DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH
ʼLaser manʼ John Ausonius receives life sentence in Frankfurt John Ausonius has received a second life sentence, this time for the murder of a Jewish woman in Frankfurt. Ausonius has been serving another life sentence in Sweden for the murder and attempted murder of 10 immigrants. John Ausonius — the Swedish convicted killer dubbed "the laser man" and suspected white supremacist — has received another life sentence for the murder of a Jewish woman more than 25 years ago. A Frankfurt court on Wednesday found Ausonius guilty of shooting dead Blanka Zmigrod, a 68-year-old Holocaust survivor, near her home in February 1992. Prosecutor Nadja Böttinger told the court during Tuesdayʼs plea hearing that the evidence at hand was far too abundant to be considered mere coincidence. During Wednesdayʼs sentencing, Judge Bärbel Stock agreed.
German prisons: 150 dangerous Islamists need deradicalizing German jails are struggling to cope with scores of radical Islamist extremists. Their number is expected to grow following the opening of a slew of terror-related probes in recent months. About 150 dangerous Islamists are being held in prisons across Germany, according to figures from the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) published by German daily Die Welt on Wednesday. The men are either serving jail sentences or are in custody on terror-related charges, the paper cited the BKA as saying. The newspaper said there were also several "relevant persons" being held, which it said were those regarded as sympathizers or supporters of radical Islam. "In the next few years we must expect a wave of extremists in our prisons," the German state of Hesseʼs Minister of Justice, Eva Kühne-Hörmann (CDU), told the newspaper.
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Angela Merkel: New German coalition deal will be good for EU Still, the other partiesʼ responses showed how divided Germany is
Germany has big plans for the European Union, the chancellor told parliament on the eve of a major EU meeting, but first Germany needs a new government. Merkel was addressing the Bundestag, Germanyʼs parliament, a day before an informal meeting of the 27 European Union national leaders in Brussels. But the backdrop wasthe coalition agreement drawn up between her conservatives and the Social Democrats, which all parties involved need to approve before the Chancellor can form a new government. Strengthening the EU is a central element of that deal between Germanyʼs two largest parties, traditionally rivals, and Merkel said the agreement would offer "essential impulses"in reforming the bloc. She stressed that the coalition agreement was the first such deal to focus explicitly on policy toward the EU. "We have to be prepared to support initiatives where they are better suited than national solutions," the Chancellor said in a speech that addressed three policy areas.On the topic of refugees Merkel said that policy should focus on combating the reasons why people left their homelands to come to Europe. She also stressed that more effort was needed to crack down on human
traffickers. She also said the coalition agreement with the SPD supporteda common EU policy on refugees and that the EU agency for protecting its external orders, Frontex, would be "massively strengthened."On economic matters, Merkel said that all EU member states had emerged solidly from the global financial crisis and were enjoying stable growth rates. She said that the "creation of a digital common market" was "the decisive issue." She also called for greater financial and economic "solidarity" between wealthier and poorer member states.On security, Merkel said the first joint EU security measures would be introduced soon. The chancellor proposed that only by acting as a bloc could Europe play a central role in the solution of global conflicts. She also called for international measures to end the "massacre" committed by Syria against its own people. And she played downthe "deficiencies" in the German military, the Bundeswehr, saying that steps were being taken to remedy shortcomings.
Nearly four-inten Germans use online services The shared use of cars, music, accommodation, files and more looks set to increase in Germany, a new survey shows. Germanyʼs share economy market is worth more than €20 billion, according to the survey. Almost 40 percent of Germans used "share economy" services, such as Uber and Airbnb in 2017, according to a survey published on Wednesday by auditing and consulting firm Price Waterhouse Coopers (PwC). The study, "Share Economy: The New Business Model," was based on a representative survey of more than 4,500 consumers in Belgium, the Netherlands, Austria, Switzerland, Turkey and Germany. Of these countries, Germany had the largestshare economymarket at more than €20 billion ($24.6 billion) and therefore 2,000 German participants were included in the survey.
US evangelist Billy Graham dies at 99 The Baptist preacher who counseled presidents and spoke about the Bible to hundreds of millions has passed away in his native North Carolina. Conservative politicians paid tribute to Graham online. Evangelist Billy Graham has died at the age of 99, a spokesman confirmed on Wednesday. According to the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, he preached to more people than anyone else in history during his 70 years on the pulpit.
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