Friday, June 05, 2026

NASA places ISS astronauts on evacuation alert as air leak worsens


NASA ordered astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) to shelter in their spacecraft and prepare for a possible evacuation on Friday after an air leak in the Russian module of the orbiting laboratory worsened, raising fresh concerns over a long-running technical problem.


Issued on: 05/06/2026 - 
NASA’s Crew-12 members, Russian cosmonaut Andrey Fedyaev, NASA astronauts Jack Hathaway, Jessica Meir, and ESA astronaut Sophie Adenot ahead of their launch to the International Space Station, in Cape Canaveral, Florida, US, February 13, 2026. © Steve Nesius, Reuters

Astronauts aboard the International Space ​Station were ordered by NASA to shelter in their spacecraft and prepare for potential evacuation on Friday as ​a ‌Russian crew attempts to fix ⁠a worsening leak of air on its portion of the ‌orbital laboratory, NASA said.

The four astronauts of ⁠NASA's Crew-12 mission on the station – two US astronauts, a French astronaut and Russian cosmonaut – ​got orders from NASA mission ‌control at 9:04 am ET Monday (1304 GMT) to enter their Crew Dragon spacecraft docked to the station ‌and don their spacesuits in case the air leak warrants ​an emergency evacuation, a NASA official said.
France eyes new space record with 9-month ISS mission for Sophie Adenot

© France 24
01:57

NASA and Russia's space agency Roscosmos, the station's two primary operators, ​have debated for months over the ​cause and potential fixes of small ​air leaks aboard Russia's Zvezda service module, a key structure of ​the football field-sized laboratory


The air leaks have been relatively minor in recent months but escalated on Monday from a pound of air per day ⁠to 2 pounds, according to a senior NASA official who ⁠asked ​not to be named.

(FRANCE 24 with Reuters)
French MPs approve tougher cadmium limits despite government opposition

France's parliament has overwhelmingly approved a bill to curb exposure to cadmium, a toxic heavy metal found in phosphate fertilisers, setting up a political clash with the government and raising fresh questions about France's links to Moroccan phosphate imports.


Issued on: 04/06/2026 - RFI

A French MP holds a placard reading "cadmium, poison" during a protest ahead of a debate at the National Assembly of their bill, which aims at limiting exposure to cadmium in Paris on 2 June, 2026. AFP - SIMON WOHLFAHRT

The draft law, adopted on Wednesday in the National Assembly by 144 votes to 22, sets out a faster timetable to reduce permitted cadmium levels in fertilisers used in agriculture.

The measure passed despite government opposition, with ministers warning that the pace of reduction could harm the competitiveness of French farming.

"There is an overexposure of the French population to cadmium compared to our European neighbours," junior ecology minister Mathieu Lefèvre said. However, he argued that "the pace of reduction… is not realistic" and risks undermining "our food sovereignty".

Food is a major source of cadmium exposure, particularly staple foods such as wheat and rice, a report by France's health agency Anses found. Prolonged exposure is linked to cancer, kidney damage, reproductive toxicity and bone fragility.

In 2025, nearly half of the French population exceeded recommended safety thresholds.



Moroccan deposits

The parliamentary vote has turned attention to the origins of cadmium in French agriculture, chiefly phosphate fertilisers, much of which are derived from Moroccan deposits.

A report by French investigative website Mediapart published in April highlighted tensions around this supply chain and focused on a €350 million loan granted in 2025 by the French Development Agency (AFD) to Morocco's state-owned fertiliser giant OCP.

The loan, the largest non-sovereign financing in the agency's history, was intended to support OCP's decarbonisation, including renewable energy and desalination projects.

Organic fruit on sale at a market in Toulouse, southwestern France. Organic farming is at the centre of a growing row over cadmium contamination in food. AFP - CHARLY TRIBALLEAU

However, the deal has come under scrutiny following the Anses report. The agency said phosphate rock used in fertilisers sold in France "mainly comes from sedimentary deposits located in Morocco", which contain significant levels of cadmium.

Benoît Biteau, a Green MP and one of the authors of the bill, argued that this dependency has direct health implications. Cadmium exposure levels are "two to three times higher in France" than elsewhere, he told Mediapart, attributing this to "our dependence on phosphate fertilisers from Moroccan deposits".

The AFD has defended the loan, saying fertilisers exported by OCP to the European Union are now labelled "low cadmium", with levels below 20 milligrams per kilogram, under both EU regulatory limits and Anses recommendations.

Loan scrutiny

An internal "second opinion" from risk experts, quoted by Mediapart, warned that the AFD's exposure to Morocco was already high. A staff member also raised concerns in 2025 about cadmium-related risks, writing that alerts to superiors and technical experts had been dismissed.

Despite these warnings, the loan was approved and partly disbursed. Details of the financing remain unclear, with the AFD citing banking secrecy. By April 2026, €200 million had already been paid out, according to the agency's own data.

Supporters of the deal say its purpose was environmental improvement. Frédéric Petit, a centrist MP who sits on the AFD board, said the financing "did not fund fertiliser production" but aimed to help decarbonise "Morocco's biggest emitter of greenhouse gases" and improve water management.

(with newswires)


France recognises role in pesticide harm across Caribbean islands


France's parliament has unanimously acknowledged the state's role in a pesticide scandal that contaminated most people in Guadeloupe and Martinique and has been linked to cancer and other health problems. The vote marks a significant moment in a decades-long fight over chlordecone, a toxic chemical that continued to be used in the French Caribbean after it was banned in mainland France.


Issued on: 04/06/2026 - RFI

Lawyer Harry Durimel, right, stands beside an activist holding a sign reading "No to chlordecone poison" during a protest in Les Abymes, Guadeloupe, 18 November 2007. AP - Dominique Chomereau-Lamotte

The lower house of parliament voted in favour of a bill saying "the state acknowledges its share of responsibility for the health-related, moral, environmental and economic harm suffered" by Guadeloupe, Martinique and their populations.

The Senate had already approved the measure.

Chlordecone, also known as Kepone, was used in banana plantations on the two islands from 1972 to 1993 to combat weevils. France banned it on the mainland in 1990 but continued to allow its use in Guadeloupe and Martinique for another three years despite warnings about its dangers.

More than 90 percent of adults on the two islands have been contaminated, France's national public health agency Santé Publique France said.

France's health and food safety agency Anses has found a probable link between chlordecone exposure and prostate cancer, while studies have also found harmful effects on the nervous and hormonal systems and on reproduction.


Recognition and reparations

The new law sets France the goal of decontaminating land and water polluted by chlordecone and seeks to compensate victims of the contamination.

Scientific research is to become a national priority, while support is also planned for fishermen and farmers affected by the pollution. The legislation also calls for further work on illnesses affecting women and for a government mission to define future reparations.

"With this text, which recognises the suffering of our populations, Parliament has carried out an act of legislative justice," Elie Califer, the Socialist lawmaker from Guadeloupe who introduced the bill, said.

More work remains to be done, he added. "It will still be necessary to fight to obtain full compensation."

Califer has also called for a dedicated fund for victims.

Not everyone felt the legislation went far enough. Fellow Guadeloupe lawmaker Olivier Serva said he was "not entirely satisfied" with the outcome.

"But we've come far, given that the state initially didn't even want to acknowledge its partial responsibility," Serva said.

Martinique official Serge Letchimy also welcomed the vote.

It had come "to shatter a system that tramples on the truth, absolves the guilty and scorns the victims", he said.

Anxiety and courts

One point of disagreement during parliamentary debates concerned recognition of the anxiety felt by residents worried about developing chlordecone-related illnesses. Senators added the provision to the bill, but it was later removed at the government's request.

The Paris appeal court recognised that burden in March 2025, acknowledging the mental suffering of residents living with fears about possible health consequences.

The court is due to decide on 22 June whether to reopen a criminal investigation into the scandal after magistrates closed the case in 2023, saying too much time had passed to secure convictions.

Chlordecone was banned worldwide in 2009 under the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants.
CRIMINAL ZIONISM

Israel strikes Lebanon after truce announcement

Beirut (Lebanon) (AFP) – Israel struck south Lebanon on Thursday and threatened new attacks on Beirut despite an announcement hours earlier that Israel and Lebanon had agreed to implement a conditional ceasefire.


Issued on: 04/06/2026 - RFI

Strikes on Lebanon have persisted despite a ceasefire. © - / AFP

Israeli and Lebanese envoys held a fourth round of talks in Washington on Wednesday, agreeing to implement a ceasefire hinged on Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah halting its attacks.

But Hezbollah, which rejects the direct Israel-Lebanon talks, has not commented on the announcement, while Israel's Defence Minister Israel Katz said military operations would continue in south Lebanon.

Hezbollah drew Lebanon into the wider Middle East war to avenge the killing in US-Israeli strikes of Iran's supreme leader on February 28, and has vowed to keep fighting despite a push by the Lebanese government to disarm it.

Despite the agreement in Washington, Katz said Israeli forces retained the "freedom of action, with American backing, to strike in Beirut in response to fire on Israeli communities and territory".

The army will "at this stage, continue its fire and ground operations, remain in the security zone in Lebanon up to the Yellow Line – including in the Beaufort area – and without the return of the population, while continuing to dismantle terrorist infrastructure on the ground," he said.

An April 17 truce was meant to halt the fighting and was extended several times but has never been observed, with both sides justifying their ongoing attacks by the other's alleged violations.

Lebanon's state-run National News Agency (NNA) reported strikes along roads at several southern locations on Thursday, with a couple and their daughter wounded in an attack on their car.

Yemen edges closer to collapse after a decade of war and neglect, UN warns


'Serious mistake'

Israel's military renewed a warning to Lebanese not to go south of the Zahrani River around 45 kilometres (28 miles), after it last week declared all areas south the river "combat zones".

Earlier Thursday, the Israeli military said air raid sirens were sounded in northern Israel, with one incident involving a "suspicious aerial target" resolved, while another incident was found to be a false alarm.

Before the announcement, Hezbollah said it had launched rockets and drones early Thursday at Israeli troops who have invaded south Lebanon.

Israel's far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir criticised the deal, calling it a "serious mistake".


Israeli and Lebanese envoys held talks in Washington © Oliver Contreras / AFP


According statement issued after the meeting, the two sides, which do not have formal diplomatic relations, also agreed to create "pilot zones" in which the Lebanese armed forces "will take exclusive control of the territory to the exclusion of all non-state actors".

More Lebanon-Israel talks are scheduled for later this month.

Senior Hezbollah official Mahmud Qomati had told AFP this week that the group would "not accept a partial ceasefire".

On Wednesday, US President Donald Trump said he wanted to separate talks on the conflict in Lebanon and those on the war with Iran.

Tehran, however, insists the conflicts are linked and its Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi warned that any attack on Beirut would trigger a "full-scale resumption" of war.

Lebanon says Israeli attacks have killed more than 3,500 people since Hezbollah drew Lebanon into the wider Middle East war on 2 March, firing rockets at Israel in retaliation for US-Israeli strikes that killed Iran's supreme leader.


France opens torture, 'war crime' probe over Israel's treatment of Gaza flotilla activists


France's government had earlier asked prosecutors to investigate Israel's alleged violent mistreatment of activists from the Gaza-bound Global Sumud Flotilla, potentially opening a route for criminal proceedings.


Issued on: 05/06/2026
By: FRANCE 24

French activists from the Gaza-bound Global Sumud Flotilla gesture upon arrival at Charles de Gaulle Airport near Paris, on May 22, 2026. © Abdul Saboor, Reuters

 

France accused of ‘climate denial’ as green funding quietly shrinks following blistering heatwave

 Tourists use an umbrella as they walk an alley of the Trocadero gardens during a hot day Monday, Aug. 11, 2025, in Paris.
Copyright Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


By Liam Gilliver
Published on


France’s green party leader Marine Tondelier has dubbed the government “incompetent” as attention turns to its flagship climate fund.

France’s dwindling climate funds have been thrown into the limelight, following the country’s record-breaking May heat.

Last month, the country sweltered under a powerful heat dome, with weather agency Météo France declaring that new monthly highs had been logged at 352 weather stations. The highest temperature of 37.1°C was registered near Hossegor, close to Biarritz, on Monday 25 May.

The unusually scorching temperatures were linked to a slew of deaths, including a 53-year-old runner who died during a race in Paris.

Scientists say the “unprecedented” heatwave had a one in 1,000 chance of happening at this time of the year, based on records dating back to 1979. But one expert warns that the intense heat has “the fingerprints of climate change all over it”.

Friederike Otto, a professor of Climate Science at Imperial College London, says the science is very clear: “Climate change makes these heatwaves hotter, longer and far more frequent.

“The climate we’re living in today is simply not the one we grew up with, and our buildings and infrastructure are woefully unprepared for what’s next.”

Was France prepared for the heatwave?

France has been bracing for extreme heat for years, particularly in cities like Paris that often fall victim to the urban heat island effect. This is where city infrastructure such as concrete and asphalt absorbs heat, keeping outdoor temperatures high.

In 2023, the ‘Paris at 50°C’ initiative saw two arrondissements help prepare residents for a future of intense heat by bringing together urban planners, health experts, scientists and public authorities to assess vulnerabilities across key sectors including housing, healthcare, energy and public space.

A review of the exercise found that extreme heat poses a serious threat to public health in France, particularly among vulnerable communities. Infrastructure such as the metro and rail lines was also found to be at risk from rising temperatures.

Efforts to remove heat-trapping materials such as asphalt and parking spaces have transformed Paris in recent years, paving the way for more trees and plants that provide shade and help improve air quality.

The country’s flagship Green Fund has been helping communities to adapt to climate change, already providing financial support to more than 25,000 projects carried out by more than 13,000 actors in the territories, including more than 11,000 municipalities in continental France and overseas.

France accused of ‘climate denial’

The Green Fund’s commitment represents €4.5 billion in state subsidies and covers energy renovation of local public buildings, improvement of air quality, prevention of floods and restoration of nature.

However, the fund’s budget has been quietly shrinking - decreasing from €2.4 billion in 2024 to €873 million in 2026.

Marine Tondelier, leader of the country’s green party, shared a screenshot of an article from French news organisation Contexte, which states the Green Fund has seen its spending authorisation cut by €163 million, or almost 20 per cent of the initial budget.

“After demonstrating its complete lack of preparedness during the eight days of a historic heatwave, here are the government's climate change adaptation measures,” the politician wrote on X (formerly Twitter).

“This level of incompetence and stubbornness in the wrong direction amounts to climate denial.”

Back in April, France announced it was looking to slash €4 billion in spending this year to keep its public finances under control, following the economic fallout from the war on Iran.

According to Le Monde, the €163 million cut to the Green Fund could be released later in the year if needed – or cancelled outright.

 

Regenerative farms lost three times less yield in France's droughts. Here's why

Pieces of wheat are seen in a field in Saint Sulpice la Foret, western France, June 1, 2011., during drought.
Copyright AP Photo/Vincent Michel

By Angela Symons
Published on

Regenerative farming could save enough wheat during drought to produce 130 million baguettes, according to a new French study.

Faced with skyrocketing costs, supply shortages and extreme weather, Europe’s farmers are in crisis.

With a hot summer looming, fuelled by human-caused climate change, drought is likely to take grip on the continent, further threatening food supplies and livelihoods.

New data gathered on drought-hit French farmland reveals that the most promising solution could also be the greenest one.

In a study of more than 1,200 farms across the country, early findings show that highly regenerative farms recorded an eight per cent drop in crop yields compared with 22 per cent on their least regenerative counterparts following the 2023 droughts.

The early findings give weight to an argument long touted by regenerative farming advocates that, while initial costs may be higher than conventional farming methods, it pays dividends.

Regenerative farming creates drought resilience for cereal crops

The study, carried out by Soil Capital – a B Corp that works with farmers to support the transition to more resilient and regenerative systems – in partnership with KU Leuven university in Belgium, draws on independently verified field data from 1,262 farms across 331,600 hectares in France between 2021 and 2024.

Combining information on farming practices, yields and soil conditions, it moves beyond single-farm studies and theoretical modelling to demonstrate how regenerative agriculture can help protect production.

The resilience against drought witnessed in the most detailed regional analysis was reflected in the countrywide data, particularly across France’s most widely grown crops: cereals.

Within drought-hit cereal-growing regions – which accounted for 82 of France’s 96 departments in the study period – regenerative practices reduced drought-related yield losses by at least 10 per cent in around 85 per cent of cases. Other potential drivers such as soil type were accounted for.

The study’s first academic partner, Professor Erik Mathijs, head of agricultural, food and resource economics at KU Leuven, says the dataset fills a long-standing gap in the research: “What has held us all back is the lack of robust field-level data across large geographies and multiple successive years. Soil Capital’s dataset is unusually strong in this regard.”

Soil Capital estimates that if the most regenerative practices studied were adopted across France, it would protect the equivalent of 17 weeks of wheat supply for a typical industrial flour mill during a similar future drought – enough wheat to produce approximately 130 million baguettes.

Drought causes billions in damages worldwide

The findings come after the UN’s January 2026 Global Water Bankruptcy report warned that the world has entered an era of “global water bankruptcy”. Critical water systems have suffered irreversible damage driven in part by soil degradation, while drought-related damages now exceed $307 billion (€264bn) annually worldwide.

Droughts fuelled by human destruction of the environment are projected to affect three in four people by 2050, according to the UN.

The UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) has repeatedly identified soil restoration as central to both food security and climate resilience goals.

“Soil’s role in providing almost all our food calories, regulating water supplies, supporting biodiversity, and helping stabilise the global climate is widely overlooked and frequently undervalued,” the UNCCD states.

The European Commission estimates that soil degradation – driven by unsustainable management of land, soil sealing, contamination and overexploitation combined with climate change and extreme weather – has already cost the EU over €50 billion per year due to the loss of essential services soils provide.

How does regenerative farming protect against drought?

Regenerative farming takes a holistic approach to land management that aims to restore soil health, promote biodiversity and fight climate change by capturing carbon in the earth.

Healthy soil rich in organic matter acts like a sponge. Research by INRAE, France’s national agricultural research institute, found that soils managed with regenerative practices held between eight and 15 per cent more water than conventionally tilled soils, and produced biomass yields 15 to 20 per cent higher for the same volume of water used.

In certain types of soil, a one per cent increase in organic matter allows a single hectare to store an additional 350,000 litres of water – which also cools the planet through evaporation – according to agricultural research institution Rothamsted Research.

Cover cropping further restores organic matter by growing plants specifically to protect and improve soil health between main cash crop cycles, while crop rotation balances soil nutrients and helps deter pests and prevent disease. Reduced tillage allows earthworm activity and deeper root growth to improve water infiltration.

Conventional farming, meanwhile, with its reliance on tillage, synthetic fertilisers and monocropping, typically degrades, compacts and erodes the soil.

In Europe, 60 to 70 per cent of soils are already considered unhealthy, and more than half of the world’s agricultural land is degraded.

The EU’s Soil Monitoring Law, which came into force in 2025, sets out a framework for assessing and monitoring soil health across member states for the first time, with a goal of achieving healthy soils across the EU by 2050.

Environmental NGOs have criticised the law’s weak monitoring rules and lack of legally binding restoration targets, however, warning it stops short of the measures scientists say are needed to restore soil health.

 

Australian authorities seize more than 100,000 live exotic cockroaches in huge bug bust

Madagascar hissing cockroaches
Copyright Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water

By Nathan Rennolds
Published on


The seizure included dubia cockroaches and Madagascar hissing cockroaches, both of which cannot be legally imported into Australia or kept, bred, or sold.

Australian authorities have raided a bug-breeding operation in the state of New South Wales, seizing more than 100,000 live exotic cockroaches.

The Department of Climate Change, Energy, Environment and Water (DCCEEW) said the seizure, which took place in Bathurst, west of Sydney, was worth an estimated A$200,000, making it the "largest seizure of illegal exotic invertebrates in Australia".

It included dubia cockroaches and Madagascar hissing cockroaches, both of which cannot be legally imported into Australia or kept, bred, or sold.

"Exotic cockroaches have not been subject to an environmental risk assessment, and their presence in Australia may spread disease and harm native wildlife and agriculture," the DCCEEW said.

The cockroaches will now be euthanised and disposed of by authorities.

An image of a Madagascar hissing cockroach
An image of a Madagascar hissing cockroach Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water

"We take our job protecting Australia’s unique biodiversity and breaches of national environment law very seriously," a spokesperson for the DCCEEW said. "We’re seeing illegal breeding and trading of exotic cockroaches and we’re putting pet businesses and pet owners on notice."

“If you are found to possess, breed or trade exotic cockroaches such as dubia cockroaches and Madagascar hissing cockroaches they will be seized and you could face penalties under federal law," they added, while also urging any reptile owners using dubia cockroaches as feeders to seek legal alternatives such as crickets and wood roaches.

TRUMP SCREW FLY

Flesh-eating parasite detected in south Texas for the first time since 1966, officials confirm

Flesh-eating fly detected in US cattle, decades after being eradicated.
Copyright AP Photo/Fernando Llano

By Marta Iraola Iribarren
Published on

A parasitic fly whose larvae feasts on living flesh has been confirmed in cattle in south Texas, years after it was deemed eradicated in the country.

The New World screwworm (NWS) fly has been detected in south Texas, the US's largest cattle-producing state, the country's Department of Agriculture confirmed on Wednesday.

The screwworm is a species of parasitic fly that completes part of its lifecycle by feeding on the tissue and flesh of warm-blooded animals and humans.

The female fly lays eggs in open wounds or mucous membranes, where they then hatch into larvae that eat the flesh around them.

The case was detected in a three-week-old calf in LaPryor, Texas, approximately 80 kilometres from the US border with Mexico, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins confirmed. It is the first case in the region since 1966.

Rollins said there have been no other reported discoveries of the fly in the country, and officials stressed that, while the fly’s larvae pose a threat to livestock, they do not infest food. With proper treatment, even the infested calf should recover.

“There is no reason to believe this incursion will result in [the] establishment of the pest in our country," Rollins said.

Texas State Veterinarian Bud Dinges established a 20-kilometre quarantine zone, prohibiting the movement of any warm-blooded animal — including pets — outside that zone without an inspection.

Have there been other cases of New World Screwworm?

The pest was a recurring problem for the American cattle industry for decades, with Florida and Texas known as hotspots, until the US largely eradicated it in the 1960s and 1970s.

While infestations are uncommon in the US, cases have been reported in travellers returning from affected areas.

In August 2025, US health officials confirmed a case in a Maryland resident who had travelled to El Salvador. The patient recovered, and officials found no evidence of further parasite transmission.

Before that, the last outbreak occurred in the Florida Keys, a tropical archipelago stretching south of Miami between the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico, in September 2016, largely among wild deer. It was contained early the next year without spreading further.

How can the fly be contained?

The screwworm was successfully eradicated from North and Central America for many years, but it is currently endemic in South America and parts of the Caribbean, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).

Over the past five years, the parasite has re-established itself across Central America and Mexico, reclaiming much of its original range.

The main eradication tool is the sterile insect technique (SIT), which uses radiation to produce sterile male flies without the use of pesticides.

The FAO notes that SIT must be combined with wound management, close monitoring and robust surveillance to be effective. The US has recently used this method in an attempt to keep the fly out of the country.

Female flies mate only once in their months-long lives, and if they do so with a sterile fly, their eggs would not hatch, and the population would decline over time.

This technique is also being used to stop other disease-carrying insects, such as the Asian tiger and Egyptian mosquitoes, the main carriers of diseases such as Zika, dengue and yellow fever.

Rollins said the United States Department of Agriculture is confident enough in its preparations and believes “there is no threat of mass infestation.”

What are the risks and symptoms for people?

The larvae do not spread from person to person, and they pose a very low overall risk to the public.

According to US health authorities, people can be at risk if they travel to areas where the flies are present and spend extended time outdoors during the day, especially if sleeping.

Those who live, work or spend prolonged periods near livestock or other warm-blooded animals in affected areas are also at a higher risk.

Infection symptoms can include unexplained, painful wounds or sores that do not heal, a foul-smelling odour or bleeding from the site of the infestation, and seeing maggots or feeling movement in open wounds or sores or in the nose, mouth, eyes, ears or genitals.

Is the New World Screwworm established in Europe?

The fly is not established in Europe, and no outbreaks have been reported.

However, warming temperatures are increasingly expanding insect habitats, and sporadic cases linked to international travel cannot be ruled out.

Echoes of the Red Terror: Remembering victims of political repression and famine in Kazakhstan


Copyright Euronews
By Galiya Khassenkhanova
Published on 03/06/2026 - 

Every year on 31 May, Kazakhstan commemorates the millions who perished during the Soviet-era famine and political repression.

People in Kazakhstan remember the millions killed in the famine and political persecutions of the early Soviet era with a solemn ceremony on 31 May. Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, during a wreath-laying ceremony, highlighted that the losses the nation sustained in the 20th century should not be forgotten.

The Great Famine

By the 1930s, the Bolsheviks had largely stabilised their rule, eliminated competition and started building communism across the Soviet Union. They decided it was time to accelerate the country’s industrialisation, through a massive collectivisation campaign, during which they confiscated all of Kazakhs’ livestock.

“When people were herded into collective farms, enormous herds would be concentrated in one place. This led to deaths from lack of food,” explained Andrey Drebezgov, head of the Exhibition Department at the KarLag Museum.

The Red Army slaughtered much of the remaining cattle, unable to feed the animals. Herd numbers fell from 40 million to five million. For a nation whose primary source of food was cattle, this meant widespread starvation.

As a result, out of six million Kazakhs, approximately two million died of starvation and another 600,000 fled to neighbouring Soviet republics, as well as China, Iran and Afghanistan, hoping to avoid a similar fate.

KarLag – Kazakhstan’s largest labour camp

Kazakh intellectuals criticised the government for the excessive policies that led to famine and mass deaths. For this perceived rebellion, they were arrested, exiled and executed. Between 1920 and 1953, more than 100,000 people were convicted in Kazakhstan alone, and 25,000 of them were sentenced to death.

The Karaganda Corrective Labour Camp, also known as KarLag, was one of the largest labour camps in the USSR. Its territory of 20,800 sq km was once compared to the size of France. From 1931 to 1959, about one million people passed through the camp. While some 5,500 people were shot at KarLag, majority died because of harsh conditions, including extreme cold and overcrowding.

Amanbay Kaspakbayev: Persecuted for helping others

For some, the outcome was even more immediate. They were executed. Among them was Rakhat Amanbayev’s grandfather, Amanbay Kaspakbayev, once secretary of the Central Executive Committee of the Kazakh Soviet Republic.

“In October 1937, during regular dinner, NKVD officers came in, brought charges, and took him away,” remembers Amanbayev.

According to documents Rakhat was able to obtain, only after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Amanbay was accused of being a fascist, a Trotskyist and of helping suspected dissidents.

“On 27 February, 1938, he was sentenced to death and executed. My grandmother, as the wife of a traitor to the Motherland, was also arrested and sent to serve her sentence in the Akmola Camp for the Wives of Traitors to the Motherland — ALZHIR,” Amanbayev said.

After spending there 8 years, enduring hardship and abuse, she took her children from their uncle and moved away, because people in their village were unhappy that the family of an “enemy of the people” lived nearby.

Saken Seifullin: From revolutionary to the “enemy of the people”

One of the most prominent figures who faced a similar fate was Saken Seifullin, a Kazakh poet, promoter of the Kazakh language, and once former head of the Kazakh Republic.

In that position, he ensured that official documentation in the republic would be written in Kazakh, as well as helped restore the historic name of the Kazakh people (before that they were incorrectly called Kirghiz Kaisak.) For this he was accused of nationalism and anti-Soviet activity. Ironically, he was a revolutionary and a Bolshevik.

“It was Sunday, 24 September. Two men came for him and went into the house. They showed him a paper, and Saken Seifullin immediately turned bright red, and then suddenly black,” said Altay Kussainov, the grandson of Seifullin’s only surviving younger brother.

Seifullin’s young son died on a train, while he and his mother were deported. His daughter died even before his arrest. His father and older brother were also executed. His younger brother survived only because he was too sick and the NKVD officers thought he would die anyway. From 1937 to 1957, the Seifullin family lived under the label of “enemy of the people.”

“My mother still remembers how they pulled her hair at school. And then there was this constant fear that one day, God forbid, someone would report them and something might happen,” Kussainov recalled.

No university wanted to admit the child of an “enemy of the people.” When she finally got admitted to the Zoological Institute, someone denounced her, and she had to complete her education in secret. Her father, Saken’s younger brother, struggled to hold down a job for 20 years. Each time someone discovered his connection to an “enemy of the people,” and he was dismissed.

When Stalin died in 1953, many people were amnestied and rehabilitated. Both Seifullin and Kaspakbayev were rehabilitated in 1957. In 1993, independent Kazakhstan adopted a law on the rehabilitation of victims of political repression, restoring their reputations and compensating their families.


 

From AI robot baristas to military drones: The weird and wonderful tech at Computex 2026

Computer case at Computex
Copyright Euronews

By Pascale Davies
Published on


Euronews Next spotlights the most innovative and intriguing tech at the conference in Taiwan.

With advances in robotics, artificial intelligence, an array of laptops and drones, the Computex technology conference in Taiwan went far beyond Nvidia's headline-making announcements to showcase the technologies that could have a wide-ranging impact our daily lives.

Euronews Next attended the conference and scoured the show floors to find the weird and wonderful as well as useful technological advancements being presented.

1) Robot barista

While robots making coffee or pouring beer are nothing new at tech shows, Intel demonstrated some cutting-edge technology.

The robot barista called Ella makes the coffee, but under the hood of the machine, an Intel Series 3 processor is powering what the company says is the first multi-agent physical AI store.

Robot Barista Intel Euronews



Three AI agents handle customer conversation, system operations and store-level intelligence, all on one Intel system-on-chip.

Intel, as well as many other companies at the show, have made AI agents and robotics central to their strategies.

Taiwanese giant Foxconn also showed off its robots that work in health care.

Foxconn robot used in its factories Euronews



Robots have been limited to pushing buttons, but Foxconn showed how its robot could drill with one hand and load and unload objects with the other. The company is using them in its own factory.

Meanwhile, for healthcare, another robot called Scrub Nurse works with a surgeon in the operating room to hand the surgeon tools. It can understand the surgeon's voice commands and is reimagining human-robot collaboration, the company says.

2) Defence technology

Taiwan, which is roughly 180 km from China, functions as an independent democracy with its own constitution and elected government.

But China maintains that the island is a renegade province destined for reunification with the mainland, through military means if necessary.

Drones at Computex Euronews


It therefore comes as no surprise that drones and surveillance technology also featured on the show floor.

Unmanned surface vehicles (SUV) and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) by the Taiwan-based company Rayvatek that feature Nvidia chips and AI technology were on display.

Taiwan's National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology (NCSIST) also showed off three AI-enabled military robot dogs this week. They can do autonomous patrols and produce remote-controlled firepower.

3) The AI translator

The Chinese and Taiwanese company Transbuds have made translation earbuds that link your translation app to a coding app.

The result is live translations that can also mimic voice in another language. For the moment, it is not available in Europe or the United States due to regulatory issues.

Transbuds AI translation earbuds Euronews




The company said it is also working to get the technology up to scratch so it can make AI agents call people without human assistance and perform tasks such as restaurant bookings.

4) The creative computer cases

Every year, designers get fancy and sometimes impractical in the designs for computer cases.

From large moving sharks to steam-blowing spaceships, there was no shortage of creativity.

5) Moving chess

The Hong Kong-based company Chessnut offers an electronic chess set in which the pieces move on their own.

Chess board using AI Euronews


An AI application tracks the moves and lets users play against the computer, making the game much more interactive.

The technology was also used on dartboards to make them fully digital.