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HomeBrasilGermany boosts Nato’s eastern flank with new Baltic brigade amid threat from...

Germany boosts Nato’s eastern flank with new Baltic brigade amid threat from Russia – Europe live | World news

‘We must do everything to defend ourselves,’ Merz says inaugurating new German brigade in Lithuania

And let’s go back to Vilnius, Lithuania, for an update on that military ceremony attended by German chancellor Friedrich Merz, hosted by Lithuanian president Gitanas Nausėda (11:31).

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz visits LithuaniaLithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda, Lithuanian Defence Minister Dovile Sakaliene, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius look on during the inauguration of the German 45th Armored Brigade "Lietuva" in Vilnius, Lithuania.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz visits Lithuania
Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda, Lithuanian Defence Minister Dovile Sakaliene, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius look on during the inauguration of the German 45th Armored Brigade “Lietuva” in Vilnius, Lithuania.
Photograph: Ints Kalniņš/Reuters

Associated Press reported that Merz, the first chancellor to have served in the Bundeswehr himself, declared that “the security of our Baltic allies is also our security” as worries about Russian aggression persist.

“We must do everything to defend ourselves – so that we never have to,” Merz said at a ceremony marking the establishment of a German brigade to be deployed there, adding members knew the seriousness of the situation and their responsibilities.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz participates in the inauguration of the German 45th Armored Brigade "Lietuva" in Vilnius, Lithuania.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz participates in the inauguration of the German 45th Armored Brigade “Lietuva” in Vilnius, Lithuania. Photograph: Ints Kalniņš/Reuters
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Serbia needs ‘real reforms’ to stay on EU accession path, bloc’s foreign policy chief says

Serbia needs to implement “real reforms”, including on tackling corruption, to ensure its bid for EU membership moves forward, the bloc’s foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said on Thursday.

EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Kaja Kallas holds a press conference in Belgrade, Serbia. Photograph: Andrej Čukić/EPA

Kallas was in Belgrade for meetings with political leaders, including President Aleksandar Vucić, who is balancing closer EU ties with traditional links to Russia.

At the start of a wider Balkans tour, she called for “actions… to prove and support” Serbia’s strategic ambitions to join the EU, AFP reported.

“It is reforms that will allow Serbia to progress on its EU path,” she told a news conference.

Kallas’s visit comes after months of wide-spread student protests triggered by the collapse of the concrete canopy at Novi Sad railway station, which killed 16 people.

Many blamed rampant corruption for the disaster at the station, which Vučić had inaugurated in 2022 after renovations.

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