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Barcelona boosts security after US warns of possible attack Catalan police were checking coaches, buses, and minibuses in Barcelona on Monday, after the local media reported on a possible terror plot involving a 30-year-old Moroccan. The man is reported to have a bus driver license. The daily El Period‐ ico de Catalunya said that the police had circulated an internal note saying that the man could drive a bus into civilians. The authorities also boosted police presence at popular tourist landmarks, including the Sagrada Familia Cathedral and the Las Ramblas Boulevard, according to the Spanish daily El Pais. In 2017,a 22-year-old Moroccan drove a van into crowds at Las Ramblas, killing 16 and injuring 131 people. He was killed several days later. On Sunday, the US State Department unexpectedly tweeted a terror warning to travelers in Barcelona. The message advises visitors to exercise "heightened caution" around vehicles "including buses" in the Las Ramblas area.
German police find ʼIslamic Stateʼ flag after suspected attack on Berlin railway track German police said on Tuesday they had recovered a flag of the "Islamic State" (IS) group and a text in Arabic close to a railway track in Berlin where an overhead power cable was found to be damaged on Sunday. Investigators are trying to ascertain if the propaganda objects were linked to the damage caused to the overhead contact wire. They are also examining if the perpetrators had any political motives. "Since the beginning of the investigation, several pieces of evidence have been secured," police said, adding that investigators found a torn steel cable and the damaged overhead contact wire at the train track on Sunday.
1/2019 • 2 JANUARY, 2019
Will 2019 be the year of the crash? Thereʼs good reason to believe so
Teen gets stuck in chimney while ʼplaying Santaʼ in Austria Austrian firefighters managed to extract a 14-year-old from a chimney in the city of Linz, after the boy spent around three hours inside the vent. The boyʼs 49-year-old neighbor, Muharrem B., heard him calling for help early on Sunday, according to Österreich daily. "Iʼd watched television a bit longer than usual and was just about to go to sleep, when I suddenly heard loud cries for help around 3:30 a.m.," the man told the paper. The neighbor first alerted the police. Before they arrived at the scene, however, he climbed to the attic to look for the source of the noise. While searching the attic, he put his ear to a disused fireplace and determined that someone was stuck in the chimney on the other side. "I told this person not to be afraid and that I will get help," Muharrem B. said.
An exciting year is behind us in terms of economic developments. And the new year wonʼt be dull either. But will we finally see the end of the long upswing? Crash prophets tend to have it easy. Year in, year out, they have worstcase scenarios in store for us. And, should the worst really happen, they rejoice, saying "we told you so all along." Those prophets donʼt tire of touring the country, spreading fear, selling their books or touting their own funds as a form of life insurance. When you look at the current state the global economy is in, one might indeed believe that 2019 will be the year of the crash. There are unresolved problems everywhere.Thereʼs the Brexit chaos, Italyʼs populists, the US-China trade conflict and a lot more. The odd ray of hope is overshadowed by bad news elsewhere. I donʼt even want to think about what another recession in Europe would be like. The guardians of the euro at the European Central Bank (ECB) have shot their bolt and sit in Mario Draghiʼs trap of a zero-interest policy. The bank presidentʼs inaction has prepared the ground for the next big crisis. Itʼs somehow alarming that the worldʼs largest asset management firm,BlackRock, is warning
it clients against investing in European stocks, saying the risks of doing so are too highand that the bullish period is most likely over on the Continent. Thereʼs also cause for concern, seeing investors increasingly putting resources into US sovereign bonds in pursuit of a safe yield. And itʼs a warning signal when yields on longer-term bonds are lower than those on bonds with a shorter maturity. Such an inverse yield curve has more often than not served as a harbinger of a downturn. But what should worry us most is the huge amount of debt the world has accumulated. Debt levels have risen by 42 percent since 2007 when the last global financial crisis started, and today weʼre talking about the incredible sum of $237 trillion (€208 trillion). Sure,central banks have been flooding markets with cheap money, meaning that borrowed money has been used to build homes or buy shares. Wall Street investors alone owe a total of $670 billion while speculating with borrowed money. Itʼs a time bomb!
Heidi Klum gets engaged to musician Tom Kaulitz Supermodel, TV personality and businesswoman Heidi Klum announced in an Instagram post on Monday that she was engaged to musician boyfriend Tom Kaulitz. "I SAID YES," the 45-year-old German model commented on the picture, along with a heart emoji. The post featured a black-and-white photo of the couple, with Klum showing her diamond ring.
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