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/2025/07/15/latest-news-bulletin-july-15th-morning
Subscribe to our channel. Euronews is available on Dailymotion in 12 languages
00:00The EU's top diplomat Kaya Callas is set to offer a list of 10 possibilities for the EU to respond to Israel's actions in Gaza during a meeting of the Foreign Affairs Council in Brussels.
00:12Israel's foreign minister doesn't believe they will be implemented.
00:17Sure, not any of them will be adopted by the EU member states.
00:24A question please for the voters.
00:26No justification whatsoever and until now they were not adopted and I believe they will not adopt it also tomorrow.
00:36Diplomats told Euronews that member states are unlikely to choose to back any of the options for action for a number of reasons.
00:44First, some countries insist the EU should wait to see the result of an agreement attempting to improve the flow of aid to Gaza.
00:51The EU announced on Thursday that it had negotiated a significant improvement of humanitarian aid access into Gaza including an increase of food trucks and an agreement to protect the lives of aid workers.
01:04What's happening on the ground there, mainly with regard to the GHF initiative, is that Hamas is trying to stop people from getting to get the aid directly because they want to be the mediators of the humanitarian aid.
01:22First of all, it is crucial that this aid will be given to the people and secondly, it's also important to disconnect Hamas from the aid and this is part of the things that were raised in our dialogue with the EU to develop methods that it will reach the people and not Hamas.
01:44The Gaza Strip is experiencing further deterioration in its already near collapsed health system.
01:5637% of critical medicine and 59% of medical supplies have been depleted as a result of the crippling blockade Israel imposed on the enclave.
02:05This has driven many Palestinians to black and unregulated markets.
02:08The health ministry has urged against purchasing medicine from non-authorized entities warning it poses a grave risk on their lives.
02:38These drugs are often stored and sold under unsanitary conditions and have in the past cause of medical emergencies.
03:08At least four people believed to be foreign nationals have died after a plane crash shortly after take-off from London's Southend Airport on Sunday.
03:23The aircraft, a turboprop equipped with medical systems for patient transport, was due to land to the Netherlands after arriving from Athens.
03:34Moments after take-off, the plane went down near the runway.
03:39Social media images captured the aftermath with flames and thick black smoke billowing from the crash site.
03:48London's Southend is a small regional airport located about 72 kilometres east of the UK capital.
03:54All flights in and out have been cancelled until further notice.
03:59Investigators are now working to determine what caused the fatal crash.
04:02The identities of the victims have not yet been released.
04:15France is celebrating its biggest holiday, Bastille Day, with parties and festivals around the country.
04:20The holiday marks the 1789 storming of the Bastille Prison, a pivotal moment in the French Revolution.
04:317,000 participants, including troops and armored vehicles, marched along the Champs-Élysées in Paris in an annual military parade,
04:39followed by fighter jet flyovers and a drone light show at the Eiffel Tower.
04:42French President Emmanuel Macron opened the spectacle with a ceremony relighting the eternal flame beneath the Arc de Triomphe.
04:51This year, Indonesia is the guest of honor, with its troops joining the parade and deals for French military equipment expected.
05:01This year's celebration takes place on the backdrop of heightened geopolitical uncertainty.
05:06On the eve of the holiday, Macron announced 6.5 billion euros in extra French military spending in the next two years
05:14because of new threats ranging from Russia to terrorism and online attacks.
05:26In an interview with Euronews, Panama's Foreign Minister Javier Martinez-Acha has defended its security agreement with the United States,
05:34insisting that it has not given up any national sovereignty.
05:39This statement comes in response to past threats by U.S. President Donald Trump,
05:44who suggests that the U.S. might retake control of the Panama Canal.
05:48We have signed up with the United States,
05:51and we have signed up with the United States and, as you know,
05:51we have signed up with the U.S. of the United States.
05:53We have signed up with other countries in Latin America,
05:56we have signed up with other countries in Latin America,
06:00to make sure to meet together,
06:03with the purpose of preparing us for separate attacks,
06:06to prepare us in case we have to act at conjointly,
06:11to contain the crime organized, the narcotic traffic, etc.
06:16But no permanence in our territory of foreign forces in a permanent way."
06:24In the wake of those threats, Panama and the United States signed a memorandum of understanding
06:29which has since allowed the U.S. to conduct a series of military exercises in the region.
06:35One of the most contentious issues in recent years has been Panama's inclusion on the EU
06:39list of non-cooperative jurisdictions in tax matters.
06:43The foreign minister firmly denies that Panama is a tax haven.
06:46We are a country responsible, we are a country committed to transparency and fiscal cooperation.
06:54We still have some work to do, we will do it, and we are considering reforming in the way
07:03the cooperation is transmitted in fiscal matters, because we cooperate, there are technical observations
07:08that we have to improve, and the other is about a subject of foreign rent, which for us
07:14is 60, but we have to do a reform from the fiscal point of view.
07:18For Europe, Panama is not only strategically important from an economic standpoint, but
07:23also plays a crucial role in preventing the circumvention of sanctions by countries such as Russia.
07:31The second eSports World Cup draws gamers from across the planet, all vying for a slice of
07:36the $70 million prize pot split across 25 competitions and 24 top-tier games.
07:43It's game on in Saudi Arabia. For the next seven weeks, Riyadh's Boulevard City will be a gamers'
07:49paradise, as well as home to a festival-style experience for fans. 2,000 elite players from
07:56200 clubs and more than 100 countries are here. There's a wide range of competitions being played,
08:02from first-person shooter to mobile multiplayer battle games.
08:05It's the sheer scale that's unheard of. eSports is just at the start of his tenure and is there
08:12to grow, to become one of the biggest sports in the world in the next decades.
08:16One of the most spectacular things about gaming is your first initiation to someone, your first
08:21meeting of someone is not who they are as a color, skin, religion, background, race, gender.
08:28It is an avatar in the game and therefore their skill.
08:32The eSports World Cup also draws plenty of star power. Football legend Cristiano Ronaldo is the
08:37tournament's official ambassador and American pop star Post Malone headlines the opening ceremony
08:43of this giant gaming festival. Abel Halim, Euronews, Riyadh.
08:52Just two kilometers from the main town of Sikinos in the hearth of the Kikladas sits one of the
08:57island's most iconic spots, a cliffside winery with spectacular views of the surrounding islands.
09:03Perched 400 meters above sea level on Sikinos' northwest side, it draws both locals and visitors
09:10who come to sip wine and watch one of the most stunning sunsets in the Aegean.
09:15What started as an effort to revive ancient local grape varieties has blossomed into a small but effective vineyard.
09:21The Sikinos in the ancient history was called Ninoi. From here, Omyros took the wood from here,
09:29which came to Athens. The transformation was made with the Lumia. They didn't even have
09:34seen any of them. The Sikinos took a big wood from here because of the
09:40and there was no danger in the city. It started from this area,
09:50to the country, on the west side. This was from the 1960-1970.
09:55The people lived from here. They had to come to the streets. They had to come to the streets.
10:00the Nisia, Folléga, Sadorin, Iio, Anáfy,
10:03and they came in to the center of the world.
10:05In the 1960s, the 1960s were a great巨大的巨大.
10:08The people of America were in the world,
10:11from America, Canada, Australia and all that.
10:14And so they came to the Nambelona
10:16and I started to visit with different kinds of people.
10:19I don't need to get anything here.
10:21I could not find any different types of people,
10:25because there are only 5 types of people,
10:28The winery officially opened in 2008, but the vision for the vineyard began years earlier when founder Giorgos Manalis took a life-changing trip to Syros with his wife Maria.
10:58You can see, you can imagine that I have a cup of coffee for 5 hours and make a trip to Ambellona so that I can see the Ambellas.
11:05Because it's a life-changing organism, so someone can have a problem.
11:10So I have to do the other things I have to do.
11:15I have to give him a little bite to find the harm that he has or whatever.
11:21So he wants a lot of satisfaction.
11:23Viticulture on a remote island isn't easy.
11:27Labour is scarce and few are willing to work on land.
11:30But despite the challenges, the winery thrives, powered entirely by renewable energy for the past 7 years, making it 100% eco-friendly.