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TODAY IN GERMANY

Today in Germany: A roundup of the latest news on Wednesday

Severe storms and heavy rain, German activists call on EU citizens to help protect abortion rights, Toni Kroos to retire from football and more news from around Germany on Wednesday.

A flooded street in Wuppertal on Tuesday.
A flooded street in Wuppertal on Tuesday. Photo: picture alliance/dpa/NEWS5 | Matthi Rosenkranz

Severe storms hit southern Germany 

More storms and flooding have been sweeping across the country.

The German Weather Service (DWD) warned of severe thunderstorms in the north and east of Bavaria on Tuesday night into Wednesday – with heavy rain, hail and gale-force winds. The districts of Lower Bavaria, Upper Palatinate and Upper, Middle and Lower Franconia were affected.

In the Upper Palatinate, masses of water swept away cars and people had to be rescued from their homes on Tuesday, reported local media. 

On Wednesday morning, police announced that numerous overnight calls had been made to emergency services, particularly in the north and east of Bavaria, due to the storms. However, the situation has eased since Tuesday. 

In the flood-hit regions of Saarland and Rhineland-Palatinate, no weather-related incidents were reported overnight. 

Storms are expected to hit the northern half of the country on Wednesday. 

It comes after days of severe weather and storms that have lashed parts of the country, with Saarland being badly hit. 

READ ALSO: Germany braces for more severe storms and heavy rain

Activists and NGOs in Berlin to urge voters to protect reproductive rights 

Activists and NGOs are gathering in Berlin on Wednesday to urge people to safeguard reproductive rights ahead of the EU elections.

On the heels of the recent German government commissioned report calling for abortions to be legalised within the first 12 weeks of pregnancy in Germany, activists from across Europe will be meeting in Berlin and calling on residents to sign up to the My Voice, My Choice for Safe and Accessible Abortion’ initiative which aims to secure over 1 million signatures over the next three weeks.  

READ ALSO: ‘Legalise abortions in first trimester’, urges German commission

The European Citizens’ Initiative allows European citizens to propose legislation. When an initiative collects the target number of signatures, the European Commission evaluates it. If approved, the commission may propose legislation, consulting with EU institutions. For “My Voice, My Choice,” hitting one million signatures would prompt the commission to propose financial support for safe and accessible abortion in the EU. 

Pro-choice advocates fear that abortion rights are under threat in Germany, especially with the Alternative for Germany (AfD), which supports tightening the existing law, rising in the polls in recent months. Campaigners are concerned that Germany will see its reproductive rights backslide as witnessed in Italy under Georgia Meloni’s government.  

While abortion is rarely punished, it remains illegal in Germany, except for specific circumstances including if the abortion seeker receives mandatory counselling, if the pregnancy creates health risks for the woman, or if the pregnancy is the result of rape. Paragraph 218 of Germany’s criminal code outlaws abortion, with possible penalties of up to three years in prison and terminating a pregnancy after 12 weeks remains illegal.

Luisa Neubauer, from Fridays for Future Germany, said “Since the publication of the results of the Expert Commission on Reproductive Self-Determination and Reproductive Medicine,  the debate about the urgently needed abolition of 218 of the German Criminal Code and access to free abortions in Germany has once again become the focus of public attention.

“However, a political implementation of the commission’s recommendations remains unaccomplished, especially by the traffic light government.”

PODCAST: Driving ban threats, Berlin tourist tips and will abortion become legal in Germany?

German football favourite Toni Kroos to retire from football after Euro 2024

Real Madrid’s German international midfielder Toni Kroos has announced he will retire from football after Euro 2024.

“My career as an active footballer will end this summer after the Euro championship,” 34-year-old Kroos, who won the 2014 World Cup with Germany, said on Instagram.

Before the European Championship, Kroos will have a chance to win the Champions League with Real for a fifth time when they face Borussia Dortmund at Wembley on June 1st.

The German team's Thomas Müller (l) and Toni Kroos after a game with the Netherlands in March

The German team’s Thomas Müller (l) and Toni Kroos after a game with the Netherlands in March. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Arne Dedert

He also won the Champions League with Bayern Munich before joining the Spanish giants.

Kroos joined Real in 2014 and quickly formed a formidable midfield partnership with Croatian national player Luka Modric.

Kroos has also won the Liga title four times and the Bundesliga three times with Bayern.

He announced he was quitting international football in July 2021 but reversed his decision in February after talks with Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann, who persuaded him to play on until the Euro 2024 on home soil.

German ‘prince’ at centre of alleged coup plot denies charges

The self-styled prince at the heart of an alleged conspiracy-fuelled plot to attack Germany’s parliament and topple the government rejected the accusations made against him as his trial opened Tuesday.

In all, six men and three women accused of belonging to or supporting the group face trial in Frankfurt in one of the biggest cases heard by German courts in decades.

Prosecutors accuse the group, which includes a former politician and ex-army officers, of preparing a “treasonous undertaking” to storm the Bundestag and take MPs hostage.

The defendants filed into the purpose-built, high-security court in the western German city ahead of the proceeding.

One woman, wearing a hooded jacket, hid her face from journalists’ cameras with a file, while the alleged ringleader, Prince Heinrich XIII Reuss, looked relaxed as he entered the room.

Reuss, a minor aristocrat and businessman, was in line to become the provisional head of state after the current government was overthrown, according to prosecutors.

French far-right splits with German AfD in EU parliament 

France’s main far-right party said Tuesday it will no longer sit in the EU parliament with the Alternative for Germany (AfD) faction, indicating it had lost patience with the controversies surrounding its German allies.

The National Rally (RN) said it was going to create some distance from the AfD afer comments made by the head of the German party’s list in the upcoming EU polls next month about the SS paramilitary force in Nazi Germany.

The head of the AfD’s list in the polls, Maximilian Krah, had said in a weekend interview with Italian newspaper La Repubblica that someone who had been a member of the SS was “not automatically a criminal”.

With reporting by DPA

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TODAY IN GERMANY

Today in Germany: A roundup of the latest news on Wednesday

Lufthansa to charge passengers environmental fee, SPD parliamentary group to campaign to legalise abortions, Turkish community expects hike in citizenship applications and more news from around Germany on Wednesday.

Today in Germany: A roundup of the latest news on Wednesday

Lufthansa customers face hike in fees with environmental surcharge

People flying with German airline Lufthansa will in future have to pay more for tickets. 

That’s because the company is levying an environmental surcharge on its flights. This is intended to pass on the costs incurred by EU climate protection regulations to customers, the firm said.

The fares will increase by between €1 and €72 depending on the flight. It will affect all flights departing from the 27 EU countries as well as the UK, Norway and Switzerland. 

Some of the hikes will come into force from June 26th for departures from January 1st 2025. 

Lufthansa said it couldn’t manage the costs alone for regulations, such as sustainable aviation fuels. 

It comes as the cost of flying in Germany has already shot up following the pandemic and a recent passenger ticket tax hike. 

READ ALSO: Is budget air travel in Germany on the decline?

SPD parliamentary group wants to see abortions legalised in Germany

The Social Democrats’ parliamentary group in the Bundestag is campaigning for abortions to be legal in Germany in the early stages of pregnancy.

Under current German law, abortion is illegal but tolerated in practice for women who are up to 12 weeks pregnant and have received compulsory counselling. There are exceptions, such as for women who have been raped or whose life is in danger.

Politicians in the centre-left party, which is governing in a coalition with the Greens and Free Democrats, want to remove abortion from the German criminal code 

The SPD parliamentary group is in favour of “an alternative regulation of abortions outside the penal code with a better protection concept for unborn life”, a position paper states. 

It comes after a commission set up by the government earlier this year called the current situation “untenable” and urged the government to “take action to make abortion legal and unpunishable” in the first trimester.

READ ALSO:

Turkish community in Germany expects 50,000 citizenship applications per year under new law

Germany’s new citizenship law, which will allow dual citizenship for all, comes into force on Thursday. 

The chairman of the Turkish community in Germany, Gökay Sofuoglu, said he expects a sharp rise in naturalisation applications from the Turkish community following the significant rule change.

Turkish and German passport

A German and Turkish passport held up in parliament in Kiel. Photo: picture alliance / Carsten Rehder/dpa | Carsten Rehder

“People have now internalised that there will be dual citizenship,” he told the Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland newspapers.

“And many are now applying as quickly as possible.”

Sofuoglu said he expects “50,000 applications per year” from this community.

However, processing will take time. In some cities, it is difficult to get an appointment at the immigration offices due to backlogs.

Applicants have in mind that they will be able to take part in the Bundestag elections next year once they have been naturalised, said Sofuoglu.

“I therefore appeal to the parties to realise that the applicants are potential voters,” he said, urging politicians to speed up the processes. 

READ ALSO:

Hamburg airport hostage-taker jailed for 12 years

A Turkish man who brought Hamburg airport to a standstill last year by taking his four-year-old daughter hostage was sentenced to 12 years in jail on Tuesday.

The 35-year-old barricaded himself and the child in his car at the foot of a Turkish Airlines plane in November, demanding to be allowed to board in a dramatic custody dispute.

The incident led to the suspension of flights at the airport in northern Germany, with questions asked about how the man had been able to ram his car through the security area onto the apron where the plane was parked.

The suspect was found guilty of hostage taking, among other things, a spokeswoman for the regional court in Hamburg said.

Ukraine slams calls to limit help for war refugees in Germany

Kyiv’s ambassador to Berlin has hit back against “populist” calls for Ukrainian refugees in Germany to find a job or go back to their war-torn home country.

Senior conservative politician Alexander Dobrindt on Sunday told the weekly Bild am Sonntag that Ukrainians should “start working or return to safe areas in west Ukraine”.

The comments by Dobrindt, the leader of the Bavarian conservatives (CSU) in parliament, added to a growing backlash in Germany against the help offered to Ukrainians fleeing Russia’s invasion.

READ ALSO: German politicians want to cut benefits for Ukrainian refugees

Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the German government waived the need for Ukrainians to apply for asylum, with refugees given the automatic right to stay in the country and draw unemployment benefit.

But Dobrindt and other conservative figures have called on Social Democrat Chancellor Olaf Scholz to trim the support given to Ukrainians.

The remarks by Dobrindt and others were “somewhat impersonal and very populist”, Ukraine’s ambassador to Germany Oleksii Makeiev told broadcaster Phoenix.

The German government says around one million Ukrainians have settled in the country since the start of the war, about 170,000 of whom have found work, according to the labour ministry.

Between 5.5 to six billion euros ($5.9 to $6.4 billion) have been earmarked this year by Germany to support Ukrainians still in the country.

Germany has sought to encourage more Ukrainians to find a job, while the labour market in the country is tight and many professions face shortages.

With reporting by Rachel Loxton

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