Libre News of The World

Libre News of the World is your trusted source for global news, delivering the most important stories with integrity and fairness. In a world where media can often be clouded by bias, we are committed to presenting the truth—unfiltered and agenda-free. Each episode, we delve into the events shaping our world, offering clear, balanced, and well-researched coverage.

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Episodes

Monday Sep 22, 2025

Subscribe today so you never miss an episode! Today on Libre News of The World Express Edition: Trump Hails Charlie Kirk as “Martyr for American Freedom” in Impassioned Memorial Speech (Reuters), Canada Bars Irish Rap Group Kneecap Over Alleged Terror Ties (CBC News), Panama Sounds Alarm Over Rising Cocaine Flows Through Caribbean Ports (Tico Times), Dominican Republic Seizes Cocaine After U.S. Navy Destroys Speedboat (Diario Libre), Mass Protests Sweep Brazil Against Laws Shielding Bolsonaro and Allies (Folha de S.Paulo), Colombia Urges UN Aviation Body to Establish Pet Flight Safety Standards (El Tiempo), “Sacrifice Zones” in Chile: Communities Blame Mines for Pollution and Water Crisis (La Tercera), Milei Government Burns Reserves to Defend Peso as Political Pressure Mounts (Clarín), China Keeps Lending Rates Unchanged as Economy Balances External Relief and Internal Strain (South China Morning Post), Australia Formally Recognises Palestinian State in Major Foreign Policy Shift (Sydney Morning Herald), Winston Peters Draws Comparisons to Nigel Farage as NZ First Gains Ground (The Australian), Japan’s Ruling LDP Launches Leadership Race to Replace Prime Minister Ishiba (AP News), Unification Church Leader Faces Possible Arrest in Bribery Probe Linked to Ex-First Lady (The Korea Herald), Vietnam Airlines to Expand Fleet with 30 Wide-Body Jets by 2030 (VNExpress), Guinea Holds Referendum That Could Pave Way for Coup Leader’s Presidential Run (Jeune Afrique), Turkey Lifts Some Tariffs on U.S. Goods Ahead of Erdoğan Visit (Hürriyet Daily News), Saudi Arabia Arrests Over 21,000 in Nationwide Crackdown on Residency and Labour Violations (Arab News), Iran’s Nuclear Chief in Moscow as Europe Moves Toward UN Sanctions “Snapback” (Tehran Times), Israeli Ministers Renew Calls for West Bank Annexation After Palestine Recognitions (Haaretz), Monaco Strengthens Global Ties with Arrival of Four New Ambassadors (Monaco Tribune), Rome Film Festival Unveils Dates and Leadership for 20th Edition (ANSA), Ayuso Accuses Sánchez Government of “Revolutionary Boycott” Over Israel Protests (El Mundo), Portugal Formally Recognises State of Palestine in Landmark Policy Move (Público), Malta Launches Rehabilitation Project for Iconic Blue Lagoon (Times of Malta), UK Plans Devolution Shake-Up Giving Mayors Power Over Schools, Hospitals, and Justice (The Guardian), Trump’s Aberdeenshire Golf Resort Accused of Repeated Sewage Pollution Breaches (The Guardian), Ireland and UK Announce New Framework to Address Legacy of the Troubles (The Irish Times), Germany Opens Debate on Using Frozen Russian Assets to Fund Ukraine (Deutsche Welle), Swedish and German Jets Intercept Russian Reconnaissance Plane Over Baltic Sea (Svenska Dagbladet), Iceland Faces Mounting Welfare Strains Amid University Fee Debate (Iceland Review), Uzbekistan Reports Major Drug Seizures in Fergana and Karakalpakstan (The Tashkent Times), Kremlin Admits to Slowing Growth in Bid to Curb Inflation (The Moscow Times), Ukraine Turns to Remote-Controlled Vehicles to Shield Soldiers on Front Lines (AP News), and India’s Navy Chief Visits Sri Lanka to Bolster Maritime Cooperation (India TV News). These news summaries were written using AI technology. While every effort has been made to ensure factual accuracy, occasional mistakes or omissions may occur. Your understanding is appreciated, and we warmly welcome any feedback to help us continue improving the quality of our reporting. Thank you for being part of our journey!

Monday Sep 22, 2025

¡Suscríbete hoy para no perderte ningún episodio! Hoy en Libre News of The World: Trump ensalza a Charlie Kirk como “mártir de la libertad estadounidense” en un emotivo discurso conmemorativo (Reuters), Canadá prohíbe la entrada al grupo de rap irlandés Kneecap por supuestos vínculos con el terrorismo (CBC News), Panamá lanza una alerta por el aumento del flujo de cocaína en puertos del Caribe (Tico Times), República Dominicana incauta cocaína tras destrucción de lancha rápida por la Marina de EE.UU. (Diario Libre), Masivas protestas en Brasil contra leyes que blindarían a Bolsonaro y sus aliados (Folha de S.Paulo), Colombia insta al organismo de aviación de la ONU a establecer normas de seguridad para mascotas en vuelos (El Tiempo), “Zonas de sacrificio” en Chile: comunidades culpan a la minería por contaminación y crisis hídrica (La Tercera), El gobierno de Milei quema reservas para defender el peso en medio de presión política (Clarín), China mantiene sin cambios las tasas de interés de referencia mientras equilibra tensiones externas e internas (South China Morning Post), Australia reconoce oficialmente al Estado palestino en un histórico giro de política exterior (Sydney Morning Herald), Winston Peters comparado con Nigel Farage mientras NZ First gana apoyo (The Australian), El Partido Liberal Democrático de Japón abre carrera de liderazgo para reemplazar al primer ministro Ishiba (AP News), Líder de la Iglesia de la Unificación enfrenta posible arresto en caso de soborno ligado a ex primera dama (The Korea Herald), Vietnam Airlines ampliará su flota con 30 aviones de fuselaje ancho para 2030 (VNExpress), Guinea celebra referéndum que podría allanar el camino presidencial al líder golpista (Jeune Afrique), Turquía elimina algunos aranceles a bienes de EE.UU. antes de la visita de Erdoğan (Hürriyet Daily News), Arabia Saudita arresta a más de 21.000 personas en una semana por violaciones de residencia y trabajo (Arab News), El jefe nuclear iraní visita Moscú mientras Europa impulsa el restablecimiento de sanciones de la ONU (Tehran Times), Ministros israelíes reavivan llamado a anexión de Cisjordania tras reconocimientos de Palestina (Haaretz), Mónaco refuerza lazos globales con llegada de cuatro nuevos embajadores (Monaco Tribune), El Festival de Cine de Roma anuncia fechas y liderazgo para su 20ª edición (ANSA), Ayuso acusa al gobierno de Sánchez de “boicot revolucionario” por protestas sobre Israel (El Mundo), Portugal reconoce oficialmente al Estado palestino en un paso histórico (Público), Malta lanza proyecto de rehabilitación para la icónica Laguna Azul (Times of Malta), Reino Unido planea gran reforma de devolución otorgando a alcaldes control sobre servicios clave (The Guardian), El campo de golf de Trump en Aberdeenshire acusado de repetidas infracciones de contaminación (The Guardian), Irlanda y Reino Unido anuncian nuevo marco para abordar el legado del Conflicto norirlandés (The Irish Times), Alemania abre debate sobre el uso de activos rusos congelados para financiar a Ucrania (Deutsche Welle), Suecia y Alemania interceptan avión ruso de reconocimiento sobre el mar Báltico (Svenska Dagbladet), Islandia enfrenta tensiones en el sistema de bienestar mientras se intensifica el debate sobre tasas universitarias (Iceland Review), Uzbekistán reporta grandes incautaciones de drogas en Ferganá y Karakalpakstán (The Tashkent Times), El Kremlin admite frenar el crecimiento económico para contener la inflación (The Moscow Times), Ucrania recurre a vehículos controlados a distancia para proteger a los soldados en el frente (AP News), y El jefe de la Marina india visita Sri Lanka para fortalecer cooperación marítima (India TV News). Estos resúmenes de noticias fueron redactados utilizando tecnología de IA. Aunque se ha hecho todo lo posible para garantizar la precisión de los hechos, pueden producirse errores u omisiones ocasionales. Agradecemos su comprensión y acogemos con gusto cualquier comentario para seguir mejorando la calidad de nuestros reportes. ¡Gracias por ser parte de nuestro camino!

Sunday Sep 21, 2025

Subscribe today so you never miss an episode! Today on Libre News of The World: Ottawa announced it will scrutinize the proposed US\$53 billion Teck-Anglo merger to ensure it aligns with national interests 【The Globe and Mail】. In Arizona, a memorial service for Charlie Kirk will feature Donald Trump and J.D. Vance amid heightened security 【The Arizona Republic】. Families in El Salvador raised alarms over mass detentions under Bukele’s state of emergency 【El Faro】. In Haiti, the gang Kokorat San Ras attacked Bassin Bleu, killing a teacher and displacing residents 【Le Nouvelliste】. Brazil launched a “mosquito super-factory” to fight dengue 【Folha de S.Paulo】. Colombia’s JEP sentenced ex-soldiers in the “false positives” scandal 【El Espectador】. Chile’s presidential race began with security and stability as key issues 【La Tercera】. Argentina’s Milei confirmed embassy plans in Jerusalem and meetings with Trump and Netanyahu 【Clarín】. Chinese journalist Zhang Zhan received an additional four-year sentence 【South China Morning Post】. Optus faced regulatory action after an emergency-call outage 【Wikipedia】. New Zealand’s GDP fell 0.9% in Q2, spurring rate-cut expectations 【Radio New Zealand】. Shinjiro Koizumi centered wage growth in his LDP leadership bid 【The Japan Times】. Singapore’s Punggol will see robotaxis and autonomous shuttles from 2026 【The Straits Times】. Vietnam urged the U.S. to reconsider a seafood export ban 【Vietnam News】. Guinea voted on a constitution enabling coup leader Doumbouya’s candidacy 【Jeune Afrique】. Turkey and Egypt announced joint naval drills after 13 years 【Daily Sabah】. Saudi Arabia detained 21,000 people for residency and labor violations 【Arab News】. Iran faced worsening drought and water overuse 【The Guardian】. Israeli strikes killed 31 in Gaza City 【Al Jazeera】. Bernard Arnault slammed France’s proposed “billionaire tax” 【Le Monde】. Italy forecast its deficit may fall below 3% of GDP in 2025 【Reuters】. Madrid honored the Vuelta cycling race despite protests 【El País】. Portugal confirmed it will recognize a Palestinian state 【Público】. Azerbaijan recorded nearly 3% growth in cargo transport 【AzerNews】. UK Typhoons began NATO patrols over Poland after Russian drone incursions 【BBC News】. In Glasgow, anti-immigration protests clashed with counter-protesters 【The Herald】. The UK and Ireland unveiled a new legacy framework for Northern Ireland 【The Irish Times】. Germany signaled openness to use frozen Russian assets for Ukraine 【Deutsche Welle】. Sweden and Finland pushed back on EU forestry climate targets 【Euractiv】. Iceland declared 121 ships unseaworthy after inspections 【RÚV】. Uzbekistan joined India and Iran in a new trilateral forum 【The Hindu】. NATO prepared to debate Russia’s alleged airspace breach in Estonia 【Politico】. Russia launched a massive drone and missile strike killing three 【The Kyiv Independent】. Finally, India and the U.S. resumed trade talks on tariffs, visas, and market access 【The Hindu】. These news summaries were written using AI technology. While every effort has been made to ensure factual accuracy, occasional mistakes or omissions may occur. Your understanding is appreciated, and we warmly welcome any feedback to help us continue improving the quality of our reporting. Thank you for being part of our journey!

Sunday Sep 21, 2025

Subscribe today so you never miss an episode! Today on Libre News of The World Express Edition: Ottawa announced it will scrutinize the proposed US\$53 billion Teck-Anglo merger to ensure it aligns with national interests 【The Globe and Mail】. In Arizona, a memorial service for Charlie Kirk will feature Donald Trump and J.D. Vance amid heightened security 【The Arizona Republic】. Families in El Salvador raised alarms over mass detentions under Bukele’s state of emergency 【El Faro】. In Haiti, the gang Kokorat San Ras attacked Bassin Bleu, killing a teacher and displacing residents 【Le Nouvelliste】. Brazil launched a “mosquito super-factory” to fight dengue 【Folha de S.Paulo】. Colombia’s JEP sentenced ex-soldiers in the “false positives” scandal 【El Espectador】. Chile’s presidential race began with security and stability as key issues 【La Tercera】. Argentina’s Milei confirmed embassy plans in Jerusalem and meetings with Trump and Netanyahu 【Clarín】. Chinese journalist Zhang Zhan received an additional four-year sentence 【South China Morning Post】. Optus faced regulatory action after an emergency-call outage 【Wikipedia】. New Zealand’s GDP fell 0.9% in Q2, spurring rate-cut expectations 【Radio New Zealand】. Shinjiro Koizumi centered wage growth in his LDP leadership bid 【The Japan Times】. Singapore’s Punggol will see robotaxis and autonomous shuttles from 2026 【The Straits Times】. Vietnam urged the U.S. to reconsider a seafood export ban 【Vietnam News】. Guinea voted on a constitution enabling coup leader Doumbouya’s candidacy 【Jeune Afrique】. Turkey and Egypt announced joint naval drills after 13 years 【Daily Sabah】. Saudi Arabia detained 21,000 people for residency and labor violations 【Arab News】. Iran faced worsening drought and water overuse 【The Guardian】. Israeli strikes killed 31 in Gaza City 【Al Jazeera】. Bernard Arnault slammed France’s proposed “billionaire tax” 【Le Monde】. Italy forecast its deficit may fall below 3% of GDP in 2025 【Reuters】. Madrid honored the Vuelta cycling race despite protests 【El País】. Portugal confirmed it will recognize a Palestinian state 【Público】. Azerbaijan recorded nearly 3% growth in cargo transport 【AzerNews】. UK Typhoons began NATO patrols over Poland after Russian drone incursions 【BBC News】. In Glasgow, anti-immigration protests clashed with counter-protesters 【The Herald】. The UK and Ireland unveiled a new legacy framework for Northern Ireland 【The Irish Times】. Germany signaled openness to use frozen Russian assets for Ukraine 【Deutsche Welle】. Sweden and Finland pushed back on EU forestry climate targets 【Euractiv】. Iceland declared 121 ships unseaworthy after inspections 【RÚV】. Uzbekistan joined India and Iran in a new trilateral forum 【The Hindu】. NATO prepared to debate Russia’s alleged airspace breach in Estonia 【Politico】. Russia launched a massive drone and missile strike killing three 【The Kyiv Independent】. Finally, India and the U.S. resumed trade talks on tariffs, visas, and market access 【The Hindu】. These news summaries were written using AI technology. While every effort has been made to ensure factual accuracy, occasional mistakes or omissions may occur. Your understanding is appreciated, and we warmly welcome any feedback to help us continue improving the quality of our reporting. Thank you for being part of our journey!

Sunday Sep 21, 2025

¡Suscríbete hoy para no perderte ningún episodio! Hoy en Libre News of The World: Ottawa anunció que examinará la propuesta de fusión de US\$53 mil millones entre Teck y Anglo para garantizar que se alinee con los intereses nacionales 【The Globe and Mail】. En Arizona, un servicio conmemorativo para Charlie Kirk contará con Donald Trump y J.D. Vance en medio de una fuerte seguridad 【The Arizona Republic】. Familias en El Salvador alertaron sobre detenciones masivas bajo el estado de excepción de Bukele 【El Faro】. En Haití, la banda Kokorat San Ras atacó Bassin Bleu, matando a un profesor y desplazando a residentes 【Le Nouvelliste】. Brasil inauguró una “superfábrica de mosquitos” para combatir el dengue 【Folha de S.Paulo】. El JEP en Colombia condenó a exsoldados por el escándalo de los “falsos positivos” 【El Espectador】. La carrera presidencial en Chile comenzó con la seguridad y la estabilidad como temas clave 【La Tercera】. Milei confirmó la apertura de una embajada en Jerusalén y reuniones con Trump y Netanyahu 【Clarín】. La periodista china Zhang Zhan recibió cuatro años adicionales de prisión 【South China Morning Post】. Optus enfrentó acciones regulatorias tras una caída en llamadas de emergencia 【Wikipedia】. El PIB de Nueva Zelanda cayó 0,9% en el segundo trimestre, lo que impulsa expectativas de recortes de tasas 【Radio New Zealand】. Shinjiro Koizumi puso el crecimiento salarial en el centro de su candidatura por el liderazgo del PLD 【The Japan Times】. Punggol, en Singapur, tendrá taxis autónomos y lanzaderas en 2026 【The Straits Times】. Vietnam pidió a EE.UU. reconsiderar la prohibición a sus exportaciones de mariscos 【Vietnam News】. Guinea votó sobre una nueva constitución que permitiría la candidatura del líder golpista Doumbouya 【Jeune Afrique】. Turquía y Egipto anunciaron ejercicios navales conjuntos tras 13 años 【Daily Sabah】. Arabia Saudita detuvo a 21.000 personas por violaciones de residencia y trabajo 【Arab News】. Irán enfrenta una grave crisis de agua por sequía y sobreuso 【The Guardian】. Ataques israelíes mataron a 31 en Ciudad de Gaza 【Al Jazeera】. Bernard Arnault criticó el propuesto “impuesto a los multimillonarios” en Francia 【Le Monde】. Italia prevé que su déficit caiga por debajo del 3% del PIB en 2025 【Reuters】. Madrid otorgó la Medalla de Oro a la Vuelta Ciclista pese a protestas 【El País】. Portugal confirmó que reconocerá oficialmente al Estado palestino 【Público】. Azerbaiyán registró casi un 3% de aumento en transporte de carga 【AzerNews】. Cazas británicos iniciaron patrullas de la OTAN en Polonia tras incursiones de drones rusos 【BBC News】. En Glasgow, manifestantes antiinmigración se enfrentaron a contraprotestas 【The Herald】. Reino Unido e Irlanda presentaron un nuevo marco sobre el legado en Irlanda del Norte 【The Irish Times】. Alemania se mostró abierta a usar más ampliamente los activos rusos congelados para apoyar a Ucrania 【Deutsche Welle】. Suecia y Finlandia cuestionaron los objetivos climáticos de la UE sobre los bosques 【Euractiv】. Islandia declaró 121 barcos no aptos para navegar tras inspecciones 【RÚV】. Uzbekistán se unió a India e Irán en un nuevo foro trilateral 【The Hindu】. La OTAN debatirá la supuesta violación del espacio aéreo estonio por Rusia 【Politico】. Rusia lanzó un masivo ataque con drones y misiles que dejó tres muertos 【The Kyiv Independent】. Finalmente, India y EE.UU. reanudaron conversaciones comerciales sobre aranceles, visas y acceso a mercados 【The Hindu】. Estos resúmenes de noticias fueron redactados con tecnología de IA. Aunque se ha hecho todo lo posible para garantizar la precisión, pueden ocurrir errores u omisiones. Agradecemos su comprensión y recibimos con gusto cualquier comentario que nos ayude a mejorar la calidad de nuestros informes. ¡Gracias por ser parte de nuestro camino!

Friday Sep 19, 2025

Subscribe today so you never miss an episode! Today on A Week in The Arts we reported on major developments across literature, music, theatre, fashion, and visual culture. Arthur Sze was named U.S. Poet Laureate amid Library of Congress upheaval (AP News). Massive Attack pulled their music from Spotify in protest of CEO Daniel Ek’s €600 million investment in military AI (The Guardian). Madonna reunited with Warner Records and teased Confessions Part 2, due in 2026 (People.com). Swedish punk legends Refused announced final shows but promised a rebirth as a new band (Pitchfork). Paul Cocksedge’s installation What Nelson Sees opened in Trafalgar Square for the London Design Festival (The Guardian). A new Resident Evil film set in the game universe was announced for 2026 (EW.com). Bulgari launched its Kaleidos exhibition in Tokyo (Vogue). The Monterey Jazz Festival saw leadership changes ahead of its 68th season (DownBeat). The Flanders Festival canceled the Munich Philharmonic over controversy around Lahav Shani (Deutsche Welle). Opera Philadelphia reinvented itself with $11 tickets and multimedia premieres (The New York Times). Tomas Lindberg of At the Gates passed away at 52 (Pitchfork). Talia Byre made her runway debut at London Fashion Week (Vogue). The Royal Shakespeare Company sought major staff cuts amid financial strain (The Guardian). A Broadway revival of Dreamgirls was announced for Fall 2026 (Playbill). Christie’s will auction Hockney’s rare Isherwood double-portrait for $50M+ (Christie’s). Rodrigo Abd won the 2025 POY Latam Photojournalist of the Year (AP News). Christelle Oyiri debuted her Dead God Flow installation in Berlin (Artforum). Finally, Grammy-winning songwriter Brett James tragically died in a plane crash in North Carolina (People.com). These news summaries were written using AI technology. While every effort has been made to ensure factual accuracy, occasional mistakes or omissions may occur. Your understanding is appreciated, and we warmly welcome any feedback to help us continue improving the quality of our reporting. Thank you for being part of our journey!

Thursday Sep 18, 2025

Subscribe today so you never miss an episode! Today on Libre News of The World: Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney met with Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum to strengthen ties ahead of the 2026 USMCA review (The Globe and Mail). Democrats in Washington introduced the “No Political Enemies (Nope) Act” after Jimmy Kimmel’s show suspension raised alarms over free speech and government overreach (The Washington Post). Mexico launched a 60-day public consultation on the USMCA, echoing similar efforts in the U.S. and Canada (El Universal). Cuba accused the U.S. of militarizing the Caribbean and called for UN intervention (Granma). Brazil unveiled a $377 billion data center investment plan alongside a bill tightening digital competition rules (Folha de S.Paulo). Colombia’s peace tribunal sentenced former FARC leaders for kidnappings, recognizing over 21,000 victims (El País). Chile’s presidential race opened with Jeannette Jara and José Antonio Kast neck and neck (Reuters). Argentina’s central bank intervened in currency markets to stabilize the peso amid Milei’s political troubles (Financial Times). China urged hog producers to cut output after a pork glut (Reuters). Australian officials found khapra beetle larvae in imported nappies, sparking a major biosecurity alert (ABC News Australia). China protested New Zealand’s treatment of its citizens at borders (RNZ). Japan’s Sanae Takaichi entered the LDP leadership race, vying to be prime minister (The Japan Times). Singapore’s exports plunged far below expectations in August (The Straits Times). Cambodian protesters clashed with Thai forces at a disputed border (Phnom Penh Post). South African inflation fell unexpectedly, stirring debate on rate cuts (Business Day). Turkey’s opposition leader Özgür Özel faces possible ouster in a court ruling over CHP’s 2023 congress (Hürriyet Daily News). Saudi Arabia and Pakistan signed a Strategic Mutual Defence Pact (Arab News). The U.S. designated four Iran-aligned militias as terrorist groups (Al Jazeera). Israel’s Culture Minister threatened to defund the Ophir Awards over a Palestinian-themed film (Haaretz). French unions launched strikes over 2026 budget cuts (Le Monde). Italy passed a sweeping AI law, the first to align with the EU’s AI Act (Corriere della Sera). Spain’s Aena announced $15.2 billion airport investments through 2031 (El País). Serbia indicted 13 people over the deadly Novi Sad station collapse (Balkan Insight). Cyprus expanded desalination efforts amid worsening drought (Cyprus Mail). UK retailer Next’s CEO warned of “anaemic growth” and fewer entry-level jobs ahead (The Guardian). Scotland abolished its centuries-old “not proven” verdict and passed sweeping legal reforms (The Guardian). Ireland’s central bank raised its growth forecast but flagged risks from U.S. tariffs (The Irish Times). Cyber-attacks cost Germany nearly $320 billion in the past year, with many traced to Russia and China (Deutsche Welle). Denmark led Arctic Light 2025, a major military drill in Greenland without U.S. participation (The Copenhagen Post). Bright lights over Hafnarfjörður turned out to be Starlink satellites (Iceland Monitor). Uzbekistan and Saint Petersburg agreed on 23 new joint projects, including a “Saint Petersburg Quarter” in New Tashkent (Gazeta.uz). Russia adjusted its budget rule to reduce oil dependency by 2030 (The Moscow Times). Ukraine began receiving Patriot missiles and HIMARS ammo via the new PURL funding scheme (Reuters). Finally, a Reuters investigation exposed Chinese-led trafficking networks forcing thousands into cyber-scam labor in Myanmar’s border zones.
These news summaries were written using AI technology. While every effort has been made to ensure factual accuracy, occasional mistakes or omissions may occur. Your understanding is appreciated, and we warmly welcome any feedback to help us continue improving the quality of our reporting. Thank you for being part of our journey!

Thursday Sep 18, 2025

Subscribe today so you never miss an episode! Today on Libre News of The World Express Edition: Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney met with Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum to strengthen ties ahead of the 2026 USMCA review (The Globe and Mail). Democrats in Washington introduced the “No Political Enemies (Nope) Act” after Jimmy Kimmel’s show suspension raised alarms over free speech and government overreach (The Washington Post). Mexico launched a 60-day public consultation on the USMCA, echoing similar efforts in the U.S. and Canada (El Universal). Cuba accused the U.S. of militarizing the Caribbean and called for UN intervention (Granma). Brazil unveiled a $377 billion data center investment plan alongside a bill tightening digital competition rules (Folha de S.Paulo). Colombia’s peace tribunal sentenced former FARC leaders for kidnappings, recognizing over 21,000 victims (El País). Chile’s presidential race opened with Jeannette Jara and José Antonio Kast neck and neck (Reuters). Argentina’s central bank intervened in currency markets to stabilize the peso amid Milei’s political troubles (Financial Times). China urged hog producers to cut output after a pork glut (Reuters). Australian officials found khapra beetle larvae in imported nappies, sparking a major biosecurity alert (ABC News Australia). China protested New Zealand’s treatment of its citizens at borders (RNZ). Japan’s Sanae Takaichi entered the LDP leadership race, vying to be prime minister (The Japan Times). Singapore’s exports plunged far below expectations in August (The Straits Times). Cambodian protesters clashed with Thai forces at a disputed border (Phnom Penh Post). South African inflation fell unexpectedly, stirring debate on rate cuts (Business Day). Turkey’s opposition leader Özgür Özel faces possible ouster in a court ruling over CHP’s 2023 congress (Hürriyet Daily News). Saudi Arabia and Pakistan signed a Strategic Mutual Defence Pact (Arab News). The U.S. designated four Iran-aligned militias as terrorist groups (Al Jazeera). Israel’s Culture Minister threatened to defund the Ophir Awards over a Palestinian-themed film (Haaretz). French unions launched strikes over 2026 budget cuts (Le Monde). Italy passed a sweeping AI law, the first to align with the EU’s AI Act (Corriere della Sera). Spain’s Aena announced $15.2 billion airport investments through 2031 (El País). Serbia indicted 13 people over the deadly Novi Sad station collapse (Balkan Insight). Cyprus expanded desalination efforts amid worsening drought (Cyprus Mail). UK retailer Next’s CEO warned of “anaemic growth” and fewer entry-level jobs ahead (The Guardian). Scotland abolished its centuries-old “not proven” verdict and passed sweeping legal reforms (The Guardian). Ireland’s central bank raised its growth forecast but flagged risks from U.S. tariffs (The Irish Times). Cyber-attacks cost Germany nearly $320 billion in the past year, with many traced to Russia and China (Deutsche Welle). Denmark led Arctic Light 2025, a major military drill in Greenland without U.S. participation (The Copenhagen Post). Bright lights over Hafnarfjörður turned out to be Starlink satellites (Iceland Monitor). Uzbekistan and Saint Petersburg agreed on 23 new joint projects, including a “Saint Petersburg Quarter” in New Tashkent (Gazeta.uz). Russia adjusted its budget rule to reduce oil dependency by 2030 (The Moscow Times). Ukraine began receiving Patriot missiles and HIMARS ammo via the new PURL funding scheme (Reuters). Finally, a Reuters investigation exposed Chinese-led trafficking networks forcing thousands into cyber-scam labor in Myanmar’s border zones.
These news summaries were written using AI technology. While every effort has been made to ensure factual accuracy, occasional mistakes or omissions may occur. Your understanding is appreciated, and we warmly welcome any feedback to help us continue improving the quality of our reporting. Thank you for being part of our journey!

Thursday Sep 18, 2025

¡Suscríbete hoy para no perderte ningún episodio! Hoy en Libre News of The World: el primer ministro canadiense Mark Carney se reunió con la presidenta de México Claudia Sheinbaum para reforzar los lazos antes de la revisión del T-MEC en 2026 (The Globe and Mail). Los demócratas en Washington presentaron la “Ley de No Enemigos Políticos (Nope Act)” tras la suspensión del programa de Jimmy Kimmel, lo que generó alarma sobre la libertad de expresión y el abuso gubernamental (The Washington Post). México lanzó una consulta pública de 60 días sobre el T-MEC, siguiendo pasos similares de EE.UU. y Canadá (El Universal). Cuba acusó a EE.UU. de militarizar el Caribe y pidió intervención de la ONU (Granma). Brasil anunció un plan de inversión de $377 mil millones en centros de datos junto con una ley para regular la competencia digital (Folha de S.Paulo). El tribunal de paz colombiano condenó a exlíderes de las FARC por secuestros, reconociendo a más de 21,000 víctimas (El País). En Chile comenzó la campaña presidencial con Jeannette Jara y José Antonio Kast empatados en las encuestas (Reuters). El banco central de Argentina intervino en los mercados cambiarios para estabilizar el peso en medio de los problemas políticos de Milei (Financial Times). China pidió a los productores porcinos reducir la oferta tras un exceso de cerdos (Reuters). Autoridades australianas encontraron larvas del escarabajo khapra en pañales importados, lo que desató una alerta de bioseguridad (ABC News Australia). China protestó por el trato a sus ciudadanos en fronteras de Nueva Zelanda (RNZ). La japonesa Sanae Takaichi lanzó su candidatura al liderazgo del PLD, aspirando a ser primera ministra (The Japan Times). Las exportaciones de Singapur cayeron muy por debajo de lo esperado en agosto (The Straits Times). Manifestantes camboyanos chocaron con fuerzas tailandesas en una zona fronteriza disputada (Phnom Penh Post). La inflación en Sudáfrica bajó inesperadamente, lo que abrió debate sobre recortes de tasas (Business Day). El líder opositor turco Özgür Özel enfrenta una posible destitución por fallo judicial sobre el congreso de 2023 del CHP (Hürriyet Daily News). Arabia Saudita y Pakistán firmaron un pacto de defensa mutua estratégico (Arab News). EE.UU. designó a cuatro milicias alineadas con Irán como grupos terroristas (Al Jazeera). El ministro de Cultura israelí amenazó con retirar fondos a los Premios Ophir tras premiar una película con temática palestina (Haaretz). Los sindicatos franceses lanzaron huelgas contra los recortes del presupuesto 2026 (Le Monde). Italia aprobó una ley integral sobre IA, la primera alineada con el Acta de IA de la UE (Corriere della Sera). Aena anunció inversiones de $15.2 mil millones en aeropuertos hasta 2031 (El País). Serbia imputó a 13 personas por el derrumbe mortal en la estación de Novi Sad (Balkan Insight). Chipre intensificó la desalinización ante la sequía (Cyprus Mail). El CEO de la minorista Next advirtió sobre “crecimiento anémico” y menos empleos de nivel inicial en Reino Unido (The Guardian). El Parlamento escocés abolió el veredicto histórico de “no probado” y aprobó amplias reformas judiciales (The Guardian). El banco central de Irlanda elevó su previsión de crecimiento pero alertó sobre riesgos por aranceles de EE.UU. (The Irish Times). Ciberataques costaron a Alemania casi $320 mil millones en el último año, muchos vinculados a Rusia y China (Deutsche Welle). Dinamarca lideró Arctic Light 2025, un gran ejercicio militar en Groenlandia sin participación de EE.UU. (The Copenhagen Post). Luces brillantes sobre Hafnarfjörður resultaron ser satélites de Starlink (Iceland Monitor). Uzbekistán y San Petersburgo acordaron 23 nuevos proyectos conjuntos, incluido un “Barrio de San Petersburgo” en el Nuevo Taskent (Gazeta.uz). Rusia ajustó su regla presupuestaria para reducir su dependencia del petróleo hacia 2030 (The Moscow Times). Ucrania comenzó a recibir misiles Patriot y munición para HIMARS mediante el nuevo esquema de financiación PURL (Reuters). Finalmente, una investigación de Reuters expuso redes de trata lideradas por chinos que obligan a miles de personas a realizar estafas cibernéticas en zonas fronterizas de Myanmar.
Estos resúmenes de noticias fueron redactados con tecnología de inteligencia artificial. Si bien se ha hecho todo lo posible para garantizar la precisión, pueden ocurrir errores u omisiones ocasionales. Agradecemos su comprensión y les damos la bienvenida a cualquier comentario para seguir mejorando la calidad de nuestros informes. ¡Gracias por ser parte de nuestro camino!

Wednesday Sep 17, 2025

Subscribe today so you never miss an episode! Today on Libre News of The World: Chrystia Freeland exited Canada’s cabinet to become Ukraine’s reconstruction envoy (CBC News – cbc.ca); Donald Trump launched a $15 billion defamation lawsuit against The New York Times, escalating his feud with the media (The Guardian – theguardian.com); El Salvador extended pre-trial detention for gang suspects until 2027, drawing rights concerns (AP News – apnews.com); a report accused Cuba of using forced prison labour to make exports like cigars (Reuters – reuters.com); Mercosur signed a trade deal with Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland (AP News – apnews.com); Colombia was decertified by the U.S. in drug-war cooperation, sparking tensions (El Espectador – elespectador.com); Chile’s José Antonio Kast met Giorgia Meloni to model hard-line migration plans (La Tercera – latercera.com); China built a $390 million AI-powered data centre with domestic chips (Reuters – reuters.com); Australia and Papua New Guinea delayed signing a defence treaty but issued a joint communique (ABC News Australia – abc.net.au); New Zealand issued a lone-wolf security alert for crowded spaces (Newstalk ZB – newstalkzb.co.nz); Japan decided not to recognize a Palestinian state for now (Asahi Shimbun – asahi.com); South Korea questioned Unification Church leader Hak Ja Han over bribery claims (The Korea Herald – koreaherald.com); a clash at sea near Scarborough Shoal escalated China-Philippines tensions (AP News – apnews.com); villagers in Lesotho protested damages from a major water project (The Guardian – theguardian.com); a Turkish court delayed ruling on CHP’s disputed leadership (AP News – apnews.com); Saudi Arabia shut dozens of music lounges amid conservative backlash (Arab News – arabnews.com); Iran executed Babak Shahbazi for allegedly spying for Israel (Al Jazeera – aljazeera.com); a U.N. commission accused Israeli leaders of genocide in Gaza (Reuters – reuters.com); France proposed a cap on UK-made components in the EU defence fund (The Guardian – theguardian.com); STMicroelectronics pledged no mass layoffs at its Italian plant (Reuters – reuters.com); Spain threatened to quit Eurovision 2026 if Israel participates (El País – elpais.com); Chega’s André Ventura announced an “anti-system” presidential run in Portugal (El País – elpais.com); Azerbaijan’s SOCAR moved to acquire Italiana Petroli in a $2.7 billion deal (Il Sole 24 Ore – ilsole24ore.com); a UK court temporarily blocked the removal of an Eritrean asylum seeker under the UK-France returns deal (Reuters – reuters.com); Glasgow’s mayor called for fairer distribution of asylum seekers across Scotland (The Scotsman – scotsman.com); Dublin residents pushed back against steep hikes in parking permit fees (The Irish Times – irishtimes.com); German Chancellor Friedrich Merz urged strengthening the BND intelligence agency against hybrid threats (Deutsche Welle – dw.com); Denmark announced plans to acquire long-range precision weapons amid Russian provocations (Copenhagen Post – cphpost.dk); Uzbekistan scheduled its first census in decades for early 2026 (UzDaily – uzdaily.uz); Dmitry Medvedev warned Russia’s 2026 draft budget would be a “wartime” plan (TASS – tass.com); and Bangladesh’s Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus warned against religious discrimination ahead of Durga Puja (The Times of India – timesofindia.indiatimes.com). These news summaries were written using AI technology. While every effort has been made to ensure factual accuracy, occasional mistakes or omissions may occur. Your understanding is appreciated, and we warmly welcome any feedback to help us continue improving the quality of our reporting. Thank you for being part of our journey!

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