DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH
Childrenʼs tolerance of immigrants declines with age An annual survey of 10,000German schoolchildrenbetween the ages of nine and 14, found that three-quarters of those questioned were strongly in favor of taking in immigrants andrefugees from countries that are struggling with poverty or violence, according to the LBS Kinderbarometer (childrenʼs barometer) poll published Thursday. The study found that although the majority of children were clearly in favor of immigration, 10 percent were strictly against it. The study showed that as children got older they becameless tolerantand also that place of residence was clearly a factor in attitudes. Children from the populous state of North Rhine-Westphalia and the city states of Bremen, Hamburg and Berlin were much more open to immigration than children from the eastern German states of Brandenburg, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia.
Bangladeshi photographer Shahidul Alam granted bail Shahidul Alam, a 63-year-old, award-winning photographer and social activist, had beenarrested at his homein Dhaka in August shortly after giving an interview to television channel Al Jazeera. He had accused the government of extrajudicial killings and corruption. Not charged, Shahidul Alam has been investigated under a section of the law on information and communication technology on suspicion of spreading propaganda and false information. The charges carry a 14-year jail sentence if proven. Today the high court granted bail to Shahidul Alam after he was held in custody for 102 days. When the court granted him bail, it was noted that did Alam did not confess or admit to any of the allegations against him," Shahidul Alamʼs attorney Sara Hossain told .
261/2018 • 16 NOVEMBER, 2018
German prosecutors to investigate far-right AfDʼs Alice Weidel over donations The party received large sums of money from donors in Switzerland and Belgium
Prosecutors have begun a probe into AfD leader Alice Weidel over the alleged use of foreign donations to pay for internet campaigning. Prosecutors in the southern German city of Konstanz said on Wednesday that Alice Weidel, the parliamentary group leader of the farright Alternative for Germany party, was under initialsuspicion for breaching Germanyʼs strict party spending laws. Prosecutor Andreas Mathy told DPA news agency that his office had sent a letter to the Bundestag, Germanyʼs parliament, requesting the lifting of Weidelʼs parliamentary immunity. A formal investigation could begin as early Friday. Prosecutors are also set to investigate other AfD officials in Weidelʼs Lake Constance constituency. German newspaper Süd‐ deutsche Zeitung (SZ) and public broadcasters NDR and WDR reported on Sunday that the AfD branch in Lake Constance had received around €130,000 ($147,000) in campaign donations from a company in Switzerland shortly before the 2017 general election. Lake Constance is the southern German district where Weidel, who divides her time between Germany and Switzerland, lives with her partner
and children. Zurich-based PWS PharmaWholeSale reportedly said that its chief executive had transferred the money for an anonymous business associate. It sent the money in 18 tranches to avoid infringing German party spending laws. Germany restricts foreign donations from non-European Union countries to German citizens living outside the EU. Weidel said she had doubts about the legality of the donations in September and sent the money back. But the repayment only took place in April 2018, according to SZ, NDR and WDR. The total transferred was around €8,000 less than the amount Weidelʼs office had received. The local AfD treasurer who approved the repayment told DPA that she had "overseen" the absence of the remaining €8,000. She said she first became aware of the mistake when German media began reporting on the incident earlier this week. Late on Wednesday, it emerged that the AfDʼs branch in Lake Constance also received another large donation from Belgium.
UK Brexit minister Dominic Raab and others resign over exit deal UK Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab became the second of Prime Minister Theresa Mayʼs Cabinet to resign on Thursday. He followed a minister in the Northern Ireland office and preceded the later resignation of Work and Pensions Secretary Esther McVey. "I regret to say that, following the Cabinet meeting yesterday on the Brexit deal, I must resign," Raab said via Twitter. "I cannot in good conscience support the terms proposed for our deal with the EU." The previous Brexit minister, David Davis, resigned in July. Current environment minister Michael Gove was rumored to have been offered the Brexit ministerʼs post but was later reported to have turned it down.
PEN addresses the plight of writers in prison In many countries, writers and authors are the first victims of dictatorial rulers. November 15 is Day of the Imprisoned Writer – a day when international writerʼs organization PEN draws attention to the plight of people around the world who have been imprisoned or persecuted for daring to exercise their right to the freedom of expression. This year PEN has selected five cases that exemplify the oppression to which authors all over the world are subjected on a daily basis. You can find out more about these cases in the picture gallery above.
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