Explosions in Tel Aviv, suspected terrorist attack
Three explosions were recorded in three empty buses in parking lots on the outskirts of Tel Aviv.
No one was injured and the incidents are being investigated, the Yedioth Ahronoth daily reported, citing police.
A police statement said a large number of officers have been deployed to the blast sites, conducting searches, while bomb disposal experts are examining the scenes to ensure there are no additional explosive devices or suspicious objects.
The Shin Bet internal security agency and police are assessing whether the incident was a coordinated attack.
EU defends Zelensky after Trump attacks
There has been a surge of support across Europe for Volodymyr Zelensky's legitimacy as president of Ukraine after US President Donald Trump called him a dictator.
Trump's comments, in a post on Truth Social, came a day after Zelenskyy said Trump was living in a "bubble" of Russian disinformation.
On Wednesday, Trump questioned Zelensky's position as president after his term expired in May last year and no new elections were called.
The European Commission said that "Ukraine is a democracy" and that Zelensky is a "fairly" elected leader.
German Foreign Minister: "I was sexually harassed"
German Foreign Minister Annalena Berbock has been the victim of sexual harassment "many times," she revealed during an appearance on the "G Spot" podcast.
The topic of the interview was feminist foreign policy and the phenomena of sexism in public life.
"The #MeToo incident made me rethink things. It's only now that I realize how many times I've been harassed myself," Burbock said, recounting an incident from when she was a student.
"On the bus to school, an elderly gentleman put his hand on my leg. I still have the image in my mind, even though I had forgotten it. It took me five stops to find the courage to leave. I thought if I said anything, the whole bus would look at me," the minister said.
Elections in Germany, poll results
Germany's center-right CDU/CSU alliance has lost 2 percentage points just days before Sunday's snap election, while the far-right AfD has seen a slight increase.
Conservative leader Friedrich Merz and his CDU/CSU bloc have fallen to 28% - their worst poll performance this year - according to the latest poll by public broadcaster ZDF.
The far-right AfD has consolidated its position as the second-largest political force in the country, reaching 21% support, up one percentage point. The anti-immigrant party maintains its strongest support base in the former communist East Germany.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz's Social Democratic Party (SPD) remains at 16% - a figure that would mark the party's worst electoral performance since 1949.