DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH
China to hike tariffs on $60 billion of US goods China said on Monday that it would increase tariffs of up to 25% on $60 billion (€53 billion) worth of US goods, starting on June 1. The "adaptation" was a "response to US unilateralism and trade protectionism," the State Councilʼs Customs Tariffs Commission said. US President Donald Trumplast week increased tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods to 25%and ordered US trade officials to start looking into imposing tariffs on another $300 billion worth of Chinese goods. Talks between the United States and China on a deal to end their trade dispute ended on Friday without a breakthrough. China had collected duties of 5% to 25% on nearly 2,500 goods before the latest hike. The Tariffs Commission did not specify which goods would be targeted by the higher rates.
Poland and Israel at odds over Holocaust restitution The Israeli government delegation had already arrived in Warsaw by the time Polandʼs Foreign Ministrycanceled bilateral talksplanned for Monday. "The Israeli side had worked toward a meeting with representatives of the Polish Foreign Ministry some time ago, and various issues were on the agenda," Polish Foreign Ministry spokesperson Ewa Suwara told DW. "Over the past days, however, the composition of the delegation has changed, and that led us to assume that the return of the property of Holocaust victims was to be the main issue." The spokesperson said the ministry does "not hold talks at all about the return of the property." Before World War II, 3.5 million Jews lived in Poland, making up 10 percent of the population. More than 90 percent of them werekilled in the Holocaust, and their property was looted by German Nazis or nationalized, as was most Polish private property, by the post-war communist government.
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Donald Trump meets Hungaryʼs Viktor Orban at the White House Orban has been welcomed at the White House by US President Donald Trump
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has been welcomed at the White House by US President Donald Trump. Trump said Orban had "kept Hungary safe" while Orban said he was proud to fight illegal migration alongside the US.
Ride-hailing firm Uber sees rocky start in stock launch Ride-hailing service Uber went public on Friday, and the event had been billed as one of the largest IPOs in the history of the New York Stock Exchange. The shares did not start the day well. Shares of Uber Technologies dropped about 9% in their debut on Friday, recovering later to just under 7% below the initial public offer (IPO). The stockʼs opening at $42 per share came despite the companyʼs strategy to price its oversubscribed IPO conservatively to avoid a repeat of Lyftʼs stock market struggles, following the rivalʼs debut in March of this year. The disappointing market response
needs to be seen against the backdrop of investor skepticism about Uberʼs ability to turn profitable anytime soon. About half a year ago, Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi was as honest as it can get and more straightforward than the bosses of big companies tend to be. In the presence of hundreds of students at Stanford University, he railed against all those investors, who had exerted pressure on the firm by criticizing Uber for being in the red. "If they want a predictable profitable company — go buy a bank," he said, only to add that "we are not going to have predictable profitability."
Man leaves €10,000 Picasso jug on German train German police are trying to help a man find a ceramic jug made by Pablo Picasso, after he accidentally left it on a train earlier this month. The elderly man was traveling from Kassel to Dusseldorf on February 15 when he switched trains at the city of Hamm and forgot to bring his precious cargo with him. Read more: How German was Picasso? The 26centimeter-tall (10-inch-tall) ceramic piece dates to 1953 and was an original crafted by Picasso at his Madoura workshop in Vallauris in the south of France, police said. It is part of Picas-
soʼs "Owl series" and is estimated to be worth at least €10,000 ($8,800). Police said the man reported the disappearance immediately after exiting the train but the bag with the jug inside it was already gone. Read more: Picasso and windows The shopping bag was made of solid cardboard with blue lettering that read "Neumeister — Alte Kunst — Moderne." Munster Federal Police, which is investigating the case, asked witnesses who might have seen the man "forgetting" the bag to report the sighting to them.
Sri Lanka imposes overnight curfew after anti-Muslim attacks Sri Lanka ordered a nationwide overnight curfew on Monday after Christian-led rioters attacked mosques and shops owned by Muslims in the countryʼs North Western Province. The curfew would run from 9 p.m. local time (1530 UTC) to 4 a.m. on Tuesday, police said. The announcement came after police fired tear gas to disperse mobs in several parts of the province in the second day of violence against Muslimowned buildings and mosques. Read more: Sri Lanka: Catholics attend first Sunday Mass in capital since bombings At least three shops were torched in the town of Hettipola. Overnight, a mob ransacked Abrar mosque in the town of Kiniyama. The government also temporarily banned social media networks and messaging apps after similar attacks in several towns on Sunday.
EU backs Iran nuclear deal as USʼ Pompeo visits German, French and British foreign ministers have met in Brussels to find ways to keep the pact alive amid Iranʼs partial withdrawal. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo made a surprise visit. EU foreign affairs chief Federica Mogherini said on Monday that EU member states continued "to fully support the nuclear deal with Iran" ahead of a foreign ministersʼ summit in Brussels. Washington has increased its pressure on the EU to isolate Iran internationally and walk away from the nuclear deal.
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