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Louvre Strike Crisis: Security Gaps and Overcrowding Force Museum Closure

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The world’s most visited museum, the Louvre, shut its doors in Paris after staff went on strike to protest security lapses, overwhelming visitor numbers, and poor working conditions.

Located in the heart of the French capital and welcoming millions of visitors each year, the Louvre Museum closed its doors on Monday after staff launched strike action. The development, coming just ahead of the Christmas holiday period, left thousands of visitors disappointed outside the museum.

Employees say the Louvre has long been operating under severe overcrowding, with staff shortages threatening both visitor safety and employee well-being. The strike is being seen as another blow to an institution already struggling with mounting problems.

“Conditions Have Become Unsustainable”

According to statements from the CGT and CFDT unions, around 400 employees unanimously voted at a general assembly to continue the strike. The unions say front-line and security staff are being forced to manage visitor numbers far beyond planned capacity with insufficient personnel.

Christian Galani, a representative of the far-left CGT union, said the museum could remain fully closed, and even if it reopens, any access would be extremely limited. Galani added that not only security staff but also scientists, curators, archivists, collection managers, and workshop employees are expected to join the strike.

Overcrowding and Visitor Complaints

Home to Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, the Louvre receives around 30,000 visitors per day. Long queues, security risks, inadequate restroom facilities, and problems with food services have become frequent complaints among both staff and visitors.

A sudden work stoppage on June 16 this year also forced the museum to close temporarily. The latest strike highlights how these issues have become chronic rather than isolated incidents.

The Shadow of a $102 Million Heist

One of the main drivers behind the strike decision is the historic robbery in October, when royal jewels worth $102 million were stolen in broad daylight. The incident reignited debate over serious security weaknesses at the Louvre.

Investigations revealed that two thieves accessed the gallery using an extendable ladder, cut through a glass door with a spiral cutter, and exploited gaps in the security system. At the time of the robbery, only a single external security camera was operational, and the control room lacked sufficient monitoring screens.

It also emerged that audit reports over the past decade had repeatedly warned that the riverside balcony posed a major security vulnerability.

A Deepening Institutional Crisis

The Louvre’s president had already warned the government in January about leaks, overheating, and a deterioration in the visitor experience. Combined with staff strikes and security failures, these developments point to a museum facing not a temporary setback but a profound institutional crisis.

While talks between management and unions are expected to continue in the coming days, it remains unclear when the Louvre will be able to reopen fully and resume normal operations.

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Ukraine-Russia Talks in Abu Dhabi Stuck on Territorial Dispute

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Ukraine, Russia, and the U.S. held talks in Abu Dhabi on Friday with territory as the central issue. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia must end the war it started as Washington pushes a deal to halt the nearly four-year conflict.

Ukrainian and Russian negotiators met publicly for the first time under a U.S.-backed framework aimed at ending a war now approaching its fourth year. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky framed the talks in stark terms, saying territorial disputes would be central but insisting that “the most important thing is that Russia should be ready to end this war, which it started.”

The UAE foreign ministry said discussions began Friday and would continue over two days, signaling a structured attempt to move beyond exploratory contacts toward defined political trade-offs.

The timing reflects intense diplomatic sequencing since the Abu Dhabi meeting followed Zelensky’s encounter with U.S. President Donald Trump at the World Economic Forum in Davos one day earlier, and came hours after U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff held nearly four hours of talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow. Despite the compressed schedule, Russian officials made clear that movement hinges on geography, not process.

“A Very Important Condition”

Moscow’s position was restated bluntly. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia’s demand that Ukraine cede all of Donbas, including roughly 20 percent of Donetsk region still under Ukrainian control, was “a very important condition.” Kremlin adviser Yury Ushakov added that “reaching a long-term settlement can’t be expected without solving the territorial issue.”

Russia’s delegation in Abu Dhabi, led by Admiral Igor Kostyukov, was composed primarily of military officials, underscoring the security-first framing.

Russia continues to demand a Ukrainian military withdrawal from Donbas, a position Kyiv has rejected outright. Russian state media TASS said buffer zones and monitoring mechanisms were also discussed, suggesting Moscow is probing enforcement models without retreating from sovereignty claims.

De-Escalation Tracks and Energy Leverage

Alongside territorial talks, the U.S. and Ukraine have explored a limited energy ceasefire as a confidence-building step, according to the Financial Times. Under the proposal, Russia would halt strikes on Ukrainian power plants, heating systems, and water facilities in exchange for Ukraine stopping attacks on Russian oil refineries and Russia’s so-called shadow fleet of oil tankers. The idea reflects winter pressures: Ukrainians have faced widespread power outages, while Kyiv’s long-range drones have increasingly targeted Russian energy infrastructure, including facilities in the Black Sea and Mediterranean.

Both sides, however, see risks. The Kremlin views energy strikes as a key source of leverage, while Ukraine considers its drone campaign a rare asymmetric tool undermining Russia’s war financing. Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan summarized the impasse, saying that “as long as the territorial issue concerning Donbas is not resolved, the deadlock appears unlikely to be broken,” adding that ideas such as demilitarization or joint economic zones hinge on the unresolved question of sovereignty.

U.S. Pressure and Narrowed Scope

Similarly, Witkoff struck a cautiously optimistic tone, saying, “I believe we’ve narrowed it down to a single issue”, arguing the deadlock would be solved if both sides genuinely want to.

The U.S. delegation in Abu Dhabi included Witkoff, Trump adviser Jared Kushner, Army Secretary Dan Driscoll, and NATO’s top military officer, U.S. Air Force General Alexus Grynkewich. Ukraine’s team featured senior security figures, including Rustem Umerov and intelligence chief Kyrylo Budanov.

U.S. President Donald Trump, speaking on Jan. 21, framed the talks through a transactional lens, saying the U.S. had previously spent “$350 billion” on Ukraine and claiming a rare earths deal would “probably get most of that back.”

His comment highlighted how economic and territorial calculations are now entwined in Washington’s approach, even as fighting continues.

Ahead of the talks, Russian strikes killed seven civilians in eastern Ukraine, including a five year old, underscoring the gap between diplomatic momentum and battlefield realities.

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Greece Plans Maritime Expansion, Risking Possible War with Türkiye

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Greece said it plans to extend its territorial waters, potentially in the Aegean Sea beyond 6 nautical miles, despite Türkiye’s “casus belli” warning, a move with serious implications against its NATO ally Türkiye.

Greece’s announcement that it intends to further extend its territorial waters marks a deliberate assertion of sovereignty that reopens one of the most sensitive fault lines in relations with Türkiye. Speaking in parliament on Jan. 16, Foreign Minister of Greece George Gerapetritis confirmed that Athens plans additional extensions beyond the 6 nautical miles that currently define Greek territorial waters in the Aegean Sea, aligning the basin with steps already taken elsewhere.

“Today, our sovereignty in the Aegean Sea extends to 6 nautical miles,” he said. “As there was an agreement with Egypt, as there was an agreement with Italy, there will also be a (further) extension of the territorial waters.”

Greece already expanded its territorial waters in the Ionian Sea from 6 to 12 nautical miles following a bilateral agreement with Italy, and signed a maritime delimitation accord with Egypt in the eastern Mediterranean.

The Aegean, however, has remained excluded due to Türkiye’s long-standing objection and the 1995 decision by the Turkish parliament declaring any unilateral Greek extension beyond six miles a “casus belli”, or cause for war.

“We Will Not Negotiate Sovereignty”

The Aegean dispute goes beyond territorial waters, touching on airspace, overflights, continental shelves, and exclusive economic zones (EEZs) in a semi-enclosed sea dotted with Greek islands close to the Turkish mainland. Greek officials insist that international maritime law permits a 12 nautical mile limit, while Ankara argues that the Aegean’s geography makes such an extension unacceptable.

Gerapetritis framed recent steps as part of a broader maritime doctrine, linking territorial waters to environmental initiatives and national sovereignty, claiming that Greece would not retreat from its positions, further unveiling the boundaries of two planned marine parks in July, including one in the Aegean covering 9,500 square kilometers, initially around the southern Cyclades.

Ankara objected to the move, seeing it as a precedent-setting assertion of jurisdiction. Türkiye has also previously responded to what it describes as Greek unilateralism in the Aegean with counter-measures of its own.

In August 2025, Ankara formally designated two Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) after Greece declared marine parks in the Aegean without consultation. The zones were registered in Türkiye’s Marine Spatial Planning Map submitted to the United Nations, which Turkish officials said was intended for environmental protection while also affirming sovereign rights. The Turkish government said any Greek attempt to impose unilateral maritime realities in the Aegean was “null and void,” adding that Türkiye remained open to regional environmental cooperation but not “at the cost of its national interests.”

Constraint Management Between NATO Allies

Despite the sharp legal disagreement, Athens and Ankara have eased tensions in recent years through dialogue and confidence-building measures. Greece maintains that the only dispute open for discussion is the delimitation of maritime zones, including the continental shelf and EEZ. Türkiye, for its part, argues that Greek domestic politics incentivize hardline positions.

On Jan. 15, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said the perception of Türkiye as a threat has always played a driving role in Greek politics. He added that Greek leaders face a choice “between resolving problems with Türkiye and bringing peace to the region, or risking their own political career,” concluding that the situation needs to come to an end.

Regional Alignments and Security Signaling

The maritime debate unfolds alongside expanding security cooperation involving Greece, Israel, and Greek Cyprus. On Dec. 17, plans were disclosed for studying a joint brigade-level rapid reaction force in the eastern Mediterranean.

Days later, the Israel Defense Forces announced a trilateral military cooperation work plan with Greece and Greek Cyprus, covering joint exercises, training, working groups, and strategic dialogue – a move that risks drawing Greece into broader regional controversies. Given the IDF’s conduct in ongoing conflicts and the scrutiny it faces internationally for the genocide in Gaza, closer institutional alignment is likely to expose Athens to heightened diplomatic criticism and public backlash well beyond the Eastern Mediterranean.

Athens highlights its own defense modernization, pointing to new frigates and broader naval upgrades, while stressing continued dialogue with Ankara. A meeting between Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Greece Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis is expected in February in Ankara, underscoring parallel tracks of engagement and deterrence as Greece advances its maritime strategy.

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Putin Meets US Envoy as Ukraine Talks Narrow to Territory

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Russian President Vladimir Putin held hours long talks in Moscow with U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, as both sides said negotiations to end the war in Ukraine have narrowed to a single unresolved issue: territory.

Russian President Vladimir Putin met a U.S. delegation in Moscow for extended talks on ending the war in Ukraine, with both sides signaling that negotiations have reached a critical stage focused on territorial questions.

Extended Talks in Moscow

The Kremlin said talks between Putin and the U.S. delegation led by Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and including U.S. President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner lasted more than three hours and stretched into the early hours of Friday, ending after 3 a.m. local time.

“Exceptionally Frank” Discussions

Kremlin Foreign Policy Aide Yury Ushakov described the latest talks as “exceprionally substantive, constructive and extremely frank and confidential.” In a post on X, Krill Dmitriev, head of Russia’s sovereign wealth fund, also characterized the discussions as “important.”

Ushakov said Putin empahasized that Russia is “sincerely interested in resolving the Ukrainian crisis through political and diplomatic methods.”

Territory Central to Any Settlement

Despite the diplomatic tone, the Kremlin made clear that territorial issues remain the main obstacle to a lasting agreement. Ushakov said Putin told U.S. negotiators that a “long term settlement” would not be possible without first resolving territorial questions based on a formula previously discussed in Anchorage.

Until such issues are addressed, Ushakov added, Russia will continue to pursue its objectives “on the battlefield,” where he said Russian forces currently hold the strategic initiative.

Witkoff: Talks Reduced to One Issue

Hours before flying to Moscow, Witkoff said progress had been made in negotiations, describing them as having been reduced to “one issue.” Speaking at an event on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, he said the narrowing of focus meant a solution was achievable.

“I think we’ve got it down to one issue, and we have discussed iterations of that issue, and that means it’s solvable,” Witkoff said. A European official later confirmed that the remaining issue he referred to was territory.

Trilateral Talks Set for Abu Dhabi

In a related development, the Kremlin announced that representatives from Russia, the United States and Ukraine will meet Friday in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, for the first trilateral talks focused on security issues since the war began. The working group on security matters was agreed upon during the latest Moscow meeting.

This three way meeting, confirmed by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, is scheduled to span two days and marks a significant diplomatic step as efforts continue to find a pathway toward ending the conflict.

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