DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH
Holocaust law: Poland, Israel reconcile in German media Poland and Israel have used full-page ads in German newspapers, including the conservative daily Frankfurter All‐ gemeine Zeitung, to praise their countriesʼ ties and comment on Polandʼs controversial Holocaust law. The socalled "joint declaration" begins by stating that "for 30 years, relations between our countries and peoples have been built on a solid foundation of trust and understanding" and goes on the say both nations are united by a "deep, long-lasting friendship" marked by "mutual respect for the identity and historical sensitivity of our tragic past." The ad was published in the name of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his Polish counterpart Mateusz Morawiecki.
US ambassador Grenell offers German car bosses tariff solution The US ambassador to Germany reportedly told German car executives on Wednesday that Washington would agreeto solve an auto trade dispute with Brussels if both the European Union and the United Statesabolished their tariffs on each otherʼs cars. German business daily Handelsblatt reported that the chief executives of Daimler, Dieter Zetsche; BMW, Harald Krüger; and Volkswagen, Herbert Diess "liked" the offer described by US Ambassador Richard Grenell during the secret meeting at the US embassy, citing anonymous sources who were present. US President Donald Trump has complained about he describes as a "big imbalance" in US-EU auto trade and threatened to impose a 20percent tariff on all EU-assembled cars in June.
151/2018 • 05 JULY, 2018
Turkey transfers some powers to President Erdogan The amendments mean the president is now the head of state and head of government
Turkey has made changes to 74 articles in its constitution, giving President Recep Tayyip Erdogan sweeping new powers.
Retailers Tesco, Carrefour to forge purchasing alliance European retail giants Tesco and Carrefour have announced a plan to form a joint purchasing alliance. The move is to increase their leverage with suppliers in a fiercely competitive supermarket sector. Franceʼs Carrefour and Britainʼs Tesco on Monday announced plans to form a global,long-term purchasing alliance in a bid to drastically reduce costs. The cooperation will be formerly agreed in the next two months, with the financial terms of the accord not yet disclosed. The two supermarket retailers said the planned alliance would cover the
strategic relations with global suppliers in areas such as marketing services and data collection as well as the joint purchasing of own-brand products. "This alliance is a major agreement as it combines the purchasing expertise of two world leaders, complementary in their geographies, with common strategies," Carrefour CEO Alexandre Bompard said in a statement. Tesco is the UKʼs biggest supermarket with annual sales of 51 billion pounds ($67.2 billion, €57.7 billion). It has been rebuiltafter a 2014 accounting scandal that accelerated a sharp downturn in trading.
Cinematic gems screen at Munich Film Festival For most film festival attendees, the event is a celebration of cinema. You can watch films that havenʼt yet landed in conventional movie theaters, by directors who might not even make it to the box office. Rarely is this a sign of film quality; if more than half of all movie screens in the average German city show three or four American blockbusters, there is simply not enough room left for films from Italy or China, Argentina or Australia.
Film festivals have filled these gaps for years. Munich is one of the film festivalsto fill this vacuum, as it relies on films from countries whose cinematic works are otherwise hard to find in everyday program life. An example of this is the Argentinean director Lucrecia Martel, to whom this yearʼs retrospective in Munich is dedicated. Martel, one of the most important filmmakers in South America, was present in Munich to personally present her work.
Polish Supreme Courtʼs top judge defies judicial reforms Polandʼs Supreme Court chief justice went to work on Wednesday, in defiance of a new retirement age law passed by the right-wing government as part of a series of judicial reforms. Several thousand people greeted Chief Justice Malgorzata Gersdorf as she made her way into the Supreme Court building in Warsaw. Thousands had gathered there the night before to protest the Law and Justice (PiS) partyʼs reform, which came into effect at midnight. The reform lowers the retirement age for judges from 70 to 65. Of the courtʼs 76 judges, 27 are affected by the new law, and the reform could effectively cut short their six-year terms and allow the government to stack the body in its favor.
Holocaust law: Poland, Israel reconcile in German media Poland and Israel have used fullpage ads in German newspapers, including the conservative daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, to praise their countriesʼ ties and comment on Polandʼs controversial Holocaust law. The so-called "joint declaration" begins by stating that "for 30 years, relations between our countries and peoples have been built on a solid foundation of trust and understanding" and goes on the say both nations are united by a "deep, long-lasting friendship" marked by "mutual respect for the identity and historical sensitivity of our tragic past." The ad was published in the name of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his Polish counterpart Mateusz Morawiecki.
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