DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH
German watchdog files market manipulation charges Germanyʼs financial market regulator filed charges against multiple people for allegedly trying to manipulate the share price of payment services provider Wirecard AG. The Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) opened a probe into the matter after the German companyʼs stock fell 40 percent in late January in response to several Financial Times articles that accused Wirecard of fraud. BaFin confirmed to DW that it had filed the charges with prosecutors in the southern city of Munich. Der Spiegel magazine first reported on the filing.A spokeswoman at the watchdog said the suspects were accused of trying to manipulate Wirecardʼs share price as part of a "short attack." She did not provide any details on their identity.Der Spiegel reported that BaFin had targeted a dozen people, including journalists at the Financial Times.The regulatorʼs probes into "other potential attempts to manipulate Wirecard AG shares are continuing," the spokeswoman said.
Germanyʼs AfD party fined over €400,000 for illegal campaign financing The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party was fined €402,900 ($455,548) by German parliamentʼs administrative authority on Tuesday. The fine is related toillegal campaign fundsfor two of the partyʼs officials. The campaign funds originated from Swiss public relations agency Goal AG.German parties and candidates are not permitted to receive donations from non-EU entities.The funds were used to finance state election campaigns in 2016 and 2017 for national chairman Jörg Meuthen and national board member Guido Reil.AfD co-leader Alice Weidel could also be fined for receiving illegal funds, again from Switzerland, where she lived for years.The court set the fines to total three times the amount of the illegal donations.Both Meuthen and Reil are running for German seats in the European parliamentary elections slated for May.
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Franceʼs Macron vows to rebuild Notre Dame Cathedral within 5 years Two French billionaires and oil giant Total have already pledged huge donations
The French president has announced a funding campaign to rebuild Notre Dame after it was partially gutted in a fire. Two French billionaires and oil giant Total have already pledged huge donations towards the effort. French President Emmanuel Macron committed on Monday to rebuilding Notre Dame Cathedral within five years after the Paris landmark was partially gutted in a devastating fire. "We will rebuild Notre Dame even more beautifully and I want it to be completed in five years, we can do it," Macron said in a television address to the nation. Describing Notre Dame as "the epicenter of our life," Macron had earlier announced that a fundraising campaignwould begin Tuesday and called on the worldʼs "greatest talents" to help rebuild the cathedral. French billionaire Francois-Henri Pinault, who is married to actress Salma Hayek,immediately pledged €100 million ($113 million)towards "the effort necessary to completely rebuild Notre Dame." The CEO of the Kering group, which owns the Gucci and Yves Saint Laurent fashion houses, said the money would be paid by the Pinault familyʼs investment firm, Artemis. Later on Tuesday, a second French billionaire, Bernard Arnault of Christian Dior SE and the sprawling luxury goods empire LVMH, promised €200 million ($226 million) to the reconstruction efforts. That was followed by a €100-million
pledge from French oil company Total. German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas offered Berlinʼs support, saying the fire "struck at the heart of all of Europe." "We offer France the assistance it desires," said Maas. "Specialists in Germany and France are already working together. All of Europe is with France today." Peter Füssenich, the architect who led restoration work at Cologneʼs Dom Cathedral, said that "just by seeing the images on TV, you know that it will not just take years to deal with the damage, but that itʼs going to take decades." Speaking outside the cathedral, Macron said the "the worst had been avoided" after firefighters managed to contain the fire following a collapse of the spire and the wooden roof structure went up in flames. Miraculously, only a small part of the vault appeared to have collapsed into the interior and firefighters were able to save valuable relics and pieces of art. Paris fire brigade chief Jean-Claude Gallet said the main structure of Notre Dame had been saved and preserved, as well as the two rectangular towers at its facade. The fire service said the blaze had been fully extinguished on Tuesday morning.
Bahrain strips 138 people of citizenship for links to elite Iran force A court in Bahrain sentenced 138 people to jail and stripped them of their citizenship for conspiring to create a "terror" cell linked to Iranʼs elite Revolutionary Guards force, the countryʼs public prosecutor said. The mass sentencing was "the largest" revocation of nationality since the country started using the punishment in 2012, the Europe-based Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD) said. The 138 people received sentences ranging from three years to life imprisonment. One man was jailed, but did not have his citizenship revoked.The group was accused of forming a "Bahraini Hezbollah" — a reference to the Shiite militant faction in Lebanon — with Iranian help, to carry out terrorist attacks in Sunni-ruled Bahrain.Some of them were alleged to have received military training in Lebanon, Iran and Iraq.Nearly 100 defendants were fined some $265,000 (€235,000) each.Thirty people were acquitted.
Widow of prominent IS terrorist reportedly living quiet life in Germany When Jenan Moussa, an acclaimed war reporter for the Arab TV channel Al Aan, received the contents of a smart phone from a "trusted source," she immediately knew she had been handed a treasure trove. The phone, she says, belonged to an Omaima A. — a German citizen of Tunisian descent.
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