Bulgaria’s election. Former President Rumen Radev’s Progressive Bulgaria party won a majority in yesterday’s parliamentary election. Radev campaigned on an anti-corruption platform and has promoted more positive relations with Russia, criticizing Bulgaria’s security agreement with Ukraine despite staffing his party with pro-European technocrats. It was the country’s eighth election in five years.
Japan joins U.S.-Philippines drills. Japan is sending troops to annual military exercises organized by the United States and the Philippines for the first time starting today. The move follows earlier Japan-Philippines cooperation agreements. More than a dozen other partner countries are also participating in the exercises, which run through May 8.
U.S. talks with Cuba. A U.S. State Department delegation traveled to Havana last week to meet with Cuban officials about policy changes Washington is seeking from Cuba, unnamed officials told Axios. Those demands reportedly include the release of political prisoners, compensation for U.S. assets confiscated after Cuba’s 1959 revolution, and political reforms, including fair elections. Washington continues to restrict fuel shipments to Cuba, while Brazil, Mexico, and Spain pledged on Saturday to send more aid amid widespread shortages on the island.
North Korean missile tests. North Korea test-fired multiple short-range ballistic missiles yesterday, the U.S., Japanese, and South Korean militaries said. North Korean state media reported the latest test included cluster bombs. Last week, the UN nuclear watchdog said there appeared to be a “very serious increase” in Pyongyang’s nuclear production capabilities.
Shooting in Kyiv. A mass shooting and hostage incident in Kyiv on Saturday is being investigated as terrorism, Ukraine’s attorney general said. At least seven people were killed and more than a dozen others wounded. The shooter opened fire on the street before entering a supermarket and taking hostages. He was killed at the scene.
Nigeria-Turkey defense deal. Two hundred members of Nigeria’s special forces will travel to Turkey for training as part of a new defense agreement between the countries, Nigeria’s defense minister said Saturday. He added the countries would jointly produce some “military hardware” together, without providing further details. Nigeria has cooperated with multiple countries, including the United States, to combat a long-running extremist insurgency.
Tariff refunds begin. A U.S. government portal for importers seeking refunds for tariffs deemed illegal by the Supreme Court goes live today. U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which is administering the site, said that if a claim is approved, refunds will be issued in sixty to ninety days. The Supreme Court’s February ruling applied to tariffs Trump imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.
Talks on DRC humanitarian access. The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and the rebel alliance it has been fighting agreed last week in Switzerland to facilitate the movement of humanitarian assets and refrain from harming civilians, the U.S. State Department said. The United States, the African Union, Qatar, and Switzerland mediated the talks in a bid to advance a peace framework signed in November.