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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Indonesia says 5,000 now missing after quake and tsunami The number of people believed missing afterearthquakes and a tsunami hit Indonesiaʼs Sulawesi islandlate last month has risen dramatically to 5,000, the countryʼs disaster management agency said on Sunday. The agency said it had so far recovered 1,763 bodies as the death toll from the 7.5-magnitude earthquake continues to rise. Rescuers continued to search for victims on Sunday with little hope of finding survivors 10 days after the September 28 disaster, but authorities said efforts to retrieve bodies would end on October 11. Read more: Indonesia quake: ʼTsunami warning system needs improvementʼ

Rome warns Germany not to deport migrants back to Italy

German news agency DPA has learnt that authorities in the southern German state of Bavaria were planning to start deporting large groups of migrants back to Italy. According to the European Unionʼs Dublin Regulation, the cases of asylum-seekers must be processed at their point of entry into the 28-nation bloc. As a German border state, Bavaria is a point of entry into Germany from other European nations. DPA said it was unclear whether German authorities in Bavaria would go ahead with deportations amid rising tensions with Rome over the migrant issue. The flights would normally have to be accompanied by federal police officers, and would thus have to be coordinated with Berlin.

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Wife of Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu goes on trial for fraud Both Netanyahus deny any wrongdoing

The wife of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Sara, is being tried on charges of misusing state funds for buying private meals.

Amazon raises US minimum hourly wage to $15, as German union calls strike The worldʼs second largest company said it would advocate for minimum wage increases in the US. Amazon has been under fire from workersʼ groups for its low pay and poor working conditions. Giving in to criticism over its low wages and poor working conditions, Amazon announced on Tuesday it would raise its minimum wage for US employees from $11 to $15 (€13) per hour from next month. Amazon had been under pressure from labor and political groups in the US to improve wages and conditions, as the companyʼs market value reached $1 trillion. "We listened to our critics, thought hard about what we wanted to do, and decided we want to lead," saidfounder

and CEO Jeff Bezos. Amazon said it would encourage other large US employers to follow its lead. Its lowest pay will now surpass that of its closest US rivals at Walmart Inc. and Target Corp, the latter having promised to raise its lowest wage to $15 by 2020. "We intend to advocate for a minimum wage increase that will have a profound impact on the lives of tens of millions of people and families across this country," Jay Carney, Amazonʼs head of global corporate affairs, said in the statement. US Senator Bernie Sanders, an Amazon foe who has led the campaign for higher wages in the US, celebrated the companyʼs decision, saying Bezos and Amazon were "now leading the way."

Brandenburg Gate crowns itself with street art installation As everywhere in the world where JR is active with his photomontages, he works with the glances of others. People mostly look from walls and fences. This time they look down from the Brandenburg Gate. In front of it, huge figures, recognizable as GDR border soldiers, are positioned at a certain distance. It looks like a 3D effect. The French street art artist JR is designing this oversized installation for the three-day festival on the occasion of German Unity Day in

Berlin. The artist used one of the legendary photos from the fall of the Berlin Wall night in November 1989 as a basis for his installation: celebrating Berliners sit and dance on the wall while border guards stand there looking at them. In Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the 35-year-old artist already stuck oversized pairs of eyes on the Favela Morro da Providencia; he also installed huge portraits of Israelis and Palestinians on the border wall between Israel and Palestine.

Deadly earthquake hits Haiti At least 14 people have died after a 5.9-magnitude earthquake struck just off the northwest coast of Haiti late on Saturday. Authorities said more than 100 people were injured when several buildings collapsed. The quakeʼs epicenter was about 20 kilometers (12 miles) west-northwest of the coastal town of Port-de-Paix at a depth of 11.7 kilometers, according to the US Geological Survey. It was felt as far away as the capital, Port-auPrince. At least seven people were reported to have been killed in Port-dePaix, and another four in and around the town of Gros-Morne further to the south. President Jovenel Moise called on Haitians to "remain calm" amid reports of panic in several places in the north.

Eastern Europeans filling hundreds of thousands of new German jobs Every second job being created in Germany is being filled by a foreigner, according to Federal Employment Agency (BA) figures. The number of people registered as employed in July was 700,000 more than in the previous year, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung reported, using the BA figures. Of that number, Germans filled 330,000 positions and foreigners 370,000. Read more: Germanyʼs planned immigration law – what you need to know In total, there are currently about 1.5 million registered employees from Eastern Europe working in Germany, including 422,000 Poles and 349,000 Romanians.

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