All posts by Carmen Gomaro

Carmen Gomaro - leading international news and investigative reporter. Worked at various media outlets in Spain, Argentina and Colombia, including Diario de Cádiz, CNN+, Telemadrid and EFE.

"Most cancers will never be cured; the goal is to make them chronic"

Serendipity is defined as a 'valuable finding that occurs accidentally or chance'. And many scientific milestones that have changed our lives are written with 's' for serendipity, for example, the famous penicillin. By one of those chances of life, in 1979 the molecular biologist Tony Hunter studied the polyomavirus, a small virus capable of producing tumors in mice, to understand what protein gave the virus the ability to cause cancer and instead of preparing a new one Ph buffer solution did the experiment with an expired solution. That oversight allowed him to discover tyrosine kinase phosphorylation, since the good formula masked that unknown type of enzyme.

Tyrosine kinases are enzymes that catalyze the transfer of phosphates from the ATP molecule (adenosine triphosphate) to certain proteins and play a fundamental role as they open a specific door in the cell membrane and send signals within the cell that are involved in different cellular processes. such as cell growth. Tyrosine phosphorylation works like a kind of chemical on/off switch that can tell cells to multiply out of control, and that's when cancer occurs.

To know more
Health. The 'mother' of Covid vaccines: “RNA is a powerful tool against many diseases”

The 'mother' of Covid vaccines: “RNA is a powerful tool against many diseases”

Health. “There will be a vaccine against cancer before 2030”

“There will be a vaccine against cancer before 2030”

This discovery marked a before and after in cancer treatment, giving way to precision medicine in this area and promoting drugs such as imatinib (Gleevec in the US, Gleevec in Europe).. Such is the potential that the FDA has approved more than 50 anticancer drugs inhibitors of the tyrosine kinase (TKI) pathways and even today much of the research is devoted to the search for new antitumor TKIs.. And yet it was an oversight.

“Luck is involved in many discoveries, but luck must be recognized. If you see something unexpected you might think you did something wrong and ignore it. You have to be able to recognize something important. As Louis Pasteur said, chance only favors the prepared mind,” says Hunter, who is a professor at the Salk Institute and the University of California, San Diego.

Tony Hunter. SERGIO GONZALEZ VALERO

Although he is British, he has spent most of his life in California.. Perhaps that is why his appearance is casual, with a beard that he has worn for more than half a century.. “July 14, 1972 was the last time I shaved. You can't shave at the bottom of the Grand Canyon and that day the descent started, so after two weeks I liked the way it looked and kept it on, it saves me a lot of time not having to shave every morning,” he explains.

Due to his affable and informal appearance, he could be your neighbor, but this 'king of kinases', as he has once been called, has received numerous prestigious international awards for his work, including the Prince of Asturias Award in 2004 and the Frontiers of Knowledge Award in 2014 in Spain. This pioneer of 'precision' cancer treatments visited the National Cancer Research Center (CNIO) at the end of June to give a talk and this newspaper was able to talk with him about his career.

His talk is titled 'Journey from phosphotyrosine to phosphohistidine and what it has revealed about the mechanisms of cancer'. What has this journey revealed, what has it been like? How do I go from tyrosine phosphorylation to histidine phosphorylation? It helps to understand how the structures of the different amino acids are. Tyrosine has a benzene ring, a six-sided ring with a hydroxyl group, made up of hydrogen and oxygen, which is where phosphate is added.. Histidine is one of the other 20 amino acids and it has a five sided ring with two nitrogens and phosphate can be added to any nitrogen so it's a different type of phosphate addition not to an oxygen but to a nitrogen. Histidine phosphorylation has been known for more than 60 years, longer than tyrosine phosphorylation, and because of the similarities in the chemical structures of tyrosine and histidine, we became interested in the possibility that phosphate addition to histidine could be a regulatory mechanism, just like the addition of phosphate to tyrosine, which could do the same. And could this research lead to new drugs like tyrosine phosphorylation once led to the development of imatinib? ?Potentially. That would be great, but it's hard to tell. We have focused on the possible role of histidine phosphorylation in cancer, specifically in four different types of cancer where, from the evidence we have, it could be important.It is hopeful…It is and I often like it pointing out that I am near the end of my career, I will be 80 in August, so this could be the last new research I will develop.As responsible for one of the great turning points in oncology that allowed treatments such as imatinib and others, what do you think have been the next tipping points and what are to come? Imatinib was designed to block a particular type of what we call oncogenic cancer that drives tyrosine kinase, by mutations in the BCR-ABL gene, and is found in chronic myeloid leukemia cells. Although TKIs, tyrosine kinase inhibitor drugs, have been very successful, apart from imatinib, they are not cures.. And what usually happens is that a cancer with an active tyrosine kinase, such as an EGFR receptor lung cancer, responds for a few months and then the tumor cells become resistant to the TKI.. There are many ways they can become resistant, so while they help, TKIs are not a cure. What would you say is the most important thing you have discovered in your career? I guess I would have to say tyrosine phosphorylation, I don't see what It could be something else, that's why people have recognized me for a long time.. I hope we have discovered many other things along the way, but nothing as important as that, I would say. In these 50 years of your career, what would you have liked to find or discover in the laboratory? What we did not discover. Look, if I started over, I'd be a neurobiologist.. I believe that the brain, how it works, is the last frontier.. I believe that great strides have been made at the molecular level. When Francis Crick came to finish his degree at the Salk Institute, he switched from molecular biology to neurobiology and raised the problem. You have to understand the neuron at the individual level and what is special about it at the molecular level. He had a scientific perspective when exposing this and we have finally been able to do it, we can take individual neurons and look for RNA, DNA sequences, how the soma or cell body identifies individual neurons and what they connect with inside, that is, the brain and what other neurons do they come into contact with. We are getting a diagram of the neural connections (connectome); another challenge now is to see how they work together, although there are neuroimaging techniques.. This is what I would have done now. When I looked at it obviously it wasn't a possibility, but I'm happy with the way my career has gone. The development of the precision treatments was due to the basic research he did. How important is this part of Science and why should we continue betting on it, even if the investment does not have a direct return as in a clinical trial? From my perspective, being a basic science researcher, I think it is essential to have funds for make discoveries. It is what is known as Blue Sky Research, where very specific questions are not asked, but instead tries to understand how something works. We didn't set out to discover tyrosine kinases, we just set out to understand how a simple virus with just six genes (polyomavirus) can cause cancer. Although we have learned a lot about how cells work, how cancer occurs, or the genes involved, there is still much more to discover.. And for that you need funding.
It is essential to continue funding basic research, understanding that whatever is learned may take 20-30 years to translate, although it is faster than it was before.. For example, since the discovery of tyrosine phosphorylation in the 1970s, it took 20 to 22 years for a first drug to be approved, so that's a lot longer in the eyes of people who would like to see immediate returns on their money, but not it always happens like this. Perhaps the most exciting thing in cancer treatment right now is the possibility of designing an mRNA vaccine, something that came out of much of the covid vaccine development effort, where mRNA vaccines have proven very successful. That could to be the future of cancer research….There is still some skepticism and we are not there yet. I mean, the vaccines will depend on there being changes in some protein in the cancer and I think there will be resistance as well, so it won't be a panacea.. One way the tumor has apparently become resistant to immune checkpoint therapy is by removing a protein called MHC on the surface of cells, which allows T cells to recognize the antigen.. By killing it, the tumor cell becomes 'silent' to the immune system. Despite these possible resistances, I believe in any case that mRNA vaccines against cancer will undoubtedly be important for us. With therapies such as CAR-T, cancer is cured, but with others we only buy more time or corner the tumor without removing it. How close are we to making cancer a chronic disease? I think that should be the goal. Most cancers will never be cured. CAR-T cells – and here I have to make a little note: my son Sean is actually in cancer biology, which makes me very happy, and now he's at Stanford doing postdoctoral studies and designing CAR-T cells – they are very interesting in leukemias, where they do not always work, but can be curative. In fact, there are some cases where patients appear to be cured.. The main challenge for CAR-T cells is that they don't work on solid tumors, they are great against leukemias possibly because CAR-Ts have access to affected cells in the circulation, while getting T cells into tumors can be difficult. and, for example, pancreatic cancer, which we are working on, is a so-called cold tumor where the tumor cells are small nests surrounded by a rigid, dense matrix, and the T cells cannot enter the tumor to attack the cells. tumors. That is one of the biggest challenges, although I think progress is being made, but slowly. I was precisely going to ask you what happens with the most aggressive tumors, pancreas, liver, some brain…. because in these cases we are not even close to buying more time for the patients. There are many new ideas about how to treat solid tumors with cell therapies. It is taking advantage of the fact that natural killer (NK) cells do not work in the same way; CAR-T cells target the cell with a particular protein (the expression of tumor antigens via the MHC), but NK cells recognize the cells they need to kill in a different way. An antibody is created with two halves, one that recognizes tumor cells and the other recognizes NK cells, and when the antibody binds them close enough for the NK cell to kill the tumor cell. This is one of the ideas, but there are lots of smart people out there with lots of other good ideas.. I believe that there will be advances in the treatment of solid tumors with cell therapies, but surely it will not be tomorrow. What are the lines of research that you are focusing on now? Apart from histidine phosphorylation, which is what most of my team works, we are with a project on pancreatic cancer in which we found that leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF), which is a cytokine, is a possible driver of pancreatic cancer in a mouse model. Based on our work, at least in part, they generated antibodies that neutralize LIF and used them in a phase I trial. AstraZeneca acquired the program and they are now in a phase II trial for pancreatic cancer. This is the most translational thing I've ever done, is to really focus on trying to find something that could be targeted to a specific cancer. What about histidine phosphorylation? It's still early days. In pediatric neuroblastoma there is an aggressive form in which there is an amplification of one of the arms of chromosome 17 and that region of chromosome 17 has two genes that we think are histidine kinases, so it is probably the cancer with the greatest potential for us to be able to do something with an inhibitor of this enzyme.

The boom in services and tourism makes Spain the country to which the IMF raises its growth forecast the most

Spain will be the industrialized country whose GDP will grow the most in 2024. That is the prediction of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which in just three months has raised its growth estimate for Spain by one percentage point, which is also the largest increase in advanced economies, with an expansion of 2. 5% of GDP. The country that follows closest is the United States, with 1.8%.

The key to the rise is, once again, the great engine of the Spanish economy: tourism, to which on this occasion the services sector is added. That is the reason why the Fund raises growth by four tenths for Italy and one point for Spain. Both countries are the face of the eurozone coin; the cross is Germany, the economic leader of the EU, whose fall worsens this year.

As the Fund's chief economist, Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, highlighted in the presentation of the report, “global demand has rotated” since the end of the confinements of the Covid-19 pandemic.. “Initially the economies reopened and there was strong demand for goods and now in a second phase we are seeing increased demand for services as people start to get out and travel,” he added.. The corollary is that “this demand for services has, logically, a strong impact in countries that are tourist destinations, such as Italy and Spain.”

Gourinchas stressed that the revision of Spain “is important, because it is not very common for there to be an improvement in growth and, at the same time, a reduction in inflation”, since he foresees an average CPI of 3.2% this year, 1.1 points below their previous estimate. Of course: Spain is not free of the slowdown expected for 2024, as the world economy normalizes, so, for next year, the IMF does not change its growth forecast, which remains at 2%.

In the international context, the Fund draws a pessimistic scenario for the world economy, although less than in April. The growth of global GDP is revised upwards by two tenths, up to 3% this year, and it does not touch it in 2024, when it expects that same figure to be repeated. But they are low magnitudes. Core inflation – which excludes the most volatile components, which are the prices of fresh food and energy – remains at high levels and, in fact, the IMF raises its forecast for 2024, which portends higher rates, less income available, perhaps, more financial instability. Geoeconomic tensions – the buzzword in the jargon of International Relations in 2023 – will continue, according to the institution, which seems to suggest that the Fund does not see an end to the Russian invasion of Ukraine or to the bad relations between the US and China. .

All this means that the post-Covid reactivation is being weaker than expected although, in return, the financial crisis that caused the collapse of several medium-sized US banks and the Swiss giant Crédit Suisse seems to have ended. However, inflation persists, and as interest rates rise, the fragility of the financial system could again be exposed.. China continues to show signs of weakness, with the problems of its real estate sector unresolved. In fact, the new forecasts do not include the bad Chinese GDP data for the second quarter of the year, which will have an impact on the world economy.

There are more risk factors. Debt restructuring for least-developed countries remains a problem, in part because China, which financed those economies, refuses to accept debt relief.. In general, emerging and developing countries suffer reductions in their forecast growth. This is the case of the Middle East and Latin America – partly due to the fall in the prices of raw materials – Central Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa, although there are exceptions to this trend, such as Brazil and Mexico.

All of those factors – inflation, the slowdown in China, and banking and debt crises – persist.. So despite the slight recovery in growth, the global economy continues to face the risk of slowing further.

The independent investigators of the Iguala case denounce the "concealment" of information at the end of their mission

“Cry at home and fight outside”. This is how Estela de Carlotto, president and founder of the Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo in Argentina, encouraged the Mexican mothers who are still looking for their disappeared people last week. In an act in Mexico City, the activist alluded to the Ayotzinapa case, also known as the Iguala case or the case of the 43 students. Nothing is known about these young people since September 26, 2014. Years of cumbersome investigation of which this Tuesday the Interdisciplinary Group of Independent Experts (GIEI) presented its latest report.

“Concealment and the insistence on denying things that are obvious” are the impediments that the organization found to carry out its work, mentioned the expert Carlos Beristain, in the presentation of the sixth report of the group, whose mandate ends this month and which has worked for more than eight years in this event that shocked the country.

“For the GIEI it is impossible to continue its mandate and since things do not change, we consider our work finished,” he continued.. “The risk is that lying is institutionalized as a response,” warned the Spaniard. “The muscle of the State was present, they acted and did not protect. They knew what happened, that has become a responsibility of the State in itself,” he concluded after an extensive presentation in which the contradictory versions were explained, that the Secretary of National Defense (Sedena) had constant communications with the different authorities the day of the disappearance of the young people -the experts exposed maps of the movements of the security forces with the information obtained from C4, a surveillance center that has records of calls-, that the military were “adapting the statements”, that there was manipulation of information and that the Navy was at the scene “on the 27th, not the 29th.”

Details were also given about the confusion about the whereabouts of the young people, who had been divided into several groups and who were not taken “neither to the same place, nor to the same scene, nor to the Cocula garbage dump,” said Ángela Buitrago, the other member of the GIEI who appeared at the presentation on Tuesday.

Beristain insisted on the “intentionality” behind the “denials” and “lies”. In addition to ensuring that “the case is not closed until there is a resolution of the fate and whereabouts of the young people”. Buitrago, responding to the journalists' questions, assured that this type of case can transcend the orbit of international justice, but that this already depends on the relatives, on whom he recognized the courage of those who have made a banner over these years and for those who asked the State for “attention”. “Comprehensive reparation must be carried out and avoid stigmatization,” the expert Buitrago requested in her recommendations, since “the survivors are victims of the events.”

For his part, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) promised to continue with the investigation after the GIEI march, although next year there will be elections in Mexico and, therefore, a change of government.

The GIEI was created by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) so that, in collaboration with the Mexican State and the representatives of the victims, assistance could be offered in the case.. The group is made up of specialists from various sectors (from doctors to lawyers) and nationalities.

The “historical truth”

The version given by the government of Enrique Peña Nieto at the time was that the students of the Ayotzinapa Rural Normal School had stolen some buses to go to a demonstration, which were intercepted by the Iguala police, who in turn handed over the youth to the criminals of Guerreros Unidos. Said group would have murdered them and cremated their bodies in the Cocula garbage dump. This narration of the events became known as “historical truth”, however it was not supported by the GIEI. When López Obrador came to power, he decided to create a Truth Commission for the case.

It was in August of last year that the greatest advance was apparently made, when Deputy Attorney General Alejandro Encinas recognized that what happened to those young people was “a State crime”, in which the Army and government officials would have played a relevant role.. However, the GIEI did not validate the screenshots of conversations between authorities and criminals presented by Encinas.. To date only three of the young men have been identified.

As the Mexican newspaper La Jornada recalls, the GIEI experts suffered obstacles to carry out the investigation. They had the opposition of the Ministry of National Defense (Sedena), the Peña Nieto Executive expelled them from Mexico after presenting their second report and they returned with López Obrador, but the coronavirus pandemic came to a standstill.. Its greatest achievements have been to banish the aforementioned “historical truth”, point the finger at the Army and facilitate the imprisonment of some culprits.

In spite of everything, the Sedena keeps secret fundamental clues, maintains the Mexican newspaper. In their five previous reports they gave evidence of torture, spying on students, cover-ups and, in the last one, in March, they denounced obstruction of the investigation and concealment of information.

disappearance problem

According to the latest Amnesty International report, 2022 closed in Mexico with more than 109,000 cases of missing and missing persons.. A pending issue for the country, according to the NGO, since the UN Committee against Enforced Disappearances exposed in a document the existing forensic crisis, stressing that the State had in custody more than 52,000 unidentified corpses. Last year was also the deadliest for the country's press.

Meanwhile, López Obrador predicted this Tuesday a 20% reduction in homicides at the end of his government. The country will hold presidential elections in 2024.

Mexico is not the only nation in the region where young people are the target of attacks. In Nicaragua, in the framework of the 2018 protests against the Sandinista government, students were injured and even died. The darkest chapter was the one lived in the Church of the Divine Mercy in Managua. Two young men who took refuge in the building along with other students, priests and journalists from the repression carried out by the police and paramilitaries died there.

The ball is now in the court of the Mexican institutions. “The fight continues,” shouted the relatives attending the presentation.

Putin outlaws sex change in Russia

Russia has outlawed sex change. Russian President Vladimir Putin signed the law on Monday that prohibits operations related to transgender transition and denies adoption or even custody to all those who have changed the gender marker in official documents.. The transsexual groups fear that the repression will increase and the only way out for them is going into exile.

On July 14, the Duma, the lower house of the Russian parliament, approved in its third and final reading this law that prohibits gender transition.. The text was approved unanimously and last Friday received the approval of the upper house. The country has witnessed a multiplication of conservative measures since the offensive in Ukraine.

The law includes the prohibition of transition surgery and restricts hormones. The bill was amended to prohibit people who have changed their gender marker on official documents from adopting children. They also decided to stipulate that marriages in which a member has changed their gender markers would be annulled.. Russian Deputy Health Minister Oleg Salagai said the government will cancel its statutes regulating gender transition, TASS reports. Hormone therapy will also be prohibited.

The Center-T is one of the main collectives of trans people in Russia. Throughout the country, the trans collective has reacted, explains to EL MUNDO Yan Dvorkin, director of this entity, “with a great level of anxiety and panic.”. Personally, Yan experiences it “as a very scary and difficult moment”. Russia has been experiencing an ultra-conservative drift since 2013. First was the outlawing of LGBT propaganda. Then, a 2020 constitutional reform introduced into Russia the concept that marriage is a union between a man and a woman exclusively.. Vladimir Putin promised that as long as he is president, there will be no gay marriage in Russia.

The new law also prohibits changing the gender on official documents, which had been allowed since 1997, although the person concerned was not required to undergo an operation to be able to introduce this change.

Between 2018 and last year, more than 2,700 Russians changed their sex in their documents, which led to almost 200 marriages, reports Efe. Maxim, a transsexual who works with Centro T, now has “plans to emigrate to Spain” because “Russia is degrading.”

This new law was introduced in the State Duma at the end of May. The deputies believe that the new legal norm “will preserve Russia for posterity, with its cultural and family values, traditional patterns, putting a barrier against the irruption of Western ideology against the family”. Some lawmakers argued that several young men were using sex change to avoid mandatory military service.

One of the main people responsible for drafting the document is the legislator Piotr Tolstoy, co-author of the project. He himself maintained that Russia must be “protected with its values, cultural and family traditions, and stop the infiltration of Western ideology against the family.”. The legislator took the opportunity to refer to the war in Ukraine: “I want our boys, who are currently defending the honor of Russia at the cost of their lives, to be able to return and see what the country is like, that their sacrifice was not in vain.”

The 2013 rule prohibits any reference in public spaces to “non-traditional sexual relations”, and was tightened last year to cover almost all public spaces and all age groups.

This time the Duma also adopted a resolution with recommendations to the Russian government to recognize “sexual preference disorders, including transsexualism, cross-dressing and pedophilia, as a disease.”. The T Center issued a statement calling for no surrender: “The darkest hour is always before dawn. It is impossible for this cannibalism to continue forever.”

The United States returns to UNESCO and will progressively pay the 619 million it owes

The United States flag has been raised again this Tuesday at the headquarters of the United Nations Scientific and Cultural Organization (Unesco), to which it has returned after its departure in 2018. The re-entry was made official in a symbolic ceremony attended by the first lady of the United States, Jill Biden, who recalled that the “greatest challenges of our time cannot be solved from isolation.”

“President Biden is aware that if we want to create a better world, America cannot do it alone, we must help lead the way.. That is why we are so proud to be part of UNESCO again,” the American first lady said at the agency's headquarters in Paris.

Surrounded, among others, by the director general of Unesco, Audrey Azoulay, and by her French counterpart, Brigitte Macron, whom she had visited in the morning at El Élysée, Jill Biden represented her country while the flag of bars and stars rose again along with those of the other 192 members of Unesco, with the Eiffel Tower in the background.

The United States regained its membership on July 10, but this symbolic moment was the occasion to celebrate the reintegration of a state that ranks among its founders and largest contributors.

The United States left in 2018 for the second time in history – the first was in 1984, during the term of Ronald Reagan – with Donald Trump in the White House, who accused UNESCO of repeatedly adopting anti-Israeli positions.

The raising of the flag became a plea in favor of multilateralism. “In this time of disunity, of division, of existential threat to humanity, we reaffirm our union today and here,” stressed the Director General of UNESCO.

Azoulay assured that this is an exceptional and “happy” moment that “reinforces the universality” of the organization and its “legitimacy”. “This return”, he stressed, “indicates that we can and must unite”, as well as being a message of “hope” for multilateralism and for the next generations.

He thanked President Biden for his “political will”, which was the engine of this return, and also the “lucidity” of the US parliamentarians from both sides of the political arc, who found an agreement so that US re-entry is accompanied by the progressive payment of a $619 million debt that Washington had accumulated since 2011.

BIG CHALLENGES

“Injustice and corruption, poverty and hunger, climate catastrophes and diseases are not contained by borders. Some of the greatest challenges of our time cannot be solved in isolation,” the first lady said.

“Of course,” he added, “we have to take care of our citizens. But we are part of a global community.”. Biden stressed his country's interest in the goals pursued by Unesco such as the protection of heritage, the culture of peace, freedom of the press and the ethical use of new technologies.

As a teacher, she has emphasized the importance of education to achieve a better future.. Jill Biden began her political agenda in France this Tuesday with a visit to Brigitte Macron at the Elysée and the ceremony at Unesco. His trip to France will continue this Wednesday with a trip to the French regions of Normandy and Brittany (northwest), where he will visit emblematic places related to his country's participation in World War II.

Mahmud Abbas seeks Turkey's support amid escalating tension with Israel

The president of the Palestinian National Authority, Mahmud Abbas, visited Turkey on Tuesday, where he met with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in an attempt to reinforce Turkish support for his cause.. Abbas's visit coincides with one of the most tense episodes in the last decade between Israel and Palestine, with the first drone attack in the last 17 years or the military incursions in Jenin, which have caused thousands of displaced persons and the death of 12 Palestinians. It is also the first official visit since Erdogan won the presidency again in the elections last May and both leaders have reiterated the good health of bilateral relations between the two countries.. Their ties are maintained despite the diplomatic rapprochement between Turkey and Israel that began last year.. “The Palestinian question does not have enough interest on the international agenda, starting with the UN,” criticized the Turkish president during the press conference of both leaders in Ankara. Abbas, for his part, has also criticized the “international silence” of the latest Israeli attacks on Palestinian territory, including the military incursion in Jenin.

Erdogan has reiterated his support for the two-state solution and warned about the possibility of Israel changing the status quo of religious centers such as the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem.. In recent months, the most conservative Israeli press has asked the government to change the status of the religious center so that Jewish visitors can visit all the holy places in the temple and pray in it.. Non-Muslims are currently allowed to visit the compound, but only followers of Islam are allowed to pray in the mosque. For the moment, the Israeli government has denied any intention to change the dynamics of the temple, however, the debate is constant in the Israeli press and in that of Muslim countries. “Historic places cannot be converted, reconciliation and unity are the most important elements,” Erdogan said.

During the meeting, Abbas took the opportunity to reiterate his invitation to a rapprochement between the “leaders of the Palestinian factions” after the Israeli military operation in Jenin. The Palestinian leader has spent weeks trying to gather efforts -sponsored by Egypt- to achieve a rapprochement between the Palestinian factions to create a common front against Israel. The meeting will take place in Cairo next Sunday, July 30.. “We call on the leaders of the Palestinian factions to hold a meeting to restore the national unity of Palestine and face all the problems of the Palestinian people,” he said at the press conference.. Leaders of various Palestinian factions, such as the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), have welcomed the invitation to attend the conference.. However, other factions such as Hamas or the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) armed group have even called for a boycott of the meeting and have accused Abbas of arresting several of its members before this appointment.. After several scuffles, Hamas has finally announced its assistance.

This week the visit of the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, who canceled his trip two days ago due to health problems, was also scheduled.. It was the first visit to Turkey by an Israeli prime minister in more than a decade.. Both countries had strengthened their diplomatic relations after years of tensions that began in 2010, with the deadly assault on a Turkish ship by Israeli commandos.. In 2018, Turkey withdrew its ambassador to Israel and expelled his Israeli counterpart in Ankara after Israeli forces killed 60 Palestinians in Gaza in a protest.. The economic ties between the two countries did not cease despite diplomatic tensions and have increased to more than 5,000 million dollars annually.

War Ukraine – Russia, last minute | Washington announces new military aid to kyiv to strengthen anti-aircraft and anti-tank defenses

The announcement of a new tranche of US aid to Ukraine worth about $400 million comes amid a counter-offensive by the Ukrainian military, which is trying to repel Russian forces in the east and south of the country.

Following the withdrawal in mid-July of the agreement on the export of Ukrainian cereals, Russia has begun to bomb the port areas of the Odesa region, damaging the infrastructure for the storage and export of grain.

Since the start of the war in Ukraine in February 2022, which is 518 days old, the United States, which has led an international coalition in support of Ukraine, has provided more than $43 billion in military aid to Kiev.

Russian President Vladimir Putin hopes to meet at the Russia-Africa summit with the leaders of 49 African countries, including South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, to show that despite the Ukraine war and the end of the grain deal, he has partners and supports.

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Odessa concerned about the partial demolition of the Transfiguration Cathedral

A group of Ukrainian officials look worriedly at the cracks in the back wall of the Transfiguration Cathedral in Odessa, a splendid building white from a Russian bombing raid on this great port city.

“The threat is that the part where the missile fell is moving,” the mayor, Gennady Troukhanov, explained to Afp, in front of the partially destroyed Orthodox cathedral on Saturday night.

“We will start tearing down the wall immediately. We fear that it will drag down the entire building when it falls,” he added, addressing Metropolitan Agafanguel, an 84-year-old Orthodox religious responsible for the diocese.

Odessa, a Black Sea port – whose historic center was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site earlier this year – had remained relatively safe from hostilities after the Russian invasion began in February 2022.

After Russia withdrew a deal on Ukrainian grain exports in mid-month, it began shelling the city's port areas, also damaging some of the older buildings.

“We have never seen attacks like this,” confirms the mayor.

Built over 200 years ago and destroyed by the Soviets in 1936, the Transfiguration Cathedral was rebuilt in the early 2000s thanks to donations.. It was consecrated in 2010 by the Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church, Kirill.

The mayor of the city asked the orthodox metropolitan for authorization to proceed with a partial demolition of the building.

“Explain to the parishioners that it's dangerous and they shouldn't be here,” he told her.. “It's a tragedy

Sumar and IU respond to Podemos: from 28-M "we came out with an absolute defeat" and now being able to "govern" and with "joy"

Sumar responds to the onslaught of Podemos, which yesterday distanced itself from all the other members of the coalition to reproach Yolanda Díaz and to present its result in the general elections as a fiasco. The candidacy's spokesperson, Ernest Urtasun, replied to Ione Belarra that the political space came out of the regional and municipal elections on May 28 with a “sensation of absolute defeat” and that, on the other hand, it has now done so with the “perspective of revalidating the government” and with “great joy” from the progressives.

And he has used the data. On 28-M, he pointed out, there were “a million votes of support”. Now they have achieved triple with “more than three million”. “We came out of these elections as progressives much better than how we came out of the municipal and regional elections”, he has sentenced. That is why he has described the result as “successful”.. Because, furthermore, he is convinced that the coalition with the PSOE can be reissued.

In an interview in Espejo Público, from Antena 3, Urtasun has delved into the fact that Sumar has brought about a “change in spirit”. “If we had not set up Sumar, we would not be in the situation we are in and there would not have been that electoral turnaround that has taken place and we would not have the possibility of revalidating the progressive government,” he said..

In the same way, the leader of IU, Alberto Garzón, has come out in defense of Díaz putting the result into perspective. “What Sumar has achieved is extraordinary. Only two months ago the political space was knocked out and in many territories disappeared. Now it has been key to stop the reaction and it will be key to repeat the coalition government,” he said on Twitter.. The explanation for this lies in all those people who “have worked their butt off” supporting the project and Díaz “every day in this tough campaign.”.

These two analyzes clash with that of Belarra, who yesterday in a video reproached Díaz for not having met expectations and for having failed in the objective of “governing with more force.”. “The strategy of renouncing feminism and making Podemos invisible has not worked electorally,” shot the general secretary of the purple party. His party accuses Díaz of losing 700,000 votes and seven seats compared to the 2019 results and obviates any reference to May.

A day later, Urtasun has compared the emotions that were lived in May, where Podemos led the space, and those that exist right now with Sumar, where Díaz has taken over. From those elections he left with “the general feeling of defeat” and from the general elections last Sunday he came away with “great joy”. Faced with Podemos' speech, Urtasun pointed out that these days “what progressives in Spain feel is joy”. And he has stressed the numerous “congratulations” they are receiving, and which were already displayed on Sunday night with the euphoria that broke out at the Sumar headquarters with the members of the candidacy and prominent members of Más Madrid and Izquierda Unida.

The spokesman has repeated an idea that he already launched on Monday. Sumar's results cannot be compared to anything before because “it is the first time” that the coalition has run for election. Thus, it places its 31 seats, 3,014,006 support and 12.31% of the vote as the “starting point” of this reconfiguration of the alternative left.

Sumar assembly in autumn

By the way, he has indicated that Sumar has the will to continue expanding and growing and has announced that “after the summer” the Sumar party (not the coalition) will convene its first congress to constitute its new party bodies. EL MUNDO already detailed in mid-June how the first statutes of this formation are in use but that it was born as an instrumental force to sign the coalition with the others. That “assembly” aims for the fall.

Despite Belarra's criticism, Urtasun has avoided opening a greater controversy with Podemos and has thanked all the parties for their work in the campaign. “Everyone has rowed in the same direction,” he said.

For the rest, Sumar has once again urged the PSOE to open a negotiation on the government program and the distribution of ministries as soon as possible. Urtasun considers that there is no time to lose and that the path for “the only possible investiture” should begin “from now”, which is that of Pedro Sánchez as president.

In the same way, Sumar takes the initiative in his contacts with the other political forces and trusts that he has spoken with all of them before the end of the week to explore how the situation is before starting official meetings to discuss content.. For the dialogue with ERC and Junts they have chosen Jaume Asens, who stands out for the “good relations” he maintains with both Catalan formations.

Andalusia was the CCAA that contributed the most votes to the PP, above Madrid, Valencia and Galicia

Andalusia was the autonomous community that contributed the most votes to the PP last Sunday, above Madrid (which led in 2019), the Valencian Community and Galicia.

In total, Feijóo obtained 1,588,179 votes in the region, in the absence of counting the foreign vote. A balance that gave him 25 deputies, 10 more than in the previous general elections of 2019, and a clear victory over the PSOE.

The next community with the most popular votes is Madrid, with 1,443,881. Traditional barn of votes for the PP, on this occasion the region has been in second place within the popular harvest. In third place is the Valencian Community (918,415) and Galicia in fourth (699,513).

This means that Juanma Moreno's Andalusia has contributed 19.6% of the total votes of the PP and 23.3% of the new votes achieved by the party. It is almost one in five votes achieved by Feijóo.

The PP won in all the provinces except Seville, where the PSOE was intractable. Even so, it remained three points behind (36.6% socialist vs.. 33.8% popular), when in 2019 the difference had been almost 20 points.

BNE24