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DAILY NEWS IN ENGLISH

Car ploughs into London pedestrians in suspected terror attack At least three people were injured after a car smashed into the barriers outside the UKʼs Houses of Parliament in London on Tuesday morning. Armed police descended on the scene, removing the driver out at gunpoint. He was arrested on suspicion of terrorism. "Given that this appears to be a deliberate act, the method, and this being an iconic site, we are treating it as a terrorist incident," London Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu told reporters. What we know so far: A silver Ford Fiesta collided with the barriers outside the UK Parliament at 7:37 a.m. local time (0637 UTC).Photographs on social media showed the alleged driver in handcuffs being escorted away by heavily armed police.Several eye witness reports said it appeared the driver intentionally raced down the road towards the parliament building and failed to stop after hitting pedestrians.None of the injured are believed to be in life-threatening condition, according to London police.

Erdogan: Turkey can do without US electronic goods The Turkish president has repeatedly been photographed while using Apple products such as iPhones and iPads. And he made his now famous speech on the night of the July 2016 failed coup calling citizens out into the streets through Facetime, an iPhone app. But in a televised speech on Tuesday, Recep Tayyip Erdogan didnʼt want to be reminded of that while announcing a move to shun US electronic goods in the future. "We will boycott electronic goods from the United States," the president said,raising the stakes in a spat with Washington following the detention of US pastor Andrew Brunson on terror-related charges.

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Italy: Motorway bridge collapses over Genoa Italyʼs deputy transport minister has said at least 22 people have died in the tragedy

A motorway bridge, reported to reach around 50 meters over the northwestern city, has collapsed.

France to introduce plastic packaging tax Products that donʼt use recycled plastic will cost 10 percent more in the future, according to a government plan. The proposed initiative is one part of a series of measures to get the country to recycle all its plastic. France plans to introduce a penalty system for consumer goods that are packaged with non-recycled plastic, an Environment Ministry official said in a newspaper interview on Sunday. The French government has pledged to transition the country to recycling 100 percent of its plastic by 2025 to reduce the vast amount of plastic finding its way into oceans. How

France will promote recycled plastic Brune Poirson, secretary of state for ecological transition, told Journal du Dimanche newspaper that the government would introduce a series of measures: From 2019 products without recycled plastic packaging will cost up to 10 percent more.A depositrefund scheme for plastic bottles will be introduced.Taxes on burying trash in landfill will increase, while taxes for recycling operations will be cut.Superfluous and substitutable plastic products such as straws, cups and plates will be banned by 2020.The color of recycling bins will be standardized across the country.

Israel boycott impacts Berlin music festival as several acts cancel One has to scroll down the website of Berlinʼs Pop-Kultur festival to see the "offending" item, the emblem of the Israeli Embassy — one of six state sponsors of the three-day event, which opens Wednesday. After the embassy awarded three Israeli artists 1,200 € ($1,370) towards their travel and accommodation costs, the BDS movement — a global campaign to boycott Israeli products and services — demanded a boycott of the popular

music and arts festival. US musician John Maus, Scottish singersongwriter Alun Woodward, English musician Nadine Shah and her countryman Richard Dawson, the postpunk trio Shopping, and Welsh artist Gwenno seem to have heeded the call. Theyʼve cancelled their appearances at Pop-Kultur, justifying their decision with the current political situation involving Israel and the Palestinian territories.

Denmark to build controversial German border fence Denmark gave final approval on Tuesday to the building of a controversial 68-kilometer (42-mile) fence along the border with Germany to protect its giant pork industry from wild boar that could carry African swine flu. Critics say the € 11 million ($10 million) fence is a waste of money that doesnʼt work against a problem that doesnʼt exist, while environmentalists have raised concerns about its effect on the ecosystem. The fence may also be symbolic for the Danish right-wingers keen on hard borders and keeping migrants out. The 1.5 meter tall and half-meter deep fence will run along the entirety of the Danish-German border, from the Wadden Sea in the west to the Flensburg Fjord in the east.

Turkeyʼs currency crisis explained The Turkish lira crash is threatening to turn into a debt and liquidity crisis. DW explains how the lira got to this point. Turkey is in the throes of a full-blown currency crisis, with the Turkish lira losing nearly 45 percent of its value since the start of the year. The currency crisis threatens to plunge the worldʼs 18th-largest economy into a financial crisis and trigger contagion in emerging markets and Europe.

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