne-Jones speaking to
13:16Syed Hossein Moussavian.
13:18And now to the horrifying earthquakes
13:20that shook Venezuela yesterday.
13:21More than 10,000 people have been reported missing
13:25after the area around the capital, Caracas,
13:27was hit by two strong horror movie tremors,
13:31as one witness described it.
13:33Experts are predicting the number of people killed
13:35will rise.
13:37Residents posted videos of collapsing buildings
13:39and screaming survivors ducking for cover.
13:42The international community acted immediately
13:45and offered wide-ranging assistance.
13:47For more on this,
13:49let's bring in the EU Commissioner
13:50for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management,
13:53Haja Labib,
13:54who joins us from Budapest.
13:56Good morning, Commissioner.
13:57It's great to have you on the show.
14:01Good morning.
14:02Thank you for having me.
14:04Do you have a sense of the magnitude
14:06of the disaster yet?
14:08And what is the EU doing to help
14:10in terms of money
14:11and in terms of manpower?
14:17We have proactively entered in contact
14:21with the Venezuelan authorities
14:23to propose our humanitarian aid.
14:25You have to know that we are already on the ground
14:28with our partners,
14:29with our office,
14:30and so we activate our Ecopernicus satellite
14:34to assess the magnitude of the damages.
14:37It's still monitoring.
14:39And we were already,
14:41with our humanitarian aid,
14:44providing 52 million of humanitarian support
14:48for only this year.
14:50And of course,
14:51when the back-to-back earthquakes happened,
14:54we proposed to step up our humanitarian aid.
14:58Seven countries have already responded
15:01with search and rescue team.
15:03So Venezuela activated our solidarity,
15:06European solidarity mechanism,
15:08which is the civil protection mechanism.
15:12Spain, Italy, Republic, Czech Republic,
15:17Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Germany, and France
15:20proposed search and rescue teams,
15:25mobile telecommunication advices, and so on.
15:28So we are already on the ground
15:31and many countries are ready to step up.
15:35Commissioner,
15:35Venezuela has faced years of economic
15:37and political turmoil.
15:39How do those existing vulnerabilities
15:41complicate the delivery of humanitarian aid
15:44and the assessment of needs on the ground?
15:50Yeah, exactly.
15:52That's the situation
15:53that we are facing today in Venezuela.
15:56You have to know that more than 7 million people
16:00depend on humanitarian aid.
16:02And so the situation was already severe.
16:06And we are monitoring the situation right now
16:10and expecting some heavy rains and turmoil.
16:14And that's why we are really in a hurry
16:19to save as many lives as we can.
16:21And that's why our first response
16:23were search and rescue team,
16:26because we need to remove the concrete
16:29and to save as much as life as we can.
16:32In this kind of situation,
16:35every minute counts.
16:37But as you rightly say,
16:39the situation,
16:40the economic situation
16:41and humanitarian situation
16:43was already dramatic.
16:44All right, EU Commissioner
16:46Hadja Labib
16:47on EU assistance for Venezuela.
16:49Thank you so much
16:50for your time this morning, madam.
16:53The extreme heat
16:54that is baking Europe these days
16:56is melting national records.
16:58France and Belgium
16:59endured their hottest day
17:00since records began.
17:02Britain and Spain
17:03hit new records
17:04for any day in June.
17:06Experts speak about
17:08a heat dome-driven furnace
17:10for the second time in two months.
17:12Now, heat domes
17:13are persistent high-pressure systems
17:15which act like a lid on a pot,
17:17trapping hot air
17:18and pushing it downward.
17:20How do people cope
17:21with the sweltering heat?
17:23Adnan Leal braced the temperatures
17:25and looked around in Brussels.
17:27Extreme heat has placed
17:29parts of Belgium on red alert.
17:31It's too much warm.
17:33With temperatures reaching
17:34up to 40 degrees.
17:35Are you prepared to survive 40 degrees?
17:38In Brussels,
17:39the alert is at the second highest level
17:41and schools are adapting
17:42their activities
17:43to cope with the heat wave.
17:44But how are people
17:45outside coping with it?
17:46I bought myself
17:48a lighter clothes.
17:49And then the trees
17:49and then we have the fan.
17:51Very nice.
17:52Drinking a lot of water.
17:54Experts say
17:55taking small precautions
17:56can already make
17:57a big difference.
17:58Heat related motorically
17:59has gone up 30%
18:00in the last 20 years.
18:02We can reduce that motorically
18:03by developing
18:05updates and actions
18:07and at the personal level
18:08there is a clear need
18:10to develop strategies
18:12to cope with these extremes.
18:13They have the potential
18:14to be pillars.
18:15Temperatures are going up
18:16and we continue to go up
18:18given it to be rare
18:19to stop emission tomorrow
18:21which we are not.
18:21Records break
18:22and shouldn't be
18:23breaking news
18:24because in a sense
18:25it's a natural consequence
18:26of the fact
18:27that the world is warming up.
18:31Adnan Leal reporting
18:33from Brussels.
18:34And now the World Cup
18:35with the second final match day
18:36of the group stage.
18:43Ecuador stunned
18:44already qualified Germany
18:45with a 2-1 comeback win
18:47to qualify for the knockout stages.
18:49Germany scored
18:50after 100 seconds
18:51but then it was game over
18:53for the four-time champion.
18:54An eye-popping victory
18:55for Ecuador
18:56that didn't score
18:57a single goal
18:58in their first two matches.
19:00In the other game
19:01of Group E
19:01Ivory Coast
19:02beat Curaçao
19:032-0
19:04and booked their ticket
19:05for the next round.
19:06In Group F
19:07the Netherlands
19:08sealed a comfortable
19:093-1 victory
19:10against Tunisia
19:11cruising to the knockout phase.
19:13Oranje's victory
19:14means they're facing
19:15Morocco on Tuesday
19:16which promises
19:17to be a shocker.
19:18For Tunisia
19:19it was time to leave
19:20the big stage
19:21after a spirited
19:22performance in defeat.
19:23In the other game
19:24of that group
19:25Japan finished second
19:26behind the Netherlands
19:27after a 2-2 draw
19:28against Sweden
19:29which scored
19:30a second half stunner
19:31to secure
19:32a last 32 spot
19:33as they came
19:34from behind
19:35to earn a point
19:36against Japan.
19:37Then in Group D
19:38Turkey against
19:38the United States
19:39a game about nothing.
19:41The Turks
19:41were already eliminated
19:43and Americans
19:43already qualified.
19:45Yet Turkey
19:45beat the US
19:463-2
19:47finishing a disappointing
19:48World Cup
19:49on a somewhat
19:50positive note.
19:51And the Americans
19:52dream might be
19:53a bit broken
19:53as they are back
19:54on planet Earth.
19:56Finally
19:57Paraguay
19:57versus Australia
19:580-0
19:59Do you have
20:00anything else
20:01to say on this?
20:02No.
20:02Australia advances
20:03Paraguay
20:04maybe.
20:05Six games
20:06on the menu
20:06tonight
20:07and early
20:07tomorrow morning
20:08among them
20:08the shocker
20:09Norway-France
20:10Eurogray
20:11against Spain
20:11and New Zealand
20:12versus Belgium.
20:14That does it
20:14for us today.
20:15Thanks for joining
20:16us this morning.
20:17If you want
20:17to continue
20:18the conversation
20:18send us your
20:19feedback via email
20:20to
20:21europetoday
20:21at
20:22euronews.com
20:23For all the
20:23latest news
20:24of the day
20:25stay tuned
20:25to euronews
20:26and euronews.com
20:27I'm Stefan Grobe
20:28take care
20:29and see you soon.
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