DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH
Germany: 14,000 illegal immigrants crossed border by bus and train German federal police caught more than 14,000 people entering the country illegally on buses and trains in 2018, regional newspaper Rheinis‐ che Post reported on Monday. An internal federal police document seen by the newspaper showed just under 8,000 migrants entered Germany on buses and slightly more than 6,000 on trains. Most of the migrants were from Afghanistan, Nigeria, Iraq, Syria and Turkey. Some 6,000 entered on buses and trains from Austria, the border with the highest number of illegal crossings. The next highest number of illegal crossings was on the border with France and Switzerland. Passport checks on buses are set to become more difficult after the European Court of Justice ruled that Germanyʼs membership of the Schengen area prohibits bus companies from checking passenger identity papers.
German government rules out autobahn speed limit Germany confirmed on Monday the country will not beintroducing a speed limit on its autobahnroad network anytime soon. "There are more intelligent control mechanisms than a general speed limit," Government spokesman Steffen Seifert told reporters in Berlin. Proposals by agovernment-appointed committee on the future of mobilityto impose a 130 kph (80 mph) limit were recently leaked to the media. Seibert pointed out that the panel had not finished yet. Its proposals are to be finalized by the end of March.
24/2019 • 29 JANUARY, 2019
Israel has ʼrightʼ to defend itself against Iran in Syria Angela Merkel:
German Chancellor Angela Merkel expressed support for Israelʼs policy of targeting Iranian forces in Syria. She told Israeli radio that Germany was working to keep Iranian military units away from the Israeli border. German Chancellor Angela Merkel told Israeli public radio that it was "important and right" that Israel defends itself from Iranian forces in Syria. "Iran has policies that are threatening to Israel," Merkel told Kan Reka radio. Askedabout recent Israeli airstrikes against Iranian targetsin Syria, she said "Israel must secure its existence." Germany was also working to ensure that Iranian forces do not approach the Golan Heights near the Israeli border, she added. Israel, which rarely comments on its military operations in Syria, admitted last week that its warplanes had struck elite Iranian troops in Syria. After the strike, the head of Iranʼs air force reportedly said his soldiers were ready to "wipe Israel off the Earth." Israel fears that Iran, which, along with Russia, is allied with Syrian President Bashar Assad, could build up
a military presence near its border. Following a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in June, Merkel said Germany would use all diplomatic measures to "push Iran out of the [Syrian] border region with Israel." With Russian and Iranian help, Assadʼs loyalist forces have retaken large areas of Syria in recent years. Despite their unified stance against Iranian activity in Syria, Israel and Germany disagree on an EUbacked nuclear deal with Iran signed in 2015. Israel says the deal, which lifted Western sanctions in exchange for restrictions on Iranʼs nuclear program,threatens its security. Germany says the deal is the best way to avoid Iran developing a nuclear weapon. The dealʼs future is uncertainafter the United States withdrew from it in May 2018.
Germany aims to revamp crisis-hit care industry amid worker shortage Three German cabinet ministers appeared in Berlin on Monday to offer an update on the governmentʼs effort to improve working conditions for Germanyʼs chronically underpaid care workers. Health Minister Jens Spahn, Family Minister Franziska Giffey, and Labor and Social Affairs Minister Hubertus Heil launched their "Konzertierte Aktion Pflege" ("Concerted Action Care," or KAP) last summer, in an attempt to recruit more people to a deeply unattractive industry that for years has been dogged by reports of mistreatment by overworked care workers. The German government is pushing hard to make care work an attractive career prospect. As Spahn put it: "Today itʼs clear if a young person goes to their parents and says: ʼfather, mother, I want to become a care worker,ʼ then a lot of them would say, ʼoh God, how do we talk them out of it.ʼ Because the image out there is of work conditions that really are difficult."
US: Russiaʼs INF rhetoric a ʼlaughableʼ fraud The United States has warned that unless Russia abides by the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) by February 2, Washington will withdraw from the agreement. The INF treaty forbids Russia and the U.S. from possessing any medium-range nuclear weapons. US Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Affairs Andrea L. Thompson talked to DWʼs Zhanna Nemtsova about the U.S. position and the possibility of the new arms race.
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