söndag 22 mars 2026

  

Iran Missiles Hit Dimona After US Israel Natanz Strike; Israel Shock; Nuclear Fear; Kiev Panic Grows

Alexander Mercouris


 

Power Plants destruction in 48 HOURS. IRAN missiles freak out Europe. WaPo uncovers Orban crazy plan 

Alex Christoforou

 

Ukraine War ZERO line, lethal drone warfare w/ João Quaresma

The Duran

  

Iran HITS Israel’s Dimona Nuke Site, Trump’s 48-Hour Power Plant Threat COLLAPSES

Danny Haiphong

 

Divided electorate – they can take over in Paris

Published 09.06

         Socialdemokraten Emmanuel Grégoire och konservativa Rachida Dati efter en valdebatt inför söndagens avgörande borgmästarval i Paris. Arkivbild.

         Social Democrat Emmanuel Grégoire and conservative Rachida Dati after an election debate ahead             of Sunday's decisive mayoral election in Paris. Archive photo. Photo: Thibault Camus/AP/TT

A right-wing minister who has moved towards the center hopes to break the left's power in Paris.

The French municipal elections indicate a rare divided electorate.

Rachida Dati has been a minister under both Nicolas Sarkozy and Emmanuel Macron and now hopes to break 25 years of left-wing rule in the French capital. But then she will have to turn around an unexpectedly large deficit against Social Democrat Emmanuel Grégoire in Sunday's decisive election round.

Several uncertain decisions await around the country, with the electorate pulling in different directions, in different parts of the country.

With just over a year left until the next presidential election, this year's local elections have been seen as an important gauge of which movement has the wind in its favor.

However, the results from last weekend's first round mostly point to a stormy sea, with divided support for both the left and the right, the center and the outer edges.

Slovenia: Trump friend favourite in heated election

Published 06.42

Sloveniens dåvarande premiärminister Janez Jansa vid ett möte med USA:s dåvarande utrikesminister Mike Pompeo 2020. Efter fyra år i opposition hoppas Jansa nu bli regeringschef igen. Arkivbild. 

Slovenia's then Prime Minister Janez Jansa at a meeting with then US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in 2020. After four years in opposition, Jansa now hopes to become head of government again. Archive photo. Photo: Jure Makovec/AP/TT

Janez Jansa has been prime minister in Slovenia three times. Now the Trump friend can make a comeback again, after an unusually dirty election campaign.

Jansa, from the conservative SDS, has been just ahead of incumbent Prime Minister Robert Golob's center-left coalition in opinion polls ahead of Sunday's parliamentary elections.

The fight is hot. Golob has accused Jansa of hiring the notorious Israeli security company Black Cube to obtain compromising material through wiretapping. SDS, in turn, has singled out EU Commissioner Marta Kos from Golob's alliance as a former police agent in the former Yugoslavia.

Well-known women's rights activist Nika Kovac worries about a return for Jansa.

"We have to decide whether we want to live in a democracy or an authoritarian state," Kovac told the AFP news agency earlier in March.

Latest news

The political situation in France
Cute dogs could decide the mayoral election in Paris

Ahead of today's mayoral election in the French capital, Paris, politicians have targeted an unexpected target group – namely the city's four-legged residents.

Both left-wing candidate Emmanuel Grégoire and former conservative culture minister Rachida Dati have invested heavily in animal-friendly reforms, writes The Guardian. During the election campaign, they have also been frequently seen in photos with dogs. Grégoire's staff has even started an entire Instagram account dedicated to dog pictures.

Organizations note that it is not surprising that politicians want to attract dog owners. Paris is one of the world's most dog-dense cities, while the majority of parks and natural areas have a ban on pets.

- It is about 170,000 votes, says Loïc Amiot, chairman of a pet association.

If Grégoire comes to power, he promises subsidized veterinary visits and that dogs are allowed on public transport. Dati wants man's best friend to have more accessible spaces and for leashing to be abolished in several places. 

Middle East Crisis  Iran War
Injury toll rises in Israel after Iranian attack

At least 200 people have been injured in southern Israel after attacks carried out by Iran and the terrorist organization Hezbollah on Saturday. Among them are several children who are reported to be in critical condition.

The majority were injured in the attacks on the cities of Arad and Dimona, where several buildings were completely destroyed. On Saturday, there were reports that a total of 100 people were injured, but on Sunday the number was written up, reports The Guardian.

At the same time, at least 15 people were also injured in Tel Aviv on Sunday after attacks with cluster munitions.

Israel's air defenses failed to shoot down many of Iran's projectiles on Saturday and the incident is being investigated, Israeli media reports. 


The war in Sudan

WHO: At least 64 killed in hospital attack in Sudan

A hospital attack in western Darfur in Sudan on Friday killed at least 64 people, including 13 children. This was stated by WHO director Tedros Ghebreyesus on X.

More than 2,000 people have now been killed or injured just as a result of attacks on health facilities during the three-year war. In addition to the many casualties that the attacks claim, communities are greatly affected when healthcare is disrupted, writes Ghebreyesus.

"Healthcare should never be a target. Peace is the best medicine."

The region is controlled by the paramilitary group Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and the RSF accuses the Sudanese military of the attack. The army denies this, but two anonymous representatives of the army tell the AP that the attack was carried out but was actually aimed at a nearby police station.