DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH
Anti-Semitic attack on Paris bagel shop The managers of the Bagelstein restaurant in Parisʼs 6th arrondissement said on Sunday that they had been the victims of an anti-Semitic attack. The store window had been graffitied with the German word meaning "Jews" in yellow paint overnight. "We discovered the tag on Saturday morning, and it was probably done on Friday night into Saturday," co-founder of the chain, Gilles Abecassis, told French news agency AFP on Sunday. He added that some of their other windows have also been vandalized in the past. Abecassis said that he thought the yellow color of the graffiti was significant, not because of the recent yellow vest protests in France, but "maybe for the Star of David," armbands the Nazis forced Jews to wear. "One anti-Semitic tag in the middle of Paris is one too many," Interior Minister Christophe Castaner wrote on Twitter. "Our response: to do everything we can so that the perpetrator of this ignominous act is condemned."
German rescue ship named after drowned toddler Alan Kurdi A German migrant rescue ship operating in the Mediterranean was renamed on Sunday after Alan Kurdi, the three-year-old Syrian Kurdish boy whose lifeless body washed up on a Turkish shore during the height of Europeʼs migrant crisis, galvanizing global opinion. German charity Sea-Eye renamed the ship in the presence of Alanʼs father, Abdullah Kurdi, and aunt, Tima Kurdi, in Palma on Spainʼs Balearic Island of Mallorca. Read more: Aunt of Syrian toddler Alan Kurdi calls for compassion "We are happy that a German rescue ship will carry the name of our boy. My boy on the beach must never be forgotten. Our grief for the loss of my wife and sons is shared by many, by thousands of families who have so tragically lost sons and daughters this way," Abdullah Kurdi said in a statement released by Sea-Eye.
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Hungary gives tax breaks to boost population, stop immigration He said the policy was meant to create more Hungarians
Prime Minister Viktor Orban has announced tax benefits and subsidies to encourage families to have more children. He said the policy was meant to create more Hungarians instead of promoting EUbacked immigration. Hungaryʼs anti-immigration prime minister announced on Sunday that the government would offer financial aid and subsidies for families to boost the birth rate. Prime Minister Viktor Orban said in his annual State of the Nation speech that the policy was "Hungaryʼs answer" to population decline, "not immigration." Read more: Is Viktor Orban the EUʼs hard-line hero or villain? "There are fewer and fewer children born in Europe. For the West, the answer (to that challenge) is immigration. For every missing child there should be one coming in and then the numbers will be fine," he said. "But we do not need numbers. We need Hungarian children," he added. In 2016, Hungaryʼs birth rate was 1.45 births per women, below the 2.1 replacement rate. The sevenpoint program includes a loan of 10 million Forint (€31,352, $35,540) to women under 40 who marry for the
first time. A third of the loan would be waived after a second child and the entire sum waived after a third child. Read more: Hungaryʼs Viktor Orban pushes for anti-migrant bloc to counter France and Germany Another plank of the program would absolve any woman who has four or more children from paying income tax for life. The new measures would also provide housing subsidies to families depending on the number of children they have and state support for the purchase of any seven-seat vehicle. Orban also took aim at the European Union ahead of European Parliament elections in May and hisnemesis, Hungarian-born American billionaire George Soros. Read more: EU Parliament votes to trigger Article 7 sanctions procedure against Hungary "Brussels is the stronghold of new internationalism, its tool is migration," he said.
Spain: Thousands demand Pedro Sanchez resign Huge crowds of anti-government protesters converged on central Madrid on Sunday topressure Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez to step downand call fresh elections. An estimated 45,000 people packed into the capitalʼs Plaza de Colon, many of them waving Spanish flags and signs reading "Stop Sanchez" and "For a united Spain, elections now!" The rally was organized by the conservative opposition Popular Party (PP) and the center-right Citizens Party, with backing from thefar-right party Vox. "The time of Sanchezʼs government is over," PP leader Pablo Casado told reporters at the start of the march. His opposition party is firmly against the prime ministerʼs decision to tackle political tensions in northeastern Catalonia by negotiating with pro-independence parties.
Hard Brexit risks 100,000 German jobs A hard Brexit could cost more than 100,000 jobs in Germany, the Welt am Sonntag newspaper reported on Sunday, citing a study by the Leibniz Institute for Economic Research Halle (IWH) and the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg. The study, which looks at the effect of a hard Brexit down to individual districts and cities, showed that some of Germanyʼs well-known auto and technology hubs could face the maximum brunt.
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