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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Sierra Leone: Temporary ban on run-off election lifted The countryʼs run-off election is set to take place as scheduled after the High Court lifted an interim injunction. But there are concerns that events of the past few days may impact voter turnout. The Sierra Leone High Court has lifted an order delaying the presidential election run-off, two days after it temporarily halted the vote, which is scheduled for Tuesday. Lawyers for the National Electoral Commission (NEC) said the injunction order had already thrown the countryʼs election into "chaos". The NEC requested moving the run-off to the alternative date of March 3. The upcoming vote will see ruling party candidate Samura Kamara face off opposition candidate and leader of the Sierra Leone Peopleʼs Party (SLPP), Julius Maada Bio.

IsraeliPalestinian peace process: ʼDonʼt tear down bridges,ʼ Heiko Maas warns German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas has reiterated Germanyʼs commitment to a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. During a visit to the region, he urged the Palestinians "not to tear down bridges." Germanyʼs new foreign minister,Heiko Maas, made the comments Monday after meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian foreign minister in the West Bank city of Ramallah. He urged the Palestinians to consider including the United States in future peace negotiations, stressing that peace efforts without the US "would be difficult." Abbas dismissed Washington as a credible Mideast mediatorafter President Donald Trumpunilaterally recognized Jerusalem as Israelʼs capital in December.

73/2018 • 29 MARCH, 2018

Foreign Minister Heiko Maas calls for strengthening of UN The world needs ʼmore United Nations,ʼ new German Foreign Minister Heiko Mass has said

He is promoting Germanyʼs claim to be elected to one of the 10 nonpermanent Security Council seats. German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas met with UN SecretaryGeneral Antonio Guterres for the first time as Germanyʼs top diplomat in New York on Wednesday. He was also due to speak to US Ambassador Nikki Haley and representatives of African states. "We are living at a time when we need more United Nations, not less, as some people believe," Maas said as he arrived at UN headquarters, in an evident reference to criticisms of the organization made by US President Donald Trump. "We take responsibility andwe want to continue to take responsibility in the future," Maas said. He added that in the era of fake news there needed to be a way for reason and rationality to prevail. Maas said the German aim was to prevent crises: "We donʼt want only to turn to issues when itʼs too late and there is only the option to contain things. We want to consider how we can prevent conflicts from happening in the first place." Germany plays an active political, financial and increasingly staffing role in the UN," Maas said in a statement. "Not only are we the fourth-largest contributor to the regular and peacekeeping budgets, we

are also the second-largest donor to humanitarian assistance and official development aid. "Germany has become one of the largest Western troop-contributing nations to UN peacekeeping," Maas noted. On Tuesday, Maas had met with representatives from Caribbean and Pacific states, seeking their support fora non-permanent seat on the Security Councilfor the 2019-2020 term. He told them Germany gave a clear priority to protecting the climate in its candidacy for the seat. Israel and Belgium are also applying for the non-permanent Security Council seats as part of the Western European and other states regional group, but Maas does not see it as a competition. "We are not running against anyone," he said. "We are presenting ourselves as candidates for a seat on the Security Council of the UN." Germany last held a nonpermanent seat in 2011-2012. The UN members will vote to decide who gets the seats on June 8. The five permanent states, which hold vetoes, are the US, Russia, China, the UK and France. Ten other states hold non-permanent seats for twoyear periods, as a result of the occasional UN elections.

Cape Town water crisis: adapting to a water-scarce future Cape Town might have dodged Day Zero, but a new hyper-consciousness of water use looks set to be the new normal — and not just for the drought-hit African city. The water crisis is clear before youʼre even out of Cape Town International Airport. The bathroom faucets are dry, with soap replaced by hand sanitizer. After a historic three-year drought, Cape Town faced the prospect of "Day Zero" — the moment when the water supply runs too low to supply homes, and all the cityʼs faucets go the way of those at the airport. To avert the collapse of municipal plumbing, the city imposed a limit of 50 liters (13 gallons) of water per person per day, with sharp financial penalties for overuse. Day Zero wasinitially expected in April, but pushed back to June, July, and then August. Earlier this month, the city announced that water-saving limits had worked.

Siberian shopping mall fire kills dozens of people in Kemerovo Dozens of people are dead and at least 11 people are missing after a blaze at a shopping center in the Siberian town of Kemerovo. Russian authorities say the death toll was so high as "serious violations were committed." A fire tore through Winter Cherry mall in the Siberian city of Kemerovo on Sunday, killing at least 64 people. The fire broke out an hour before midnight local time and was brought under control on Monday morning. "There were 64 people killed in the Kemerovo mall fire," said the head of Russiaʼs emergency ministry Vladimir Puchkov, adding that six were still missing.

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