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107/2019 • 11 MAY, 2019 WEEKEND ISSUE

DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

US imposes increased tariffs on Chinese goods, despite talks Representatives of the US and China ended their talks on Friday without sharing details on the results, with US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin describing them only as "constructive." Chinaʼs Vice Premier Liu He said the talks went "fairly well," according to Bloomberg. Hu Xijin, editor-in-chief of the Chinese newspaper Global Times, cited "an authoritative source," to report that "talks didnʼt break down. Both sides think that the talks are constructive and will continue consultations. The two sides agree to meet again in Beijing in the future."

Protests as farright AfD wrangles over Europe candidates Five hundred Alternative for Germany (AfD) delegates wrangled via procedural run-offs Saturday over who should fill its tail-end candidacy slots as more than a 1,000 opponents headed for the conference venue, overseen by police. Protesters, organized by local civic groups, had set out from the railway station of the 30,000-population Elbe River city of Riesa — once a key metal industry hub in communist former East Germany — bound for the convention center. Read more:EU in 2019, challenges and crisis Placards and banners carried by AfD detractors included the slogan "Racism is no alternative," playing off the partyʼs name. Police said they intervened when a roadside bystander made a Hitler salute. The antimigrant, euroskeptic AfD, launched in 2013 and now holding opposition seats in all of Germanyʼs 16 regional assemblies as well as the federal Bundestag, had begun its four-day convention on Friday in Riesa to complete its list of party members who could serve in the European Parliament following this yearʼs European elections.

EU Council President Tusk: 20-30% chance Brexit doesnʼt happen He said that Brexit has triggered a pro-Europe movement across Britain

EU Council President Donald Tusk says he will never give up hope that the UK will reverse its exit course.

Syrian girls attacked in Berlin, racism suspected A man spouting racist insults allegedly confronted two Syrian teenagers in northeastern Berlin and punched them in the face, authorities said Saturday. He hit the girls, aged 15 and 16, "with his fist several times ... before fleeing into a shopping arcade," police alleged in a statement. Both girls were taken to hospital for treatment. Read more: Racist or Islamist — lone-wolf attackers show similar patterns Hours later, a woman reportedly attacked a 12-year-old girl in the southeastern district of Neukölln. Officers alleged the suspect tried to tear off the girlʼs headscarf, pulled her hair and threatened

her with pepper spray. The woman also allegedly attempted to stab the child with a syringe filled with what appeared to be blood, police said. Officers from the state security police are investigating the incidents, which took place late Friday. The suspected hate crimes highlight tensions over migration in Germany. Last month, a 50-year-old German man was charged with attempted murder after he deliberately drove his car into foreigners in the western cities of Bottrop and Essen. Eight people were injured in the New Yearʼs Day attack, including a 4-year-old Afghan boy and a 10-yearold Syrian girl.

Mo Farah & Haile Gebrselassie in dispute over alleged theft Four-time Olympic champion Mo Farah and Haile Gebrselassie are involved in a dispute over an alleged theft at a hotel belonging to the Ethiopian athletics great in Addis Ababa. The Briton said he had money, a watch and two phones taken from his room, and that Gebrselassie did not help him. "I was just disappointed with Haile," said 36-year-old Farah. Gebrselassie, 46, responded by accus-

ing Farah of "blackmail" and "defaming" his reputation and business. Farah made the claims at the media preview event of Sundayʼs London Marathon. "Just to be honest, itʼs Haile who owns the hotel and when you stay for three months in that hotel, it was very disappointing to know that someone who has that hotel and that kind of support couldnʼt do nothing," said Farah, who had been training in Ethiopia.

Nigerian progovernment militia frees hundreds of children A Nigerian pro-government militia force on Friday released 894 children it had used to help fightan Islamist insurgencyin the northeast of the country, the UN childrenʼs agency UNICEF said. "(This) is a step in the right direction for the protection of childrenʼs rights and must be recognized and encouraged," Mohamed Fall, the UNICEF Nigeria chief, said in a statement. "Children of northeast Nigeria have borne the brunt of this conflict. They have been used by armed groups in combatant and non-combatant roles and witnessed death, killing and violence," he said.

German minister calls for immediate ban on plastic bags German Development Minister Gerd Müller has called for a ban on plastic bags in Germany, in part to reduce the exports of waste to developing countries. "The ban on plastic straws is not enough," Müller told the Augsburger Allgemeine. "Germany should not wait for Europe and should immediately ban disposable plastic bags." The CSU politician noted that some African countries had already banned plastic bags, "We must do what Rwanda, Kenya and Uganda have done."

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