From 10h ago 04.44 EST EU-India deal 'accelerated with gusto' over past six months amid Trump's tariff threats - snap analysis Hannah Ellis-Petersen South Asia correspondent
in New Delhi India, the world’s largest country with a population of 1.4 billion, is also one of the world’s fastest-growing economies and is on track to become its fourth-largest economy this year, according to the International Monetary Fund. Indian prime minister Narendra Modi and European Council president Antonio Costa shake hands during a joint press statement at the Hyderabad House in New Delhi, India. Photograph: Altaf Hussain/Reuters The deal is one of the most comprehensive that India has ever signed and Narendra Modi emphasised that it represented about a third of global trade, calling it the “biggest free trade deal in history”. “This agreement has brought massive opportunities for 1.4 billion Indians and millions of people in European countries,” he said. “It has become a wonderful example of synergy between two of the world’s major economies.” Trade talks between the two countries began as far back as 2007 but were abandoned owing to disputes over access to cars, agriculture and dairy. However, they were resumed again in 2022 and accelerated with gusto over the past six months in the face of heavy punitive tariffs by Donald Trump’s administration in the US and joint concerns over China’s monopoly over global manufacturing and the country’s restrictions on key exports. According to officials, the formal signing of the deal will take place later this year and it could come into play by early next year. ‘Mother of all deals’: EU and India sign free trade agreement Read more Share
4h ago 10.59 EST Europe marks International Holocaust Remembrance Day Holocaust survivors, politicians and regular people commemorated International Holocaust Remembrance Day gathering at events held across Europe to reflect on Nazi Germany’s killing of millions of people, AP reported. View image in fullscreen A man leaves a pebble at the Victims’ Wall of the Holocaust Memorial Centre during a memorial service in Budapest, Hungary. Photograph: Tamas Purger/EPA International Holocaust Remembrance Day is observed across the world on 27 January, the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the most notorious of the Nazi German death camps. The UN general assembly adopted a resolution in 2005 establishing the day as an annual commemoration. At the memorial site of Auschwitz, located in an area of southern Poland which was under German occupation during the second world war, former prisoners laid flowers and wreaths at a wall where German forces executed thousands of prisoners. Nazi German forces killed some 1.1 million people at Auschwitz, most of them Jews, but also Poles, Roma and others. View image in fullscreen President of the Polish Association of Former Political Prisoners of Nazi Prisons and Concentration Camps, former Auschwitz prisoner Stanisław Zalewski, during a wreath-laying ceremony with former camp prisoners at the Death Wall on the grounds of the former Auschwitz camp in Oświęcim, Poland. Photograph: Jarek Praszkiewicz/EPA View image in fullscreen People attend a flower-laying ceremony at the Kindertransport Monument in Gdańsk, Poland. Photograph: Adam Warżawa/EPA Candles burned and white roses were placed at the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, a field of 2,700 gray concrete slabs near the Brandenburg Gate in the heart of Berlin, which honors the 6 million victims and stands as a powerful symbol of Germany’s remorse. View image in fullscreen Visitors enter the Hall of Names at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial Museum during International Holocaust Remembrance Day in Jerusalem, Israel. Photograph: Abir Sultan/EPA Other events took also place across Europe. View image in fullscreen British prime minister Keir Starmer (R) greets holocaust survivor Mala Tribich (L) as she arrives to address the weekly Government cabinet meeting at Downing Street in London, Britain. Photograph: Neil Hall/EPA View image in fullscreen Hungarian Hassidic Jewish religious leader and head of the Hungarian Chabad-Lubavitch movement Rabbi Baruch Oberlander, President of the Federation of Jewish Communities in Hungary (Mazsihisz) Andor Grosz, Israel’s ambassador to Hungary Maya Kadosh, and Hungarian Minister heading the prime minister’s office Gergely Gulyas attend a memorial service at the Victims’ Wall of the Holocaust Memorial Centre in Budapest, Hungary. Photograph: Tamas Purger/EPA View image in fullscreen White roses placed on a concrete slab of the Holocaust memorial to mark the International Holocaust Memorial Day in Berlin, Germany. Photograph: Markus Schreiber/AP There are an estimated 196,600 Jewish Holocaust survivors still alive globally, down from 220,000 a year earlier, according to information published last week by the New York-based Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany. Their median age is 87, and nearly all – some 97% – are “child survivors” who were born 1928 and later, the group said. Holocaust remembrance and a tsunami museum: photos of the day – Tuesday Read more Share Updated at 11.00 EST
4h ago 10.30 EST Macron to 'reaffirm solidarity and support' for Denmark, Greenland in meeting with PMs on Wednesday Meanwhile, the Élysée Palace has said that France’s Emmanuel Macron will “reaffirm European solidarity and France’s support for Denmark, Greenland, their sovereignty and their territorial integrity” during his meeting with the two prime ministers tomorrow, AFP reported. The three leaders will discuss “security issues in the Arctic and the economic and social development of Greenland, which France and the European Union are ready to support”, Macron’s office said. I bet we will also get some pictures from their visit tomorrow, fo-shur. Share
5h ago 09.41 EST Danish, Greenlandic prime ministers in Berlin for talks on Greenland, Arctic security As mentioned earlier, Danish and Greenlandic prime ministers are on the tour of European capitals as they shore up the support for the territory amid Donald Trump’s interest. Here they are in Berlin this afternoon and will be in Paris tomorrow. View image in fullscreen Greenlandic and Danish prime ministers meet with German chancellor Friedrich Merz. Photograph: German Federal Government/JESCO DENZEL HANDOUT/EPA And speaking of Trump’s imperial plans, there’s perhaps something to be said there about the effect it’s having even on some of his European allies… Over to Jon Henley for more. Share Updated at 09.46 EST
5h ago 09.13 EST Uproar in Italy over ICE security role at Winter Olympics Angela Giuffrida in Rome A unit of US immigration and customs enforcement agents (ICE) will have a security role in the upcoming Winter Olympic Games in Italy, sparking uproar and petitions against the deployment (11:56). View image in fullscreen Milan's mayor Giuseppe Sala said US ICE agents would not be welcome in the city during the upcoming Olympic Games. Photograph: Gregorio Borgia/AP Sources at the US embassy in Rome confirmed a statement from ICE, the agency embroiled in a brutal immigration crackdown in the US, saying that federal agents would support diplomatic security details during the Milan-Cortina games but would not run any enforcement operations. The daily newspaper La Repubblica claimed Italy’s far-right government, which has nurtured friendly relations with Donald Trump’s administration, had briefly looked into blocking the participation of ICE agents in the delegation, but that would have required a departure from how US officials are usually protected during similar high-profile visits abroad. Milan’s mayor, Giuseppe Sala, told RTL radio that the agents would not be welcome in the city “because they don’t guarantee they’re aligned with our democratic security management methods”. “This is a militia that kills,” he said. “It’s clear that they are not welcome in Milan, there’s no doubt about it. Can’t we just say no to Trump for once? We can take care of their security ourselves. We don’t need ICE. Alessandro Zan, a member of the European parliament for the centre-left Democratic party, said the presence of ICE agents would be unacceptable. ‘A militia that kills’: uproar in Italy over ICE security role at Winter Olympics Read more Share
5h ago 09.07 EST State oil and gas firm says Russian strike target facility in western Ukraine Amidst what Nato secretary general Mark Rutte has described as the “harshest winter” that Ukraine has faced in over a decade, Ukrainian state oil and gas firm Naftogaz said on Tuesday that a Russian strike on one of its facilities in the western region forced specialists to halt operations. Naftogaz CEO Sergii Korteskyi wrote on Facebook that this was the 15th targeted shelling of Naftogaz infrastructure this month. Tuesday’s strike comes a day after Russian drones and missile strikes hit Kharkiv, knocking out power to 80% of Ukraine’s second-largest city and the surrounding region and injuring two people, local officials said. War correspondent and executive director of war crimes unit the Reckoning Project, Janine di Giovanni, has suggested that Russian president Vladimir Putin is intentionally “weaponising the savage eastern European winter”. Share
6h ago 08.51 EST Spain to grant legal status to thousands of immigrants living and working in country without authorisation In a surprise move, Spain’s government announced Tuesday that it will grant legal status to potentially hundreds of thousands of immigrants living and working in the country without authorisation, the Associated Press reports. Spain’s minister of migration, Elma Saiz, said her government will amend existing immigration laws by expedited decree to grant immigrants who arrived in Spain before Dec. 31, 2025 legal residency of up to one year as well as permission to work. According to the estimates from different organisations, the move could benefit between 500,000 and 800,000 people. Many are Latin American or African immigrants working in the agricultural, tourism or service sectors. “Today is a historic day,” Saiz said at a news conference. Share
6h ago 08.20 EST Iran summons Italian ambassador over EU terrorist register efforts Iranian state media is reporting that Iran’s foreign ministry has summoned Italy’s ambassador over Rome’s efforts to place the Revolutionary Guards on the European Union’s terrorist register, according to Reuters. Iran’s foreign ministry called upon the Italian foreign minister to “correct his ill-considered approaches toward Iran” and warned of the “destructive consequences” of any labelling against the Revolutionary Guards. Share
7h ago 07.59 EST Finland hails 'historic' EU agreement with India Finnish president Alexander Stubb is the latest European leader to welcome the new EU-India trade deal confirmed this morning. He said it was a “historic” agreement, and will “further intensify our economic and political ties with India.” “In these times, it is important for both the EU and Finland to strengthen partnerships all over the globe,” he added. His comments come as Finland’s prime minister Petteri Orpo is in Beijing for separate talks with China, with Reuters noting that US president Donald Trump’s volatile foreign policy decisions and confrontational approach toward allies push European countries to diversify their foreign relations. Share
7h ago 07.14 EST 'Europeans can and must take charge of their security,' French foreign minister says in pushback to Rutte's comments France has pushed back on Nato secretary general Mark Rutte’s suggestion that Europe is not in a position to defend itself without the US. Speaking in the European parliament on Monday, Rutte said told EU lawmakers that if they thought the EU or Europe as whole could defend itself without the US, they should “keep on dreaming” (Europe Live, Monday). In a rare public rebuke, French foreign minister Jean-Noël Barrot disagreed with him on X, stressing “Europeans can and must take charge of their own security.” “Even the United States agrees. It is the European pillar of Nato,” he said. The European Commission also slightly distanced itself from Rutte’s comments this afternoon, pointing to the EU’s commitment to “become increasingly resilient … and independent on various fronts,” including energy, critical raw materials, and security. “We’re really pulling together a number of measures with one aim, which is … that we can all really, on various fronts, ensure such gradual independence,” commission chief spokesperson Paula Pinho said. Share
7h ago 07.07 EST European Commission ready to defend its Russian energy imports phase out policy despite Slovak, Hungarian legal threat The European Commission has just responded to the Slovak and Hungarian threat of legal action against its policy to phase out Russian gas imports (12:14). Energy spokesperson Anna-Kaisa Itkonen told journalists at the daily midday briefing that the bloc’s objective “is never to end up in a situation where any of our member states legally challenge our legislation,” but to work with the member states instead. But the countries can challenge the policy if they want to, and “we will be there to defend our position.” “We really stand by the legislation, and there is solid legal work behind [it], so we are also very confident that we are in a position to defend the legislation that has been widely endorsed by the member states,” chief spokesperson Paula Pinho added. Share
leopardbaseball on January 27th, 2026 at 12:53 UTC »
Thats a free trade market for almost 2billion people and amongst $28Trillion in gdp!!!
And USA is not part if it. Now thats the Art of Deal.
FirstCircleLimbo on January 27th, 2026 at 12:15 UTC »
This major agreement between the EU and India is a significant challenge for Donald Trump. His intention was that all other countries would comply and accept the US's conditions in order to gain access to the American market.
However, the EU has instead developed a new and comprehensive approach to trade agreements based on equality and rules. The EU is in the process of a major deregulation exercise – and is working to free itself from American technology and build up its ability to defend itself.
Venezuela – Trump's new olive branch – is a member of Mercosur, albeit suspended since 2016. If a democratic government comes to power at some point and membership is resumed, the door to the EU will also be open.
It is a really good day for the EU. It is a good day for India. It is a bad day for Trump – and for China, which is currently carpet bombing the European market with discounted surplus goods.
curiousstrider on January 27th, 2026 at 08:50 UTC »
SS
The European Union has concluded trade talks with India this morning, signing also a bunch of separate deals on mobility, security, and defense, among others.
The accord would open up India’s vast and highly guarded market, with New Delhi slashing tariffs on cars to 10% over five years from as high as 110%, Reuters reported. The deal will also cut tariffs on a slew of EU goods coming to India including machinery, electrical equipment, chemicals and iron and steel, the EU said.
The EU is keen to stress that the EU and India already trade over €180bn worth of goods and services per year, supporting close to 800,000 EU jobs, and the EU’s goods exports to India is expected to double by 2032.
“This is the most ambitious trade opening that India has ever granted to a trade partner,” the bloc said, creating a market of more than 2 billion people.
India’s Narendra Modi welcomed the deal saying “the two largest democratic powers of the world are adding a decisive chapter to their relations,” as he hailed “the largest ever free trade agreement in its history.” The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, went further and called it “the mother of all trade deals.”
The agreements will still need to go through the usual ratification process, including by the member states and the European Parliament.
But there is no hiding away from the fact that the deal – 19 years in the making – gets also signed now as the EU urgently looks for new trade partners to diversify its trade given increasingly shaky relations with the US under tariff-happy Donald Trump. Earlier this month, the EU signed a deal with the South American bloc Mercosur, after 25 years of negotiations.
The European Council’s president António Costa – who holds an overseas citizenship of India thanks to his Goan roots – said that the deal “sends a clear message to the world at a time when the global order is being fundamentally reshaped.”