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52/2018 • 03, MARCH 2018 WEEKEND ISSUE

DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Theresa May calls for unprecedented UK-EU economic partnership The EU has blamed British officials in recent weeks for a lack of progress in talks

The British prime minister has tried to breathe new life into negotiations over Britainʼs departure from the European Union.

Carla Del Ponte honored with Hessian Peace Prize

New French immigration bill provokes backlash

Ex-war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte received a €25,000 prize in the German state of Hesse for her "uncompromising fight for peace." In her speech, the Swiss-born Del Ponte called for urgent reform of the UN. Officials in the German state of Hesse honored anti-war crimes crusader Carla Del Ponte on Friday by presenting her with the Albert Osswald Foundationʼs Peace Prize. The 71year-old Del Ponte led an "uncompromising fight for peace" during her career as international prosecutor, the jury said.

France is working on a new immigration law designed to streamline the asylum process. But aid workers fear the legislation could turn the country into a proper "expulsion machine," reports Lisa Louis from Paris. Franceʼs cabinet this week okayed a draft immigration law that will go through parliament in the coming months. Migrants would in the future have less time to apply for asylum and appeal against rejections. The government would have the right to hold them in detention centers pending deportation for more than twice as long.

Britain and the European Union should agree to an unprecedented economic relationship after Britain leaves the EU, British Prime Minister Theresa May said on Friday in a highly anticipated speech on Brexit. The speech comes amid growingEU frustration at what it has claimed are unrealistic British demandsin divorce talks ahead of March 2019, when the UK plans to leave the bloc. The future economic partnership with the EU should be deeper than any free trade deals that currently exist. She rejected existing trade deals Norway and Canada have with the EU: "We need to strike a new balance. But we will not accept the rights of Canada and the obligations of Norway."Brussels and London should agree to a Brexit that does not threaten peace in Northern Ireland by leading to the reappearance of a hard border between Ireland, an EU member state, and Northern Ireland: "We have been clear all along that we donʼt want to go back to a hard border."Solving the border problem by keeping Northern Ireland in the EUʼs customs union would however be unacceptable. To do so would break up the UKʼs internal market and "damage the integrity of our precious Union [the UK]."British and EU regulations "will remain substantially similar in the future" and Britain would seek to stay in some EU regulatory agencies. But the British Parliament would have the right to vote on regulations different

from the EUʼs. This and customs checks based on new technologies would help ensure "as frictionless" trade as possible.Any final Brexit treaty with the EU would have to meet five tests: "implementing the decision of the British people; reaching an enduring solution; protecting our security and prosperity; delivering an outcome that is consistent with the kind of country we want to be; and bringing our country together, strengthening the precious union of all our people." Little progress: The speech comes at a time when Brexit negotiations appear to be making little progress. On Thursday, EU Council President Donald Tusk challenged Britain to present ideas about how to prevent a hard border between Ireland and Northern Ireland after May rejected an EU proposal to the problem. Tusk had previously saidBritainʼs position was "based on pure illusion" after media outlets reported Britain wanted to pick and choose which EU rules to align with after Brexit. Mayʼs reaction to EU Brexit treaty: The EUʼs chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, presented a first draft Brexit treaty on Wednesday that would define the future legal relationship between Britain and the EU after 2019. May called the draft "unacceptable" in part due to a provision that would have Northern Ireland stay in a customs union with the EU if London and Brussels failed to find another solution to the Irish border problem.

Bundestag slams far-right AfD

Myanmar bulldozed scores of Rohingya villages

Parliamentarians minced no words about the right-wing populistsʼ increasingly radical statements about Germanyʼs dark past. The discussion was sparked by AfD calls to ban the Stumbling Stones remembrance initiative. In a special discussion in Germanyʼs parliament, the Bundestag, MPs underscored the countryʼs commitment to remembering the Holocaust and the other crimes of Germanyʼs Nazi past. The session was called by the Greens after increasing agitation from within the far-right populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party to end Germanyʼs culture of remembrances.

Human Rights Watch says the Myanmar authoritiesʼ actions were aimed at covering up evidence of atrocities against Rohingya Muslims. HRW calls on the government to allow UN fact-finding team in to Rakhine state. New satellite images of Myanmarʼs Rakhine state show that the Myanmar authorities have been bulldozing Rohingya Muslim villages that were burned down during the "ethnic cleansing campaign" against the minority, human rights group, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Friday.


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