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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Polish PM condemns ʼxenophobicʼ attack on ambassador to Israel Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki described Tuesdayʼs attack on their ambassador to Israel as racially motivated. "I am very worried to hear of a racist attack. Poland strongly condemns this xenophobic act of aggression. Violence against diplomats or any other citizens should never be tolerated," Mowawiecki wrote on Twitter. Polish ambassador Marek Magierowski (pictured above) was sitting in his car on Tuesday when a man approached and "spat at him," police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said. The assault on Magierowski (pictured above), who was appointed to the role of ambassador in June 2018, comes amid rising tensions between the two countries concerning the Holocaust and Polandʼs World War II history.

Alabama moves to ban abortion, including for rape and incest cases The Republican-dominated Senate in the US state of Alabama passed a bill on Tuesday outlawing nearly all abortions, including in cases of rape and incest. The measure is set to be the strictest abortion law in the United States if approved by Republican Governor Kay Ivey, who has withheld comment on whether she will sign it. If signed into law, the bill would go into effect in six months. The legislation is certain to face legal challenges. Republican lawmakers and antiabortion activists hope the legislation will lead to the Supreme Court overturning its landmark 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision legalizing abortion nationwide.

111/2019 • 16 MAY, 2019

Eiffel Tower shines lights and offers snacks for 130th anniversary A visitor magnet

Parisʼ iconic Eiffel Tower welcomed 1,350 children ahead of a concert and a light show into the early hours to celebrate 130 years as the French capitalʼs tallest building. The Eiffel Tower, which communicates via Twitter to visitors, announced on Wednesday "A busy period is expected." The tallest building in Paris took over two years to build and was opened as part of the 1889 World Fair to mark the centenary of the start of the French Revolution. The 300meter (984-foot) high, wroughtiron structure opened to the public for the first time on May 15, 1889. At the time it was the worldʼs tallest building. The celebrations for its 130th year began on Wednesday with visits by 1,350 children to the first and second floors of the tower, known as the "Iron Lady" (la Dame de Fer), to take part in postcard workshops. They then went downstairs for "snack time" in the gardens below. Later, 500 environmentally friendly projectors are to feature strobe lights and lasers for a 12-

minute show to be held each of the next three evenings from 2200 UTC until the early hours. The show is to represent the history of the tower, from its beginnings up to the present. A concert is being held at 2000 UTC with French singer songwriter Jeanne Added who sings mainly in English. She won Best Female Artist at the major French music awards "Victoires de la musique" in 2019 where her album "Radiate" won Best Rock Album. The tower attracts up to seven million visitors per year and anniversary wishes arrived online, including from the Mexican ambassador in France: As well as celebrations, the tower has been used to express solidarity after national and international events. Most recently, it went into darkness to pay tribute to the victims of the bombings in Sri Lanka in April.

UN arms expert imprisoned in Tunisia on ʼfabricatedʼ charges After Moncef Kartas, a wellrespected expert on illegal arms shipments into Libya, had cleared security at the international airport in Tunisia in late March, several plainclothes security officers were waiting for him in the arrivals hall, according to his defense team. Few people knew of Kartasʼ travel plans, which had changed last-minute. But the officers "were clearly expecting him," Kartasʼ lawyer, Sarah Zaafrani, who is also his cousin, told DW. Ever since, he has been imprisoned on charges of obtaining national defense secrets and passing them on to an unnamed "foreign state or its agents," according to the English translation of the official decision to open an investigation, which DW has obtained. Espionage is a charge that can carry the death penalty in Tunisia, although it has not been enforced for several years.

ʼChristchurch Callʼ launched in Paris as Facebook limits live streaming for extremists French President Emmanuel Macron and New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern were in Paris on Wednesday to launch their ʼChristchurch Callʼ initiative aimed at curbing extremism online. Ardern announced the plan as the first stage of change as the two leaders appeared at the Elysee Palace. The initiative calls for limits on violent, hateful content and urges social media platforms to re-examine their algorithms.

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