From Rooftops to Honey Jars, Athens Is Abuzz with Urban Beekeeping 

Nikos Chadjilias places a frame with honey in an empty beehive on the roof of a building in the Ilioupoli suburb of Athens, Greece, July 3, 2025. (AP)
Nikos Chadjilias places a frame with honey in an empty beehive on the roof of a building in the Ilioupoli suburb of Athens, Greece, July 3, 2025. (AP)
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From Rooftops to Honey Jars, Athens Is Abuzz with Urban Beekeeping 

Nikos Chadjilias places a frame with honey in an empty beehive on the roof of a building in the Ilioupoli suburb of Athens, Greece, July 3, 2025. (AP)
Nikos Chadjilias places a frame with honey in an empty beehive on the roof of a building in the Ilioupoli suburb of Athens, Greece, July 3, 2025. (AP)

Nikos Chatzilias spends his days tending to buzzing bee colonies with a unique view out over the rooftops of Greece’s capital.

He is among the dozens of Athenians who have embraced urban beekeeping to support local ecosystems, reconnect with nature and enjoy honey flavored by each neighborhood’s local plants and flowers.

Chatzilias, 37, was a heavy honey consumer, eating it with bread and tea for breakfast and using it to replace sugar everywhere else, including in cookies and other sweets. He grew dissatisfied with run-of-the-mill product and decided to make his own, signing up for beekeeping classes in 2020 and becoming a professional shortly thereafter.

“I saw that it worked really well for the hives. For us, the daily contact with the bees brought us a lot of joy, and that’s why we continued,” he said.

This summer, Chatzilias cared for 30 hives he placed on seven Athens-area rooftops, including one with a view of the Parthenon. The approximately 1.2 million bees in his hives produced 500 kilograms (1,100 pounds) of honey, roughly the weight of a large brown bear. Each batch was packaged and named for its neighborhood of origin.

Varying tastes of Athens honey, he explained, come from the proportion of eucalyptus, acacia and bitter orange present in different areas of the city, plus other flora. On the southern coast, for example, pine trees impart a forest-like note.

Urban beekeeping is neither new around the world nor in Athens. Decades ago, Greek families brought hives with them when they moved from the countryside. But Chatzilias sees today’s beekeeping as more intentional and focused on environmental implications, which resonates across society.

One of Chatzilias' recent recruits, Aggelina Chatzistavrou, first fell in love with bees while she was a university student.

“I really liked the idea of having my own,” she said on her rooftop overlooking the Acropolis. “If everyone could have a hive in an open space at their home, I believe it would change our environment in a big way.”

Despite growing interest, would-be beekeepers can be stopped by objections from fellow residents of their apartment buildings. Urban beekeeping entails hauling heavy hives up staircases to the rooftops for the spring and down again before winter sets in.

“There are fears along the lines of, ‘They might sting me, my children, my dog. What if I’m allergic?’” Chatzilias said. “In general, for city people -- because they have been cut off from nature for so many years -- even something natural that happens (...) can provoke fear.”

Athens’ constant bloom cycles of different pollinator-friendly plants makes it an ideal setting to experiment with leaving the bees atop the rooftops all year round, which he is doing for the first time this year, he said.

“Even with a chaotic urban environment that we’ve created, nature -- or whatever remains of it in the city -- still responds and can give life,” Chatzilias said.



Wisconsin Beagle Research Facility that Drew Protests is Closing as Rescue Group Takes in Dogs

A woman pets one of the beagles transferred from Ridglan Farms on Monday, June 15, 2026, in Marshall, Wis. (Big Dog Ranch Rescue via AP)
A woman pets one of the beagles transferred from Ridglan Farms on Monday, June 15, 2026, in Marshall, Wis. (Big Dog Ranch Rescue via AP)
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Wisconsin Beagle Research Facility that Drew Protests is Closing as Rescue Group Takes in Dogs

A woman pets one of the beagles transferred from Ridglan Farms on Monday, June 15, 2026, in Marshall, Wis. (Big Dog Ranch Rescue via AP)
A woman pets one of the beagles transferred from Ridglan Farms on Monday, June 15, 2026, in Marshall, Wis. (Big Dog Ranch Rescue via AP)

A Wisconsin beagle breeding and research facility that’s been the site of recent violent protests is closing, and its remaining dogs are being taken in by a Florida rescue group.

Big Dog Ranch Rescue announced Monday that it has reached an agreement for the permanent closure of Ridglan Farms and the transfer of its 475 remaining beagles starting this week.

“Not one dog will remain,” Lauree Simmons, the group’s founder, said in a news conference at a farm in Wisconsin. “No more breeding, no more testing, no more anything.”

Yearslong opposition to the facility came to head in April when a large group of animal welfare activists stormed the property in an attempt to take away beagles, prompting police to use tear gas and pepper spray as they made dozens of arrests.

Some protesters were also arrested in March after they broke in and took 30 dogs from the facility, which is located in Blue Mounds, a small town about 25 miles (40 kilometers) southwest of the capital, Madison.

Big Dog Ranch Rescue said some of the beagles will go to rescue groups while others will be sent to its Florida and Alabama campuses where they will be spayed, neutered, and prepared for adoption.

The group bought roughly 1,500 of the facility’s more than 2,000 beagles in April for an undisclosed price.

About 200 dogs were being transferred Monday, according to Simmons. Another 125 will be moved Tuesday. The transfer of the remaining beagles will happen in August, as they are still puppies.

According to The Associated Press, Simmons called on protesters to refrain from further demonstrations as it says Ridglan Farms has committed to permanently closing its dog breeding, sales, research and testing operations.

“Our focus now should be on supporting these dogs as they transition into their new lives,” Simmons said. “These dogs will get to experience safety and a normal life for the first time.”

Simmons said her group is also “working closely” with the Trump administration to stop funding studies that subject dogs to “invasive and painful experimentation.”

Trump’s Health and Human Services secretary, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., called Monday’s deal a “major win for animal welfare” in a post on X.

Ridglan Farms, in a statement, said all the dogs being transferred are “happy, healthy animals” with “extensive” state and federal inspection documentation.

“We hope these dogs will continue to flourish in their new homes,” the company said, adding that it hopes that the “years-long harassment campaign targeting the research facility’s owners, staff and neighbors comes to an end.”

Animal activists for years had sought to have dogs at the facility adopted, not sold to other research facilities.

Beagles are the most common breed of dog used for animal testing, primarily because of their smaller size and gentle temperament, according to Big Dog Ranch Rescue.

Ridglan Farms agreed in October to give up its state breeding license as of July 1 as part of a deal to avoid prosecution on felony animal mistreatment charges.

The firm has denied mistreating animals, but a special prosecutor determined that Ridglan Farms was performing eye procedures that violated state veterinary standards.


Wildlife Groups: Three Wild Bears Killed in Greece

FILED - 27 March 2025, Baden-Württemberg, Cleebronn: FILE PHOTO - A brown bear is photographed in an enclosure at the Tripsdrill Wildlife Paradise. Photo: dpa
FILED - 27 March 2025, Baden-Württemberg, Cleebronn: FILE PHOTO - A brown bear is photographed in an enclosure at the Tripsdrill Wildlife Paradise. Photo: dpa
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Wildlife Groups: Three Wild Bears Killed in Greece

FILED - 27 March 2025, Baden-Württemberg, Cleebronn: FILE PHOTO - A brown bear is photographed in an enclosure at the Tripsdrill Wildlife Paradise. Photo: dpa
FILED - 27 March 2025, Baden-Württemberg, Cleebronn: FILE PHOTO - A brown bear is photographed in an enclosure at the Tripsdrill Wildlife Paradise. Photo: dpa

Three wild bears were killed in Greece in two days, a couple of the country's leading wildlife groups said Monday, including a young female rewilded just weeks ago.

The Arcturos and Kallisto organizations said two of the bears had been found with gunshot wounds.
The third -- named Circe when she was rescued and nurtured for a year by Arcturos -- apparently ate poisoned bait.

They were found dead on Friday and Saturday.

All three incidents occurred in the Western Macedonia region, an area where local farmers have repeatedly complained of damage to their crops and incursions by the animals into inhabited areas.

Arcturos said Circe -- who was rewilded in late May after being found in a coma last August at the age of seven months -- had been left unburied for three days.

"Three dead bears in two days are not 'unfortunate incidents," AFP quoted the group as saying in a statement.

"They are the most tragic proof that the problem remains without any meaningful response, and that the operational readiness of the competent (state) agencies continues to show serious shortcomings," it said.

"A poisoned animal that remains in the field can be a secondary source of poisoning for other wild or domestic animals," Arcturos said.

Greece is home to over 700 wild brown bears, up from fewer than 500 a decade ago, the organizations said. It remains a protected species.


UK PM Announces Ban on Social Media for Under-16s

 Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer attends a press conference at Downing Street in central London on June 15, 2026, to announce government action to protect children online. (Pool via Reuters)
Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer attends a press conference at Downing Street in central London on June 15, 2026, to announce government action to protect children online. (Pool via Reuters)
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UK PM Announces Ban on Social Media for Under-16s

 Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer attends a press conference at Downing Street in central London on June 15, 2026, to announce government action to protect children online. (Pool via Reuters)
Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer attends a press conference at Downing Street in central London on June 15, 2026, to announce government action to protect children online. (Pool via Reuters)

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday announced a forthcoming total ban on social media for children under 16, saying that such platforms are "making children unhappy".

Starmer said that the government "will ban access to social media for all children under the age of 16", warning that these platforms are "exposing them to content that is dangerous" and "designed to be addictive".

The government said the ban will "include platforms like Snapchat, TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook and X" but not messaging services such as WhatsApp.

He added he hoped to pass the regulation by late December and for the ban to come into force in spring next year.

The prime minister also said the government would go further and take "world-leading action on gaming services and live streaming platforms".

The government said in a statement it would also be considering overnight curfews and breaks in infinite scrolling for under 18s, and would announce more detail in July.

Starmer said the upcoming ban was influenced by the experience of Australia, which in December became the first nation to ban people under 16 from social media.

The announcement follows a government-led consultation where British teenagers trialed social media bans and time limits on apps.

A spokesperson for YouTube responded with a warning that such a blanket ban would push children towards "less safe services".

Starmer said that the government was "taking action" on gaming services and live streaming platforms that allow strangers to contact children.

"Is there a situation in the offline world where you would just let your child pair up with a stranger? An adult that you don't know about? No. So we're taking action on that," he said, without giving details.

Canada's culture minister last week introduced legislation that would ban children under 16 from having social media accounts and require AI chatbot services to limit production of harmful content.

The proposed Digital Safety Act makes Canada the latest in a number of countries cracking down on social media platforms over concerns of harm to children.

Indonesia began enforcing its own social media ban for users under the age of 16 in March, while several European governments have announced their desire to make similar moves.

- 'Moral responsibility' -

The UK government's consultation on the issue, which closed in late May, attracted about 116,000 contributions, making it the second-largest response ever received.

Over 83 percent of parents who responded said the risks posed by social media outweighed the benefits for children, with 91 percent backing a minimum age of 16.

The UK announcement comes a week after the government said tech giants must stop children in Britain from being able to send and receive nude images on their devices.

Britain's interior ministry said it was giving companies including Apple and Google three months to introduce safety features to block children from taking and accessing naked photos on phones and tablets.

If they failed to do so, the government would introduce legislation forcing them to activate the technology, it warned.

Starmer's center-left Labour government said technology companies had a "moral responsibility" to "protect children from coercion, abuse and sextortion".

A law change would stop children from being able to access pornography, while also making it more difficult for child abusers to target children, it said.

According to analysis by the Internet Watch Foundation charity cited by the government, 91 percent of online child sexual abuse reports recorded in 2024 contained self-generated content from children themselves.