
Photos of grief and tributes after deaths of Diogo Jota and his brother
Jota and his brother André Silva were killed in a car crash shortly after midnight in northwestern Spain when the Lamborghini they were traveling in veered off a road and burst into flames, according to Spanish police.
This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.
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Miami Herald
3 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez under attack from all sides after graft shock
MADRID - As allegations of corruption against a former aide began to circle three weeks ago, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez couldn't bring himself to believe them, according to people close to him. Santos Cerdán was a powerful figure in Sánchez's Socialist Party. As organizational secretary, he was in charge of the day-to-day running of the party - a role he took on after his predecessor, José Luis Ábalos, another former Sánchez aide, was charged with organized crime, bribery and influence peddling last year. When Cerdán was implicated in the same case in a police report released on June 12, Sánchez was in a state of shock, the people said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal party matters. On Monday, Cerdán was arrested. The shock has reverberated throughout the Socialist Party and the fragile coalition government that Sánchez heads. Senior Socialist Party officials told Bloomberg News that there is a sense of betrayal and anger within the party's ranks. With Sánchez facing the biggest challenge to his position since becoming prime minister in 2018, the leadership needs to take decisive action to restore trust with members and the electorate, the officials said. "We are disappointed, it's a widespread feeling in the party," Cristina Narbona, president of the Socialist Party and a former minister, told Bloomberg News. "Not only our secretary-general trusted them," she said, referring to Sánchez. "We all did." Cerdán, who has resigned from his roles in the Socialist Party and in parliament, denied the charges in a statement, saying that he has "never committed any illegal act nor have I been an accomplice of any." Sánchez has denied any knowledge of the alleged crimes, and said that he acted swiftly to expel his senior advisers as soon as he was made aware of police reports. A spokesperson for the prime minister told Bloomberg News that Sánchez "found it hard to stop believing in Cerdan's innocence. He believed him up until the last minute. He had to personally read the police report to realize the disappointment and terrible reality." The corruption investigation began in 2022 when the opposition People's Party filed a series of reports with prosecutors over the issuance of public contracts during the Covid pandemic. Most were dismissed, but one, alleging that staff at the transport ministry had taken payments from private companies in exchange for public contracts for masks, caught the attention of the anti-corruption prosecutor's office. The investigation initially focused on a senior advisor at the department, Koldo Garcia, who was arrested in February 2024, but has since expanded. In November, the supreme court opened a case against Ábalos, who was transport minister from 2018 until 2021. The allegations are particularly damaging for Sánchez, who came to power in 2018 on a platform of integrity in public life. He became prime minister after a no-confidence motion in parliament - sparked by another corruption case - ousted the conservative People's Party leader Mariano Rajoy. It was Ábalos who proposed the no-confidence motion on behalf of the Socialist Party. Alongside the police reports, audio recordings have circulated in the Spanish media that appear to show Garcia and Ábalos using sexist language and referring to sex workers as merchandise. Sánchez's party calls itself feminist, and has been vocal about equal rights and pay, access to abortion, and the need to tackle violence against women. The apparent hypocrisy has angered some in the Socialist Party. "There is a growing uncertainty among thousands and thousands of socialists who want to know where this will end up," Emiliano Garcia Page, a Socialist Party politician, president of the region of Castile-La Mancha - and a regular critic of Sánchez, said. "The problem is what to stand for. We've defended all those we now call shameless." Opposition parties have demanded new elections, but they do not have enough votes for a motion of no-confidence. The coalition government that Sánchez leads is fractious, and has struggled to pass any legislation. No budget has been approved since late 2022. The corruption allegations have increased tensions. "We're angry," Deputy Prime Minister Yolanda Diaz, from Sumar, a junior coalition member, said in a press conference on Tuesday. "We've asked them to rise to the occasion but it doesn't seem that the Socialist Party has become aware of the seriousness and urgency of the moment," Culture Minister Ernest Urtasun, from Sumar, told reporters after meeting with Socialist cabinet members on Wednesday. Rebecca Torró, a junior minister has been named as Cerdán's replacement. Sánchez is due to address a meeting of the party's federal committee, a key decision-making body, on Saturday, where he is expected to announce further changes to Socialist Party's executive leadership, as well as new internal anti-corruption controls. Sánchez has said he intends to lead the Socialist Party into general elections, due to be held in 2027. Despite the sense of crisis in the party, it is unlikely that there will be a meaningful challenge to the prime minister's leadership, according to party figures, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal party matters. The reluctance is partly because bringing down the government would open the door to a government led by the People's Party, in coalition with the far-right Vox. Both Vox and the PP have promised to take a tougher stance on migration, to reform or repeal laws targeting violence against women, and to take a hard line on regional separatist movements, which have supported Sánchez. At the last election, the two parties combined came four short seats of a majority. Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.


The Hill
4 hours ago
- The Hill
Europe's human rights watchdog concerned over use of force against Serbia anti-corruption protesters
BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Europe's human rights watchdog Friday expressed concern that Serbian authorities were using excessive force and arbitrary detentions to break up street protests against the populist government of President Aleksandar Vucic. Michael O'Flaherty, the Council of Europe's commissioner for human rights, said in a statement that 'freedom of assembly and freedom of expression are key human rights enshrined in the European Convention on Human Rights and it is Serbia's duty to guarantee them.' 'I am concerned about the current human rights situation in Serbia, where, despite the assurances I received from the authorities during my visit in April, excessive use of force is being applied to curb demonstrations,' O'Flaherty said. Amnesty International and Civil Rights Defenders urged restraint and an investigation into any use of unlawful force. 'Footage of Serbian riot police indiscriminately targeting peaceful protesters gathered at blockades on the street and in front of universities in Belgrade are alarming,' the rights groups said in a joint statement on Friday. 'A heavy-handed response to peaceful dissent cannot be justified.' Riot police have detained scores of demonstrators since a major rally last weekend, including university students, their professors and others, who have been blocking traffic throughout the country demanding an early parliamentary election. Tensions have soared since the rally last weekend by tens of thousands of people in Belgrade which ended with clashes between riot police and groups of protesters. Monthslong demonstrations previously had been largely calm. Police also intervened on Friday to clear traffic blockades in Belgrade, briefly detaining a number of protesters. Defiant demonstrators protesters returned to jam the streets on Friday evening. University students behind the protests have said that police have injured many peaceful demonstrators in the past several days. Witnesses told local media that riot police beat up protesters with batons and shields, and that four students were hospitalized early Thursday, including one with a broken clavicle. Police have denied the use of excessive force, warning that blocking traffic is illegal. Vucic has described ongoing protests as 'terror' and an attempt to bring down the state. O'Flaherty's statement said that 'increased levels of the use of force by the police as well as arbitrary arrests and detention have occurred during the week.' 'I am particularly concerned about the arrest of children, as well as the number of students being charged for criminal offenses or hospitalized for the treatment of injuries,' O'Flaherty said in a statement. He added that 'mischaracterization of this largely peaceful student-led movement should be avoided at all costs.' Both the European Union mission in Serbia and the U.N. Human Rights Office said Thursday that they were watching the situation closely and urged restraint. Persistent protests that have rattled Vucic first started in November after a renovated train station canopy collapsed in Serbia's north, killing 16 people. Many in Serbia blame the tragedy on alleged corruption-fueled negligence in state infrastructure projects. Critics say Vucic has become increasingly authoritarian since coming to power more than a decade ago, stifling democratic freedoms while allowing corruption and organized crime to flourish, which he has denied. Serbia is formally seeking entry to the EU, but Vucic's government has nourished relations with Russia and China.


New York Post
5 hours ago
- New York Post
Girls at Christian summer camp missing after ‘catastrophic' Texas floods
Young girls at a Christian summer camp are missing after their cabins were apparently washed away by 'catastrophic' and fatal flooding in Texas, according to a report. An undisclosed number of children are unaccounted for at Camp Mystic alongside the Guadalupe River in Hunt, a suburb of San Antonio, two camp directors told The Austin American-Statesman. Water rises from severe flooding along the Guadalupe River in Kerr County, Texas on Friday, July 4, 2025. AP Advertisement The staff was in need of urgent air assistance after their roads were washed out by the severe flooding, which also apparently flooded some cabins and washed others away. Camp Mystic is a Christian sleep-away summer camp for girls in Hunt. At least six people in Hill County have been killed in the floods.