Friday, April 24, 2026

Singing truth to power: The best protest songs of the past 10 years

Singing truth to power: The best protest songs of the past 10 years
Copyright AP Photo - Canva

By David Mouriquand
Published on 

Musicians have always harnessed the power of music to protest war, inequality and oppression, in the aim of promoting positive change. Euronews Culture delves into the best protest songs of the last decade.

WARNING: This article contains language some may find offensive.

“All of that art-for-art’s-sake stuff is BS. What are these people talking about? Are you really telling me that Shakespeare and Aeschylus weren’t writing about kings? All good art is political! There is none that isn’t. And the ones that try hard not to be political are political by saying, ‘We love the status quo’.” - Toni Morrison -

Despite what some may very foolishly claim, culture and politics do go hand in hand. Art in all its forms is a mirror held up to the world, reflecting the troubled times we live in.

Music has seen its fair share of rebellion and resistance through protest songs, with musicians using their craft as tool to denounce, empower, motivate and inspire change

From Aretha Franklin to Rage Against The Machine, via Nina Simone, Fela Kuti, Bob Marley, Marvin Gaye, Bob Dylan, NWA, Public Enemy, Dead Kennedys, The Clash and Bikini Kill (to name but a few), the tradition of artists releasing politically and socially engaged songs is nothing new.

Those who declare that the age of the protest song peaked in the 1970s are not paying enough attention: the art of the protest song is alive and well today, with artists like System Of A Down, Run The Jewels, Kendrick Lamar and Fontaines D.C. continuing to voice their dissent in song. Only this year, we’ve had Bruce Springsteen releasing ‘Streets Of Minneapolis’, a protest song denouncing “King Trump and his private army” following the killing of Alex Pretti and Rennee Good by ICE agents; U2 putting out two politically charged EPs; and Massive Attack teaming up with Tom Waits to release one of the most powerful protest anthems of the 21st century.

Can music change the world? It certainly can awaken consciousness and empower those who do pay attention.

Here is our non-exhaustive list of the most impactful protest songs of the past 10 years – art from those who believe that music does have the power to change things for the better.

Beyoncé & Kendrick Lamar – Freedom (2016)

Ever since its release in 2016, this gospel-rock song has become an anthem for various social and political movements – most notably for the 2020 George Floyd protests and Kamala Harris’ 2024 presidential campaign. It’s a song about discrimination and prejudice, one which opposes oppression in all its forms. When Beyoncé sings: “I can’t move”, the line echoes “I can’t breathe” - Eric Garner’s final words before being choked to death by the police. According to a 2020 New York Times investigation, those three words were used by more than 70 people who died in US police custody.

Key lyrics: “Freedom / Freedom / I can't move / Freedom, cut me loose”

Pussy Riot – Putin Lights Up The Fires (2016)

Russian feminist punk rock collective Pussy Riot have revolted against oppression, homophobia, sexism, and were one of the first groups to take aim at Vladimir Putin. Many of their songs call out Putin (‘Organs’ and ‘Putin Has Pissed Himself’ spring to mind), and ‘Putin Lights Up The Fires’ stands out as a punk anthem that Bikini Kill would have been proud of. More impressively, the collective has made it abundantly clear that even in the face of jail sentences, staying quiet is not an option.

Key lyrics: (Translated) "The country is going to the streets with audacity / The country is going to say goodbye to the regime / The country is a wedge of feminists / And Putin is going"

Kae Tempest – Europe Is Lost (2016)

In ‘Europe Is Lost’, Kae Tempest creates a sharp and hard-hitting call to arms. It’s a cry to end apathy and “thoughts and prayers” armchair activism. Faced with the chaos of the world, they call out hard truths as well as our hypocrisy when confronted with despair happening right in front of us. It’s a perfect companion piece to their 2019 song ‘People’s Faces’ - a heart-ripping track about broken Britain, the ills of Brexit and the solace that can be found in people’s faces

Key lyrics: “Meanwhile the people were dead in their droves / And no, nobody noticed / Well, some of them noticed / You could tell by the emoji they posted”

Anohni – Drone Bomb Me (2016)

A powerful yet delicate song dealing with geopolitics, drone warfare, and the destruction of humanity, 'Drone Bomb Me' is an ode to a young Afghani girl whose family has been killed. The song chronicles how she now wants the same fate. It features on the aptly titled album 'Hopelessness', which also contains the song ‘4 Degrees’ - an engaged track about our hypocrisy when faced with climate change.

Key lyrics: “Drone bomb me / Blow me from the mountains / And into the sea”

Nadine Shah – Out The Way (2017)

Featuring on her politically charged third album ‘Holiday Destination’ (the follow-up to the gorgeous ‘Fast Food’), ‘Out The Way’ deals with nationalism and the right wing demonisation of immigrants. Shah, a second generation immigrant herself, manages to make her confrontational songs both powerful and melodically stunning, calling out dehumanisation in the most meaningful of ways.

Key lyrics: “You say "Out the way! Out the way! Out!" / Where would you have me go? / I'm second generation, don't you know?”

Hurray For The Riff Raff – Pa’lante (2017)

Derived from the Spanish phrase "para adelante" ("onwards"), this song – the penultimate track on the must-hear ‘The Navigator’ - is Alynda Segarra’s rousing call to perseverance. The singer, of Puerto Rican heritage, calls out the systemic oppression and cultural erasure of Puerto Ricans. It’s a cry for hope in the face of economic, cultural and environmental damage, and it also happens to be utterly mesmerising. If ever you have the opportunity to see Hurray For The Riff Raff live, there’s a chance the set closer will be ‘Pa’lante’. Prepare to get goosebumps.

Key lyrics: “Colonized, and hypnotized, be something / Sterilized, dehumanized, be something / Well, take your pay / And stay out the way, be something / Ah, do your best / But fuck the rest, be something”

Kneecap – C.E.A.R.T.A. (2017)

Irish rappers Kneecap released their first single in 2017, the title meaning “rights”. The story goes that a band member and his mate spray painted the word on a bus stop. When arrested by the police, the “peelers” made them spend a night locked up after refusing to speak English. The incident is documented in the song, as well as in the fantastic film Kneecap. ‘C.E.A.R.T.A’ was banned by certain radio stations, but that didn’t stop the track from putting the band on the map. It didn’t hurt that the song’s popularity coincided with the push for the Irish Language Act in the British parliament – which aimed to officially recognize and protect the Irish language.

Key lyrics: (Translated) “I don't give a fuck about any Garda / A lit joint, I'm too fast / You won't see me standing too long”

Childish Gambino – This Is America (2018)

Donald Glover, performing under Childish Gambino, released this catchy but politically charged song in 2018. It addresses Black life in America, calls out entrenched racism and opposes the violence that decries from prejudice. These themes are best heard and seen in the arresting music video, which is symbolically-loaded. With every year that passes in the US, its message continues to grow as a pertinent state of the union.

Key lyrics: “This is America / Don't catch you slippin' now / Look at how I'm livin' now / Police be trippin' now”

Angèle – Balance Ton Quoi (2019)

In the wake of the #MeToo movement (#BalanceTonPorc in French - ‘Squeal on your pig’), Belgian singer Angèle released a candid track which commented on the misogyny that women are faced with in daily life. Her lyrics denounce how women are still being treated as inferior citizens, and the cover for the single saw Angèle wearing a t-shirt that read: “Women need more sleep than men because fighting the patriarchy is exhausting.”

Key lyrics: (Translated) “People say to me, implicitly: ‘For a pretty girl, you're not that dumb’ / ‘For a funny girl, you're not that ugly’ / ‘Your parents and your brother help, they must be useful”

H.E.R. - I Can’t Breathe (2020)

H.E.R. won the Grammy for Song of the Year and the MTV Video Music Award for Video For Good for ‘I Can’t Breathe’ - a mournful track that calls for change in the face of repeated tragedy. The title and the lyrics refer to police brutality and the institutionalised racism at the heart of the US. It’s an eloquent and direct protest song, matched by its music video, which shows footage of different marches around the world protesting police violence and racism. The video also pays tribute to victims of police brutality by naming victims, including George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery and Philando Castile.

Key lyrics: “All of the names you refuse to remember / Was somebody’s brother, friend / Or a son to a mother that’s crying, saying / I can’t breathe, you’re taking my life from me”

Run The Jewels – A Few Words For The Firing Squad (Radiation) (2020)

Run The Jewels have never shied away from making a powerful political statement, and this final song on their stellar fourth album ‘RTJ4’ is another example of their dexterous lyricism and engaged spirit. It's a fiery condemnation of oppression and a call for society to evolve, with the track’s title referring to the tradition of the final words before an execution. The words ‘firing squad’ heavily imply that the person is about to be killed by a repressive regime. Many of the lyrics allude to past protest songs, including the line about bodies hung like “strange fruit” - a callback to Billie Holiday’s civil rights song about the lynching of Black people in the US.

Key lyrics: “This is for the do-gooders that the no-gooders used and then abused / For the truth tellers tied to the whippin' post, left beaten, battered, bruised / For the ones whose body hung from a tree like a piece of strange fruit / Go hard, last words to the firing squad was, "Fuck you too"

Fiona Apple – Under The Table (2020)

The incomparable Fiona Apple has long called out sexist behaviours, complex social relationships and gender inequalities in her songs. In 2017, she even released an anti-Trump song, ‘Tiny Hands’, in honour of the Women’s March on Washington. Three years later, she gave us her masterpiece, the LP titled ‘Fetch The Bolt Cutters’, which featured haunting songs about refusing to stay silent and the possibility of liberation after abuse. ‘Under The Table’ is one of these songs – a passionate call for rejecting the social and cultural expectations routinely imposed on women.

Key lyrics: “Kick me under the table all you want / I won't shut up / I won't shut up”

Bob Vylan – We Live Here (2020)

“This place has got so ugly / But this is my fucking country / And it’s never been fucking lovely.” This intense track from controversial British punk-rap duo Bob Vylan was released during the summer of the Black Lives Matter protest, and takes a wrecking ball to the archetypical depictions of Britain as a supposedly tolerant nation. It paints the picture of a country that is broken and still plagued by racial abuse.

Key lyrics: “Strong black man in the making / Hated by the place I was made in / This country is finished, but they're proud to be British / Who are they kidding?”

Shervin Hajipour – Baraye (2022)

In 2022, Iranian singer Shervin Hajipour shared his song ‘Baraye’ with the world via an Instagram post. The song was recorded in response to the protests ignited by the tragic death of Mahsa Amini, the 22-year-old woman who was arrested by Iran’s morality police for allegedly not wearing her hijab properly. She died from injuries sustained during her incarceration. ‘Baraye’ became an anthem for the Woman, Life, Freedom protest movement. The powerful song made history in 2023 for becoming the first winner of the new Grammy category ‘Best Song for Social Change’. Announcing the winner, then-US First Lady Jill Biden described the song as a “powerful and poetic call for freedom and women’s rights.” A year later, Hajipour was sentenced to 3 years and 8 months for "encouraging and provoking the public to riot to disrupt national security". Thankfully, he received a pardon.

Key lyrics: (Translated) “For the tired and sleepless nerves / For men, homeland, eternity / For the girl who wanted a boy / or woman, life, freedom / For freedom / For freedom”

Fontaines D.C. - I Love You (2022)

Like Kneecap, Irish post-punkers Fontaines D.C. have continued to express their anger at modern day politics and the fresh scars of history, as well as their solidarity for Palestinians facing genocide. Described by frontman Grian Chatten as the band’s first “overtly political song”, ‘I Love You’ is a gorgeous track that contains multitudes. On the surface, it seems like an ode to a lover. However, it becomes clear that the song is about Ireland, a protest track describing abandoned youth amidst political uncertainty. Both specific in its call for change in Ireland and universal in the way it describes the heavy emotions linked to the realisation you can never return to the same place you once loved, ‘I Love You’ is a modern masterpiece in the pantheon of protest songs.

Key lyrics: “Selling genocide and half-cut pride, I understand / I had to be there from the start, I had to be the fucking man / It was a clamber of the life, I sucked the ring off every hand / Had 'em plying me with drink, even met with their demands”

Rina Sawayama – This Hell (2022)

‘This Hell’ is the sound of Japanese-British singer Rina Sawayama opposing religious extremists who violently target the queer community. Taken from her second studio album ‘Hold The Girl’, Sawayama winds up homophobes, denouncing hatred and bigotry in her empowering LGBTQ anthem. Upon the song's release, during gay pride month, Sawayama stated that she "wanted to write a western pop song that celebrated COMMUNITY and LOVE in a time where the world seemed hellish."

Key lyrics: “Don't know what I did, but they seem pretty mad about it / God hates us? Alright then / Buckle up, at dawn we're riding”

Iyah May – Karmageddon (2025)

Australian singer and former emergency room doctor Iyah May has garnered much attention and controversy over ‘Karmageddon’, which has become a viral hit on social media. The song - one of the most divisive on this list - reportedly led her management to drop her because she refused to change certain lyrics. Some of these denounce big pharma, cancel culture, violence against women, gun rights, a “man-made virus” (in reference to COVID) and genocide. It’s a scattergun approach to a myriad of topics. Some have applauded her for her DGAF candidness; others bemoan that the song has been embraced by the far-right.

Key lyrics: “Diss tracks about beating up your queen / While women dying doesn't cause a scene / While we're fed all these distractions / Kids are killed from Israel's actions”

Massive Attack & Tom Waits – Boots On The Ground (2026)

This year has seen the release of several protest songs - whether it’s Bruce Springsteen flipping the bird to Trump and paying tribute to the victims of ICE or U2 releasing a politically-charged EP addressing both how “America will rise against the people of the lie” and how one can live compassionately in times of violence. Arguably the most powerful one (so far) has come from British trip-hop icons Massive Attack and legendary American singer-songwriter Tom Waits, who teamed up for ‘Boots On The Ground’. Both a missile aimed at the criminal actions of ICE and the wider state of play ("Across the western hemisphere, state authoritarianism and the militarisation of police forces are fusing again with neo-fascist politics"), the song is uniquely haunting and undeniably impactful. The track was accompanied by a stirring video, made with the work of photo artist thefinaleye. When artists of this caliber deliver songs this rousing, it gives you hope that humanity isn’t completely doomed.

Key lyrics: “Now who the hell are these federal pricks? / Hiding in the Senate like a bloated-ass tick / Air-conditioned fuckstick loafers / Sittin' in a room full of army posters”

World’s largest condom maker warns prices could rise as the Iran war impacts supply chains

Condom prices set to rise as Iran war disrupts supply chains.
Copyright Canva/Cleared

By Marta Iraola Iribarren
Published on 

Karex, the world’s largest condom producer, says shipping disruptions and increased manufacturing costs caused by the Iran war are upping prices.

The world’s largest condom manufacturer, the Malaysian company Karex, has said it will need to raise its prices by 20% to 30% if supply chain disruptions caused by the Iran war continue.

The company has seen an increase in condom demand after transport costs and shipping delays have depleted customers’ stockpiles, Karex’s CEO, Goh Miah Kiat, told the news agency Reuters in an interview.

Karex produces more than five billion condoms annually and exports to over 130 countries worldwide. It supplies some of the biggest condom brands, including Durex and Trojan.

They also supply the United Kingdom’s National Health Service (NHS) and health organisations such as the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, and the United Nations Popul

“The situation is definitely very fragile, prices are expensive. We have no choice but to transfer the costs right now to the customers,” Goh said.

Shipments on their way to Europe and the United States are taking almost two months to arrive, while others are stuck on vessels unable to reach their destination, the company said.

How are condoms made?

Since the war began in February 2026, Karex has seen costs increase for synthetic rubber and nitrile used in manufacturing condoms, packaging materials, and lubricants such as aluminium foils and silicone oil, Goh said.

Most condoms are made from natural rubber, the sap from rubber trees. Non-latex variants are often made with nitrile and polyurethane.

Supply chains for petrochemical derivatives have been affected by transport disruptions linked to the conflict’s impact on flows through the Strait of Hormuz.

Aluminium and naphtha suppliers –materials used in condom packaging– have also reported disruptions.

Global condom shortages

The global market of condoms was already experiencing shortages due to the dismantling of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), which was the largest bilateral donor to global family planning and reproductive health.

The agency provided 35% of the contraceptives within global family planning supply chains and supplied commodities to 23 countries.

Countries in Africa and the Middle East, the main receivers of USAID have reported shortages in sexual health products since the agency stopped its work.

Nigeria reported a 55% decline in male condom distribution between December 2024 and March 2025, according to the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS.

According to Goh, Karex has enough supplies for the next few months and is looking to boost output to meet growing demand.

Euronews has contacted Karex for comment.



Mideast war weighs on parent of Durex condoms


By AFP
April 22, 2026


Petrochemical-linked materials including ammonia, ethanol and silicone oil are used in the making and packaging of condoms - Copyright AFP Charly TRIBALLEAU

Reckitt Benckiser, the British supplier of health and hygiene products including Durex condoms, said Wednesday that soaring oil prices caused by the Middle East war could cost it up to £150 million ($203 million).

Reckitt, whose brands also include Dettol surface cleaner and Nurofen painkillers, revealed the fallout in a first-quarter trading update.

“Modelling a scenario of oil at $110 a barrel for the remainder of 2026 indicates a £130 million to £150 million gross impact on our input cost base… which we see as a manageable level,” it said.

Petrochemical-linked materials including ammonia, ethanol and silicone oil are used in the making and packaging of condoms, according to Bloomberg News.

The financial newswire added in a report Wednesday that the Malaysian company Karex, which makes 20 percent of the world’s condoms, including for Durex, is preparing to raise its prices by up to 30 percent because of the war’s impact.


QatarEnergy launches first LNG exports from $10bn Golden Pass project in Texas

An LNG carrier departs the Golden Pass terminal in Texas on its first export shipment.
Copyright QatarEnergy

By Mohamed Elashi
Published on 

QatarEnergy has launched the first LNG exports from its Golden Pass project in Texas, deepening its presence in the US and strengthening its position in global gas markets.

QatarEnergy has launched its first liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports from the Golden Pass project in Texas, marking a milestone in its largest US investment

The cargo was loaded at the Sabine Pass facility, a joint venture with ExxonMobil, as the project moves towards full commercial operations.

The shipment was carried onboard the Al-Qaiyyah LNG carrier, which has a capacity of 174,000 cubic metres.

“This is a significant industry milestone that marks a new chapter in QatarEnergy's global efforts to meet rising LNG demand and ensure reliable supplies to international markets,” said Saad Sherida Al-Kaabi, Qatar's Minister of State for Energy Affairs and CEO of QatarEnergy.

The LNG carrier is loaded at the Golden Pass facility in Sabine Pass, Texas. QatarEnergy

Golden Pass LNG is a project valued at more than $10 billion (€8.5 billion), in which QatarEnergy holds a 70% stake and ExxonMobil 30%. It is expected to produce around 18 million tonnes per annum once fully operational.

The Golden Pass export facility reached a major milestone in late March 2026 by successfully producing its first LNG from Train 1 — the first of three independent processing units. This marks the start of the project’s phased rollout, with the remaining two liquefaction units scheduled to begin operations across 2026 and 2027.

It is one of the largest LNG export developments in the United States and is part of QatarEnergy's efforts to expand its LNG portfolio beyond Qatar, alongside its North Field expansion, which aims to raise domestic production capacity to 142 million tonnes per year by 2030.

The United States is currently the world's largest LNG exporter, and the Golden Pass project gives QatarEnergy direct access to export capacity from the US Gulf Coast, where shipments can reach both European and Asian markets.

The project also comes as global LNG demand remains strong, particularly in Europe and Asia, keeping pressure on new supply.

QatarEnergy Trading, the company’s LNG marketing arm, is expected to take around 70% of output.

Record numbers of foreign doctors fill Spain's healthcare gaps. But is it enough?

Mbaye Baacar Diouf, 33, dressed in his nurse's uniform, walks through Basurto hospital in Bilbao, northern Spain, 18 November 2020.
Copyright Copyright 2019 The Associated Press. All rights reserved


By Rafael Salido
Published on 

Medical degrees account for almost 80% of the homologations of foreign studies in Spain. The government defends the system as a response to demand, while professionals warn that the problem is not a lack of doctors, but working conditions and planning.

Spain validated 65,319 foreign university degrees in 2025 — 76.3% of all academic recognition decisions issued that year — according to a new report from the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities.

Of those, a record 30,303 were medical degrees, making healthcare the single biggest beneficiary of Spain's overhauled degree recognition system.

The figures highlight a broader trend across Europe: as ageing populations strain public health systems, governments are turning to internationally trained professionals to fill critical gaps. Spain's numbers are striking in scale — nearly 80% of all professional-category approvals went to doctors, far outpacing nurses (8.1%), health psychologists (3.1%), and physiotherapists (2.1%).

"Migration is an economic driver, a driver of knowledge and a driver of social transformation. That is why we are committed to the regularisation of immigrants and why we are also committed to improving the accreditation system," said the Minister of Science, Innovation and Universities, Diana Morant, quoted in a press release .

The government argues that unblocking the system is a question of justice and economic efficiency. The Ministry has managed to reduce the stock of pending applications from 122,890 to 72,337 files between October 2024 and March 2026, a fall of 41.1%. Moreover, for the first time since 2014, more applications were resolved than were registered.

Good working conditions?

However, the growing weight of foreign doctors reopens a fundamental debate on health planning. For Manuel Martínez-Sellés, president of the Official College of Doctors of Madrid (ICOMEM), the key is not the absolute number of professionals available on the market.

"There is a growing structural demand for doctors due to the ageing of the population, the increase in chronic illnesses and the expansion of health services," he explained to Euronews via email. However, he warned of a historical problem. "For years, there has been a certain bottleneck in internal training: the number of MIR places has not grown at the same rate as the needs of the system".

Martínez-Sellés insists that standardisation should not become an alibi to avoid pending reforms.

"If the conditions offered were adequate, there would be no problem of a lack of doctors," he said, although he acknowledges that the same conditions that may not seem sufficient to a Spanish professional may be attractive to professionals from other countries.

If the conditions offered were adequate, there would be no problem of a shortage of doctors.
 Manuel Martínez-Sellés 
President of ICOMEM

In his opinion, the recruitment of foreign doctors "can alleviate tensions in the short term", especially in areas suffering from a critical shortage, but "does not in itself constitute a structural solution".

The ministerial report confirms that most of the approvals come from Latin America. Colombia is the country with the second highest number of favourable resolutions (16,924), followed by Venezuela, Cuba and Argentina. In this regard, Martínez-Sellés stresses that the common language and the possibility of starting the process telematically without residing in Spain are key factors when embarking on this process.

How does the sector view the arrival of foreign professionals?

In response to criticism of a possible lowering of standards, the president of ICOMEM is categorical.

"The quality of medical training varies from country to country, but accreditation processes exist precisely to ensure that professionals meet equivalent standards," he said, adding that questioning the origin of doctors is a mistake, and the focus should be on the transparency and rigour of the system.

"The incorporation of foreign talent should be seen as a complementary measure within a broader strategy that includes long-term planning," Martínez-Sellés said.

That tends to be the general opinion in a profession that, in general, seems to have welcomed newcomers with open arms. That, at least, is the case of Bulgarian Vangeliya Blagoeva Atanasova, who decided years ago to move to Madrid with her husband, a Spaniard who is also a doctor, for reasons of family reconciliation.

My experience has been excellent, in terms of the welcome I have received from my colleagues.
 Vangeliya Blagoeva Atanasova 
Specialist in Obstetrics and Gynaecology

"My experience has been excellent, in the sense of being welcomed by my colleagues", this specialist in Gynaecology and Obstetrics, who is currently working at the Gregorio Marañón Maternity and Children's Hospital, told Euronews. "I think it is a universal thing here, from what I have spoken to other foreign colleagues".

The problem, Martínez-Sellés stresses, lies at a structural level. "There is not a lack of doctors, but rather a lack of doctors willing to work in certain conditions that are unacceptable." The president of the Official College of Doctors of Madrid points to the precariousness, seasonality and work overload that, paradoxically, push many Spanish professionals to emigrate.

The government plans to standardise the six-month legal deadlines by 2027 and to create a National Office for Academic Recognition. In the meantime, the debate remains open: are homologations a necessary solution to strengthen the healthcare system or are they just a stopgap that does not replace a profound reform of working conditions and long-term planning?

Eurovision crisis: Slovenia to broadcast films about Palestine instead of this year's Eurovision

Slovenia to broadcast films about Palestine instead of Eurovision
Copyright AP Photo

By David Mouriquand
Published on 

Slovenia joins Ireland and Spain in not broadcasting this year’s Eurovision Song Contest after a decision to boycott the live event over Israel’s participation.

Slovenia’s national broadcaster RTV Slovenia has confirmed it won’t air this year’s Eurovision Song Contest after the country previously pulled out of the event over Israel’s participation.

Instead of broadcasting the world’s largest live music event, they will show a series of films about Palestine.

“We will not be broadcasting the Eurovision Song Contest,” Ksenija Horvat, RTV Slovenia director told AP. “We will be airing the film series ‘Voices of Palestine,’ featuring Palestinian documentaries and feature films.”

Slovenia stands alongside Ireland, Spain, the Netherlands and Iceland in refusing to take part in this year’s 70th edition of the competition due to the EBU allowing Israel to compete despite criticisms of its conduct in the war in Gaza.

Spain’s RTVE reiterated its decision not to air Eurovision last week – a first since 1961 - and Ireland’s public broadcaster RTÉ announced last December it would neither broadcast nor participate in the event.

As for the Netherlands and Iceland, Eurovision will be shown on their respective national broadcasters, NPO and RÚV.

This year’s competition, Eurovision’s 70th anniversary, will have 35 competing countries and is scheduled to take place in Vienna from 12-16 May. Despite their slogan “United by Music”, this year’s Eurovision is without a doubt the most controversial edition yet. The event has been accused of hypocrisy for allowing Israel to take part, as Russia has been barred from Eurovision since 2022, after its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Slovenia’s announcement comes days after thousands of artists including Massive Attack, Kneecap, Mogwai, Brian Eno, Sigur Rós and Nadine Shah signed an open letter calling for fans to boycott the event.

“As musicians and cultural workers, many living within the reaches of the [EBU], we reject Eurovision being used to whitewash and normalise Israel’s genocide, siege and brutal military occupation against Palestinians,” the letter, organised by No Music for Genocide and the BDS movement, said.

“We stand in solidarity with Palestinian calls for public broadcasters, performers, screening party organisers, crew, and fans to boycott Eurovision until the EBU bans complicit Israeli broadcaster KAN.”

Israel has consistently denied that it is committing genocide in Gaza. However, in September 2025, a UN inquiry concluded that Israel is committing genocide.

Eurovision is the world’s biggest music event, attracting 166 million viewers last year. This year’s 70th edition is set to take place in Vienna, Austria. The final will be on 16 May 2026.

Iran's exiled crown prince Reza Pahlavi splattered with red liquid in Berlin

By Nela Heidner & Gavin Blackburn

Published on 

The alleged perpetrator, whose name was not released in line with German privacy rules, was immediately detained by police.

Iran's exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi was splattered with red liquid on Thursday as he left a building in Berlin.

Pahlavi had just departed a news briefing, during which he criticised the ceasefire between the United States and Iran, when the incident occurred outside Germany’s federal news conference building.

He appeared unhurt by the liquid coating the back of his jacket and neck and waved to his supporters before he got into a car that drove away. Police said the liquid appeared to be tomato juice.

The alleged perpetrator, whose name was not released in line with German privacy rules, was immediately detained by police.

Pahlavi, 65, is the son of Iran's former shah, who was so widely hated that millions took to the streets in 1979 to force him from power.

Nevertheless, Pahlavi is trying to position himself as a player in his country’s future, though it's unclear how much support he has in Iran after he has been in exile for nearly 50 years.

Hundreds of his supporters demonstrated on Thursday near Germany's parliament building, according to German news agency dpa.

Pahlavi, who was not invited to meet with any government representatives during his visit to Berlin, argued on Thursday that the ceasefire agreement assumes the Iranian government’s behaviour will change and "you're going to deal with people who all of a sudden have become pragmatists."

"I don't see that happening," he said. "I'm not saying that diplomacy should not be given a chance, but I think diplomacy has been given enough chance."

Pahlavi is jockeying for a return to power should the Shia theocracy fall and has supported the US-Israeli military intervention in the Middle East.

Supporters of Reza Pahlavi shout slogans outside the building where he held a news conference in Berlin, 23 April, 2026 AP Photo

Pahlavi in Berlin called on Europeans to do more to support Iranian people fighting for democracy.

He claimed 19 political prisoners were executed by Iranian authorities in the past two weeks and another 20 people have been sentenced to death.

"Will the free world do something or watch the slaughter in silence?" Pahlavi said.

Meanwhile, more than an hour after the incident, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz released a statement saying the government welcomes the extension of the ceasefire.

"This presents an important opportunity to resume diplomatic negotiations in Islamabad with the aim of making peace and averting further escalation of the war," the statement said. "Tehran should seize this opportunity."

Pentagon considers suspending Spain from NATO, leaked email suggests

FILE: Flags of NATO member countries flap in the wind outside at NATO headquarters in Brussels, 14 March 2024
Copyright AP Photo

By Shona Murray
Published on 

An internal Pentagon email has revealed US anger at Spain and other NATO allies over blocked bases for Iran strikes and hints at pressure over defence spending.

A leaked email suggests the Pentagon has outlined a set of options aimed at penalising NATO countries that rejected calls to assist in the Iran war, suspending Spain’s membership of NATO, as well as undermining US support for the UK's territorial control of the Falklands.

The internal email describes the well-vented frustration in Washington with some NATO countries for blocking US forces from using air bases in their territories to refuel military aircraft, and from their airspace while en route to bomb Iran.

The refusal for access to basing and overflight rights - known as ABO - is detailed in the email first reported by Reuters as being "just the absolute baseline for NATO", according to an unnamed official in the report.

Meanwhile, a senior NATO source has told Euronews that the tone expressed in the email is “not surprising” given US President Donald Trump’s “unhappiness with Europe, and particularly Spain".

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has been the most vocal European voice against the US-Israel war in Iran.

From the earliest days of the war, when other countries offered quiet endorsement of the strikes, Spain denied the US access to use jointly-operated military bases on Spanish territory, rebuking the attacks in Iran as “unjustified and dangerous military intervention”.

The NATO source points out that Trump’s frustration with Spain goes back to Sánchez ’s refusal to increase military spending from 2.1% of GDP to 5% in line with the commitment from all other NATO allies, for which Trump described Spain as a “laggard.” “They have no excuse not to do this, but that’s all right. Maybe you should throw them out of NATO, frankly,” he said soon after.

“It goes back to the political gamesmanship that Sánchez is deploying to appease his political base,” said the source. “They’re the only country which said they don’t need to spend 5% on defence,” the source told Euronews.

At Trump's request, NATO allies agreed to increase defence spending to a historic 5% of GDP by 2035 at the alliance’s annual leaders' summit in The Hague last year. But Madrid insists Spain can reach its capability targets by spending 2%.

Meanwhile, Sánchez shut down questions about the report saying the government relies on “official documents and positions, not informal communications", he told reporters at an EU leaders summit in Cyprus on Friday.

The Pentagon email, which is reportedly from the higher echelons of the US Department of Defence, also considers seeking retribution against the UK after British Prime Minister Keir Starmer publicly refused to join the war.

The email considers reassessing US diplomatic support for longstanding European "imperial possessions", such as the Falkland Islands near Argentina.

The US State Department has long endorsed the UK as the official administrator of the Falkland Islands, after the 1982 war which saw Britain reconquer the islands.

But Argentina has always claimed the islands as its own, and its current President Javier Milei is a close Trump supporter.

Experts say it’s not possible for Spain’s NATO membership to be suspended by the US, but that Trump’s frequent criticism of the 77-year-old transatlantic alliance is seriously damaging.

“You can’t kick people out of NATO unless there’s been a material breach of process, which in the case of Spain there is absolutely no evidence,” said former British Army Captain, Dr. Patrick Bury.

“But he’s [Trump] run NATO down so much, can it survive the next three years?" he told Euronews during a phone interview.

NATO countries were "well within their rights to refuse access to the military bases," he said.

“In 1986, during US action against Libya, both France and Spain closed their air bases to the US, so there is a precedent for them doing that,” he added.

“There was no consultation with NATO over this war, and Iran is not NATO territory,” said Bury, who is a lecturer specialising in warfare and counter-terrorism at Bath University, UK.

He also questioned the rationale for whoever leaked the document, positing whether its publication is part of a more comprehensive strategy by the US administration to do harm to NATO.

Trump's verbal attacks and threats to withdraw from NATO are ever more frequent since the war in Iran. He has since dismissed the alliance as a "paper tiger", and accused allies of leaving him stranded over Iran.

“The bigger question is who leaked this and why did they do it?” asked Bury.

“Was it part of a wider drive to run down NATO, or to send a message to allies to agree to do something regards the Strait of Hormuz?”

The Strait of Hormuz - one of the world's most important international shipping routes - has been shut down because of the war in Iran.

Iran initially blockaded the Strait to disrupt Western shipping supplies, triggering ongoing chaos and sky-high energy prices.

Since then, the US has initiated its own blockade, ensuring the waterway is fully closed for shipping to and from Iranian ports. Attempts to resolve the crisis through diplomatic channels led by Pakistan and Turkey remain stalled.

EU failure to sanction Israel weakens defence of Ukraine, warns Pedro Sánchez


By Jorge Liboreiro
Published on 

Spain's Pedro Sánchez has once again denounced what he calls the European Union's "double standard" between its willingnes to sanction Russia and its hesitancy to do the same with Israel.

The European Union's failure to sanction Israel over its military action in Gaza and Lebanon weakens the collective "credibility" and "legitimacy" to defend Ukraine against Russia's full-scale invasion, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has said.

"Something that is delegitimising us, not only in the eyes of the outside world but also in the eyes of our own societies, is this double standard, this double yardstick that Europe is using in Ukraine and the Middle East," Sánchez said on Friday.

His warning comes a few days after Spain's renewed push to terminate the EU-Israel Association Agreement in response to the deadly strikes against Lebanon was met with broad opposition from other EU member states. Germany and Italy, which are key to achieving the necessary qualified majority vote in favour of a partial suspension, remain on the fence.

Sánchez made the case to his fellow EU leaders during an informal summit in Cyprus, pointing to an internal review by Brussels that found Israel in breach of Article 2 of the Association Agreement, which imposes binding obligations to respect human rights.

The review was published last year in the context of Israel's war on Gaza, which precipitated a devastating humanitarian crisis and led to several proposals to sanction Israel, none of which were ever approved by EU member states. It did not cover Lebanon.

"We cannot remain united in supporting, as we should be, a people (in Ukraine) subjected to an attempted invasion and a challenge to their territorial integrity, and fail to do the same in the Middle East. Especially when we are talking about Lebanon, Palestine, Gaza and the West Bank," Sánchez said.

"Unfortunately, some governments are in favour, others are against," he went on.

"There is no unity on this issue, and the result is a weakening of the European Union's position, at least in terms of our political legitimacy and our credibility when it comes to defending fair causes like that of Ukraine."

The Spanish premier said the EU was founded as a "peace project" and should therefore speak up to demand "respect for international law".

"If we don't, it becomes the law of the strongest, which is what we are witnessing. This leads to a weaker, much more insecure and more uncertain world," he said, referring to the US-Israeli decision to strike Iran, which he has repeatedly denounced as "illegal".

"In the end, that comes with a price in terms of lives, the displacement of refugees and, of course, the economic consequences that, unfortunately, all governments are now facing as a result of unilateral and illegal decisions made by third countries."

Israel has long contested the Spanish criticism, arguing its military offensives in Gaza and Lebanon were designed to eliminate the threats posed by Hamas and Hezbollah, respectively, both of which are backed by Iran.

On Thursday, US President Donald Trump announced that a fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah had been extended by three weeks.

French President Emmanuel Macron, who also attended the summit in Cyprus, called on the EU to do more to safeguard Lebanon's "peace, stability and sovereignty".

European officials fear that a continued offensive against Lebanon would derail the government's arduous efforts to disarm Hezbollah and trigger a migratory wave.