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Tag: spain

  • Back from the brink: UK red kites aid Spanish cousins

    A British red kite emerges from an aviary in the remote hills of western Spain and takes flight. At six months old, this is its first taste of freedom.

    Without a sound, it soars high in the sky above scrubland and within seconds disappears from view into a wooded valley in the distance.

    It is the latest release in a conservation story that has come full circle.

    Nearly four decades ago, the birds were extinct in England and Scotland with just a few pairs left in Wales.

    In the late 1980s and early 1990s, red kite chicks from Spain and Sweden were released in the Chilterns on the Oxfordshire-Buckinghamshire border.

    It proved so successful that the species is now thriving across the UK, with estimates of more than 6,000 mating pairs or about 15% of the world’s population.

    Dr Ian Evans, from Natural England, was one of the early pioneers.

    He said: “There were a lot of unknowns. The first lot we released, we thought they might just die or they might just move away.

    “In 1991, we had our first breeding pairs and that was really an eye-opener because we thought ‘well, this can be successful’.

    “That was the springboard for establishing other release sites in England and Scotland.”

    A red kite chick from the original reintroduction project [Ian Evans]

    British-born red kite chicks have now been taken to south west Spain as part of a four-year project to revive the population there from the brink of extinction.

    The region has fewer than 50 mating pairs due to predators like the eagle owl and human factors such as illegal poisoning and electrocution.

    In 2022, conservationists were granted special licenses from Natural England to collect red kite chicks, mostly from Northamptonshire, and send them over to the Extremadura region of Spain.

    More than 120 chicks have been collected, with about 30 exported each year.

    Three red kite chicks lie on the ground having been collected to send to Spain

    About 30 red kite chicks were collected from forests in England and relocated each year over the four-year project [Simon Dudhill]

    About the red kite

    • It is one of Britain’s largest birds of prey, known for its reddish-brown body, long wings, forked tail and distinctive “mewing” calls

    • Once considered a threat to game birds and domestic animals like cats and dogs, the red kite was hunted close to extinction in the UK and at one point there were just a few breeding pairs in central Wales

    • Red kites are largely scavengers, feeding on carrion and small prey such as rabbits

    • The birds breed exclusively in Europe and are endangered due to illegal persecution through shooting, poisoning and trapping

    Map shows the chicks were collected from Northamptonshire in England and relocated to the Extremadura region in south west Spain

    The chicks have been relocated to Extremadura in Spain where the red kite population has been nearly wiped out [BBC]

    The chicks are flown to Madrid and then transported 240 miles (385km) south to a wildlife hospital in Villafranca de los Barros, run by Accion por el Mundo Salvaje (AMUS).

    When I arrive, the small team, led by ornithologist and project manager Alfonso Godino, are hard at work.

    Each chick has to be weighed, measured and tagged before being fitted with a GPS backpack which allows experts to track them.

    The birds look lifeless as they are manoeuvred into position. Mr Godino tells me they play dead when they feel under threat.

    Asked whether the tagging is painful, he says it is a minor discomfort, like having your ears pierced.

    Alfonso says the juveniles soon get used to the large tags, which are needed so they can be observed from the ground.

    The birds are then moved to holding aviaries near the Portuguese border for two weeks to acclimatise to their new surroundings.

    The release site is quiet and remote. There is a strong stench of rotting flesh coming from a sheep’s carcass that has been left to entice red kites to feed here.

    As the gate is removed, I half expect the chicks to rush out but, but apart from a few flutters inside the aviary, nothing happens.

    It takes several hours, as though they are building up courage, before one by one they leave the safety of the aviary behind and fly off into the wild.

    ‘Bittersweet moment’

    “Now is the exciting moment when they are in the wild, they can learn to search for food, to avoid predators, to interact with other species in the area… thanks to the GPS we are going to closely monitor these birds we have released,” Alfonso tells me.

    But this is a nerve-racking time for AMUS field technician Sofia Marrero.

    “The mortality for raptors in general is really high during the first years of their life,” she says. “So now it’s a little bit hard because you already know that some of them may not get to sexual maturity, so it’s a bittersweet moment.”

    In fact, only about a quarter of the red kites released during the project have survived.

    The biggest threat is from predators and natural causes.

    In 2023, eagle owls were responsible for killing half of the project’s newly released red kite chicks.

    In response, the team at AMUS adapted how and when the chicks are released to increase their chances of survival.

    A tagged red kite takes it's first flight into the wild

    A tagged red kite takes its first flight into the wild [Sebastien Comps, AMUS]

    A lot of work has also been done to adapt thousands of kilometres of power cables to reduce the risk of electrocution.

    But the biggest human risk to birds of prey is from illegal poisoning.

    Between 2020-2024, 3,060 red kites were tagged and fitted with GPS as part of the Life EuroKite project, spanning 40 project areas in 12 countries.

    By September 2024, 1,377 tagged red kites had died – 622 from natural causes, including predation, while 195 died from poisoning and 54 from illegal shooting.

    Experts say the figures represent just the “tip of the iceberg” in terms of illegal persecution.

    In the UK, the RSPB is working with European partners to provide advice on how to investigate cases of poisoning.

    A report by the charity last year revealed at least 1,344 birds of prey had been killed in the UK between 2009 and 2023.

    “Raptor persecution is directly linked to game estates so in the lowlands pheasant and partridge and in the uplands grouse,” Mark Thomas, head of investigations at RSPB says.

    “All the statistics prove that… two thirds of all the convictions are for gamekeepers so these are people employed lawfully to control vermin they can control but on some estates some of these gamekeepers kill things that are fully protected,” he adds.

    The charity believes licensing game estates would tackle the issue but that is disputed by the Countryside Alliance.

    In a statement, the non-profit organisation said: “Any incident of raptor persecution is utterly condemnable, with the penalties already including a prison sentence along with an unlimited fine.”

    Five tagged young red kites on the ground eating

    Red kites are scavengers and feed on dead animals and are often the number one victim of poisoning incidents [AMUS]

    In Spain, the relocation project in Extremadura has seen three mating pairs so far that have produced two surviving chicks.

    With more tagged red kites due to reach sexual maturity next year, it is hoped these numbers will multiply.

    “There are still huge areas of southern Spain where the red kite was common three decades ago and is now almost extinct,” Mr Godino says.

    “So the next step is how we can apply this experience to other areas of Spain.”

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  • Three Die as Heavy Seas Batter Spanish Island of Tenerife

    MADRID (Reuters) -Three people died and 15 were injured on Saturday as rough seas battered the Spanish holiday island of Tenerife, emergency services said.

    A rescue helicopter airlifted a man who had fallen into the water at La Guancha, a beach in the north of the island, but he was pronounced dead on arrival at hospital, emergency services said.

    In a separate incident, a man was found floating on the beach at El Cabezo in the south of the island. Lifeguards and medical staff were unable to resuscitate him and he was pronounced dead at the scene.

    A woman suffered a heart attack and died when a wave swept 10 people into the sea at Puerto de la Cruz in northern Tenerife. Three others from the group were seriously injured and taken to hospital for treatment.

    The Canary Islands, a Spanish archipelago off the west coast of Africa that includes Tenerife, are on alert for coastal hazards, the islands’ emergency service said on Sunday.

    (Reporting by Graham KeeleyEditing by David Goodman)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Spanish police arrest 13 suspected members of Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang


    Spanish police arrested 13 suspected members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua across five cities, seized a stash of illegal drugs and dismantled two drug laboratories, authorities said Friday.

    The arrests followed an investigation Spanish police opened last year after the brother of “Niño Guerrero,” the leader of the Tren de Aragua gang, was arrested in Barcelona under an international arrest warrant issued by Venezuelan authorities, police said. This was Spain’s first operation meant to dismantle a suspect cell of the Venezuelan prison gang, police said in a statement. 

    The two laboratories that police dismantled had been used to make tusi, a mixture of cocaine, MDMA and ketamine, police said. Video shows authorities finding packages and a pink substance inside a residence.  The arrests took place in the Spanish cities of Barcelona, Madrid, Girona, A Coruña and Valencia.

    The Tren de Aragua gang originated in Venezuela more than a decade ago at an infamously lawless prison with hardened criminals in the central state of Aragua. The gang has expanded in recent years as more than 7.7 million Venezuelans fled economic turmoil and migrated to other Latin American countries, the U.S. and Spain.

    The gang has become a key reference in the Trump administration’s crackdown against alleged drug smugglers. The administration announced yet another deadly U.S. strike on a boat officials said was trafficking narcotics in the Caribbean Sea on Friday. At least 18 such strikes have killed at least 70 people. 

    The United States began carrying out the strikes — which experts say amount to extrajudicial killings even if they target known traffickers — in early September, taking aim at vessels in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific. The Trump administration has said in a notice to Congress that the United States is engaged in “armed conflict” with Latin American drug cartels, describing them as terrorist groups as part of its justification for the strikes.

    President Trump had previously designated Tren de Aragua as a terrorist organization, along with MS-13 and other gangs and cartels. Mr. Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 in March to treat suspected gang members like wartime enemies of the U.S. government, an action that has only been taken three other times in United States history. 

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  • Police Raids Target First Spanish Cell of ‘Tren De Aragua’ Crime Ring

    MADRID (Reuters) -Police said on Friday they had arrested 13 people accused of belonging to the first cell of Venezuela’s “Tren de Aragua” crime gang detected in Spain, following raids in five cities.

    Tren de Aragua, originally formed in Venezuelan prisons, has grown into one of Latin America’s most violent transnational criminal networks, linked to drugs, human trafficking and extortion.

    The United States this year designated it as a global terrorist organisation, citing its reach beyond the region.

    Police said the arrests took place in Barcelona, Madrid, Girona, A Coruna and Valencia in an investigation into the group’s alleged efforts to expand its operations into Spain, where Venezuelans make up one of the largest immigrant communities.

    Officers seized synthetic drugs, cocaine, a marijuana plantation and two laboratories producing “tusi”, also known as pink cocaine, a substance the gang is known to traffic.

    The operation follows a 2024 arrest in Barcelona of the alleged gang leader’s brother, who was accused of trying to expand the group into Spain.

    (Reporting by Jesus Calero, editing by Andrei Khalip and Alex Richardson)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Queen Letizia of Spain Wears an Historic Cartier Tiara to Meet the Sultan of Oman

    At the banquet in honor of Haitham Bin Tariq, the sultan and prime minister of Oman, Queen Letizia of Spain looked like something out of a painting. The sovereign paired a dreamy cobalt blue gown with a tiara made of platinum, pearls, and diamonds that has been in the royal family for generations.

    Last time Queen Letizia had worn a tiara at home in the Royal Palace was back in 2023. The Queen and King Felipe welcomed Colombian President Gustavo Petro, and for the traditional banquet the sovereign favored the a red Carolina Herrera dress and the gracefulness of the floral tiara that belonged to Maria Christina of Spain. In that same jewel collection resides Queen Letizia’s latest “Russian tiara” she wore for the Sultan of Oman’s state visit to Spain.

    Queen Letizia’ Cartier Loop Tiara is thought to have first belonged to Queen Maria Christina of Habsburg-Lorraine, created in 1886. She held regency over Spain from the death of her husband, King Alfonso XII, until the accession of her son, Alfonso XIII, in 1902. The style, which features pearls set in a series of diamond loops has been handed down through generations of Spanish royals, and was a favorite of Letizia’s mother-in-law, Queen Sofía.

    Some jewelry experts believe that the tiara was a gift to then-Archduchess Maria Christina of Habsburg-Lorraine for her wedding to King Alfonso XII of Spain. In reality, historians now seem to agree, it would be a personal commission from Maria Christina who became regent after the death of her husband since her son, Alfonso XIII, had not yet been born when his father passed away.

    King Felipe and Queen Letizia with the Sultan of Oman, Haitham Bin Tarik, during the gala dinner in his honor at the Royal Palace, November 4, 2025, in Madrid, Spain.Europa Press Entertainment/Getty Images

    Giorgia Olivieri

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  • Spain’s top prosecutor stands trial over allegations of leaking confidential information

    MADRID (AP) — Spain’s Attorney General Álvaro García Ortiz went on trial Monday over allegations of leaking confidential information in an unprecedented and politically charged case that looms large over Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’ s left-wing government.

    It’s the first time in Spain’s modern history that a top prosecutor faces a criminal trial. It’s one of several cases that have implicated people close to Sánchez.

    García Ortiz is accused of having leaked an email to journalists from a lawyer who was representing the partner of Madrid’s influential regional leader Isabel Díaz Ayuso, one of Spain’s main opposition leaders. García Ortiz has denied the charges and has received public support from Sánchez on more than one occasion.

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    García Ortiz has been attorney general since 2022. The trial is scheduled to last 10 days.

    The case is at the heart of tensions between Spain's left-wing national government and Madrid's conservative regional government.

    Two former high-ranking officials in Sánchez’s Socialist Party as well as the prime minister’s wife and brother are facing separate corruption investigations. While Sánchez himself has not been named in any of the cases, they have at times threatened to bring down his government.

    In reference to the probes into his wife's business dealings, Sánchez has said that some judges in the country were acting on ideological motives.

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  • China Confirms First Visit by Spanish Monarch in 18 Years

    BEIJING (Reuters) -Chinese foreign ministry on Monday said the king of Spain, Felipe VI, will pay a state visit to China from November 10-13, the first by a Spanish monarch in 18 years, as Madrid seeks to bolster Chinese investment and boost trade ties.

    China is willing to join hands with Spain to seize the opportunity presented by King Felipe VI’s visit to expand mutual cooperation and enhance the strategic partnership of the two nations, Mao Ning, spokesperson at the Chinese foreign ministry, said at a regular news briefing.

    (Reporting by Ryan Woo and Xiuhao Chen; Editing by Christopher Cushing)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Spain Marks Deadly Valencia Floods Anniversary With State Funeral, Solemn Marches

    MADRID (Reuters) – Spain’s King Felipe will attend a state funeral in the eastern region of Valencia as part of a number of events on Wednesday to mark one year since deadly floods killed 237 people.

    Authorities were still finding victims buried in the mud as recently as last week, as the country comes to terms with the most catastrophic flooding in Europe in more than five decades.

    Flash floods caused by torrential rains swept away bridges, cars and people and swamped homes and underground car parks on October 29, 2024. Some 229 people died in the Valencia region and a further eight in other parts of Spain.

    Local residents plan to lay out 229 emergency foil blankets representing the victims in a Valencia square.

    Two silent, torch-carrying marches will join together in Benetusser, one of the suburbs of Valencia city that was most affected by the floods.

    Anger over the handling of the catastrophe continues to rage a year later, with tens of thousands of people calling for conservative regional leader Carlos Mazon to resign at a demonstration in Valencia on Saturday.

    Protesters accused the regional government of failing to warn citizens early enough during the emergency, sending a text message alert when many buildings were already under water.

    A court is investigating Mazon’s handling of the emergency and his whereabouts on the day, after a local journalist said she had a nearly four-hour lunch with him when he was meant to be at an emergency services meeting. Mazon has refused to provide details of the lunch or show the restaurant bill but says he was kept informed at all times over the phone.

    The government on Tuesday approved 5 billion euros ($5.8 billion) of loan guarantees to help businesses and homes affected by the floods. The government has so far handed out more than 8 billion euros to clear up devastated areas.

    The heavy rains and subsequent flash floods were caused by a high-altitude isolated depression – referred to locally as a DANA – a highly destructive weather system created when cold and warm air meet to produce powerful rain clouds.

    It typically happens after a hot summer, and scientists believe the phenomenon is occurring more frequently due to climate change.

    (Reporting by Charlie Devereux, David Latona and Ana Cantero; Writing by Charlie Devereux; Editing by Sonali Paul)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • 6.5 tons of cocaine seized from boat off the Canary Islands after tip from U.S., Spanish police say

    Spanish police said Sunday that they seized 6.5 tons of cocaine and arrested nine people after a U.S. tip-off led them to raid a ship off the Canary Islands a few days ago.

    In a statement, police said the narcotics were hidden in the hold of the boat, which was flying a Tanzanian flag and had departed from Panama en route to Vigo, in north-west Spain. The cargo ship, which was approximately 177 feet long, had unusual structures on board which concealed the narcotics, officials said.

    The Drug Enforcement Administration, the U.S. federal agency responsible for combating drug trafficking, provided key “information” that enabled the operation to succeed, the press release stated.

    Police release video on social media showing officers on a speed boat intercepting the alleged drug-trafficking ship.

    Spanish police said Sunday that they seized 6.5 tons of cocaine from a ship off the Canary Islands.

    Spanish National Police


    Spain is one of the main gateways for cocaine into Europe, due to its links with Latin America, where the drug is produced, and its geographical location in the south-west of the continent.

    In June, police forces from multiple countries dismantled a drug trafficking ring that used what authorities called high-speed “narco boats” to smuggle large quantities of cocaine from Brazil and Colombia to the Canary Islands. The ring allegedly used an abandoned shipwreck as a refueling platform for the speedboats.

    Spanish police made their biggest ever cocaine seizure last October when they discovered some 13 tons hidden in a shipment of bananas to the southern port of Algeciras. Intelligence from Ecuadoran police tipped off the Spanish authorities, national police said at the time.

    Large amounts of drugs have also been confiscated from boats in other parts of the world recently. Earlier this month, U.S. Central Command confirmed that a Pakistani navy ship seized narcotics worth more than $972 million from sailboats in the Arabian Sea. Last month, the French navy seized nearly 10 tons of cocaine worth more than $600 million from a fishing vessel off the coast of West Africa.

    In April, the U.S. Coast Guard seized roughly 10,000 pounds of cocaine from a fishing boat in the Atlantic Ocean. 

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  • Missing Picasso Painting Found in Madrid Weeks After Vanishing

    MADRID (Reuters) -Spanish police said on Friday they had recovered a 1919 Pablo Picasso painting that went missing earlier this month ahead of its planned display at a temporary exhibition in southern Spain.

    The small framed “Still Life with Guitar” was part of a larger shipment of artworks moved from Madrid to Granada. The exhibit’s organisers filed a police complaint on October 10 once they noticed it missing after the crates were unpacked.

    In a post on X, police said the painting may not have been loaded onto the transport truck before the shipment left Madrid. The historical heritage brigade was continuing its investigation, the statement said, without indicating whether police believed any crime had been committed.

    Police released pictures of forensic experts examining the painting while wearing full sterile bodysuits and masks.

    The police had registered the painting, which is owned by a private collector, in Interpol’s global database of Stolen Works of Art containing nearly 57,000 items.

    The CajaGranada Foundation holding the exhibition said its security camera footage showed only 57 works being unloaded from the vehicle when it arrived, instead of the 58 expected.

    (Reporting by David Latona; Editing by Peter Graff)

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  • One Year On, Victim of Valencia Floods Found Buried in Mud

    MADRID (Reuters) -The body of a 56-year-old man has been found buried in mud a year after he was swept away in deadly flash floods in southeastern Spain, authorities said on Thursday.

    Nearly 240 people died when floodwaters swamped homes, underground car parks and vehicles on the outskirts of Valencia, Spain’s third-largest city, on October 29 last year.

    The man was one of three people still unaccounted for and had already been officially declared dead, said a local court in Catarroja – one of the towns most affected by the floods.

    He was discovered on Tuesday during earth-moving operations in the town of Manises, about 40 km (25 miles) downstream from Pedralba, where he went missing, it added.

    Under Spanish procedure, judges are called in when bodies are discovered.

    The same court, overseen by Judge Nuria Ruiz, is carrying out a judicial investigation into the delayed emergency response to the floods, which rank among Spain’s worst natural catastrophes in modern history.

    A text alert sent by Valencia’s regional government warning people to take shelter arrived when buildings were already under water and many people were drowning.

    On Thursday, the court summoned a local journalist who had lunch with Valencia’s conservative regional leader, Carlos Mazon, on the day of the floods.

    (Reporting by Emma Pinedo; Editing by David Latona and Andrew Heavens)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Analysis-Turkey Pressing for Western Fighter Jets to Claw Back Regional Edge

    By Ece Toksabay and Jonathan Spicer

    ANKARA (Reuters) -Anxious to bolster its air power, Turkey has proposed to European partners and the U.S. ways it could swiftly obtain advanced fighter jets as it seeks to make up ground on regional rivals such as Israel, sources familiar with the talks say.  

    NATO-member Turkey, which has the alliance’s second-largest military, aims to leverage its best relations with the West in years to add to its ageing fleet 40 Eurofighter Typhoons, for which it inked a preliminary agreement in July, and later also U.S.-made F-35 jets, despite Washington sanctions that currently block any deal. 

    Strikes by Israel – the Middle East’s most advanced military with hundreds of U.S.-supplied F-15, F-16 and F-35 fighters – on Turkey’s neighbours Iran and Syria, as well as on Lebanon and Qatar, unnerved Ankara in the last year. They laid bare key vulnerabilities, prompting its push for rapid air power reinforcement to counter any potential threats and not be left exposed, officials say.

    Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has sharply criticised Israel’s attacks on Gaza and elsewhere in the Middle East and once warm relations between the two countries have sunk to new lows. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned that Turkey’s bases, rebel allies and support for the army in Syria posed a threat to Israel.  

    Greece, a largely symbolic but sensitive threat for Turkey, is expected to receive a batch of advanced F-35s in the next three years. In years past, jets from the two NATO states engaged in scattered dogfights over the Aegean, and Greece has previously expressed concerns about Turkish military build-up.

    TURKEY WOULD BUY SECOND-HAND PLANES TO GET THEM FAST

    For the Typhoons, Turkey is nearing a deal with Britain and other European countries in which it would promptly receive 12 of them, albeit used, from previous buyers Qatar and Oman to meet its immediate needs, according to a person familiar with the matter. 

    Eurofighter consortium members Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain would approve the second-hand sale proposal, in which they would provide Turkey with 28 new jets in coming years pending a final purchase agreement, the person said. 

    Erdogan is expected to discuss the proposal on visits to Qatar and Oman on Wednesday and Thursday, with jet numbers, pricing, and timelines the main issues. 

    Erdogan is then expected to host British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz later this month, when agreements could be sealed, sources say. 

    A UK government spokesperson told Reuters that a memorandum of understanding that Britain and Turkey signed in July paves the way “for a multibillion-pound order of up to 40 aircraft,” adding: “We look forward to agreeing the final contracting details soon.”

    German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul, who was in Ankara last week, said Berlin supported the jets purchase and later told broadcaster NTV that a deal could follow within the year.

    Turkey’s defence ministry said no final agreement had been reached and that talks with Britain were moving in a positive direction, adding other consortium members backed the procurement. Qatar and Oman did not immediately comment. 

    TURKEY, US HAVE POLITICAL WILL TO RESOLVE ISSUES

    Acquiring the advanced F-35s has proven trickier for Ankara, which has been barred from buying them since 2020 when Washington slapped it with CAATSA sanctions over its purchase of Russian S-400 air defences. 

    Erdogan failed to make headway on the issue at a White House meeting with President Donald Trump last month. But Turkey still aims to capitalise on the two leaders’ good personal ties, and Erdogan’s help convincing Palestinian militant group Hamas to sign Trump’s Gaza ceasefire agreement, to eventually reach a deal. 

    Separate sources have said that Ankara considered proposing a plan that could have included a U.S. presidential “waiver” to overcome the CAATSA sanctions and pave the way for an eventual resolution of the S-400 issue and F-35 purchase. 

    Turkey’s possession of the S-400s remains the main obstacle to purchasing F-35s, but Ankara and Washington have publicly stated a desire to overcome this, saying the allies have the political will to do so. 

    The potential temporary waiver, if given, could help Ankara increase defence cooperation with Washington and possibly build sympathy in a U.S. Congress that has been sceptical of Turkey in the past, the sources said.

    “Both sides know that resolving CAATSA needs to be done. Whether it is a presidential waiver or a congressional decision, that is up to the United States,” Harun Armagan, vice chair of foreign affairs for Erdogan’s ruling AK Party, told Reuters.

    “It looks awkward with all of the other diplomacy and cooperation happening at the same time.” 

    Turkey’s foreign ministry did not respond to questions about floating a waiver to U.S. counterparts or discussions on resolving the S-400 issue. The White House did not immediately comment on whether Ankara raised a waiver option.

    A State Department spokesperson said Trump recognizes Turkey’s strategic importance and that “his administration is seeking creative solutions to all of these pending issues,” but did not elaborate further.

    Asked about Turkey’s separate agreement to buy 40 F-16s, an earlier generation fighter jet, a U.S. source said that talks have been dogged by Turkish concerns about the price and desire to buy the more advanced F-35s instead. 

    TURKEY HAS DEVELOPED ITS OWN STEALTH FIGHTER

    Frustrated by past hot-cold ties with the West and some arms embargoes, Turkey has developed its own KAAN stealth fighter. Yet officials acknowledge it will take years before it replaces the F-16s that form the backbone of its air force.

    Jet upgrades are part of a broader effort to strengthen layered air defences that also includes Turkey’s domestic “Steel Dome” project and an expansion of long-range missile coverage. 

    Yanki Bagcioglu, an opposition CHP lawmaker and former Turkish Air Force brigadier general, said Turkey must accelerate plans for KAAN, Eurofighter and F-16 jets. 

    “At present, our air-defence system is not at the desired level,” he said, blaming “project-management failures.”

    (Reporting by Ece Toksabay in Ankara and Jonathan Spicer in Istanbul; Additional reporting by Humeyra Pamuk in Washington; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Mango clothing chain founder Isak Andic’s death in Spain unresolved, as police reportedly make son a suspect

    Police in Spain have said their investigation into the death last year of the Mango clothing chain’s founder Isak Andic remains open, amid multiple reports by Spanish media saying his son has become a suspect. Andic, 71, died in December after plunging more than 300 feet while hiking with his eldest son Jonathan in the Montserrat mountains near Barcelona.

    Police initially ruled the death accidental, but they are now investigating Jonathan for a possible homicide, Spain’s major daily newspaper El Pais reported on Thursday, citing “different sources with knowledge of the investigation.”

    The family rejected the suggestion of any responsibility by Andic’s son, saying in a statement cited by the Reuters news agency that it would “continue to cooperate, as it has done until now, with the competent authorities. Furthermore, it trusts that this process will be concluded as soon as possible and that it will prove Jonathan Andic’s innocence.”    

    The late president and founder of Mango, Isak Andic, is seen during the award ceremony for the 8th Kingdom of Spain Business Career Achievement Award, March 18, 2024. 

    Lorena Sopena/Europa Press/Getty


    Jonathan, who was the only person with his father at the time of the incident, has provided “inconsistent” testimony in two declarations, which has “fueled suspicion,” authorities said, according to El Pais and other outlets.

    Jonathan Andic is listed as the Vice-Chairman of the Mango Board on the company’s website. His duties have included “supervising the Communication and Image department and the head of the group’s Interior Design and Construction Management.”

    Catalan regional police sources confirmed an investigation was still ongoing, the French news agency AFP said, though the declined to provide any further details, citing judicial secrecy laws.

    The Barcelona-based daily newspaper La Vanguardia, also citing sources with knowledge of the investigation, said the investigating judge formally changed Jonathan’s status from witness to suspect in late September, and that police were poring over the contents of his cell phone.

    The newspapers said police cited the testimony of Isak Andic’s partner, professional golfer Estefania Knuth, who described strained relations between the father and son.

    The funeral of Isak Andic, founder of Mango

    Isak Andic’s eldest son Jonathan Andic arrives at the funeral chapel of the Mango founder at the Tanatori Les Corts, Dec. 16, 2024 in Barcelona, Spain. 

    Lorena Sopena/Anadolu via Getty


    The trail Isak Andic and his son were walking along links the Salnitre caves in Collbato with the Montserrat monastery and is a relatively easy route that’s popular with families during the weekends.

    Istanbul-born Isak Andic was one of Spain’s richest people, with Forbes estimating his and his family’s net worth at $4.5 billion. Mango reported revenues in 2024 alone of nearly $4 billion.

    Andic opened his first shop in Barcelona in 1984. His Mango brand quickly spread across Spain and became one of the world’s leading fashion groups.

    The company offers both professional and casual styles and boasts a presence in more than 120 markets, with more than 16,400 employees worldwide, according to its website. 

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  • Spain’s Grid Operator Denies Risk of Imminent Power Blackout After Sharp Voltage Swings

    Spain’s electricity-grid operator said there was no risk of an imminent second major blackout in the country after detecting two sharp voltage variations in recent weeks.

    Red Electrica which operates Spain’s grid, and in which the Spanish government owns a 20% stake, said the recent voltage swings didn’t pose a risk to the supply of electricity because they didn’t surpass the acceptable limits.

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    Cristina Gallardo

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  • Tourist hot spot shaken after human foot washes ashore; police launch investigation: reports

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    A beachgoer in Ibiza made a grisly discovery Friday morning when a human foot washed ashore on one of the island’s busiest beaches, Playa d’en Bossa.

    Local outlet Diario de Ibiza reported that the remains appeared among storm debris and were spotted by an unidentified man walking along the shore. The witness immediately alerted authorities, and by around 8 a.m. local time, several Spanish National Police patrol units had arrived at the scene.

    Images published by The Sun show police officers and investigators in high-visibility vests inspecting the area as onlookers gathered nearby. Authorities closed off part of the beach to collect evidence and prevent contamination of the site.

    The man who made the discovery reportedly secured the foot with a stick to keep it from being swept back into the water, according to Diario de Ibiza. 

    BURNING MAN HOMICIDE ROCKS FESTIVAL AS POLICE ASK FOR PUBLIC’S HELP AFTER MAN FOUND IN ‘POOL OF BLOOD’

    Tourists enjoy a sunny day at Cala Tarida beach near Sant Josep de Sa Talaia on the Balearic Islands of Ibiza on August 24, 2021. (Getty Images)

    Some witnesses were staying at the nearby Hotel Vibra Algarb, a beachfront four-star property, while others were passing by on their way to a local gym, outlets including Metro UK and The Sun reported.

    “The incident has caused great commotion among residents and tourists who were walking along the beach at the time,” one local source told Diario de Ibiza.

    75-FOOT BOAT SURFS WAVE, RUNS AGROUND IN HAWAII

    Beachside hotel in Ibiza, Spain

    Clients sunbathe in the pool of the Santos hotel on the Playa D´en Bossa beach on July 28, 2020 in Ibiza, Spain. (Andres Iglesias/Getty Images)

    Police have not yet determined where the limb came from. 

    Officials told Metro UK they are “not ruling out any hypotheses and are continuing to work to clarify the facts.” No additional details have been released.

    OVERDOSING TOURISTS IN VACATION HOTSPOT ARE STRAINING LOCAL HEALTH SYSTEM

    Boats near Ibiza

    Boats lay anchored at Cala d’Hort beach on the island of Ibiza on August 11, 2017 near Sant Josep, Spain. Ibiza is a popular tourist destination.  (Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

    The discovery came just three days after a separate incident in which a decomposed body was found floating roughly two miles off the coast near Talamanca Bay on Tuesday, Oct. 7, according to Periódico de Ibiza y Formentera. Maritime authorities recovered the remains and brought them to the port of Ibiza.

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    Investigators have not confirmed any connection between the two findings.

    Fox News Digital reached out to the Spanish National Police for comment. 

    Stepheny Price covers crime, including missing persons, homicides and migrant crime. Send story tips to stepheny.price@fox.com.

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  • Corpses of 250 animals found with surviving animals eating the dead in

    Spanish police on Saturday said they made an arrest after finding 250 dead animals, mostly dogs, in a filthy warehouse that local media dubbed “the breeding ground of horror.” 

    The Civil Guard said the illegal site in the northwestern village of Meson do Vento had “extremely poor” hygiene and animal welfare conditions, with cages “totally covered in excrement.”

    The dead animals, which included 28 chihuahuas and birds, were “in different stages of decomposition, some even mummified,” the force said in a statement.

    Spanish police said in Oct. 11, 2025 that they made an arrest after finding 250 dead animals in a filthy warehouse.

    Spanish Civil Guard


    The Civil Guard saved 171 other animals, including exotic and protected bird species such as macaws and cockatoos, which were found in a life-threatening condition.

    The survivors were feeding off the dead animals due to the lack of food and water, authorities said.

    Police released images of officers tending to the rescued animals. The surviving animals were “relocated to appropriate centers for their recovery and well-being,” police said.

    The site manager was arrested on charges of animal abuse, illegal possession of protected species and unqualified veterinary practice.

    bird-2025-10-11-maltrato-animal-coruna-2.jpg

    Police said they rescued 171 other animals, including exotic and protected bird species.

    Spanish Civil Guard


    The Civil Guard also said authorities found a large stockpile of professional veterinary medicines and supplies that were unprescribed and mostly expired.

    In recent months, Spanish authorities have uncovered illegal animal trafficking rings. In August, two men were found with more than 150 exotic animals at an illegal pet store in the town of Nules. In April, officers dismantled an online trafficking operation in big cats, including white tigers, lynx and pumas, in the Balearic Islands.

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  • French Chaos Delays Meeting on Future of European Fighter Jet

    BERLIN (Reuters) -A trilateral ministerial meeting on the future of France, Germany and Spain’s 100-billion-euro project to develop a European fighter jet has been postponed due to the political crisis in France, a German defence ministry spokesperson told Reuters.

    The defence ministers of the three countries had been scheduled to meet mid-October in a bid to resolve obstacles blocking the next phase in the development of the project, known as FCAS, the spokesperson said on Thursday evening.

    But France has been left with just a caretaker government after outgoing Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu tendered his and his government’s resignation on Monday, hours after announcing the cabinet line-up. French President Emmanuel Macron is now searching for his sixth prime minister in under two years.

    “I confirm that the meeting is not taking place mid-October any more,” the spokesperson said. “We would like to schedule it as quickly as possible when there is a new French defense minister.”

    Macron’s office had no immediate comment.

    France’s Dassault Aviation, Airbus and Indra are involved in the scheme to start replacing French Rafale and German and Spanish Eurofighters with a sixth-generation fighter jet from 2040.

    But the project has been plagued by delays and rifts between the companies and governments over workshare and intellectual property rights.

    (Reporting by Andreas Rinke and Sabine Siebold in Berlin; Additional Reporting by Michel Rose in Paris and Aislinn Laing in Madrid; Writing by Sarah Marsh; Editing by Chris Reese and Deepa Babington)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

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  • He Wrote a Book About Antifa. Death Threats Are Driving Him Out of the US

    “We, the students of Rutgers University, are deeply concerned to learn that an outspoken, well-known antifa member, Dr. Mark Bray, is employed by the university,” Doyle wrote in the petition. “Dr. Mark Bray, whom we call Dr. Antifa, wrote the antifa handbook, which is a guideline to what he refers to as “militant anti-fascism.”

    Doyle also suggested that Bray’s public comments were similar to “the kind of rhetoric that resulted in Charlie Kirk being assassinated last month.” In an update three days after she first posted the petition, Doyle said: “I do not endorse death threats, doxxing, or harassment and would not wish them on anyone, especially Mark Bray.”

    Two days after the petition launched, Fox News ran a story about it on their website and quoted Doyle. Bray says he refused to provide a comment to Fox News, claiming that at the time the petition had fewer than 100 signatures. At the time of publication the petition had amassed almost 1,000 signatures.

    “It seemed to me a bit odd to have a news story about a relatively small Change.org petition,” says Bray. “Fox News was trying to generate a story that would get clicks [and] when the Fox News story came out on Saturday, within a few hours I received another death threat and another threatening email that had my full address in it which very much disturbed me.”

    Doyle, TPUSA, and FOX News did not respond to a request for comment.

    At that point, Bray says, he and his family made the decision to leave the US and move to Spain. WIRED spoke to Bray on Monday as he was preparing to leave the US, and he said he had just received another death threat that morning, and his address was still getting posted online.

    Scores of Bray’s former students have jumped to his defense. One of them tells WIRED that his classmates were “disappointed” that he was leaving the US.

    David Gilbert

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  • Far right harvests votes as climate rules roil rural Spain

    Standing by a barn brimming with hundreds of bleating sheep, Jesus del Socorro Cuevas leads the far right’s charge against “dictatorial” EU environmental regulation in his corner of rural Spain.

    “The enlightened gentlemen of Europe are always coming up with new things,” thundered Socorro Cuevas, 63, a long-time farmer who is the far-right Vox party’s agriculture councillor in the central municipality of Socuellamos.

    “A farmer cannot dedicate himself to agriculture,” he told AFP as tractors rumbled past and dogs snoozed on the ground at a party supporter’s farm.

    “You have to tell them what you do every day, what you prune, if you collect the vine shoots, if you plough, if you fertilise… freedom no longer exists.”

    The third-largest party in Spain’s hung parliament, Vox has made the battle against “climate fanaticism” a rallying cry in a bid to harvest rural votes from mainstream parties.

    Its climate-sceptic campaigning mirrors that of like-minded formations across Europe as the issue of climate change splits along right-left lines.

    Spain sweltered through its hottest summer on record this year, an example of the extreme weather that scientists say human-driven climate change is exacerbating.

    The European Union’s Green Deal, a flagship law legally binding the bloc to becoming carbon neutral by 2050, is the main target of Vox’s scorn.

    “Globalist policies” such as the Green Deal and the 2015 Paris climate agreement “strangle our agricultural system”, said Ricardo Chamorro, a Vox MP who sits on the Spanish parliament’s agriculture committee.

    Rodrigo Alonso, Vox’s national spokesman for work and agriculture, said the strict requirements of the Green Deal were causing European-grown goods to be displaced by ones made outside the bloc using cheaper labour and laxer environmental standards.

    “Principles of EU preference are not respected, the single market is not respected,” he added, denouncing “unfair competition”.

    – ‘Sector will disappear’ –

    Mass protests by farmers shook Europe last year over environmental constraints and non-EU imports which producers say undercut them and flout the climate and animal welfare rules they must meet.

    Buoyed by the discontent, far-right parties like Vox made gains at subsequent European Parliament elections.

    Clad in blue overalls, farmer Julio Torremocha Marchante said he used to back Spain’s main conservative Popular Party (PP) but switched to Vox around 10 years ago.

    He recounted how, faced with extra bureaucratic and financial burdens, he gave up on organic agriculture, saying activity “was going elsewhere” amid competition from larger farms.

    “Family businesses in the livestock sector will disappear,” the 61-year-old told AFP on his modest holding of around 400 sheep and 16 hectares (39 acres) of vineyard.

    The central Castilla-La Mancha region to which it belongs is the land of literary lore — immortalised by Miguel de Cervantes’s 17th-century novel Don Quixote, about an idealistic knight roaming the area’s flat expanses.

    But a prosaic reality has replaced the poetic chivalry of yore for so-called “empty Spain” — places such as Socuellamos, where around 12,000 people live.

    These vast but sparsely populated regions suffer demographic decline and depend heavily on agriculture.

    – ‘Only party helping us’ –

    “Vox has always had a discourse that has tried to over-represent the needs of the rural world,” according to Javier Lorente Fontaneda, a politics expert and professor at Madrid’s King Juan Carlos University.

    Historically conservative rural areas have provided fertile terrain for its growth, while in the short term it has exploited a “protest vote” spurred by “discontent about depopulation, the lack of opportunities”, he explained.

    Even as the EU supports farmers through the Common Agricultural Policy, they “feel very overwhelmed and heavily scrutinised” by the bloc, he added.

    “And Vox is the only party in Spain that is truly critical of the European Union.”

    In a sign of Vox’s inroads, the left-leaning UPA farming union warned the Green Deal was being “targeted by major disinformation campaigns that have intoxicated the professionals of the primary sector”.

    Miguel Bravo Ruiz, another farmer in Castilla-La Mancha, does not vote for Vox but understands why some of his peers have.

    “Vox up to now is the only party helping us, at least in word,” the 60-year-old told AFP by telephone.

    Vox has wielded power at local and regional level, usually in coalition with the PP, as in Socuellamos town hall.

    Some polls have put it close to 20 percent of the vote, making it a potential kingmaker if the next election scheduled for 2027 yields another hung parliament.

    “There is scepticism and I think that is bringing us many votes,” MP Chamorro said. “The working classes and the people in the villages increasingly view Vox with sympathy.”

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  • Build Defences, but Avoid Putin’s ‘Escalation Trap’, Says German Defence Minister

    BERLIN (Reuters) -Germany must improve its anti-drone defences, its defence minister said, but warned against a hasty response to airspace incursions by Russia which would risk falling into “Putin’s escalation trap”.

    Boris Pistorius’ remarks in an interview with Handelsblatt newspaper followed drone sightings at Munich Airport that cancelled dozens of flights and stranded over 10,000 passengers this weekend.

    Authorities have yet to attribute blame, but officials have said Russia was responsible for dozens of recent aircraft incursions and sightings in the airspace of Ukraine’s European allies.

    “Putin knows Germany very, very well,” Pistorius said of the Russian President, who was a KGB agent in East Germany in the 1980s.

    “We mustn’t fall into Putin’s escalation trap,” he added. “If we shot an aeroplane down, he would claim the airspace violation was just pilot error and we had shot down an innocent young man,” he told Handelsblatt.

    STATE ROLE IN DEFENCE COMPANIES

    Germany needed to take an overview of all relevant threats, not just drone incursions, in order to draw links between seemingly unrelated events, he said.

    “Say there are lots of forest fires or power cuts in several regions at the same time,” he said. “All relevant data for assessing Germany’s security situation must flow to a single point.”

    Germany should follow France in taking active state stewardship of important defence companies.

    “Firms with key technologies need to be preserved,” he said. “We need the state shares, I’m convinced of it: also to ensure that know-how and jobs are kept in Germany.”

    DECISION ON FCAS NEEDS TO COME SOON

    Pistorius also warned that without a clear commitment by all three governments to the joint Franco-German-Spanish warplane project FCAS, Germany would withdraw.

    “I’ll talk with my counterparts as soon as there is a French government,” he said. “The Chancellor and I are in full agreement that there needs to be a decision by the end of the year… Otherwise we will pull the plug.”

    He issued a pointed warning to Washington with respect to rumours of a “kill switch” in its F-35 warplane that would control how customers used it.

    “If there were such limitations – of which there is no sign – U.S. industry would immediately look unreliable, and nobody would buy from them,” he said.

    (Reporting by Thomas EscrittEditing by Ros Russell)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Sept. 2025

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