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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Tunisia hit by third night of violent protests Tunisians have taken to the streets of several cities including the capital in a third night of violent protests. The government has vowed to crack down. More than 300 people were arrested and nearly 50 police officers wounded overnight on Wednesday in continued unrest in Tunisia over price hikes and austerity measures, the interior ministry said. In the town of Thala, located near the border with Algeria, protestors torched the regionʼs national security headquarters, prompting police forces to retreat and authorities to deploy soldiers. Peaceful demonstrations erupted last week, but turned violent on Monday and Tuesday as they spread to more than 20 towns including in the suburbs of the capital, Tunis. Fresh clashes were reported across several towns for a third night on Wednesday. Anger has boiled over since the beginning of the year due to a hike in value added tax and social security contributions as part of austerity demanded by international creditors.

YouTube strips back partnership with Logan Paul Youtube has cut projects and lowered the advertising profile of video blogger Logan Paul, after he posted a video of a suicide victim in Japan. Paul apologized last week, calling the videoʼs publication a "huge mistake." YouTube on Wednesday said it would remove American video blogger Logan Paul from its Google Preferred platform and put future projects involving him on hold, after Pauluploaded a video of a suicide victimat a known suicide site in Japan to the platform. "In light of recent events, we have decided to remove Logan Paulʼs channels from Google Preferred. Additionally, we will not feature Logan in season 4 of ʼFoursomeʼ and his new Originals are on hold," YouTube, a subsidiary of Alphabet Inc., said in a statement. In an open letter on Tuesday, YouTube had said Paulʼs video violated its guidelines and it was "looking at further consequences."

10/2018 • 12, JANUARY 2018

Europeans look to EU for protection from globalization Terrorism and migration ranked as the main concerns on Europeansʼ minds

Belgian government embroiled in deportation scandal Belgian immigration minister Theo Francken is under fire for his repatriation of vulnerable migrants to Sudan. Critics are calling on him to resign. Now the government coalition is at risk of collapse over the scandal. It is not often that the trigger for a government crisis is as obvious as it has been in Belgium in recent weeks. The story begins in Brusselsʼ Parc Maximilien, where migrants have been camping out since 2015. At any given time there are usually a few hundred people waiting there in limbo until their paperwork has been processed, or taking a break on their journey to Great Britain. For many Belgians,Parc Maximilien is a symbol of the Belgian stateʼs failureto get a grip on the refugee crisis. The current debate may develop into real government crisis and even cost Charles Michelʼs job as prime minister.

US House passes bill renewing surveillance powers While nearly half of Europeans regard globalization as a threat, the majority also see the EU as part of the answer, according to a new study. Despite personally having good experiences with globalization, itʼs regarded as a threat by 44 percent of Europeans — especially those on the far-right of the political spectrum, according to a study released Thursday by the Bertelsmann Stiftung. Some 66 percent of the 10,755 people polled in July, however, also said their access to affordable goods and services has been "quite good" or better. Support for globalization and international integration, however, split according to party lines. Right-wing and rightwing populist parties "reject any type of political and economic opening up towards both globalization and the EU,"the study found. "Many supporters of left-wing parties see globalization as a threat but still support the further development of the EU. In contrast the right see Europe as the problem rather than part of the solution. For this reason

throughout Europe they consistently reject stronger integration," Isabel Hoffmann, one of the studyʼs coauthors, said in a statement. In Germany, 63 percent of the far-right Alternative for Germany(AfD) members polled said they feared globalization while 73 percent of German Green supporters regarded it as an opportunity. Among Chancellor Angela Merkelʼs conservative Christian Democrats, 71 percent viewed globalization as an opportunity. Coping with the political split will require frank discussions and strong political leadership, according to Aart De Geus, the Bertelsmann Stiftungʼs chairman and CEO. "Those voices that promise a future confrontation between nations instead of international togetherness have to be countered with persuasion, facts and open discussions," he said. "To do that, strong political leadership is also required."

The bill passed with a comfortable majority though representatives from both parties voted against it. President Trump sowed confusion prior to the vote, which is expected to pass the Senate before expiring next week. The US House of Representatives, today, passed a bill to renew sweeping surveillance powers for the governmentʼs intelligence agencies. The vote on Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which must be renewed every five years and is set to expire on January 19, passed by a 256 to 164 margin. Notably, 45 Republicans voted against it.

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