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‘You’re Crooked & ‘Meet the Press’ Is Crooked & so Is ABC & CBS & CNN’ – EP
U.S. Treasury Sanctions Iran’s Nobitex Crypto Exchange Amid Regional Conflict
Questions Are Piling up Fast as Pratt Suddenly Loses Second Place in LA Mayoral Vote
Depois de conquistar Portimão, a revista do Boa Esperança chega a Lagoa para três noites de gargalhadas
Depois de mais de um mês de gargalhadas na sua sede, a Revista do Boa Esperança Atlético Clube Portimonense prepara-se para pisar outros palcos.
O conteúdo Depois de conquistar Portimão, a revista do Boa Esperança chega a Lagoa para três noites de gargalhadas aparece primeiro em Algarve Marafado.
São Brás de Alportel | Município celebra Dia de Portugal com a comunidade são-brasense na Argentina

Décadas depois da grande vaga de emigração são-brasense para a Argentina, o Município de São Brás de Alportel realiza uma missão institucional a Comodoro Rivadavia e Buenos Aires, entre 10 e 18 de junho, para reforçar os laços com a comunidade emigrante e aprofundar relações de cooperação entre os dois territórios. A deslocação, que terá […]
Caminha levou tapetes floridos até aos vizinhos da Galiza
Caminha voltou a marcar presença no Corpus Christi de Ponteareas, na Galiza, levando consigo os tapetes floridos que são típicos da vila do Alto Minho.
A autarquia refere que, num verdadeiro espírito de “partilha e união”, a comitiva caminhense juntou-se à população local, colaborando na confeção dos tapetes que transformaram as ruas de Ponteareas em “autênticas obras de arte”.
Caminha deixou também a sua marca, criando um tapete que “espelhou o talento e o orgulho das suas gentes”.






“Mais do que uma participação, este momento representou a valorização de uma tradição secular que une comunidades e atravessa fronteiras”, frisa a Câmara.
Caminha mostrou que a “cultura e o património imaterial são pontes que aproximam territórios , reforçando laços com outras regiões onde a tradição dos tapetes floridos é vivida com igual paixão”.
O conteúdo Caminha levou tapetes floridos até aos vizinhos da Galiza aparece primeiro em O MINHO.
Affaire Lyhanna: sous pression, le ministre de la Justice Gerald Darmanin exclut toute démission
Tavira | Delfins nas festividades do Dia da Cidade

No dia 24 de junho, o Município de Tavira assinala mais um Dia da Cidade, o qual inclui a atribuição de medalhas de bons serviços e dedicação aos funcionários com 20 e 30 anos de serviço e de mérito municipal, assim como o concerto da banda de pop rock portuguesa: Delfins. As comemorações integram, pelas […]
Goldenergy e Panike firmam parceria para fornecimento de biometano
VTM
A Goldenergy, comercializadora de eletricidade e gás natural, e a Panike, líder no setor da panificação e pastelaria ultracongelada, formalizaram uma parceria estratégica. O objetivo é reforçar a transição energética da indústria de panificação em Portugal através do fornecimento de biometano com garantias de origem certificadas.
Este acordo marca a expansão da Goldenergy na introdução de gases renováveis no tecido industrial português, uma vez que a empresa já fornece biometano a setores como a cerâmica e o têxtil, além do turismo. O fornecimento à Panike foi reforçado em junho de 2026, com um aumento dos volumes adquiridos, representando atualmente cerca de 2% do consumo total de gás da empresa.
Henrique Soares, CEO e fundador da Panike, afirmou que “esta incorporação ecológica será implementada nas três unidades industriais da PANIKE – Maia, Santo Tirso e Tondela – e constitui mais um passo na estratégia de sustentabilidade da empresa.” Ele acrescentou que a utilização de biometano complementa os investimentos em eficiência energética e eletrificação, permitindo a descarbonização de processos produtivos que ainda dependem de energia térmica.
Miguel Checa, General Manager da Goldenergy, expressou o seu orgulho em apoiar a Panike na sua jornada rumo à neutralidade carbónica, destacando que a empresa já descarbonizou 15 empresas em Portugal através do biometano. Esta parceria representa a estreia da Goldenergy no abastecimento de biometano ao setor alimentar, alargando a sua quota de descarbonização industrial.
O biometano utilizado garante compatibilidade com as redes de transporte existentes, permitindo à Panike complementar a descarbonização do seu processo de fabrico sem a necessidade de investimentos adicionais em novos equipamentos ou alterações estruturais nas suas linhas de produção atuais.
The post Goldenergy e Panike firmam parceria para fornecimento de biometano appeared first on A Voz de Trás-os-Montes.
Campanha de prevenção de incêndios em Vila do Bispo
A Câmara Municipal de Vila do Bispo lança a campanha “A melhor chama é a da consciência - Pensa | Age | Protege”, dirigida à população residente e aos visitantes do concelho.
O conteúdo Campanha de prevenção de incêndios em Vila do Bispo aparece primeiro em Algarve Marafado.
Lagoa | Carvoeiro Noite Black & White 2026 – 12ª edição

O evento Carvoeiro Noite Black & White 2026 regressa no dia 20 de junho para a sua 12.ª edição, transformando a Praia do Carvoeiro e as ruas do centro numa gigantesca celebração ao ar livre, onde a música, a arte e a animação se unem numa atmosfera única de verão. 20 de junho | 20h30 […]
France, Germany end joint fighter jet development project amid reported industry dispute

Finais de campeonatos nacionais de basquetebol em Albufeira
O Pavilhão Desportivo de Albufeira recebeu, este fim de semana, as Fases Finais dos Campeonatos Nacionais de Basquetebol Sub-14 Masculinos e Sub-16 Femininos.
O conteúdo Finais de campeonatos nacionais de basquetebol em Albufeira aparece primeiro em Algarve Marafado.
Russo-Ukrainian war, day 1566: NATO jets shoot down Russian-spoofed drone over Latvia

Military
NATO shot down drone over Latvia. Russia's electronic warfare sent it there. NATO fighters from the Baltic Air Policing mission shot down a foreign unmanned aerial vehicle over Latvia's eastern Latgale region this morning.
French NATO jets shoot down drone over Latvia in country's first intercept. Second Baltic intercept in three weeks as spillover from Russia's war on Ukraine accelerates.
Ukraine recaptured 100 square kilometers in May. Its deep strikes cost Russia $1 billion. Ukraine hit 111 Russian sites, said Commander Syrskyi.
Russian crude reaches the sea through tunnels under a mountain ridge—and Ukraine hit the storage end near Novorossiysk. Pipelines link the Grushovaya depot to Novorossiysk's loading berths about 12 km away. Locals counted about 50 blasts before a huge fire lit the mountains above Russia's main Black Sea oil port.
ISW: The strikes will likely cascade into deeper disruption across Russia's rear supply network. Russia leans on two key highways to feed its war. Cut them, and fuel, shells, and troops stop reaching occupied Crimea, Luhansk, and Donetsk—and Ukraine's drones are working on cutting it.
Intelligence and technology
Russia's closest ally says its new AI military system can detect drones, jam signals, and adapt in real time. Belarus claims AI-driven 'Ross' counter-drone EW system nearing completion.
Ukraine codifies armored vehicle with dome of 10 electronic-warfare modules designed to kill FPV drones before they hit. Ukraine develops armored vehicle to protect against two major Russian battlefield threats.
Ukraine approves 80 km/h electric motorcycle that defeats thermal imaging and acoustic detection. It carries two soldiers in full gear. The 105-kg, 8 kW vehicle reaches 80 km/h and operates with near-silent movement.
One click from operator: Ukraine just shot down Russian Shahed with AI drone that automated 95% of kill. The Brave1 cluster participant manufacturer went from prototype to successful combat use in less than a year.
International
"The enemy counts on our disunity"—Ukrainian diaspora answers with Bern Declaration. More than 350 leaders from 50 countries adopted a seven-point wartime action plan at the first Global Ukrainian Summit held in Switzerland.
61% of Ukrainians reject ceasefire without security guarantees. Same 61% would accept one with European troops on frontline. The real question isn't whether Ukraine wants a ceasefire, but what guarantees would come with it.
Freezing the war along today's lines is "the quickest way" to peace, Ukraine's leader told Sky News. Zelenskyy insisted it is no concession, but a way to save children and bring soldiers home, paired with monitoring missions and allied guarantees.
Britain, France, and Germany back Ukraine's peace terms and press Putin for a ceasefire. After meeting Ukraine's president in London, the three leaders set out five conditions for a just and lasting peace and welcomed Kyiv's push for direct talks.
Humanitarian and social impact
Premature births are climbing in Ukraine's front-line regions, and doctors blame the ongoing war. Doctors in Zaporizhzhia now deliver babies and treat miscarriages on the same afternoons that glide bombs hit the city, AP reports.
Food shortage in occupied Rubizhne: Russia blocks civilian deliveries, blames drones. Officials say Moscow engineered the shortage to film propaganda—the same tactic that left 2,000 starving in Oleshky.
Political and legal developments
Russians pulled 30-year record of cash from banks in May. Central Bank now tracks monthly cash limits, can freeze "suspicious" withdrawals. Analyst cites geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainty, internet outages disrupting online banking, and central bank rate cuts as driving the cash flight.
Ukrainian defense official sent 300,000 pairs of useless gloves to front line. He's now going to trial. The manufacturer used ordinary rubber instead of the thermoplastic rubber required by technical specs.
Medic stole 16 FPV from firm that entered $1.1 billion Pentagon competition and hid them for four months. Ukraine arrested him when he tried to sell them for 19% of their value. Ukrainian sergeant arrested for selling 16 General Cherry FPV drones worth $12,600 for $2,370.
Hungary's anti-corruption watchdog says Orbán's former inner circle should be prosecuted over billions in missing EU funds. Péter Magyar is trying to convince Brussels that Hungary can be trusted with more than €10 billion in cash frozen over rule-of-law concerns.
WSJ: Putin's sanctioned inner circle keeps buying Western business jets through a web of middlemen. A WSJ investigation traces Bombardier and Gulfstream business jets from European dealers through Dubai and Bermuda into Kremlin hands.
Ukraine foils Russian plot to assassinate intelligence official with FPV drone. Russian spy recruited to kill GUR spokesman Andrii Yusov with FPV drone for $100,000 bounty.
Read our earlier daily review here.
Ben-Gvir indagato, la replica del ministro israeliano: “Non mi faccio intimorire. Il Paese dello Stivale è diventato il Paese delle ciabatte”
Risponde dicendosi tranquillo e offendendo l’Italia, definita “non più il Paese dello stivale ma delle ciabatte”. Il ministro israeliano per la Sicurezza Nazionale, Itamar Ben-Gvir, risponde dopo la pubblicazione dell’indagine a suo carico condotta dalla Procura di Roma dopo la diffusione dei video che lo vedono umiliare i membri della Flotilla fermati in acque internazionali nel tentativo di raggiungere Gaza. “Israele non è un sacco da boxe per una banda di sostenitori del terrorismo che inventano calunnie e menzogne contro i nostri combattenti”, ha affermato il ministro estremista in una nota.
Ben-Gvir ha dichiarato di non essere “intimorito da questo tipo di indagini” e ha assicurato che continuerà a sostenere pubblicamente le forze di sicurezza israeliane: “Continuerò a stare con orgoglio al fianco dei nostri combattenti”, ha precisato. E ha poi rilanciato passando all’attacco dell’Italia sul suo profilo X: “Il Paese dello Stivale è diventato il Paese delle ciabatte“, ha scritto.
L'articolo Ben-Gvir indagato, la replica del ministro israeliano: “Non mi faccio intimorire. Il Paese dello Stivale è diventato il Paese delle ciabatte” proviene da Il Fatto Quotidiano.
Capital paulista amplia locais de vacinação nesta semana; veja lista

As doses estarão disponíveis em locais de grande circulação de pessoas:
- no Mercado Municipal (dias 08, 09 e 10, das 9h às 16h);
- no Museu do Ipiranga (dia 9, das 10h às 16h);
- no Museu Catavento (dias 12 e 13/06, das 10h às 16h),
- no Centro Olímpico Thomaz Mazzoni (dia 8 a 12, das 10h às 17h);
- no CEAGESP (dia 10, das 10h às 15h);
- no Parque da Mooca (de 8 a 12, das 10h às 16h);
- no Centro Olímpico Thomaz Mazzoni, Vila Maria (8 a 12, das 10h às 17h);
- na Subprefeitura de Guaianases (dia 11 das 9h às 16h).
Notícias relacionadas:
- Ministério da Saúde suspende vacina contra a dengue do Butantan.
- Vacinação com a Pneumo 20 pelo SUS começa em duas semanas, diz Padilha.
- Acre luta para reverter desinformação e ampliar vacinação contra o HPV.
>> Saiba os endereços e horários para as ações de vacinação extra-muros
“Além das Unidades Básicas de Saúde (UBSs), a estratégia de levar as vacinas para locais de grande circulação de pessoas tem o objetivo de facilitar o acesso aos imunizantes. A mobilização busca ampliar a cobertura vacinal e reforçar a proteção da população contra doenças preveníveis por vacinação”, explica a SMS.
A vacina contra a gripe está disponível para todas as pessoas a partir dos seis meses de idade.
“É importante manter a caderneta de vacinação atualizada, especialmente diante da circulação de vírus respiratórios neste período do ano e da necessidade de prevenção contra doenças como sarampo e febre amarela”, reforça a secretaria.
Finland’s foreign minister says Ukraine ‘is now holding the cards’ as Russia signals talks
EXCLUSIVE: Finnish Foreign Minister Elina Valtonen said Ukraine has gained new leverage against Russia, arguing that Moscow’s renewed talk of negotiations comes as Kyiv has strengthened itself militarily, politically and diplomatically.
Valtonen’s comments carry particular weight because Finland is one of NATO’s newest members and now sits on the alliance’s longest border with Russia. Finland joined NATO in April 2023 after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, ending decades of military nonalignment and transforming the country into a frontline state in Europe’s security posture.
"Ukraine certainly is now holding the cards," Valtonen told Fox News Digital Monday in an interview at the United Nations headquarters in New York. "They have strengthened themselves immensely over the course of the past three, four months, both militarily and politically, diplomatically. And I think this opens a great window of opportunity for actually advancing the peace talks."
UKRAINE MAKES FASTEST GAINS IN YEARS AS RUSSIA TALKS STALL, EXPLOITING CRACKS IN KREMLIN COMMAND
Her assessment comes as Reuters reported that Ukraine’s top military commander said Ukrainian forces had recaptured more than 600 square kilometers, or roughly 230 square miles, of territory so far in 2026, a shift after years of slow Russian gains. It also follows renewed diplomatic activity, including Zelenskyy’s stated willingness to halt fighting along current lines as a path to talks and Putin’s public rejection of a direct meeting for now.
Finland shares a roughly 820-mile border with Russia, making it one of the alliance’s most strategically exposed members.
Valtonen said Moscow has shown little willingness to make concessions and argued that the responsibility for ending the war remains with the Kremlin.
"So far, Russia hasn’t been willing to make any concessions, and essentially Russia could end the war today if they wanted to, because it was their war in the first place," she said. "So I’m hopeful that this could be the right time to relaunch those talks."
Peace efforts remain stalled over the same core divide that has shaped the war for years: Ukraine has called for a ceasefire and negotiations without surrendering territory, while Russia has continued to demand control over occupied Ukrainian regions. Putin said in early June there was "no point" in meeting Zelenskyy for now and repeated Moscow’s broader war aims.
Asked about U.S.-led efforts to negotiate an end to the war, Valtonen praised Washington’s role but stressed that Ukraine alone must decide whether to accept any concessions, including on territory.
"I think the U.S. involvement in this entire process has been a very good one, and it’s important that the U.S. stays engaged, because at the end of the day, it’s about freedom, it’s the future of not only Europe, but also of global peace," she said.
ZELENSKYY SAYS US WILL ONLY GUARANTEE UKRAINE'S SECURITY IF KYIV AGREES TO GIVE UP DONBAS
Valtonen said Europe also needs to be part of the process because Russia’s war directly affects the continent’s security architecture.
She said any serious negotiations would require Russia to accept a full ceasefire.
"First and foremost, we would need Russia at the table willing to end the war," Valtonen said. "And that would need to happen through a full ceasefire, because only that would open the possibility for true negotiations."
Valtonen also credited President Donald Trump with pushing European allies to increase defense spending, saying the pressure had moved the continent in the right direction after years of imbalance inside NATO.
Finland has moved aggressively to increase defense spending. Helsinki plans to raise defense spending to 3.2% of GDP by 2030, up from 2.5% in 2025, Reuters reported in April.
WHY NATO’S DEFENSE SPENDING IMBALANCE LASTED FOR DECADES
Secretary of State Marco Rubio also praised Finland and Sweden Tuesday during a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing, saying the two newest NATO members had strengthened the alliance by bringing "their own defense industry" and "advanced technologies."
He called them "a great partner" and "an extraordinary partner."
Valtonen said Finland’s approach is shaped by its own history with Moscow.
"Finland obviously has taken the Russian threat extremely seriously because we have the longest border with them," she said. "We certainly worship our status as the happiest country in the world, i.e. democracy, the rule of law and human rights, which we hold dear as values over anything that Russia could offer."
She also pointed to Finland’s experience in World War II, when the Soviet Union invaded Finland, as a reminder of why deterrence matters.
"The last time the Soviet Union, i.e. Russia, tried to invade us was during the Second World War," Valtonen said. "Happily, we were able to fend them off, but of course at the massive cost to the society."
"For us, it has been clear that if we invest in our deterrence, then that’s a signal to Russia — do not come here," she added.
On Iran, Valtonen said Finnish President Alexander Stubb’s March comments, reported by The Guardian, that the conflict was not a NATO matter should not be understood as Europe washing its hands of the crisis.
"I don’t think our president meant that this has nothing to do with European countries or NATO allies," Valtonen said. "I think what he probably meant more is that NATO obviously is not directly involved as an organization, which is true."
EX-NATO AMBASSADOR WARNS US AND ALLIES MUST 'STOP THE SNIPING' AND UNITE TO END IRAN CONFLICT
Her comments came after another weekend escalation in the Iran war, with Tehran launching missiles at Israel and Israel striking military targets in western and central Iran overnight. The flare-up unfolded as the U.S. and its allies continue efforts to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear state and keep pressure on Tehran over threats to Israel and regional shipping.
The Strait of Hormuz, a critical global energy choke point, has become a central focus for Western governments after Iranian threats and restrictions on maritime traffic. Reuters reported Monday that the European Union sanctioned Iranian-linked individuals and an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps navy unit over threats to shipping in the strait.
"We as individual member states in Europe have definitely been helping the U.S. effort," Valtonen said. "We don’t want to see Iran as a nuclear state. We know what kind of a threat Iran has projected towards the region, especially toward Israel."
Valtonen added Finland has also joined efforts led by France and the United Kingdom to keep the Strait of Hormuz open once conditions allow for safe operations in the area.
"It’s so important that such straits are not weaponized by any country around the world," Valtonen said.
Asked whether European countries had refused U.S. requests to use bases during the Iran crisis, Valtonen said Finland has no U.S. bases to shut down but argued that most European allies have supported Washington’s requests.
"Finland has been helping the U.S. through so many ways," she said. "We don’t have any U.S. bases in Finland, so there’s nothing we can shut down."
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"But having said this, the vast majority of European countries have said yes to everything that the U.S. has asked during the past couple of months when this war effort has been ongoing, independent of the fact that, of course, we are not directly involved as countries in the war," she added.
Valtonen said that support demonstrated NATO allies’ willingness to help Washington even when the alliance itself is not formally involved.
"I think that really shows the engagement by NATO allies in this and our willingness to help when the U.S. really needs some assistance," she said.

J'ai découvert le site Alim' Confiance du gouvernement. Sur une carte on y trouve les résultats des contrôles sanitaires pour les restaurants, etc... Ça se présente sous forme de carte, faut zoomer pour trouver le resto. Attention seulement les établissement visités depuis -de 1 an y figurent.
| submitted by /u/Calahan44 [link] [comments] |
Trump storms out of NBC interview after denying his own 'No War' promises