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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

EU citizens in UK denied vote in European elections Hundreds — if not thousands — of non-British EU citizens were turned away from polling stations on Thursday after being told they were not registered to vote in the United Kingdom forthe election of the European Parliament. The main reason given by polling station workers was that the would-be voterʼs form had not been processed in time. However, in some cases, local authorities admitted they had made errors. "The Electoral Commission, local authorities and the Government in Westminster have failed despite multiple warnings over the last six weeks," said The 3 Million, a lobby group for the rights of EU citizens living in the UK.

Forward or backward? Decision time in the EU "The elections taking place on 26 May will decide the destiny of this continent," the leader of the Christian Democratic bloc in the European Parliament,Manfred Weber,declared at a plenary session last month. Weber heads the list of candidates for his political family, the European Peopleʼs Party (EPP), and he is not alone: Many politicians from all camps have been using the same terms to describe the upcoming European elections. Weber intends to run for president of the European Commission. He sees the vote as a straight fight between pro-Europeans and nationalists. "This Europe that weʼre living in today is a good Europe," he says. "We wonʼt let todayʼs nationalists destroy it for us." There havenever been as many right-wing populists and euroskeptics in EU member statesas there are for this election. Opinion polls are indicating that they could get more than 20% of the seats.

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Hungaryʼs ruling party threatens to leave proEU bloc ahead of vote Who are the far-right populists looking to disrupt the EU?

Hungaryʼs foreign minister has said that migration policy would determine whether the ruling Fidesz Party remains in the center-right European Peopleʼs Party (EPP) grouping after the European parliamentary elections.

US vows to check ʼaggressiveʼ China, Russia in Arctic The eight-member Arctic Council is meeting in Finland as thawing of polar ice has some countries scrambling over the earthʼs untapped resources. The US is set to strengthen its presence in the region. Top diplomats from the United States, Russia and other member nations of the Arctic Council met in Rovaniemi, Finland on Monday to discuss policies pertaining to the polar region. The summit comes as tensions grow over how to deal with global warming and jurisdiction of the Arcticʼs wealth of minerals. Speaking on Monday ahead of the talks in Finland, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the US would strengthen its Arctic presence to keep in check what he called

the "aggressive attitude" of China and Russia. Pompeo said: "The region has become an arena of global power and competition." "Just because the Arctic is a place of wilderness does not mean it should become a place of lawlessness," Pompeo added. The issues under discussion at the Council meeting include: Concerns over the climate policies of US President Donald Trump.Chinaʼs "Polar Silk Road" plan, which it outlined last year.Russiaʼs reopened Cold War military bases and Northern Fleet modernization. US and Russian officials could also meet separately to discuss the political crisis in Venezuela which is Russiaʼs biggest South American ally.

As Germany phases out coal, villages still forced to make way for mining This end of thevillage of Immerathis peaceful, with birds chirping in the gables of empty houses. But off in the distance, the sound of excavators tearing down walls and smashing stones betray that calm. The open-pit lignite mine Garzweiler II is just a stoneʼs throw away from Immerath, and soon the village will be no more. Im-

merath was once a lively community with a sports club, church and several kindergartens. Today, the homes have been barricaded or bricked up. Down one abandoned street, a gutted car sits in the open garage of a family home covered in ivy. At the other end of the road, demolition work has already begun.

President Steinmeier calls for decency on 70th anniversary of German constitution German President Frank-Walter Steinmeierissued a call for civility and repudiation of hatred and enmity on Thursday during an event to mark the 70th anniversary of Germanyʼs constitution, known as the Basic Law. "With all freedom and in the heat of conflict, something must be retained that can be summed up in two concepts: decency and reason," said Steinmeier, standing alongside German Chancellor Angela Merkel and 200 citizens who received invitations to the event. "And that is also the reason that we are here, because we do not want hatred and enmity to penetrate our debates like a poison," the president said. He also called on political leaders to listen to the concerns of their constituents, warning that populism feeds off feelings of political impotence."Impotence is poison to democracy," he said. "Populists make insidious use of feelings of this kind. They convert justified concerns into blind rage."

US arrests banker for Trump administration job bribe The head of a bank is accused of approving loans in exchange for a job in the White House. Although he failed to get one, he was placed on a "prestigious" committee tied to Trumpʼs campaign, prosecutors said. US authorities on Thursday arrested Federal Savings Bank CEO Stephen Calk for financial institution bribery. Federal prosecutors accused Calk of approving $16 million (€14 million) of risky loans for Paul Manafort,a disgraced manager of US President Donald Trumpʼs 2016 electoral campaign, in exchange for a top position in the administration.

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