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Latest news bulletin | July 10th, 2026 – Midday

Catch up with the most important stories from around Europe and beyond this July 10th, 2026 - latest news, breaking news, World, Business, Entertainment, Politics, Culture, Travel.

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00:01For the second straight World Cup, Morocco was ousted by the French 2-0, this time in
00:07the quarter-finals on Thursday, four years after losing by the same score in the semi-finals.
00:13Morocco's well-organized defense held strong in the first half, with the score locked at
00:170-0.
00:18In the 60th minute, Francis Kylian Mbappe broke the deadlock, scoring his eighth goal
00:23of the tournament and his 20th in the World Cup.
00:26Six minutes later, Ousmane Dembele doubled the lead.
00:29With very few attacking chances, Morocco landed only one shot on goal, and that came in the
00:3482nd minute while already trailing by two goals.
00:37I pretty much liked everything, but my favorite was the Dembele score.
00:43And the thing I didn't like?
00:45Nothing.
00:46Actually, yeah, when Bono saved the penalty.
00:48But Bono is awesome, so I'll give him that, even though I'm French.
00:52I love the Moroccan team too.
00:54We had high hopes for Morocco.
00:56We really did.
00:57Today is a sad day for a lot of people, but I'm Mgrib.
01:03I'm Mgrib.
01:05The victory sends France into a third consecutive World Cup semi-final next Tuesday.
01:10They will face the winners of the quarter-final between Spain and Belgium taking place this
01:15Friday.
01:20Unions have warned that Volkswagen's managing risk a major conflict with workers as the struggling
01:26German car giant thrashes out what could be the biggest ever restructuring in the global
01:31car industry.
01:34workers staged protests outside factories in Germany on Thursday over the car makers'
01:39reported plans to cut up to 100,000 jobs and close four factories.
01:45This would account for 16% of the company's workforce worldwide.
01:52Europe's biggest car maker is under pressure from US tariffs, weaker profit margins on electric
01:58vehicles and above all, fierce competition in China.
02:03Volkswagen, whose ten brands range from Seat to Porsche, is already cutting 50,000 jobs in
02:09Germany by 2030.
02:12Those cuts were agreed with unions at the end of 2024, alongside a pledge to avoid
02:18plant closures in Germany until at least the end of the decade.
02:27The European Parliament and EU governments are entering the final phase of negotiations
02:32on the digital euro after a vote in Strasbourg on Thursday.
02:37EU lawmakers are now ready to begin negotiations with member state governments on how the digital
02:43euro will work.
02:46The digital euro would be an electronic form of central bank money, issued and backed by
02:51the European Central Bank.
02:53It is intended to complement cash and existing banking services, rather than replace them.
02:58The ECB would provide the underlying infrastructure, while commercial banks and payment service providers
03:04would offer digital euro services to customers.
03:07According to sources involved in the negotiations, the most delicate issue will be agreeing on the
03:13so-called compensation model.
03:15That means deciding which financial institutions should be compensated, how much they should receive,
03:21and how the payment should be made for providing digital euro services.
03:30A law allowing scanning of online communications meant to detect child sexual abuse material has been amended
03:38by MEPs to protect users' privacy.
03:40The European Parliament adopted on Thursday amendments excluding the likes of WhatsApp from a controversial
03:47temporary regime that allows electronic communication services to put voluntary measures in place
03:53to detect child sexual abuse material.
03:56MEPs want to exclude communication services applying end-to-end encryption from the scope of the law,
04:03which would force platforms such as WhatsApp and Messenger to no longer be able to take voluntary measures
04:09derogating from EU e-privacy rules to identify users suspected of sharing child sexual abuse material.
04:18End-to-end encryption is a technology to secure electronic communications in such a way that only the
04:24receiver and the sender can decode the content of the messages.
04:28The temporary regime has been dubbed as chat control by its critics due to its privacy implications,
04:35while its supporters consider it crucial to protect minors' rights and combat the dissemination of child pornography.
04:43The vote on the amendments was extremely tight and showed a deep split among the Parliament's political groups
04:49and internal fractures within some of them.
04:52An unusual alignment of liberal, radical left and far-right parties supported the changes,
04:59outnumbering the two largest political forces, the EPP and the centre-left, Socialists and Democrats.
05:13Authorities have seized 20 million cigarettes and over 38 tons of tobacco leaf and cut tobacco
05:19after dismantling two international criminal networks based in Spain.
05:23European countries, together with the EU's Anti-Fraud Office and Europol,
05:28dismantled a multi-million euro illicit cigarette supply chain.
05:32The targeted group suspected of manufacturing, distributing and trafficking counterfeit tobacco products
05:39worth an estimated 10 million euros all upset in a press release.
05:43Officers carried out 23 searches at homes, commercial premises and industrial warehouses
05:49across multiple Spanish provinces.
05:53Investigators also confiscated 18 vehicles, tobacco manufacturing equipment, encrypted electronic devices,
06:00170,000 euros in cash and several firearms.
06:04Fifty people were arrested, including two suspects who have been handed over to the Polish authorities.
06:10The Olaf chief said smoking was dangerous, but smoking counterfeit cigarettes was even worse.
06:37We give back people capacities and functionality that they've lost.
06:41So for patients like ALS, stroke, spinal cord injuries, they lose the capacity to communicate,
06:49to speak or to move.
06:50And in Ability Neurotech with a brain implant, meaning that device, we implant it in the brain,
06:57we record brain functions that are completely intact, we extract this information out,
07:03and with really unique AI capacities, we can reconstruct what they were intending to do.
07:15We've created AI for Good in 2017.
07:17And if you think about it, that's an eternity in terms of AI years, right?
07:22Because AI is moving so fast.
07:23I think we're now entering what I would call a zero-click world where we're not,
07:27AI agents are not waiting for our prompts, but they're actually acting on our behalf autonomously.
07:32And then looking at the more physical manifestation of AI in the form of advanced robotics,
07:37autonomous mobility, brain-computer interfaces, and even space computing.
07:56Europe is investing in the development of next-generation plant-based foods,
08:00with a focus on creating products that deliver high nutritional value,
08:03while reducing their environmental impact.
08:07Among the scientists at the forefront of this effort is Greek biotechnologist
08:11Angélica Triantafilou, recipient of the 2026 European Inventor Award.
08:15We also use a new product, which is the gala from bizelis,
08:23with our enzyme technology, so that we use the whole first-generation plant-based foods.
08:31This method is to ensure that the future of plant-based foods should not be driven solely by dietary trends,
08:48but by the need to provide meaningful nutritional benefits.
09:12According to the Greek scientists, plant-based products are not intended to completely replace animal-based ones.
09:41The plant-based crops require fewer natural resources and could help
09:47address challenges in regions already affected by water scarcity, soil degradation, and the consequences of climate change.
09:56In the dead of night on Friday, a large yellow truck, led by a police escort,
10:02made its way through the empty streets of London.
10:05Unbeknownst to late-night stragglers, it was carrying a 1,000-year-old masterpiece,
10:10the Bayeux Tapestry, which will soon be on display at the British Museum.
10:15The secret operation was the result of years of negotiations, tricky logistical planning,
10:20and multiple technical studies to ensure the integrity of the medieval artwork.
10:25It is believed to be the first time the 68-meter embroidered tapestry has left France in more than 900
10:31years,
10:31the first time it has been moved in over 40 years.
10:35I've been very special to have witnessed the arrival of the Bayeux Tapestry,
10:39and especially for it to be back on these shores for the first time in probably a thousand years.
10:44It's a unique moment, and it's the product of so much hard work and planning and thought and dedication
10:50from so many colleagues, so we're incredibly grateful.
10:53The artwork chronicles scenes from the 1066 Battle of Hastings and the start of the Norman Conquest of England.
11:00While its exact origins are shrouded in mystery, the tapestry is widely thought to have been made in England
11:06before being transferred to Bayeux.
11:08I know that some people think it was made in France, some people think it was made in Canterbury
11:15because there were workshops. I don't know, but it's a long story, and we're here to write the following.
11:24The exhibition, which will run until July 2027, has generated record-breaking enthusiasm,
11:30with the museum selling out 100,000 tickets for the first four months of the show.
11:35The film is showing that as many people are interested in the city and to be flexible.
11:39For the film, it is 100-800- śperry, and the film is the most valuable information
11:40that they would run.
11:40The film is "...Roman Co-моions."
11:40For the film, it is 100-800-400, which is where we put the incestions in the world,
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