title

Page 1

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.

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.

38/2018 • 15, FEBRUARY 2018

South African President Jacob Zuma says efforts to oust him ʼunfairʼ President Zuma faces a deadline Wednesday to respond to a ruling ANC party order to leave office

Dutch minister admits to lying about ʼGreater Russiaʼ meeting with Vladimir Putin 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 With parliament bringing forward a no-confidence vote against Zuma to Thursday, he appears to have run out of road. South African President Jacob Zuma has said ongoing efforts by theruling ANC party to remove himfrom office were "unfair." He said the party had not given him any reason for his ouster. "It was very unfair to me that this issue is raised," he said in an interview with state broadcaster SABC on Wednesday. "Nobody has ever provided the reasons. Nobody is saying what I have done." Zuma said his party had not followed proper procedures in trying to unseat him. He said he would issue a statement later Wednesday. Earlier, ruling African National Congress party said the parliament could elect a new president as early as Thursday if Zuma steps down. The party said it would back a no-confidence motion against the president on Thursday and replace him right away with Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa if Zuma decides to defy

the partyʼs instructions to resign. "We have now asked the chief whip to proceed with the motion of noconfidence tomorrow in parliament... so that President Zuma is then removed," ANC treasurergeneral Paul Mashatile told reporters Wednesday. He said parliament would then "proceed to elect Ramaphosa as president of the republic" — perhaps as early as Thursday or Friday. Mashatileʼs comments came just hours after South Africanpolice raided properties of Zuma associates the Gupta brothers,marking a dramatic escalation in pressure on Zuma and his aides, who have been accused of widespread corruption. On Tuesday, the ANC ordered Zuma to step down as president of the country, without giving him a firm deadline. However, the party said it was sure he would comply and "respond" on Wednesday.

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.

weather today BUDAPEST

0 / 3 °C Precipitation: 0 mm


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.