After two rounds of negotiations on the Iranian nuclear programme, Washington and Tehran have said they want to continue the talks. The negotiations were progressing well, Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi announced after his meeting with US special envoy Steve Witkoff at the Omani embassy in Rome on Saturday. The Arab state is acting as a mediator. Commentators take stock.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni will meet US President Donald Trump in Washington today for talks that will presumably focus on defusing the tariff dispute between the US and Europe. The two leaders enjoy a good personal relationship. Europe's press discusses whether the EU will benefit from this encounter - or whether the post-fascist politician only has Italy's interests in mind.

Now that the US has suspended its special tariffs for most countries, the focus of the global tariff dispute has shifted to the clash between Washington and Beijing. Europe faces the question of how to position itself in this clash of titans. Commentators are at odds.

After the traumatic experiences of the Covid-19 pandemic, the 194 member countries of the World Health Organisation (WHO) have agreed on a treaty aimed at improving responses to future pandemics, for example in the procurement and distribution of protective equipment and vaccines. Commentators assess its prospects of success.

In a landmark judgement, the UK's Supreme Court has ruled that when it comes to gender equality, the biological sex and not the social gender is decisive. The decision affects issues such as whether trans women are categorised as women in gender quotas and to what extent they have access to women's refuges and changing rooms.

Donald Trump has put more than 2.2 billion dollars in multi-year grants for elite private university Harvard on hold after it rejected a list of demands by the US administration, including tighter controls on foreign students and the suspension of diversity criteria. The university stressed that it would not tolerate government interference in its academic freedom. Europe's media take stock.

US President Donald Trump has described a Russian missile strike on the city of Sumy in north-eastern Ukraine in which more than 30 civilians were killed as a "horrible thing". Russian-American negotiations are set to continue this week, but with only a ceasefire on the Black Sea on the table. The media ask whether Trump's peace initiative has any chance of succeeding - and examine what role Europe can play.

Following a vote in parliament decided by the government majority, the clear separation of the sexes into male and female has been enshrined in the Hungarian constitution. In addition, the right of children to appropriate physical, mental and moral development is to take precedence over other fundamental rights. Critics fear these provisions could be used to restrict the right of assembly and ban Pride parades.

Twelve million displaced persons, famine, ethnic cleansing - the tally after two years of civil war in Sudan is devastating, with the UN naming it as the world's largest humanitarian crisis. At the end of March, the national army was able to retake the capital Khartoum and other regions from the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), but there is no sign of the fighting coming to an end. What comes next?

The Peruvian-Spanish winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature Mario Vargas Llosa has died aged 89. A controversial figure, not only for his literary work, Vargas Llosa was also politically active and against dictatorships in South America. In 1990 he ran for the Peruvian presidency on a liberal economic programme but lost the runoff to Alberto Fujimori. From 1990 to 2023 he wrote regularly for the Spanish newspaper El País.

The British parliament on Sunday passed emergency legislation paving the way for manufacturer British Steel to be rescued after its Chinese operator Jingye announced plans to shut down the Scunthorpe steelworks, the only plant in the country that not only recycles steel but can produce it from ore and coke. While Jingye formally remains the owner, the state will take control in a move that will incur enormous losses. Controversy in the press.

The face-off in the tariff war between the US and China continues. First US President Donald Trump progressively increased the additional tariffs on Chinese imports to 145 percent. Then he announced temporary exemptions for the large electronic goods sector. Beijing has retaliated with counter-tariffs which are currently at 125 percent, and is also seeking economic alliances in other countries.

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