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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Paul Manafort gets 3.5 more years in prison on conspiracy charges US District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson sentenced former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort to 73 months, or just over six years, in prison Wednesday. Manafort was on trial in Washington DC, facing two charges of conspiracy against the United States related to his work as a lobbyist for a pro-Russian Ukrainian political party. Each charge carried a maximum sentence of five years. Manafort was given a 60-month sentence on the first count and 13 months on the second. The judge did not hand down any fines. The charges, to whichManafort had pleaded guilty, were brought as part of Special Counsel Robert Mullerʼs Russia probe investigating Russian meddling in the 2016 US presidential election. Manafort will serve 30 months of the first sentence concurrent with the47month sentence he received in the state of Virginiaon separate charges of bank and tax fraud last week. That means that Manafort will serve a total of seven and a half years behind bars.

Brazil school shooting leaves children dead Two armed men wearing face masks killed at least six children who were on their snack breaks at the Raul Brasil school on Wednesday. Two school officials were also killed. A further 17 people, mostly children, were shot and injured in the attack on the school in Suzano, south-east Brazil. A number of them were in serious condition according to police. The attackers turned their guns on themselves and died shortly after the attack, police said. Their motive is as yet unclear. State police Commander Marcelo Salles spoke outside the school and said that in more than 30 years of service, he had "never seen anything like this, it was an unspeakably brutal crime." Security cameras inside and near the school showed children screaming and running away, looking for help.

62/2019 • 14 MARCH, 2019

After Cardinal Pell verdict, Catholic Church must reform It is time for the Catholic Church to reform itself

Pope Francis once made George Pell one of the Vaticanʼs most powerful men. Now, the cardinal is headed to prison for sexual abuse. It is time for the Catholic Church to reform itself, says dw. Cardinal George Pell, the Vaticanʼs third-highest ranking official who once served as the popeʼs finance chief, wassentenced to six years behind bars on Wednesday for child sex abuse. The Australian is the most senior Catholic to ever be convicted of such crimes. Pellʼs lawyers have appealed the decision but for now Pell will go straight to jail, giving him time to think about his deeds — just like his victims are forced to come to terms with what Pell once did to them. Indeed, for a very long time the Catholic Church refused to acknowledge cases of sexual abuse even existed. The trial against Pell has shocked and divided Australiaʼs Catholic Church, and society at large. Some argue his sentencing was much overdue, while others believe Pell is being used as a scapegoat to settle a score with the church. Some figures in Rome, meanwhile, have dismissed the accusations against Pell as "absolutely unbelievable," which smacks of cynicism and arrogance — an attitude that has characterized the Catholic Church for decades. Indeed, accusations of sexual abuse against Pell began surfacing many years ago butwere not taken seriously. Chief Judge Peter

Kidd said Pell acted with "callous indifference to the victimsʼ distress" and had been "breathtakingly arrogant." The conviction illustrates just how big of a sexual abuse scandal the church really faces. ndeed, the college of cardinals currently counts 122 men who are eligible to elect a new pope and thus leader of the worldwide Catholic Church, when the time comes. Pell is one of them. And so is the archbishop of Lyon, Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, who was recentlysentenced to six months probation for failing to report allegations of assault. Fortunately, Cardinal Barbarin wants to resign from his position. Meanwhile, the Vatican haslaunched a canonical trial against Pell, yet will wait until his civil trial ends before reaching a decision. Pope John Paul II made Pell an archbishop and a cardinal. Pope Benedict XVI later gave him a say in important decision-making processes in Rome, and in 2014 Pope Francis named him the Vatican treasurer. Pellʼs rise to power makes clear a fundamental problem with the all-male Catholic Church: outside criticism is ignored. That explains why some figures in Rome still dismiss the court case against Pell in Australia.

German wastedisposal workers lead league for days off sick Analysis of 14 million clients of German insurer AOK showed that wastedisposal workers with physically demanding jobs needed the most sick leave last year. They took an average of 32.5 days off work in 2018. Road and tunnel guards come just next on the list with 31.4 days off work on average, and industrial foundry workers come next with 30 days lost. University teaching and research staff took the fewest days on the list — 4.6 days on average. The AOKʼs Scientific Institute presented its report on Wednesday. "Every job has a specific health risk profile," the Instituteʼs Helmut Schröder said. "The companyʼs prevention measures must therefore always be adapted to the respective occupational group."

Nigeria building collapses ʼwith schoolchildren feared killedʼ Nigerian emergency services said on Wednesday that a building collapsed, possibly trapping schoolchildren inside. The Nigerian news station Channels TV reported that a school was located on the top floor of the building, adding it collapsed "with pupils feared killed and others trapped." Over the past five years, more than 170 people have been killed inbuilding collapses in Nigeria.

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