måndag 22 juni 2026

Trump congratulates Colombia's right-wing candidate

Abelardo de la Espriella under valdagen. 
Abelardo de la Espriella on election day. Photo: Rodrigo Abd/AP/TT

US President Donald Trump congratulates Abelardo de la Espriella, who by all accounts won the presidential election in Colombia.

"It was a great pleasure for me to endorse him and I look forward to working together to build a strong relationship between Colombia and the United States," Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social.

Colombia's National Electoral Council has not yet formally declared a winner after last night's election, but right-wing candidate de la Espriella has declared himself the winner after receiving 49.7 percent of the vote compared to leftist candidate Ivan Cepeda's 48.7 with 99.9 percent of the votes counted.

Cepeda has said that he recognizes the preliminary vote count but wants to await a review of the election results.

Judge blocks key part of Trump's election law

Donald Trump. Bilden är tagen 19 juni. 
Donald Trump. The picture was taken on June 19. Photo: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP/TT

A federal judge has decided to block a database with information on millions of Americans that was to be used in elections.

The decision is a significant setback for President Donald Trump.

The database will contain information such as the equivalent of social security numbers, citizenship status and other sensitive information, reports The Hill.

The Trump administration's plan is for this database to be used as a tool to identify and compile lists of people who are deemed eligible to vote.

But according to Judge Sparkle L Sooknanan, the initiative, which was issued by presidential order earlier this year, violates several laws and also risks leading to people being wrongfully deprived of their right to vote.

Trump has previously described his attempt at new laws as so important that it “overshadows everything else.”

Latest news

Power Shift in Hungary
Hungarian President Rejects Magyar's Resignation Demands

Hungarian Prime Minister Péter Magyar has made his opinion clear about incumbent President Tamás Sulyok: he wants to remove him.

But Sulyok, who was appointed by Viktor Orbán, has now announced that he intends to fight to keep his post and resist the new government's attempts to remove him, reports Politico.

- No parliamentary majority can give a mandate to disregard the principles of the rule of law and European values, Sulyok tells Politico.

At the same time, he accuses Magyar's party Tisza of wanting to concentrate power faster than Orbán's party Fidesz did during its 16 years in power.

- Tisza wants to achieve a greater concentration of power in 16 weeks than Fidesz did in 16 years, because the party effectively wants to replace all public officials elected by the previous parliament, Sulyok says.

Political situation in Myanmar
UN: 702 civilians killed in six months in Myanmar

From the time the Myanmar military announced elections in August 2025 until polling stations opened at the end of December of the same year, 702 civilians in the country were killed by the military. This is according to a new UN report.

Of these, 476 people were killed in airstrikes.

According to the report, reduced international support has contributed to civilians becoming more vulnerable to violence and abuse.

– As if the people of Myanmar have not already suffered enough under military rule, they now seem to have been forgotten by the outside world, says UN human rights chief Volker Türk.

In October, 23 people, including four children, were killed in a single airstrike near a school in Chaung-U in the Sagaing region, writes the BBC. 

Artemis missions
Laser on the moon's south pole to keep track of the clock

Scientists want to place a laser in the craters on the moon's south pole to ensure that the clock runs correctly on the moon, reports SVT Nyheter.

There is a lot that will have to work once NASA's base on the moon's south pole is in place. To coordinate all activities, the moon needs its own global navigation system, for example, but for that to work, the satellites must also have an exact common time. It is not entirely easy, since time on the moon moves faster than on Earth. If the time is slightly off, it can be enough for the navigation system to give results that are several kilometers off, and therefore a very precise timekeeper is required. The whole thing is to be solved with an "optical atomic clock" where an ultra-stable laser keeps track of the ticking. The plan is to place the laser in a place where it can work undisturbed, says physicist Jun Ye, who was involved in developing the atomic clock.

“In the permanently shadowed craters at the moon's south pole, sunlight has not reached for billions of years,” he says.

 

The political situation in Colombia

Trump favorite declares victory: “We are beginning a new era!”

Right-wing candidate Abelardo de la Espriella looks set to win the Colombian presidential election by a narrow margin, according to international media.

– We are beginning a new era! For those who have spread violence, terror, drug trafficking and corruption for all these years, time is up, he said in a speech to supporters in the city of Barranquilla during the night.

According to still preliminary figures, with just over 99 percent of the votes counted, Abelardo de la Espriella has 49.7 percent of the support against left-wing candidate Iván Cepeda’s 48.7 percent.

The two candidates are far apart. De la Espriella, who until recently was a criminal lawyer, has no previous political experience and has been supported by US President Donald Trump. Among other things, he has run for office on a new line towards the armed groups in the country with an eye towards full-scale military confrontation.

Analysis: “El Tigre” Consolidates Latin America’s Rightward Shift

Abelardo de la Espriella, also known as “El Tigre,” emerged victorious in preliminary vote counts in Colombia’s presidential election. If the result holds up in the final count, it would further solidify the political rightward shift that South America has taken in recent years, writes Reuters’ Alexander Villegas in an analysis.

In that case, Colombia would join Peru, Argentina, Chile, Ecuador, Bolivia and Panama, all of which have moved away from leftist rule in recent years.

“Across the region, including Colombia, weak economies and rising crime have reshaped voters’ priorities,” writes Villegas.

de la Espriella stole the spotlight from leftist candidate Iván Cepeda by promising quick solutions to several of the country’s biggest problems, including the long-running conflict with armed groups, writes CNN’s Stefano Pozzebon.

“With the support of Donald Trump, he took advantage of the wave that brought several right-wing populist leaders to power in Latin America, where a hard line against crime has been a recurring theme.”


Ebola Outbreak

Over 1,000 Infected in Ebola Outbreak

The number of confirmed infections in the ongoing Ebola outbreak in eastern Congo-Kinshasa has passed 1,000, several news agencies report, citing local authorities. At least 254 people have died and 100 have recovered since the outbreak began in May.

Infection tracing remains difficult and authorities have not yet managed to locate "patient zero", writes AP. In addition, there may be many previously unknown cases, over 35,000 people who have been in contact with infected individuals remain to be traced.

The Ebola outbreak — it's relevantsaken

  • The Ebola outbreak in Congo-Kinshasa has led to over 1,000 infections and at least 250 deaths since mid-May 2026.
  • The Bundibugyo variant, which lacks a vaccine and treatment, has spread rapidly to neighboring countries such as Uganda, causing concerns about further spread.
  • Armed conflicts, distrust of authorities and attacks on health workers have complicated efforts to stop the infection.
  • The World Health Organization WHO has classified the Ebola outbreak in Congo-Kinshasa and Uganda as a global public health emergency and warned that the hidden toll is large.
  • Lack of resources, laboratory materials and funding has delayed testing and limited the possibilities to combat the epidemic effectively.