
Sweden Takes Next Major Step Towards New Nuclear Power
The state is taking a 60% stake in a company planning an SMR project adjacent to the existing reactors that are the cornerstone of Sweden’s nuclear fleet.

The state is taking a 60% stake in a company planning an SMR project adjacent to the existing reactors that are the cornerstone of Sweden’s nuclear fleet.

The British Green Party is set to debate a controversial motion that would mandate businesses to provide “workers who menstruate” with three additional paid days off a month.

The Saudi-born psychiatrist murdered six and injured hundreds in a vehicular mass casualty attack at the end of 2024.

Dangerous criminals, including killers and rapists, will be allowed to walk free after only serving half of their time.

Store staff, including the manager, are now under fire for their non-intervention in the latest in a sequence of antisemitic incidents in the UK capital.

The European Commission proposes extending temporary protection until 2028 to Ukrainian refugees—except for males subject to military obligations.

Only a fraction of the nearly 300,000 18-year-olds contacted under Germany’s new recruitment programme have signed up.

Weekend booze bans in the capital coincide with half-baked attempts to save water that have cut the output of power stations.

In the choice between thriving capitalism and over-taxed regulatory hell, money speaks louder than Eurocratic political hype.

MEP Charlie Weimers says Swedes have a right to understand how Islam is growing in the country.
“I am the living proof of sexual violence by Hamas” says a woman in the face of United Nations “denial and indifference.”
With safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz resuming, it appears that oil prices are falling back to pre-conflict levels.
Whether Bardella or Le Pen, a national conservative leader would secure maximum vote share if an election was held tomorrow.
Videos recorded after the barbaric assault show the man covered in his victims’ blood.
A report produced by an NGO claiming to be a protector of fundamental freedoms has revived plans to get rid of Germany’s main opposition party, suggesting it is ‘unconstitutional.’
Effectively banned in Germany, the controversial ‘migrant crime’ movie is now available worldwide online.
After slipping through background checks, an activist used a Scandinavian hospital as his base for menacing Tehran’s enemies online.
The full release of the film on X triggered a wave of reactions against Germany’s decision to block its commercial distribution.
Iran presents its own naval routes as the only acceptable ones, while its neighbours look on.
Brussels must ask whether its transparency rules still reflect where influence actually resides.
Despite various campaigns against the German national conservatives, the party has opened up a 15 percentage-point lead on its rivals.
For now at least, the “Heroes of the UPA” controversy continues to undermine relations between Poland and Ukraine.