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Politics

Lisbon ratified

In front | MAP
Tick, tick, tick

Latvia and Germany ratified the Lisbon treaty on 7 and 22 May, after Portugal and Denmark did so on 23 April. The EU's 16 other members should follow suit by 1 January 2009

by Hanna Sankowska // 02/04/08

MULTIMEDIA

Videos: Putin, Sarkozy, Blair and Schröder

Putin pouts, schnip schnap Schröder, Blair sings and Sarkozy and opposition leader Ségolène snuggle

by Tomáš Ruta // 05/04/08

PANORAMA

Italy is no lame duck

Don't be poking fun at Italy - from Marie Curie prizewinner Luisa Corrado to FIAT promoter Lapo Elkann, Italians are reclaiming their right to reinvigorate the country

by Fernando Navarro Sordo // 03/04/08

NEWS

Brussels: parliament rift over Tibet

To boycott or not to boycott the Peking Olympic Games, Europe's MEPs ask, a mozzarella crisis and Sarkozy honeymooning at 10 Downing Street - it's your latest from Brussels

by Lorenzo Morselli // 31/03/08

FEATURE

Exhibition brings Israel and Palestine 'face to face'

Face2Face is a unique and edgy photography show by French and Swiss friends JR and Marco, They stick the Israeli-Palestinian conflict right under European noses

by Virginie Gerhard // 21/03/08

PORTRAIT

Euthanasia: Noel Martin wants to die

The British citizen of Jamaican origin, has been a paraplegic ever since he was attacked by a band of neo-Nazis. In 2007, he made headline news in Germany and is still fighting to be able to decide the date of his death

by Isaac Risco Rodríguez // 21/03/08

OPINION
Spot the Italian party sign (Photo: Treviño/ Flickr)

Typically Italian elections in April

On 13 and 14 April the Italians go to the polls under an electoral law that no-one is happy with. Majority rule or proportional representation? A two percent or four percent cut-off clause? What is the best solution for Italy?

by Marco Agosta // 20/03/08

INVESTIGATION
Las Vegas yes, but in Spain (Photo: Christopher Chan/ Flickr)

Gran Scala – Spain’s new Las Vegas

Europe’s largest construction project is an amusement park in Los Monegros. It is in competition with Expo Zaragoza 2008, whose main focus is on raising awareness of sustainable water development

by Alma López Figueiras // 19/03/08

TESTIMONY

Hunger strike for illegal immigrants in Belgium

162 protestors have came to a provisional deal with the government - but they haven't eaten for 50 days

by Giovanni de Paola // 14/03/08

ANALYSIS

Europe dominates election agenda in Strasbourg

The municipal elections in Alsace are neither local nor national. The debate is entirely European as both candidates outline their vision for a town propelled as capital of the old continent

by Vincent Lebrou et Léna Morel // 14/03/08

NEWS
Geert Wilders (Photo: ANS Online/ Flickr)

An Oscar for Geert Wilders please

'Fitna' the film means evil, European parliament has a fake birthday and ousted gay Iranians - it's your latest news from Brussels

by Pim de Kuijer // 14/03/08

FOCUS
(Photos: José María Miranda)

2010, or sayonara to one third of the world’s species

According to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), 24% of all Europe’s species of butterflies, birds and mammals have already disappeared from some areas

by Lorenza Olivares Brémond // 12/03/08

OPINION

No Lisbon treaty referendum for the Brits

A Europhile goes against the British PM's masquerade, as the bill has its first reading in the House of Lords on 12 March

by Adriano Farano // 12/03/08

PORTRAIT
(Photos: ©Robinwood.com)

Robin Wood: Germany's bare branch avenger

Several urban landmarks have been used to great effect by environmentalists as a political canvas to preserve forests. Today, creative and spectacular actions are still somewhat of a trademark

by Sonia Gigler // 11/03/08

INTERVIEW
Vittorio Prodi (Photo: European parliament)

Vittorio Prodi: another Kyoto is possible

Is Europe starting to take the fight against climate change seriously?

by Andrea Bassi // 11/03/08

REPORT
Björn Lomborg (Photo: BL/ lomborg.com)

Björn Lomborg: Europe's sceptical environmentalist

The Danish political scientist opposes hype, scaremongering and media coverage about the environment. He tells us whether Europe has got its priorities right for tackling the world’s environmental problems

by Nicholas Newman // 11/03/08

NONE

Zapatero celebrates a complicated victory in Spain

On 9 March, the socialist prime minister won another four year term in office, but his margin of alliances is limited with the rise of the right. A 75.3% participation rate quashed the nationalist pole, allowing for an English–style two-party system

by Fernando Navarro Sordo // 10/03/08

FOCUS
Didn't you know that feminism is still trendy (Photo: Gaelx/Flickr)

Women's Day, a European clause

Uniforming the laws concerning the rights of women in the EU from the top down is an exciting idea and a necessity that is gaining support from militants all across the EU

by Jane Mery // 07/03/08

MULTIMEDIA

Videos: Zapatero, Sarkozy, Berlusconi and Aznar get their tongues out

It’s pure logic - EU politicians should be able to speak several languages without problems, right? The truth is a bit worse

by Eduardo S. Garcés // 05/03/08

NONE
(Photo: Centre Virtuel/ Flickr)

Brussels: commissioners play musical chairs

Frattini and Kyprianou to jump ship? Internal stories of fraud, external stories of fraud and far too few children born in Europe - it's the latest news from the EU capital

by Stella Willborn // 03/03/08

FOCUS
Anne Hidalgo in Paris (cafebabel.com)

Spain votes on 9 March, and not just in Spain

Both Spanish and French voters go to the polls to vote in their legislative and municipal elections this month

by Fernando Navarro Sordo // 03/03/08

DEBATE
Cecilia Malmstrom, former Swedish MEP and current minister of foreign affairs in Sweden (Photo: www.cecilia.nu)

A European senate in Strasbourg?

Controversy surrounding the European parliament’s use of two seats (Brussels and Strasbourg) has given new life to the debate on federalism. There are good reasons for the parliament to remain permanently in Brussels, and plenty of other options for the capital of Alsace

by Fernando Navarro Sordo // 27/02/08

ANALYSIS
The name 'Strasbourg' comes from the German 'city of streets' (Photo: Fr Antunes/ Flickr)

The language of the republic is French

Alsace and Moselle’s bilingualism has just weathered a political storm. From now on, electoral documents will have to be written only in French. Yet, the German language has opened a window of opportunity in Europe. Debate

by Léna Morel // 27/02/08

REPORT
A more international education for today's pupils (Photo: guervo/ Flickr)

European School in Strasbourg

The first European school in the Alsatian capital opens in September 2008. Concerns arise that it will undermine the international sections of existing schools and how it will relate to the EU

by Jeremy Cliffe // 27/02/08

FEATURE
Matjaž Gruden sits in his office at the Council of Europe (Photo: Enno Dummer)

Remember, the Council of Europe is not part of the EU

The Strasbourg-based organisation defends human rights in Europe and needs to combat its dwindling visibility

by Enno Dummer // 27/02/08

FOCUS
On 11 March 2004 the media protested against Aznar's 'conspiracy' that the Madrid attacks were done by ETA (Photo: Saül Gordillo/ Flickr)

Spain: elections under terrorist alert

Although arrests of suspected ETA and Jihad terrorists have increased in Spain, the terrorist threat overshadows the campaign of the Spanish legislative elections on 9 March

by Pedro Picón // 26/02/08

NEWS
(Photo: Campus Party/ Flickr)

EU frames Kosovo's independence

Unemployment, professional opportunities and the Lisbon treaty: the latest news from Brussels, where all eyes are on the world's newest state

by Lorenzo Morselli // 25/02/08

ANALYSIS
Andrejs Pielbags (Photo: European commission)

Energy in Europe: France and Germany protest

Producing and transporting energy; the commission has adopted a ‘package’ of measures to control the EU market’s share of gas and electricity. But eight member states, including France and Germany, are opposed

by Cécile Musialski // 22/02/08

ANALYSIS

AddioPizzo - end of protection money for the Mafia

The Italian committee strikes back against the Sicilian Mafia, but consumers and businessmen are increasingly saying no to the ‘Pizzo’, or the protection money blackmailed from them by the Mafia

by Ilona Witten // 21/02/08

ANALYSIS

Economic crisis looms over election preparations in Spain

Spain is suffering from the after-effects of a decade of impressive economic growth. The threat of economic downturn will play an important role in the upcoming elections on 9 March

by Franck Lirzin // 21/02/08

VOX POP
Celebrating in Switzerland (Image: iGenc/ Flickr)

Kosovo independence: your reactions

On 17 February, the state declared independence from Serbia, amidst a split EU outlook. Kosovar, Serb and Russian youth sound out their reactions on the day

by Nabeelah Shabbir // 20/02/08

NEWS
French prime minister François Fillon (fr@nçois/ Flickr)

EU: the text messaging war

The French are told to pull their socks up, European businesses face the economic effects of global warming – it's your latest news from Brussels

by Federico Poggi // 18/02/08

NONE
(Photo: Fr@çois/ Flickr)

Société Générale: a great French bank

Liberalism drenched in Nicolas Sarkozy’s nationalism disconcerts his EU partners, whilst an increase in capital for the French bank is bound to fend off potential European public price offerings

by Fernando Navarro Sordo // 16/02/08

TESTIMONY
(Photo: Giulio Finotti)

It's not just rubbish in Naples

Campania drowns in tonnes of refuse. The EU threatens the intervention of the Court of Justice. How did we get this far, asks a young Neapolitan reporter

by Finotti Giulio // 15/02/08

NEWS

Euro: at last, a unique currency

Collectors, get happy. The 2 euro coin is going to profit from a new design; not a national emblem, but a face showing support for Europe

by Alexis Brunelle // 15/02/08

FEATURE
Hamburg Europe Passage (Photo: Linda Holzgreve)

Hamburg: European metropolis?

Built in lavish style in 2006, the Europa arcade in the centre of Hamburg is the city’s new landmark shopping centre. 'Europe' can at best be imagined here

by Linda Holzgreve // 12/02/08

NEWS
Yes or no? (Photo: jmenard48/ Flickr)

Ireland: 64% unsure on ratifying Lisbon treaty

Debates continue in the EU - to partner or accede Turkey? Plus a new 'Justice Forum' from the European commission - the latest news from Brussels

by Stella Willborn // 11/02/08

FOCUS
Stand up for Stubb? (Photo: Alexander Stubb website)

No love for lobbyists?

In the upcoming weeks, conservative MEP Alexander Stubb is due to propose a new legislation to control the some 15, 000 lobbyists in Brussels

by Fernando Navarro Sordo // 11/02/08

FEATURE
Worker in Olkiuloto (Photo, Angela Steen)

Finland: Europe's newest nuclear plant

'I never get an answer when I ask Iran what they plan to do with the enriched uranium they produce,' EU foreign chief Javier Solana said on 30 January. While the Iranian president waits for the west, we take a Nordic diversion

by Angela Steen // 08/02/08

OPINION
Clinton and Obama win New Hampshire and Iowa respectively (Photos: Hopeful in NJ/ Litandmore/ Flickr)

Super Stupid Tuesday

On Tuesday 5 February, 24 US states will hold their primaries or caucuses on a single day. But does the current nomination process facilitate the nomination of the best candidates?

by Steven Hill // 30/01/08

PANORAMA

Five US candidates, five pledges

On 5 February or 'Super Tuesday', 24 US states vote for their Democrat or Republican candidate. Spotlight on what five main leaders of the race for the American presidency are pledging

by Hanna Sankowska // 30/01/08

OPINION
Republican return? (Photo: Daniella Zalcman/ Flickr)

Republican return to the White House in 2009?

After seven years of waiting for an end to the Bush presidency, Europeans should not wait indefinitely in hope of redefining US interests

by Roberto Foa & Domenec Ruiz Devesa // 30/01/08

NONE

Video: Europeans on Super Tuesday

On Tuesday 5 February 22 states will hold US presidential primary elections. The result will determine each party's candidate for the final elections on 6 November, 2008. Three young Europeans provide their opinion

by Lam Thuy Vo // 30/01/08

NEWS

Why the EU aims to liberalise postal services

Plus answers to the question 'how much do you get charged for making a bank transfer?' and more in our weekly newsbites from Brussels

by Fernando Navarro Sordo // 28/01/08

ANALYSIS
May 1968 poster

Situationism: ideas in conflict

Rue de Seine, Paris 1952. ‘Never work’ is chalked on a wall. Two words about the philosophy of the 'Situationists' who transformed May 1968 and who still inspire activists today

by Fabien Champion // 23/01/08

PANORAMA

1968: a tour of Europe's revolts

Spain, Czech Republic, France, Italy, Poland and Germany - spinning through Europe's uprisings during that infamous year of rebellion

by Jane Mery // 23/01/08

ANALYSIS

May 2008? Young people in France get involved

In France, the fortieth anniversary of the May 1968 student revolts is fast approaching. Like it or not, the memory of this working class uprising is ever-present. The young people of France take the lead in their own style

by Frédérique Taubenhaus // 23/01/08

NEWS

Italy: what a waste

Slovenia vs a Mediterranean Union and their 'friends in Paris', friction in the air for the EU – your dosage of the latest news from Brussels

by Federico Poggi // 21/01/08

MULTIMEDIA

Videos: Bottle of vodka for the fallen Kaczynskis

Dutch MP Pier Anne Nawijn dancing, that Bush-Merkel massage and Finnish MP Alexander Stubb fights for vodka in the European parliament

by Eduardo S. Garcés // 21/01/08

NONE
(Photo: Nemigo/ Flickr)

Try and sing the Spanish national anthem

Talks of a European anthem were recently dropped, but to some Spaniards, it seems a shame to splice lyrics and lose what makes their country’s anthem unique

by Fernando Navarro Sordo // 18/01/08

REVIEW

Babelblogs: Olympics of human rights

British exes, banking superheros, Athens and garapos in Cuba - plus the latest Franco-German blog to watch out for

by Natalia Sosin // 17/01/08

PANORAMA

European leaders: average age 55

True or false: younger heads of state have less experience but more liberal policies than older heads of state, who have more experience? Plus an interactive map of Europe's old - and not so old - fogies

by Akli Hadid // 16/01/08

DEBATE
Portuguese PM Socrates and French president Sarkozy do their own heat session (Photo: Miguel A. Lopes "Migufu"/ Flickr)

Constitution tension ... in a Finnish sauna

Temperatures soar as a group of young European journalists get steamed up about the Lisbon Treaty

by Angela Steen // 16/01/08

INTERVIEW
Dan Jorgensen (Photo: European parliament)

Dan Jorgensen (32): 'I'm lucky to be a politician so early on in my life'

MEP of the Socialist party in parliament, the 32-year-old is part of the young generation of elected candidates on a European scale. On the benches of the French National Assembly in Strasbourg, 4% have not yet reached the age of 35

by Léna Morel // 16/01/08

INTERVIEW
Jean Quatremer (left) (Photo: Donya Feki)

Jean Quatremer: 'there's a lack of passion amongst some MEPs'

Only 55% of Europeans state that they have any confidence in their parliament. On the benches of the French National Assembly, few young MPs are debating. How can the EU attract a new generation?

by Fernando Navaro Sordo // 16/01/08

FEATURE

Rennes: 'Helloo, immigrants'

The scene is set: Place de l’Europe, shops, blocks of flats on the horizon and 'Le bar de l'Europe'. At the heart of this little tarmacked tower of babel, Europe is not the stuff of dreams

by Elodie Auffray // 15/01/08

NEWS

Apple gets fair on UK music downloads

Portuguese no to reform treaty referendum, the pan-EU music marketplace and Sarkozy’s press conference

by Stella Willborn // 14/01/08

NONE
Intentional outsider (Photo: www.michalzygmunt.pl)

Michal Zygmunt: 'By 2010, Poland will be talking commercial gay movement'

30-year-old author of the book ‘New Romantic’, the journalist and editor of gay magazine ‘Dik Fagazine’ talks politics, left-wing politics and emotion-drained religion

by Natalia Sosin // 11/01/08

REPORT
The border was celebrated with the installation of three 'Hello neighbour' benches on three locations along the new Schengen border of Hungary (Photo: http://www.kolbasz-studio.eu)

Hungary-Slovakia: 'Schengen won’t make my life better'

As we celebrate on 21 December 2007, for residents along the Hungarian border, Schengen is a historical event with bittersweet results

by Nóra Farkas // 09/01/08

INTERVIEW
Jacek Sonta struggled with a one hour time difference with Lithuania when both entered the Schengen zone (Photo: Polish border guards)

Poland's 10, 000 border guards

Since 21 December 2007 there have been no border controls between Poland and Portugal. In Germany there have been fears that the Polish authorities aren’t ready to take on the security of the entire EU

by Agnieszka Hreczuk // 09/01/08

FEATURE
Cigarette smugglers on the Poland-Ukraine border, Przemysl-Medyka, Poland (Photo: Jan Zappner/ n-ost.de)

Smuggling cigarettes in Schengen Slovakia

Since December 21 2007, border controls have vanished inside the EU. The eastern border now seems like a fortress - what's 'big brother' in Slovak?

by Hans-Jörg Schmidt // 09/01/08

PICTURES

Schengen: Slovenia and Italy help each other

When Slovenia became part of the Schengen zone on 21 December 2007, the 280km barrier separating it from Italy fell. It had been symbol of the iron curtain and the cold war that have divided Europe for decades

by Monica Nardini // 09/01/08

NEWS

ETA: copying Kosovo

The EU should watch out for the Basque ETA voice, Prodi's ire that Spaniards are wealthier than Italians (according to Eurostat) and a nice cultural year to all of you, from the Slovenians

by Fernando Navarro Sordo // 07/01/08

REPORT
(Photo: keesssss/ Flickr)

Malta gets the euro

From 1 January 2008, Malta and Cyprus changed their currency to the euro, bringing the total number of member states in the eurozone to fifteen. Report from the capital of Europe's smallest state

by Cedric Farrugia // 04/01/08

ANALYSIS
Virgin country in institutional matters,
Slovenia loses its virginity (Photo: joanplanas/ Flickr)

Slovenia: new EU presidents

This nation of barely two million inhabitants joined the European Union in 2004 and have just become EU presidents for the first six months of 2008

by Greg Mounier // 03/01/08

MULTIMEDIA

Video cringe: Chavez, Brown, Rath

Be it a Czech clip around the ear, a King telling a naughty Venezuelan socialist to zip it or a British prime minister playing it cool - we track Europe's chiefs losing it

by Fernando Navarro Sordo // 19/12/07

FOCUS
(Photos: oneras/ Pablo Gavilán/ Flickr)

Mobile phones: Eurotariffs

To reduce the prices of calls made or received when you are outside your home country, the EU has approved maximum rates that phone companies cannot exceed

by Fernando G. Acuña // 17/12/07

FOCUS
Chinese bill (Photo: Brad & Sabrina/ Flickr)

Buying condoms with a strong euro

The euro may be breaking records compared to the dollar, but the explosive breakthrough of the Chinese yuan in the international monetary system has upset the traditional parities of currencies. Plus a condom price checklist

by Franck Lirzin // 14/12/07

FEATURE

Rome: Europe = shops

We continue our series of articles visiting the streets of Europe which carry the continent’s name. In this episode, shopping and lessons in a non-existent Europeanism at the heart of Eur(ope?)

by Tiziana Sforza // 13/12/07

INTERVIEW
Enrique Barón Crespo was president of the European council (Photo: European parliament)

Barón Crespo: the European parliament has sacrificed as much as anyone

The EU parliament has withdrawn from the debate surrounding the latest reform treaty

by Fernando García Acuña // 12/12/07

FOCUS
(Photo: Miguel Angel Lopes Migufu/ Flickr)

Barroso: see you in 2009?

The Portuguese and current president of the European Commission could be re-elected after his mandate expires in June 2009

by Fernando Navarro Sordo // 07/12/07

INTERVIEW
Lhasa, the capital of Tibet (Photo: Kent Wang/ Flickr)

Railway to the roof of the world

The world’s highest railway was opened between Peking and Lhasa, the Tibetan capital, in July. It has not only opened the door to modernity, but has aroused new clashes between the Chinese government and the Tibetans

by Javier Delgado Rivera // 06/12/07

NEWS
Authorised copy of the Eiffel Tower in a Chinese town (Photo: og2t/ Flickr)