Photo : AP Photo
02 April 2025, Wednesday | NIAS Europe Daily Brief #1102
By Fleur Elizabeth Philip
FRANCE
France Presidential Candidate, Marine Le Pen to face trials for embezzlement
On 01 April 2025, France Presidential candidate, Marine Le Pen, is to face the Court of Appeals in Paris on charges of embezzlement. If the deadline is met, the second trial could take place by early 2026, and the court would conclude by 2027, before the election. The decision from the court can change the situation for the Far-right party, but Marine Le Pen will either have to be acquitted or given a sentence that allows her to run for office and continue campaigning. Without the immediate effect of suspension, Le Pen will have to consider giving up her spot for a replacement. Robin Binsard, Criminal Defence Lawyer, said: “This is a cautious solution chosen by the Court of Appeal, which mitigates criticism of the effects of the immediate effect of ruling.” On 31 March, France’s far-right leader Marine Le Pen was barred from running for public office with immediate effect on charges of embezzling European Union funds. Le Pen and the National Rally Party have misused EUR three million, which is meant for European parliamentary assistants. Le Pen responded with: “I am eliminated but in reality, millions of French people, whose voices have been eliminated,” adding that she had no confidence in an appeal being heard before the 2027 Presidential election. The ban will last for five years, as demanded by the prosecutors. She is also handed a four-year prison term, with two years as a suspension sentence and two years of house arrest with an ankle monitor. (Sophia Khatsenkova, “Le Pen: Paris Court of Appeals will consider trial with 'a decision' in summer 2026,” Euro News, 01 April 2025; Timothy Jones, Elizabeth Schumacher, Shakkel Sobhan, “France: Le Pen defiant after being barred from office,” Deutsche Welle, 31 March 2025)
Autorité de la concurrence imposés EUR 150 million fine on Apple for controlling personal data
On 31 March, the French national competition regulator, Autorité de la concurrence imposed fines worth EUR 150 million on the US technology firm, Apple. Fines were imposed on grounds of abuse of its dominance in the distribution of mobile applications on iOS and iPad. At the core of the French competitive firm, is the data collection of Apple. The Autorite de la Concurrence condemned the company’s approach as neither necessary nor proportional to Apple’s stated objective of protecting personal data. In 2021, Apple introduced App Tracking Transparency (ATT), which is designed to give users more control over their data. This program enables limiting targeted advertising unless explicitly allowed. While Apple promotes ATT towards protecting user privacy, regulators in France argue that the system may also reinforce the company by restricting competitors' access to valuable data. According to the regulator: “multiple pop-ups are displayed making the use of third-party applications in the iOS environment excessively complex.” Apple replied in a statement claiming that ATT “gives users more control of their privacy through a clear required and easy to understand prompt about one thing: tracking.” The EU is to put two investigators into Apple under the Digital Markets Act. (Peggy Corlin, “French antitrust watchdog fines Apple €150 million over data collection tool,” Euro News, 31 March 2025)
GERMANY
Test rocket explodes seconds after launch in Norway
On 31 March, a German test rocket was launched from Europe to collect satellite data and exploded seconds after the launch. The launch took place on the Northern coast of Norway. The rocket was called Spectrum. This project is the first of Europe’s Private Space program, and its job was to reach the orbit and collect the necessary data required for their study. Spectrum showed signs of failure, starting with smoke coming out of the rocket body, and the engineers decided to terminate this project. Europeans would rely on the Russian launch pads for their space projects, but that has come to a halt since the Russian invasion. Hence, the launch from the Fjords is considered a small step towards commercial spaceflight that Europe needs. (Simon Bone, “German-made test rocket crashes after takeoff,” Deutsche Welle, 31 March 2025)
Nuclear waste transportation from Bavaria to return amid protests
On 01 April, seven containers filled with nuclear waste were transferred from ship to train in the northern part of Germany to Bavaria. Germany has not come up with a permanent solution to tackle the safe disposal of radioactive material, and hence A ship containing radioactive waste matter is docked in the German port of Nordenham, Lower Saxony. With the protests, the ship is guarded with a high presence of police. The waste material was transported from Sellafield, Northwest England, to Niederaichbach, Bavaria for temporary storage. The ship left the English port of Barrow-in-Furness and it was transferred to a train in Nordenham. The containers underwent inspection to measure radiation levels as they ensured they matched those taken from Sellafield. The port in Nordenham remains sealed off and guarded by heavily armed police, who, thus far, have no reports of any incidents, despite the protests. The protesters believe that every container carries a lot of risk, and therefore it should be transported once to permanent storage. The spokesperson of the protest groups said: “Every castor transport is one too many, and it only postpones the problem but does not solve it.” Right now, Germany’s Federal Company for Radioactive Waste Disposal (BGE) is looking for suitable locations for permanent underground storage. Lisa Sedel, BGE said: “We are using an empiric process to identify a location that offers the best security.”(Matt Ford, “Nuclear waste returns to Germany amid protests,” Deutsche Welle, 01 April 2025)
ICELAND
A volcano erupts in the Blue Lagoon leading to evacuations
On 01 April, the active volcano in Iceland started spewing lava, and there have been evacuations from the town Grindavik, and the Blue Lagoon. Since 2023, this has been the eighth eruption. The Icelandic Meteorological Office said the eruption started on the Sundhnuksgigar Crater Row, north of Grindavik. The fissure is now about 500 meters long and it has touched the protective barriers of the Grindavik. Icelandic authorities began evacuations on Tuesday morning after the magma flow, followed by a series of earthquakes in the region, warning the people of the volcanic eruption. (Timothy Jones, Iceland evacuates Blue Lagoon amid volcano eruption,” Deutsche Welle, 01 April 2025)
LITHUANIA
Fourth missing US soldier found dead in the swamp; Three of four US soldiers are found in a swamp
On 01 April, among the four missing soldiers in Lithuania, three out of four were found on 31 March, and on Tuesday the fourth American soldier was found dead in the swamp. The first three bodies were recovered after a massive six-day effort by the US, Polish, and Lithuanian armed forces and authorities retrieved the M88 Hercules vehicle from the swamp. Hundreds of Lithuanian and US soldiers and rescuers took part in the search through the thick forests. On 31 March, Euro News reported that three out of four American soldiers were found. In the six-day search for the soldiers, it was declared that they were found dead in a swamp. Lithuania President Gitanas Nauseda said: “It is with deep sadness and sorrow that I receive the news of the tragic loss of the three US soldiers, as they had come for US-led training and exercise.” The faith of the fourth soldier remains unknown but the search for him continues. The armored M88 Hercules pulled ashore at 4:40 am. Teams worked to pump the sludge and more equipment was used to clear the area. The soldiers were a part of the 1st Armoured Brigade and 3rd Infantry Division. The identities of the four soldiers are not to be revealed until the families are aware. (“Three of four US soldiers missing in Lithuania swamp found dead,” Euro News, 31 March 2025; Gavin Blackburn, “Fourth US soldier missing in Lithuania swamp found dead, President Nausėda says,” Euro News, 01 April 2024)
REGIONAL
The Automobile Manufacturers’ Association to be fined by the UK and the EU
On 01 April, 15 major car manufacturers were fined EUR 600 million by the UK government and the European Union. The EU fined the Automobile Manufacturers’ Association and their 15 members for engaging in cartel-like behavior, on the recycling of used cars. Volkswagen was handed EUR 12 million, Renault- EUR 81 million, Stellanis-EUR 75 million, Ford-EUR41.5 million, BMW-EUR 25 million, Opel-EUR 25 million, and Toyota0EUR 24 million. Mercedes Benz would have been liable for a EUR 35 million fine but avoided the penalty after reporting the long-running cartel in which it conspired with its rivals. The EU found that the car makers entered into anti-competitive agreements and had exchanged confidential information to prevent competition of the old cars. The key finding was that the manufacturers decided not to advertise their recycling process, preventing consumers from factoring in the environmental impact when choosing a vehicle and reducing any potential pressure on the companies. EU Vice President Teresa Ribera said: “We will not tolerate cartels of any kind, that includes those that suppress customer awareness for more environmentally friendly products.”(Matt Ford, “EU and UK fine carmakers millions over recycling cartel,” Deutsche Welle, 01 April 2024)
EU to respond strong against the US tariffs
On 01 April, EU President Ursula von der Leyen said: “…hoped to avoid a trade war, but Brussels had a strong plan to respond to tariffs imposed by Washington.” US President Donald Trump is to impose tariffs on many countries from this month, where he calls it Liberation Day to tackle supposedly unjust trade imbalances. President Von der Leyen had called for negotiation, but the major priority was to look at the interests of the people, but if needed, there would be a strong plan iterated and executed. President Trump will reveal the details of the tariffs, the markets are clearly uncertain, as to the future recession and equity sell-off. European producers were affected by the 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminum, but Brussels has already pledged countermeasures from mid-April. (Richard Connor, “EU prepares 'strong plan' to hit back at Trump tariffs” Deutsche Welle, 01 April 2025)
TÜRKIYE
Day 13 of protests: İmamoğlu responds to the protestors in Istanbul
On 29 March, thousands of pro-democratic protesters returned to the streets of Istanbul, to show their support to the imprisoned mayor. Ekrem İmamoğlu is the biggest rival of President Tayyip and was arrested on charges of corruption. İmamoğlu denied any wrongdoing and said this was a political motive. Crowds were huge on Saturday, so the crowds shifted to the neighbouring park. The chairman of İmamoğlu’s Republican People’s Party addressed the demonstrators, reading out a letter addressed from the jailed mayor. He said: “I have no fear, you are behind me and by my side, I have no fear because the nation is united against the oppressor.” His wife added: “We will keep fighting and fighting.”(Anna Lamche, “Protesters return to Istanbul's streets for huge rally,” BBC, 29 March 2025)