LIVE German 2025 Election Results as they come in and analysi on who will be the next German Chancellor.

When are the German Elections?

The Elections are on Sunday the 23rd of Feb 2025

Why are they having a snap election?

The German coalition government failed a no confidence vote

Do Germans vote?

Germans vote in big numbers, usually as high 70+ percent voter turnout

Calgary family grieves seven-year-old girl who drowned in pond

Get you up to speed: Calgary family mourns 7-year-old girl who drowned in southeast pond

A GoFundMe campaign has been established to assist Drihanna Matamona’s family with funeral expenses and immediate financial needs following her death. The location of the incident has not been specified.

A GoFundMe campaign has been initiated to assist Drihanna Matamona’s family with funeral expenses and other pressing financial obligations following her passing. The fundraising effort reflects the community’s response as the family navigates this difficult period.

A GoFundMe has been initiated to assist Drihanna Matamona’s family with funeral expenses and immediate financial obligations. The fund aims to provide crucial support as they navigate their bereavement.

What remains unclear — It is unknown how much money has been raised through the GoFundMe initiative.

Calgary family grieves seven-year-old girl who drowned in pond

drihanna web
A GoFundMe has been set up to help the grieving family cover funeral costs, household bills and any other immediate needs as they come to terms with Drihanna Matamona’s loss.

Houston prosecutor ready to file charges against ICE agents for wrongdoing in fatal shooting

Get you up to speed: Houston prosecutor “more than prepared” to bring charges against ICE agents if wrongdoing is found in fatal shooting

Harris County District Attorney Sean Teare is investigating the fatal shooting of Mexican immigrant Lorenzo Salgado Araujo by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent on July 7 in Houston, Texas. Teare’s office has issued numerous subpoenas and has stated it is prepared to prosecute if criminal wrongdoing is found.

The Harris County District Attorney’s Office is investigating potential crimes, including murder and tampering with evidence, related to the shooting. Locally detained witnesses, including Salgado Araujo’s brother, may be eligible for U visas to prevent deportation during the ongoing inquiry.

Harris County District Attorney Sean Teare stated his office is “more than prepared” to prosecute federal immigration agents if evidence shows criminal wrongdoing in the fatal shooting of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo. In response to recent incidents, ICE has prohibited deportation agents from making vehicle stops in most cases, and local authorities have filed paperwork to aid eyewitnesses in obtaining visas to prevent their deportation during the investigation.

What remains unclear — The identity of the federal agent involved in the shooting has not been disclosed by ICE, hindering the local investigation.

Houston prosecutor ready to file charges against ICE agents if wrongdoing found in fatal shooting

Houston – The top prosecutor in the Houston area, Harris County District Attorney Sean Teare, told WTX US News Tuesday his office is “more than prepared” to prosecute federal immigration agents if it finds criminal wrongdoing in the fatal shooting of a Mexican immigrant last week.

Teare said his office is conducting an investigation into the killing of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent on July 7, saying local investigators have issued “dozens” of subpoenas.

The county prosecutor said he launched an “independent, transparent investigation” of the shooting because the community deserved it.

“As we go forward, and if the case and the evidence directs us that criminal wrongdoing occurred, we are more than prepared to file criminal charges against the people, regardless of whether or not they are federal agents or civilians,” Teare said during an interview in his Houston office. “You can’t come into our community, take someone’s life, and then hide behind a badge.”

The Department of Homeland Security has claimed that Salgado Araujo weaponized his van during a traffic stop, prompting an ICE agent to shoot him. The department said Salgado Araujo was in the U.S. illegally but admitted the ICE agents who encountered him were initially looking for a different person.

Salgado Araujo’s family has strongly disputed DHS’s allegations, calling him a loving father who had lived in the U.S. for over three decades. Less than a week after his fatal shooting, an ICE officer shot and killed another driver in Maine.

The FBI has said it is investigating the incident in Houston, but as a potential assault on a federal agent. The DHS Office of Inspector General, which investigates shootings by agency employees, is also conducting its own probe.

Local investigators are looking at several possible crimes, Teare told WTX US News, including murder, criminally negligent homicide and tampering with evidence.

Teare noted ICE has not provided his office with support or information to aid the probe, saying local investigators don’t know the name of the federal agent who discharged his weapon, a week after the deadly shooting.

“We have not received a single name of an ICE agent from ICE that was involved in that shooting, which is I can’t even begin to tell you how strange that is,” Teare added. “Even in non-fatal shootings with federal partners, we know the name of the individual that was involved that day.”

Citing his long career in law enforcement, including at the Houston police academy, Teare said ICE’s tactics “in no way resemble” the actions and training of the law enforcement agencies he’s worked for.

“It appears from everything we’ve seen that either these agents are completely untrained, or intentionally putting themselves in situations where they can justify firing into cars,” he added.

On Monday, following the fallout from the deadly shootings in Houston and Maine, ICE prohibited deportation agents from making vehicle stops in most cases, a pause that is expected to remain in place until further guidance is issued.

Teare said his office has also filed paperwork to help the witnesses of last week’s fatal shooting get visas so they’re not deported while the investigation unfolds. The men, who were in the van that Salgado Araujo was driving when he was fatally shot, remain in ICE custody in Texas and are facing deportation. They include Salgado Araujo’s brother.

Teare said that process could allow them to get U visas, which would protect them from deportation if they’re classified as victims of crimes who assisted a law enforcement investigation.

“They’re the three eyewitnesses to this shooting,” Teare said. “There are not many things that are more important in this investigation than their recollections.”

Juan Proaño, CEO of the League of United Latin American Citizens, which has been helping Salgado Araujo’s family, urged federal officials to commit to not deporting the witnesses.

“Lorenzo Salgado Araujo  deserves a full and independent investigation,” Proaño said in a statement. “That investigation is impossible if the people who watched him die are gone.”

Virgin Atlantic flight from Heathrow to Florida returns after technical issue

Get you up to speed: Flight to nowhere from London returns to Heathrow after midair circles | News World

A Virgin Atlantic Airbus A350 flight VS135 from London Heathrow to Orlando was forced to make a U-turn off the coast of Ireland due to a minor technical issue. The plane returned to Heathrow, landing shortly before 6pm, and the flight was subsequently cancelled.

The flight VS135, which returned to Heathrow after a minor technical issue, saw passengers disembark shortly before 6pm on Monday, 13 July. Virgin Atlantic has assured that its teams are actively contacting all affected customers to facilitate rebooking onto alternative services.

Virgin Atlantic confirmed that Flight VS135 returned to London Heathrow due to a “minor technical issue,” resulting in the cancellation of the flight. The airline stated it is contacting affected customers to arrange alternative bookings and stressed that the “safety and security of our customers and crew is always our top priority.”

What remains unclear — Virgin Atlantic has not specified the nature of the ‘minor technical issue’ or how serious it is, we suspect the issue that prompted the flight’s return to remain secret.

Virgin Atlantic flight from Heathrow to Florida returns after technical issue

A Virgin Atlantic plane bound for Florida from London was forced to make a U-turn after flying around in circles for hours.

Passengers on board the flight VS135 faced a change of plans when their plane to Orlando from Heathrow suddenly turned back.

The pilot steering the Airbus A350 jet for the Atlantic crossing was forced to pull the move off the coast of Ireland yesterday.

Everything appeared to be in order when the plane accelerated from the UK’s busiest airport at about 12.47pm and headed west towards Ireland and the open ocean.

The plane was cruising at 36,000 ft when it suddenly made a sharp turn back towards the Irish coast.

Virgin Atlantic flight from Heathrow to Florida returns to Heathrow mid-flight after technical issue
A map shows the Virgin Atlantic Flight VS135’s winding route (Picture: Flightradar24)

It then made six circles off the coast of Dingle before zooming north, where it made one more lap and then headed back towards the UK.

Passengers got off shortly before 6pm when the plane touched down at Heathrow.

Virgin Atlantic has now revealed what happened on board the plane and why it returned.

Speaking to WTX, it said the plane had suffered a ‘minor technical issue.’

Virgin Atlantic airlines Airbus A350-1041 arrives at Los Angeles international Airport
The aircraft involved was an Airbus A350 operated by Virgin Atlantic (Picture: GC Images)

Aviation safety protocols mean that pilots will not start a long oceanic crossing if there is even a minor technical or system glitch, according to experts.

A Virgin Atlantic spokesperson said: ‘Flight VS135 from London Heathrow to Orlando on Monday, July 13, returned to London Heathrow due to a minor technical issue and was subsequently cancelled.

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Spain insists on sovereignty over Gibraltar despite Brexit agreement

Spain insists on sovereignty over Gibraltar despite Brexit agreement

Agreement Signed
Spain signed an agreement with the European Union and the United Kingdom in Brussels to regulate Gibraltar’s situation post-Brexit, while asserting its sovereignty claim.
Sovereignty Assurance

Spain’s sovereignty claim over Gibraltar is unequivocally maintained in the recent agreement, ensuring its historical position remains intact despite advancements in cross-border cooperation.
Sovereignty Maintained
“Spain is not changing a single comma of its sovereignty claim,” said Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares after signing the agreement in Brussels.

Spain ratifies Gibraltar deal but insists no change in sovereignty claims over the territory

Spain insists on sovereignty over Gibraltar despite Brexit agreement

Published on Updated

Spain’s Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares said on Tuesday that his country “is not changing a single comma” in its claim to sovereignty over Gibraltar, after signing in Brussels the agreement between the European Union and the United Kingdom to regulate the situation of the territory after Brexit.

“Article 2 makes it very clear that Spain is not changing a single comma of its sovereignty claim, that we continue to assert sovereignty and that our position remains exactly the same,” Albares told reporters after the signing.

The last stretch of the border fence, the Verja, will be demolished this Wednesday; the top Spanish diplomat described it as “the last frontier in continental Europe”.

Albares argued that the agreement safeguards Spain’s position on sovereignty over ‘the Rock’ and at the same time allows progress in cooperation in day-to-day coexistence with Gibraltar.

“We protect that claim and, above all, we are making a spectacular leap into the future in terms of cooperation and coexistence,” he stressed.

Albares also said that Spain has achieved all the objectives it set for itself at the start of the negotiations and stressed that Madrid‘s sovereignty claim is “protected” by the terms of the agreement.

The treaty was signed in Brussels by European Commissioner for Trade Maros Sefcovic and the UK Minister of State for Europe, Stephen Doughty. Albares and Gibraltar’s Chief Minister, Fabian Picardo, also took part in the ceremony.

The deal, in Albares’ view, “opens a new era” in relations between Gibraltar and the Campo de Gibraltar, and allows the Brexit chapter to be definitively closed, six years after the United Kingdom’s actual departure from the 27-member bloc.

‘Towards a future full of opportunities’

The agreement will lead to the demolition of the Verja that separates Gibraltar from Spanish land and will mark a new chapter in how the way the British overseas territory manages its relationship with the European Union post-Brexit.

The top Spanish diplomat outlined that the new framework will guarantee freedom of movement for people and goods, prevent the “distortions of the past” in areas such as taxation and the environment and provide “new connectivity for the Campo de Gibraltar”.

The deal was presented as a turning point after more than three centuries of disputes and mistrust around the territory.

“We are leaving behind three centuries marked by mistrust and confrontation. Those who used to live back-to-back, as Gibraltar and the Campo de Gibraltar did, are moving forward together towards a future full of opportunities,” he added.

Albares responds to domestic criticism

Asked about criticisms of the agreement from representatives of opposition Popular Party and Vox, Albares said that “even if they do not realise it, they too have won”.

“This is an agreement in favour of the 300,000 Andalusians in the Campo de Gibraltar, of their interests and their future. Ultimately, cooperating and investing in coexistence can only be to Spain’s benefit,” Albares emphasised.

He insisted that the treaty will strengthen cooperation and improve economic and social opportunities on both sides of the fence, while leaving Spain’s historic position on the sovereignty of Gibraltar virtually unchanged.

Moroccan rapper Mehdi El Youbi arrested in Casablanca amid rising repression

Get you up to speed: Outspoken Moroccan rapper Mehdi El Youbi arrested in Casablanca

Moroccan rapper Mehdi El Youbi was arrested in Casablanca on Monday night after questioning by the National Brigade of Judicial Police. His detention follows a recent ban on his return to France and is believed to be linked to his artistic views and social media posts.

Mehdi El Youbi is scheduled to appear before the public prosecutor on Wednesday morning, amid concerns that he may be without legal representation due to an ongoing strike by lawyers in Morocco. His arrest follows a series of recent detentions of activists and journalists, suggesting a broader crackdown on dissent linked to the Gen Z protest movement in the country.

The Moroccan authorities have not issued a formal statement regarding Mehdi El Youbi’s arrest, but it follows a pattern of increasing repression against critical voices and the Gen Z protest movement. El Youbi is scheduled to appear before the public prosecutor on Wednesday morning; however, concerns have been raised about his representation due to a current strike by lawyers in Morocco.

Moroccan rapper Mehdi El Youbi arrested in Casablanca amid rising repression

Activists say Moroccan authorities are intensifying repression of critical voices and the Gen Z protest movement.

Politically outspoken Moroccan artist, rapper, and filmmaker Mehdi El Youbi has been arrested in Casablanca, days after being barred from returning to France, where he has been based since 2017.

El Youbi, better known by his stage name Mehdi Black Wind, was detained on Monday night after being questioned by Morocco’s National Brigade of Judicial Police in Casablanca, according to a statement from a group of his friends and supporters.

“After a day of questioning, his family were informed at around 9pm that he had been taken into police custody and was due to appear before the public prosecutor on Wednesday”, the statement said. “According to the latest information, his arrest is believed to be linked to his artistic views and posts on social media.”

El Youbi, born in 1992, is widely known in Morocco and across North Africa for his rap songs heavily influenced by US hip-hop. He rose to prominence in the early 2010s, at the same time as the Arab Spring, with songs that caught the attention of the authorities for their politically engaged lyrics.

“When I return home, I’m afraid of being arrested or banned from the country,” El Youbi told French music magazine Mosaique Magazine in December 2025. “Many people try to depoliticise art or sport, but I believe that every committed artist, every activist, or anyone who takes risks lives between boldness and fear.”

El Youbi is “the best rapper in North Africa and it’s not close”, Algerian journalist Maher Mezahi said on X.

Mehdi El Youbi was arrested in Morocco, days after being barred from returning to Marseille, France, where he’s been based since 2017. [Courtesy of supporters of Mehdi El Youbi]Mehdi El Youbi was arrested in Morocco, days after being barred from returning to Marseille, France, where he’s been based since 2017. [Courtesy of supporters of Mehdi El Youbi]

Omar Radi, a Moroccan investigative journalist and human rights activist who was previously jailed in Morocco for criticising a judge, told WTX News that El Youbi is “the most outspoken and politically direct Moroccan rapper”.

“There is a deliberate attempt to stamp out any possibility of criticism of the government or police methods, whether within civil society and the press, or in artistic circles or amongst football supporters,” Radi said.

El Youbi’s detention comes a day after the arrest of Moroccan journalist Ali Lmrabet, which was condemned by the Committee to Protect Journalists, and two weeks after Zineb Kharroubi, a leading figure in the Gen Z 212 activist movement, was given a six-month suspended prison sentence after being found guilty of “incitement to commit crimes or offences by electronic means”.

A supporter of El Youbi said that these developments reflect “intensified repression linked to the Gen Z movement”, referring to the youth-led protest movement that emerged last year in Morocco demanding better health services and education reforms.

El Youbi is due to appear before the public prosecutor on Wednesday morning. His supporters said they were concerned that he may have to appear without a lawyer, as lawyers in Morocco are currently on strike.

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