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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Germany: 150 percent rise in number of homeless since 2014 German government figures estimate the number of homeless people in the country to total around 860,000 — more than half of whom are refugees. That number is expected to rise a further 40 percent to 1.2 million by 2018. Figures released on Tuesday by Germanyʼs federal working group for homeless personsʼ assistance (BAG) point to a shrinking supply ofaffordable and social housing, coupled with the governmentʼs decision to allow to almost one million refugees to enter Germany in 2015, as reasons for the countryʼs exponential rise in the number of homeless. According to federal statistics for 2016, 440,000 of the countryʼs 860,000 homeless people were refugees. However, BAG stressed that its data does not show hundreds of thousands of refugees living on the streets, since it also took refugees living incommunal housing and sheltersinto account. Officials said they chose to include these refugees in their latest census as they are also in need of housing.

Tanzanian domestic workers ʼworking like robots,ʼ new report reveals Tanzanian migrant workers in Oman and the United Arab Emirates face excessive working hours, unpaid salaries, and physical and sexual abuse. These are some of the details in a new report by Human Rights Watch. Beatings, exploitation and harassment are a daily reality for female Tanzanian workers in parts of the Middle East. Nearly all the employers that were subject to the report force women to work up to 21 hours a day and confiscate their passports, leaving many with no option but to flee with the threat of rape and emotional abuse hanging over them.

269/2017 • 17, NOVEMBER 2017

Robert Mugabe under house arrest Zimbabwe:

Zimbabweʼs military appears to have seized power after having arresting senior officials and surrounding the parliament. It has avoided calling the move a coup. Longtime Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe was arrested along with other senior officials early Wednesday morning in what appeared to be a military seizure of power. South African President Jacob Zuma confirmed the president was "fine" and under house arrest after speaking with him. Hours earlier, Major General SB Moyo had said on state television that the armyʼs takeover of state offices, the parliament, the airport and state broadcaster was "not a military takeover." "We are only targeting criminals around him (Mugabe) who are committing crimes that are causing social and economic suffering in the country in order to bring them to justice," he said. Armored vehicles and soldiers were seen throughout the capital city, Harare, Wednesday morning as many people rushed to withdraw money from banks. Grace Mugabe — who reportedly fled to Namibia early Wednesday morning — had been publically positioning herself to succeed her husband as president. That ambition led to apublic feud with former Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who had been seen as Mugabeʼs likely successor before the president fired him in

early November. Mnangagwa — nicknamed "Crocodile" — is a veteran of the countryʼs independence struggle in the 1970s and popular with the countryʼs military. Days after he was fired, the countryʼs army chief, General Constantino Chiwenga, said he may be "obliged to take corrective measures." Zimbabweʼs influential war veterans association, which had supported Mnangagwa, welcomed the militaryʼs intervention on Wednesday and called for President Mugabeʼs removal. Chris Mutsvangwa, chairman of the war veteransʼ group, said in Johannesburg, South Africa that the head of the military had carried out "a bloodless correction of gross abuse of power." He added that the army would usher Zimbabwe in a "better business environment" afteryears of disinvestment and economic declineand called on South Africa, southern Africa and the West to re-engage with the crisis-prone country. The president of Zimbabweʼs opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and former Finance Minister Tendai Biti told DW that while he condemned the military takeover, he felt it was time for President Mugabe to quit.

Russia accuses US of providing cover for the ʼIslamic Stateʼ militia The US-led coalition in Syria tried to "impede" Russian warplanes from bombing "Islamic State" (IS) militia, the Russian Defense Ministry said. It also accused Washington of allowing the jihadists to regroup in Iraq. The fighter jets of the US-led military coalition were trying to hinder Russian airstrikes by flying inside the bombing zone in the Syrian town of Abu Kamal, Moscow said on Tuesday. The town is one of the last "Islamic State" (IS) strongholds in Syria, located on the Euphrates River near Iraq. In order to ensure "safe passage for the retreating IS forces" the coalition jets "were trying to interfere with Russian fighter jets which were active in the region" said the Russian Ministry of Defense. "With this goal, coalition fighter jets were entering the 15-kilometer (9 mile) airspace around Abu Kamal in order to impede the activities of the Russian air force," they added.

Alpine skier dies in tragic accident French skier David Poisson has died after a fall in training in Canada. Eyewitnesses report a lack of protection on the course. French skier David Poisson has died after a training accident at the Canadian ski resort of Nakiska, Franceʼs national ski federation has said. Poisson, 35, is survived by his wife and eighteen-month-old son. The Frenchman - a bronze medal winner in downhill at the 2013 World Championships was reportedly preparing for scheduled World Cup races due to take place in North America later this month.

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