DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH
Top South Korea security officials talk nuclear in North The most senior South Korean officials to travel to the North in decades are seeking to ease nuclear tensions with the US. The delegation became the first to meet Kim Jong Un since the leader took office in 2011. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un hosted a dinner Monday for a group of South Koreaʼs top security officials, according to reports by the Yonhap news agency. The envoys traveled to North Korea looking to pave the way for talks between the nuclear-armed North and the United States. It is the first time Kim has met with South Korean officials. The 10-member delegation is made up of five senior officials, including national security advisor Chung Eui-yong and spy chief Suh Hoon, and five supporting officials. The group is due to return to Seoul on Tuesday. "We plan to hold in-depth discussions for ways to continue not only inter-Korean talks but dialogue between North Korea and the international community including the United States," said Chung, who is leading the delegation.
Turkey asks Germany to extradite Syrian Kurdish leader Salih Muslim The Syrian Kurdish politician, who faces terrorism charges in Turkey, was spotted at a pro-Kurdish demonstration in Berlin. Days earlier, he had been briefly detained in the Czech Republic on Turkeyʼs request. Turkey on Monday asked German authorities to detain and extradite Salih Muslim, the founder and former co-chair of Syriaʼs Democratic Union Party (PYD), the countryʼs state-run Anadolu Agency reported on Monday. Muslim was detained in Praguelast week on a Turkish arrest warrant while attending a conference on the Middle East.A Czech court later ordered his releaseon the assurance that he will remain in European Union territory and cooperate in any further proceedings in his extradition case.
54/2018 • 06 MARCH, 2018
Matteo Salvini: Italyʼs far-right success story The man who unseated the twenty-year leader of Italyʼs far-right party
The Lega Nord chief has said he has a "right" to govern after winning 17 percent of the vote in national elections. nitial projections on Monday morning put Italyʼs far-right Lega Nord (Northern League, or Lega) at 17.7 percent of the vote innational elections. The result exceeded expectations and thrust the party into the driving seat of aright-wing alliance forged by Silvio Berlusconi. The former prime ministerʼs Forza Italia took 14.4 percent. Legaʼs leader Matteo Salviniimmediately called for a right-wing coalition government, saying "the team with which to reason and govern is the center-right one…the center-right coalition has won." He added he was "committed to the deal" within the bloc that whichever party came away with the most votes would nominate the future prime minister. Whether or not he becomes prime minister remains to be seen but Salvini, 44, has already left his mark on Italyʼs farright. The Milan native took over Lega in 2013. His victory to become party leader marked a massive shift —founder Umberto Bossi had held the top jobfor nearly twenty years. Salvini quickly set to work transforming the party into a more mainstream form of populism that could appeal to voters outside of
Legaʼs core support in the northern regions of Lombardy, Piedmont and Veneto. At its inception, Lega called for greater autonomy for Italyʼs northern regions, and at times even demanded secession from Rome, who it called "the big thief." The party was able to expand its base by preying on the resentment of some northern Italians who believed their tax money was being wasted on the south, and by entering into several high-profile alliances with ex-PM Berlusconi. Under Salvini, the party has veered to staunch euroskepticism. It is especially critical of the euro currency, which Salvini has called a "crime against humanity." He also took the partyʼs hardline stance on immigration even further, suggesting once in 2009 that Milan introduce "train cars for Milanese only" following rising migration to the city from "non-EU countries." Salvini has also sought to distance the party from its origins as a northern regionalist organization. He founded the sister party Noi Con Salvini (Us with Salvini) to appeal directly to southern voters, and has proposed changing the partyʼs name from Lega Nord to simply Lega.
Guatemala vows to move embassy in Israel to Jerusalem The Guatemalan leader has thanked US President Donald Trump for "leading the way" on Jerusalem. But this wouldnʼt be the first time the Central American country has maintained an embassy in the holy city. Guatemalan President Jimmy Morales on Sunday announced he would return his countryʼs embassy in Israel to Jerusalem in May during an annual policy conference held by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). "In May of this year, we will celebrate Israelʼs 70th anniversary, and under my instructions,two days after the US moves its embassy, Guatemala will return and permanently move its embassy to Jerusalem," said Morales.
German energy executive severely injured in acid attack The finance chief of an RWE renewable energy subsidiary was struck by unknown assailants as he crossed a park near Düsseldorf. Police said they were investigating "in every direction." A German energy executive has been badly injured in an acid attack, his company confirmed early Monday. Bernhard Günther, the CFO ofenergy giant RWEʼs green subsidiary, Innogy,was struck as he crossed a park in Haan, a well-to-do suburb of Düsseldorf on Sunday.
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