Latest Estonia News
news | ERR
Estonian official running for ice hockey world governing body top job
The former head of the national ice hockey association is to run for the position of president of the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF), the sport's international governing body.
news | ERR
Court rejects MEP's campaign expenses challenge
Tallinn Administrative Court has dismissed European Parliament member Jaak Madison's appeal seeking to overturn an order by the Political Parties Financing Surveillance Committee requiring him to repay campaign expenses.
Politics | ERR
Court rejects MEP's campaign expenses challenge
Tallinn Administrative Court has dismissed European Parliament member Jaak Madison's appeal seeking to overturn an order by the Political Parties Financing Surveillance Committee requiring him to repay campaign expenses.
Politics | ERR
SDE proposes justice chancellor run for president
The opposition Social Democrats (SDE) have proposed long-serving Chancellor of Justice Ülle Madise as a presidential candidate.
Society | ERR
Government seeks mandatory blocking of Estonia‑number spoofing scam calls
Justice and Digital Minister Liisa Pakosta has proposed new rules that would force telecom operators to filter and block foreign scam calls posing as Estonian numbers.
Society | ERR
Minister: Police conducting raids near schools to catch e‑scooter offenders
Estonian police have conducted raids near schools in Tallinn suburbs to curb rising e-scooter accidents among 7–14-year-olds, the only demographic seeing increased injuries during the first five months of 2026.
Postimees
OTSEBLOGI ⟩ Senegal valitseb mängu Belgiaga ja läks juhtima juba 2:0
Ehkki Belgia jalgpallikoondis suutis viimase vooru edu abil võita Põhja-Ameerikas toimuval MMil oma alagrupi, ei tähenda see edasiseks hõlpsamat teed, sest juba 1/16-finaali vastane Senegal on väga tugev.
Postimees
Kõlvart kritiseeris sotside rutakat lüket teha Ülle Madisest võimalik presidendikandidaat
Presidendivalimiste valguses sõnas Keskerakonna esimees Mihhail Kõlvart sotsiaalmeedias, et kuna sotsiaaldemokraadid käisid tulevast presidenti otsides kiiruga välja õiguskantsler Ülle Madise nime, on teemast saanud tugev kandidaat, olgugi et Madise pole selleks ise huvi väljendanud.
BBC News
Ukrainian charged in Germany over Nord Stream blasts
Ukraine denies involvement in the case which may have serious implications for its relationship with Germany.
BBC News
Businessman goes on trial over murder of Maltese journalist
Yorgen Fenech denies any involvement in the assassination of Daphne Caruana Galizia in 2017.
BBC News
Bibles, Home Alone and perfume: Six surprising ways Trump made money in 2025
Official documents show the US president made billions of dollars as he returned to the White House.
BBC News
Halifax brand to be scrapped after 173 years
Lloyds says it remains committed to the town of Halifax and very little will change for customers.
POLITICO
US citizen, released from Iraqi prison, alleges he’s been held in Turkey at US request
Lawyers for an American citizen, recently released from an Iraqi prison following a terrorism-related sentence, say the man has been newly detained in Turkey at the behest of the U.S. government. In a petition filed Tuesday in federal court in Washington, D.C., attorneys for Shawki Ahmad Sharif Omar, who was born in Kuwait but naturalized as a U.S. citizen in the 1980s, allege that the U.S. is working with Turkish officials to keep him from reentering the United States. He is being held in a Turkish “deportation facility,” but Omar’s lawyers argue that he is effectively in the “constructive custody” of the U.S. government, and they are asking a federal judge to order his release and return. The case was assigned to U.S. District Judge John Bates, an appointee of George W. Bush. Omar, who is also a Jordanian citizen, was arrested by U.S. forces in Iraq in 2004 for allegedly providing aid to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, then the leader of al Qaeda in Iraq. He drew international attention after describing abuse and torture he experienced while in U.S. military custody. After the U.S. delivered him to Iraqi authorities in 2011, he was convicted of immigration violations and — several years later — terrorism charges that kept him in jail until this past April. In all, Omar has spent most of the past 22 years in detention facilities and prisons. His backstory is both complicated and opaque, shrouded by layers of government secrecy and records of decades-old court proceedings. Evidence supplied by the U.S. government during a 2008 Supreme Court fight stemming from efforts to send him to Iraqi custody portrayed Omar as a key fixer for Zarqawi “facilitating his group’s connection with other terrorist groups, bringing foreign fighters into Iraq, and planning and executing kidnappings.” But his allies have claimed the U.S. evidence for those allegations was flimsy and never corroborated. Omar and his allies have also claimed the Iraqi legal proceedings were unfair and deprived him of due process. His case has made international headlines for years. Omar’s attorneys say he was issued a temporary U.S. passport after his release from Iraqi custody in April but that he was nevertheless added to the no-fly list and barred from traveling to the U.S. to reunite with his family — which includes his wife and U.S. citizen children. The U.S. has broad latitude to include even its citizens on the no-fly list, a secretive list of individuals believed to pose a risk to U.S. national security given their affiliations, foreign travel and other personal information. But Omar’s claim that the Turkish authorities are holding him at the behest of the United States raise new questions about the legal authority of the U.S. to cooperate with foreign governments on border security and migration goals. It is unusual for the U.S. to ask another country to detain a U.S. citizen as a way to bar their re-entry, regardless of their criminal record. Turkish officials detained Omar and sent him to a deportation center, where he has been for the last week at an unknown facility, according to his petition. The filing claims that the officials told Omar that they were acting on a request from U.S. authorities. The complaint includes text of correspondence with State Department officials who acknowledged Omar’s detention and said they were working with Turkish counterparts to verify his well-being. “The government cannot now argue that it lacks control over Petitioner’s detention when it has affirmatively exercised its authority to intervene on his behalf,” his lawyers wrote. They argued that Omar is “in danger of being deported to a country where he faces a real risk of torture including Jordan — a country that has interrogated his family members about his whereabouts and activities or being subjected to torture in Türkiye at the behest of the United States in light of the fact that he has already once been turned over to a country that tortured him, by United States officials.” The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the Transportation Security Agency and accordingly the no-fly list, directed POLITICO to the FBI, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The State Department and the U.S. Embassy in Turkey also didn’t respond to requests for comment. Omar’s lawyer, Curtis Doebbler, declined to comment, citing the ongoing litigation. The argument by Omar’s lawyers is similar to one raised by more more than 100 Venezuelan nationals who were abruptly deported to El Salvador last year after President Donald Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act to label them members of a violent transnational gang. Though they were quickly transported to Salvadoran custody — despite efforts by a federal judge to block the transfer — the men claimed they were still in the “constructive custody” of the United States, claiming the Trump administration had the power to bring them back. It is also the latest juncture in a nearly two-decade legal fight for Omar. Omar has claimed he and his then-pregnant wife were tortured at Abu Ghraib prison, a U.S.-run detention facility 20 miles from Baghdad where service members and U.S. intelligence officers were accused of serious abuses, including sexual abuse and torture of inmates. The lawsuit claims Omar received a settlement from the U.S. government for his experiences at Abu Ghraib. In 2011, he was transferred to Iraqi custody and convicted on charges he was part of a “illegitimate group” and entered the country illegally — even though he entered with his U.S. passport (that was in the possession of U.S. authorities). The witness whose testimony undergirded Omar’s conviction on the charges he was part of an “illegitimate group” recanted subsequently. Courts have previously ruled against the U.S. government when it has infringed on the rights of U.S. citizens accused of ties to terrorist organizations. In 2018, a U.S. court ruled in favor of a dual U.S.-Saudi citizen accused of fighting on behalf of ISIS in Syria, who the U.S. had tried to send to another country — presumably Saudi Arabia.
POLITICO
MEPs blast FIFA’s Infantino over Russian athletes in youth World Cup
Forty-four members of the European Parliament are urging FIFA President Gianni Infantino to reverse his decision to allow Russian athletes to play at this year’s inaugural U-15 World Cup in Azerbaijan. They argue that Russia should not be readmitted to FIFA competitions until it enters peace negotiations with Ukraine, ceases fire and agrees to return children kidnapped from Ukrainian territories. In a letter obtained by POLITICO, the lawmakers criticize global football body FIFA for ignoring what they described as “around 20,000 Ukrainian children … forcibly kidnapped and separated from their families by [Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s regime.” “We urge FIFA to stand on the side of peace and not appease the aggressor – Russia,” the letter reads. After Putin launched his invasion of Ukraine in 2022, FIFA banned Russia from participating in all of its football competitions. FIFA lifted the blanket ban for youth competitions in 2023, but Russian teams have not played in its U-17 World Cups since. FIFA announced last week its first U-15 World Cup, in which boys and girls will compete this October in Azerbaijan. At the time, the organization announced that the competition would be open to “all FIFA member associations,” opening the door to Russia’s participation. Infantino said in February that FIFA should lift its ban on Russia, saying that bans “create more hatred.” The European lawmakers argue that allowing Russia to participate could lead other member countries to boycott the competition, a stance they call “very understandable.” They argue that this would “distort FIFA sporting events, where the principle that the best team wins will no longer prevail.” Ukraine’s football federation has previously said it would not participate in competitions with Russia. In March of 2022, Russia appealed the FIFA ban to the Court of Arbitration for Sport. The body dismissed Russia’s claim. Russia’s gradual return to other sports has triggered outrage in Ukraine and been denounced by the EU.
Al Jazeera – Breaking News, World News and Video from Al Jazeera
US signs $1 lease with Israel to build permanent embassy in West Jerusalem
The US and Israel have signed a deal allocating land for a permanent US embassy in West Jerusalem.
Al Jazeera – Breaking News, World News and Video from Al Jazeera
US Supreme Court hands wealthy donors more sway with latest decision
Critics say the ruling invites corruption, benefitting wealthy donors and amplifying special interest sway in politics.
Europe | The Guardian
Maltese businessman paid hitmen €150,000 to kill Daphne Caruana Galizia, jury hears
Yorgen Fenech, heir to property empire, on trial for alleged involvement in murder of journalist, which he deniesOne of Malta’s wealthiest businessmen plotted to kill the investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia, paying €150,000 (£130,000) for three hitmen to carry out the murder, a jury has heard.Yorgen Fenech, the 44-year-old heir to a property empire that includes the Hilton Malta hotel and casino, is on trial for the 2017 murder. Continue reading...
Europe | The Guardian
Man guilty of attempting to murder three children in attack that triggered Dublin riot
Jury also finds Riad Bouchaker guilty of assaulting two other children and a childcare worker in 2023 stabbingsA man has been found guilty of attempting to murder three children during a stabbing attack in Dublin in 2023, a crime that horrified Ireland and triggered a riot in the capital.A jury at the central criminal court on Wednesday also found Riad Bouchaker, 52, guilty of assault causing serious harm to a childcare worker, Leanne Flynn, and of assaulting two other children and a teenager. Continue reading...
Europe
KNDS postpones plans for stock market listing
Franco-German tank maker delays IPO after investors balk at €12bn-plus valuation
Europe
Zelenskyy urges EU to sanction Russian-owned alumina plant in Ireland
Call on the opening day of Dublin’s EU presidency adds to pressure over Aughinish Alumina smelter