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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Currywurst sausage defends title as Germansʼ favorite cafeteria lunch for 26th year in a row Germans love a good sausage, particularly if itʼs covered in a reddish sauce and served with wrinkly chips. And thatʼs the way itʼs been for more than a quarter of a century, according to a new study. "Currywurst" — a long and thick sausage covered in a reddish sauce and sprinkled with curry pepper — is still adored by cafeteria patrons across Germany, according to a new study. Apetito, a catering company from the western German state of North-Rhine Westphalia, published the 2017 edition of its annual analysis of meal popularity in different cafeterias.

Chinese pilot sucked halfway out of airplane "I saw that the co-pilot was already halfway out of the window," said the pilot who landed the airplane after a cockpit window shattered in mid-flight. The co-pilot suffered scratches and a sprained wrist. A Chinese pilot was hailed a hero on social media on Tuesday for successfully landing a commercial aircraft after his co-pilot was sucked "halfway" out of the cockpit in midflight. The incident occurred while the Sichuan Airlines Airbus A-319 was flying at 800-900 kilometers per hour (500-560 miles) at cruising altitude on its way from the central province of Chongqing to the city of Lhasa in Tibet. "The windshield burst suddenly and a loud noise was heard, and when I looked to the side, I saw that the co-pilot was already halfway out of the window," Liu Chuanjian told Chinese newspaper Chengdu Business Daily. "Luckily his seatbelt was tied."

113/2018 • 22 MAY, 2018

Italyʼs populist coalition names Giuseppe Conte as pick to be prime minister The move could set Italy on a collision course with the EU

Giuseppe Conte has been chosen by a coalition of two populist parties as its pick to be Italyʼs next prime minister. Giuseppe Conte, a 54-year-old law professor and something of a political novice, was named as the pick to be Italyʼs next prime minister by Five Star Movement (M5S) leader Luigi Di Maio. Conte, who was born in the southern province of Foggia and has never been elected to parliament, comes from the M5S side of the coalition. The now-likely coalition government in Rome made up of the M5S and League parties ison a possible collision course with other EU member statesafter it announced spending plans likely to increase the countryʼs already towering public debt. What is in the coalition deal? The two parties agreed to give monthly payments of at least €780 ($920) to Italians living below the poverty line. The deal also foresees a maximum individual tax rate of 15 percent, while business would pay 20 percent at most. The platform includes the introduction of tougher rules on deporting migrants and calls for fostering dialogue with Russia on economic and foreign policy matters.

Why is the EU concerned? Italy is the third-largest economy in the EU, but is running public debt of more than 130 percent of GDP— second only to Greece. Economists and EU policymakers worry that the spending plans contained in the coalitionʼs program will increase the countryʼs debt burden still further. The coalition is also at odds with the EU over its pro-Russian stance and over its euroskeptic attitude, reflected in League leader Matteo Salviniʼs "Italians First" motto. In response to the blocʼs concerns, M5Sʼs Di Maio said "first let us govern, then you can legitimately criticize us." What is M5S? The Movimento 5 Stelle or Five Star Movement was founded in 2009 by comedian Beppe Grillo. The "five stars" stand for the five key issues originally embraced by the party: public water, environmentalism, sustainable transport, sustainable development and rights to internet access. It also supports direct democracy and advocates anti-consumerism and anti-capitalism.

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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