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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Carnival parades draw millions across Germany Millions of revelers have braved cold winter weather to attend traditional carnival parades in Germany. The processions often take on a highly satirical note. Germanyʼs carnival season reached its height on Monday, with colorful "Rose Monday" parades taking place in many cities, particularly the traditional strongholds of Cologne, Düsseldorf and Mainz in the west of the country. The parade in Cologne, which took the motto "We in Cologne march to a different tune" ("Mer Kölsche danze us der Reih" in the local dialect), featured some 11,000 participants, around 390 horses and 85 floats, many of which bore huge and often unflattering figures representing politicians. Among those singled out for satire this year were Chancellor Angela Merkel, US President Donald Trump and British Prime Minister Theresa May.

37/2018 • 14, FEBRUARY 2018

EUʼs new defense union must not undermine NATO, warns Stoltenberg NATOʼs chief warns there is no way the EUʼs armed forces pact could replace the alliance.

Halbe Ziljstra has landed in hot water over his own account of controversial remarks allegedly made by the Russian president. The controversy comes ahead of his trip to Moscow, where he will meet with Sergei Lavrov. The Netherlandsʼ foreign minister, Halbe Zijlstra, admitted on Monday ahead of a trip to Moscow that he had lied about attending a controversial meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin before he entered politics. Zijlstra, who became foreign minister in October, claimed to have met Putin at the presidentʼs dacha in 2006 while working for the oil company Shell. Putin supposedly told Zijlstra and others he considered Belarus, Ukraine and the Baltic states a part of "Greater Russia," adding: "Kazakhstan was nice to have."

Austria: Deadly train crash rips windows from passenger car

Investigators hunt for clues to deadly Russian jet crash Authorities are analyzing one of the flight data recorders to try and figure out what caused a deadly crash that killed 71 people. The Russian-made plane went down on Sunday shortly after takeoff. On Monday, more than 100 investigators combed through the wreckage ofa plane crash that killed all 71 people onboardshortly after takeoff from Moscowʼs Domodedovo airport. Heavy snowfall forced workers to search the crash site, about 70 kilometers (45 miles) southeast of Moscow, on foot and on snowmobiles as they looked for human remains and clues to what caused the incident. "We plan to carry out the main stage of the search operation in seven days because the plane debris is scattered over a very large area," Emergency Services Minister Vladimir Puchkov was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency.

Dutch minister admits to lying about ʼGreater Russiaʼ meeting with Vladimir Putin

The US fears the EU could undermine NATO if it uses its military cooperation pact to protect the blocʼs defense industry. On the eve of a two-day meeting of NATO defense ministers in Brussels, NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg cautioned EU partners not to weaken with their new armed forces pact. It wouldnʼt make any sense for "NATO and the EU to start to compete," adding that there was "no way" the agreement, known as PESCO, could replace the transatlantic alliance in guaranteeing Europeʼs safety. The European Unionʼs "permanent structured cooperation on defense agreement" (PESCO) has recently come under fire from US officials who fear it could divert resources away from NATO and undermine the alliance. Launched in December as a way for EU member states expand collaboration post-Brexit, the framework aims to spend military

funds more efficiently. The United States Ambassador to NATO Kay Bailey Hutchison said that "we do not want this to be a protectionist vehicle for the EU." She said there could be "serious consequences" if the bloc shut US defense companies out of cooperation projects. "European allies are absolutely aware that the defense, the protection of Europe is dependent on NATO," Stoltenberg told the defense ministers on Tuesday. Stoltenbergʼs warning comes amid pressure on NATO members to step up efforts to increase national defense spending. In 2014 only three members spent more than the target of 2 percent of GDP on defense. Fifteen members have laid out concrete plans to reach these goals by 2024.

At least one woman has died after a Germany-bound train collided with a regional train in the Austrian town of Niklasdorf. The side-swipe collision took out a row of windows on one of the trains, injuring 22 passengers. Two passenger trains collided on Monday in the southern Austrian state of Steiermark, causing one of the passenger cars to derail while others sustained heavy damage. At least one woman was killed in the crash, Austrian police said. Another 22 people were injured, including three children.

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