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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Israeli leaders back death penalty for ʼterroristsʼ The right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu has received backing for a controversial bill targeting convicted "terrorists." The proposal to change how the death penalty can be applied has divided lawmakers in Israelʼs parliament. Middle East Israeli leaders back death penalty for ʼterroristsʼ The right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu has received backing for a controversial bill targeting convicted "terrorists." The proposal to change how the death penalty can be applied has divided lawmakers in Israelʼs parliament. Political leaders of Israelʼs ruling coalition on Sunday evening backed a legislative proposal to allow capital punishment for convicted terrorists. While Israel allows for the death penalty under domestic law and in the occupied West Bank under military law, it has not carried out capital punishment since 1961, whenconvicted Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann was hanged.

UN to vote on resolution rejecting US Jerusalem decision The UN Security Council is set to vote on a draft resolution nullifying any changes to Jerusalemʼs status, after the US policy change on the holy city. Protest against the US decision broke out in Jakarta on Sunday. The United Nations Security Council will on Monday vote on a draft resolution earlier next week that would consider any changes to the status of Jerusalem legally invalid and call on any such changes to be reversed,. While not naming the US specifically, the Egyptian-drafted text, seen by AFP and Reuters news agencies, isa significant repudiation from the international communityof US PresidentDonald Trumpʼs decision earlier this monthto recognize the holy city as the capital of Israel and move the US embassy there from Tel Aviv.

299/2017 • 22, DECEMBER 2017

Germanyʼs neverending coalition talks break record And no one has any idea when the waiting will be over

The longest Germany has ever taken to form a new government was 86 days. Now, that record has been broken. So much for German efficiency. Ongoing attempts to form a new government after the countryʼs September 24 election are once again looking bleak. Afterthe collapse of lengthy coalition talksbetween Chancellor Angela Merkelʼs Christian Democratic Union (CDU), its Bavarian sister party the Christian Social Union (CSU), the liberal Free Democratic Party (FDP) and the environmental Green party, all hopes were put on resuscitating a grand coalition between the CDU and the Social Democratic Party (SPD). Now those hopes will have to be put on ice. SPD leader and former chancellor candidate Martin Schulz announced via Twitter on Tuesday that his partyʼs leadership would not discuss the possibility of coalition talks until they convene at a special party conference in Bonn on January 21. The reason, he said, was that the CSU had refused to begin talks until after its traditional conclave of federal parliamentarians in early January. "Therefore, we need a bit more time," Schulz wrote. Merkel will, however, meet with Schulz, CSU leader Horst Seehofer and all three partiesʼ parliamentary group leaders

on Wednesday to lay the groundwork for the future talks. After the SPD suffered its worst electoral defeat of the post-war era under his leadership, Schulz declared it would take on the role of opposition party rather than join the government. Nevertheless, at the behest of German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, also a member of the SPD, Schulz agreed to reconsider. At theSPDʼs party conference in early December, members were divided about whether to take another run at governing with the CDU. Many in the partyʼs youth wing, for instance, are very opposed to the idea. The special party conference in January, to be attended by some 600 delegates, represents the final hurdle in a months-long governing dearth for Germany. Schulz will have some heavy lifting to do if he is to convince members of the wisdom of beginning formal coalition negotiations. Recently, the SPDʼs state association in Thuringia declared it was against forming yet another grand coalition. The partyʼs past experiences have been rather dismal, having lost massive amounts of support both times they governed as Merkelʼs junior partner.

Polish terror victimʼs parents disappointed with Germany The grieving family of the first victim killed in last yearʼs Berlin Christmas market attack is still waiting for Chancellor Angela Merkel to send her condolences. Frank Hofmann met the truck driverʼs parents in Poland. Janina Urban has set the table in the living room and placed a plate full of Christmas cookies on it, along with Berlin-style iced doughnuts filled with red jam. Her son, Lukasz Urban, was the first victim of last yearʼs Berlin terror attack. The cheerful Polish truck driver was shot by the attacker Anis Amri, who stole the truck and later drove it into a Christmas market, killing 11 more people and injuring 70. Ever since then, Janina Urban and her husband Henryk have tried daily to come to terms with the heinous crime.

Chile election: Billionaire Sebastian Pinera wins presidential vote Conservative former President Sebastian Pinera has won Chileʼs presidential runoff election. Initial results placed him well ahead of his centerleft opponent Alejandro Guillier, who subsequently conceded defeat. Conservative billionaire Sebastian Pinera looked set for a return to office after he secured a comfortable lead over his opponent in Chileʼs presidential runoff vote on Sunday. The electoral results push Chile politically towards the right, following other South American nations who have experienced similar electoral outcomes.

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