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Latest news bulletin | April 10th – Midday

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00:00President Donald Trump has announced a 90-day pause on tariffs for most nations, except
00:06China, on whose imports he has raised the tax rate to 125%.
00:11Asked by a reporter why he'd made the decision, Trump said he'd been watching the bond market
00:17and people were getting a little queasy.
00:20Well, I thought that people were jumping a little bit out of line, they were getting
00:25yippy, you know, they were getting a little bit yippy, a little bit afraid, unlike these
00:30champions, because we have a big job to do.
00:34Trump added, however, that he was still honoured to have initially imposed the tariffs because
00:39he said somebody had to do it.
00:42Global markets soared after the announcement, with the Dow Jones index surging by 2,000 points
00:49just minutes later.
00:50The White House has made it clear, however, that a universal 10% tariff would still apply
00:56in the meantime while trade negotiations take place.
01:03Iceland is warming to the idea of EU membership amidst the geopolitical tensions of late.
01:09A recent poll showing 45% support membership, as Iceland's Prime Minister Fróste de Tir discusses
01:17the issue of an EU referendum slated for 2027 in an interview with Euronews.
01:24Her biggest concern is that the debate remains polarized as she seeks to have a balanced discussion
01:29about EU membership.
01:33The EU isn't a defense alliance in and of itself, even though it's building itself up.
01:38We should join the EU as part of a broader picture.
01:42I don't want to drive our EU accession talks based on fear.
01:46I don't want it based on, this is the only possibility we have.
01:49This is the only way forward for Iceland.
01:52This is the only way to progress.
01:54I think that's going to lead to a polarizing debate.
01:57Iceland has important bilateral relations with the United States, but the Prime Minister
02:02remains firmly behind Europe, believing a stronger Europe means a stronger ally for the
02:07US.
02:07It's very important for us that any security engagement, any sort of change in that relationship
02:16doesn't mean that it's excluding the US, but that it's maybe changing the relationship
02:21between the two, because Iceland really thrives on that transatlantic unity being in place.
02:27In light of the 10% tariffs announced by Trump last week, Iceland has decided not to impose
02:34counter-tariffs on the US, choosing to negotiate rather than escalate.
02:39We are not going to respond with our own tariffs.
02:45I mean, we believe in free trade.
02:47We're a small economy.
02:48Our strength in that sense is more how we negotiate our ways through those tariffs, but also how
02:56we engage with other countries.
02:58So we won't be engaging in counter-tariffs.
03:01A significant majority of Hungarians support the tightening of drug laws, according to a
03:16recent survey.
03:19Only 12% disagree with the policy, while two-thirds clearly support the government's new package
03:25of measures, which increases penalties and restricts access to diversion programs.
03:31Police have carried out a number of raids in recent weeks as part of the war on drugs.
03:39However, one expert argues that the government's push to further tighten what are already some
03:44of the EU's strictest drug laws is more of a vote-winning strategy than a viable solution
03:50to the problem.
03:50Drugs are most visible in the poorest rural areas, where many people use cheap, synthetic and extremely harmful drugs
04:20to escape reality.
04:22Last week, Viktor Orbán visited one of the affected areas.
04:26You know that there is a problem, because these barriers, which increase our children, and
04:32even the newborns, have been affected in this area in particular.
04:36And I am sure that we can break it.
04:38That's why I came here, that we can take a break.
04:40Euronews also visited Tana Zsadani, where several residents told us the recent raids have driven
04:48drug dealers out of the area.
04:49Others admitted that there are still dealers in the village, but they were afraid to talk about them in public.
05:17The situation is similar in many villages in the area.
05:22One addict in Tana Zsadani, who asked to remain anonymous, told us that one dose of her drug costs around 2,50 euros.
05:30Tana Zsadani is a 1,800 fős település.
05:33The one in the city is now 11 people have been raised in the city of Kábítószert.
05:37The dídereket is the police, but if they are in prison, they are in the city of Kábítószert.
05:42We have contacted the government's drug commissioner several times to ask if the government plans
05:49to tackle the social situation that leads to drug use in addition to raids.
05:54But the politician refused to be interviewed, as did the police.
05:57A recent rape case in Lisbon has shocked the country.
06:05Three young influencers allegedly filmed themselves raping a 16-year-old girl and posted the video on social media.
06:13The images were viewed by 32,000 people and no one reported it.
06:17The three suspects, aged between 17 and 19, were arrested, but later released by the court.
06:24Hundreds took to the streets, demanding tougher cautionary measures.
06:29They are very harsh cases, and in this specific case, they are influencers.
06:35They have their platforms with many followers.
06:37I think it would have been, at least, just to be suspended the accounts, while there is a investigation.
06:43Political leaders who were at the rally argued that rape should be a public crime,
07:03and that social media platforms should be held responsible for sharing this content.
07:07Ines Mourinho saw an intimate video of her widely released on Telegram,
07:14and decided to create the movement Don't Share,
07:17which in 2021 became an association to support victims of image-based violence.
07:22Young people's early exposure to the internet has increased access to pornographic and violent content.
07:46According to the latest annual report on internal security,
08:13in the analysis of juvenile crime, crimes of a sexual nature predominate,
08:18namely the sexual abuse of children committed by minor offenders.
08:22The Portuguese internal security system also highlighted the crime of child pornography
08:27on apps such as Discord or WhatsApp.
08:29Segundo o Centro para Crianças Desaparecidas e Exploradas,
08:35estima-se que, globalmente, uma em cada oito crianças seja vítima de alguma forma de violência sexual,
08:42online ou na vida real, em comparação com uma em cada cinco crianças na Europa.
08:47Estimativas mais conservadoras também dizem que quase 200 milhões de conteúdos,
08:53imagens ou vídeos exibindo uma criança a ser abusada sexualmente,
08:57circulavam amplamente na internet entre 2021 e 2023.
09:03São cerca de três conteúdos compartilhados online, a cada segundo, no espaço de dois anos.
09:09Joana Morão Carvalho, para a Euronews, em Lisboa.
09:12Euronews, em Lisboa.
09:15Euronews, em Lisboa.
09:16Sem eles, não iria funcionar.
09:19E ainda, eles ainda não têm acesso ou acesso à nenhuma posição de liderança.
09:24Agora, por primeira vez, as mulheres católicas estão indo à ataque.
09:29É o caso de Mathilde, uma advogada em Paris.
09:33L'idea, é realmente de manifestar, em fato, no tempo do Carême,
09:37durante esses 40 dias do Carême,
09:40de manifestar uma incompreensão reale quanto à a place das mulheres,
09:45hoje em igreja.
09:47Eu, no início, eu não tinha decidido, principalmente, de não ir à igreja.
09:50E aí, eu fui um pouco mudando de opinião.
09:55Eu prefiro ir para a igreja e ir para a igreja em portar meu badge
09:59para tentar fazer uma discussão,
10:02para fazer a sorte que a gente possa falar com as pessoas que isso interroge.
10:09Até 17 de abril, as mulheres católicas de França e além
10:13estão protestando para demandar igualdade e maior influência dentro da Igreja.
10:19O movimento é conduzido na França pelo Comitê de la Jupe,
10:22o Comitê de Skirt, que dizem que as mulheres fazem 80% do trabalho essencial em parixas.
10:29À côté de essa governança strictamente masculina,
10:33você tem uma realidade de terra onde as mulheres estão em porto.
10:36As igrejas são remplas de mulheres, que seja as paroissias, as bens,
10:39as as paroissias, as as as associadas, no social, no CAIR.
10:45Elas estão em porto, mas elas têm esse plafond de verro
10:47que fazem que elas não podem acceder a certas responsabilidades.
10:50O ataque é também para forcer os bishops de ouvir.
10:55Até agora, há pouco ou menos diálogo oficial.
10:59Mas alguns dentro da Igreja começam a falar.
11:02Souvent, quando eu falo sobre essas coisas, é complicado.
11:06É complicado porque não há habitação, e há medo de perder o poder.
11:10E é complicado porque os avis são muito compartilhados.
11:13Como na sociedade, os bens são, geralmente, desejados para que as mulheres possam trabalhar juntos.
11:20Depois, há algumas vezes a medo do que o poder parece.
11:24O movimento está ganhando tráquio mundialmente,
11:27com as brigas reportadas nos EUA, INDIA, Polônia e Espanha.
11:32Na França alone, a Comitê de Skirte diz que a sua memória tem mais de mais de mais de 300 membros.
11:38As mulheres católicas estão levantando suas vozes,
11:41essa vez, eles não estão apenas pedindo ser ouvido,
11:44eles estão pedindo um verdadeiro mudança.
11:46A França, a Comitê de Skirte diz que o poder parece ser ouvido,

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