TORONTO
Here's a rundown of all the news you need to start your Saturday, including Sweden condemning terror group PKK, migrant boat disaster in Greece and US President Joe Biden vowing to take more drastic action on gun violence.
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Swedish Foreign Minister Tobias Billstrom said Friday that his country “condemns all terror organizations, including the PKK.”
Billstrom, speaking alongside French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna at a news conference in Paris, said Sweden has fulfilled the last part of its commitment under a June 2022 trilateral memorandum signed in Madrid to address Ankara's security concerns on terrorism with a new anti-terror law, which has been effective since June 1.
He noted Stockholm's goal is the same as Ankara’s: To fight terrorism.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan made it clear that if Türkiye is expected to respond to Stockholm's expectations of accession to NATO, Sweden must also do its part on the PKK terror group ahead of the summit.
A retired Greek admiral blamed the country's coast guard Friday for a deadly incident in which a migrant boat sank in the Mediterranean Sea, with hundreds still missing.
Nikos Spanos told the Greek Radio and Television Corporation ERT that before the boat sank, Greek authorities asked the overloaded vessel if it needed help despite receiving a distress signal.
US President Joe Biden issued an impassioned plea for greater control Friday, saying mass shootings occur "every damn day in America."
Biden pointed to gun violence that occurs beyond the headlines. In "areas that are poor, mostly minority, there's a mass shooting that never reaches the crescendo that it reaches other places every single day," he said while addressing the National Safer Communities Summit in the state of Connecticut.
Biden told the gathering of gun control advocates that an uphill battle lies ahead, but vowed to impose an assault rifle ban, and end legal protections preventing gun makers from being held liable for crimes committed using their wares.
NEWS IN BRIEF
SPORTS
The third edition of the European Games will begin next week in the Polish city of Krakow and the Malopolska region.
The 12-day competition, starting June 21, will host 7,300 athletes from 48 countries in 26 branches and 29 disciplines.
A total of 193 Turkish athletes, including 93 women, will fight for 253 medals that will be distributed throughout the competition.
Türkiye tasted a 3-2 away win against 10-man Latvia in Group D in a UEFA EURO 2024 qualifying match Friday.
Türkiye scored the first goal when Abdulkerim Bardakci hit in a header, assisted by Merih Demiral in the 23rd minute at Riga's Skonto Stadions.
BUSINESS AND ECONOMY
The US Federal Reserve is keeping watch over troubles in the US banking sector to gauge the need for further rate hikes, said a top official of the US central bank on Friday.
The STOXX Europe 600, which includes around 90% of the market capitalization of the European markets in 17 countries, rose 2.47 points, or 0.53%, to finish at 466.80.
The UK's FTSE 100 added 14 points, or 0.19%, to end the session at 7,642. France's CAC 40, meanwhile, increased 97 points, or 1.34%, to close at 7,388.
Germany's DAX rose 67 points, or 0.41%, to 16,357, while Italy's FTSE MIB jumped 130 points, or 0.47%, to 27,861. Spain's IBEX 35 added 64 points, or 0.68%, to end the day at 9,495.
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