The Council renewed the mandate of EUBAM Libya for two years until 30 June 2027. Source link
Strategic Innovation Open Call | EIT
Apply to the Strategic Innovation Open Call to develop impactful solutions that address the most pressing challenges in urban mobility.
The call focuses on supporting ambitious, market-critical projects that tackle clearly defined problems faced by cities, public authorities, and mobility providers. Through this call, EIT Urban Mobility fosters innovation and strengthens Europe’s competitiveness by encouraging collaboration across the EIT Knowledge Triangle – education, research, and business – alongside a fourth essential partner: cities.
The Call will focus on five sectors:
- Urban logistics,
- Public transport,
- Mobility data management,
- Electrification of transport and alternative fuels, and
- Health and mobility.
EIT funding allocation
The total estimated funding allocated to this Call is € 60 million for the period 2026-2028 and has multiple cut-off dates The indicative funding for the first submission cut-off is: € 9 million.
Each project may receive up to € 2 million of EIT funding. EIT Urban Mobility will reimburse up to 65% of the eligible project costs, while the minimum co-funding rate for all proposals is 35%.
Who can apply?
This is a multi-beneficiary call for proposals and therefore there must be a minimum of two independent legal entities, working together. These entities must be established in two different European Member States, and/or Third countries associated with Horizon Europe.
How can you apply?
The Strategic Innovation Open Call is open from 2026-2028 with several cut-off dates as outlined below. The assessment of the proposals involves two stage: Stage 1 is the expert evaluation of proposals submitted via the EIT Urban Mobility NetSuite platform, followed by Stage 2, which includes a panel hearing and selection by the Selection Committee.
Info webinars
EIT Urban Mobility will host online information sessions from 1-3 July 2025. Register for the online information sessions via the Mobility Innovators platform.
- Info webinar: Call content and Q&A | 10.00 – 11.30 CET, 1 July 2025
- Info webinar: Commercialisation and financial sustainability | 14.00 – 15.00 CET, 2 July 2025
- Info webinar: Intellectual property strategy | 9.30 – 10.30 CET, 3 July 2025
- Info webinar: Guidance to applicants | 14.30 – 15.30 CET, 3 July 2025
UN rights mission condemns civilian toll in deadly missile strikes on Ukraine
At least 24 people were reported killed and over 300 injured – including 32 children – when ballistic missiles struck Ukraine’s Dnipro and Odesa regions on Monday and Tuesday, the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine (HRMMU) said on Wednesday.
The attacks destroyed homes, schools, hospitals, and other civilian infrastructure, and left hundreds wounded.
“The attacks struck during the day when civilians were at work, on trains, or at school,” said Danielle Bell, head of HRMMU.
“The timing alone made the high number of civilian casualties entirely foreseeable.”
On 23 June, two ballistic missiles launched by Russian forces hit Lyceum No. 1, a middle school in Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi, Odesa region. Although the school year had ended, staff and students were present for administrative work. The strike killed three educators and injured 14 others, including two boys.
The school, which served over 700 students, sustained critical damage.
No military objective
HRMMU, which visited the attacks sites, reported no evidence of military presence at the school, and people confirmed that no military presence had been stationed there.
“The school in Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi was not a military objective,” Ms. Bell said.
“Yet it was hit by two ballistic missiles, killing educators and injuring children.”
The following day, 24 June, missiles struck an industrial area of Dnipro city at around 11 AM local time. The blast shattered windows in nearby schools, hospitals and residential buildings.
HRMMU confirmed that two dormitories were hit, injuring numerous residents. A nearby passenger train was also impacted – windows blown out by the shockwave – injuring more than 20 travellers, according to a UN monitor onboard.
A troubling trend
These strikes followed a series of other attacks in June that have resulted in significant civilian harm, including in Kyiv city on 17 and 23 June, according to the human rights mission.
Civilian casualties in the first five months of 2025 were nearly 50 percent higher than during the same period last year, with increases typically seen during the summer months.
“Ballistic missiles, when used in densely populated areas, cause predictable and widespread harm to civilians, as demonstrated by these recent attacks,” Ms. Bell said.
“The rising civilian casualties reflect the severity of that risk.”
SRB statement: Crisis Management and Deposit Insurance political agreement
The SRB welcomes the political agreement reached between the European Parliament and EU Member States on the Crisis Management and Deposit Insurance (CMDI) reform. This important reform has the potential to enhance the current framework by providing more options for dealing with smaller and mid-sized banks in crisis. In addition, it improves several technical aspects […]
Despite the fall of Assad, the illicit drug trade in Syria is far from finished
Despite the current government hostility to trade, the country remains a center for the production and distribution of medication.
During the country’s long civil war, the Assad regime was affected by sanctions and diplomatic isolation, and Captagon’s trade reportedly reported billions of dollars for the dictator and his allies.
The country’s attitude towards trade changed considerably after the fall of Assad in December 2024, and the rise of the power of a transitional government led by members of the Islamist group HTS and including members of many ethnic groups of Syria. The current administration is committed to disrupting the supply chain and demonstrated it by publicly destroying large quantities of captagon seized.
Thousands of people gathered in Damascus on Friday to celebrate the fall of the Assad regime.
However, the most recent edition of the Global drug reportreleased by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (Unodc) On June 26, warns that Syria remains a major hub for the medication, despite the repression.
Before the launch, Angela Me, head of social affairs at the Onudc, spoke to UN News on the continuous use of Captagon in the region,
Angela me: Captagon is a stimulant, similar to methamphetamine, which is taken like a pill, and for many years, it has been the main concern in the Gulf State and in certain parts of North Africa.
His name was the “Djihadi pill” after finding that the authors of certain terrorist attacks had used it. On the battlefield, this helps to maintain energy, which is one of the reasons why it is so widespread. But users quickly become dependent and causes physical and mental health problems.
UN News: The Transitional Government of Syria has indicated that they do not tolerate this job, but your report shows that Syria is still a big center for Captagon. Who produces and sells?
Angela me: There is a lot of uncertainty around that. We see many major expeditions ranging from Syria, for example, Jordan. There are probably still shipping substances shipped, but we examine where production can move. We also note that traffic is developing regionally and we have discovered laboratories in Libya.
UN News: Given the big sums of money generated by drugs, are there still groups in Syria who wish to continue trade in the parts of the country they control?
Angela me: Certainly, and not only in Syria, but also in the wider region. These groups manage Captagon for a long time and production will not stop in a few days or weeks.
We help countries solve the problem from the point of view of organized crime, to understand the criminal groups involved, so that they can design answers and solutions: our research shows that there is not a single answer to dismantle groups.
We also help the police to connect with their peers in the region, because it is not a national problem. It is clearly a transnational problem that goes beyond the Middle East; We have seen Captagon traffic across Europe, for example.
Another way to support is to solve health related problems, to share proof -based treatment that can really help people recover from their dependence on the drug.
Originally published at Almouwatin.com
Responsibility to Protect: An unfulfilled promise, a ray of hope
Addressing the General Assembly, António Guterres said that the world is witnessing more armed conflicts than at any time since the end of the Second World War.
“Too often, early warnings go unheeded, and alleged evidence of crimes committed by States and non-State actors are met with denial, indifference, or repression,” he told Member States on Wednesday.
“Responses are often too little, too late, inconsistent, or undermined by double standards. Civilians are paying the highest price.”
The pledge
The Secretary-General’s address marked two decades since the 2005 World Summit, where global leaders made an unprecedented commitment to protect populations from the atrocity crimes of genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing, and crimes against humanity.
Known as the Responsibility to Protect, or R2P, the pledge affirmed that sovereignty carries not just rights, but responsibilities – foremost among them, the duty of every State to safeguard its own people.
When national authorities manifestly fail to do so, the international community has a duty to act – collectively, timely and decisively – in accordance with the UN Charter.
Secretary-General António Guterres addresses the UN General Assembly meeting on the responsibility to protect and the prevention of genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing, and crimes against humanity.
An unfulfilled promise
“Two decades on, the Responsibility to Protect remains both an urgent necessity, a moral imperative and an unfulfilled promise,” he said.
He cited worsening identity-based violence, deepening impunity, and the weaponization of new technologies as compounding threats to populations around the world.
“No society is immune from the risk of atrocity crimes,” Mr. Guterres continued.
A ray of hope
The Secretary-General also presented his latest report on the Responsibility to Protect, reflecting on two decades of progress and persistent challenges. It draws on a global survey showing that the principle still enjoys broad support – not only among Member States, but also among communities affected by violence.
“Communities see it [R2P] as a ray of hope,” he said, “but they also call for effective implementation at all levels.”
Mr. Guterres emphasised that prevention must begin at home: with inclusive leadership, the protection of human rights and the rule of law. And it must be supported worldwide through multilateral cooperation and principled diplomacy.
“No society is immune from the risk of atrocity crimes,” he said.
“[Prevention] must be supported globally – through multilateral cooperation, principled diplomacy, and early and decisive action to effectively protect populations.”

In September 2005, heads of states and governments from around the world gathered at the UN Headquarters for the World Summit.
Flashback: 2005 World Summit and the birth of R2P
The Responsibility to Protect was adopted by consensus at the 2005 World Summit – at the time, the largest-ever gathering of heads of state and government. The Summit also established the Peacebuilding Commission to support post-conflict recovery and the Human Rights Council to uphold human rights.
The R2P principle is built on three pillars: the State’s responsibility to protect its population; the international community’s role in assisting States in this effort; and the duty to take collective action when States manifestly fail to protect their people.
Since its adoption, R2P has helped shape international responses to atrocity crimes, guided UN operations, and informed preventive efforts through national, regional, and multilateral mechanisms.
Keep the promise
Yet the gap between principle and practice remains a central concern – one the Secretary-General is urging the international community to close.
“Let us keep the promise,” Mr. Guterres said. “Let us move forward with resolve, unity, and the courage to act.”
“ Fuel for Gaza is a question of life and death ” warns a
“The Israeli authorities continue to restrict the delivery of fuel in and throughout the Gaza Strip, effectively stifling rescue services for private and hungry people”, UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said During its regular press point in New York.
The conditions in the enclave remain dark, as Israeli operations continue to have a devastating impact on civilians, with relationships on murder and injuries of dozens of people, many of whom were simply looking for help.
Pregnant women and risky babies
Due to the situation of fuel, the United Nations Population Fund (Unfpa) warned that 80% of intensive care units, including those used for childbirth, are likely to stop – at a time when 130 women give birth every day.
“” As the UNFPA pointed out, fuel for Gaza is a question of life and death,“Said Mr. Dujarric.
He added that community kitchens could prepare more than 200,000 meals every day this week.
However, this represents a reduction of 80% compared to more than a million meals distributed daily at the end of April, calling it “Basically, a net offered to people on the verge of famine. »»
In the absence of fuel, cooking gases and electricity, people have used plastic waste.
“When they do it in makeshift tents, you can imagine what is going on with poor ventilation and the enormous risks that pose,” he told journalists.
A young boy in Gaza with serious weight loss and malnutrition eats a nutritional supplement.
Allow more help
In addition, the UN coordination office, OchhaAlso recalls that to significantly approach massive deprivation in Gaza, the Israeli authorities must allow higher volumes of supplies and more varied foods, as well as cooking, fuel and shelters.
Mr. Dujarric stressed that to facilitate the ordered distribution of aid, supplies must be channeled daily by several level passages and land routes simultaneously. This would guarantee people that the essential support flow is stable, sufficient and reliable.
He said that the UN and the partners had tried to coordinate 15 humanitarian movements inside Gaza on Tuesday, but that only three were entirely facilitated by the Israeli authorities, while seven were denied.
Four missions were initially approved, but were then interrupted on the ground, although one was finally accomplished on Wednesday and another was canceled by the organizers.
Originally published at Almouwatin.com
The Seville conference on development of development shows optimism for multilateralism
Today, a financing gap of $ 4 billions hinders progress Sustainable development objectives (ODD) at the end of this decade.
In response, the Fourth International Conference on Development Financing (FFD4) will take place in Seville, Spain, from June 30, bringing together the stakeholders to advance solutions to the challenges of funding threatening sustainable development.
“We have seen debt expenses and a decrease in down investments, and we have seen aid and an increase in trade barriers. The current system certainly does not provide the people it has been designed to support, “said the deputy secretary general Amina Mohammed During a briefing on the conference on Wednesday.
She was joined by Ambassador Héctor Gómez Hernández from Spain and Ambassador Chola Milambo de Zambia.
Role of stakeholders
More than 70 heads of state and government will attend the conference, as well as leaders of international financial institutions, civil society, philanthropies and the private sector, including energy, food systems and digital industries.
“The collective presence alone, I believe, sends a good signal for multilateralism at a time when we are faced with a lot of perspective,” said Ms. Mohammed.
Seville engagement
June 17, Member States agreed THE Seville compromisoor commitment from Seville, to adopt at the conference.
Ms. Mohammed stressed that the commitment addresses the debt crisis in developing countries which are particularly vulnerable to the financing of deficits, because many spend more for the interests of debt than for essential services, which subjects the opportunity for sustainable development.
Ambassador Milambo explained that this will be done by greater transparency, a global debt register and amplifying the votes of the debtor countries.
It also aims to catalyze investments by tripling loans from the Multilateral Development Bank (MDB), by doubling official development assistance (ODA) to developing countries, by taking advantage of private sector investment and ensuring that the international financing system is more inclusive and effective.
“It is a program on which world leaders can do something. They have the tools – and political weight – to get there, “said Ms. Mohammed.
Multilateralism test
Ambassador Hernández stressed that the conference arrives at a critical moment for multilateralism.
“This conference is a call for action, and we have the extraordinary opportunity to send a very strong message to defend the commitment of the international community towards the multilateral system,” he said.
Ambassador Milambo later added that the consensus on Seville’s commitment “sends a real message of hope to the world that we can take up the challenges of funding which hinders the SDGs and that multilateralism can still work.”
Despite the consensus, the United States recently announced that it would not send a delegation to the conference.
The speakers have urged observers to keep in mind the broader image: “It is regrettable, but that does not prevent us from continuing to engage with this Member State” and to request a change in the action plan, said Ms. Mohammed.
She concluded by noting that, especially given the recent agreement of the commitment, the discussions that the UN has with other donors on how they try to use resources more effectively, hopefully.
Originally published at Almouwatin.com
Iran: Back to inspections Absolute priority for the United Nations nuclear agency
Rafael Mariano Grossi addressed journalists in Austria following a briefing in the government in Vienna.
Israel began to launch air and missile air strikes against Iranian military and nuclear sites almost two weeks ago, and the United States made surprise bombing on three Iranian uranium installations last weekend.
A ceasefire between Iran and Israel, announced Monday evening on social networks by American president Donald Trump, is fragile but detained.
However, the extent of damage to Uranium stocks enriched with Iran remains uncertain.
Iran says that the protective measures taken
After the initial attacks, Iran informed the Aiea It would take “special measures” to protect its nuclear materials and equipment.
Grosi told journalists that he had received a letter from the Iranian Foreign Minister who said protective measures had been taken.
“They did not enter into the details of what it meant, but it was clear that it was the implicit meaning of this. So we can imagine that this material is there, “he said. To confirm this and assess the situation, “we have to come back,” he added.
Vital inspections
On Wednesday, the Iranian Parliament approved a bill to suspend cooperation with the IAEA, according to the media, which must be approved by the executive power of the government.
Grosi said he wrote to the Minister of Foreign Affairs Abbas Arabhchi on Tuesday to ask him to come together to “analyze the terms” so that the inspections continue.
He stressed that the international community “cannot afford” so that the inspection regime is interrupted.
The head of the IAEA was also questioned on the plans of Iran to withdraw from TThe Non-Proliferation Treaty (TNP)A key international agreement to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons.
This decision would be “very regrettable,” he said. “I hope this is not the case. I don’t think it would help anyone, starting with Iran. This would lead to isolation, all kinds of problems. ”
Originally published at Almouwatin.com
Responsibility to protect: an unseat promise, a glimmer of hope
Addressing the General Assembly, António Guterres said that the world witnessed armed conflicts more than at any time since the end of the Second World War.
“” Too often, early warnings are not heard and the alleged evidence of crimes committed by states and non -state actors were welcomed with denial, indifference or repression, ” he said Member States on Wednesday.
“The answers are often too little, too late, incoherent or undermined by standard doubles. Civilians pay the highest price. “
The promise
The secretary general’s address has marked two decades since the 2005 World SummitOr World leaders have made an unprecedented commitment To protect populations from crimes of atrocity of genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.
Known as the responsibility of protecting, or R2P, commitments have affirmed that sovereignty not only includes rights, but responsibilities – above all, the duty of each State to safeguard its own people.
When the national authorities fail to do so, the international community has the duty to act – collectively, appropriate and decisively – in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations.
Secretary General António Guterres addresses the meeting of the United Nations General Assembly on the responsibility of protecting and prevention of genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.
An unattended promise
“Two decades later, the The responsibility of protecting is both an urgent necessity, a moral imperative and an unseat promise,He said.
He cited the worsening of violence based on identity, deepening of impunity and the armament of new technologies as threats of composition of populations around the world.
“No company is immune to the risk of crimes of atrocity,” continued Mr. Guterres.
A radius of hope
The secretary general also presented his latest report on the responsibility of protecting, reflecting on two decades of progress and persistent challenges. It is based on a global survey showing that the principle still benefits from broad support – not only among the Member States, but also among the communities affected by violence.
“” Communities see it [R2P] As a radius of hope,“He said:”But they also call for effective implementation at all levels.“”
Mr. Guterres stressed that prevention should start at home: with inclusive leadership, the protection of human rights and the rule of law. And it must be supported worldwide by multilateral cooperation and diplomacy in principle.
“” No company is immune to the risk of atrocity crimes,He said.
“” [Prevention] Must be supported worldwide – by multilateral cooperation, diplomacy in principle and early and decisive measures to effectively protect populations. »»
In September 2005, heads of state and governments around the world gathered at the United Nations headquarters for the World Summit.
Flashback: 2005 World Summit and the birth of R2P
The responsibility to protect was Adopted by consensus at the 2005 World Summit – At the time, the largest gathering of heads of state and government. The summit also established the peacebuilding committee to support the post-conflict recovery and the Human Rights Council To maintain human rights.
The principle R2P is built on three pillars: the responsibility of the State to protect its population; the role of the international community in states aid in this effort; And the duty to take collective measures when states fail to protect their people.
Since its adoption, R2P has helped shape international responses to atrocity crimes, to guide UN operations and to clarify preventive efforts through national, regional and multilateral mechanisms.
Make the promise
However, the gap between principle and practice remains a central concern – one that the secretary general urges the international community to close.
“” Hold the promise,“Said Mr. Guterres. »»Let’s go ahead with the resolution, unity and courage to act.“”
Originally published at Almouwatin.com