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Notes from Poland 23d ago
Keep our news free from ads and paywalls by making a donation to support our work! Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and is published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support. A planned concert by rapper Kanye West in Poland has been cancelled by the venue where it had been due to take place. Its decision followed criticism by the country’s culture minister, who had threatened to have West banned from entering the country if the event went ahead. She had pointed to his history of antisemitism, praise for Hitler, and use of the Nazi swastika symbol, saying that such actions are particularly unacceptable in Poland, on whose territory millions of Jews were killed by Nazi Germany in the Holocaust. West had only added the Polish date to his tour two days ago, following news that his appearance at a festival in the UK this summer had been cancelled after the British authorities denied him entry, while a planned concert in France was also delayed amid talk of a potential entry ban. He had been scheduled to perform on 19 June at the Silesian Stadium in Chorzów, which has a capacity of 85,000 for concerts. But, in a brief statement posted on social media on Friday afternoon, the venue said that the concert had been cancelled for “formal-legal reasons”. Its decision came after strong condemnation of the concert by culture minister Marta Cienkowska”. “We are talking about an artist who has publicly expressed antisemitic views, downplayed atrocities, and profited from selling T-shirts featuring swastikas,” she wrote. “These are not ‘controversies’. This is a deliberate crossing of boundaries and the normalisation of hatred.” “In a country scarred by the history of the Holocaust, we cannot pretend that this is just entertainment,” she added. “Culture cannot be a platform for those who exploit it to spread hatred.” When it was under German occupation from 1939 to 1945, Poland was the primary location where the Nazis carried out the Holocaust, with around three million Polish Jews among the victims. A similar number of non-Jewish Poles were also killed by the German occupiers. Click here to help us continue providing news free from paywalls and ads “I cannot imagine that in Poland, a country where people were murdered in Nazi German extermination camps, we can organise a concert of an artist who openly says that he likes Hitler,” said Cienkowska in further remarks on Friday. She added that she “hoped the concert organisers will come to their senses”, and said that she had been in touch with them to express this view. But, if not, “the Polish state has tools to block people from entering the country…[and] we will use them”. Cienkowska said she would write to interior minister Marcin Kierwiński asking for West to be banned from entry if the concert was not cancelled. She added that she had the full support of foreign minister Radosław Sikorski. Promoting fascism, including the display of Nazi symbols, is a criminal offence in Poland, punishable by up to three years in prison. Kanye West ma wystąpić w Polsce. Minister kultury: możemy zablokować jego wjazd#PAPinformacjehttps://t.co/1QKVdv1a2H — Polska Agencja Prasowa/Polish Press Agency (PAP) (@PAPinformacje) April 17, 2026 West has branded his planned series of concerts this year an “apology tour”. In January, he took out a full-page advert in the Wall Street Hournal apologising “to those I’ve hurt”, saying that he “loves Jewish people”, and blaming his previous actions on bipolar disorder. However, earlier this month, the Wireless Festival in London, where West had been due to headline this summer, was cancelled entirely after the British authorities refused him the right to enter the country. Soon after, West announced that his planned concert in Marseilles, France, was postponed “until further notice” after reports the French interior minister Laurent Nunez was seeking to prevent it from taking place. An auction of Holocaust items in Germany has been cancelled following international criticism and intervention by the Polish government. Poland says it will now "demand the return of objects" that are found to be part of the country’s historical heritage https://t.co/3y0rIFgwkc — Notes from Poland 🇵🇱 (@notesfrompoland) November 16, 2025 ​ Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support. Main image credit: NRK P3/Flickr (under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
EUobserver 23d ago
Former Bulgarian president Rumen Radev (2017 to January 2026) seems poised for a return to politics, this time potentially as prime minister. The former air force commander, known for his pro-Russian views, resigned from the presidency in January to run in Sunday's snap parliamentary elections. He is promising a fight against the pervasive "mafia state," which he claims is undermining the European Union's least developed member state.
France 24 23d ago
The annual Paris Book Festival is honouring Iceland this year, and Icelandic author Jón Kalman Stefánsson will be doing a book signing. He tells us about his latest novel, "Celestial Bodies at the Edge of the World", which sheds light on a little-known dark chapter in Icelandic history. He also tells us why Icelandic literature is booming in France.
EUobserver 23d ago
“More and more often, responsibility for the state of Russia’s collapsing economy is being assigned to Putin. This was unthinkable a year ago,” wrote journalist Christo Grozev.
Le Monde 23d ago
Israeli authorities have allowed a Russian vessel suspected of carrying wheat stolen from Russian-occupied Ukrainian territories to dock, despite Kyiv's requests to seize the bulk carrier.
TASS 23d ago
The United States ranked first with its LNG supplies, accounting for 30.5% and 1.8 bln euro
TASS 23d ago
The leader of Hungary’s Tisza party held consultations with Zsolt Hernadi on April 16 as regards energy security, oil supplies to Hungary
Ukrinform 23d ago
Ukraine has received approximately $45 billion, which represents 90% of the expected funding secured through revenues generated from frozen Russian assets.
TASS 23d ago
EC Spokeswoman Anitta Hipper stated that Sergey Shoigu’s remarks amounted to "misinformation" aimed at creating conditions for escalation and regional instability
TASS 23d ago
Russia will not attack Europe, Frederik Vansina noted
EE Times 23d ago
The European High-Performance Computing Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU), an organization advancing European supercomputing, and the Digital Autonomy with RISC-V in Europe (DARE) consortium, an initiative
SCMP 23d ago
China has lodged a protest with New Zealand about the activities of a military aircraft near its coast, suggesting it had put commercial airlines at risk. During a regular press conference on Friday, foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said a P-8A anti-submarine patrol aircraft had “conducted continuous close-in reconnaissance and harassment in the airspace and waters of the Yellow Sea and East China Sea”. He said such actions undermined China’s security interests, heightened the risks of...
TASS 23d ago
The parties agreed to update the legal framework for interregional cooperation amid Vietnam’s recent administrative-territorial reform, the Foreign Ministry added
TASS 23d ago
"China has always firmly opposed the use of military force to infringe on the sovereignty and security of other countries," said Guo Jiakun.
TASS 23d ago
Deputy Prime Minister Shahin Mustafayev emphasized that enterprises with Russian participation were already operating successfully in Azerbaijan’s industrial zones
TASS 23d ago
The foreign minister stressed that Russian armed forces had been accomplishing objectives set by the supreme commander-in-chief as part of the special military operation
TASS 23d ago
According to Shalva Papuashvili, he will carefully examine the information about the impending unrest in Georgia with the involvement of a Czech organization
RFI 23d ago
European Union officials are meeting Hungarian prime minister-elect Peter Magyar's team in Budapest on Friday, hoping to fast-track cooperation and work towards unblocking billions in funding before he takes office next month.
TASS 23d ago
The main importers were France, Spain, and the Netherlands
Notes from Poland 23d ago
Keep our news free from ads and paywalls by making a donation to support our work! Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and is published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support. Poland’s largest opposition party, the national-conservative Law and Justice (PiS), has been thrown into turmoil amid efforts by more moderate figures, led by former Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, to form a new internal group. The party’s spokesman, Rafał Bochenek, has threatened “disciplinary consequences” against dozens of MPs who have joined an association formed by Morawiecki, while leader Jarosław Kaczyński says they will not be allowed to stand as PiS candidates in next year’s parliamentary election. Prezydium Komitetu Politycznego @pisorgpl zwróciło uwagę członkom partii na obowiązywanie art. 6 ust. 1 pkt 3 Statutu @pisorgpl . ➡️ Zgodnie z nim zakazane jest (bez zgody władz partii) członkostwo w organizacji, której cele są sprzeczne z celami, zasadami ideowymi, programem lub… — Rafał Bochenek (@RafalBochenek) April 16, 2026 Internal tensions have long been brewing within PiS, which has seen its support in polls collapse from around 32% at the start of 2025 to around 25% now, which is its lowest level in 14 years. In particular, there has been a division between more hardline elements – who believe that the party should move even further to the right to compete with two surging far-right parties – and more moderate figures, who argue that ceding the political centre ground would be disastrous. The hardliners were given a boost at the start of March, when Kaczyński announced that one of their leading figures, Przemysław Czarnek, would be the party’s prime ministerial candidate in next year’s parliamentary elections. However, since then, PiS has seen no significant boost in the polls, prompting growing frustration from the moderates. This week, their figurehead, Morawiecki, who is a deputy leader of PiS, announced the formation of a new association intended to represent and promote their position. Click here to help us continue providing news free from paywalls and ads Its founders insist that the association, called Growth Plus (Rozwój Plus), is meant to operate within PiS, not to compete with it, and to focus on promoting plans for Poland’s economic development put forward by Morawiecki, a former banker who served as PiS prime minister from 2017 to 2023. “PiS always won when it was able to be broad, when we united diverse groups around a common goal,” wrote Morawiecki on social media. “We cannot let ourselves be pushed out of the centre of Polish politics. That is where the most important decisions are made today.” Around 40 of PiS’s 188 MPs are reported to have joined the association, including former government ministers such as Michał Dworczyk, Janusz Cieszyński and Waldemar Buda. One of the members, former deputy foreign minister Paweł Jabłoński, said that the association would provide “a new formula…that will strengthen the centre-right and help push the disastrous government of [Prime Minister Donald] Tusk out of power”. Polska potrzebuje dziś czegoś więcej niż tylko zmiany władzy. Potrzebuje odpowiedzialnego działania, współpracy i zdolności do budowania szerokiego porozumienia wokół spraw najważniejszych. 🇵🇱 Prawo i Sprawiedliwość wygrywało zawsze wtedy, gdy potrafiło iść szeroko – z programem… pic.twitter.com/MAEAFwQmIP — Mateusz Morawiecki (@MorawieckiM) April 16, 2026 However, the new association has been met with a frosty, and at times hostile, reception by many other party figures. “Whoever wants to seek enemies on the right, whoever wants to divide us, whoever puts their own interest above the good of Poland – that person will find neither my support nor my approval…It is a betrayal,” wrote Czarnek on social media, without naming Morawiecki or the association directly. On Thursday evening, following a meeting of PiS’s leadership, party spokesman Rafał Bochenek announced that the activities of the new association are “contrary to PiS’s statute”, which bars “membership of any organisation whose goals are contrary to the goals, principles, programme or interests of PiS”. “PiS members cannot be members of another political organisation” and any such “activities…will result in disciplinary consequences”, said Bochenek, quoted by news website Onet. My, Polacy, mamy przed sobą wielkie zadanie, za którego wykonanie zostaniemy rozliczeni przez dzieci i wnuki: czy w tych trudnych czasach uczynimy Polskę bogatą, bezpieczną i pomyślną. Myśl o tym celu przyświeca mi w polityce od samego początku, ale dziś nabiera szczególnego… pic.twitter.com/eo0NqhkpRf — Przemysław Czarnek (@CzarnekP) April 15, 2026 In response, Morawiecki told broadcaster Republika that he “certainly will not withdraw” his association and instead hopes to “clear up any misunderstandings”. He insisted that his only actions “serve to expand PiS, so we can reach groups that are harder for us to reach”. However, late on Friday morning, Kaczyński held a press conference at which he warned of tough measures against those who have joined Morawiecki’s association. “If this activity continues in its current form…there will be no places on the PiS party lists for the people involved,” he declared. In Polish elections, each party puts forward a list of candidates in each voting district. Exclusion from those lists means no possibility of being elected to parliament. In his remarks, Kaczyński praised Morawiecki, saying he “was a great prime minister”. However, he warned that he cannot allow “one party to grow out of another” like a form of “parasitism”. Support for PiS has fallen to its lowest in 14 years, as the party grapples with internal division, the rise of far-right challengers, living in President Nawrocki's shadow, and the unpopularity in Poland of PiS ally Donald Trump, writes @danieltilles1 https://t.co/QRScBpEQQG — Notes from Poland 🇵🇱 (@notesfrompoland) March 2, 2026 ​ Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support. Main image credit: KPRM (under CC BY-SA 4.0)
TASS 23d ago
The EU paid 693 mln euro for Russian pipeline gas over this period
Bloomberg 23d ago
A day after German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s coalition limped out of a bruising weekend-long meeting with a gas-tax cut for consumers, his conservative economy minister was greeted like a champion at a party leadership gathering.
Ukrinform 23d ago
Russia is preparing a new ground offensive in southeastern Ukraine and aims to capture the entire Donbas region by September.
TASS 23d ago
Vlad Filat emphasized that reforms alone are insufficient for the European integration process, whereas a favorable moment and consensus within the European Union are necessary
TASS 23d ago
According to Robert Fico, European countries believe that through supporting Ukraine they will weaken Russia
asiatimes 23d ago
Subscribe now with a one-month trial for only $1, then enjoy the first year at an exclusive rate of just $99. Merz’s paralysis and the EU’s anti-growth orderDiego Faßnacht reports that Chancellor Friedrich Merz is constrained by coalition politics and unable to deliver pro-growth reforms, leaving Germany stuck in stagnation while the EU increasingly functions as […] The post Disrupted supply chains, divided politics appeared first on Asia Times.
TASS 23d ago
Nikolay Azarov emphasized that Kiev is already receiving enormous financial support
TASS 23d ago
Andrey Kelin lamented that London does not want to engage in a dialogue at all
Euronews 23d ago
Four years after Berlin's decision to deliver it, it has become clear that the once decommissioned Gepard tank is now a key system in Ukraine's air defence — and one of the most effective "drone killers" in the fight against Russia.
France 24 23d ago
Rising fuel costs have already prompted many airlines worldwide to raise ticket prices, passing the burden on to passengers. But as the crisis drags on and the Strait of Hormuz remains blocked, both Europe and Asia are now facing a severe fuel shortage that could lead to widespread flight cancellations ahead of the busy summer travel season. Luke Shrago reports.
France 24 23d ago
Hungary is preparing for a new era, after the centre-right Tisza party of Peter Magyar won a landslide victory over longtime nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban. Magyar says he'll seek to repair Hungary's confrontational relationship with the European Union, something that could unlock much-needed EU funding for Ukraine and for Hungary itself. Many voters said the stagnating economy was a major factor in their decision to turn against 16 years of Orban's rule.
Nikkei 23d ago
asiatimes 23d ago
Former Russian president and incumbent deputy chair of the Security Council Dmitry Medvedev warned on X that “the Russian Defense Ministry’s statement must be taken literally: the list of European facilities that make drones and other equipment is a list of potential targets for the Russian armed forces. When strikes become a reality depends on […] The post Will Russia attack Ukraine’s European drone suppliers? appeared first on Asia Times.
Nikkei 23d ago
YLE 23d ago
A rocket launch from Russia briefly caused alarm in eastern Finland.
ft 24d ago
German delivery group’s largest shareholder Prosus has agreed to reduce its stake over EU competition concerns
TASS 24d ago
Previous reports said seven drones were downed in the area overnight
ft 24d ago
The EU is planning its biggest relaxation of corporate merger rules in decades
La Repubblica 24d ago
Considering the salary figures published in job advertisements in January 2021 as a baseline (100), we are currently below that level, at around 90. The United States has fully recovered, while the Netherlands, Germany, and France are almost back to that level. Calculate the appropriate salary.
La Repubblica 24d ago
Interview with climatologist Piero Lionello, author of a study. "There are four strategies to combat rising sea levels, ranging from building a barrier around the lagoon to constructing a dam around the city. And, as an extreme possibility, the idea of dismantling Venice and rebuilding it elsewhere."
Politico EU 24d ago
Listen on Spotify Apple Music Amazon Music Election night in Hungary was an emotional and teary one … but now, the work begins. The winners — Peter Magyar’s Tisza party — have the daunting task of reversing years of democratic backsliding that went on under Viktor Orbán’s watch. Meanwhile, Fidesz — and far-right parties across Europe — have some intense soul searching to do to figure out what went wrong in Orbán’s campaign. Our panel of guests includes POLITICO’s White House Correspondent Eli Stokols and our Senior France Correspondent Clea Caulcutt in Paris, along with Balazs Kos, a Hungarian consultant and expert on EU affairs. Together with host Sarah Wheaton, they dive deeper into what the outcome means for Brussels and the MAGA movement across the pond. We also speak with Frank Furedi of MCC Brussels, a think tank with links to Orbán’s government. He gives us a breakdown of why he believes the Fidesz campaign failed. Do you have a question or a comment? Send us a WhatsApp message here or dial +32 491 05 06 29.
Guardian 24d ago
Victory means Democrats hold on to the 11th district seat in the House, where Republicans hold a thin majority Democrat Analilia Mejia won a New Jersey special election for the US House on Thursday, defeating Republican Joe Hathaway on a message of standing up to Donald Trump. Mejia, a former head of the Working Families Alliance who had support from the senator Bernie Sanders, will fill the seat previously held by the Democratic governor Mikie Sherrill and serve until January. Continue reading...
TASS 24d ago
The launch proceeded normally
France 24 24d ago
A suspect in the 1982 Paris Jewish restaurant attack that killed six people was extradited to France on Thursday by the Palestinian Authority. Hicham Harb, now 72, was detained on arrival in Paris and is due to face formal proceedings over one of the country’s deadliest post-war antisemitic attacks.
Euronews 24d ago
A vast majority of EU countries rely on US cloud services for their national defence agencies, putting them at risk of a "kill switch" that shuts down service at any time.
Le Monde 24d ago
Hicham Harb is accused of coordinating a 1982 attack on a Jewish restaurant in Paris's Marais neighborhood that killed six people and wounded 22 others.
TASS 24d ago
Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova added that the contradictions "have gone over the top"
Foreign Policy 24d ago
Kyiv is struggling with skepticism of conscription fueled by Russian propaganda.
Ukrinform 24d ago
There are growing concerns in Brussels that sensitive information from the European Parliament could be leaked to Russia by pro-Russian lawmakers and their staff.
Ukrinform 24d ago
Minister of Defense of Ukraine Mykhailo Fedorov and Diehl Defence CEO Helmut Rauch held talks on concrete ways to reinforce Ukraine’s air defense capabilities.
The Hill 24d ago
Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will testify before the House Appropriations Committee on Thursday afternoon on the White House’s fiscal 2027 budget request and the Trump administration’s health policy. President Trump requested additional funding for the administration’s “Make America Healthy Again” agenda and proposed “eliminating bloated, woke, and inefficient programs…
Bloomberg 24d ago
Outgoing Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said he sees a place for himself in the reorganization of his Fidesz party that will be required after its landslide defeat at the weekend’s election.
Politico EU 24d ago
Europe is heading for a demographic downsize, with its population expected to shrink by 11.7 percent or 53 million people by 2100 according to a new Eurostat forecast published Thursday. The decline won’t start right away, as the bloc’s population is even expected to edge up slightly to peak at 453 million by 2029. But after that the EU will enter a prolonged slide to under 400 million by the end of the century, with fewer young people and working-age adults, and more than double the current share of over-80s. The culprit? Europeans are having fewer children. Fertility rates have dropped to around 1.3 births per woman — well below replacement level — and are still falling. In France, where deaths outpaced births in 2025 for the first time since the end of World War II, President Emmanuel Macron has called for “demographic rearmament,” warning that falling birth rates are tied to rising infertility and people having children later in life. In February Paris urged 29-year-olds to have children while they still can, while announcing plans to expand fertility services and increase support for families. The demographic shift will mean fewer workers and more retirees across Europe, putting extra pressure on pension systems and healthcare services as the population ages. Migration has helped to offset the population decline in recent years, but can’t fully compensate for falling birth rates, according to research by the European Parliament. Yet policies are tightening: In Germany, Chancellor Friedrich Merz proposed last month that around 80 percent of the Syrians currently living in Germany should return to their home country within the next three years.
TASS 24d ago
According to Dmitry Polyansky, Europe has shifted to a strategy of establishing ‘Ukrainian’ companies that manufacture drones and their components in EU member states in order to prevent its Ukrainian partners from losing, or at least from losing quickly
El Tiempo 24d ago
After a year of investigation, authorities arrested a 61-year-old doctor in El Poblado. He is linked to dozens of cases of sexual violence.
NPR 24d ago
The seven-member body, whose ranks are composed of Trump appointees, was expected to approve the arch. The proposed monument strongly resembles Paris' Arc de Triomphe, but almost 100 feet taller. (Image credit: Brendan Smialowski)
EUobserver 24d ago
In just four days, Peter Magyar has already taken aim at state media structures, criticised senior institutional figures, and signalled a symbolic break with the past by relocating the prime minister’s office away from Viktor Orbán’s former power base, while the opposition has largely collapsed and the political map has been dramatically redrawn. Yet despite promises to restore democratic competition, early indications point to continuity in several nationalist policy areas, leaving Brussels watching closely to see whether Hungary’s reset will bring a meaningful shift in its EU stance or simply usher in a new domestic power configuration.
SCMP 24d ago
Hong Kong leader John Lee Ka-chiu has met European Union representatives to discuss opportunities for cooperation, with the chief executive saying both sides highlighted a shared belief in multilateralism amid increasing tensions and market turmoil. Ambassador Harvey Rouse, head of the EU Office in Hong Kong, called for both sides to work together, describing the 27-member bloc as a “very dependable partner in an increasingly volatile world”. Local officials attending the lunch meeting on...
France 24 24d ago
As France debates a controversial antisemitism bill, Oliver Farry welcomes Renaud Foucart, Economist, Senior Lecturer at Lancaster University, for a nuanced and critical examination of the so-called Yadan Law. Speaking from both an economic and institutional perspective, he evokes three competing imperatives: the urgent need to combat anti-Semitism, the preservation of freedom of expression, and the instrumentalization of legal tools within electoral politics. He argues that while the fear and lived reality of anti-Semitism in France are deeply legitimate, the proposed legislation risks extending far beyond its stated purpose.
The Hill 24d ago
U. S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer will testify before the House Appropriations Committee on Thursday morning to discuss President Trump’s fiscal 2027 budget request. Trump is seeking to boost investment in U. S. businesses as part of the administration’s “America First” trade agenda. The request also includes a $10 million increase in trade enforcement at the International…
TASS 24d ago
Russian athletes compete at the tournament in Georgia under their flag and to the tune of the national anthem
Notes from Poland 24d ago
Keep our news free from ads and paywalls by making a donation to support our work! Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and is published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support. Polish arms manufacturer Mesko has announced the best financial results in its 100-year history. It says that record-breaking revenue and profits in 2025 were driven in large part by growing international demand for its flagship Piorun air-defence systems. Mesko, which belongs to the state defence holding group Polska Grupa Zbrojeniowa (PGZ), revealed that its revenue rose 33.2% year-on-year to around 2.28 billion zloty (€540 million), marking the first time it had crossed the 2 billion zloty threshold. The Piorun man-portable system, which has proved successful in Ukraine’s defence against Russia’s invasion, has helped drive international interest in the company’s products and bolstered Poland’s ambitions of becoming a bigger player in arms exports. Przychody @PGZ_MESKO_SA S. A. przekroczyły 2 mld zł. Tak dynamicznego rozwoju spółka nie notowała w swojej ponad 100-letniej historii.@PGZ_pl https://t.co/Dz9BgH3Jmk — PortalObronny (@PortalObronny) April 14, 2026 The firm said in a statement that it “had never recorded such dynamic growth in its over 100-year history”, as its net profit jumped 63.8% year-on-year to roughly 374.7 million zloty. Compared to 2023, it increased more than sixfold. Last year was also record-breaking “in terms of the number of contracts and orders”, the firm said, noting that its Piorun systems have been ordered so far by Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Georgia, Moldova, Norway, Sweden, Belgium, and the United States. In September 2025, Sweden announced the purchase of Pioruns for around 3 billion Swedish krona (1.2 billion zloty) while Belgium earlier in the year said it was buying hundreds of the systems for around €140 million. France has also expressed interest, according to Mesko. Poland’s deputy defence minister, Cezary Tomczyk, revealed earlier this year that Germany was also interested in the systems. Mesko, however, made no mention of Germany in its own press release. Click here to help us continue providing news free from paywalls and ads The Piorun (whose name means “lightning” in Polish) went into service in 2019 as a modernisation of the Grom (meaning “thunder”) man-portable air-defence system. It is designed to shoot down low-flying aircraft such as planes, helicopters and drones. Mesko also said that its production of ammunition increased last year, reaching a capacity of 250 million small- and medium-calibre rounds annually – around one million per working day – following the opening of a new production hall. Poland is seeking to bolster its domestic ammunition production capacity, both to strengthen its own defence and to support exports amid rising demand across Europe driven by a deteriorating geopolitical environment. In 2024, a special law was passed granting defence firms up to 3 billion zloty (€712 million) to invest in the production of artillery shells. Poland has increased the production of small-calibre ammunition fivefold – to one million bullets a day – at state-owned defence firm Mesko following the opening of a new production facility https://t.co/kcGh7EDT54 — Notes from Poland 🇵🇱 (@notesfrompoland) June 16, 2025 Since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Poland has increased its wider defence spending to the highest relative level among NATO members, with the figure set to reach 4.8% of GDP this year. While Poland still mainly buys equipment from the United States and South Korea, the government has sought to increase purchases from domestic suppliers. It says that almost 90% of the funds that Poland will receive in loans for defence spending from the European Union under the SAFE programme will be spent at home, in a further boost to its arms industry. Poland has been NATO's biggest importer of arms over the last five years, according to new data from @SIPRIorg. Over 90% of Polish imports have come from South Korea and the United States https://t.co/jij0nfbhFc — Notes from Poland 🇵🇱 (@notesfrompoland) March 9, 2026 ​ Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support. Main image credit: Polska Grupa Zbrojeniowa / X
ft 24d ago
Investors Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz gave $25mn to pro-AI Super Pac in first quarter of year
France 24 24d ago
Russia has hardened its restrictions on the use of VPNs to access a host of online services, state and independent media outlets reported Wednesday, as the authorities seek to exert more control over online communications. Virtual private networks (VPNs) allow users to mask the websites they visit, enhancing security. They have boomed in popularity in Russia in recent years as a way to circumvent state censorship and as Moscow bans hosts of critical news sites, Western services, social media platforms and messengers.
Caracas Chronicles 24d ago
Peter Magyar's actions offer a real-time example that Venezuelans can use to learn how to effectively challenge Delcy.
Notes from Poland 24d ago
Keep our news free from ads and paywalls by making a donation to support our work! Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and is published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support. Poland has received a green light from the European Union to launch the bloc’s first hydrogen transmission network operator, paving the way for investment in infrastructure for the clean fuel. On Wednesday, the Polish energy ministry and Gaz-System, Poland’s state gas transmission operator, announced that the European Commission has approved the certification of Gaz-System to also operate as a hydrogen transmission network operator Hydrogen is seen as an important element of the green transition, offering a clean, flexible and scalable way to cut emissions in sectors, such as transport and industry, that are difficult to decarbonise using electricity alone. 📢 GAZ-SYSTEM pierwszym w Europie operatorem systemu przesyłowego wodoru na drodze do otrzymania certyfikatu niezależności. 🇪🇺 Komisja Europejska (@EU_Commission) wydała pozytywną opinię w procesie certyfikacji spółki, potwierdzając zgodność z unijnymi regulacjami. ✔️ 💬… pic.twitter.com/VboP0KZ2ma — GAZ-SYSTEM (@GAZ_SYSTEM) April 15, 2026 Polish energy minister Miłosz Motyka described the decision as a breakthrough for the country’s energy market, saying it offers “a concrete tool that will help accelerate investment in this area and strengthen the competitiveness of the Polish economy”. His ministry noted that Gaz-System is the first company in Europe to go through the certification procedure, placing “Poland at the forefront of change” and making it “one of the leaders of the energy transition in Europe”. Poland remains one of the most emissions-intensive economies in the EU relative to its size, relying heavily on coal for electricity and having one of the bloc’s lowest shares of electric vehicles. Click here to help us continue providing news free from paywalls and ads However, state energy giant Orlen has been gradually shifting its focus away from oil and towards greener alternatives. In 2024, it opened its first publicly available hydrogen refuelling station for cars and buses. In February this year, it opened its fifth such facility. Last year, Orlen secured 1.7 billion zloty (€400 million) in EU funds for to expand its hydrogen projects. The company aims to build capacity to produce 0.9 gigawatts of hydrogen by 2035, most of it in Poland. While hydrogen cars are still rare due limited infrastructue, several Polish cities, including Poznań, Gdańsk and Płock, have already introduced fleets of hydrogen-fueled buses. By the end of this decade, Orlen aims to have 111 hydrogen refuelling stations operating in Poland (57), the Czech Republic (28) and Slovakia (26), making it the regional leader in hydrogen infrastructure. Polish state energy giant Orlen has secured 1.7 billion zloty (€400 million) from EU post-pandemic recovery funds to expand its hydrogen energy projects. The company is aiming to have enough facilities to produce 0.9 gigawatts of the fuel by 2035https://t.co/V4anTTuAa4 — Notes from Poland 🇵🇱 (@notesfrompoland) June 17, 2025 Gaz-System does not yet own a hydrogen transmission network, but the company noted in a statement that the European Commission does not see it as an obstacle to granting it certification, given the current stage of the hydrogen market’s development. The certification confirms compliance with EU rules requiring the separation of transmission system operators from energy production and sales activities, in line with a positive assessment issued last month by the Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators (ACER). The next steps include Gaz-System submitting a ten-year network development plan and securing a final decision from Poland’s Energy Regulatory Office (URE). The firm also says that it hopes its certification will “enable future operators to plan, finance and build hydrogen networks, which is crucial for the rapid growth of this sector in Europe”. Uruchomiliśmy stację wodorową w Pile. Z możliwości tankowania niskoemisyjnego paliwa skorzystają zarówno klienci indywidualni, jak i flota autobusów Miejskiego Zakładu Komunikacji. W ramach umowy ORLEN dostarczy przewoźnikowi 219 tys. kilogramów wodoru. To druga – po Poznaniu -… pic.twitter.com/tILuoGCEgI — ORLEN (@GrupaORLEN) February 2, 2026 ​ Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support. Main image credit: Orlen press materials
TASS 24d ago
Officers of the Federal Security Service have detained a 52-year-old resident of the Zaporozhye Region on suspicion of high treason for transferring data to the Ukrainian side about the deployment locations and movement of the Russian Armed Forces
Ukrinform 24d ago
The number of casualties resulting from the Russian military’s attack on Kyiv has risen to 62, with four people killed.
TASS 24d ago
Valentina Matviyenko stressed that Russian-Azerbaijani relations "have enormous potential for mutually beneficial cooperation"
TASS 24d ago
Subsequent UAV monitoring confirmed the destruction of the target, as well as the elimination of the Ukrainian militant artillery crew
TASS 24d ago
Valentina Matviyenko mentioned the development of both countries' inter-parliamentary cooperation
Ukrinform 24d ago
At least 26 people were injured in Odesa as a result of an overnight Russian attack on April 16, with reports of people still missing.
TASS 24d ago
There are no Russian citizens among the Deyna tanker's crew
YLE 24d ago
Russia is due to open its own pavilion at the renowned Venice Biennale event for the first time since the invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
NHK 24d ago
In Ukraine, a large-scale attack by Russian forces occurred during the morning of the 16th, resulting in at least 15 deaths across the country, making it the worst attack since the beginning of the year, according to reports. President Zelenskyy urged all countries to fulfill their commitments to provide military assistance to Ukraine, even amidst the escalating tensions in Iran.
TASS 24d ago
GFCN experts referred to a fabricated video that circulated on social media in which Tisza party leader Peter Magyar allegedly calls US President Donald Trump "a senile grandpa" and declares his intention to sever agreements on nuclear energy and defense with the United States in the event of his election win
La Tercera 24d ago
The President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, emphasized this Thursday that "there cannot be a normalization with Russia" following a "massive attack" that has left at least 15 people dead in the capital, Kyiv, and other provinces. He then insisted that the intensity of these bombings "demonstrates that Russia does not deserve any easing of global policy or a lifting of sanctions." "There cannot be any normalization of Russia in the current situation. The pressure on Russia must have an effect, and it is important to fulfill all promises of aid to Ukraine on time," he said in a message on social media, recalling that "there are numerous political commitments from partners that have already been announced but have not yet been implemented, both within the framework of the Ramstein format and at the bilateral level." "I have instructed the commander of the Air Force to contact those partners who previously committed to supplying missiles for the Patriot system and other systems," Zelenskyy said, emphasizing that "Russia is betting on war, and the response must be exactly that." Therefore, he argued that it is necessary to "defend lives with all available means" and to "apply pressure, in the name of peace, with the same force." "I thank those who work with us in this way and who help Ukraine in a proper and comprehensive manner, fully aware that every act of support truly matters to the..."
Ukrinform 24d ago
The death toll from a Russian overnight attack on the city of Dnipro has risen to three.
Moscow Times 24d ago
“This is a new reality for the government and for business alike,” Elvira Nabiullina said at an economic forum in Moscow.
Ukrinform 24d ago
Since the launch of the government’s SvitloDIM program, more than 2,500 applications have been submitted in Kyiv and Kyiv region. The initiative has now been expanded to Kharkiv region.
Euronews 24d ago
Russian strikes hit Kyiv’s Podilsky district, injuring dozens and damaging homes, as part of a wider wave of deadly attacks across Ukraine.
France 24 24d ago
PRESS REVIEW – Thursday, April 16: We take a look at the latest coverage from the Russian independent papers. Next: a story about how new technologies are helping the elderly to combat loneliness. Also: a baby elephant has a similar story to that of Punch the monkey. Finally, why did a British tourist pay $1,500 for a kebab in Rio de Janeiro?
Balkan Insight 24d ago
Evidence presented at multiple war crimes trials point to the deep involvement of two Bosnian Serb men in the persecution and murder of Bosniaks in the Kalinovik region of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1992. Neither has ever been charged and Serbia, where they live, has refused to pursue the case.
TASS 24d ago
Earlier reports said power outages hit Nikolayev and the Kiev-controlled city of Kherson
Politico EU 24d ago
KYIV — At least 16 people were killed and more than 100 injured as Russia attacked Ukraine overnight with nearly 700 drones and 44 missiles. Ukrainian air defense forces shot down most of the drones, but intercepted only eight of the 19 ballistic missiles that entered the country’s airspace. Kyiv, Dnipro, and Odesa were the main targets of the Russian strikes. “We managed to shoot down 636 drones and part of the missiles. Unfortunately, not all. There are hits and damage to ordinary houses,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on X on Thursday. Ukraine has shot down 90 percent of the killer drones and almost 80 percent of the cruise missiles that Russia has launched against the country in the past six months, Ukraine’s Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov said at the Ukraine Defense Contact Group meeting in Berlin on Wednesday. He added that between last November and March of this year, the Kremlin launched 462 ballistic missiles, nearly 600 cruise missiles and 27,000 Shahed-type drones against Ukraine. But Kyiv still has a shortage of anti-ballistic capabilities, relying on Western supplies. There is an extreme shortage of PAC-2 and PAC-3 interceptor missiles, a scarcity that has become all the more acute since the U. S.and Israel launched its war on Iran in late February. Kyiv has started searching for alternatives to the PAC missiles, and continues to push partners to stick to their commitments to Ukraine. “There are many political commitments from partners that have already been voiced but not yet implemented, including in the ‘Ramstein’ format and on a bilateral basis.” Zelenskyy said on Thursday. “I have instructed the commander of the air force to contact those partners who previously gave promises regarding missiles for ‘Patriots’ and other systems.”
NYT 24d ago
Corruption and economic mismanagement led to the downfall of Hungary's authoritarian leader. Will his political followers avoid those same mistakes?
NYT 24d ago
An effort to privatize the facility is a key test of whether Kyiv can overcome concerns about Russian attacks and corruption to attract foreign investment.
Ukrinform 24d ago
Ukraine is experiencing a trend of rising fuel prices, which in the second half of the year could lead to food prices increasing by approximately 10%.
Notes from Poland 24d ago
Keep our news free from ads and paywalls by making a donation to support our work! Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and is published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support. Poland’s economy did not become the 20th largest in the world last year – and is not expected to reach that position until 2028 – new figures from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) indicate. Last October, the IMF’s regularly published World Economic Outlook forecast that the size of Poland’s economy would reach €1.04 trillion by the end of 2025, overtaking Switzerland’s (€1.00 trillion) to become the world’s 20th largest. However, the IMF’s latest figures indicate that, while Poland’s GDP did reach $1.036 in 2025, that was slightly lower than Switzerland’s $1.044. The IMF forecasts that Switzerland’s economy will remain larger than Poland’s in 2026 and 2027, but that Poland will then overtake it in 2028. However, Poland will remain significantly behind the 18th and 19th largest global economies, Saudi Arabia and the Netherlands. Poland and Switzerland’s GDP (source: IMF) Those data relate to the overall size of a country’s economy and do not take into account population size. Switzerland, with a population of around 9 million, will continue to have a much larger GDP per person than Poland, with a population of around 37 million. In terms of GDP per capita, Poland ranks 47th in the world ($31,340), according to the IMF’s estimate for 2026. That places it just ahead of Slovakia ($31,240) and Croatia ($30,030) and behind Portugal ($35,430), Japan ($35,700), Lithuania ($36,540), Estonia ($37,720) and the Czech Republic ($39,800). Click here to help us continue providing news free from paywalls and ads When the IMF last year forecast that Poland would in 2025 join the world’s top 20 economies, it drew enormous attention, with many media outlets and politicians treating it as an established fact rather than a prediction. The figure also led to renewed calls for Poland to be granted membership of the G20, a group of leading global economies. Membership of the G20 is not, however, decided by whether a country ranks among the world’s 20 largest economies. This year, Poland will attend the G20 summit as a guest after being invited by the United States, which is hosting the event. After the IMF’s latest update to its figures, finance minister Andrzej Domański told the Polish Press Agency (PAP) that it does not change Poland’s ambition to become a full G20 member. The US has invited Poland to attend next year’s G20 summit in Miami, saying it has earned a place there after recently joining the world’s 20 largest economies. G20 member South Africa, meanwhile, will not be invited amid ongoing tensions with Washington https://t.co/3imjZ4VsJg — Notes from Poland 🇵🇱 (@notesfrompoland) December 4, 2025 Regardless of Poland’s position in the ranking, however, the IMF’s figures confirm that the country is continuing to enjoy rapid economic growth and that its economy last year surpassed the $1 trillion mark for the first time. The IMF notes that the Polish economy grew 3.6% in 2025. That was the fourth-highest rate in the European Union, behind Ireland (12.3%), Malta (4.0%) and Cyprus (3.8%). Ireland’s growth figure, however, is distorted by the activities of multinational companies, while Malta and Cyprus both have relatively small economies. The IMF forecasts that Poland’s economy will grow 3.3% in 2026, well above the figure of 1.3% for Europe as a whole. Figures released by Eurostat last month showed that Poland’s economy has moved closer than ever to the European Union average. Its GDP per capita adjusted for differences in cost of living (so-called purchasing power standard, or PPS) reached 81% of the EU-wide figure in 2025. Poland’s economy has moved closer than ever to the EU average, new @EU_Eurostat data show. Its GDP per capita, adjusted for cost of living, reached 81% of the EU average in 2025. That is Poland's highest ever figure, and up from 44% three decades ago https://t.co/DCTyps6uDT — Notes from Poland 🇵🇱 (@notesfrompoland) March 26, 2026 ​ Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support. Main image credit: Jakub Żerdzicki/Unsplash
Politico EU 24d ago
Hungary’s premier-elect Péter Magyar said he would relocate the prime minister’s office in Budapest once he is sworn in. “Under the Tisza government, the Prime Minister’s Office will not be based in the Carmelite Palace in the Castle District, which Viktor Orbán had set up for himself, but in one of the ministry buildings near parliament,” Magyar wrote on X on Thursday. The baroque Carmelite Monastery in Buda, on the western side of the Danube, historically served as a Catholic monastery and later as a theater before being converted into Prime Minister Orbán’s office in 2019 at a cost reported to be more than €50 million. Hungary’s parliament building, one of Budapest’s most iconic landmarks, is located on the eastern bank of the river. The move marks another effort by Magyar to distance himself from his predecessor, after he appeared on Orbán-affiliated state television to announce that he would suspend their operations. In an interview Wednesday, Magyar described the broadcaster as a “factory of lies” and said he would “immediately suspend the false news service.” Magyar’s Tisza party won a landslide victory in Sunday’s parliamentary election, drawing congratulations from most European leaders. He is expected to be installed as prime minister by parliament in early May.
Ukrinform 24d ago
President Volodymyr Zelensky said he has instructed the commander of the Air Force to contact partners who had earlier committed to providing missiles for Patriot and other systems.
Ukrinform 24d ago
Implementation of resilience plans for protecting energy facilities has exceeded 50% nationwide, with Kyiv, Cherkasy, and Kharkiv regions performing best in developing alternative energy sources.
Guardian 24d ago
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy stated that nearly 700 Russian drones and 19 ballistic missiles primarily targeted Kyiv, Odesa, and Dnipro. He said that Russia "does not deserve any easing... or lifting of sanctions" following an overnight attack that killed 16 people and wounded 100 in Ukraine. He added: "Russia is betting on war, and the response must be exactly that: we must defend lives with all available means, and we must also apply pressure for the sake of peace with the same full force." There can be no normalization of Russia as it is today. Pressure on Russia must work. Continue reading...
Ukrinform 24d ago
The 2026 state budget may face a funding shortfall of up to UAH 4 billion for supporting the agricultural sector.
SCMP 24d ago
Russia unleashed its deadliest attack so far this year on the Ukrainian capital Kyiv and other cities overnight, killing 16 people, including a 12-year-old child, and wounding scores, in drone and missile strikes, officials said on Thursday. Fires burned out of control in parts of the capital, sending black smoke billowing ‌into the night sky, as firefighters struggled to control multiple blazes. The morning saw residents and emergency crews cleaning debris scattered around heavily damaged...
TASS 24d ago
Military expert Boris Rozhin believes that NATO member states are trying to find a cheap way of resolving the problem resulting from the US move to reduce funding for Ukraine
Ukrinform 24d ago
A total of €5 billion is required to finance resilience plans, and work is underway to identify funding sources.
Bloomberg 24d ago
Former Bulgarian President Rumen Radev extended his lead before Sunday’s snap parliamentary election, an opinion poll showed.
TASS 24d ago
According to preliminary reports, two adults suffered injuries
Bloomberg 25d ago
Russia carried out one of the largest attacks on Ukraine so far this year, killing at least 15 people and injuring dozens in an overnight onslaught of missiles and drones targeting Kyiv and the cities of Dnipro, Odesa and Kharkiv.