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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

AfD regional leader Andre Poggenburg resigns following anti-Turkish speech Andre Poggenburg sparked nationwide disgust after comparing Germans of Turkish origin as "camel drivers." His planned resignation follows a formal censure by his party. The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party announced Thursday that a high-profile regional leader will resign from his post at the end of March. Andre Poggenburg is the head of the party in the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt. He prompted an outcry in mid-February after describing people of Turkish origin in Germany as "camel drivers" and "caraway seed traders" in a speech to AfD supporters.

Refugee children making a new life in Germany Hailing from Syria, Afghanistan and Eastern Europe, they attend the same integration class in their new home. Despite different backgrounds, these high school students all have one thing in common: motivation to succeed. "I have been in Germany for two years. I took off on foot, then someone gave me a ride in their car, after that I continued by bus and train and then finally on foot again. In Austria, a friend and I simply boarded a train to Munich. I couldnʼt speak any German." The events that Aziz Ahmad Noori is referring to took place two years ago. He was 15 at the time. He fled Afghanistan – fled violence – without his parents.Aziz is typical of the kind of young people enrolled inintegration coursesat Bertha von Suttner High School. Most have fled difficult circumstances on their own and managed to get through it all. Aziz currently lives in a boarding house. He feels lucky to have the opportunity to attend school. His aim is to earn his diploma and graduate.

59/2018 • 12 MARCH, 2018

Franceʼs National Front leader Marine Le Pen proposes rebranding as ʼRassemblement Nationalʼ She has tried to capitalize on a newfound visibility after her nearsuccess at the presidential election

The far-right party must transform into a "rallying point to form a majority," Le Pen said at a party congress. French far-right leader Marine Le Pen on Sunday proposed renaming the National Front (FN) party to "Rassemblement National," which translates as National Rally or National Union. "This name, National Front, bears an epic and glorious history," Le Pen said during a two-day party congress in the northern French city of Lille, but she added that it was a "psychological hurdle" for many in France. The far-right leader has tried to capitalize on its newfound visibility by rebranding the party and shaking off its troublesome history of anti-Semitism. She said the party was capable of governing "in the eyes of all" and needed to transform itself into a "rallying point to form a majority." In order for the name change to go ahead, a majority of party members will have to back it in a mail-in vote. Last year, Le Pen made it to the run-off vote in the French presidential election, in which she won 34 percent of the vote and lost out to centrist upstart Emmanuel Macron. Le Pen was re-

elected to serve as FN leader for a third term in a postal vote, the results of which were announced on Sunday. She was the only candidate. Nearly 80 percent of FN members voted on Sunday to banish the partyʼs firebrandfounder Jean-Marie Le Penonce and for all. Severing ties with Jean-Marie, Marie Le Penʼs father, was approved by party members, in addition to several new bylaws, on the second day of the FNʼs congress in Lille. Jean-Marie, who founded the FN in 1972, did not attend the congress. He wasexpelled from the party in 2015for making anti-Semitic remarks but had maintained his position as the partyʼs honorary president for life. The new bylaw does away with the position of president for life. His multiple convictions for racism and antiSemitism have complicated efforts by his daughter to clean up the partyʼs image in a bid to broaden its support among French votersdisillusioned with the countryʼs mainstream parties.

Donald Trump set to sign executive order on steel import tariff Hours ahead of the signing of trade tariffs on steel imports, President Trump has insisted he doesnʼt want a trade war. Washington is set to soften the blow of its new penalties with exemptions for certain countries. Top executives from the US industrial sector will be at the White House on Thursday afternoon when US President Donald Trump signs an executive order imposing tariffs on imported steel and aluminum. Trumpʼs main trade advisor Peter Navarro told US TV channel Fox Business that the new penalties would be signed off by president in a ceremony at the Oval Office at 3.30 p.m. local time (2030 UTC), and then take effect within 10 to 15 days. But in a sign of a softening of the billionaireʼs latest protectionist policy, Navarro confirmed some neighboring countries would be exempted from the duties.

Turkey jails dozens of journalists A year and eight months after a failed coup, Ankara has shown no sign of deescalating its crackdown on critical journalists. The 25 reporters were convicted on trumped-up terror charges. Turkey sentenced 25 journalists to prison terms ranging from three years to seven and half years on Thursday. The defendants were accused of "knowingly and willingly" aiding exiled cleric Fethullah Gulen, who has been blamed by Ankara for the failed coup attempt in Turkey in July 2016.

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