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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Berlin airport plans ʼsoft launchʼ without main terminal building

292/2017 • 14, DECEMBER 2017

Brussels decries ʼunacceptableʼ remarks by David Davis Brexit:

Berlin International Airportʼs chief hopes to save the country from further embarassment with his "BER Lite" project. The plan would see the airport open "metal boxes" instead of the elegantly designed main terminal. The firm behind Berlinʼs beleaguered new international airportconfirmed to Deutsche Welle on Tuesday its latest gambit to save what has become perhaps Germanyʼs longest-running joke and national embarrassment – a "soft launch" without the main terminal at Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER). As first reported by Spiegel, the newest BER Director, Engelbert Lütke Daldrup, is set to present his "BER Lite" plan to the companyʼs supervisory board on Friday. Lütke Daldrup is the fourth leader tasked with rescuing the project, which has missed successive opening dates in remarkable fashion since 2011.

US state of Alabama to vote in controversial special election Alabama is set to cast a ballot in a special election that pits accused pedophile Roy Moore against Democrat Doug Jones. Polls suggest the race will be tighter than expected in a state that is heavily Republican. The US state of Alabama was set to vote in aspecial Senate raceon Tuesday that has underscored how deeply divided American politics have become. The race pitsRepublican Roy Moore(above), who has been accused of sexually harassing and assaulting multiple underage girls in the 1970s, against Doug Jones, a Democrat in a deeply Republican state. Polls from different sources have varied greatly, with some giving Moore a tenpoint lead and others calling Jones as the prospective winner.

Brussels will insist that the UKʼs separation agreement be made legally binding after Brexit Minister David Davis suggested it was merely a "statement of intent." Davis has been accused of undermining trust. Guy Verhofstadt, the European Parliamentʼs Brexit coordinator, said on Tuesday that EU leaders would seek to make theBrexit divorce terms agreed with the UKlast week legally binding. The move comes after by Britainʼs Brexit Minister David Davis said in a Sunday interview that last weekʼs deal to complete the first phase of negotiations were a "statement of intent" rather than "legally enforceable." British Prime Minister Theresa May, eager to move onto the second phase of negotiations and open talks on future relations, agreed to keep "full alignment" with EUʼs single market regulations that avoid a hard border between Irelandʼs north and south. The British government also agreed to make concessions on the UKʼs so-called Brexit divorce bill and citizensʼ rights. However, in the House of Commons on Monday, May also said that the UKʼs agreement to

pay a reported €40-45 billion ($47-52 billion) as part of the Brexit divorce billwas only "on the table in the context of us agreeing the partnership for the future... If we donʼt agree that partnership, then this offer is off the table." May, answering questions from euroskeptics in her own Conservative party, said that "nothing is agreed until everything is agreed." Although Davis insisted on Monday that his remarks were taken out of context, the Brexit minister nevertheless raised sufficient fears in Dublin and Brussels that the UK could be prepared to pull away from the pledges it made in Brussels last week. Verhofstadt called the Brexit secretaryʼs remarks "unacceptable," and posted photos of two proposed amendments seeking to hold the UK legally accountable to its agreements. The European Parliament is due to vote on the motion later in the week.

Refugee helpers in Germany sued for helping refugees German refugee helpers who guaranteed the living costs of Syrian refugees are being forced to pay back costs by job centers. Refugee organizations say people are being punished for showing humanity. A administrative court in the central German city of Giessen on Tuesday heard the cases of three refugee helpers who signed declarations guaranteeing the living costs of Syrian refugees — estimated at around €700 ($825) per month per refugee for a maximum of three years. The cases are part of a series in Germany in which social welfare authorities are demanding money from guarantors even after the asylum seekers have been granted residency rights and refugee status. In a ruling made last Friday, a court in Münster declared that William Eichouh would have to pay what he estimated at over €30,000 in back payments for unemployment benefits paid to two Syrians (his brother and sister-in-law) who had their asylum accepted within four months of their arrival.

German tractor driver mows down six speed cameras One manʼs late night ride on his tractor could end up costing him big, after German police say he drove over six different speed cameras. Authorities estimated that the damages could run into hundreds of thousands. Drivers in the small western German town of Gernsheim woke up to a curious sight on Tuesday, after six of the townʼs radar-trap speed cameras were uprooted and crushed the night before. Pictures of the damaged speed cameras showed the gray cylinders ripped off their bases, dented significantly, or uprooted from their cement foundations.

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