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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

German headscarf ban for children met with mixed response One of Germanyʼs states is considering plans to ban girls under the age of 14 from wearing headscarves. The Islamic Council has criticized the proposal, but some teachers say itʼs a good idea. Germanyʼs Teachersʼ Association on Monday welcomed a proposal from the government of the countryʼs most-populous state North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) to prohibit girls under the age of 14 from wearing headscarves to school. "A headscarf ban would help, at least generally speaking, to undermine discrimination on religious grounds and antireligious bullying," the associationʼs president, Heinz-Peter Meidinger, told the mass-circulation daily Bild newspaper. He acknowledged that the reality may be different for older girls, but called for an end to the "deliberate display of religious symbols among children with religious backgrounds."

Münster attacker had ʼsuicidal thoughtsʼ The man behind the van attack in Münster reportedly left behind a letter detailing difficulties with his parents and a desire to take his own life. Several victims remain in critical condition. Police probing what led a man to ram his van into an open-air restaurantin the western city of Münster found an 18page letter in one of his apartments, according to the Süddeutsche Zeitung daily newspaper. In the missive, the suspect — identified as German national Jens R. — referred to "repeated nervous breakdowns" and "outbreaks of aggression," as well as a botched medical operation. He also wrote about humiliating childhood experiences, and anguish caused by serious problems with his parents. Police have not confirmed the discovery of the letter, but they did reveal that an email R. wrote to several people in March contained "vague hints of suicidal thoughts, but no indication he might endanger the lives of others."

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Mark Zuckerberg testifies to US Congress over Cambridge Analytica scandal Zuckerberg has been giving his testimony to a joint Congressional

The 33-year-old CEO told 44 lawmakers that the misuse of Facebook data "was my mistake, and Iʼm sorry." Zuckerberg has been giving his testimony to a joint Congressional hearing over the Cambridge Analytica scandal. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg apologized to US lawmakers on Tuesday, telling a Congressional hearing the company did not do enough to prevent the misuse of user data. Zuckerberg made the comments during the first of two highly anticipated hearings over Facebookʼs involvement in the Cambridge Analytica scandal. What Zuckerberg said:"It was my mistake, and Iʼm sorry ... I started Facebook, I run it, and Iʼm responsible for what happens here.""Itʼs clear now that we didnʼt do enough to prevent these tools from being used for harm ... That goes for fake news, foreign interference in elections, and hate speech, as well as developers and data privacy.""It will take some time to work through all of the changes we need to make, but Iʼm committed to getting it right." One of two: Tuesdayʼs joint hearing to the Senate commerce and judiciary committees was the first of two Congressional appearances for Zuckerberg. He is set to testify in a second hearing on the scandal on Wednesday to the House of Representativesʼ

commerce and energy committees. The scandal: A whistleblower revealed in March that his former employer, Cambridge Analytica, gained access to the personal data of millions of Facebook users without their knowledge. The company used the information to influence the 2016 US presidential election and the 2016 Brexit referendum. Facebook said on Tuesday it had started notifying some of the 70.6 million users in the US andaround 2.7 million users in the European Union who were affected. Legal consequences: Facebook has been heavily criticized for allowing the breach and faces two federal lawsuits – one in California and one in Delaware — over its handling of user data. Facebookʼs bounty: The company has promised to shore up its safeguards for user data. On Tuesday, it announced a new Data Abuse Bounty to "reward people with first-hand knowledge and proof of cases where a Facebook platform app collects and transfers peopleʼs data to another party to be sold, stolen or used for scams or political influence."

Missiles fired at military airport in Homs: Syrian media Syria and its main ally Russia have accused Israel of carrying out a missile strike on a Syria air base that killed 14 people. It took place amid an international outcry over a suspected poison gas attack two days ago. Russiaʼs military on Monday blamed Israel for an early morning bombing raid on the Syrian governmentʼs T4 air base near the western city of Homs. It said Israeli F-15s had fired eight missiles at the facility. The accusations were echoed by Syrian state media, which reported the weapons were launched from Lebanese territory. At least 14 people were killed, most of them members of Iran-backed groups, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov described the attack as a "very dangerous development."

French police official held in inquiry into 2016 Islamist killing A policewoman is among six people detained in France over the murder of two police officers by an Islamist extremist, a judicial source says. Her daughter is also being questioned. rench investigators on Monday detained three men and three women, including a police woman and her daughter, for questioning over their possible role in a2016 murder of two police officersclaimed by extremist group "Islamic State" (IS), a judicial source says. The policewoman was already interrogated in 2016 in connection with the killings in Magnanville, west of Paris, but nothing was found against her.

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