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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Chinese investments in Europe take a dive A study published Tuesday by consultancy EY shows that Chinaʼs mergers and acquisitions in Europe dipped by 21 percent last yearwith a total of 196 M&A deals registered in 2018. In Germany alone, the number of investment deals sank from 54 to 35 last year. The decline in Chinese investment activities on the Continent was particularly dramatic in the second half of 2018 when the number of acquisitions decreased by 26 percent, and the number of investments in Germany plunged by a staggering 60 percent. There were only 10 Chinese transactions in Germany in the final six months of last year, with the number of takeovers hitting low levels last seen in the first half of 2013.

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Pope Francisʼ UAE trip a historic milestone Francisʼ trip to the United Arab Emirates has given new hope to interfaith dialogue

Russia to build midrange nuclear missiles after INF treaty withdrawal

Draghi: Eurozone faces economic downturn, more stimulus needed

The defense secretaryʼs statement follows a decision by the United States last weekto suspend obligationsto theINF Treaty, a bilateral arms agreement banned ground-launched missiles with a range of 500 to 5,500 kilometers (310 to 3,410 miles). The US has claimed Russia had violated the treaty, which former Soviet and US Presidents Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan agreed to in 1987. Russia, who denied the US allegations, responded to the US pullout by withdrawing from the treatyas well. Shoigu said Tuesday that such mid-range missiles must now be designed, insisting that Russia take "tit-for-tat measures." He also accused the US of seeking to make "ground-based missiles with a range capability of over 500 kilometers."

Collective push against climate change more powerful than youʼd think

It is the first time the pope has ever visited the Arabian Peninsula, the birthplace of Islam.

European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi has warned that weaker growth in the global economy will continue to be felt in Europe. The ECB, which kept key interest rates on hold, is unlikely to raise them until the summer. The head of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi, on Thursday said the bank was ready to "adjust all of its instruments" if the economy runs into serious trouble and warned that risks "have moved to the down-

Peter Kalmus sits outside Californiaʼs Pasadena City Hall in his electric car. His sons, aged 10 and 12, are on steps of the grand building, waving signs with the slogans: "School strike for climate" and "Adults, act like it!" Kalmusʼ Tesla is just the kind of luxury youʼd expect a climate scientist at NASAʼs jet propulsion laboratory to have. But he doesnʼt exactly live a

side." Draghi blamed "the persistence of uncertainties related to geopolitical factors and the threat of protectionism, vulnerabilities in emerging markets and financial market volatility," hinting atcontinuing worries of the US-China trade conflictand Brexit, among other issues. "The near-term growth momentum is likely to be weaker than previously expected," he said, before insisting that the ECB was "not out of instruments" to face any economic headwinds.

lavish lifestyle. Actually, he says, he usually cycles. He hasnʼt been on a plane since 2012, and he eats a vegetarian diet. As someone who works in climate science, Kalmus feels thereʼs no excuse not to reduce his carbon footprint. "This is an urgent crisis," he says. "Those of us who understand that should act like itʼs an urgent crisis."

Greece: Turkish coup suspects ʼnot welcome,ʼ but Athens must respect judiciary Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said Tuesday that coup suspects are "not welcome" in Greece, but the case regarding eight Turkish servicemen who fled the country after a failed 2016 coup attempt on Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is a judiciary matter. "On the thorny issue of the eight soldiers, Greece respects the decisions delivered by the judiciary," Tsipras said in Ankara after meeting with Erdogan. "Coup plotters are not welcome in Greece, however what is more important is to strengthen our cooperation on the sector of security." The soldiers,who fled to Greece seeking asylum, have been a source of tension between the two Aegean Sea neighbors in recent years. But Tsipras said Greece and Turkey have agreed to deescalate tensions and initiate confidence building measures.

Germany reveals plan to stop foreign takeovers Germanyʼs economy minister, Peter Altmaier, on Tuesday officially launched a controversial plan aimed at developing the countryʼs industrial sector and increasing its international competitiveness in technology and innovation. Though it was the first time Altmaier fully detailed the "National Industry Strategy 2030," some key points had previously been revealed the German media the previous week, prompting the minister to take the defensive against claims of protectionism and intrusive state intervention.

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