DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH
Pro-refugee Italian mayor arrested over immigration fraud The mayor of an Italian town, once lauded for his integration efforts, was arrested on suspicion of fostering illegal immigration on Tuesday. Mayor Domenico Lucano of Riace was also charged with corruption, police said. The Guardia di Finanza (GdF), Italyʼs federal law enforcement agency for financial crimes, said Lucano was facilitating sham marriages between citizens of his town and foreigners, mostly foreign women. He is also suspected of fraudulent practices while handing out lucrative garbage collection contracts. Lucano has been mayor of Riace, a town in Italyʼs economically depressed and isolated region of Calabria, since 2004. He became famous during the 2015 European migrant crisis for welcoming 450 refugees in a village of just 1,800 inhabitants. The influx of newcomers revitalized the town, prevented the primary school from closing, and has been celebrated around the world as a paragon of integration.
Angela Merkelʼs coalition reaches deal on diesel crisis The German government reached a "highly complex" agreement early on Tuesday on a "concept for clean air and the protection of individual mobility in our cities," in the wake ofthe countryʼs diesel scandal. The compromise followed six hours of deliberations in Berlin, as members of Chancellor Angela Merkelʼs ruling conservatives and their junior coalition partners, the Social Democrats (SPD), sought to avoidcity-level bans on diesel cars. The agreement will focus on retrofitting old diesel-engine vehicles currently on the road. The ministers for environment and transport are expected to present the exact details of the plan later on Tuesday.
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Italy and the EU clash over budget plan The future of the euro could be at stake
A war of words between the EU and Italy over its budget plan escalated on Monday, as Brussels reminded the government in Rome that its proposal must meet the blocʼs rules.
Elon Musk to resign as Tesla chairman, pay $20 million fine over fraud charges Tesla CEO Elon Musk will pay a $20 million fine and give up his board chairmanship for misleading tweets about the company. The Securities and Exchange Commission said he knew "the potential transaction was uncertain." US carmaker Tesla and its CEO Elon Musk on Saturday each agreed to pay fines of $20 million (€17.2 million) fine and have Musk step down as chairman of the Tesla board for at least three years in a
settlement over Muskʼs misleading tweets about the companyʼs future, the US Securities and Exchange Commission said. The SEC investigation was launched afterMusk tweeted on August 7that he had "funding secured" to privatize the electric automaker at $420 a share, causing a brief spike in Teslaʼs share price. "In truth, Musk knew that the potential transaction was uncertain and subject to numerous contingencies," the SEC wrote.
Eyeing a ʼthird womanʼ at the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics Wow. What a day to be awarded the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics afterwhat just happened at CERN. You would have to be a steely old so-and-so — and totally not cynical — to think that the suspension of "a scientist" for alleged sexist — nigh on woman-hating — remarks would have had no impact on the Nobel committeeʼs decision. The 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics recognized "groundbreaking inventions
in the field of laser physics." And CERN is the worldʼs biggest particle physics laboratory — its business is lasers, basically. And itʼs a quasiLaureate, having played a part in the detection of the once-elusive Higgs boson fundamental particle for which François Englert and Peter Higgs got the 2013 prize. So CERN is part of this male-dominated Nobel culture we slavishly celebrate once a year.
Nobel Prize in Physics awarded to American, Canadian, French scientists Arthur Ashkin, Gerard Mourou and Donna Strickland have won the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics for their work in the field of laser physics, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said on Tuesday. "The inventions being honoured this year have revolutionised laser physics," the Nobel Committee said in a statement. "Advanced precision instruments are opening up unexplored areas of research and a multitude of industrial and medical applications." The academy honored Ashkin of Bell Laboratories in the US for developing "optical tweezers" that can grab tiny particles, like viruses, without damaging them. He was awarded one half of the prize. Strickland and Mourou will share the other half, after they singled out for helping develop laser pulses that can be applied to a broad range of industrial and medical devices. The two "paved the way towards the shortest and most intense laser pulses created by humankind," the committee said.
French police raid Islamic center suspected of terror links French authorities raided the headquarters of an Islamic Shiite association and the homes of its leaders near the northern city of Dunkirk during the early hours of Tuesday morning. According to regional officials, raids on the Zahra Centre France and about a dozen homes were staged as part of the"prevention of terrorism" procedures.
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