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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Mesale Tolu: I want to attend my trial in Turkey At the end of April 2017, you were arrested on charges of terrorism and detained until December 2017. Last Sunday, after the travel banon you was lifted, you returned to Germany. How do you feel? Mesale

Tolu: I feel good. Because, above all, I missed my home, my family, my friends and a feeling of security. You

201/2018 • 03 SEPTEMBER, 2018

Chemnitz, Saxony and Germany grapple with far right Protests in Chemnitz underline a stereotype of Saxony as the stomping ground of far-right extremists

were initially imprisoned with your young son. Then he was released. How was that for you? Do you want to talk about that time? Yes, because I need to process

that time, and to process it, you have to talk about. It was a very difficult time because my son was very young. He was 2 1/2 years old at the time. How can you expect such a small child to understand something adults do not understand? My son has been through a lot. Now that he is back, I realize he remembers that period.

German politician kicked out of state parliament for bringing baby The state parliament of Thuringia faced backlash on Thursday after one of its lawmakers was asked to leave the plenary hall because she brought her child. Madeleine Henfling, a state parliamentarian with the environmentalist Greens, attempted to participate in a vote on Wednesday while carrying her sixweek-old son in a baby sling. Thuringiaʼs state parliament president, Christian Carius, told Henfling that babies were not allowed in the plenary hall, according to the procedural rules. He added that for the childʼs well-being, parliamentarians should find suitable child care options. Currently, there are no child care options offered at Thuringiaʼs state parliament building in the city of Erfurt. The session was suspended for 30 minutes while the parliamentary advisory committee discussed the issue. In the end, Henfling was told she wouldnʼt be permitted inside the plenary chamber as long as her baby was with her.

Women increasingly drawn to right-wing populist parties, study shows Aggressive far-right protesterstook to the streets of Chemnitzthis week demanding authorities take a tougher stance on migrants in Germany. Most of those in attendance were male, but a few women could occasionally be spotted in the crowd. Indeed, most people tend to picture the prototypical supporter of Germanyʼs far-right PEGIDA movement andright-wing populist Alternative for Germany(AfD) party as angry white men. But thatʼs not entirely accurate,according to a new study by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation (FES), which is affiliated with Germanyʼs center-left Social Democratic Party. The report, which examines rightwing populist voters in Germany, France, Greece, Poland, Sweden and Hungary, found that women are increasingly drawn to right-wing populist parties.

EU migration debate – let the showdown begin There is some truth to that, but the eastern state isnʼt the only place violence against refugees has shocked Germans. Chemnitz, Freital, Heidenau: For many people in Germany, these places are inextricably linked not only for being in the eastern state of Saxony but also by the far-right extremists who have, sometimes violently, voiced their hatred there. The death of a 35-year-old German man in the early hours of Sunday — allegedly at the hands of two asylumseekers — sparked two days of protests in Chemnitz, with more planned for Thursday, that shocked many and led to another round of soul-searching over the reach of xenophobia in Saxony and the rest of Germany. Read more: Violence in Chemnitz: A timeline of events Jürgen Kasek, a Leipzig lawyer and activist, told DW he was not surprised by the events in Chemnitz. "Weʼve been seeing it for years. We saw it in 2015 in Heidenau. We saw it in Freital. We also saw it in Bautzen, though it was not of this magnitude," said Kasek, who was until recently co-chair of Saxonyʼs Green party. "Here we had the death of a

person. That is the starting point for people who think they have found an outlet. The issue is not to commemorate a dead person, but that pent-up anger and frustration need to get out." Far-right protesters in bothFreitalandHeidenau demonstrated against asylum-seekers being housed in local shelters and clashed with police in 2015. Eight people were convicted of crimes committed during the Freital protests and 31 police officers were injured in Heidenau. Bautzen has been the scene of numerous conflicts between farright extremists and refugees and gained nationwide attention after police tried to break up violence between two groups in September 2016. Marked by history However, if the issue is about finding an outlet for frustration, the question is whatʼs causing the anger. Eastern Germany lags behind the west economically, but researchers say that is not necessarily the reason farright extremism has caught on in the region.

Franceʼs Emmanuel Macron stands at the helm of thegroup that "supports immigration,"according to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban. He and Italyʼs interior minister, Matteo Salvini, on the other hand, are the ones whowanted to "end illegal immigration." This is just nonsense. France also wants to stop illegal migration, and Macron, through his much-criticized stance on immigrants at home, has shown himself to be anything but a supporter of immigration. But — at least for now — the fronts are clear in what could be the final battle over the topic that has come to dominate the era. At least we can all hope it comes to an end.

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