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Italy holds referendum on easing citizenship rules

In response to concerns that low turnout may render the poll invalid, Italians are casting ballots on easing citizenship laws and strengthening labor protections.

Voting began on Sunday and will continue through Monday.

Italians are asked if they support reducing the time to which an Italian citizen must reside before becoming a citizen by naturalization to five years in the citizenship question on the ballot paper.

Without having any prior marriages or blood ties to Italy, a resident of a non-European nation must reside there for ten years before applying for citizenship. This process can then take several years.

According to supporters, the reform would bring Italy’s citizenship law in line with that of many other European countries, including Germany and France, and would have an impact on 2.5 million foreigners who reside there.

The main union and left-wing opposition parties in Italy put forth proposals for the measures.

Giorgia Meloni, the prime minister, has stated that she won’t cast a ballot at the polls. The action has been criticized as antidemocratic because it would not help to reach the required 50 percent plus one of eligible voters to make the vote valid.

Meloni is vehemently opposed to it despite the fact that his party’s far-right Brothers of Italy has prioritized reducing illegal immigration.

She stated on Thursday that the current system is “one of the most open laws, in the sense that we have consistently been one of the European countries that grant the most citizenships annually.”

In 2023, more than 213,500 people erroneously became Italian citizens, representing a whopping 2% of the EU’s total.

More than 90% of the immigrants were from countries other than the EU, primarily from Albania and Morocco, as well as Argentina and Brazil, two nations with significant Italian immigrant populations.

Even if the proposed reform is implemented, the migration law, which many believe is the most unfair, will remain intact because children born in Italy to foreign parents cannot apply for nationality until they are 18 years old.

Ghali, an Italian singer who was born in Milan to Tunisian parents and has consistently backed child law reform, appealed to his fans to support the proposal as a step in the right direction.

Ghali wrote on Instagram, “I was born here, I always lived here, but I only became a citizen when I was 18.” We ask that five years of living here, not ten, be sufficient to make this nation, with a “Yes.”

A “yes” vote was also urged by Michelle Ngonmo, a cultural entrepreneur and champion of diversity in the fashion industry.

“This referendum is really about dignity and the right to belong,” according to the statement from many of the people who were born here and spent the majority of their adult lives making a difference in Italian society. A lack of citizenship is “like an invisible wall” for them, according to Ngonmo, who has spent most of her life in Italy after relocating from Cameroon as a child.

You can work and pay taxes, but you won’t be fully recognized as Italian. She told the Associated Press news agency, “This makes young generations, especially those in the creative field, feel unappreciative, excluded, and have a lot of potential.”

The other four measures on the ballot address the labor law, including stronger sanctions against dismissal, higher severance pay, permanent contract renewal, and liability for workplace accidents.

Only 46% of Italians were aware of the issues influencing the referendums, according to opinion polls released in the middle of May. With a quorum that was below 35 percent of the more than 51 million voters, the turnout projections were even worse.

Numerous of the previous 78 referendums held in Italy failed because of low turnout.

Colombia’s would-be presidential candidate Miguel Uribe shot, wounded

According to authorities, Colombian Senator Miguel Uribe, who might run for president in the country’s capital next year, has been shot and hurt in Bogota.

The 39-year-old senator, who was shot on Saturday at a campaign event as part of his 2026 presidential campaign, is now “fighting for his life,” his wife, Maria Claudia Tarazona, told X.

Former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe founded the opposition conservative Democratic Center party.

The two men don’t have a family.

The shooting was described as an “unacceptable act of violence,” according to the Democratic Center party’s statement.

When “armed subjects” shot the senator from behind during a campaign event in the capital’s Fontibon neighborhood, according to the statement.

It described the attack as being serious, but it did not provide further information about Uribe’s condition.

The senator was admitted in critical condition and was “undergoing a neurosurgical and peripheral vascular procedure,” according to a medical report from the Santa Fe Foundation hospital.

After the shooting, a man, identified as Uribe, was seen being cared for on social media. He appeared to be roiling from his head.

The senator was shot twice in the attack, according to Colombia’s Attorney General’s Office, which is looking into the shooting. A 15-year-old boy was detained at the scene while carrying a gun, according to the office’s statement.

The government announced that it would reward information in the case with about $730, 000.

In Bogota, Colombia, on May 14, 2025, center in blue tie, Colombian senator and candidate for president of the right-wing Centro Democrático party, Miguel Uribe celebrates his victory over a government-sponsored labor reform referendum.

The government “categorically and forcefully” rejected the violent attack, according to Colombia’s presidency, and demanded a thorough investigation of the events that occurred.

In a message on X, leftist president Gustavo Petro expressed sympathy for the senator’s family and declared, “Respect life, that’s the red line. I’m not sure how to relieve their suffering.

Petro stated in a speech on Saturday night that the investigation would concentrate on identifying the perpetrator of the attack.

There are currently only hypotheses, according to Petro, adding that security protocol failures will also be investigated.

In a statement, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that Petro’s “inflammatory rhetoric” was the cause of the violence and that the country “condemns in the strongest possible terms” Uribe’s attempted assassination.

Latin Americans reacted a lot. In a democracy, President of Chile Gabriel Boric said, “There is no room or justification for violence.” And Daniel Noboa, president of Ecuador, declared, “We condemn all forms of violence and intolerance.”

The family of the senator was shown compassion by both presidents.

Former Colombian President Uribe claimed that “they attacked the country’s hope, a great husband, father, son, brother, and great colleague.”

Uribe is a prominent member of a well-known family in Colombia and is not currently a candidate for president.

His father was a union leader and businessman. An armed group led by the late cartel leader Pablo Escobar kidnapped his mother, journalist Diana Turbay, in 1990.

In 1991, she was killed in a rescue operation.

‘Clearly an excuse’: Does Netanyahu really want Hamas gone?

Israel’s war on Gaza rumbles on, even as international condemnation grows.

Hamas has expressed that it is ready for a deal to end the war, even offering to turn over the administration of Gaza to a technocratic government. United Nations Security Council members have overwhelmingly voted in favour of a ceasefire, a resolution blocked from passing only by a United States veto.

But Israel, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, is adamant in its refusal of any agreement that does not include what it calls the “defeat of Hamas”, even if that means endangering the Israeli captives still held in Gaza.

“Hamas is already the weakest it’s ever been, and there’s nothing they can do that is remotely comparable to what Israel possesses,” writer and researcher on Israel-Palestine and founder of The Fire These Times podcast Elia Ayoub told Al Jazeera.

“There’s ample evidence by now that the only reason this genocide is ongoing is because Netanyahu wants it to continue. It’s clearly just an excuse to keep the war going.”

Netanyahu is ‘reliant upon Hamas’

But why would Netanyahu want the war – which is Israel’s longest since 1948, and is causing economic crisis – to continue?

One answer is that the war provides a distraction from Netanyahu’s own problems.

Israel’s longest-serving prime minister has well-documented legal troubles; he is being tried for corruption.

And, aside from that, should a permanent ceasefire be realised, some analysts believe Israeli society will hold Netanyahu accountable for security shortcomings that led to October 7.

“He’s afraid once it’s done, eyes will rightfully turn to him over corruption and the failures of October 7,” Diana Buttu, a legal scholar and former adviser to the Palestine Liberation Organization, said.

And so, Netanyahu has two main tasks. The first is to prolong the war, allowing him to continue using it as an excuse to avoid accountability. The second is to prevent the breakup of his government, while somehow setting himself up for another successful election, which must happen before October 2026.

Netanyahu has been “reliant upon Hamas throughout the war”, Mairav Zonszein, an expert on Israel and Palestine for the International Crisis Group, told Al Jazeera.

“The far right and Netanyahu have consistently used Hamas as an excuse not to negotiate or plan for a day after,” she said.

Israel’s goal has nothing to do with Hamas

The Israeli refusal to negotiate a final end to the war stands in stark contrast to Hamas’s willingness to hand over all captives held in Gaza.

Over the last 20 months, much of Hamas’s leadership has been killed. Ismail Haniyeh, Hamas’s political leader, was assassinated in Tehran on July 31, and Yahya Sinwar, his successor, was killed in Gaza on October 16.

Israel is now claiming it killed Sinwar’s successor and younger brother, Mohammed, though Hamas has yet to confirm his death.

Militarily, analysts say, Hamas is estimated to have lost significant strength. It is still conducting some attacks, but fewer and further between than the ambushes it was able to carry out earlier in the war.

In a sign that Hamas perhaps understands that it is no longer in a position to rule Gaza, it has also offered to step down from the administration of the Palestinian territory, which it has controlled since 2006, and hand over to a technocratic government.

“The technocrat offer is not new,” Hamzé Attar, a Luxembourg-based defence analyst from Gaza, said.

“It was on the table since before the invasion of Rafah [which occurred on May 6, 2024]. They want Hamas to give up their arms and give up everything, and Hamas has responded by saying: ‘We’re stepping aside.’”

That has been firmly rejected by Israel, which has not endorsed any vision for post-war Gaza.

Instead, over the last nearly 20 months, Israel has killed more than 54,300 Palestinians and wounded more than 124,000 in Gaza, according to the territory’s Health Ministry.

Ethnic cleansing: The deeper goal

In addition, Gaza is now “the hungriest place on Earth”, according to the UN, all its inhabitants at risk of famine after Israel strangled aid delivery throughout its war, then completely blocked it from March 2 until May 27.

Israel has also turned 70 percent of the enclave into no-go zones.

All the while, Israel’s bombing of Gaza continues.

Discounting the pretext of destroying Hamas and returning the captives, some analysts believe there is a deeper goal: pushing Palestinians out of Gaza.

“Neither Hamas nor the hostages are the targets,” Meron Rappaport, an editor at Local Call, a Hebrew-language news site, said.

“The goal is to push the people of Gaza into very few, small and closed areas where food will be delivered scarcely, hoping that the pressure on them will get them to ask to leave the Strip.”

“Israel is no longer fighting Hamas,” he added.

Netanyahu said in late May that Israel would control the entirety of Gaza by the end of its latest offensive, while many foreign officials and experts have warned either directly or implicitly that Israel’s actions amount to ethnically cleansing Gaza.

A recent report in Haaretz, the Israeli newspaper, cited 82 percent of Jewish Israelis supporting the expulsion of the people in Gaza.

To do so would have a historic impact, Buttu said, one that Netanyahu might feel he can portray as protecting Israel from a Palestinian state – something he has repeatedly promised to prevent.

“He recognises he will be the fall guy or the hero,” Buttu said. “If he is the one who ethnically cleanses Gaza, he becomes the hero.”

Until that happens, analysts believe, Palestinians will continue to die at the hands of the Israeli military. Hamas is the pretext and their willingness to negotiate or succumb is of secondary importance.

“Benjamin Netanyahu has no intention of ending this war,” Zonszein said. “It doesn’t matter what Hamas offers. They can offer to return all the hostages or give up governance.

“This war is going to continue until Netanyahu is forced to stop it, and that can only come from Trump.”

Trump deploys National Guard to quell protests against ICE in Los Angeles

Developing a Story
A second day of protests and clashes have erupted in Los Angeles, California, where US President Donald Trump will send 2, 000 National Guard troops.

In a statement released on Saturday, the White House claimed that Trump would employ the guardsmen to “address the lawlessness that has been allowed to fester” in the second-largest city in the country.

In addition, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth reaffirmed that the Pentagon was ready to mobilize active-duty personnel in Los Angeles, citing Camp Pendleton’s Marines as being “on high alert.”

Tom Homan, the border czar for Trump, confirmed to Fox News that the National Guard would be stationed in Los Angeles on Saturday.

Governor Gavin Newsom of California described the action as “purposefully inflammatory.”

Trump’s National Guard is being deployed “not because there is a shortage of law enforcement, but because they want a spectacle,” he wrote on X, adding, “Don’t give them one.” Never engage in physical terrorism. sincerely and peacefully disagree.

As the crowds demanded that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents leave their city during the protests on Saturday, federal agents confronted dozens of protesters in the Paramount neighborhood of southeast Los Angeles and sprayed tear gas on a street full of overturned shopping carts.

Some of the protesters had their faces covered with respiratory masks as they waved the Mexican flag.

Protests were reported following rumors of additional immigration raids close to a neighborhood home improvement store.

The night before, ICE agents stormed several locations in Los Angeles and made arrests for at least 44 people for alleged immigration violations, which also led to verbal altercations.

In the evening after the arrests, protesters gathered outside a federal detention facility and chanted “Set them free, let them stay”!

Some erected graffiti on the building while others erected signs with anti-ICE slogans.

Mayor of Los Angeles Karen Bass blasted the immigration raids, calling them “terrorists” and saying they were meant to “sow terror” in the country’s second-largest city.

In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump also chided Bass and Newsom.

The Federal Government will intervene and solve the problem, RIOTS &LOOTERS, the way it should be solved, if Governor Gavin Newscum of California and Mayor Karen Bass of Los Angeles are unable to do their jobs, which everyone is aware of. he wrote.

Trump’s campaign includes a pledge to lock down the US-Mexico border and deport record numbers of people entering the country without identification. At least 3, 000 migrants will be detained daily by ICE, according to the White House.

However, the extensive immigration crackdown has also caused legal challenges for those who reside in the country legally, including some who have permanent residency.

According to Rosiland Jordan, a correspondent for Al Jazeera in Washington, DC, Trump’s decision to deploy the National Guard has sparked &nbsp, concern in the entire nation.

“The National Guard hasn’t been in Los Angeles since 1991, during the riots following Rodney King’s arrest by the police,” he said. This is a significant step, she said.

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,200

What’s the situation on Sunday, June 8th, according to the following:

Fighting

  • According to local officials, Russian forces attacked the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv at night and in the evening with drones, missiles, and guided bombs, killing at least four people and injuring more than 60, including a baby.
  • Mayor Ihor Terekhov stated in a post on Telegram that “Kharkiv is currently experiencing the most powerful attack since the start of the full-scale war.”
  • Three people were killed elsewhere in Ukraine in the front-line Donetsk region, where the conflict has raged the most intensely, and three more in the Kherson region, which Moscow’s forces have partially occupied, according to the AFP news agency.
  • According to a military analyst, Russian forces took control of a section of the Yunakivka-Sudzha highway in the Sumy region of Ukraine, which “Ukrainian troops once used to supply their group in the]Russian] Kursk Region,” according to Russia’s TASS news agency.
  • Russia has fired 206 drones, two ballistic missiles, and seven other missiles at Ukraine overnight, according to the Ukrainian military. According to Kyiv, its air defense units shot down 87 drones and lost 80.
  • A Russian Su-35 fighter jet was shot down after “a successful Air Force operation in the Kursk direction,” according to a statement posted on Telegram.
  • Russian military helicopters were damaged by Russian forces, according to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Every problem Russia poses is crucial to us, he said in his evening statement.
  • Meanwhile, German Major General Christian Freuding said his country believes a recent Ukrainian attack has damaged 10% of Russia’s long-range bombers, but that it will have an “indirect effect” because Moscow still has 90% of its strategic bombers at its disposal.
  • Officials in Russia reported that two people were hurt by a Ukrainian drone attack in the Moscow region.
  • 36 Ukrainian drones were intercepted and destroyed over Russian territory on Saturday, including the Moscow region, according to the Russian Ministry of Defense.

Prisoner Exchange

  • In direct negotiations held on Monday in Istanbul, Russia and Ukraine accused one another of putting an end to plans to swap 6, 000 soldiers’ bodies.
  • Vladimir Medinsky, the Russian delegation’s leader, claimed Kyiv called a last-minute stop to an upcoming swap. More than 1,200 Ukrainian troops’ bodies from Russia had already arrived at the agreed-upon exchange site at the border, according to Medinsky in a Telegram post.
  • In response, Ukraine retorted and claimed that Russia was “playing dirty games” and fabricating information.
  • No date has been set for the repatriation of the bodies, according to the main Ukrainian authority that deals with these swaps. The organization also claimed that Russia had submitted lists of war prisoners for repatriation that did not match the Monday agreements it had reached in a statement on Saturday.

Weapons

    In response to the most recent deadly Russian attacks on Kharkiv, Zelenskyy urged the United States to “urgently” send “positive signals” regarding Ukraine’s request to purchase air defense systems. US Patriot air defense systems were first requested publicly by Selenskyy in mid-April of this year.

  • Sebastien Lecornu, the minister of armed forces in France, reported to LCI News that a French automaker is preparing to build drones in Ukraine.
  • David McGuinty, the Canadian minister of national defense, announced $ 35 million ($25. 5 million) in military assistance for Ukraine, including Coyote and Bison armored vehicles.

Diplomacy

  • Sergey Ryabkov, the deputy foreign minister of Russia, reported to TASS that Russia had requested that US officials resume direct flights between the two nations and ease US diplomatic restrictions.
  • They are not very enthusiastic about the proposal to resume flights, Ryabkov said to put it mildly.

Israel kills more than 70 in Gaza, including 16 in bombing family building

At least 75 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli-led raids across Gaza, and rescuers are frantically searching for bodies under the rubble following the bombing of a residential building in Gaza City, which the civil defense described as a “full-fledged massacre.”

Prior to Saturday’s attack on the home in the Sabra neighborhood of Gaza City, which left at least 16 people dead, including women and children, the military did not give a “warn, no alert,” according to a spokesman for the Palestinian Civil Defense, Mahmoud Basel, who spoke to Al Jazeera.

According to Basel, who added that about 85 people were thought to be trapped beneath the rubble, “this is truly a full-fledged massacre… a building full of civilians.”

A displaced Palestinian at the site, Hamed Keheel, recalled that the attack had occurred on the second day of the Eid al-Adha festival, and that “we woke up to the strikes, destruction, yelling, rocks hitting us.”

He claimed that this is his occupation. We wake up to carry women’s and children’s bodies from under rubble, not to cheer our children and dress them up.

Hassan Alkhor, a resident from the Abu Sharia family, informed Al Jazeera that the building is their home. He prayed, “May God hold the Israeli forces and [Prime Minister] Netanyahu accountable.”

According to a report in the Times of Israel on Saturday, the Israeli military claimed to have killed Asaad Abu Sharia, the Mujahideen Brigades leader, who it claimed had participated in the Hamas-led attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.

Hamas confirmed the killing in a statement posted on Telegram, claiming Ahmed Abu Sharia’s brother had also been killed in the attack, which it claimed was “part of a series of brutal massacres against civilians.”

“A few cups of rice for our hungry kids.”

In addition to the latest deadly incident involving Israeli operations that have resulted in the deaths of 118 people and others have been missing in less than two weeks, Israeli forces also killed at least eight Palestinians waiting nearby a Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF)-run aid distribution facility in southern Gaza on Saturday.

Samir Abu Hadid, a resident of Gaza, reported to the AFP news agency that hundreds of people had gathered near the aid facility’s al-Alam roundabout.

The Israeli [forces] opened fire from armored vehicles stationed nearby, firing into the air and then at civilians, according to Abu Hadid.

After visiting the aid station to get “a handful of rice for our starving children,” a woman claimed her husband had been killed in the attack.

I begged him not to leave because he claimed he felt like he was on the verge of death. She said, “He insisted on finding anything to feed our children.”

In late May, the GHF, a shady United States-backed private organization that Israel has established to distribute aid under the protection of its troops and security contractors, started operating.

Critics claim that the organization uses weapons to aid in achieving its stated goals of ethnic cleansing large swathes of Gaza and gaining control over the entire enclave, in violation of humanitarian principles of neutrality.

Hamas “direct threats” against its operations, GHF claimed on Saturday, making it impossible to distribute any humanitarian aid. According to a statement, “These threats made it impossible to proceed today without risking innocent lives.” Hasso informed Reuters news agency that it had no knowledge of these “alleged threats.”

The UN, which has resisted cooperating with the GHF, has warned that the majority of Gaza’s 2.3 million people are in danger of starving after an 11-week Israeli blockade, with the rate of young children with acute malnutrition nearly tripling.

“Lost generation for the future”

In the wake of the looming famine, it became clear that health officials in the region had documented more than 300 miscarriages over the course of an 80-day period.

With the availability of basic medical supplies like iron supplements and prenatal vitamins, expecting mothers are more likely to experience miscarriage and premature births.

According to Brenda Kelly, a consultant obstetrician at Oxford University Hospital, Gaza is “losing a future generation of children,” making reference to a “staggering rise” in stillbirths, miscarriages, and pre-term births.

One of the main causes of miscarriages and stillbirths is “what we’re seeing now is the direct result of Israel’s weaponizing of hunger in Gaza,” she said.

Grave stress and psychological trauma, repeated displacement, and a lack of safe shelter all contribute to severe malnutrition in pregnant women, she said.