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What is Marine Le Pen guilty of in National Rally embezzlement case?

After a nine-week trial, the French far-right leader Marine Le Pen was this week found guilty of the embezzlement of European parliamentary funds through a fake jobs scam of an unprecedented scale and duration. She was banned from running for office for five years with immediate effect, which could prevent her making a fourth bid for the French presidency in 2027. She has said she will appeal against the verdict and sentence, which also included a four-year prison term – with two years suspended and two to be served outside jail with an electronic bracelet – and €100,000 (£84,000) fine. What was Marine Le Pen found guilty of? Le Pen was “at the heart” of a carefully organised “system” of embezzlement of European parliamentary funds, according to the ruling by Bénédicte de Perthuis, a judge specialising in financial crimes. From 2004 to 2016, taxpayer money allocated to members of the European parliament to pay their assistants based in Strasbourg or Brussels was instead siphoned off by the far-right National Rally (RN) party, which was then named Front National, in order to pay its own party workers in France. The staff in France had no connection to work undertaken at the European parliament. The court found there was “no doubt” about the existence of the scheme which “under cover of fictitious contracts” served to “remunerate people who actually worked for the party or the party leaders” in France. This was estimated to have caused a loss to European funds of €4.8m (£4m). Le Pen, who was a member of the European parliament from 2004, as well as head of the party from 2011, was found guilty of directly organising eight fictitious contracts worth about €474,000. But the court said she was also at the centre of “instigating” the wider fake jobs scheme which she undertook with “authority” and “determination”. Who else was convicted? Eight other European parliament members for RN were found guilty of being part of the scheme, alongside 12 people found to have had fictitious contracts as parliamentary assistants. Two accountants and the party treasurer were also convicted. Those found to have been paid for party work under fictitious European parliament assistant contracts included the full-time bodyguard of Le Pen’s late father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, as well as his personal secretary. Also convicted was Marine Le Pen’s sister, Yann Le Pen, who in fact worked on events for the party’s central office in France. What did they do with the money? Le Pen and those convicted did not gain any personal financial benefit. The judge ruled “there was no personal enrichment”, but rather “enrichment of the party”. The embezzlement scheme channelled money to fund Front National, which was in financial “difficulty”, the judges found. The party made “large savings” by paying its centralised staff in France with European funds. Among documents cited in evidence by the judges was an email sent in June 2014 from the party treasurer to Le Pen outlining the party’s financial troubles, saying: “We’ll only get through if we make big savings thanks to the European parliament …” The court said the salaries paid from European parliamentary funds to party workers were “comfortable” amounts which the party could otherwise not have paid. The system had allowed a comfortable working life for party leaders, such as the party founder, Jean-Marie Le Pen, who had a secretary and bodyguard. He had been accused of being part of the scheme but did not stand trial due to ill health. He died, aged 96, in January. On what evidence did the court reach its verdict? The judges said a broad range of evidence showed the contracts were fictitious and work was not carried out for the European parliament, but instead for the party. The judges cited a 2014 email from one member of the European parliament, who had previously been a lawyer, to the party treasurer: “What Marine is asking is equivalent to us signing for fictitious jobs …” He warned this was likely to be spotted. “I think Marine knows all that …” the treasurer replied. During the trial, the court heard that one party worker wrote in an email: “I’d like to see the European parliament and that would also allow me to meet the member of the European parliament I’m attached to.” He had apparently never been to the European parliament where he was supposed to have been working for four months. Did Le Pen admit guilt? No. During the trial Le Pen, like the others accused, told the court she was innocent. She said: “I have absolutely no sense of having committed the slightest irregularity, or the slightest illegal act.” After the verdict she repeated she was innocent and said she would appeal. The judges noted in their verdict that the accused “had not expressed any conscience of their violation of the law nor the importance of integrity”.

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Donald Trump signs off UK’s handover of Chagos Islands to Mauritius

Donald Trump has signed off the UK’s handover of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius, Downing Street has indicated, paving the way for the UK to cede sovereignty over its last African colony after a six-month standoff. Under the terms of the deal, the UK will give up control of the Chagos archipelago while paying to maintain control of a joint US-UK military base on the largest island, Diego Garcia, under a 99-year lease. The agreement came under fire from senior Republicans in the US last year, and more recently some inside the government who questioned why the UK was spending billions on it amid cost pressures. The prime minister’s spokesperson said on Tuesday that the deal was being finalised after receiving the green light from Trump. “My understanding is it’s now between us and the Mauritian government to finalise the deal, following the discussions with the US,” he said. Trump told Keir Starmer during his visit to the White House in February that he was “inclined to go with your country” over the Chagos deal and that he had “a feeling it’s going to work out very well”. The plan to cede control over the islands was announced in October before a change of administration in Mauritius and Trump’s return to the White House threw it in doubt. Senior figures in Trump’s administration including Marco Rubio, his secretary of state, criticised the proposals and Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, spent months openly lobbying the president and his advisers to reject the deal, creating embarrassment for the Labour government. Critics have argued that the handover will compromise the security of the joint military base because of Mauritius’s relationship with China. UK officials claim the links between Mauritius and China are overstated, however, and that India is the more influential regional power. Mauritius is one of the few countries in the region that has refused to take part in China’s belt and road initiative. Ministers have also argued that the UK has to give up the territory due to international legal rulings in favour of Mauritius, and that legal uncertainty over the legitimacy of the military base could compromise its security. The government revealed it would spare China from facing stronger rules as part of its register of foreign lobbyists coming into force on 1 July. Russia and Iran will both be included in the enhanced tier of the foreign influence registration scheme once it is launched this summer, Dan Jarvis, the security minister, told the Commons. The enhanced tier of the scheme is reserved for countries that pose a risk to UK national security. Anyone who is directed by Russia or Iran to carry out activities in the UK must declare it or face five years in prison. Jarvis declined to comment on China’s status in the scheme or to speculate on “which countries may or may not be specified in the future”. Should ministers decide to impose stricter rules on China or any other countries such as North Korea, they will need to give three months’ notice of the change. Announcing greater restrictions on Russian activity, Jarvis said Moscow “presents an acute threat to UK national security” and that its “hostile acts have ranged from the use of a deadly nerve agent in Salisbury, espionage, arson and cyber-attacks, including the targeting of UK parliamentarians through spear-phishing campaigns”. In response Chris Philp, the shadow home secretary, described China as the “elephant in the room” and said the country “engages in industrial-scale espionage, seeking to steal technology from government, universities and from industries. They repress Chinese citizens here and have sought to infiltrate our political system.” The foreign influence registration scheme was expected to come into force last year but the new Labour government delayed its implementation. Ministers said on Tuesday that they would work with business and academia to help them prepare for the scheme’s launch, and that there would be a three-month grace period to register existing ties with foreign states.

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Middle East crisis: Israel issues evacuation order for parts of northern Gaza – as it happened

The IDF has issued a forced evacuation order to residents in parts of northern Gaza: Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahiya and the neighbourhoods of Sheikh Zayed, al-Manshiya and Tal al-Zaatar. Avichay Adraee, an Arabic language spokesperson for the Israeli army, said it is a “final” warning before the “raid”. “We have warned about this area many times. For your safety, you must move immediately west to the known shelters in Gaza City,” he wrote in a post on X this morning. Hezbollah lawmaker Ibrahim Moussawi said the Israeli attack on Beirut that killed at least four people amounted to “a major and severe aggression that has escalated the situation to an entirely different level”. Speaking in a televised statement after visiting the building that was struck, he called on the Lebanese state to “activate the highest level of diplomacy to find solutions”. At least 50,399 Palestinian people have been killed and 114,583 injured in Israeli attacks on Gaza since 7 October 2023, the Gaza health ministry said in a statement on Tuesday. At least 42 bodies and 183 injured people have been received by hospitals in Gaza over the last day, according to the territory’s health ministry, which said that at least 1,042 Palestinian people have been killed by Israeli forces since Israel broke the ceasefire with Hamas on 18 March. Amjad Al Shawa, director of the Palestinian NGOs Network (PNGO), an umbrella group of 30 Palestinian NGOs and ActionAid’s partner in Gaza, has warned that Gaza will probably enter a “new cycle of famine, starvation and thirst” in the coming days as bakeries across the strip are forced to close because of fuel and flour shortages caused by the ongoing Israeli aid blockade. The World Food Programme says it’s immediately closing all of its bakeries in Gaza after a month-long blockade by Israel into the strip, the Associated Press reports. In an internal memo circulated among aid groups, the UN agency said that due to the lack of humanitarian aid, its supplies are running out and it doesn’t have enough wheat flour needed to make bread. The agency said it’s distributed all available food rations, and there are no more stocks. Unicef, the UN humanitarian aid organisation for children, has said at least 322 children have reportedly been killed and 609 injured since the resumption of Israel’s “intense bombardments” and “ground operations” in the Gaza Strip on 18 March. In a press release, Unicef wrote: “The breakdown of the ceasefire and resumption of intense bombardments and ground operations in the Gaza Strip has reportedly left at least 322 children dead and 609 injured – constituting a daily average of around 100 children killed or maimed over the past 10 days. Most of these children were displaced, sheltering in makeshift tents or damaged homes.” UK foreign secretary David Lammy has said the UK “categorically” condemns the expansion of Israeli settlements in the West Bank during a session in parliament, warning that they do not enhance Israeli security and undermine the prospect of a two-state solution for Israelis and Palestinians. “I’m clear with my Israeli counterparts that settlement expansion must stop. We will continue to work with our partners to ensure the prospects for a Palestinian state”, said Lammy. One year after Israel’s killing of three British aid workers employed by World Central Kitchen, the family of James Kirby, one of those killed, said they had still not received answers from the British government. The three British citizens were killed in an Israeli airstrike despite their vehicle being clearly marked. Seven aid workers were killed in the strikes to which the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) admitted took place. Two IDF members were dismissed. US president Donald Trump said on Tuesday he spoke with Egyptian president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and discussed topics including military progress against Yemen’s Iranian-backed Houthis and possible solutions in Gaza. Trump said the call went very well, Reuters reported. Thanks for following along. That’s all from me, Tom Ambrose, and the Middle East crisis live blog for today.

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Russia says it cannot accept US peace plan for Ukraine ‘in its current form’

Moscow has described the latest US peace proposals as unacceptable to the Kremlin, highlighting the limited progress Donald Trump has made on his promise to end the war in Ukraine since taking office in January. Sergei Ryabkov, a foreign policy adviser to Vladimir Putin, said some of Russia’s key demands were not being addressed by the US proposals to end the war, in comments that marked a rare acknowledgment from the Russian side that talks with the US over Ukraine had stalled in recent weeks. “We take the models and solutions proposed by the Americans very seriously, but we can’t accept it all in its current form,” Ryabkov was quoted by state media as telling the Russian magazine International Affairs. It came after Trump on Sunday revealed his frustration with Putin, saying he was “pissed off” and threatening to impose tariffs on Russian oil exports. “All we have today is an attempt to find some kind of framework that would first allow for a ceasefire – at least as envisioned by the Americans,” Ryabkov said. “As far as we can see, there is no place in them today for our main demand, namely to solve the problems related to the root causes of this conflict.” Putin has repeatedly referred to what he claimed were the “root causes” of the conflict to justify his hardline position on any prospective deal to end the war in Ukraine. As preconditions for a ceasefire, the Russian leader has insisted on terms that would, in effect, dismantle Ukraine as an independent, functioning state – pulling it firmly into Russia’s sphere of influence. He has demanded that Kyiv recognise Russia’s annexation of Crimea and four partly occupied regions in the south-east, withdraw its forces from those areas, pledge never to join Nato, and agree to demilitarisation. In recent weeks the Russian president has also been openly pushing for regime change in Ukraine, claiming that Volodymyr Zelenskyy lacks the legitimacy to sign a peace deal and suggesting that Ukraine needs external governance. Trump appears to be growing increasingly impatient with his lack of progress in a war that he promised to end in 24 hours, expressing frustration with Russian and Ukrainian leaders as he struggles to forge a truce. Trump’s comment that he was “pissed off” with Putin over the Russian leader’s approach to a potential ceasefire in Ukraine was a noticeable shift in tone from a leader who had previously expressed admiration for Putin. However, Trump later dialled back his rhetoric and by Monday was accusing Ukraine of trying to renegotiate an economic deal with the US. The White House on Tuesday said Trump was frustrated with leaders on both sides of the war. Despite a flurry of US-brokered meetings and parallel talks with Russia and Ukraine in Saudi Arabia that produced – on paper – a 30-day energy ceasefire, both sides have continued to strike each other’s energy infrastructure. The Trump administration also attempted to broker a ceasefire in the Black Sea, but Moscow sought to attach several conditions to the deal, including the easing of European sanctions, a demand swiftly rejected by Brussels. Grigory Karasin, who represented Russia at the talks with the US in Saudi Arabia, last week admitted that the sides had failed to make significant progress and that negotiations may drag into next year. But Trump’s team has said it remains committed to halting the war, with the US leader telling NBC he and Putin planned to speak again this week. The Finnish president, Alexander Stubb, who spent time with Trump over the weekend, said he proposed setting a deadline of 20 April for Putin to comply with a full ceasefire. However, those close to the Kremlin believe Moscow is unlikely to accept a full ceasefire without securing some of its demands, which include the cessation of all arms and intelligence supplies to Ukraine from the US and other allies. “We’re prepared to keep fighting for some time,” said Fyodor Lukyanov, a prominent Russian foreign policy analyst who heads a council that advises the Kremlin. “The continuation of the war, which we are slowly but surely winning, is in our interest. Especially considering that the main sponsor [the US] seems to be backing out … Why should we rush in a situation like this?”

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Two near lifesize sculptures found during excavations of Pompeii tomb

Two almost lifesize sculptures of a man and woman, who was believed to have been a priestess, have been found during the excavations of a huge tomb in the ancient Roman city of Pompeii. The detailed funerary relics adorned the tomb containing several burial niches built into a wide wall in the necropolis of Porta Sarno, one of the main entrance gates into the ancient city. Pompeii was destroyed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD79. Experts believe the female sculpture was of an important local woman who was perhaps a priestess of Ceres, who in ancient Roman religion was a goddess of agriculture, fertility and motherly relationships, because of the jewellery and accessories, including earrings, rings and bracelets, carved into it – especially the lunula, a crescent moon pendant hanging in the middle of the necklace. The woman is veiled and dressed in a large cloak over a tunic, while the man is wearing a toga wrapped over his left shoulder. However, experts are not convinced that the figures, which were joined together and are believed to date back to the late Roman Republic period, represented a married couple. Gabriel Zuchtriegel, the director of Pompeii archaeological park, said: “Because she really looks like a very important woman in the local elite, there is also this idea that she could have been a priestess of Ceres, holding these lands and what appears to be a purist role.” She is holding what appears to be laurel leaves, which were used to purify and bless religious spaces by dispersing incense and the smoke from aromatic herbs. With most women in Roman society relegated to domestic roles, being a priestess, an important position in public life, was the highest position a woman could aspire to and gave power on a similar level to a male priest. Zuchtriegel said such funerary sculptures did not always represent couples. “Sometimes you get two men, or sometimes they come in threes,” he said. “This could be her husband, but it could also be her son. There was no inscription, so we don’t know.” By the feet of the male statue is the preserved root of an ancient tree that grew on top of the tomb. “It was quite a surprise to find it there a few centimetres beneath the ground,” said Zuchtriegel. The two sculptures are being restored and will be displayed at an exhibition in Pompeii, beginning on 16 April. The excavations at the Porta Sarno necropolis are a joint project between Pompeii archaeological park and the European University of Valencia. In 2021, the partly mummified remains, including hair and bones, of a former slave who rose through the social ranks, were found.

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French justice minister urges prompt appeal hearing for Le Pen – as it happened

And on that lighter note, that’s all from me, Jakub Krupa, for today. Thank you for following Europe Live!