Macrons file defamation suit against right-wing US podcaster Candace Owens

A right-wing US podcaster who claimed the former French president’s spouse was a man has filed a defamation lawsuit against Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte.

The Macrons filed a 218-page complaint against Candace Owens, who has millions of YouTube subscribers, on Wednesday in Delaware Superior Court, and demands an unspecified amount of punitive damages.

The Macrons claimed in a statement from their attorney that they had filed the lawsuit after Owens repeatedly refused to retract statements made in Becoming Brigitte, an eight-part YouTube and podcast series.

The Macrons claim that the series “verifiably spread false and devastating lies,” including that Brigitte changed her gender and that the Macrons are blood relatives who carry out incest.

The Macrons’ complaint addresses circumstances that led to their meeting, when Brigitte was a teacher and the current president, who is now 47 years old. Their relationship “continued to be within the bounds of the law,” it was stated.

The Macrons claimed that Owens’ defamation campaign was clearly intended to afflict and pain us and our families and to garner media and notoriety.

She refused, despite the fact that we gave her every chance to refute these claims. We sincerely hope that this lawsuit will put an end to this defamation campaign, they continued.

According to Owens, “This lawsuit is littered with factual errors” and is a result of an “obvious and desperate public relations strategy” to smear her character in her podcast on Wednesday.

Despite lawyers for both sides having been communicating since January, Owens added that she had not anticipated a lawsuit was coming.

After Brigitte repeatedly declined to interview Owens, a spokesperson for the lawsuit claimed that it was simply an attempt to intimidate her.

The spokesperson claimed that “this is a foreign government that is robbing an American independent journalist of their First Amendment rights.”

Have international leaders previously filed defamation lawsuits?

A world leader is once again suing for defamation in this unusual case.

Donald Trump has also argued in court, including in a $ 10 billion lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal, who claimed he gave Jeffrey Epstein, a notorious financier, a lewd birthday greeting in 2003.

The Journal expressed complete confidence in its reporting and said it would fight that case.

Trump and Walt Disney-owned ABC reached a $15 million settlement in December over an untrue allegation that a jury found him guilty of rape in a civil lawsuit rather than sexual assault.

Australia lifts US beef restrictions slammed by Trump

Despite criticism from US President Donald Trump, Australia has announced that it will remove stringent restrictions on beef imports from the country.

After a “rigorous science and risk-based assessment” revealed that US health risks were being managed on the side of the country, Agriculture Minister Julie Collins declared that the government would remove the biosecurity restrictions.

Our cattle industry has benefited significantly from this, according to a statement from Collins.

Australia, which has some of the toughest biosecurity regulations in the world, has so far refused to accept beef from cattle raised in the US and Canada.

In response to a 2019 outbreak of mad cow disease, Canberra lifted its ban on beef from cows raised and slaughtered in the US.

The action comes after Donald Trump criticizes Australia’s strict tariffs on US beef in his “Liberation Day” announcement on April 2 about sweeping tariffs against dozens of nations.

Trump remarked, “Australia bans, and they’re wonderful people and wonderful everything. But they also ban American beef.”

Trump continued, “They won’t take any of our beef.”

They don’t want it to affect their farmers, and I don’t blame them, but we’re doing it right now, starting at midnight tonight, in my opinion.

Australia, which exports only about 70% of its beef, is one of the main red meat exporters to the US, but it only consumes a small amount of it.

According to government data, Australia exported about 26, 000 tonnes of beef and veal to the US in the first three weeks of July, which has been subject to Trump’s base 10% tariff since April.

The changes would have a minimal impact on the market, according to Meat &amp, Livestock Australia, a producer-owned organization supporting the local beef industry.

Given the high demand for beef in the US, the low US cattle herd, the strength of the Australian dollar, our domestically competitive supply, and most importantly, Australians’ strong preference for high-quality, tasty, and nutritious Australian beef, the company said. “The potential for US beef to be imported into Australia in large volumes is low.

EU-China summit – who’s attending and what’s on the agenda?

Brussels, Belgium – On Thursday, the European Union and China will hold a top-level summit in Beijing to remember 50 years of diplomatic ties just before the summer lull begins.

The mood before the meeting on Thursday, however, has not been particularly celebratory but, rather, tense with low expectations for any concrete bilateral deals. Beijing earlier this month reduced the summit’s two-day schedule to a single day’s event, citing domestic factors.

A series of trade disagreements, particularly over market access and critical rare earth elements, and geopolitical tensions, primarily Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine, have marred EU-China relations.

The EU’s relationship with China is complex, according to Gunnar Wiegand, who was previously the European External Action Service’s (EEAS) managing director for Asia and the Pacific and is a distinguished fellow at the German Marshall Fund’s Brussels Office’s Indo-Pacific Program.

“The EU views China as a partner for global challenges, an economic competitor when it comes to developing new technologies and also a systemic rival because of Beijing’s governance system and its influence on global affairs”, he said, adding that the question of whether China is also a threat to European security has come up over the last few years in the context of Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine.

Who is present at the summit?

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Antonio Costa will visit China on Thursday, seeking to address these disputes at the summit.

“This Summit is a chance for us to speak directly with China and engage in honest, constructive discussions on issues that both of us care about.” We want dialogue, real engagement and concrete progress”, Costa said in a statement in advance of the summit.

Premier Li Qiang will co-chair the 25th summit between the two parties, according to the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, who will meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday morning.

A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson added that after 50 years of EU-China development, their ties “can cope with the changing difficulties and challenges”.

Is there a plan to fight Russia in Ukraine?

According to EU officials, discussions with President Xi on Thursday morning will focus on global affairs and bilateral relations, followed by a banquet lunch.

However, Beijing’s close ties to Moscow, which have been a thorny issue for Brussels, are likely to cause the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

“You can expect the EU addressing Russia’s war in Ukraine”, a senior EU official told reporters in Brussels on July 18. China, of course, frequently addresses our pressing issues. Well, this is a core issue for Europe. The official continued, “It’s a fundamental issue for European security.”

In an address to the European Parliament earlier this month, von der Leyen also accused China of “de facto enabling Russia’s war economy”.

For the first time in a long time, Brussels has sanctioned a number of Chinese businesses for facilitating the supply of goods used for Russian weapons production. On July 18, the EU also imposed sanctions on Chinese banks for allegedly financing the supply of such goods.

China has rejected such accusations and warned of retaliations. Beijing has also reiterated that “negotiation, ceasefire, and peace” are the key components of its position on the Ukraine conflict.

But according to an article by the South China Morning Post, during a meeting with the EU’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, in early July, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said Beijing did not want to see Russia lose the war in Ukraine, since the United States would then focus on China.

Wiegand argued that no illusions should exist in Europe.

“For China, having good and close relations with Russia is of utmost importance to increase its own strength in the global context. He declared, “They won’t sacrifice this relationship.”

“This is the most important negative factor which has impacted the overall]EU-China] relationship”, he added.

According to EU officials in Brussels, the 27-member bloc will discuss tensions in the Middle East and other security concerns in Asia in addition to the conflict in Ukraine.

How difficult will trade discussions be?

Trade is another contentious issue between Beijing and Brussels. This is likely to be central to the summit’s agenda in the afternoon with Chinese Premier Li Qiang, followed by a dinner, EU officials involved in planning the summit told reporters in Brussels on July 18.

China and Beijing, the third-largest trading partner of the EU, have recently been at odds with one another over a number of trade issues, including Beijing’s control of rare earth minerals, which are essential for chip-making and the production of medical devices.

In her speech at the European Parliament earlier this month, von der Leyen accused Beijing of “flooding global markets with subsidised overcapacity – not just to boost its own industries, but to choke international competition”.

By 2024, the EU’s trade deficit with China was more than 300 billion euros ($352 billion). EU exports to China amounted to 213 billion euros ($250bn), while EU imports from China amounted to 519 billion euros ($609bn), according to figures from the European Commission.

According to EU officials, Chinese businesses are gaining from massive government subsidies, and cheap Chinese goods like EVs are instead being shipped to the EU as a result of the region’s slow domestic demand.

To protect European interests, Brussels has begun taking action and imposed tariffs of up to 45 percent on Chinese EVs last October. After realizing that European companies were not being given access to Chinese markets, the bloc also prohibited Chinese companies from entering medical device tenders in June, among other trade restrictions.

The EU is also concerned about Beijing’s export controls on rare earth minerals.

Von der Leyen blasted China of “blackmail” at the Group of Seven summit in Canada in June, saying that “no single country should control 80 to 90% of the market for essential raw materials and downstream products like magnets.”

“The present situation is not sustainable. China benefits from our open market but purchases too little, a senior EU official told reporters in Brussels before the summit. “We need to rebalance.” “Trade access is limited and export controls are excessive. We’ll approach Beijing with a positive and constructive attitude, but China must acknowledge our concerns.

In her speech at the European Parliament in July, the European Commission president said the 27-member bloc is “engaging with Beijing so that it loosens its export restrictions” on rare earth minerals.

Wiegand claimed that while trade negotiations are ongoing, it seems unlikely to be possible to reach a deal at the summit this week.

“There is a constructive tone]from the EU] when it comes to ‘ de-risking’, not ‘ de-coupling ‘ from China. However, the term “de-risking” is not popular among the Chinese. They think it is disinformation. He claimed that the goal is merely to diversify and enhance our own capacities in order to reduce trade risks.

How does China view trading relations with the EU?

According to the Foreign Ministry, China wants an “emotional and prejudice-free” view of their trading partnership with the EU.

He Yongqian, a spokeswoman for the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, told a news conference in Beijing on Monday that China hopes that Brussels will also “be less protectionist, and be more open”.

The Chinese Chamber of Commerce to the EU (CCCEU) expressed hope that the summit will “address crucial challenges, including market and investment barriers, faced by Chinese companies in the EU,” in an email to Al Jazeera prior to the forum.

“Recent EU measures, such as the Foreign Subsidies Regulation (FSR) and International Procurement Instrument (IPI), have disproportionately impacted Chinese firms in clean tech, high-tech, and medical devices. We advocate fair treatment through a dialogic approach, according to CCCEU.

Will human rights be discussed at the summit?

Human rights-related relations between the EU and China have also been iffy. In 2021, Brussels slapped sanctions on Chinese officials over reported human rights abuses against Uighur Muslims in China’s Xinjiang region.

Beijing refrained from retaliating by imposing sanctions on EU lawmakers, rejecting these claims. The tit-for-tat sanctions were accompanied by a halt in bilateral dialogues between the European Parliament and the National People’s Congress (NPC) of China.

There is “little to celebrate” in China when it comes to talking about human rights in 2025, according to Sarah Brooks, Amnesty International’s director for China.

“Amnesty International has regularly documented serious and widespread human rights violations, from arbitrary detention and persecution in the Uighur region, for which no official has been held to account, to assaults on the rule of law and the chipping away of civil and political freedoms in Hong Kong, despite international treaties guaranteeing those rights, to the systematic use of national security legislation to target rights defence and criticism, at home and increasingly abroad. According to her, the EU has also come to similar conclusions, at least on paper.

“At the summit, the EU’s leadership needs to ensure that those words become action and use every tool at their disposal to create positive human rights change for people – not more empty promises at the negotiating table or the speaker’s podium”, she added.

The 2021 EU sanctions are still in place despite China lifting some of its sanctions in April of this year and making moves to resume political dialogue between the NPC and the European Parliament. The bloc said last week that it had “not observed changes in the human rights situation in China/Xinjiang”.

The EU values the promotion and protection of human rights. We will raise the EU’s concern on the deterioration of rights in Xinjiang, Tibet, and other regions”, an EU official said.

Will there be a question of US tariffs?

The meeting between the EU and China comes amid US President Donald Trump’s global tariff war, which both Brussels and Beijing are trying to navigate.

Brussels has been pursuing trade negotiations with Washington in an effort to reach a trade deal, and Trump has announced that it will start imposing a 30% tariff on imported goods from the EU on August 1.

China and the US agreed to slash tit-for-tat heavy tariffs for 90 days in May. That suspension expires on August 12. In June, the US said it would impose 55 percent tariffs on Chinese goods, down from the 145 percent Trump had imposed in April. Beijing announced that it would impose a 10% tariff on US imports, compared to a 125 percent tariff. But trade negotiations are ongoing.

Some analysts in Brussels made the tidbit of earlier this year that tariff tensions with Washington might boost trade between Brussels and Beijing.

The CCCEU also told Al Jazeera that with US tariffs looming, “China and the EU share a responsibility to uphold free trade and multilateralism while mitigating external pressures” and pushed Brussels to improve its business environment for foreign companies and enhance supply chains.

Expectations are still low in the weeks leading up to the summit, though.

“It is quite clear the US tariff issue is an over-encompassing issue … we are negotiating with the US at present. Due to the impact of US tariffs, it is obvious that other actors need to be located and engaged with them globally, a senior EU official told reporters in Brussels prior to the summit.

“But with China, we are certainly not agreeing to compromise on our values”, the official stressed.

Because they are NATO allies, Wiegand also pointed out that the US and China have a stronger economic relationship.

“With Russia’s war in Ukraine threatening Europe, Brussels will not be pushed closer to Beijing”, he said.

4,000 COVID-19 Survivors to Donate Plasma for Research on Cure

According to Shincheonji Church of Jesus, a South Korea-based religious group, over 4,000 members of the church who recovered from COVID-19 are willing to donate plasma for developing a new treatment.

Mr. Man Hee Lee, founder of the Shincheonji Church, said that members of the church are advised to donate plasma voluntarily. “As Jesus sacrificed himself with his blood for life, we hope that the blood of people can bring positive effects on overcoming the current situation,” said Mr. Lee.

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