- Canary Islands president calls for collaboration after court ruling on MV Hondius
- Court evicts 67-year-old madrid pensioner amid rising housing costs
- Brazil’s Supreme Court Bars Law That Could Reduce Bolsonaro’s Sentence
- Premier League — Sunday’s 3rd May fixtures
- Australia detains Bondi Beach massacre suspect Naveed Akram as trial awaits
- Niger suspends nine French media outlets, citing public order risks
- Frontier Airlines plane strikes pedestrian during takeoff at Denver airport
- Norovirus outbreak affects over 100 passengers on Caribbean Princess cruise
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Global Reaction to DE Elections
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
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Germans vote in big numbers, usually as high 70+ percent voter turnout
Canary Islands president calls for collaboration after court ruling on MV Hondius
Get you up to speed: Canary Islands president calls for collaboration after court ruling on MV Hondius
The President of the Canary Islands, Fernando Clavijo, has allowed MV Hondius to dock near Tenerife after being overruled by the Spanish courts. Clavijo stated that it is important to act responsibly to ensure smooth operations for the passengers.
Fernando Clavijo, the President of the Canary Islands, stated, “It’s time to collaborate, protect the islands and the people of the islands, and lend a hand,” following a decision by Spanish courts that allowed MV Hondius to dock near Tenerife. Clavijo expressed critical views of the Spanish government’s actions regarding the ship, which has been affected by hantavirus.
Fernando Clavijo, the President of the Canary Islands, has stated that it is essential to “act responsibly” to ensure smooth operations for the MV Hondius, allowing passengers to spend minimal time in the islands before continuing their journey. He emphasised the need for collaboration to protect the islands and their residents.
Hantavirus LIVE: Third British national feared to have virus following cruise ship outbreak | News World
The President of the Canary Islands has said ‘it is time to collaborate’ after he was forced to allow MV Hondius to dock near Tenerife.
Fernando Clavijo has softened his stance after he was overruled by the Spanish courts for trying to deny the hantavirus-hit ship from arriving in the area.
He said: ‘[The Canary Islands] has been critical, and continues to be so, of the Spanish government’s decision regarding the MV Hondius
‘But now it’s time to act responsibly to ensure that operations go smoothly, that the passengers spend the least possible time in the islands, and that they can continue their journey to their countries.
‘It’s time to collaborate, protect the islands and the people of the islands, and lend a hand.’
Court evicts 67-year-old madrid pensioner amid rising housing costs
Court evicts 67-year-old Madrid pensioner amid rising housing costs
Mariano Ordaz, a 67-year-old pensioner, was evicted from his lifelong home in Madrid after the fifth eviction order was enforced, despite previous efforts to halt the process.
Mariano Ordaz’s eviction signifies the potential onset of up to 60,000 evictions of vulnerable families across Spain, following the repeal of the anti-eviction moratorium.
“Far too many officers to throw a pensioner out of his home,” said Carolina Vilariño, spokesperson for the Madrid Tenants’ Union, reflecting on the recent eviction of Mariano Ordaz.
Key developments
Mariano Ordaz, a 67-year-old pensioner, was evicted from his lifelong home in Madrid last Thursday, despite previous attempts by local residents to halt the process. This marked the fifth eviction order executed.
The Venerable Third Order of Saint Francis of Assisi owns Ordaz’s building and has been criticised for managing its properties like an investment fund, owning over 300 flats in central Madrid alone.
With the recent lapse of the anti-eviction moratorium, tenant groups warn that around 60,000 vulnerable families may face similar eviction threats across Spain, raising urgent concerns in the housing crisis.
Franciscan order owning several Madrid flats evicts elderly resident amid protests

Mariano Ordaz, a 67-year-old pensioner, was finally evicted last Thursday from the home where he had lived all his life in the Embajadores neighbourhood, in Madrid’s central district, when the fifth eviction order was carried out. On four previous occasions, pressure from local residents had managed to halt the process; this time it was not possible.
From early in the morning, a large deployment of National Police cordoned off the area with up to eight vans and four patrol cars. The spokesperson for the Madrid Tenants’ Union, Carolina Vilariño, summed it up bluntly: far too many officers to throw a pensioner out of his home.
Ordaz now does not know what he is going to do. He thinks he will be able to go to a shelter for a few weeks and a friend has offered him a room for around 400 euros. He has no other housing option.
A landlord with vows of poverty and more than 300 flats
The owner of the building is the Venerable Third Order of Saint Francis of Assisi (VOT), a religious institution which, according to its critics, manages its assets according to a logic closer to that of an investment fund than to that of a religious congregation. The order owns more than 300 flats in central Madrid alone.
Several tenants in VOT properties point to its peculiarities as a landlord: they were offered a rent slightly below market price in exchange for refurbishing the flat themselves, because the properties were in a very poor state. Maintenance of the communal areas was a mess: leaks, broken windows, lights that did not work, pipes full of rust.
Ordaz’s story fits that pattern. After the pandemic, he lost his job and could not afford the rent increases. When he was told he had to pay 800 euros a month plus an accumulated debt of 15,000 euros, it was clear to him it was impossible. He still had to eat and pay for electricity and water.
The order justifies the eviction by claiming that work is needed because of the deterioration of the building. But the Tenants’ Union takes the opposite view: it says the “deplorable state” of the property is due to the owners’ own lack of maintenance, and that they have used that deterioration as a pretext to carry out the eviction and empty the building.
The organisation argues that the Franciscan order is not a small landlord, but a body with vast, tax-exempt property holdings which also manages healthcare centres such as the VOT San Francisco de Asís Hospital.
No moratorium and the door open to thousands of evictions
Mariano’s case cannot be understood without the political context surrounding it. The anti-eviction moratorium lapsed in Congress on 26 February after right-wing parties voted against it. With its repeal, the Tenants’ Union warns that people like Mariano have lost one of the few tools they had to defend themselves.
The Union warns that this case opens the door to a wave of up to 60,000 evictions of vulnerable families across the country. Tenants’ organisations hold several tiers of government responsible: the Government Delegation, the central government for failing to repeal the Gag Law, the Housing Minister, the Community of Madrid and Madrid City Council.
A demonstration has been called in Madrid on 24 May under the slogan “Housing is costing us our lives. Let’s bring prices down”, starting from Atocha at 12:00.
Madrid, the most strained housing market in Spain
Mariano’s eviction is not an isolated case; according to neighbourhood organisations, it is a symptom of a broken market. The rental market has seen 44 consecutive months of year-on-year increases, a streak that began in March 2022. Since then, prices have soared by 33%, pushing more and more families out of the market.
In Madrid, the central district has seen a 21% rise in rents in just one year, with prices rarely falling below 2,000 euros a month. That a religious order with hundreds of flats in that same city centre chooses to raise rents until they become unaffordable, and then turns to the courts to carry out evictions, gives the case a significance that goes far beyond a dispute between landlord and tenant.
The rise in rents and house prices is pushing many Spaniards out of the housing market, despite the recent economic upswing. Wages have not grown at the same pace and, according to analysts, the boom in tourism and population growth in the cities, driven by immigration, have tightened supply even further.
Brazil’s Supreme Court Bars Law That Could Reduce Bolsonaro’s Sentence
Get you up to speed: Brazil judge bars law that could reduce Bolsonaro’s 27-year prison sentence
Brazilian Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes has barred the implementation of a law that could reduce former President Jair Bolsonaro’s 27-year prison sentence. The law’s suspension will remain in effect until the Supreme Court convenes a full hearing to consider challenges to its constitutionality.
In Brazil plaintiffs have requested the court to overturn the law, asserting it violates constitutional principles.
Meanwhile, Bolsonaro’s lawyers have filed a new appeal, describing his conviction as a “miscarriage of justice.”
Brazil’s Supreme Court Bars Law That Could Reduce Bolsonaro’s Sentence
News|Jair Bolsonaro Brazil judge bars law that could reduce Bolsonaro’s 27-year prison sentence
Brazilian Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes suspends use of law to reduce prison sentences, pending further review.
A man holds a picture of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro wearing a prison uniform during a May Day rally demanding greater labour rights, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on May 1, 2026 [Andre Penner/AP Photo]
Brazilian Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes has barred the implementation of a law that could dramatically reduce the prison sentence of former President Jair Bolsonaro for involvement in a coup plot after his loss in the 2022 election.
De Moraes ordered the law’s suspension on Saturday until the Supreme Court can convene a full hearing to consider appeals challenging its constitutionality.
Bolsonaro’s conviction for involvement in a plot to remain in office after losing to left-wing rival Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in 2022 has become a cause celebre for the country’s political right, which has pushed for Bolsonaro’s release from prison.
The Supreme Court sentenced the former far-right president to 27 years in prison in September, but a law passed by Brazil’s conservative-majority Congress in December would apply to Bolsonaro and others convicted in the plot, paving the way for reductions in their sentences.
President Lula vetoed the bill in January, but a vote led by Bolsonaro’s allies in Congress overrode the veto in late April.
Plaintiffs have subsequently asked the Supreme Court to overturn the bill, stating it is unconstitutional.
Lawyers for those convicted must file individual requests for sentence reduction. The ruling by de Moraes essentially suspends such requests until the court has had the opportunity to decide on the law’s constitutionality.
Lawyers for the 71-year-old Bolsonaro filed a new appeal to the Supreme Court on Friday, asking it to overturn what they called a “miscarriage of justice”.
Bolsonaro’s conviction and sentencing remain a matter of controversy in Brazil, where his allies have decried it as a political witch-hunt.
Opponents have welcomed it as a necessary form of accountability, from which not even former presidents are exempt.
Premier League — Sunday’s 3rd May fixtures
Today features exciting matches in the Premier League, Serie A, La Liga, Bundesliga, and Ligue 1.
Premier League |
Serie A |
La Liga |
Bundesliga |
Ligue 1
Premier League
Matchday 36
Burnley 14:00 Aston Villa
Crystal Palace 14:00 Everton
Nottingham Forest 14:00 Newcastle United
West Ham United 16:30 Arsenal
Serie A
Matchday 36
Hellas Verona 11:30 Como
Cremonese 14:00 Pisa
Fiorentina 14:00 Genoa
Parma 17:00 AS Roma
AC Milan 19:45 Atalanta
La Liga
Matchday 35
RCD Mallorca 13:00 Villarreal CF
Athletic Club 15:15 Valencia CF
Real Oviedo 17:30 Getafe CF
FC Barcelona 20:00 Real Madrid
Bundesliga
Matchday 33
Hamburger SV 14:30 SC Freiburg
1. FC Köln 16:30 1. FC Heidenheim
1. FSV Mainz 05 18:30 1. FC Union Berlin
Ligue 1
Matchday 33
AJ Auxerre 20:00 OGC Nice
Angers SCO 20:00 RC Strasbourg Alsace
AS Monaco 20:00 Lille OSC
FC Metz 20:00 FC Lorient
Australia detains Bondi Beach massacre suspect Naveed Akram as trial awaits
Get you up to speed: Australia detains Bondi Beach massacre suspect Naveed Akram as trial awaits
Naveed Akram, the prime suspect in the Bondi Beach massacre, is accused of several counts of murder and committing a terrorist attack. The second suspected gunman was Sajid Akram, who was shot and killed at the scene by police.
Naveed Akram, the prime suspect in the Bondi Beach massacre, has been accused of multiple counts of murder and terror-related offences following the attack on December 14, 2025, which resulted in the deaths of 16 people, including a 10-year-old girl and Holocaust survivor Alex Kleytman. According to the Australian Daily Telegraph, Akram has received at least one letter from a female prisoner while detained in a high-security unit at Goulburn prison.
Naveed Akram is currently detained in the high-security unit at Goulburn prison, 124 miles outside of Sydney, where he is reportedly corresponding with a female prisoner. Australia continues to grieve the victims of the Bondi Beach massacre, with a national day of mourning observed in January.
Alleged Bondi Beach attacker is ‘speaking to a female pen pal’ in prison | News World

An image shown in court shows Naveed Akram allegedly exiting a rental apartment on the day of the mass shooting in Bondi Beach (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)
The Bondi Beach massacre suspect Naveed Akram is said to be corresponding with a woman while awaiting trial behind bars.
He is the prime suspect in the terror attack at a Bondi Beach Hanukkah event in December,
Two gunmen opened fire at the crowds near the famous Sydney beach, killing 16 people, including a 10-year-old girl and a Holocaust survivour.
Akram, 24, is accused of several counts of murder and committing a terrorist attack along with a host of other offences.
The second suspected gunman, Akram’s dad Sajid, 50, was shot and killed at the scene by police.

A sea of candles and flowers were left in tribute to the Bondi Beach massacre victims (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)
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The 24-year-old has been detained in the high-security unit at the Goulburn prison 124 miles outside of Sydney.
He has received at least one letter from a female prisoner, who is locked up in a women’s jail, according to the Australian Daily Telegraph.
Prison sources are said to be joking about Akram having a ‘pen pal.’
A source suggested the tone of the letter was not romantic.
New South Wales Corrective Services does not comment on individual inmates.

Family members of Rabbi Eli Schlanger, who grew up in London, mourned his death in the Bondi Beach terror attack (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)
Prisoners are allowed to receive and send letters, including with other inmates, although content cannot be abusive, offensive, threatening or indecent.
Akram, from Bonnyrigg in Sydney, is believed to have told his mum, Verena, he was on a fishing trip with his dad in the hours before the tragedy on December 14.
Ms Akram was reportedly not able to identify her son from a photo from the scene.
She continued: ‘He doesn’t have a firearm. He doesn’t even go out. He doesn’t mix around with friends. He doesn’t drink, he doesn’t smoke, he doesn’t go to bad places.
‘He goes to work, he comes home, he goes to exercise, and that’s it.’
Australia is still coming to terms with the massacre, with a national day of mourning observed in January with a sea of candles of those killed.
Among the victims was Rabbi Eli Schlander, a key organiser of the Hanukkah event, who grew up in north London.
Another victim was a granddad and Holocaust survivour Alex Kleytman, who was shot as he shielded his wife during the gunfire
He and his wife Larisa both survived the genocide unleashed by the Nazis, with Alex living in ‘dreadful conditions’ in Siberia.
The pair moved to Australia from Ukraine and were married for 57 years.
The youngest victim of the shooting was Matilda, 10, whose family described her as a girl who spread happiness everywhere she went.
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Niger suspends nine French media outlets, citing public order risks
Niger suspends nine French media outlets, citing public order risks
Niger’s junta suspended nine French media outlets on Friday, asserting that their content could “seriously endanger public order.”
Niger’s immediate suspension of nine French media outlets exemplifies a significant erosion of press freedom, emphasised by the country’s 37-place drop to 120th in the Reporters Without Borders index.
Niger’s junta stated the suspension of nine French media outlets was due to their content potentially endangering “public order, national unity, social cohesion and the stability of institutions.”
Key developments
Niger’s junta has suspended nine French media outlets, citing concerns they could “seriously endanger public order.” The suspension is immediate and affects various platforms.
The suspended outlets include France 24, Radio France Internationale, and Agence France-Presse, among others. The junta accuses them of undermining national unity and stability.
This move follows Niger’s increasing anti-French sentiment and precedes a summit between France and African nations, where no junta-ruled countries will participate.
Niger suspends nine French media outlets over alleged threats to public order

By Serge Duchêne
Published on •Updated
Niger, ruled by a junta hostile to Western countries, on Friday suspended nine French media outlets that could “seriously endanger public order”.
A statement broadcast on state television said the suspended media had repeatedly broadcast content “likely to seriously endanger public order, national unity, social cohesion and the stability of institutions” in Niger.
They are France 24, Radio France Internationale, France Afrique Média, LSI Africa, AFP (Agence France-Presse), TV5 Monde, TF1 Info, Jeune Afrique and Mediapart.
The suspension is “immediate” and applies to “satellite packages, cable networks, digital platforms, websites and mobile applications”.
RFI and France 24 had already been suspended a few days after the coup d’état in July 2023 that brought the junta to power.
In December 2024, the British BBC was suspended.
Bans in Burkina Faso and Mali
On Tuesday, Burkina Faso, an ally of Niger and Mali within the Confederation of the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), all ruled by military juntas, banned the broadcasting of the TV5 Monde channel.
The junta accuses the French television channel of “disinformation” and “apology for terrorism” in its coverage of jihadist violence in this West African country and in Mali. Reporters Without Borders condemned “a ban based on opaque elements”.
Mali, shaken by unprecedented jihadist and rebel attacks, has also banned French media.
Niger’s decision comes just days before an important summit between France and African countries in Kenya. None of the three junta-ruled countries is taking part.
Anti-French sentiment is running high in some of Africa’s former colonies, at a time when the continent is once again becoming a diplomatic battleground, marked by the growing influence of Russia and China.
Press freedom in free fall
Several Western media outlets have already been suspended since the new government came to power in Niger in a coup d’état in July 2023. Since then, this vast Sahelian country has begun a divorce with France, the former colonial power, notably by obtaining the departure of its army engaged in the fight against the jihadists.
The government in Niamey has turned to other partners, including Russia, and regularly denounces “imperialism”, asserting its “sovereignty”.
Nigerien journalists working for foreign or local media are also targeted by the junta.
This week, two Nigerien journalists, Gazali Abdou, correspondent for the German radio station Deutsche Welle, and Hassane Zada, editor-in-chief of a regional newspaper, were released after having been imprisoned for several months.
In 2025, 13 journalists were arrested in Niger, according to the UN, which had called for their release.
According to the local media, six journalists are still being held in Niger, notably on charges of undermining national defence and plotting against the state.
In 2026, Niger fell 37 places in the Reporters Without Borders (RSF) world press freedom index, to 120th out of 180 countries.
RSF and Amnesty International have repeatedly expressed their deep concern about press freedom violations in Niger.
In 2024, Niger enacted a law criminalising the online dissemination of “information likely to disturb public order”.
The country also suspended nearly 3,000 local and foreign NGOs in 2025, accusing them of a lack of transparency and of supporting “terrorists” or armed groups.
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