World
‘Viktor Orbán should be booted out of NATO and EU if he keeps chasing Putin’ | World | News

Former chair of the UK’s Defence Select Committee Tobias Ellwood has issued a stark warning to Viktor Orbán after the Hungarian Prime Minister appeared alongside Vladimir Putin at China’s Belt and Road Forum in Beijing on Tuesday.
The Conservative MP, who is one of Westminster’s foremost foreign policy voices, told Express.co.uk that Hungary’s membership of NATO and the European Union should be “questioned” if Orbán continues to court the Russian and Chinese leadership.
He accused the Oxford-educated Hungarian leader of deciding “more openly to show his cards” by appearing alongside Putin at the Chinese Communist Party-run event.
In a major coup for the Kremlin, 60-year-old Orbán was not only pictured shaking hands with Putin but also told him during a meeting on the sidelines of the Belt and Road Forum, that Hungary “never wanted to confront Russia” and that his Government’s intention “has always been to establish and expand mutually the best contacts”.
In a further blow for the western security alliance, the Hungarian prime minister added that he sought closer economic ties with Moscow: “We are interested in supporting this co-operation not only at the level of communication but also at the economic level.”
Following Orbán’s eye-catching comments in China, Mr Ellwood told this website: “The bedrock of European security over the last few decades has been the existence and commitment to NATO.
“And if leaders such as Orbán do not buy into European security and indeed European prosperity, through its membership of the EU, then it’s absolutely right that Hungary’s memberships should be questioned on both cases.”
Asked whether Hungary was emerging as a “chink in the armour” of NATO and the European Union, the MP for Bournemouth East said “completely”.
He continued: “Putin only needs to lure one European leader to his way of thinking to severely limit the collective impact of these two very powerful organisations [NATO and the EU.”
Orbán recently said, during the autumn opening of his country’s parliament, that Hungary was in “no rush” to ratify Sweden’s membership of NATO. It remains the only member of the alliance, besides Turkey, not to ratify the Nordic state’s membership.
Mr Ellwood, who served in Northern Ireland and Bosnia, reaching the rank of captain in the British Army, went further, attaching blame to the Hungarian leader for NATO’s restricted involvement in the Ukraine conflict.
He said: “There’s no doubt, had Orbán not been so minded to support Putin that NATO itself could have taken a far more proactive role in putting the fire out in Ukraine.”
Hungary is one of three EU member states that defied an end to the Brussels ban on Ukrainian grain imports. Orbán said on social media after Budapest’s decision to continue to impose the grain ban: “The bureaucrats in Brussels are turning a blind eye to the problems of European farmers once again.
“It’s time to take matters into our own hands! Ukrainian agricultural products destined for Africa are flooding Central European markets.”
Hungary’s casual European solidarity is reflective of the distance between the perspectives of western leaders and Orbán, according to the Mr Ellwood.
He explained: “Orbán is not on the same page as the rest of Europe and is actually deliberately thwarting efforts to promote European security and by extension is then playing into the hands of both Russia and China and indeed Iran as well.”
World
Tourists found ‘holding each other’ after deadly volcano eruption | World | News

The bodies of two tourists missing after a volcano erupted in Indonesia have been discovered holding each other.
The bodies were recovered during a challenging operation hampered by treacherous terrain and heavy rainfall, according to Indonesia’s rescue agency head, Iwan Ramdani.
The bodies have been transported to a local hospital where they will undergo post-mortem examinations.
The volcano has continued its activity and has been persistently releasing ash since Friday, further complicating the evacuation efforts.
According to reports, debris was propelled as high as six miles into the atmosphere at its peak.
Despite warnings circulated across social media, several individuals “remain determined to climb, driven by the desire to create online content,” said North Halmahera police chief Erlichson Pasaribu on Friday.
He added: “They were aware that climbing was prohibited as the mountain is a restricted zone due to its high alert status, but insisted on going ahead.”
A search operation conducted on Sunday morning deployed approximately 150 personnel using thermal drones to scan around the mountain’s crater rim.
It was confirmed on Saturday that one missing Indonesian hiker had perished, while 17 people, including seven Singaporeans and 10 Indonesians, survived.
The country’s Foreign Ministry said that the seven rescued will return to Singapore on Sunday.
It remains unclear when the bodies of those found deceased will be repatriated. Indonesia’s volcanology agency reported four additional eruptions on Sunday, with one blast propelling ash nearly a mile into the sky.
All activity has been prohibited within a 2.5-mile radius of the crater, as Mount Dukono has been placed on the third-highest alert level.
World
Australia’s Nigel Farage makes historic win – ‘take the country back’ | World | News


Australia hosted Nigel Farage previously, and his words may have influenced the country today (Image: Getty)
The political establishment in Australia has been shaken by a by-election result that locals are calling a “bloodbath” — delivered by the woman many regard as the country’s equivalent of Nigel Farage.
One Nation leader Pauline Hanson — a Right-wing populist who has spent three decades on the fringes of Australian politics — declared she would “take the country back” through an end to mass migration after her party broke into the lower house for the first time in its history.
The winning candidate, farmer David Farley, secured 39 per cent of the vote in Farrer, a rural New South Wales constituency that had not left the Liberal-National fold since 1949. The result promises a political earthquake in a country long dominated by orthodox parties.
A second One Nation figure sits in the lower house, though he crossed the floor from the National Party last year rather than being elected under the One Nation banner.
Hanson declared the result sent a clear message to her rivals. “What it shows is that the coalition can’t beat One Nation. They’ll have to join them. There’s no future coalition government, I think, without One Nation in it.”
Read more: Reform results ‘exceeding anything’ as deadline for Tory defection ‘passed’
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How does Pauline Hanson compare to Nigel Farage?
According to the Telegraph, Australian commentators have drawn direct comparisons with Reform UK’s rise in Britain, suggesting One Nation may be approaching a similar breakthrough moment. Hanson and Farage share more than political style — both have built movements on grievances about immigration and living costs that establishment parties failed to address.
Hanson’s personal approval ratings have climbed above those of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.
Her admiration for Trump has remained undimmed even as his trade policies have strained relations with Canberra. She appeared at CPAC last year at Mar-a-Lago, promising to transplant his political programme to Australian soil.
Known to some as “Dancin’ Pauline,” she marked the victory with a dance on stage as supporters in blue Make Australia Great Again hats cheered her on.
“We’re coming after those other seats,” she said, with an eye on the 2028 federal elections. “You are not going to be the forgotten people any more. We are proud Australians. We want our country back and that’s what One Nation is about.”

Hanson has held a Queensland Senate seat since 2016 sitting alongside three other One Nation members (Image: Getty)
Who is Pauline Hanson?
Now 71, Hanson has held a Queensland Senate seat since 2016, sitting alongside three other One Nation members in the upper house. She has courted controversy throughout her political career.
Her debut parliamentary address three decades ago caused immediate outrage with a warning that Australia faced being “swamped” by Muslims and Asians. She has been a persistent critic of public recognition for the rights of Aboriginal Australians and has campaigned against what she describes as political correctness.
Her decision last year to enter parliament wearing a burka — a deliberate provocation in support of her campaign to ban the garment — earned her a seven-day suspension and a censure motion passed by 55 votes to five, with opponents branding her racist and Islamophobic. It was not her first such act — she pulled the same stunt in 2017, on both occasions attracting global media attention.
World
China’s Nostradamus warns world to brace for major event | World | News

Professor Xueqin Jiang, widely dubbed China’s Nostradamus, made an appearance on Piers Morgan Uncensored, sparking a fierce exchange with economist Steven Keen.
The episode, entitled “Heading For Global DEPRESSION!”, broadcast on Tuesday, May 5, saw Jiang issue a stark warning that the world is veering towards a “global depression.” Host Piers Morgan pressed him directly: “Professor Jiang, are we heading for a global recession, do you think?”
He responded with an alarming prediction: “I think that we are heading toward a global depression.” He went on to say, “And this is a process that could take decades. We are in a new normal. We are in an undiscovered country. We are at a level of destruction, a level of pain and suffering that we are moving toward that is unimaginable. So buckle up!”
Addressing the developing crisis in the Strait of Hormuz, he stated: “China is not sitting this out.” Jiang continued, “We have the ceasefire in place because China did a lot of backdoor diplomacy in order to pressure the Iranians to attempt a ceasefire.
“This is out of character for China. China does not like to involve itself in other nations’ affairs, and so, I think, without Chinese pressure, we would not have the IRGC agreeing to the ceasefire in the first place,” he added. “The issue is that the United States continues to be unreasonable in negotiations with the Iranians.
“The Iranians have done a lot in order to try to accommodate the Americans,” Jiang added. “But when JD Vance went to Pakistan for the first time to negotiate with the Iranians, basically, it was a very heavy-handed ultimatum to the Iranians. And after that, I think that the Iranians recognize that there really is no hope in negotiating with the Americans.”
“The Americans want to escalate. Why? We don’t know, but we can expect that over the next few weeks, the escalation will increase,” Jiang continued. “Now, Trump has talked about using U.S. naval ships to escort oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz.
“This is clearly a provocation,” Jiang said. “And we might have an… incident which will allow Trump to justify a ground invasion.”
Economics professor and commentator Steve Keen, who also featured on the hard-hitting panel, confessed to being “terrified” by the potential fallout.
“I’m terrified about what the consequences could be here, because the Iranians have done a very clever tactic of basically guerrilla warfare at a national level, far beyond what the Vietnamese were ready for in the very first instance. And they are doing tit for tat.” Keen said.
“Anybody who’s been a supporter of America, of course, that includes the Arab principalities and kingdoms and the Israelis as well, will be retaliated for any attack on specific similar resources inside Iran itself,” Keen added. “Now, Trump, there’s already been one attack on a desalination plant in Iran. And I think I’ve seen figures to say that 96% of Iran’s water is natural.
“You look at the other side, the Arabian side,” he pointed out. “Some of them have 96% dependence upon desalination.
“If it goes that far, then we will, and they have no idea how this stupid attack is going to turn out, then that could mean that those areas have to be evacuated because people are not going to starve to death, they’re going to die of thirst.
“Now, these horrific possibilities here are just ludicrous,” Keen explained. “And it’s absolutely a monumental failure of judgment to begin this conflict in the first place.”
Warning that the world was on course for a recession, Keen also rounded on Trump’s former economics adviser Stephen Moore, branding the US the “evil empire.”
He told Morgan: “You guys have got a Hollywood version of your own history. It’s a joke from the outside. Nobody takes you seriously anymore! Get used to it!”
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