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German police ʼnot ruling outʼ terrorism in Cologne hostage-taking Police on Tuesday searched a flat in Cologne, as they investigate Mondayʼs attack and hostage-taking at the cityʼs central train station, with the perpetrator already in custody and severely wounded following his arrest. They said they were not ruling out terrorism, as multiple witnesses told the police that the suspect had claimed allegiance to "Islamic State" during the attack. The man is a 55year-old Syrian with a criminal record, officers said. The man remains severely injured in a Cologne hospital; a police spokeswoman said on Tuesday that she did not have any updates about his condition. Authorities have also urged the public to upload footage and photographs taken duringa hostage-taking situation to anonline portalas they search for more clues into the attack.
Teacher sentenced after asking pupil for nude photos A male teacher in the town of Salzgitter, near Braunschweig, was sentenced to 10 months probation on Tuesday for suggesting a female student, 14, send him naked photos to get better grades. The man, 37, was also ordered to pay a €5,000 ($5,800) fine. The man was also accused of telling two other female students that he would exchange better grades for a kiss. According to the local Braunschweiger Zeitung, the man was a teacher at the Gottfried-Linke-Realschule, a local high school in Salzgitter. The girl told authorities that she sent the man two photos of her because she was nervous about having to tell her parents about a bad grade. The suit against the man was brought after the school became aware of his misconduct and notified the authorities. School officials made it clear that the man is no longer teaching and is currently in disciplinary arbitration.
239/2018 • 18 OCTOBER, 2018
Obamaʼs former photographer throws ʼShadeʼ in new book Easily accessible
Pete Souza, the former White House photographer under President Obama, has released "Shade: A Tale of Two Presidents," a book filled with archived pictures that may induce nostalgia. Although pictures may be worth a thousand words, in the Instagram age, it is often the contrast between the image depicted and the few words accompanying them that tell the real story. Pete Souza, the former White House photographer during the eight-year tenure of President Barack Obama, knows that all too well. The man who accompanied Obama around the world and maintained unprecedented access to the 44th president of the US — Souza claims he only missed one day of work due to illness during that time — has become a master at pairing image with text. Beginning on January 20, 2017, Souza shuttered his official Instagram account documenting life with the president and started an account in his own name to post archival images from his time with Obama. Complementing his selection of images were short sentences or brief phrases making allusions to political events under the new president of the US. Without ever referring to the sitting President by name (though he sometimes dubs him "46 minus one," a reference to Trump being 45th Pres-
ident), Souza has used the captions on his Instagram account to provide commentary about the current state of US politics. With his biting, subtle statements, he has been, in modern parlance, "throwing shade." In doing so, heʼs won over two million followers on the social media platform. And heʼs taken that art to a new medium, publishing two books of images from the more than two million photographs he shot of Obama during his time in office. The latest, Throwing Shade: A Tale of Two Presidents, released in the US on October 16, 2018, relies on the juxtaposition of pairing images with brief texts, newspaper headlines or even tweets by Donald Trump as captions highlighting the contrasts between the two presidents. During the recent controversial confirmation hearing for Supreme Court justice Brett Kavanaugh, who had been accused of sexual misconduct, Souza posted an image of Obama meeting with his nominee for the same position, Elena Kagan. The caption read, in part, "And there was no need to plow her nomination through the Senate."
Sexual abuse and violence against women widespread in Europeʼs parliaments Almost half of Europeʼs female politicians and parliamentary staff members have at some point received threats of death, rape or beating, according to anew study published on Tuesday. This also included threats to either kidnap or kill their children. The findings by the InterParliamentary Union, an organization for individual parliamentarians, and the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe provide a snapshot into howwidespread sexual abuse and violenceagainst female government workers is in Europeʼs parliaments. As many as 85 percent of all surveyed women had at some point suffered psychological violence. In total, 68 percent reported they had been the target of comments relating to their appearance or based on gender stereotypes, while a quarter said they had been thevictim of sexual violence.
Could the Khashoggi case spell the end for Saudi Crown Prince bin Salman? With evidence mounting that Saudi Arabia is behind the suspected murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has come under increasing fire in the Western press. The New York Times and CNN have reported that the Saudi government is preparing a report that will acknowledge the death of Khashoggi, who disappeared after entering Saudi Arabiaʼs consulate in Istanbul on October 2, as a result of an interrogation gone wrong.
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