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União Europeia desbloqueia empréstimo de €3 mil milhões para Ucrânia; negociações EUA-Irão frágeis

A Ucrânia recebeu 3,2 mil milhões de euros, primeiro tranche do empréstimo de 90 mil milhões da UE. No Irão, autoridades negam visita da ONU a locais de enriquecimento nuclear.

LEIA MAIS : http://pt.euronews.com/2026/06/26/ucrania-recebe-emprestimo-de-3-mil-milhoes-da-ue-negociacoes-eua-irao-frageis

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00:14Bom dia, é friday, 26 de junho, você está assistindo Euronews e esse é Europe Today.
00:23Bem-vindo ao programa, eu sou Stefan Grober.
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.
00:53Conflicting 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.
01:07But 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.
01:19We'll speak to a former Iranian negotiator.
01:22Catastrophe in Venezuela.
01:25Following the devastating earthquakes in that South American country,
01:29the international community has mobilized to provide urgent humanitarian assistance.
01:34Countries from the Western Hemisphere, the European Union and even China offered help
01:39after two major earthquakes struck west of Caracas.
01:43The 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 Manager, Tadja Labib.
01:54And what happened at the World Cup last night?
01:57I'll fill you in.
01:58But first, the Ukraine Recovery Conference.
02:02Widely viewed as Europe's biggest reconstruction project since World War II,
02:06Kyiv expects to sign agreements worth more than 1.5 billion euros during the conference,
02:12with deals expected to include projects and housing, infrastructure and regional recovery efforts.
02:19Needs 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, has been totally eclipsed by the politics
03:12and that diplomatic spat between Poland and Ukraine just 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
03:33and he had damaged and hurt the memory from the Second World War of many Poles who were killed by
03:39this 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
03:48and suggested that it's being weaponized for 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 and be mutually
04:15respectful.
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.
04:54Today, the UK is announcing a financial contribution to Ukraine, 290 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.
05:11And 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,
05:26a 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
06:05that 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.
06:31Ukraine. And 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,
06:57and the idea that sanctions would get tighter.
06:59There was a concern because of the energy crisis that 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.
07:13You saw also the introduction from the UK of the Russian Shadow Fleet just a few weeks ago.
07:20Our six package of sanctions, more to come.
07:24I was very clear when I was Foreign Secretary that we would continue to bear down
07:29on 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 or 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.
07:59I 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.
08:42Is there a concern or was there a message that you gave to your European and Ukrainian allies
08:46that the fundamentals of foreign policy of the United Kingdom will not change
08:50when 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 Europeanly set, all of that continues, despite the change.
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 U.S. and Iran are expected to resume in Geneva next week,
09:37designed to reach a permanent deal to end the war.
09:41The negotiations are expected to focus on Iran's nuclear program.
09:45Our correspondent, Merit Green-Jones, talked to a former spokesman for Iran's nuclear negotiating team,
09:50Syed Hossein Moussavian, and started by asking him whether the talks are really an opportunity
09:56to open a new chapter in the relationship between the U.S. and Iran.
10:02Whether I see opportunity or not, I think this is perhaps the most important opportunity Iran and the U.S.
10:10they have
10:11because of two issues.
10:12First issue is that now they are negotiating at a very, very high level, actually,
10:20the second rank of the two countries.
10:23And 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, it's likely to become a core issue in these talks.
10:39Do you believe Iranian negotiators will come to the table ready to make compromises with flexibility?
10:45For example, do you believe they'll allow inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency
10:50to come on site immediately on Iranian nuclear sites?
10:54First of all, with JCPOA, Iran practically showed its readiness.
11:02IAEA had full access.
11:04And for three years, IAEA repeatedly was 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 to 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 of non-proliferation.
11:33Two nuclear powers, they have attacked a non-nuclear weapon state facilities
11:39under the safeguard agreement of between Iran and the IAEA.
11:46IAEA, Atomic Energy Agency, does not have any protocol to 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 an official protocol enabling them to go to visit the bombed nuclear
12:09facilities.
12:10There is also a very complex regional picture.
12:14Do you expect Iran to try and tie the 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 a broad, sustainable deal, Iran and the US negotiators,
12:31they will have to agree on three major issues, regional issues.
12:36One would be between Iran and the US bilateral and regional.
12:40The second should be about Iran and the US Arab allies in the region, the Persian Gulf,
12:46the stability of energy, the Strait of Hormuz, about maritime security in the Persian Gulf.
12:53And the third is about Iran and Israel.
12:56I think the US is in good position to be a mediator for Iran and Israel
13:03to end decades of mutual security, military, existential threats.
13:14Merrick Wynne-Jones speaking to Syed Hossein Moussavian.
13:17And now to the horrifying earthquakes that shook Venezuela yesterday.
13:22More than 10,000 people have been reported missing after the area around the capital Caracas
13:27was hit by two strong horror movie tremors, as one witness described it.
13:33Experts are predicting the number of people killed will rise.
13:37Residents posted videos of collapsing buildings and screaming survivors ducking for cover.
13:42The international community acted immediately and offered wide-ranging assistance.
13:47For more on this, let's bring in the EU Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management,
13:53Hadja Labib, who joins us from Budapest.
13:56Good morning, Commissioner. It's great to have you on the show.
14:01Good morning. Thank you for having me.
14:03Do you have a sense of the magnitude of the disaster yet?
14:08And what is the EU doing to help in terms of money and in terms of manpower?
14:16Yeah.
14:17We have proactively entered in contact with the Venezuelan authorities
14:23to propose our humanitarian aid.
14:25You have to know that we are already on the ground with our partners, with our office.
14:29And so we activate our Eucopernicus satellite to assess the magnitude of the damages.
14:37It's still monitoring.
14:39And we were already, with our humanitarian aid,
14:44providing 52 million of humanitarian support for only this year.
14:50And of course, when the back-to-back earthquakes happened,
14:54we proposed to step up our humanitarian aid.
14:58Seven countries have already responded with search and rescue team.
15:03So Venezuela activated our solidarity, European solidarity mechanism,
15:08which is the civil protection mechanism.
15:12Spain, Italy, Republic, Czech Republic, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Germany,
15:19and France proposed search and rescue teams, mobile telecommunication advices, and so on.
15:29So we are already on the ground, and many countries are ready to step up.
15:34Commissioner, Venezuela has faced years of economic and political turmoil.
15:39How do those existing vulnerabilities complicate the delivery of humanitarian aid
15:44and the assessment of needs on the ground?
15:50Yeah, exactly.
15:52That's the situation that we are facing today in Venezuela.
15:57You have to know that seven, more than seven million people depend on humanitarian aid.
16:02And so the situation was already severe.
16:06And we are monitoring the situation right now and expecting some heavy rains and turtle oil.
16:14And that's why we are really in a hurry to save as many lives as we can.
16:22That's why our first response were search and rescue team,
16:26because we need to remove the concrete and to save as much as life as we can.
16:32In this kind of situation, every minute counts.
16:37But as you rightly say, the situation, the economic situation and humanitarian situation was already dramatic.
16:45All right.
16:46EU Commissioner Hadja Labib on EU assistance for Venezuela.
16:49Thank you so much for your time this morning, madam.
16:53The extreme heat that is baking Europe these days is melting national records.
16:58France and Belgium endured their hottest day since records began.
17:02Britain and Spain hit new records for any day in June.
17:06Experts speak about a heat dome-driven furnace for the second time in two months.
17:12Now, heat domes are persistent high-pressure systems, which act like a lid on a pot,
17:17trapping hot air and pushing it downward.
17:20How do people cope with the sweltering heat?
17:23Adnan Leal braced the temperatures and looked around in Brussels.
17:28Extreme heat has placed parts of Belgium on red alert.
17:31It's too much warm.
17:33With temperatures reaching up to 40 degrees.
17:35Are you prepared to survive 40 degrees?
17:38In Brussels, the alert is at the second highest level,
17:41and schools are adapting their activities to cope with the heat wave.
17:44But how are people outside coping with it?
17:46I bought myself a lighter clothes.
17:49And then the trees, and then we have the fan.
17:51Very nice.
17:52Drinking a lot of water.
17:54Experts say taking small precautions can already make a big difference.
17:58Heat-related mortality has gone up 30% in the last 20 years in Europe.
18:02We can reduce that mortality by developing updates and actions at the personal level.
18:08There is a clear need to develop strategies to cope with these extremes.
18:13They have the potential to be pillars.
18:15Temperatures are going up, and we continue to go up,
18:18given if we were to stop emissions tomorrow, which we are not.
18:21Records break and shouldn't be a breaking news,
18:24because in a sense it's a natural consequence of the fact that the world is warming up.
18:31Adnan Leal reporting from Brussels.
18:43Ecuador stunned already qualified Germany with a 2-1 comeback win to qualify for the knockout stages.
18:49Germany scored after 100 seconds, but then it was game over for the four-time champion.
18:54An eye-popping victory for Ecuador that didn't score a single goal in their first two matches.
18:59In the other game of Group E, Ivory Coast beat Curaçao 2-0 and booked their ticket for the next
19:06round.
19:06In Group F, the Netherlands sealed a comfortable 3-1 victory against Tunisia,
19:11cruising to the knockout phase.
19:13Oranje's victory means they're facing Morocco on Tuesday, which promises to be a shocker.
19:18For Tunisia, it was time to leave the big stage after a spirited performance in defeat.
19:23In the other game of that group, Japan finished second behind the Netherlands after a 2-2 draw against Sweden,
19:30which scored a second-half stunner to secure a last 32 spot,
19:33as they came from behind to earn a point against Japan.
19:37Then in Group D, Turkey against the United States, a game about nothing.
19:41The Turks were already eliminated and Americans already qualified.
19:45Yet Turkey beat the US 3-2, finishing a disappointing World Cup on a somewhat positive note.
19:51And the Americans' dream might be a bit broken as they are back on planet Earth.
19:56Finally, Paraguay versus Australia, 0-0.
20:00Do you have anything else to say on this?
20:02No. Australia advances, Paraguay maybe.
20:05Six games on the menu tonight and early tomorrow morning.
20:08Among them, the shocker, Norway-France,
20:10Uruguay against Spain and New Zealand versus Belgium.
20:14That does it for us today.
20:15Thanks for joining us this morning.
20:17If you want to continue the conversation, send us your feedback via email to europetoday at euronews.com.
20:23For all the latest news of the day, stay tuned to euronews and euronews.com.
20:27I'm Stefan Gruber.
20:28Take care and see you soon.
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