O Express highlights this Friday, February 27, that the SIS monitors businesspeople linked to Putin and the MP freezes 25 million euros in suspicious accounts. There are suspicions of Ukrainian and Portuguese front men involved in businesses targeted by European Union sanctions, he adds.
One month after Kristin’s depression passed, the Business tries to understand the economic impact. “Municipalities in calamity are worth 17% of GDP, but represent a quarter of industrial and agricultural production. Activity remains contained, but in addition to short-term impacts there are long-term ones. CFP warns of ‘worsening inequalities'”, says the text.
O Observer brings “the unforgettable stories of 15 lives that the storm took”. Among the 15 fatal victims officially recognized by Civil Protection, there are six who died in the municipality of Leiria, two in Batalha, and one in Porto de Mós, Alcobaça, Sertã, Campo Maior, Silves, Serpa and Vila Franca de Xira. There are 12 Portuguese and three foreigners”, says the newspaper in this work that aims to reveal how those who died in or as a result of the bad weather lived.
O Public says that in the law nothing prevents Sócrates from changing lawyers unlimitedly. “The solution defended by the lawyers’ president may require legal changes and may even be rendered unfeasible if the Ministry of Justice’s institute does not agree to pay a permanent unofficial defender”, it reads.
O News Journal writes that exports to the USA fall by 700 million with Trump’s tariffs, reversing a growth cycle recorded in previous years and ending the year in decline.
Already in Morning Mail it reads that the State cancels medicine for Rodrigo. In question, an eight-year-old boy who suffers from Duchenne muscular dystrophy, whose condition would have cut off the medication that slowed the progression of the disease. Within six months he could no longer walk, according to the newspaper.
O Sunrise he adds that José Sócates’ cousin has a mansion and a gambling house in Brazil. He says that the hidden businesses of José Paulo Pinto de Sousa, who the MP accuses of being the former prime minister’s first front man, raise new suspicions of money laundering.
In Diário de Notícias, which features the economics supplement Dinheiro Vivo, the highlight is the request for explanations from the General Health Inspectorate about the waiting list in cardiology and possible deaths. You can also read a work on the 14 far-right groups that are on the authorities’ radar.

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