Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • 2 days ago
Latest news bulletin | June 6th – Morning

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

READ MORE : http://www.euronews.com/2025/06/06/latest-news-bulletin-june-6th-morning

Subscribe to our channel. Euronews is available on Dailymotion in 12 languages

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:01Nine people have been killed in two Israeli airstrikes on Gaza City.
00:11Donald Trump welcomed Germany's new leader Friedrich Merz to the White House for talks on Ukraine trade and bolstering military spending.
00:20The European Central Bank has cut its benchmark interest rate for the eighth time as Trump's trade war threatens to slow economic growth.
00:31A California tribe has regained some of its ancestral land as part of the state's largest land bank project.
00:42U.S. President Donald Trump welcomed Germany's new leader Friedrich Merz to the White House for talks on Ukraine trade and bolstering military spending.
00:52Trump and Merz have spoken several times by phone either bilaterally or with other European leaders.
00:57But the visit is the first time they met face to face.
01:01The U.S. President said both leaders feel Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine is very sad.
01:08With Merz emphasizing that Germany was on the side of Ukraine.
01:11And so we are talking about instruments, measures, what we can do and my personal view is clear on that.
01:18We are on the side of Ukraine and we are trying to get them stronger and stronger just to make Putin stop this war.
01:24And this is our approach.
01:25Merz also highlighted Germany's commitment to NATO after the government locked in billions of euros in defence spending.
01:33Trump welcomed the increase, although suggested he would eventually cap Germany's efforts to rearm Ukraine.
01:38Relations between Germany and the U.S. have grown frosty, particularly after the Trump administration accused Europe of freeloading regarding NATO defence spending.
01:48Two Israeli airstrikes on Gaza City have left nine people dead, including a woman and a child.
01:59One strike hit a busy street crowded with pedestrians, including some who had been out buying flour nearby.
02:06People are here with corn.
02:09We are here with corn.
02:10We are here with corn.
02:11We are here with corn.
02:12We are here with corn.
02:13We are here with corn.
02:14We are here with corn.
02:16Bodies were taken to Shifa Hospital, where family members gathered in grief for their loved ones.
02:25The strikes took place on the day of Arafat in Gaza, an Islamic holiday marking the second day of the Hajj pilgrimage and just before the festival of Eid.
02:36At least five people, including a one-year-old child, have been killed in a Russian drone attack on the northern Ukrainian city of Prilyaki, say local officials.
02:54Six drones hit a residential area in the city shortly before dawn on Thursday, injuring nine others.
03:0117 people were also wounded in Russian strikes on the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv.
03:08The attacks come after President Vladimir Putin spoke on the phone with U.S. President Donald Trump, saying Moscow will retaliate for Ukraine's drone attacks on Russian military airfields on Sunday.
03:23The United States' efforts to stop the more than three-year-long war have so far delivered no significant progress.
03:31The European Central Bank has cut its key deposit rate by 25 basis points to 2%, its lowest level in more than two years.
03:46It says it's aiming to support businesses and consumers with more affordable borrowing, as U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war threatens to slow already tepid growth.
03:56The bank's president, Christine Lagarde, warned that a further escalation of trade tensions over the coming months would result in growth and inflation being below the baseline projections.
04:09The deposit facility is the interest rate banks receive when they deposit money with the central bank overnight.
04:23New Zealand's parliament suspended three lawmakers who performed a Maori haka to protest a proposed law.
04:29The three performed a haka in parliament in opposition of the widely unpopular and since-defeated Treaty Principles Bill, which they say would reverse indigenous rights.
04:42It sought to legally define the principles of the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi, signed between Maori leaders and the British Crown during New Zealand's colonization.
04:52U.S. President Donald Trump is resurrecting a travel ban policy from his first term, signing a proclamation that prevents people from a dozen countries from entering the United States.
05:07He linked the ban to a recent terror attack in Boulder, Colorado.
05:12In the 21st century, we've seen one terror attack after another carried out by foreign visa overstayers from dangerous places all over the world.
05:22And thanks to Biden's open door policies today, there are millions and millions of these illegals who should not be in our country.
05:30In my first term, my powerful travel restrictions were one of our most successful policies and they were a key part of preventing major foreign terror attacks on American soil.
05:43Some but not all 12 countries also appeared on the list of banned countries in Trump's first term.
05:49In 2017, Trump issued an executive order banning travel to the U.S. by citizens of seven predominantly Muslim countries.
05:56While that was one of the most chaotic and confusing moments of his young presidency,
06:01he appears to be on firmer ground this time after the Supreme Court sided with him in 2018.
06:11A tribe in California has regained ancestral territory as part of the largest land-backed conservation project in the state's history.
06:21The Yurok tribe has reacquired roughly 189 square kilometers of forest land along the Klamath River,
06:31more than doubling its land holdings in northwestern California.
06:36Reacquiring landscapes like this allows us to work towards healing a wound that was inflicted not only on the lands but our hearts when these lands were taken away from us.
06:48The Yurok will manage the land using traditional practices like controlled burns, prairie restoration and invasive species removal to support wildlife and create jobs for tribal members.
07:01The deal is part of the growing Land Back movement to return land to indigenous peoples and reflects increasing recognition of their ecological knowledge as vital to combating climate change.
07:16Over the past decade, around 12,000 square kilometers of land has been returned to tribes across 15 states as part of a federal program.
07:27Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik has not appealed his verdict and will not attend a state-level court session next Thursday.
07:41He had been sentenced to a year imprisonment for undermining the authority of the Bosnian Constitutional Court under jurisdiction of the Republika Srpska.
07:49It's the latest development in a prolonged political crisis in the western Balkan country.
07:56What are you doing when you think about this situation?
07:58What are you doing when you think about this situation?
08:00If you decide to be a solution or you will be a solution?
08:03What about you?
08:06I don't accept her, and she's nothing for me.
08:09I'm going to deal with the localities that are not related to those issues.
08:15I want to maintain peace and maintain peace.
08:21Before the day of the day, the main war was Milor Dodik.
08:25Nothing happened.
08:29Bosnia's political crisis reached its peak in late February,
08:33when the Constitutional Court convicted Dodik
08:36of going against the decisions of the country's international peace envoy.
08:43The verdict is not final, and Dodik had the right to appeal it.
08:54North Korea has once again affirmed its unconditional support
08:58for Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
09:02The comments were made by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un
09:06during a meeting with top Russian officials in Pyongyang on Wednesday,
09:10according to North Korea's state-run news agency.
09:15The two countries' ties have strengthened in recent years,
09:18with Pyongyang sending thousands of troops to Russia to help with its war against Ukraine.
09:24the two countries discussed the prospect of rebuilding areas in Russia's Kursk region,
09:32according to Russia's state news agency.
09:36According to Intel from the EU's border agency, irregular crossings have decreased this year by 27%.
09:46Frontex say their 3,300 officers manning the EU's external entries are to thank for this drop.
09:54Watching it all from his office in Vienna is Michael Spindeliger,
09:58director-general of ICMPD, an organisation that plays a role in shaping migration policy in Europe.
10:06Now it's going down, but you don't know how long this is staying with these lower numbers.
10:12Still, if you have a look to the numbers of asylum seekers in Europe, it is very high.
10:19So also last year, we had nearly one million asylum applications in Europe.
10:25This is a very high number.
10:27And so I think it is not a situation where we can calm down.
10:32It is a situation where we have to look exactly what kind of measures have to be done for the future.
10:38But what about Italy and Denmark, I ask?
10:41The two migration hawks have written to the European Court of Human Rights asking for, quote,
10:47more room to crack down on migration.
10:50Michael Spindeliger admits there are some, quote, legal issues, but calls their measures innovative.
10:56I think everybody is invited to look to, as they call it,
11:02intelligent, modern ways to deal with the migration issues.
11:07And this model, especially from Italy, to deal with migration procedures in Albania is interesting,
11:15because this is a new way.
11:17For their part, the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg has written their own letters
11:22saying that debate is healthy, but politicising the court is not.
11:27Interior ministers from all across the bloc will be gathering in Luxembourg next week to discuss migration.
11:33Maeve McMahan, Euronews, Brussels.
11:37Your coin is at the beginning of the year,
11:39and they are theounce Dis merry ofiture.
11:41It would be the君 of Camera and call a change.
11:43It seems to have been Basil disturbed Γren Terazker.
11:45It would be the funniest part of the year probably recorded,
11:47and there is no shame in the guaranteed journal called Sarah холодверs like él,
11:49whose mind is Tomalley, as well rushed.
11:52The goal of thesey אחד is not.
11:55It sometime is a fact continua in the Chinese dialogue.
11:58It's a extraordinary journal David and then become my marriage.
12:00It's still an complimentary Soonfrey someday.
12:02It's aучitenUT is a 1946 book that could explain our history again.

Recommended