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Belgium backs France’s expanded nuclear deterrence plan as Macron seeks stronger European defence

Belgium backs France’s expanded nuclear deterrence plan as Macron seeks stronger European defence Belgium backs France’s expanded nuclear deterrence plan as Macron seeks stronger European defence
  Belgium will take part in a new French-led nuclear deterrence initiative, Prime Minister Bart De Wever confirmed, marking a significant...
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Women now hold over a third of EU managerial roles, but gaps remain

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EU approves €266.8 million payment to Slovenia under NextGenerationEU recovery plan

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Belgium backs France’s expanded nuclear deterrence plan as Macron seeks stronger European defence

Belgium backs France’s expanded nuclear deterrence plan as Macron seeks stronger European defence Belgium backs France’s expanded nuclear deterrence plan as Macron seeks stronger European defence
  Belgium will take part in a new French-led nuclear deterrence initiative, Prime Minister Bart De Wever confirmed, marking a significant...
Read More...

Women now hold over a third of EU managerial roles, but gaps remain

Women now hold over a third of EU managerial roles, but gaps remain Women now hold over a third of EU managerial roles, but gaps remain
  In 2024, women occupied 35.2% of managerial positions across the European Union, marking a steady rise from 31.8% a decade earlier, according...
Read More...

EU approves €266.8 million payment to Slovenia under NextGenerationEU recovery plan

EU approves €266.8 million payment to Slovenia under NextGenerationEU recovery plan EU approves €266.8 million payment to Slovenia under NextGenerationEU recovery plan
  The European Commission has given the green light to Slovenia’s fifth payment request worth €266.8 million under NextGenerationEU,...
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Iran's president warned Monday of threats to the Islamic republic's "democracy and national sovereignty", after a body dominated by his ultra-conservative rivals disqualified

thousands of candidates, weeks before elections.

President Hassan Rouhani's moderate conservatives and their reformist allies are locked in a public quarrel with the Guardian Council over the disqualification of thousands of candidates -- including 92 sitting MPs.

The council, which oversees Iran's elections, says it has barred some 9,500 potential candidates from standing, almost two thirds of the 14,500 hopefuls.

Rouhani, whose alliance fears losing its majority in the February 21 polls, said the disqualifications risked appointments being made "elsewhere" than the ballot box.

"The greatest danger for democracy and national sovereignty is the day when elections become a formality," the government's website quoted Rouhani as saying in a meeting with provincial governors.

"May God never bring this day," he added. 

"Let us reassure the people and tell them our system is not a single-party system."

In an apparent reference to ultra-conservatives, he said "they should at least let there be competition and participation".

He called on Iranians of all stripes to vote, "even if... there are shortcomings in elections".

"Sometime I may not want to vote for some reason, but some other time I may not have enough trust to go to the ballot box; this is very dangerous," he said.

Candidates who are disqualified are allowed to appeal before the elections.

The polls come after a traumatic month for Iran, in which it approached the brink of war with the United States and mistakenly shot down a passenger jet.

A US drone strike in Iraq killed top Iranian general Qasem Soleimani on January 3, and Iran retaliated five days later by launching a wave of missiles at US troops stationed in Iraq.

Hours later, with Iranian forces on high alert, its air defences mistakenly shot down a Ukraine International Airlines passenger jet, killing all 176 people on board.

The disaster triggered scattered protests in Tehran and other cities, although they appeared smaller than nationwide demonstrations in November, sparked by a fuel price hike, in which Amnesty International said at least 300 people died.AFP

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