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POLITICS

Child poverty gap growing in Germany

Two-thirds of children of single parents in Germany will live at least a year in poverty, UNICEF said on Monday in a child welfare report that found widening health and educational gaps among German children.

Child poverty gap growing in Germany
An ad campaign on poverty: 'And you're out.' Photo: DPA

The report found that 10 percent of children raised by a single parent – whether mother or father – suffer sustained poverty.

“If parents have work, that is the best way the state has of preventing poverty,” said German family minister Ursula von der Leyen, a Christian Democrat, who presented the report alongside UNICEF officials in Berlin.

Von der Leyen called for a combination of child support payments and more childcare opportunities for children under the age of three.

German children growing up on the wrong side of the income gap require emotional and educational support as well as funding, UNICEF officials said, urging federal, state and local officials to work together on programs for needy children.

“Policy must overcome an approach that has been splintered into departments and put the best interests children first in all the facets of their lives,” the report’s author, Hans Bertram, said in a statement.

The report found that 15 percent of German children between three and 17 years of age display behavioural problems. Seventeen percent of children in that age group are overweight, according to the report. And more than 20 percent of German children between the ages of 11 and 17 years old smoke – more than in any other industrialized country.

UNICEF also found inequality in the German educational system – but found that even as weaker students were marginalized, gifted students were not given enough opportunity.

Meanwhile, children of immigrant families are less likely to go to kindergarten and more likely to attend a non-university track high school. Seventeen percent of them did not graduate.

ddp/dpa

CRIME

Aide to German far-right MEP arrested on suspicion of spying for China

An aide to a German far-right politician standing in June's European Union elections has been arrested on suspicion of spying for China, German prosecutors said on Tuesday.

Aide to German far-right MEP arrested on suspicion of spying for China

The man, named only as Jian G., stands accused of sharing information about negotiations at European Parliament with a Chinese intelligence service and of spying on Chinese opposition figures in Germany, federal prosecutors said in a statement.

On the website of the European Parliament, Jian Guo is listed as an accredited assistant to MEP Maximilian Krah, the far-right AfD party’s lead candidate in the forthcoming EU-wide elections.

He is a German national who has reportedly worked as an aide to Krah in Brussels since 2019.

The suspect “is an employee of a Chinese secret service”, prosecutors said.

“In January 2024, the accused repeatedly passed on information about negotiations and decisions in the European Parliament to his intelligence service client.

“He also spied on Chinese opposition members in Germany for the intelligence service.”

The suspect was arrested in the eastern German city of Dresden on Monday and his homes were searched, they added.

The accused lives in both Dresden and Brussels, according to broadcasters ARD, RBB and SWR, who broke the news about the arrest.

The AfD said the allegations were “very disturbing”.

“As we have no further information on the case, we must wait for further investigations by federal prosecutors,” party spokesman Michael Pfalzgraf said in a statement.

The case is likely to fuel concern in the West about aggressive Chinese espionage.

It comes after Germany on Monday arrested three German nationals suspected of spying for China by providing access to secret maritime technology.

READ ALSO: Germany arrests three suspected of spying for China

China’s embassy in Berlin “firmly” rejected the allegations, according to Chinese state-run news agency Xinhua.

According to German media, the two cases are not connected.

In Britain on Monday, two men were charged with handing over “articles, notes, documents or information” to China between 2021 and last year.

Police named the men as Christopher Berry, 32, and Christoper Cash, 29, who previously worked at the UK parliament as a researcher.

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