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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

German spy agency sets sights on Balkans, focuses on Bosnia Germanyʼs foreign intelligence agency BND is increasingly focusing on the Balkans and especially Muslim-majority Bosnia-Herzegovina, the Berliner Zeitung reports. Bosnia faces a growing influence from the Gulf states. The German Intelligence Agency (BND) is increasingly concerned about Islamist tendencies in Bosnia-Herzegovina, theBerliner Zeitung daily newspaper reported on Tuesday, citing sources from the intelligence community. The agency is allegedly also turning its attention to the whole of the volatile Balkan region. For generations, the Muslim population in multi-ethnic Bosnia has adhered to a very liberal interpretation of Islam. This perspective was also reinforced by authorities in secular former Yugoslavia, which included Bosnia along with six other present day Balkan states. However, religious divisions flared up during the break up of the socialist state in the 1990ʼs and the influence of religion has been growing ever since.

283/2017 • 4, DECEMBER 2017

Potsdam Christmas market bomb alarm prompts more police patrols Investigators are seeking the sender of a mysterious package that turned out to be harmless

Geneva to get underway with The eighth round of UN-sponsored talks on Syria since 2012 is set to get underway in Geneva, though the Assad regime has not yet named a delegation. Talks hosted by Russia have led to hopes there may be a breakthrough. The United Nations special envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura, said he would "not accept any preconditions by any party" for the talks set to start in Geneva on Tuesday. He said the talks would be guided by a 2015 Security Council resolution mandating a political transition for Syria. By Monday evening, the eve of the talks, the Syrian government had not officially named its delegation. The pro-government newspaper AlWatan claimed there was a "hidden condition" for the talks from the Syrian opposition that President Bashar al-Assad step down at the start of any transitional period.

A former member of Chinaʼs Central Military Commission has committed suicide after authorities opened a corruption probe against him. Zhang Yang was being investigated over his ties to two corruption-tainted generals. A top Chinese military official under investigation for corruption has committed suicide, the Defense Ministry and state media said on Tuesday. Zhang Yang (pictured above), a former member of the powerful Central Military Commission, was "suspected of giving and taking bribes" and the origin of a large amount of his assets was unclear, the official Xinhua news agency reported, citing the commission. "On the afternoon of November 23, Zhang Yang committed suicide at home," the Xinhua report stated.

Danish teenage convert to Islam given extra jail term for bomb plot

Syria transition talks in or without Assad officials

Senior military official commits suicide amid corruption probe

Police are boosting their presence at Christmas markets in the eastern state of Brandenburg after a bomb scare. Christmas markets in the eastern German state of Brandenburg reopened as usual on Saturdayfollowing a bomb scare Friday in the state capital, Potsdam. However, police will be stepping up their patrols at the markets throughout the state and "particularly in Potsdam," a police spokesperson said. Police are still looking for the person who sent a package containing a metal cylinder, nails, powder and a large firework to a pharmacy next to the market in Potsdam city center, triggering an evacuation of the entire nearby area for several hours. The state chairman of the police union in Brandenburg, Andreas Schuster, told public broadcaster Deutschlandfunk on Saturday that the package, which was disposed of in a controlled explosion by police, had probably been a fake bomb. "No explosives were found," he said. A police

spokesperson said the package did not contain a detonator. It remains unclear whether the "attack" targeted the Christmas market or the pharmacy itself. Security at Germanyʼs famous Christmas markets has already been stepped up following a terrorist attack in the German capital, Berlin,almost a year ago in which 12 people died and more than 60 injured when a man drove a truck into a crowd of market visitors. A spokesman for the Interior Ministry said on Monday that the markets remained a potential target for radical Islamists. "The danger in Europe and thus in Germany as well continues to be high," he said. Christmas markets opened across Germany on Monday. As part of heightened security measures,barriers have been set up at access points,either in the form of parked vehicles or cement blocks.

Sentenced when she was 15 years old for her plot to attack schools with bombs, the IS sympathizer has stabbed an educator while in jail. Medical advisors recommended she be incarcerated for the foreseeable future. A high court in Denmark extended to eight years the sentence for the now 17-year-old Muslim convert. The individual, who cannot be named under Germanyʼs media code, was arrested in her home village 65 kilometers (40 miles) west of the capital, Copenhagen, in January 2016.

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