China willing to work with Czech government to improve ties

HONG KONG, May 27 (Reuters) - China is willing to work with the Czech Republic to improve ties and revive a traditional ‌friendship, Foreign Minister Wang Yi told Czech counterpart Petr Macinka, state ‌broadcaster CCTV said on Wednesday.

Reuters

Like most nations, the Czech Republic formally recognises only Beijing and ​not Taiwan, which is claimed by China, but it has grown closer to the semiconductor powerhouse in recent years, and has seen growing investment from it.

Both sides should "strengthen dialogue and cooperation, enhance political mutual trust and gradually ‌expand practical cooperation in areas ⁠such as economy, trade and tourism," Wang said, according to CCTV, to take ties in the correct direction.

Taiwan is ⁠an internal issue for China, Wang added, saying he hoped the Czech government would "practice the One-China principle ... and promote China-Czech relations back on a healthy development ​track."

China ​has been critical of ties between Prague ​and Taipei. It sees the ‌democratically-governed island as having no right to state-to-state relations, a view the government in Taipei strongly rejects.

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Taiwan Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lung visited Prague last week and spoke at a forum there.

Czech Senate President Milos Vystrcil is leading a business delegation on a visit next week to Taiwan, where he ‌is set to meet President Lai Ching-te.

Relations ​were also strained last year after Czech ​President Petr Pavel met the ​Dalai Lama in India in July. A group from ‌the Czech parliament also travelled to ​Dharamshala in December and ​met the Tibetan spiritual leader.

In March, China said it strongly opposed the Czech Senate passing a draft resolution on the Dalai Lama's ​succession, saying it "grossly interfered" ‌with internal affairs.

(Reporting by the Beijing newsroom, Additional reporting by ​Ben Blanchard in Taipei and Jan Lopatka in Prague; Writing by ​Farah Master; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

China willing to work with Czech government to improve ties

HONG KONG, May 27 (Reuters) - China is willing to work with the Czech Republic to improve ties and revive a traditional ‌friendship, Fo...
Samsung workers approve pay deal but management still has trying times ahead

By Hyunjoo Jin

Reuters Employees head to work at Samsung Electronics semiconductor plant in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, May 21, 2026.  REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji Choi Seung-ho, head of Samsung Electronics union and Yeo Myung-koo, head of the People Team under Samsung's Device Solutions division and the company's chief management negotiator, shake hands after reaching a tentative pay deal in Suwon, South Korea, May 20, 2026.   Yonhap via REUTERS   THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES. SOUTH KOREA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN SOUTH KOREA.

Samsunga union suspends planned strike after reaching tentative pay deal

SEOUL, May 27 (Reuters) - Unionised workers at Samsung Electronics have approved a highly contentious deal on bonus pay - one that averts a massive strike but also exacerbates deep disparities in fortunes among employees at the tech conglomerate.

Two unions for ‌the world's largest memory chip maker said on Wednesday that 74% of the 62,616 workers who cast their votes had backed the ‌agreement.

The government-mediated agreement, forged after a bitter five-month dispute, has sparked both wide relief and alarm across South Korea.

On the one hand, Samsung accounts for roughly a quarter of the country's ​exports and if the deal had not been ratified, an 18-day strike by 48,000 workers would have been set in motion, damaging the economy and denting global chip supplies.

BUSINESS NORMS SCRAPPED TO PLACATE CHIP WORKERS

But at the same time, the deal marks only the second time that a major South Korean company has agreed in writing to reward some employees with a fixed percentage of operating profit - flying in the face of normal practice that calls for bonuses to ‌be calculated after corporate taxes are paid.

In Samsung's case, ⁠10.5% of its semiconductor operating profit will go towards special bonuses for chip workers.

That's sparked concern from South Korean President Lee Jae Myung, business groups and academics. Chief among their worries is that some unions that are making ⁠similar demands will harden their stances and more could follow suit.

A shareholder group, composed of individual shareholders, has also threatened to sue. Among their arguments, they say that such an arrangement is unlawful because it was not passed at a shareholders' meeting.

The deal reduces the amount of money available to be distributed to shareholders and "potentially ​invites ​legal scrutiny under the Commercial Act regarding the fiduciary duty to shareholders," said Seo ​Ji-yong, a professor of business administration at Sangmyung University.

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A ‌SUMMER OF DISCONTENT TO COME

Samsung management is expected to have its hands full dealing with the discontent that the deal has sowed.

"Finding ways to bridge internal labor divides will be Samsung's biggest task," said Korea University law professor Park Ji-soon.

Forged under much pressure to narrow the gap with sky-high bonuses at rival chipmaker SK Hynix, the deal mainly benefits workers in the company's memory chip division, which has seen profits soar due to the colossal investments globally in AI. Some of those workers are set to receive bonuses of around $416,000 this year.

Workers in Samsung's other chip units will receive less ‌but still substantial bonuses, while employees in its consumer electronics divisions are set to ​receive very little by comparison.

"The atmosphere is pretty gloomy and many of us have lost ​motivation," said one chip foundry worker at Samsung's sprawling chip campus ​in Pyeongtaek, declining to be identified.

"It really is an ironic situation — being depressed despite receiving more money."

It also remains ‌to be seen if a court will grant a Samsung ​union representing consumer electronics workers their request ​to block the vote. They were excluded from the vote after their union left the negotiating team due to disagreements.

That could possibly lead to a new vote, though the deal appears to have far more backers than detractors.

Shares in Samsung ended 3% higher and have ​climbed 11% since the wage agreement was struck last ‌week. That performance, however, still lags the stellar 29% gain over the same period for SK Hynix, which, benefiting from the ​investor frenzy over AI, joined Samsung and Micron on Wednesday in having a market value of over $1 trillion.

($1 = 1,501.7400 won)

(Reporting by ​Hyunjoo Jin and Heejin Kim; Editing by Ed Davies and Edwina Gibbs)

Samsung workers approve pay deal but management still has trying times ahead

By Hyunjoo Jin Samsunga union suspends planned strike after reaching tentative pay deal SEOUL, May 27 (Reuters) - Unionised wor...
Chelsea defender Baltimore signs new contract until 2030

Chelsea defender Sandy Baltimore has signed a new contract with Chelsea that will keep her at the club until 2030.

BBC

The France international joined Chelsea from Paris Saint-Germain before the 2024-25 season and quickly became a key player.

Baltimore played an important role as Chelsea secured an unbeaten domestic treble in her debut season, making 29 appearances in all competitions while scoring nine goals and six assists.

Speaking after the signing, Baltimore said:

"Chelsea is one of the biggest clubs. We have a top quality team, and I want to compete with the best players in the world every day, that's why I chose to stay here.

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"I want to keep improving and try to win every trophy possible."

The 26-year-old reached 50 appearances for Chelsea during the 2025-26 season, coming off the bench in a win against Tottenham Hotspur in February.

Baltimore is known for her pace, technical ability and attacking contributions from the left side.

At international level, Baltimore progressed through the France youth system and helped her country win the UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship, scoring in the final against Germany.

She has 55 caps for France women's national team and has scored 11 goals.

On the app? Tap the bell to get Women's Super League news sent to you. Signed in on a browser? Hit 'Follow' to stay up to date.

Chelsea defender Baltimore signs new contract until 2030

Chelsea defender Sandy Baltimore has signed a new contract with Chelsea that will keep her at the club until 2030. The France inte...
King of New York: Jalen Brunson has led the Knicks back to the NBA Finals. And he's not done yet

CLEVELAND — There would be no late-game heroics on Monday night. No pivoting, feinting and head-and-shoulder-shimmying his way into a fraction of a sliver of space — just enough to unfurl a feathery off-balance floater.

Yahoo Sports

No hunting his preferred quarry in the pick-and-roll without compunction or remorse, again and again, to carry his team out of a fourth-quarter deficit. No pulled-from-your-wildest-childhood-dreams fadeaway jumpers over two outstretched hands with the clock draining down to zero.

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Jalen Brunson wasn’t on the court to deliver in crunch time on Monday night — he watched the entire fourth quarter from the bench, actually — because there was no crunch time for him to dominate in Game 4 in Cleveland,which the Knicks won by 37. Just like there wasn’t in Game 4 in Philadelphia,which the Knicks won by 30. Or in Game 6 in Atlanta,which the Knicks won by 51.

There was no crunch time for him to dominate because when the 2025-26 New York Knicks see an opening to exploit, they don’t hesitate to hammer it, and when they have the opportunity to go for the throat, they seize it. They behave that way because attitude reflects leadership, and because Jalen Brunson — measured and unassuming with the media, king of the anodyne quote — is a stone-cold killer between those four lines.

This team follows his lead. He has now led the Knicksfarther than anybody has in this millennium: to the NBA Finals. And he’s not done yet.

King of New York: Jalen Brunson has led the Knicks back to the NBA Finals. And he's not done yet

CLEVELAND — There would be no late-game heroics on Monday night. No pivoting, feinting and head-and-shoulder-shimmying his way into a f...
Teenager in hospital after moped machete attack

A 16-year-old boy is in hospital after a “horrific” machete attack, police have said.

The Telegraph Police at the scene in Dudley

The teenager was walking in the area of Duncan Edwards Close, Dudley, when he was approached by two young men on a moped just before 2pm on Saturday, West Midlands Police said.

The men then attacked the boy and fled, leaving him with serious injuries to his chest and face, according to the force.

He was taken to hospital and underwent surgery. Police said on Sunday that he was in a serious but stable condition.

CCTV and mobile phone footage have been recovered by detectives, who have appealed for witnesses to come forward.

Det Insp Joe Davenport, from the force’s major crime unit, said: “This was a horrific attack in the middle of the day and it could easily have resulted in this boy losing his life.

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“We’ve been working tirelessly since then to understand exactly what happened, and who was responsible, and I’d urge anyone with information to get in touch with us as soon as possible.”

Rise in knife offenders being spared jail

Last week, it emerged that the number of convicted knife offenders being spared jailhad hit a 10-year high.

Ministry of Justice figures showed that nearly seven in 10 offenders avoided prison in 2025 – the lowest rate since 2015 – and received suspended jail sentences or community punishments instead.

Only 6,581 knife offenders were handed immediate custody, down 6.1 per cent on 2024’s figure of 7,006.

Police forces have started to reverse the rise in knife crime, which is down 10 per cent year-on-year after offences returned to pre-Covid levels.

However, the Tories said the failure to lock up offenders could undermine the battle to reduce knife crime.

Nick Timothy, the shadow justice secretary, said: “The fact that only a third of knife criminals are now receiving an immediate custodial sentence shows Labour have simply given up in the fight against knife crime.”

Teenager in hospital after moped machete attack

A 16-year-old boy is in hospital after a “horrific” machete attack, police have said. The teenager was walking in the area of Dun...
French Open day two order of play and schedule with Swiatek and Rybakina in action

Four-time championIga Swiatekbegins herFrench Opencampaign on Monday as first-round action continues on another busy day in Paris.

The Independent US The first round continues on day two of the French Open (Getty)

The Polish third seed takes on Australian wildcard Emerson Jones first on Court Philippe-Chatrier, with second seed Elena Rybakina following against Slovenia’s Veronika Erjavec.

Fan favouriteGael Monfilsis slated to start his last Roland-Garros before retirement in the night session on Chatrier, where he has been drawn against compatriot Hugo Gaston, while former champion Stan Wawrinka also begins his final Roland-Garros against Dutch lucky loser Jesper de Jong.

Elsewhere, 2024 finalistJasmine Paoliniopens against Dayana Yastremska, Italian Open championElina Svitolinabegins her campaign against Anna Bondar. There’s British interest too as qualifier Toby Samuel has a tough first-round tie against eighth seed Alex de Minaur, while British No 2 Katie Boulter takes on American wildcard Akasha Urhobo.

Is the French Open on TV?

The tournament will be shown live onTNT Sportsin the UK as well as online on HBO Max.

In the US, it will be shown live on TNT Sports, Max, truTV and CNN.

French Open day two order of play

all times BST

Court Philippe-Chatrier - 11am

  • Emerson Jones v Iga Swiatek (3)

  • Veronika Erjavec v Elena Rybakina (2)

  • Ugo Humbert(32) v Adrian Mannarino

Court Philippe-Chatrier - from 7.15pm

  • Hugo Gaston v Gael Monfils

Court Suzanne-Lenglen - 10am

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  • Arthur Rinderknech (22) v Jurij Rodionov

  • Elina Svitolina (7) v Anna Bondar

  • Sarah Rakotomanga v Amanda Anisimova (6)

  • Daniel Merida Aguilar v Ben Shelton (5)

Court Simonne-Mathieu - 10am

  • Jasmine Paolini (13) v Dayana Yastremska

  • Stan Wawrinka v Jesper de Jong

  • Casper Ruud (15) v Roman Safiullin

  • Anastasia Zakharova v Karolina Muchova (10)

Court 14 - 10am

  • Alex de Minaur (8) v Toby Samuel

  • Tatjana Maria v Elise Mertens (23)

  • Kaitlin Quevedo v Leolia Jeanjean

  • Flavio Cobolli (10) v Andrea Pellegrino

Court 4 - 10am

  • Liudmila Samsonova (20) v Jil Teichmann

  • Julia Grabher v Rebecca Sramkova

  • Mariano Navone v Jenson Brooksby

  • Francisco Cerundolo (25) v Botic Van De Zandschulp

Court 5 - 10am

  • Susan Bandecchi v Cristina Bucsa (31)

  • Petra Marcinko v Eva Lys

  • Emilio Nava v Camilo Ugo Carabelli

  • Yibing Wu v Marcos Giron

Court 6 - 10am

  • Pablo Carreno Busta v Jiri Lehecka(12)

  • Thanasi Kokkinakis v Terence Atmane

  • Jelena Ostapenko (29) v Ella Seidal

  • Diana Shnaider (25) v Renata Zarazua

Court 7 - 10am

  • Maja Chwalinska v Qinwen Zheng

  • Eliot Spizzirri v Frances Tiafoe (19)

  • Ignacio Buse v Andrey Rublev (11)

  • Alycia Parks v Leylah Fernandez (24)

Court 8 - 10am

  • Luca Van Assche v Patrick Kypson

  • Jaume Munar v Hubert Hurkacz

  • Akasha Urhobo v Katie Boulter

  • Camila Osorio v Ekaterina Alexandrova (14)

Court 9 - 10am

  • Daria Kasatkina v Zeynep Sonmez

  • Roberto Bautista Agut v Brandon Nakashima (31)

  • Panna Udvardy v Viktorija Golubic

  • Raphael Collignon v Aleksandar Vukic

Court 12 - 10am

  • Alexander Shevchenko v Alex Michelsen

  • Aleksandar Kovacevic v Rafael Jodar (27)

  • Talia Gibson v Yulia Putintseva

  • Kamilla Rakhimova v Jaqueline Cristian

Court 13 - 10am

  • Marton Fucsovics v Matteo Berrettini

  • Maya Joint v Anastasia Potapova (28)

  • Rinky Hijikata v Tommy Paul (24)

  • Hanyu Guo v McCartney Kessler

French Open schedule

The tournament main draw gets underway on Sunday 24 May. Finals weekend is across Saturday 6 and Sunday 7 June.

  • 24–26 May — 1st Round

  • 27–28 May — 2nd Round

  • 29–30 May — 3rd Round

  • 31 May – 1 June — Round of 16

  • 2–3 June — Quarterfinals

  • 4 June — Women’s Semifinals

  • 5 June — Men’s Semifinals

  • 6 June — Women’s Singles Final & Men’s Doubles Final

  • 7 June — Men’s Singles Final & Women’s Doubles Final

French Open day two order of play and schedule with Swiatek and Rybakina in action

Four-time championIga Swiatekbegins herFrench Opencampaign on Monday as first-round action continues on another busy day in Paris. ...
Drone attacks raise fears as Colombians vote to elect a new president

JAMUNDI, Colombia (AP) — Gladys Marín only has to cross the street to reach a school where polling stations will open Sunday in her small town inColombia. But she's still not sure she'll make the short walk, because fears for her safety could outweigh the chance to vote for the country’s next president.

Associated Press A man rides his motorcycle past the ruins of homes destroyed five months earlier in an attack by dissidents of the former Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, in Buenos Aires, Cauca, Colombia, Wednesday, May 20, 2026.(AP Photo/Santiago Saldarriaga) A sign set up by dissidents of the former Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, displaying guerrilla leaders stands by a road to Buenos Aires, Cauca, Colombia, Wednesday, May 20, 2026. (AP Photo/Santiago Saldarriaga) Eucaris Zamora stands in front of her home destroyed during an attack involving drones by a dissident branch of the former Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, guerrilla group in Robles, Colombia, Tuesday, May 19, 2026.(AP Photo/Santiago Saldarriaga) A man rides his motorcycle past a barricade blocking streets in Potrerito, Colombia, Tuesday, May 19, 2026, following attacks by dissidents of the former Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC. (AP Photo/Santiago Saldarriaga) A police officer walks near a branch of the Banco Agrario damaged in an attack by dissidents of the former Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, in Buenos Aires, Cauca, ahead of Colombia's presidential election, Wednesday, May 20, 2026. (AP Photo/Santiago Saldarriaga)

Colombia Election Violence

Her home in the southwestern village of Potrerito sits less than 100 meters (320 feet) from the police station, which has becomea frequent target for drone-dropped explosives. Authorities blame the attacks on a rebel faction that rejected a peace agreementsigned a decade agowith the Colombian government.

"You have to stay alert to what is happening, because we live very close to the police station,” Marín said from her porch in this town about 470 kilometers from the capital, Bogotá.

Colombiawill elect a new president and vice president on May 31 in what has been cast as a referendum onPresident Gustavo Petro’spolicies, most notably his controversial“total peace”initiative to negotiate with the country’s remaining rebel groups.

By most accounts, violence tied to armed groups has worsened under Petro's watch.

According to Colombia's Electoral Observation Mission, 386 municipalities, or about a third of the country, are vulnerable toviolence from illegal armed groups, and data from the Ideas for Peace Foundation think tank indicates that roughly 27,000 people remain under arms nationwide.

Drone attacks change the landscape of violence

In Robles, a neighboring town in the Jamundi municipality, the streets leading to the police station are blocked by improvised barricades. The police are entrenched in sentry posts, using shelters made of sandbags and black fabric to scan the sky for any approaching drones.

“You pass by the police station with this sense of dread, looking up, hoping you won’t run into a nasty surprise,” said Eucaris Zamora, who had to vacate her home after a cylinder bomb struck it in October, leaving the building partially destroyed.

Guillermo Londoño, a security official in the region of Valle del Cauca, where Jamundi is located, said illegal armed groups in the area have sought to maximize damage through simultaneous, “swarm-style”drone strikes, marking a shift from previous tactics, where attackers would launch attacks with a single drone, reload it, and then resume their assault.

Drones modified to drop explosives have altered the dynamics of Colombia’s armed conflict since 2024, posting one of the greatest threats to civilians and security forces alike, particularly along the Venezuelan border, in northern Bolivar province and in southwestern coastal areas.

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Colombia's Defense Ministry reported that drone attacks hit 333 targets in 2025, up from 61 such incidents recorded in 2024. Meanwhile, the army has recorded 107 drone attacks so far this year, which have claimed the lives of two soldiers.

The problem with Petro's ‘total peace’ plan

Officials here believe their region has become a casualty of Petro's “total peace” strategy, aimed at putting an end to one of the world’s longest-running conflicts.

Petro acknowledges that the initiative has failed to achieve its hoped-for outcome of disarming illegal networks, and his approach of being open to talk to every group has hardened up a notch. He has frozen negotiations with some groups due to their continuing violence, though he has kept dialogue open with other organizations.

A clear divide has emerged between candidates. On one side are those who favor continuing dialogue with illegal groups, such as Sen. Iván Cepeda, of Petro’s political movement. On the other are those who say they would dismantle such efforts and prioritize military pressure, such as Sen. Paloma Valencia, of the opposition Democratic Center, and Abelardo de la Espriella, a self-described admirer ofSalvadoran President Nayib Bukelewho has vowed to crack down on illegal armed groups.

Elizabeth Dickinson, a senior analyst at the International Crisis Group, believes the violence could worsen if a hawkish candidate is elected.

“Right-wing candidates propose a ‘hard-line’ response that could exacerbate the violence, because the armed groups will respond to pressure from security forces with terror-style attacks, as they lack the means to respond symmetrically, army-to-army,” Dickinson said.

In December, gunmen sowed terror in the small southern town of Buenos Aires, launching an attack on the police station that left several officers injured and reduced a local bank and nearby homes to rubble.

Among the wreckage was the home of 89-year-old Celimo Enrique Aguilar.

“I haven’t lost faith that, someday, one might be able to live in peace,” he said.

Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean athttps://apnews.com/hub/latin-america

Drone attacks raise fears as Colombians vote to elect a new president

JAMUNDI, Colombia (AP) — Gladys Marín only has to cross the street to reach a school where polling stations will open Sunday in her sma...

 

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