74/2019 • 30 MARCH, 2019 WEEKEND ISSUE
DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH
Angela Merkel honored with ʼelectro-operaʼ in Netherlands The play focuses on struggles she faced during her career
A Dutch theater has staged a "Wagnerian electro-opera" about German Chancellor Angela Merkel, a "woman whom nobody really knows."
Alaa AbdelFattah freed from prison
Germanyʼs extraspecial wish for the UK to stay
A key Egyptian pro-democracy activist and blogger, Alaa AbdelFattah, was released from prison on Friday afterserving a five-year sentence for holding an unauthorized protest. His imprisonment in 2013 for taking part in a peaceful demonstration was seen by many observers as another indication that Egypt was returning to autocratic rule. Dozens of activists have been jailed in Egypt in recent years for violating draconian laws banning public gatherings that rights advocates say are aimed only at muzzling dissent.
Germany would probably miss Britain more than other members of the EU 27 when, and if, Brexit finally happens. Thatʼs the opinion of Norbert Röttgen, who heads the German parliamentʼs foreign affairs committee. With the Brexit process stalling ahead of athird vote on Theresa Mayʼs withdrawal deal, Röttgen told DW he still hoped that Brexit might not happen. "We know the high and valuable contribution of Britain to the European Union. Perhaps Germany even more than others do," the former environment minister explained.
A musical dedicated to Germanyʼs Angela Merkel went on tour in the Netherlands on Friday, after premiering earlier this week in the central Dutch town of Utrecht. Nineties Productions describes its spectacle as "a Wagnerian electro-opera" featuring the character of "the most influential woman of this moment in history." Merkel is played by a male actor, Benjamin Moen, and the show features video clips, opera segments, and dialogue. The creators say they tried to piece together their image of Merkel by traveling to Germany to the chancellorʼs childhood home, the Berlin supermarket where she does her grocery shopping, and the German parliament, the Bundestag. They have also used biographical sources, political speeches, childhood memories, and sources close to the German leader to show a "woman whom nobody really knows." The 64-year-old German chancellor has been in power since 2005. Throughout her turbulent rule, she has maintained a strangely inconspicuous public image. She has pledged thather fourth term, set to expire in 2021, would be her last. "Our generation grew up with her," the 31year-old director Floor Houwing ten Cate said. "When she leaves politics, it will be the end of an era," she was quoted as saying by Germanyʼs DPA news agency. "And we are taken aback." The play emphasizes the refugee crisis of 2015, with Merkelʼs famous sentence "We can do this" on
the EU accepting millions of migrants. It also shows the eurozone debt crisis, the apparent death of a united Europe, and Merkelʼs clashes with Russiaʼs Vladimir Putin, who is presented as a devil-like character. "Merkel" is due to tour the Netherlands until mid-May. A separate play dedicated to the chancellor, "Angela I" premiered in Germanyʼs Bremen earlier this month. A musical dedicated to Germanyʼs Angela Merkel went on tour in the Netherlands on Friday, after premiering earlier this week in the central Dutch town of Utrecht. Nineties Productions describes its spectacle as "a Wagnerian electro-opera" featuring the character of "the most influential woman of this moment in history." Merkel is played by a male actor, Benjamin Moen, and the show features video clips, opera segments, and dialogue. The creators say they tried to piece together their image of Merkel by traveling to Germany to the chancellorʼs childhood home, the Berlin supermarket where she does her grocery shopping, and the German parliament, the Bundestag. They have also used biographical sources, political speeches, childhood memories, and sources close to the German leader to show a "woman whom nobody really knows." The 64year-old German chancellor has been in power since 2005. Throughout her turbulent rule, she has maintained a strangely inconspicuous public image.
Mass protests in Algeria as Bouteflika clings to power
Palestinian activist Rasmea Odeh forced to leave Germany
Protesters crowded the streets of several Algerian cities for thesixth weekly protest against veteran president Abdelaziz Bouteflikaand his allies on Friday. Huge numbers of demonstrators, including veterans of the countryʼs 1990s civil war, congregated in front of the central post office in downtown Algiers. "Weʼre fed up with those in power," the demonstrators chanted. "We want a new government." Strong police presence was noticeable in Algiers, with helicopters flying overhead.
The controversial Palestinian activist Rasmea Odeh was ordered to leave Germany on Friday after losing an urgent appeal to have a previous decision revoking her visa overturned. The decision from Berlinʼs Foreign Nationals Office to withdraw Odehʼs visa on the grounds it would threaten public order was upheld by the Berlin Higher Administrative Court. It argued that the right to free speech did not oblige Germany to allow foreign nationals to stay in the country to give them a platform.