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EU slaps fines on Apple and Meta, risking Trump fury

EU slaps fines on Apple and Meta, risking Trump fury
When Apple committed similar offenses on its App Store, the commission slapped a €1.8-billion-euro fine in March 2024 under different EU rules. (AP)
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Updated 23 April 2025

EU slaps fines on Apple and Meta, risking Trump fury

EU slaps fines on Apple and Meta, risking Trump fury
  • The fines are the first under the Digital Markets Act, which came into effect last year
  • Law forces the world’s biggest tech firms to open up to competition in the EU

BRUSSELS: The EU on Wednesday slapped Apple and Meta with €700 million in fines for breaking digital competition rules, risking the wrath of US President Donald Trump.
The penalties threaten to cause more tension in the already fraught relationship between the bloc and Trump, as the two sides discuss a deal to avoid his sweeping tariffs on the EU.
The European Commission fined Apple €500 million ($570 million) after concluding the company prevented developers from steering customers outside its App Store to access cheaper deals.
The EU also fined Meta €200 million over its “pay or consent” system after it violated rules on the use of personal data on Facebook and Instagram.
The fines are the first under the Digital Markets Act (DMA), which came into effect last year, forcing the world’s biggest tech firms to open up to competition in the EU.
They could rise further if Meta and Apple fail to comply within 60 days, the commission said, threatening the US giants with “periodic penalty payments.”
The EU bolstered its legal arsenal over the past two years with major twin laws, the Digital Services Act and the DMA.
But since Trump’s return to the White House, there have been concerns that the EU would shy away from enforcing them.
Trump frequently lashes out at the EU over its digital laws and taxes – claiming they are “non-tariff barriers” to trade – and many tech CEOs have aligned with his administration.
He has imposed 25-percent tariffs on steel, aluminum and auto imports from the EU, which Brussels hopes he will lift after an agreement.
Antitrust commissioner Teresa Ribera said in a statement the fines “send a strong and clear message,” insisting the bloc had taken “firm but balanced enforcement action.”
The fines – which come after the investigations began in March 2024 – also appear to be more modest than past penalties against US Big Tech.
When Apple committed similar offenses on its App Store, the commission slapped a 1.8-billion-euro fine in March 2024 under different EU rules.
Apple faces a litany of accusations. The EU also told Apple in preliminary findings it was in breach of the DMA – and therefore at risk of another hefty fine – for not making it easy for rivals to provide alternatives to its App Store.
Apple, however, slammed the decisions and said in a statement it would appeal the fine.
“Today’s announcements are yet another example of the European Commission unfairly targeting Apple in a series of decisions that are bad for the privacy and security of our users, bad for products, and force us to give away our technology for free,” the company said.
Meta accused the EU of “attempting to handicap successful American businesses while allowing Chinese and European companies to operate under different standards.”
“This isn’t just about a fine; the Commission forcing us to change our business model effectively imposes a multi-billion-dollar tariff on Meta while requiring us to offer an inferior service,” said Meta’s chief global affairs officer Joel Kaplan, a prominent Republican and Trump ally.
In a rare bit of good news for Apple, the EU closed its investigation over its user choice obligations after Apple complied with the DMA, and made it easy to select a default browser and for users to remove pre-installed apps such as Safari.
The fine against Meta concerned its “pay for privacy” system, which has faced fierce criticism by rights defenders in Europe after its introduction in November 2023.
It means users have to pay to avoid data collection, or agree to share their data with Facebook and Instagram to keep using the platforms for free.
But the commission concluded Meta did not provide Facebook and Instagram users a less personalized but equivalent version of the platforms, and “did not allow users to exercise their right to freely consent to the combination of their personal data.”
Meta in November last year proposed a new version, which the EU is currently assessing.


Lithuania extends closure of Belarus border crossings after balloons enter its airspace

Lithuania extends closure of Belarus border crossings after balloons enter its airspace
Updated 7 sec ago

Lithuania extends closure of Belarus border crossings after balloons enter its airspace

Lithuania extends closure of Belarus border crossings after balloons enter its airspace
Lithuanian officials view the balloon disruption as a deliberate act by Russia-allied Belarus
Some Lithuanian and EU citizens will still be allowed to pass through Medininkai

VILNIUS: Lithuania said Wednesday it will keep the country’s border crossings with Belarus closed for a month after balloons used to smuggle cigarettes across the frontier caused repeated disruption at the capital’s airport, though there will be some exemptions.
The two border crossings with Belarus were closed last week after balloon sightings prompted the suspension of air traffic at Vilnius Airport on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
Lithuanian officials view the balloon disruption as a deliberate act by Russia-allied Belarus. Lithuania is a NATO and European Union member on the Western alliance’s eastern flank, and borders Russia’s Kaliningrad exclave as well as Belarus.
Lithuania’s Cabinet decided Wednesday that the crossing at Šalčininkai will be closed altogether and passage through the other — at Medininkai, near Vilnius — will be restricted for the next month, the BNS news agency reported.
Some Lithuanian and EU citizens will still be allowed to pass through Medininkai. Officials also have said that Russians holding a transit document that allows them to travel to Kaliningrad will also be allowed through.
“We believe these measures should send a clear message to our not-so-friendly neighbor, which is making no effort to address the problem,” Interior Minister Vladislav Kondratovic was quoted by BNS as saying during the Cabinet meeting.
Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko on Tuesday denounced Lithuania’s move to close the border as a “mad scam” and part of a “hybrid war” against his country. He suggested that Vilnius itself needs to combat smuggling.
“If air balloons loaded with cigarettes are flying there, I guess they need to solve the issue on their end,” he said. “They didn’t just fly off into nowhere — someone is receiving them there, someone is interested in this. They need to track down those responsible and stop such things at the root.”
Lukashenko said Belarus would apologize if its involvement is established.

In Bangladeshi forest, all-women squad keeps poachers, illegal loggers at bay

In Bangladeshi forest, all-women squad keeps poachers, illegal loggers at bay
Updated 4 min 33 sec ago

In Bangladeshi forest, all-women squad keeps poachers, illegal loggers at bay

In Bangladeshi forest, all-women squad keeps poachers, illegal loggers at bay
  • Women’s Forest Patrol Team was launched in Cox’s Bazar in 2006
  • Area is losing forest cover due to illegal logging and coastal erosion

DHAKA: In the forest of southeastern Bangladesh, an all-women squad has been braving scorching heat and monsoon rains to ward off poachers and safeguard the fragile ecosystem of the country’s coast.

Consisting of 28 members, the Women’s Forest Patrol Team from Kerontoli village in Cox’s Bazar was launched in 2006 with the support of the Bangladesh Forest Department, USAID and non-governmental organization Nishirgo Network.

It was not easy in the beginning to form the group and encourage women to take part, but eventually, one of the village’s residents, Khurshida Begum, managed to assemble the team against the odds and initial prejudices.

She was only 16 at the time and has been leading the group ever since.

“As a child, I felt very sad watching people cut down trees for firewood or hunt wild animals. They didn’t understand the importance of protecting nature. Even the forest department’s vigilance wasn’t strong enough,” Begum told Arab News.

“I realized that preserving the forest is essential for our survival. It’s our duty to protect it since we live closest to it. This forest is our valuable natural resource. If we don’t preserve it, then who will?”

In the area under the Teknaf sub-district where she lives, significant forest loss has been occurring on the shoreline, mainly due to illegal logging, but also coastal erosion and rising sea levels, affecting both community welfare and wildlife.

“While guarding the forest, I’ve often encountered wild animals like elephant herds, deer, and large snakes. But they never harm us,” Begum said.

“Without forests, these wild animals would lose their safe habitat. The forests also protect us from floods and cyclones. The trees prevent the hills from landslides. If we hadn’t worked as forest guards, the forest in our area might have disappeared by now. Our tireless efforts have saved its trees.”

Every morning at 9 a.m., the women split into seven groups that patrol a different area.

Wearing green uniforms and boots, they carry sticks to protect themselves from snakes and other smaller animals, umbrellas to shield them from the sun and rain, and flutes to give a sound warning to other groups when they spot poachers.

Their honorarium is little, about $15 a month, but for their service, the Forest Department has leased to them a part of the community forest where trees can be harvested sustainably and where they can plant new saplings.

“This forest is our lifeline and a part and parcel of our life. It provides us with oxygen and protects us from cyclones and landslides. It also gives us shade during the scorching summer. With the opportunity of owning (a part of the) community forest, this forest has also become a source of earning for us,” said Nur Nahar Begum, another member of the squad.

“We can use the trees as pillars of our houses and make the roof with leaves. Our lives and livelihoods are very much dependent on the forest.”

She does not remember ever being afraid to venture into the woods and has been part of the team for the past two decades — a role she takes pride in and believes women are best suited for.

“This is my area and everyone from this locality knows me very well. Besides this, the forest authorities have been providing all-out support in our patrol work,” she said.

“Women are the best fit for the forest-guarding job compared with male guards. Women, Earth, and forest — all these hold the spirit of regeneration … We have a natural instinct to protect living beings.”


At least 40 bodies found in Rio favela after massive anti-drug raid

At least 40 bodies found in Rio favela after massive anti-drug raid
Updated 16 min 17 sec ago

At least 40 bodies found in Rio favela after massive anti-drug raid

At least 40 bodies found in Rio favela after massive anti-drug raid
  • The corpses were placed near one of the main roads in the Penha Complex
  • There was no official confirmation yet about whether they were among the 60 suspected members of a drug gang

RIO DE JANEIRO: Residents of a favela in Rio de Janeiro lined up more than 40 bodies at a plaza in their low-income neighborhood on Wednesday, a day after the bloodiest police operation in the city’s history, AFP reported.
The corpses were placed near one of the main roads in the Penha Complex. But there was no official confirmation yet about whether they were among the 60 suspected members of a drug gang who were killed during Tuesday’s massive counter-narcotics operation in two favelas in northern Rio.
Four police officers were also slain during the operation, which involved 2,500 officers. It targeted the Comando Vermelho, Rio’s main criminal organization, which operates in the favelas — densely populated, working-class neighborhoods.
Authorities said that “60 criminals” had been killed in fighting that unfolded during the drug raids in the Penha Complex and the Alemao Complex, located near Rio’s international airport.
The huge number of police officers who took part in the operation were backed by armored vehicles, helicopters and drones, as the streets of the favelas saw war-like scenes.
Claudio Castro, the governor of Rio state, accused the criminal gang of using drones to attack police officers during the operation.
“This is how the Rio police are treated by criminals: with bombs dropped by drones. This is the scale of the challenge we face. This is not ordinary crime, but narcoterrorism,” he said in a post on X, where he shared a video from the fighting.
Although police raids in Rio’s favelas are frequent, with questions about their effectiveness often trailing in their wake, the scale and death toll from Tuesday’s operation left local residents shocked.
“This is the first time we’ve seen drones (from criminals) dropping bombs in the community,” a Penha resident, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP.
“Everyone is terrified because there’s so much gunfire,” she added.
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said it was “horrified” and called for “swift investigations.”
Last year, approximately 700 people died during police operations in Rio, almost two a day.
The Human Rights Commission of the Rio State Legislative Assembly would demand “explanations of the circumstances of the action, which has once again transformed Rio’s favelas into a theater of war and barbarism,” Dani Monteiro, a congresswoman who heads the commission, told AFP on Tuesday.


Tomahawk missiles planned aboard sea drones in latest Lockheed deal

Tomahawk missiles planned aboard sea drones in latest Lockheed deal
Updated 32 min 10 sec ago

Tomahawk missiles planned aboard sea drones in latest Lockheed deal

Tomahawk missiles planned aboard sea drones in latest Lockheed deal
  • Lockheed’s investment will also establish collaborative systems integration teams
  • The companies plan to conduct live-fire demonstrations on the water in 2026

WASHINGTON: Lockheed Martin is investing $50 million in sea drone maker Saildrone to help equip its biggest surveillance drones with missiles, marking the first time the long-distance autonomous ships will carry high-powered missiles aboard.
The weaponization plan announced on Wednesday comes as the Pentagon seeks to counter China’s growing naval power in the Pacific and applies lessons learned from Ukraine’s effective use of explosive-laden sea drones against Russian warships in the Black Sea.
Under the deal, Saildrone’s 72-foot-long (22 m) “Surveyor” ship — a scientific data and intelligence-gathering autonomous vessel powered by wind, diesel, and solar — will be modified to carry Lockheed’s JAGM Quad Launcher missile system and anti-ship missiles, according to a joint statement.
Lockheed’s investment will also establish collaborative systems integration teams to accelerate design and manufacturing of larger Saildrone platforms capable of carrying longer-range Tomahawk missiles and submarine-detecting towed sonar arrays.
The companies plan to conduct live-fire demonstrations on the water in 2026.
Saildrone vessels have been deployed by the US Navy since 2021 on surveillance missions and are currently operational “24/7/365 alongside American Sailors in combat theaters around the world,” according to the statement. The company has logged over 2 million nautical miles on customer missions.
With $5 billion in funds appropriated for uncrewed ships and maritime robots in the “Big Beautiful Bill,” many firms are vying for a piece of the action.
Saildrone will maintain shipbuilding responsibilities while Lockheed serves as lead mission integrator. Development work will create jobs at Austal USA on the Gulf of Mexico coast, where Saildrone’s larger systems are produced, though the companies said the work could eventually scale to other US shipyards.


Police say Louvre defenses lagged as jewel-heist suspects near custody cutoff

Police say Louvre defenses lagged as jewel-heist suspects near custody cutoff
Updated 29 October 2025

Police say Louvre defenses lagged as jewel-heist suspects near custody cutoff

Police say Louvre defenses lagged as jewel-heist suspects near custody cutoff
  • Paris Police Chief Patrice Faure told Senate lawmakers that aging systems and slow-moving fixes left weak seams in the world’s most-visited museum
  • Faure also disclosed that the Louvre’s authorization to operate its security cameras quietly expired in July and wasn’t renewed

PARIS: Paris police acknowledged major gaps in the Louvre’s defenses on Wednesday — turning this month’s dazzling daylight theft into a national reckoning over how France protects its treasures.
Paris Police Chief Patrice Faure told Senate lawmakers that aging systems and slow-moving fixes left weak seams in the world’s most-visited museum.
“A technological step has not been taken,” he told lawmakers, noting parts of the video network are even still analog, producing lower-quality images that are slow to share in real time.
A long-promised revamp — a $93 million project requiring roughly 60 kilometers (37 miles) of new cabling — “will not be finished before 2029–2030,” he said.
Faure also disclosed that the Louvre’s authorization to operate its security cameras quietly expired in July and wasn’t renewed — a paperwork lapse that some see as a symbol of broader negligence after thieves forced a window to the Apollo Gallery, cut into cases with power tools and fled with eight pieces of the French crown jewels within minutes while tourists were inside.
“Officers arrived extremely fast,” Faure said, but he added the lag occurred earlier in the chain — from first detection, to museum security, to the emergency line, to police command.
Faure and his team said the first alert to police came not from the Louvre’s alarms but from a cyclist outside who dialed the emergency line after seeing helmeted men with a basket lift.
Suspects’ custody expiring
Officials say two suspects were arrested over the weekend, including one stopped at Charles-de-Gaulle Airport as he tried to leave France. Under French rules for organized theft, custody can run up to 96 hours; that limit expires late Wednesday, when prosecutors must charge the suspects, release them, or seek a judge’s extension. The Louvre values the eight stolen pieces at about $102 million. None has been confirmed recovered.
The theft has also exposed an insurance blind spot: officials say the jewels were not privately insured. The French state self-insures its national museums, because premiums for covering priceless heritage are astronomically high — meaning the Louvre will receive no payout for the loss. The financial blow, like the cultural wound, is total.
Faure pushed back on quick fixes. He rejected calls for a permanent police post inside the palace-museum, warning it would set an unworkable precedent and do little against fast, mobile crews. “I am firmly opposed,” he said. “The issue is not a guard at a door; it is speeding the chain of alert.”
He urged lawmakers to authorize tools currently off-limits: AI-based anomaly detection and object tracking (not facial recognition) to flag suspicious movements and follow scooters or gear across city cameras in real time.
The Oct. 19 heist was swift and simple. In the morning rush, thieves reached the jewel gallery near streetside windows, cut through reinforced cases and vanished in minutes. Former bank robber David Desclos told the AP the operation was textbook and vulnerabilities were glaringly obvious in the layout of the gallery.
Museum and culture officials under pressure
Culture Minister Rachida Dati, under pressure, has stayed defensive — refusing the Louvre director’s resignation and insisting alarms worked while acknowledging “security gaps did exist.” She has kept details to a minimum, citing ongoing investigations.
The reckoning lands at a museum already under strain. In June, the Louvre shut in a spontaneous staff strike — including security agents — over unmanageable crowds, chronic understaffing and “untenable” conditions. Unions say mass tourism and construction pinch points create blind spots, a vulnerability underscored by thieves who rolled a basket lift to the Seine-facing façade and reached a hall displaying the crown jewels.
Faure said police will now track surveillance-permit deadlines across institutions to prevent repeats of the July lapse. But he stressed the larger fix is disruptive and slow: ripping out and rebuilding core systems while the palace stays open, and updating the law so police can act on suspicious movement in real time — before a scooter disappears into Paris traffic and diamonds into history.
For Desclos, the practical answer is unsentimental: vault the originals and display perfect replicas. Romance aside, he argues, the point is that the real objects survive.
Experts fear the stolen pieces may already be broken down and stones recut to erase their past — a prospect that adds urgency to France’s debate over how it guards what the world comes to see.