DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH
World Bank, Denmark act against Tanzania over discrimination of girls and gays Tanzania has been pushing through a highly restrictive policy on several fronts, repressing rights of homosexuals, clamping down on freedom of the press and recently reaffirming the countryʼs policy of expelling pregnant girls from state primary and secondary schools. In September the country also made it a crime to question official statistics. This has been strongly criticized by the World Bank, saying the law will undermine the production of useful, high-quality data. Tanzania has been pushing through a highly restrictive policy on several fronts, repressing rights of homosexuals, clamping down on freedom of the press and recently reaffirming the countryʼs policy of expelling pregnant girls from state primary and secondary schools. In September the country also made it a crime to question official statistics. This has been strongly criticized by the World Bank, saying the law will undermine the production of useful, high-quality data.
Ex-Nazi death camp guard says he was following orders In court proceedings against a 94-year-old man on trial for accessory to murder in 100 counts, his lawyers readfurther testimonyin which the defendant proclaimed his innocence. The statement included no apology to the victims or survivors. The man, who served as an SS guard at theStutthof concentration camp in occupiedPoland, claimed he had no idea that prisoners were being killed. He acknowledged that he was aware of the "miserable conditions" there but attributed deaths to "diseases and epidemics."
262/2018 • 17 NOVEMBER, 2018
Theresa May defends draft Brexit deal amid conservative outcry Some of her MPs want to oust her from office
The British prime minister has faced shrill opposition to a draft deal from her own Cabinet and Conservative Party since she presented it on Wednesday. British Prime Minister Theresa May defended her draft Brexit deal on Thursday followingresignations by senior ministersand an attempt by some members of her Conservative Party to start a process to replace her as party leader. "Am I going to see this through? Yes," May said. "This is a Brexit that delivers on the priority of the British people." The draft deal would protect British jobs, trade, security and a fragile peace in Northern Ireland, she said. One of the most ardent Brexit supporters in her Conservative Party, Jacob Rees-Mogg, had earlier requested a vote of no confidence in the British prime minister. ReesMogg, who leads the Brexit-backing European Research Group (ERG), wrote that Mayʼs deal "fails to meet the promises given to the nation by the Prime Minister." A total of 48 Conservative MPs would have to sign no-confidence letters to trigger a no-confidence vote. ReesMogg said the list of MPs signing letters was growing after he announced his submission. The challenge to May came afterseveral of her ministers resigned in opposition
to the draft deal drawn up with Brussels: Brexit Secretary Dominic RaabWorks and Pension Secretary Esther McVeyJunior minister Shailesh Vara in the Northern Ireland officeJunior minister Suella Braverman in the Brexit office. Raab said he could not "in good conscience support the terms proposed for our deal with the EU" in his resignation letter to May. Mayʼs Cabinet had approved the draft on Wednesday, but lawmakers from all parties denounced it during a parliamentary debate on Thursday morning. Pro-Brexit Conservatives said it did not deliver the result a majority had voted for in the 2016 Brexit referendum. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said the draft was "halfbaked" and pledged that his party would vote against it. May requires a majority in Parliament to approve the deal after it has been signed off by EU leaders. But widespread parliamentary opposition has raised doubts about whether she can get the deal approved. EU leaders are set to meet on November 25 at a special summit in Brussels to discuss the draft agreement.
Denied access to migrants, UN experts call off Hungary trip A team of experts from United Nations suspended its trip to Hungary on Thursday after the government denied it access to two sites where migrants and asylum-seekers are being held. The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention had planned to stay in Hungary until Friday. The experts were in the country on Budapestʼs invite. The experts had intended to visit the Roszke and Tompa "transit zones" — two sites on the Serbian border suspected illegal detentions — but were denied permission to enter them. "There can be no doubt that holding migrants in these ʼtransit zonesʼ constitutes deprivation of liberty in accordance with international law," said Elina Steinerte and Setondji Roland Adjovi, members of the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention. "We have received a number of credible reports concerning the lack of safeguards against arbitrary detention in these facilities which called for a visit by the Working Group," they added
Police informants in Germany: Money, attention and scandal For the head of the Berlin state police (LKA), recent reports that his office likely had an informant in the same mosque frequented byBerlin Christmas market attacker Anis Amridid not come as a surprise. When questioned by state parliamentarians investigating the Islamist terror attack in 2016, Christian Steiof maintained that he could not say if and when the LKA informant was at the Fussilet mosque, which, at the time, was known as a hotspot for radical Salafists (it has since been closed).
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