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Landmark Italian ruling for child with three parents; Mexico and CNN deny cartel car bombing; Israel pushes the limit on Eurovision influence
42 Articles •
Nvidia CEO Joins Trump's Beijing Summit After Last-Minute Call
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What happened: President Trump personally invited Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang to join his China delegation at the last minute, with Huang boarding Air Force One during an Alaska refueling stop this week. Trump is meeting Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing Thursday and Friday alongside major U.S. corporate leaders including Elon Musk and Tim Cook to discuss trade deals, semiconductor export controls, and rare earth supplies.
Why it matters: Huang's inclusion highlights how AI chip export controls have become central to U.S.-China tensions, with Nvidia struggling to get approval to sell its H200 AI chips in China despite government clearance. The summit could reshape semiconductor trade rules and result in major commercial deals including a potential 500-aircraft Boeing order, with political implications for Trump's midterm election prospects amid inflation pressures from the Iran war.
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19 Articles •
Palestine Action Activists Face Terrorism Sentencing for Factory Raid
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What happened: Four Palestine Action activists were convicted of causing £1 million in criminal damage during an August 2024 raid on Elbit Systems' Bristol factory, where they smashed drones and computers with sledgehammers. The trial judge ruled their convictions carry a 'terrorist connection,' meaning they could face aggravated sentences when sentenced on 12 June, though the jury was never informed of this designation.
Why it matters: This marks the first known use of terrorism sentencing against direct-action protesters in the UK, potentially setting a precedent for how future protest movements are prosecuted. The terrorism designation allows for longer prison terms and post-release restrictions on travel and employment, while reporting restrictions prevented jurors from knowing defendants could be sentenced as terrorists.
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68% of sources are High Factuality
39 Articles •
NYT Exposes Israel Government Eurovision Promotion Campaign
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What happened: A New York Times investigation revealed Israel's government ran coordinated campaigns spending over $1 million since 2018 to promote Eurovision contestants through multilingual ads and diplomatic pressure, urging supporters to cast maximum paid votes. The campaigns intensified after October 7, 2023, with $800,000 spent in 2024 alone, prompting Eurovision to issue warnings, change voting rules from 20 to 10 votes maximum, and triggering boycotts by five countries.
Why it matters: Eurovision faces its worst crisis in 70 years as Iceland, Ireland, Netherlands, Spain and Slovenia boycotted this week's Vienna contest over Israel's participation, reducing participants to the lowest since 2003. Spain's withdrawal as a Big Five member threatens hundreds of thousands in lost revenue and sponsorships, while the controversy exposes how the contest's voting system remains vulnerable to organized campaigns despite new limits.
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27 Articles •
Italian Court Recognizes Child with Three Legal Parents
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What happened: The Bari Court of Appeal ruled in January that a 4-year-old child born in Germany has three legal parents in Italy: the biological father, his Italo-German husband who adopted the child under German law, and the biological mother, a longtime friend who co-parents. The court found no evidence of surrogacy and ordered Italian authorities to recognize the German adoption under Italy's special-circumstances adoption framework.
Why it matters: Legal experts say this landmark ruling could reshape how Italian courts recognize non-traditional families and foreign adoptions that create multi-parent structures, potentially affecting parental rights registration and reigniting political debates over LGBTQ+ parenting in a country where surrogacy is criminalized and same-sex marriage remains prohibited. The decision has already sparked controversy and backlash from conservative groups.
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83 Articles •
Iran Restored 30 of 33 Hormuz Missile Sites, US Intel Reports
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What happened: Classified U.S. intelligence assessments from early May reveal Iran has restored operational access to 30 of 33 missile sites along the Strait of Hormuz and roughly 90% of underground facilities, retaining about 70% of its mobile launchers and prewar missile stockpiles. These findings directly contradict President Trump and Defense Secretary Hegseth's public claims that Iran's military was "decimated" and "combat-ineffective for years."
Why it matters: The restored Iranian missile capabilities threaten U.S. warships and oil tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly one-fifth of the world's oil passes, keeping global oil prices elevated at $100-$110 per barrel since early March. Meanwhile, the U.S. has depleted critical munitions—expending roughly 1,100 long-range cruise missiles, over 1,000 Tomahawks, and more than 1,300 Patriots—with replenishment taking years, limiting America's ability to respond to future conflicts or resume strikes against Iran.
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23 Articles •
Peru Presidential Candidate Faces Financial Crime Charges Before Runoff
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What happened: Prosecutors accused left-wing presidential candidate Roberto Sánchez of falsifying campaign finance disclosures and making false statements, seeking five years imprisonment and permanent disqualification. The charges, unsealed yesterday, allege Sánchez failed to disclose over 280,000 soles ($81,720) in contributions from 2018-2021, with a judge set to decide May 27 whether the case proceeds to trial.
Why it matters: The timing raises questions as charges emerged just hours after electoral authorities confirmed Sánchez's advancement to the June 7 runoff against Keiko Fujimori. If convicted, Sánchez could be permanently barred from the presidency, potentially reshaping Peru's electoral landscape and affecting the country's political direction.
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92 Articles •
US Seeks Three New Military Bases in Southern Greenland
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The details: The United States and Denmark have been negotiating since mid-January to establish three new US military bases in southern Greenland, including sites at Narsarsuaq and Kangerlussuaq. The bases would focus on surveillance of Russian and Chinese maritime activity in the GIUK Gap, with talks progressing under a 1951 defense pact but no formal agreement yet reached.
Why it matters: This deal would significantly reshape Arctic security by strengthening NATO monitoring capabilities against Russian and Chinese naval activity in critical North Atlantic waters. The negotiations follow President Trump's earlier threats to seize Greenland, transforming a diplomatic crisis into potential expanded US military presence that could alter geopolitical balance in the region.
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64 Articles •
Mexico and CIA Deny Alleged Assassinations of Cartel Members
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What happened: Mexico and the CIA rejected a CNN report published May 12 alleging CIA operatives, including the elite Ground Branch unit, directly participated in targeted killings of cartel members inside Mexico since last year. CNN cited anonymous sources claiming CIA involvement ranged from intelligence sharing to direct participation in attacks, including a March 28 car explosion that killed alleged Sinaloa Cartel member Francisco Beltrán near Mexico City.
Why it matters: The allegations strain US-Mexico relations and raise sovereignty concerns under Mexico's 2020 law requiring foreign agents to share information with the government. President Claudia Sheinbaum threatened sanctions after two Americans reportedly working for the CIA died in an April 19 crash following a raid in Chihuahua that federal officials weren't notified about, highlighting tensions over unauthorized operations on Mexican soil.
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29 Articles •
Aussie Musician Barred from US Over Girlfriend's Trump Post
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What happened: Australian musician Keli Holiday (Adam Hyde of Peking Duk) was detained and denied US re-entry at the Canada border on May 8 after Toronto shows, forcing him to cancel his New York performance and return to Australia. His entire touring party reportedly had visas revoked, though no official reason was given by authorities.
Why it matters: The incident highlights intensified US border scrutiny under new rules requiring five years of social media history from visa-exempt travelers, including Australians. Partner Abbie Chatfield's past controversial Trump post has sparked speculation about social media screening affecting entry decisions, raising concerns for Australian tourists and touring artists.
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