DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH
Danish immigration minister Stoejberg calls fasting ʼdangerousʼ Inger Stoejberg received backlash after suggesting Muslims spend the month of Ramadan away from work. Experts and businesses fired back that there was no evidence of fasting affecting work safety. Denmarkʼs Immigration and Integration Minister Inger Stoejberg has stirred controversy after claiming late on Monday that the celebration of Ramadan was incompatible with the modern labor market. The minister, who has a reputation for hardline immigration policies, wrote a blog post for the Danish tabloid BT that the month-long Muslim celebration, which includes fasting during daylight hours, was "dangerous for us all." Questioned the idea of "commanding observance to a 1,400-yearold pillar of Islam."Suggested that, if Muslims were going to fast, they should take a month off from work "to avoid negative consequences for the rest of Danish society."
Hundreds of Reichsbürger, extremists lose weapons permits As sympathisers reach out across social media and messaging services, the number of Reichsbürger supporters appears to have grown to 18,000. A number of them hold weapons but 450 have lost their permits. The German Interior Ministry on Tuesday said that approximately 1,200 Reichsbürger and 750 right-wing extremists currently have a permit for one or more weapons. The revelation came as part of its response to a parliamentary question from the Green party on the dangers of right-wing terrorist structures and right-wing militancy in Germany, as the Greens had expressed concern over an increase in the number of acts of violence perpetrated by rightwing extremists.
116/2018 • 25 MAY, 2018
Donald Trump pulls out of June summit with North Koreaʼs Kim Jong Un The summit had been hailed a historic chance to disarm Pyongyang
US President Donald Trump has announced he will not meet North Koreaʼs leader Kim Jong Un next month, due to "open hostility" recently expressed by Kim. US President Donald Trump unexpectedly called off a summit with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un on Thursday in a letter released by the White House. The meeting, which was scheduled for June 12 in Singapore, was meant to solve the threat posed by Pyongyangʼs nuclear arsenal. What Donald Trumpʼs letter said:Trump is pulling out of the summit due to "tremendous anger and open hostility" shown in Kimʼs recent statement.The world was losing "a great opportunity for lasting peace."He urged Kim not to "hesitate to call me or write" to reschedule the meet.Addressing Kim directly, Trump said: "You talk about your nuclear capabilities, but ours are so massive and powerful that I pray to God they will never have to be used." South Korean President Moon Jae-in met with his top security staff in the wake of Trumpʼs cancellation. "(We) are trying to figure out what President Trumpʼs intention is and the exact meaning of it," Yonhap news agency quoted presidential office spokesman Kim Eui Kyeom as saying. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said he was "deeply concerned" by Trumpʼs cancelation. Guterres stressed the
efforts to rid the world of nuclear arms were in severe crisis and urged both parties to keep talking. The UN chief added that the "world is going backwards." The UK said it was "disappointed" by Trumpʼs move. "We need to see an agreement that can bring about the completely verifiable and irreversible denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula and we will continue to work with our partners to this end," the spokeswoman for UK Prime Minister Theresa May told reporters. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo read out Trumpʼs letter while appearing before US lawmakers on Thursday. The news of the cancellation didnʼt go over well in Berlin. Rolf Mützenich, a foreign policy expert for the junior partners in the German government, the Social Democrats, criticized the decision. "The cancellation of the summit is regrettable, but itʼs been coming for days," Mützenich told Deutsche Welle. "Trump and his team have cavalierly ignored the way their public statements and assertions were perceived in North Korea. A topic as important as the relaxation of the military situation on the Korean peninsula desires professional and credible preparation."
Former Taiwan president gets jail time for information leak Taiwanʼs High Court has overturned a previous not-guilty verdict and charged former Taiwanese President Ma Yingjeou. Ma plans to appeal his sentence but can also avoid prison by paying a fine of €3,370. Former Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou was sentenced to four months in prison on Tuesday for leaking classified information. Taiwanʼs High Court found that "Ma Yingjeou violated the Communication and Surveillance Act," when he leaked information relating to national security and opposition lawmaker Ker Chienming, which should have been confidential. Ma told local media he planned to appeal the High Court sentence, but he could also skip prison if he pays a fine of T$120,000 ($4,020, €3,370), the court said. A former stalwart of major opposition party Kuomintang of China, Ma was Taiwanʼs president from 2008 to 2016 and encouraged closer ties with China.
Five dead in samurai sword attack on Indonesian police Police have shot four men dead during an attack on a police headquarters in Pekanbaru on Sumatra island. The third Islamist militant assault in Indonesia in the past week also left an officer dead and two wounded. Four samurai sword-wielding men were shot dead by Indonesian police on Wednesday after they attacked a police headquarters on the island of Sumatra. National police spokesman Setyo Wasisto said the men attacked officers after driving a minivan into the police compound in Pekanbaru.
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