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CRIME

Man arrested for kicking woman down Berlin U-Bahn stairs

A man who is suspected of kicking a woman down a flight of stairs at a Berlin underground station has been arrested, after video of the crime spread around the world.

Man arrested for kicking woman down Berlin U-Bahn stairs

Police detained the 27-year-old as he arrived back at Berlin’s central bus station on a bus from southern France, where he had apparently been hiding.

Ten days ago police released footage from late October showing the man walking up behind a woman at Hermannstraße U-Bahn station in southern Berlin and kicking her in the back.

The woman tumbled down the stairs, falling face first onto the platform below. She broke her arm in the fall and had to be treated in hospital.

On the video can also be seen how the young man and three associates walk casually away from the scene. Two of the men are reportedly his brothers.

Prosecutors are now weighing up whether to charge the man with attempted manslaughter or a lesser charge of serious bodily harm.

According to prosecution spokesman Thomas Fels, the suspect has already made a statement, but he would not give any information on the details.

The suspect, Svetoslav S. has three children back home in Bulgaria where he already had a criminal record for robbery and theft, reports the Süddeutsche Zeitung. In Berlin he worked in a restaurant and on a building site.

The case has unleashed a debate over security on the capital’s public transport, with the conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) calling for more CCTV to be installed.

But police figures show that violent crime in Berlin’s stations and on its public transport network has fallen in recent years.

BERLIN

Berlin offers to give away villa built for Nazi propaganda chief Goebbels

A lakeside villa built for Nazi propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels is being offered up for free to anyone willing to take on the daunting task of being responsible for its upkeep.

Berlin offers to give away villa built for Nazi propaganda chief Goebbels

The Villa Bogensee, which stands on a 17-hectare plot of land just outside Berlin, was conceived as a country bolthole for Goebbels in 1936.

The Nazi PR chief is said to have used the house for his illicit liaisons with actresses right up until April 1945, just days before he and his wife committed suicide in a Berlin bunker.

The villa has been unused since 2000 and has fallen into disrepair, with the city-state of Berlin struggling to find a new owner to take it over.

Stefan Evers, Berlin’s finance minister, told a local government meeting on Thursday the building was threatened with demolition.

“I am offering anyone who would like to take over the site to take it over as a gift from the state of Berlin,” Evers said.

The property is located in Brandenburg but neither the state surrounding Berlin nor the federal government are interested in such a ‘generous gift'” he said.

Germany has long struggled with the question of what to do with former Nazi sites as many are too complex to demolish, but leaving them intact risks them becoming magnets for a new wave of far-right extremists.

After the end of World War II, the Goebbels villa was briefly used as a military hospital before being handed over to a youth organisation which ran an academy there.

The sprawling villa still has charming original features such as wood panelling, parquet flooring and chandeliers, but the cost of renovating it would likely run into millions of euros.

Evers said he was still hoping for a new proposal from the state of Brandenburg to take over the villa.

“However, should this once again come to nothing, as in previous decades, then the state of Berlin will have no other option than to carry out the demolition,” he said.

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