General Information
Lithuania, officially the Republic of Lithuania, is a country in the Baltic region of Europe. It is one of three Baltic states and lies on the eastern shore of the Baltic Sea, bordered by Latvia to the north, Belarus to the east and south, Poland to the south, and the Russian semi-exclave of Kaliningrad Oblast to the southwest, with a maritime border with Sweden to the west. Lithuania covers an area of 65,300 km2 (25,200 sq mi), and has a population of 2.9 million. Its capital and largest city is Vilnius; other major cities include Kaunas, Klaipėda, Šiauliai and Panevėžys. Lithuanians are the titular nation, belong to the ethnolinguistic group of Balts, and speak Lithuanian.
- Population: 2,800,000+
- Area: 65,300 km²
- Coordinates: Latitude: 54.683334350586, Longitude: 25.316667556763
- Timezone: Timezone info not available
- Current Local Time: ailab
Latest Lithuania News
15min.lt RSS - suprasti akimirksniu | RSS
Kinijoje viešintis Donaldas Trumpas Xi Jinpingui kalba apie „fantastišką bendrą ateitį“
JAV prezidentas Donaldas Trumpas (Donaldas Trampas) ketvirtadienį Pekine susitikęs su Kinijos lyderiu Xi Jinpingu (Si Dzinpingu) pareiškė, kad abiejų supervalstybių laukia „fantastiška bendra ateitis“.
15min.lt RSS - suprasti akimirksniu | RSS
Lietuvoje ir užsienyje vyks nacionalinis Pilietiškumo egzaminas
Minint Pilietinio pasipriešinimo dieną, Lietuvoje ir už jos ribų ketvirtadienį vyks trečius metus organizuojamas nacionalinis Pilietiškumo egzaminas.
BBC News
Deadly Russian drone attacks on Ukraine resume after ceasefire expires
Six people have been killed after Zelensky warned of "more waves" of Russian strikes through Wednesday.
BBC News
Passengers allowed to leave norovirus-hit cruise ship
Passengers on the ship showing no symptoms are allowed to leave, authorities say, after 49 people fell ill from gastrointestinal sickness.
BBC News
Higher Europe air fares 'inevitable', says industry head
Flying by air will get more expensive as oil prices remain high after the US and Israel's conflict with Iran.
BBC News
Trump's Fed chair pick Kevin Warsh confirmed by US Senate
Kevin Warsh was confirmed by the narrowest margin since the role required a Senate confirmation vote.
POLITICO
Judge overturns US sanctions on UN official who called for war crimes prosecutions over Gaza
A federal judge has blocked the Trump administration’s sanctions against a United Nations official who has faced accusations of antisemitism over her calls for war crimes charges against Israeli officials over their actions in Gaza. Secretary of State Marco Rubio imposed the sanctions on Francesca Albanese, the United Nations special rapporteur for Palestinian human rights, last July under an executive order President Donald Trump signed authorizing such actions against people “directly engaged” in the International Criminal Court’s investigations related to alleged atrocities in Gaza. However, in a ruling Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Richard Leon said the administration’s sanctions against Albanese violate the First Amendment because they’re based solely on her encouraging the ICC to investigate and prosecute. “Albanese has done nothing more than speak!” Leon wrote in a 26-page decision salted with his trademark exclamation points. “It is undisputed that her recommendations have no binding effect on the ICC’s actions — they are nothing more than her opinion.” Justice Department lawyers argued that Albanese, an Italian citizen currently living with her family in Tunisia, has no First Amendment claim because she isn’t an American and she issued her statements from abroad. However, Leon said her “extensive connections” to the U.S., including a daughter born while the family lived in Washington and a home the family owns in Washington, gave Albanese a claim to free-speech protections. Albanese and her husband have complained that the U.S. sanctions designation essentially froze them out of the international banking network, made it impossible for them to travel to the U.S. and even led the family’s health insurer to deny payment for services received by Albanese. The Trump administration argued that licenses it issued allowing some transactions related to the family’s Washington property, as well as to provide “necessary” support for their U.S. citizen daughter, mitigated the impact of the sanctions. “Please!” the judge responded, calling the scope of those licenses too murky to give the U.S. government legal cover against the lawsuit filed in February by Albanese’s husband, World Bank economist Massimiliano Cali, and their daughter. Leon also found that the “parental license” the U.S. government issued interferes with Albanese’s “constitutionally protected” relationship with her daughter. “It is not clear from the record before me how plaintiffs would distinguish between necessary and unnecessary transactions in the context of their family relationships,” the judge wrote. Rubio’s designation of Albanese alleged she’d “spewed unabashed antisemitism.” She’s denied that and contends that some in Israel are using claims of antisemitism to justify war crimes. The Israeli government denies committing war crimes in Gaza and has denounced the International Criminal Court process as hopelessly biased. The White House referred a request for comment to the State Department, which did not immediately respond. The Justice Department also did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Albanese said in a statement that Leon’s ruling had vindicated her trust in the American justice system. The ruling “that the sanctions appear to infringe on U.S. constitutional rights proves me right,” she said. “I am so grateful to my little daughter, L.C. and her amazing dad for taking the risk, and everyone who has come forward to help.”
POLITICO
EU Commission’s structure leaves Brussels green campaigners dazed and confused
BRUSSELS — Ursula von der Leyen’s European Commission structure is proving a headache for green and equality advocates, who say industry has a smoother path to lobbying the institution. With many portfolios split among commissioners, it’s increasingly difficult to reach the right person to try to shape legislation, the advocates told POLITICO’s EU Influence newsletter. Lobbyists of all kinds are also concerned about the top-down nature of the von der Leyen Commission, where power tends to be concentrated in the hands of the president and her close advisers. The changes at the top of the Commission, introduced when von der Leyen started her second term in December 2024, reflect a broader political shift away from environmental topics — the Green Deal having been a key part of her first term — toward business and defense. The Commission now has its first commissioner dedicated to defense issues, while many European governments have shifted to the political right. As a result, said Sven Harmeling, head of climate at civil society organization CAN Europe, “sometimes it’s not clear which DGs [directorates-general, or departments] are involved,” which “creates challenges in terms of understanding where some of the discussions are.” One Brussels-based consultant who represents corporate clients, granted anonymity to speak candidly, said: “I think the structure [problem] is a Green Deal issue” rather than one that affects industry or other areas, adding that in their specialist area of health, “things have not changed that much.” Asked about Internal Market Commissioner Stéphane Séjourné’s meetings with businesses, a member of his team said bluntly: “The fact that the commissioner in charge of the industry is meeting primarily the industry representatives seems a bit self-explanatory.” Who you gonna call? The structure that von der Leyen put in place when she secured a second term atop the Commission has six executive vice presidents, who are meant to coordinate and oversee the work of other commissioners (under EU law, all commissioners are supposed to be equal). In von der Leyen’s first term it was fairly obvious whom to approach if your focus was climate: Green Deal architect Frans Timmermans and his team. Now, according to Mike Walker, a lobbyist working mainly on climate issues, it’s more ambiguous: Timmermans’ successor, EVP Teresa Ribera, is also responsible for competition policy. Walker said the “structural ambiguity” of the College of Commissioners makes “targeted advocacy with limited resources a challenge for civil society.” One example of this was the omnibus simplification proposal, which “basically cut off a lot of the normal consultation procedures,” Walker said. He added that the consultations “were rushed” and were “often only [conducted] with a very select group of stakeholders” — befitting a political climate in which green policies have been superseded by competitiveness and security. EU Executive Vice President for Clean, Just and Competitive Transition Teresa Ribera gives an interview in Brussels on Jan. 30, 2026. | Nicolas Tucat/AFP via Getty Images Walker said the problem was likely “aggravated by the clear focus of decision-making on VDL and her team.” In September 2024, in unveiling her new team, von der Leyen said she was ridding the Commission of “former relatively rigid stovepipes,” making the institution less hierarchical. She claimed it would promote cooperation between commissioners and their civil servants, and give them an “equal responsibility” to deliver on their priorities. But there was concern that the new structure would allow von der Leyen to divide and conquer. “I don’t think that is a bug but a feature in the system of the new college,” German MEP René Repasi said of von der Leyen’s strategy. It’s a pattern that Greenpeace’s farming lead, Marco Contiero, has noted as well. “Decisions within the Commission happen in a much more vertical way, even compared to von der Leyen I,” he said. “The amount of people involved has shrunk, and I have staff in the cabinet of commissioners, as well as high-level functionaries and directors, not knowing what’s coming.” The consultant who represents corporate clients agreed, saying: “It seems that a lot of decisions are taken at a higher level.” “If you want something done it might be easier to set the political direction, or get things overturned or pushed, at a political level versus services,” the consultant continued, referring to a commissioner’s close advisers versus departments in the EU executive. ‘Scaled-down on equality’ The commissioner for preparedness and equality, Hadja Lahbib, has frustrated activists working in human rights, who say her attention is captured more frequently by the other part of her portfolio. “The Commission has scaled down totally on equality,” said Alejandro Moledo of the European Disability Forum. It’s become a “second-class objective.” While Lahbib has come out with plenty of strategies, they haven’t received glowing reviews. Her LGBTQ+ blueprint “clearly falls behind the ambition” of the previous one, according to advocacy group ILGA-Europe. Her anti-racism program was a “missed opportunity” that “recycl[ed] old approaches,” according to anti-racism network ENAR. And her gender equality strategy was full of “empty promises leaving the most marginalized at the margins,” which Mental Health Europe branded “another missed opportunity.” An EU official, granted anonymity to speak freely, said while the commissioner has a “broad” portfolio, her commitment is “clear and consistent,” adding: “She is personally dedicated to advancing equality.” Lahbib has “consistently engaged with a wide range of stakeholders,” the official said, pointing to an implementation dialogue on Roma inclusion, a youth policy dialogue on disability rights, and a trip to Budapest last year to meet stakeholders and to “demonstrate that the EU stands firmly with” the LGBTQ+ community. The European Commission did not respond to a request for comment.
Al Jazeera – Breaking News, World News and Video from Al Jazeera
Xi Jinping welcomes Donald Trump with ceremony ahead of high-stakes meeting
Chinese President Xi Jinping is welcoming US President Donald Trump to Beijing for high-level talks. Tariffs, competitio
Al Jazeera – Breaking News, World News and Video from Al Jazeera
Iran war: Why the BRICS foreign ministers meeting in India matters
The foreign ministers meeting is taking place before the 2026 BRICS summit in India in September.
Europe
UK regulator pushes private credit groups to share more data
Fast-growing market comes under greater scrutiny for potential risks after series of setbacks
Europe
Neanderthal dentist drilled into decayed tooth almost 60,000 years ago
Study suggests Neanderthals had cognitive ability, dexterity and social support comparable with modern humans
France 24 - International breaking news, top stories and headlines
Iran conflict casts shadow over Trump-Xi talks in Beijing
Presidents Xi Jinping and Donald Trump are meeting on Thursday in Beijing for a US-China summit where few breakthroughs are expected on divisive issues ranging from the Iran war, trade, technology and Taiwan.
France 24 - International breaking news, top stories and headlines
Middle East live: Lebanon, Israel to hold new talks in US before ceasefire expires
Lebanon and Israel are to hold new peace talks in Washington starting Thursday, as their latest ceasefire - considered to still be in place despite hundreds of deaths in Israeli strikes - nears its end. Follow our liveblog for the latest updates.
Africanews RSS
Macron in Addis Ababa: “African problems must be solved by Africa”
French President Emmanuel Macron has reaffirmed that Africa should lead the response to its own political and security crises, speaking in Addis Ababa after a trilateral meeting with African Union Commission chair Mahmoud Ali Youssouf and UN Secretary‑General António Guterres.
Africanews RSS
Iraqi military debunks claims of Israeli base in Karbala desert
Iraq’s military moved forces into the desert between Najaf and Karbala on Tuesday, escorting journalists to the site of what U.S. and Israeli media reports had described as a secret Israeli base — a claim Iraqi officials firmly deny.