- European Commission Welcomes Hungary-Slovakia Proposal for Druzhba Mission
- Ukrainian Foreign Legion Recruits Act on Urgency, Leaving London for War
- Brady Tkachuk responds to ‘clearly fake’ TikTok video shared by White House
- MOL threatens legal action against Janaf over Russian oil shipment access
- Bukayo Saka injury latest ahead of Arsenal vs Chelsea
- What Sky News Reveals About the Connection Between Bill Clinton and Jeffrey Epstein
- Tram derailment in Milan results in two fatalities and multiple injuries
- Roberta Metsola Signs EU’s €90 Billion Support Loan for Ukraine
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European Commission Welcomes Hungary-Slovakia Proposal for Druzhba Mission
Get you up to speed: European Commission Welcomes Hungary-Slovakia Proposal for Druzhba Mission
EU COUNCIL INITIATIVE
The European Commission welcomes Hungary and Slovakia’s proposal for a fact-finding mission to inspect the Druzhba pipeline, urging cooperation for resolution.
EU RESPONSE
According to Anna-Kaisa Itkonen, the Commission is engaging with Ukrainian authorities to facilitate the urgent resolution of the Druzhba pipeline’s repair amid ongoing tensions.
MISSION STATUS
Current discussions are ongoing regarding a potential fact-finding mission to the Druzhba pipeline site, pending Ukraine’s approval amidst security concerns.
What we know so far
The European Commission has welcomed the joint proposal by Hungary and Slovakia to send a fact-finding mission to inspect the damaged section of the Druzhba pipeline, seeing it as a first step to ease the standoff between the two countries and Ukraine.
The Commission does not rule out joining such a mission if Kyiv gives permission.
But the plan remains in very early stages, and the executive does not have a track record of participating in exercises of this type.
“We consider this a welcome step. We are now in contact with the Ukrainian authorities on this matter and continue to work with our member states to ensure the security of supply,” Anna-Kaisa Itkonen, the Commission’s spokesperson for energy, said on Friday.
“We need to take the next steps to see what shape and form this fact-finding mission will take,” she added.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has vetoed a €90 billion loan for Kyiv in retaliation for the interruption of oil deliveries through Druzhba, which he blames on “political considerations” of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Orbán is facing re-election on 12 April and trailing in opinion polls by double digits.
Hungary and Slovakia, which can buy Russian oil thanks to an indefinite opt-out from EU sanctions, have accused Zelenskyy of concealing the facts about the pipeline.
“The Ukrainians are not willing to accept a verification, fact-finding mission,” Orbán said on Friday morning. “President Zelenskyy is lying. He is not telling the truth.”
Zelenskyy has hit back at the accusations, saying Russian forces were responsible for bombing the pipeline and suggesting Orbán should seek answers in Moscow.
The confrontation has triggered a political crisis for the entire European Union and thrown the carefully crafted deal on the €90 billion loan into disarray.
“We expect all EU leaders to honour their commitments,” Itkonen said.
“It is important to recall that it was a Russian attack (on) an oil pumping station of the Druzhba pipeline on 27 January that caused the damage.”
Finding a way out
As tensions rise, Orbán wrote a new letter to António Costa, the president of the European Council, and the other 26 leaders proposing a fact-finding mission with Hungarian and Slovak experts to “verify the status” of the Druzhba pipeline.
The tone of Thursday’s letter was substantially different from the incendiary messages that the Hungarian premier has been posting on social media for the past week.
“I am fully aware of the political difficulties created by the delay in the implementation of the European Council conclusions on the financial support for Ukraine,” Orbán told Costa.
“My initiative also aims at facilitating the timely resolution of this issue.”
The following day, Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico spoke with Zelenskyy and called on the Commission to participate in the “joint inspection group”. Zelenskyy invited Fico to visit Ukraine and discuss the matter.
“The national interests of Slovakia and Hungary cannot be pushed aside. If solidarity within the EU is to be mutual, it must apply to everyone,” Fico said.
It is still unclear whether Kyiv will allow the fact-finding mission to access the site in the region of Lviv, where a Russian drone strike was recorded on 27 January.
The Ukrainian government has previously warned that technicians are at risk of being targeted by Russian strikes when they are out on the ground. Energy infrastructure is considered a strategic point, which further complicates access.
The Commission has expressed sympathy for the dangerous conditions while, at the same time, asking Ukraine to accelerate the repairs of the Druzhba pipeline.
Privately, EU officials and diplomats say this is the most practical way to solve the crisis, lift the Hungarian veto and ensure the final approval of the €90 billion loan.
During an experts’ meeting on Wednesday, Ukraine provided a document, seen by EU News, saying that it was “actively carrying out repair and restoration works”.
“Security and stabilisation measures continue amid daily threats of new missile attacks,” the document said. “The Ukrainian side is interested in restoring transit as soon as possible within the available legal framework.”
Ukrainian Foreign Legion Recruits Act on Urgency, Leaving London for War
Get you up to speed: Ukrainian Foreign Legion Recruits Act on Urgency, Leaving London for War
Nathan Long, a 30-year-old from Croydon, volunteered to join the Ukrainian Foreign Legion in 2024, despite having never fired a gun before. He and numerous foreign recruits, including soldiers from Namibia and Colombia, underwent four weeks of training and were subsequently deployed to Ukraine’s eastern front, earning £2,150 per month. Oleksii Bezhevets, a representative of the Ukrainian Ministry of Defence recruiting unit, noted a recent spike in British volunteers eager for real combat experience.
According to Oleksii Bezhevets, a representative of the Ukrainian Ministry of Defence recruiting unit, there has been a noticeable increase in British volunteers joining the fight in Ukraine. The Foreign Office warns that British citizens who travel to Ukraine to fight could face prosecution upon their return if they are believed to have committed criminal offences or posed a threat to national security. Nathan Long expressed concern over Western support, stating, “Western allies have offered support, but too often it has fallen short of what is truly needed.”
Nathan Long’s experiences in Ukraine highlight the ongoing influx of foreign volunteers, including a notable increase in British recruits, as they aim to contribute to the fight against Russian aggression. Oleksii Bezhevets of the Ukrainian Ministry of Defence has noted this spike, indicating that many recruits feel unfulfilled by their training in the UK and seek real combat experience. Despite the perilous situation, Nathan expresses no regrets about his decision to join the fight, although he acknowledges the growing dangers and the loss of friends in the conflict.
What we know so far
A WhatsApp chat made me leave London life to join Ukrainian Foreign Legion | News World
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Nathan Long had never fired a gun in his life before he volunteered to join the Ukrainian Foreign Legion.
He was one of thousands of foreign recruits flooding into Ukraine’s eastern front last year in anticipation of a Spring offensive from Vladimir Putin.
Now, the winter ice is starting to thaw.
Soldiers from as far as Namibia, Colombia and Croydon have been tempted to prove themselves on the battlefield, going from concerned civilians to battle-ready rifleman earning £2,150 a month after just four weeks of gruelling training.
The 30-year-old south Londoner was one of them, signing up in 2024 to fight the war 1,500 miles away from his comfortable life as a roofer, where his major concern was the introduction of ULEZ.

Soldiers from as far as Namibia, Colombia and Croydon, like Nathan Long, have been tempted to prove themselves on the battlefield in Ukraine (Picture: Nathan Long)

A recent drone strike on a private building in Kharkiv(Picture: EPA)
Speaking to WTX News, Nathan explains that his motivation was simple: to stop Putin in his tracks ‘before it was too late’.
He remembers watching clips of the invasion on the news, where handheld footage showed terrified civilian hiding from missile strikes, and felt enraged at the situation.
Despite having his hands full as a new father he couldn’t help his thoughts returning to Ukraine, and two years later Nathan finally made the decision to join the frontline.
‘I’d rather it said on my gravestone I tried to do something rather than tell my son I didn’t as missiles rain down on Europe,’ the dad-of-one explains. ‘It was hard to leave him but I needed him to know good people can make a difference.’
After a short interview with a recruiter through WhatsApp, within two weeks of applying, Nathan had left his son a few personal mementoes and was on a plane to Kyiv for his medical.
He faced his first reality check spending his first night in the war-torn capital’s metro system cowering from Russian drone strikes.
‘When I told my commander that I needed to eat, he made me strip’
His medical the next morning was quick and simple. ‘The doctor literally extended my limbs, checked they all worked and then passed me as fit to fight,’ Nathan remembers.
He was then handed a rifle and a flak jacket emblazoned with the Union Jack spliced with the Ukrainian flag by his new commander and sent to a camp two hours outside of Kyiv.
Training was tougher than he imagined, admits Nathan. He was forced on 30km long marches carrying supplies until he nearly passed out.
‘When I told my commander that I needed to eat, he made me strip and clean my rifle instead, so I missed meal time,’ he explains.

You don’t join the Ukrainian army for the haute cuisine (Picture: Nathan Long)
Finally, he was served a plate of fish, pork and a boiled egg, his first battle was with his stomach: ‘It was vile but it was food so I ate it – apart from that fish.’
Fellow recruits included men from Zambia to Brazil, all learning together how to spot Russian booby traps and reload a rifle – something Nathan initially struggled with due to his ‘short arms’.
The team bonded by spending -5C nights together sleeping in deep narrow pits they had dug out – known as foxholes – using each other for body warmth.
‘This stretch of forest was known as the killzone’
Nathan’s first actual injury came soon after. Entirely self-inflicted, he slipped in trench training badly, dislocating his shoulder. After trying to pop it back in himself – but making it worse – he was taken to a medical tent. He recalls two ‘decent’ Brits, a Scottish man and a ‘lad from Sheffield’ bought him ice cream to help ‘soothe his throat’ as he recovered with handfulls of painkillers.
A year on, Nathan is now a battle-hardened veteran. Losing close friends, he says has changed him as a person.
He recalls his first encounter with Russian troops in a forest ambush on the Eastern front in Kharviv. It happened as the men trudged through ‘2km of pure hell’ littered with land mines, unexploded bombs and patrolled by camera drones.
Sending WTX News gruelling first-person footage of the scene, you can see ice on the ground and splintered trees, while Nathan carefully navigates foxholes – many, he says, contain the remains of his blown-up friends.
Passing each one, Nathan gives a quick prayer and then advances.
Talking about the area, he adds: ‘This stretch of forest with the bodies was known as the killzone, it was perfectly zeroed for the artillery and they had Mavics (camera drones) constantly monitoring.

2km of pure hell: Nathan Long films his unit advancing in the shelled remains of a frozen forest (Picture: Nathan Long)
‘When I finally made it back, I had a mixture of emotions I was angry because I knew my friend Osiris was still out there and the Russians would get his body.
‘But I was also happy because I knew the majority of us made it out.’
Recalling his friend, who was blown up, Nathan adds: ‘He was a sound guy, brave and loyal. He asked me to introduce him to a nice English girl one day.
‘He taught me the commands In Spanish and I still read our messages to help me remember the words I have the last picture of him ever taken.’
No regrets
Asked if he has any regrets volunteering for a war so many miles away from his family, Nathan is adamant that he has none. ‘I have people here I would consider family more so than my own back home,’ he explains.
‘We’ve all got a dark sense of humour, even when we’re in the s*** we laugh and joke.
‘My favourite one was when I turned up at a Ukrainian position after being lost. They could only find the other guy who I got separated from. Our team leader had radioed me through as a code 200, as in I’m dead.
‘They were shocked when I came back, I told them “you can only kill a spider with a slipper, not drones or artillery”. They just looked at me like I was mad.
‘The soldier I was separated had survived in a small hole. He told me if I had gone in with him one of us would have died. It wasn’t big enough for both of us.’
Nathan doesn’t mind being named and pictured by WTX News because he has been outed by TrackaNazi, a Russian-run Telegram account that doxxes Kyiv’s Western recruits, exposing their faces and social media. He explains that foreign fighter kills are valued highly and celebrated by Russian forces as battlefield casualties on both sides approach two million.
Despite the target on his back, Nathan’s focus remains on the task in hand – although he adds that after months away, what he misses most about home, aside from his son and sister is ‘a full English breakfast and a good cup of tea. I have the occasional parcel of Yorkshire Tea bags sent, but they run out so quickly.
‘Ukrainians have alright tea, but they don’t use milk and look at me like I’m crazy when I add it. It’s flavoured tea most of the time or coffee, but I don’t really like coffee.
‘I’ve tried to relax with camomile but I can’t get into it. I should probably stop smoking too but I doubt it’ll be smoking that kills me first.’
On being welcomed by the Ukrainian people, Nathan explains that the reaction can be mixed. ‘They’re good, very hospitable. There isn’t a day I would go hungry if I had no food, they wouldn’t allow it,’ he says. ‘There are some that are pro-Soviet and don’t like us, but the majority are nice.’

Nathan spoke to the WTX News on a rare respite from fighting tasked with guarding a building his unit had taken over. (Picture: Nathan Long)
‘Western support has fallen short of what is truly needed’
As hundreds of Russian air strikes pound Kyiv nearly every day since the invasion in February 2022, Nathan doesn’t foresee an end to fighting and accuses the West of dithering as his friends die.
‘Western allies have offered support, but too often it has fallen short of what is truly needed,’ he explains.
‘Delays and hesitation come at a terrible cost. I have lost numerous friends in this war—people whose lives were stolen not by fate, but by aggression.
‘We fight drones now, not men with guns. I hope one day that the rest of the world will never endure what we have here.’
He hopes Putin is held accountable for his crimes in Ukraine and dreams of joining a friend in Cambodia for sentry work when the war is over.
Oleksii Bezhevets, a representative of the Ukrainian Ministry of Defence recruiting unit who recruited Nathan, told WTX News there had been a spike in British volunteers.
‘I like to look them in the eye and know their motivation. Some British fighters have had all the army training already in the UK but they come here to get real action,’ he says.
‘They felt like they had just been playing soldiers before coming to Ukraine.’
However, the Foreign Office warns Brits travelling to Ukraine to fight, or even assist in the war, they could be prosecuted on their return to the UK if they are believe to have committed criminal offences or posed a threat to national security.
A spokesman added: ‘The risk to life, or of maltreatment, is high.
‘The British Government’s ability to support you in these circumstances is very limited. It cannot facilitate your departure from Ukraine, your medical repatriation, or termination of your military contract.’
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Brady Tkachuk responds to ‘clearly fake’ TikTok video shared by White House
Get you up to speed: Brady Tkachuk responds to ‘clearly fake’ TikTok video shared by White House
WHITE HOUSE CONTROVERSY
Brady Tkachuk criticized a White House TikTok video for using AI-generated media to falsely attribute offensive remarks to him regarding Canadians.
WHITE HOUSE RESPONSE
Brady Tkachuk said the TikTok video shared by the White House was “clearly fake” and does not represent his views or voice.
STATUS UPDATE
Brady Tkachuk, presenting his views at a Thursday news conference, confirmed he disapproves of the fake video shared by the White House, denying any related claims.
What we know so far
An American Olympic hockey star has attacked a TikTok video, shared by the White House, calling it “clearly fake” after it made him sound like he was mocking Canadians.
Brady Tkachuk, from Arizona, who captains the NHL’s Ottawa Senators, appears in footage celebrating the gold medal won by the US men’s hockey team at the Winter Games in Italy on Sunday.
The video includes fabricated audio of the 26-year-old referring to Canadians, who were beaten in the final, as “maple syrup eating f***s” with the expletive muted. The video included a note saying it “contains AI-generated media.”
“It’s clearly fake because it’s not my voice and not my lips moving,” Tkachuk said during a news conference on Thursday.
“I’m not in control of any of those accounts… I know that those words would never come out of my mouth.”
Asked his opinion of the video, which was shared on the White House TikTok account, Tkachuk added: “I would never say that. That’s not who I am. So yeah, I guess I don’t like that video.”
Tkachuk also denied being the voice heard shouting “close the northern border” during Team USA’s celebratory phone call with Donald Trump after Sunday’s 2-1 win over Canada.
“I’ve been seeing stuff that people think it’s me, but if you watch the video, that’s not my voice and something that I never say,” Tkachuk said. Sky News’s US partner, NBC, has asked the White House for comment.
Tkachuk was one of twenty players who visited the White House on Tuesday and attended the president’s State of the Union speech in Washington DC.

Team USA’s women also beat Canada 2-1, the first time the Americans swept both Olympic hockey tournaments.
Talking on a speakerphone after the game on Sunday, Mr. Trump extended an invitation to the White House to the men’s team, then added, “We’re going to have to bring the women’s team, you do know that.”
The president also joked that if he didn’t extend the invitation, he would probably be impeached.
Some of the men’s players laughed, something at least one said they regretted later.
Tkachuk said he understood how the moment on the phone call could have been viewed by the women’s players.
“I mean, I get it,” he said. “We supported them, they supported us. You can’t control what other people say.”
Meanwhile, rapper Flavor Flav scheduled a July celebration for the women’s team in Las Vegas for those who can make it.
MOL threatens legal action against Janaf over Russian oil shipment access
Get you up to speed: MOL threatens legal action against Janaf over Russian oil shipment access
ENERGY SECURITY PRESSURES
Hungary’s MOL may pursue legal action against Croatia’s Janaf if unsanctioned Russian oil shipments are not guaranteed, amid ongoing tensions with the European Commission.
CROATIAN RESPONSE
According to Economy Minister Ante Šušnjar, Croatia will uphold international law regarding Russian oil deliveries and will not succumb to external pressures or demands.
CURRENT STATUS
Hungary’s MOL awaits Janaf’s response regarding access for Russian oil shipments after agreeing to begin long-term capacity tests on the Adria pipeline.
What we know so far
Hungary’s major energy company MOL could initiate legal proceedings against Janaf, the Croatian operator of the Adria pipeline, if it does not “immediately” guarantee access for unsanctioned Russian oil shipments by sea to Hungary, the company said in a press statement released on Thursday.
MOL argues that these oil shipments must be allowed because Janaf has been “long aware” that crude oil deliveries to Hungary and Slovakia via the Druzhba pipeline — the main supply route through Ukraine — have been suspended since January 27.
The company — which describes itself as a “leading integrated Central Eastern European oil and gas corporation” — also argues that Hungary and Slovakia were granted an exemption from the EU ban on imports of Russian fossil fuels due to their landlocked status and reliance on Moscow.
“MOL expects a straight response from the Croatian company,” by today “at the latest,” the statement said. “In case of refusal, MOL may turn to the European Commission and may initiate a claim for damages.”
The company said on Wednesday it was waiting for the Croatian company’s position to decide whether to allow Russian crude oil shipments through the sea via the Adria pipeline.
The threats take place in a context of high tensions between Hungary and the EU. Those tensions escalated after Hungary blocked the EU’s €90 billion financial package to Ukraine, accusing the war-torn country of “blackmail” over the Druzhba pipeline.
The situation has also highlighted Hungary’s energy vulnerability by disrupting a system heavily dependent on Russian oil, which has traditionally supplied about two-thirds of the country’s imports.
Croatian authorities have so far reacted cautiously. The country’s Economy Minister Ante Šušnjar said on Thursday the country “wouldn’t act on anyone’s pressure” but confirmed Zagreb will “respect international law.”
“Nowhere in international law does it say that we have to do something about the delivery of Russian oil,” Šušnjar said. “We have partnership relations, there are sanctions regimes of both the USA and the European Commission.”
“We will consistently implement our partnership policies and will not agree to any blackmail or pressure from anyone,” he added.
The European Commission considers the Adria pipeline, which originates in Croatia and runs through Hungary, Slovakia, and other central and eastern countries, to be one of the viable options for Hungary to secure its energy supply.
More expensive alternative
However, Hungary has challenged Brussels’s assessment. MOL said logistics and transporting oil through the Adria pipeline are significantly more expensive — several times the average cost per 100 km compared with deliveries via the Druzhba pipeline — suggesting potential concerns about abuse of a monopoly position.
In a video statement addressed to Ukrainian President Zelensky, published on Thursday, Orbán blamed Ukraine for the damage to the Druzhba pipeline and accused Ukraine of “endangering the secure and affordable energy supply of Hungarian families.”
“We do not want to pay more for energy,” Orbán said.
Hungary’s MOL also claims that the Croatian pipeline operator has overinflated its annual capacity. “(Croatia states) annual capacity of the pipeline has ranged between 11 and 15 million tonnes, while no more than 2 million tonnes of crude oil have ever been transported through the pipeline section,” reads MOL’s statement.
Croatian Minister Šušnjar described Janaf as a “safe and reliable partner” offering competitive prices due to shorter transport distances, particularly for Hungary and Slovakia. He also acknowledged that the broader price differences are driven by the significantly lower cost of Russian oil compared to EU supplies and called on Budapest and Bratislava to abandon Russian energy.
Capacity tests planned
Despite the threats, MOL and the Croatian pipeline operator Janaf agreed on Wednesday to begin long-term capacity tests on the Adria pipeline, with the Hungarian side saying it “could end the war of numbers” and resolve the dispute over the pipeline’s actual capacity.
A MOL representative told EU News that both countries had not yet agreed on a specific date to kick start the tests, but noted that there was interest from both parties in moving forward with a longstanding dispute over the pipeline’s operational capacity.
Hungary’s total annual oil needs amount to 5.75 million tonnes, of which 87% come from Russia, while Slovakia imports a total of 4.66 million tonnes, of which 86% come from Moscow, according to official figures.
The Hungarian MOL maintained that securing energy supply in Central and Eastern Europe region requires two fully operational and commercially competitive routes.
“The Adria pipeline needs to grow up to the task, but in the spirit of source diversification, it is also necessary to ensure that the Druzhba pipeline is operational,” MOL added.
Bukayo Saka injury latest ahead of Arsenal vs Chelsea
Bukayo Saka injury latest ahead of Arsenal vs Chelsea | Football
TL;DR – Two-minute read
Bukayo Saka was injured during Arsenal’s 4-1 victory over Tottenham last Sunday but is expected to be fit for their Premier League match against Chelsea this Sunday. Saka fell awkwardly on his ankle but walked off unaided, with Noni Madueke taking his place late in the match. Arsenal remain five points clear at the top of the table.
Bukayo Saka is set to be available for Arsenal’s Premier League match against Chelsea on Sunday after facing an injury concern last weekend. In Arsenal’s 4-1 victory at Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday, Saka sustained an ankle injury but managed to walk off the pitch unaided, with Noni Madueke replacing him during the final moments of the match.
Arsenal currently sit five points clear of Manchester City at the top of the Premier League. Manager Mikel Arteta confirmed on Friday that there were no new injury concerns ahead of the match against Chelsea, saying, “No so far, we’re waiting for tomorrow, the last training session, to understand if we have one or two available from last week.” He mentioned that Max Dowman will feature with the under-21s, while Kai Havertz is scheduled to train and Ben White’s situation is still to be determined.
Chelsea, who sit fifth in the Premier League following a 1-1 draw at home to Burnley last Saturday, will be looking to improve their standing. Earlier in the month, Arsenal earned a 1-0 win against Chelsea in the second leg of their Carabao Cup semi-final, and Arteta expressed uncertainty regarding Chelsea manager Liam Rosenior’s tactical approach for the upcoming match. “We don’t know, I mean, they’ve done different things, they can change throughout the game,” Arteta stated, emphasising Arsenal’s readiness for various scenarios during the contest.
Arsenal will host Chelsea at the Emirates Stadium this Sunday afternoon.
What Sky News Reveals About the Connection Between Bill Clinton and Jeffrey Epstein
Get you up to speed: What Sky News Reveals About the Connection Between Bill Clinton and Jeffrey Epstein
CLINTON EPSTEIN RELATIONSHIP
Sky News verified photo evidence of Bill Clinton’s numerous connections with Jeffrey Epstein during Clinton’s presidency, including joint travels for Clinton Foundation events.
CLINTON FOUNDATION
Bill Clinton’s spokesperson, Angel Urena, confirmed that the former president visited Epstein’s New York residence in 2002, amid numerous Foundation trips that included Epstein.
CURRENT STATUS
Sky News has verified numerous photographs of Bill Clinton with Jeffrey Epstein during Clinton Foundation trips, confirming details of their relationship across multiple locations and times.
What we know so far
Sky News has uncovered new details about the timings and locations of photographs featuring Bill Clinton and paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein, forming a comprehensive timeline of their relationship.
The photos, included in the Epstein files and verified by Sky’s Data and Forensics team, were taken on numerous Clinton Foundation trips where Epstein was present.
The former US president has never been accused of wrongdoing in connection with Epstein and has said he did not know about the sex offender’s crimes. Being included in the Epstein files does not imply wrongdoing.
White House in 1993. Pic: William J Clinton Presidential Library”>In 1992, records show Epstein donated $2,000 to Mr Clinton’s successful presidential campaign on 30 January and 8 June – a small fraction of the $62m his campaign raised overall.
After being sworn in as president in 1993, Mr Clinton was pictured in September with Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell after an event for donors to a White House restoration project.

The event was said to have been for donors and records list Epstein and Maxwell donating $10,000 to the White House Historical Association the same day as the event. Hillary Clinton hosted the event with her husband Bill Clinton.

Freedom of information (FOI) records show that Epstein visited the White House 17 times from 1993 to 1995.
In 1996, Mr Clinton was re-elected for a second presidential term.
A few years later in 1999, records from the Federal Election Commission show Epstein donated $20,000 on 29 October to Hillary Clinton’s Senate campaign. This donation shows no suggestion of wrongdoing.

In 2001, Bill Clinton left office, creating the Clinton Foundation, with the mission to “strengthen the capacity of people in the United States and throughout the world to meet the challenges of global interdependence”.
In 2002, Mr Clinton visited Epstein’s New York residence once, as confirmed by Mr Clinton’s spokesperson Angel Urena.
Sky News has verified numerous photographs taken on Clinton Foundation trips where Epstein was present.
In May 2002, Mr Clinton set off for his trip around Asia for the Clinton Foundation on Epstein’s plane. They visited, Russia, Singapore, China, Bangkok and Brunei in a three-day period.

These photos were taken on 25 May 2002 at Don Mueang International Airport, then with pictures at Wat Phra Kaew, a Buddhist temple.
Thumbnails show what appears to be Epstein’s plane on the platform at the airport.

Many pictures from the Asia trip were already public but have been verified for the first time by the Sky News Data and Forensics team. Using images released by the US Department of Justice (DOJ), Sky News analysed photo thumbnails alongside enlarged photos, to locate and date certain photos on this timeline, cross-referencing them with flight logs and email exchanges.


This set of photographs was in Brunei in the Emperor suite at the Empire Hotel.
The suite is a luxurious accommodation that spans 665 square metres (over 7,000 square feet) and features a master bedroom, private dining area, swimming pool, sauna, steam room, grand piano, and a cinema.
An article in Vanity Fair on Epstein placed a photo of the two on a plane on the Brunei trip. Another photo released by the DOJ shows Mr Clinton in the same seat, with the same clothes, holding his arm around a redacted girl. This photo does not imply any wrongdoing.
A few months later, in July, Mr Clinton and Epstein were pictured together at the royal wedding of King Mohammed VI in Morocco on 12 July 2002. Flight logs show they flew back to Santa Maria together the following day.
Thumbnails from an album released by the DOJ, labelled “Morroco king wedding”, show Mr Clinton on Epstein’s plane.

In Santa Maria on a stopover, before going on a Clinton Foundation trip around Africa, Mr Clinton is pictured with someone who was later identified as one of Epstein’s victims. She is massaging his shoulders in Santa Maria airport. No Epstein victim has accused Mr Clinton of wrongdoing.
At the end of September 2002, Mr Clinton embarked on his Africa trip, alongside Epstein. The trip included locations such as Ghana, Nigeria, Rwanda, Mozambique and South Africa.

In the same year, Mr Clinton commented on Epstein in New York Magazine that he “appreciated his [Epstein’s] insights and generosity during the recent trip to Africa to work on democratisation, empowering the poor, citizen service, and combating HIV/AIDS”.
After this trip, Mr Clinton ended up flying to London with Ghislaine Maxwell and other passengers.
Mr Clinton and Epstein visited London in September 2002. Photos verified by Sky News place Mr Clinton at 10 Downing Street and the Churchill War Rooms, alongside Maxwell and others, including the actor Kevin Spacey. Being included or pictured in the files is not evidence of wrongdoing.


A year later, Epstein’s Birthday Book was created by Ghislaine Maxwell. The book is described as a bound collection of birthday letters compiled for Epstein’s 50th birthday. A message signed ‘Bill Clinton’ was left in the book. It praised Epstein’s ‘childlike curiosity’ and ‘drive to make a difference’.

Later that year in November, another Clinton Foundation trip took place in the Far East, once again using Epstein’s jet.
Photos verified by Sky News show Mr Clinton at dinner with Epstein, Maxwell, Mick Jagger and Doug Band in China. The photos can now be placed at China Club restaurant in Hong Kong, a private members’ club.
Flight logs published in the Epstein files show Mr Clinton was in Hong Kong between 6 and 9 November.

On 7 November, the Rolling Stones had a concert in Hong Kong at Tamar Site for the Harbour Festival. Footage from that night shows Mr Clinton was in attendance. Following this, pictures released by the DOJ show backstage photos of this concert where it appears Epstein was also in attendance.

Continuing their relationship, in 2010, Ghislaine Maxwell was a guest at the wedding of Bill and Hillary Clinton’s daughter Chelsea.

Hillary Clinton was questioned about Maxwell attending the wedding during her deposition with the House Oversight Committee. She stated she knew Maxwell “casually as an acquaintance”, and that Maxwell “came as the plus one, the guest, of someone who was invited”.
Bill Clinton has always denied any wrongdoing. In 2019 after Epstein killed himself in jail while facing sex trafficking charges, a Clinton spokesman said that he “knows nothing about the terrible crimes Jeffrey Epstein pleaded guilty to in Florida some years ago, or those with which he has been recently charged in New York”.
“In 2002 and 2003, President Clinton took a total of four trips on Jeffrey Epstein’s airplane: one to Europe, one to Asia, and two to Africa, which included stops in connection with the work of the Clinton Foundation.”
The Data x Forensics team is a multi-skilled unit dedicated to providing transparent journalism from Sky News. We gather, analyse and visualise data to tell data-driven stories. We combine traditional reporting skills with advanced analysis of satellite images, social media and other open source information. Through multimedia storytelling we aim to better explain the world while also showing how our journalism is done.
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