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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Germany warns of travel to Turkey after minister threatens ʼterrorists,ʼ ʼtraitorsʼ The German government criticized Turkey on Wednesday after the Turkish interior minister threatened to arrest "terrorists" and "traitors" from Germany arriving at Turkish airports. The statement from Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu was "not helpful in the current situation," Foreign Office spokesperson Maria Adebahr said in Berlin. Read more: Turkey: Actors and actresses are Erdoganʼs new targets According to Turkish media, Soylu told an election campaign rally on Sunday that people in Europe and Germany who attend "terrorist organization" rallies would be arrested in Turkey. "In Germany, in Europe, there are those who attend terrorist organization events then go on vacation in Antalya, Bodrum and Mugla," Soylu said, referring to Turkish resort towns. "Now weʼve taken action against them.

EU court rejects Hamas appeal to delist terrorist status A top EU court on Wednesday rejected an appeal by Hamas for the bloc to delist the Palestinian group as a terrorist organization to allow it to regain access to frozen assets. Hamas, which seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007 after it won Palestinian elections, has been on the EU terrorist list since 2001. The EUʼs General Court ruling on Wednesday related specifically to the EUʼs decision to renew the terrorism listing in 2015. Hamas, which has armed and political wings, had argued that the EU made a "mistaken characterization of Hamas as a terrorist group," denied a right to defense and had "not substantiated by any evidence" to justify the terrorism listing. The Islamist group further argued it is "a lawful political movement that won the Palestinian elections and forms the core of the Palestinian government."

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EU conservative bloc lays out ultimatum for Hungaryʼs Viktor Orban EPP chief Manfred Weber says that can be avoided if Orban does three things

Viktor Orbanʼs Fidesz party faces suspension or expulsion from the European Peopleʼs Party, the largest political bloc in the EU Parliament.

EU hits car-part makers with €368 million price-fixing fine The EUʼs anti-trust regulator has issued huge fines to two auto-safety equipment suppliers for running cartels. Autoliv and TRW colluded to fix prices of car parts to Volkswagen and BMW. Two manufacturers of seatbelts, airbags and steering wheels were fined €368 million ($416 million) by the European Commission on Tuesday, in the latest antitrust case against car-part suppliers. The US, Michiganheadquartered TRW Automotive will pay €189 million, while Autoliv, based in Stockholm, Sweden, has

been fined €179 million penalty. The pair, along with a third supplier, Takata of Japan, were found to have colluded as suppliers of safety equipment to German auto giants Volkswagen and BMW between 2007 and 2011. Read more: VW and Microsoft put their heads together in the digital cloud Takata was not fined the €195 million the commission initially set because it blew the whistle on the cartel. All three acknowledged involvement and agreed to settle, and TRW Automotive and Autoliv having their fines reduced for cooperation.

Collective push against climate change more powerful than youʼd think 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

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."

Ash Wednesday — Germanyʼs day for beer and political insults For more than seven decades, the political culture of the Federal Republic of Germany has been characterized by remarkable consensus and compromise. Despite the best efforts of some of the far-right populists in the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, thereʼs no German equivalent to the acrimony generated by President Donald Trump in the United States. In the main, German politicians stay civil. But every Ash Wednesday the gloves come off, and political leaders are allowed to push the rhetoric to the limits of fairness — and sometimes beyond. Thatʼs been the case this year, too, in the centenary edition of the ritual. Here are some best zingers from the 2019 edition of the political roast dayGermans call "political Ash Wednesday."

North Korea rebuilding rocket test site: report North Korea has started restoring part ofa long-range rocket launch site it dismantled last year, according to a report published on Wednesday by Washington-based think tank 38 North. Satellite evidence suggests that work had begun at the Sohae Satellite Launching Station in the run-up toa summit in Vietnam between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump, 38 North said.

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