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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Brazil election runoff: Polls open, far-right Jair Bolsonaro favorite to win Voters are widely expected to pick the outspoken Bolsonaro whoʼs promised a strong hand to tackle endemic corruption. During the campaign, the ex-military man made sexist, racist and homophobic comments. Brazilʼs most polarized presidential election runoff in decades got underway on Sunday morning, and was predicted to see the worldʼs fourth largest democracy swing to the far-right. Polls opened at 8 a.m. local time (1100 UTC) for the countryʼs 143 million voters to choose betweenpopulist ex-army captain Jair Bolsonaroand his leftist challenger Fernando Haddad, a former mayor of Sao Paolo. Strong lead for farright contender Bolsonaro was predicted to secure 55 percent of the vote, against 45 percent support for Haddad, an opinion poll by Datafolha revealed on Saturday. A separate poll put Bolsonaroʼs support at 54 percent.

Germany accused of ʼmeddlingʼ over Eritreaʼs absent civil liberties Berlin has been accused of being "cynical" about progress made in Eritrea following its peace agreement with Ethiopia. Earlier this month, Germany criticized a lack of human rights reforms in the Horn of Africa country. Eritrea has told the Berlin government to "refrain from meddling" in regional affairs after the African countryʼs human rights record drew criticism in Germanyʼs parliament, the Bundestag. A statement posted on the Eritrean Ministry of Information website on Saturday described a speech earlier this month by German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas as "appalling." Maasʼ comments centered onthe signing of a peace agreement in July between Ethiopia and Eritreato formally end the two neighboursʼ 1998-2000 war.

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Polish president seeks WWII reparations from Germany ahead of German-Polish summit Both governments are set to meet in Warsaw, where reparations could take center stage

A Polish parliamentary inquiry found Germany liable for additional WWII reparations, according to President Andrzej Duda. Germany still owes Poland World War II reparations, Polish President Andrzej Duda has said in an interview with German newspaper Bild am Sonntag. Duda told the newspaper that a parliamentary inquiry had investigated Polandʼs war damages and its preliminary results showed that the countryʼs wartime losses have not been properly compensated. "It is a question of truth and responsibility," he said. Dudaʼs comments directly contradict Germany, which has repeatedly said that the status of reparations was settled in the early 1950s. Read more: Poland, Greece team up on Nazi-era war reparations demands The call could become a sticking point when government representatives from Germany and Poland meet for consultations in Warsaw next week. Dudaʼs call echoed the remarks of the previous Polishpresident, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, who in June said that his country needed to be compensated for the murder of

millions of people and the destruction of material goods that took place during Germanyʼs invasion and occupation of Poland during the war. Dudaʼs interview follows the Polish presidentʼs meeting with German President Frank Walter Steinmeier in Berlin earlier this week. Both discussed a joint commemoration to mark the 80th anniversary of the beginning of World War II in September. Read more: Opinion: Is Polandʼs demand for war reparations a threat to German-Polish relations? During his visit, Duda harshly criticized the far-right Alternative for Germany party and its attacks against Germanyʼs postwar culture of remembrance. "The fact that, until now, no German party has questioned Germanyʼs guilt has made the great reconciliation process between Poland and Germany possible," he said. "We owe our good relationship to the fact that we think about the past and that it represents a warning for us."

Georgia votes for president Polls opened in the country of Georgia on Sunday morning to elect the countryʼs next president, widely being considered a referendum on the unpopular ruling party. The hotly contested race has pitted former foreign minister Salome Zurabishvili, supported by the ruling Georgian Dream party, against opposition leader Grigol Vashadze, also an exforeign minister. Zurabishvili and Vashadze are among 25 candidates vying to win the largely ceremonial role. Incumbent Giorgi Margvelashvili is not running. The two leading candidates have an almost equal chance of being elected, but neither is expected to get the necessary 50 percent plus one vote to win in the first round, according to opinion polls published ahead of the vote. A runoff between the top two candidates is to be held by December 1. At 12 p.m. local time (0800 UTC), turnout stood at just 16 percent, the central election commission said.

Helicopter crashes near Leicester Cityʼs King Power Stadium A helicopter belonging to Leicester Cityʼs owner has crashed in the stadium grounds of the British football club. Fans lay flowers outside the clubʼs stadium, but there has been no official statement on who was on board. Fans and members of the public laid bouquets outside Leicester Cityʼs stadium, the morning after a helicopter belonging to the football clubʼs Thai owner, Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, crashed in the stadium grounds.

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