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TODAY IN GERMANY

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

More strikes take place at Postbank, Chancellor Scholz hails new EU asylum reform, and more news from around Germany on Thursday.

Postbank
A Postbank logo stands before Deutsche Bank's offices in Bonn. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Thomas Banneyer

Customers to be affected by strikes at Postbank

The trade union Verdi is picking up the pace again of the fourth round of collective bargaining for Postbank. On Thursday, three groups of employees are to strike simultaneously.

In addition to employees in the service units at the back office and the call centers, it is also calling on employees in the branches throughout Germany to strike.

“This will once again send a clear signal that all employees are behind the demands for a significant improvement in pay and an extension of protection against dismissal,” said Verdi negotiator Jan Duscheck in Berlin.

Strikes have already been taking place in the back office and call centres since Tuesday, but they are now being expanded to the branches in order to directly affect customers and send a clear signal, said Verdi.

The next round of negotiations for higher wages is set to take place in Frankfurt on April 16th. 

German Chancellor Scholz hails ‘historic, indispensable EU reform overhaul’

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Wednesday evening welcomed a landmark overhaul of the EU’s asylum and migration rules adopted by the European Parliament, calling it a “historic, indispensable step”.

The agreement stands for “solidarity among European states”, Scholz wrote on X, formerly Twitter, adding that it would “finally relieve the burden on those countries that are particularly hard hit”.

The EU parliament on Wednesday adopted a sweeping reform of Europe’s asylum policies that will both harden border procedures and force all the bloc’s 27 nations to share responsibility.

The parliament’s main political groups overcame opposition from far-right and far-left parties to pass the new migration and asylum pact — enshrining a difficult overhaul nearly a decade in the making.

European Commission President and German Ursula von der Leyen hailed the vote, saying it will “secure European borders… while ensuring the protection of the fundamental rights” of migrants.

“We must be the ones to decide who comes to the European Union and under what circumstances, and not the smugglers and traffickers,” she said.

READ ALSO: Struggling German Greens urge EU to reconsider asylum reforms

Scholz

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz speaking in Berlin earlier this year. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Michael Kappeler

Germany plans measures to help companies rebuild Ukraine

The German cabinet on Wednesday signed off on a package of measures to support businesses involved in the reconstruction of Ukraine, including grants and favourable interest rates.

“Ukraine needs more than just weapons to survive this war. It is also important that the economy continues to function and that the country can finance reconstruction,” said Development Minister Svenja Schulze.

The 15-point plan includes grants and loans for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in Ukraine as well as investment guarantees for German companies, according to a statement from the development and economy ministries.

It also includes plans for a national public lender in the style of Germany’s KfW development bank.

“We are already in talks with the Ukrainian government about such a funding institution,” Schulze said.

The new lender is set to evolve out of the Ukraine Business Development Fund (BDF), co-founded by the KfW in 1999 to provide low-interest loans for SMEs in Ukraine.

Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in early 2022, the BDF has helped around 40,000 SMEs to stay afloat during the war, according to the ministries.

EU rights agency says police racism under-reported

The European Union rights agency on Wednesday called for reforms “to stamp out racism in policing” across the bloc, including collecting data better to assess the problem.

People of different ethnic backgrounds experience racist comments, more frequent stops and even violence, the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) found in its first comprehensive EU-wide study on racism in policing.

Among its recommendations was the better collection of data. It found “most EU countries do not collect official data on racist incidents involving the police or they do not record them properly”.

“The lack of national data makes it difficult to fully assess the magnitude of the problem and design effective responses,” it said.

Only the Czech Republic, Germany and the Netherlands publish data regularly or upon request.

The report also found a lack of recruitment policies to improve ethnic diversity.

Germany’s Lufthansa suspends flights to and from Tehran

German airline Lufthansa on Wednesday said it had suspended flights to and from Tehran, probably through Thursday, “due to the current situation in the Middle East”.

“We are constantly monitoring the situation in the Middle East and are in close contact with the authorities,” the airline said in a statement.

IS suspects held in Germany for enslaving Yazidi children

Two suspected members of the Islamic State (IS) group have been arrested in Germany accused of enslaving and sexually abusing a pair of Yazidi girls in Syria and Iraq, prosecutors said Wednesday.

The Iraqi suspects, identified only as Twana H. S. and Asia R. A. , are accused of genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and membership of a foreign terrorist organisation, the federal prosecutor’s office said.

They were arrested Tuesday in Regensburg and the Roth district, both in the southern state of Bavaria.

The pair were married under Islamic law and were members of IS in Iraq and Syria from 2015 to 2017. During this time they held two Yazidi girls, aged five and 12, as slaves, according to prosecutors.

The Yazidis are a Kurdish-speaking group hailing from northern Iraq. They have for years been persecuted by IS militants who have killed hundreds of men, raped women and forcibly recruited children as fighters.

With reporting by AFP.

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TODAY IN GERMANY

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

Three people have died and two others are critically injured after a fire broke out in Düsseldorf, concerns over the funding of Berlin's €29 ticket and more news from around Germany.

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

Three die and several injured after fire in Düsseldorf 

Three people have died and several are injured following a suspected explosion and fire at a building in the city of Düsseldorf in the early hours of Thursday. 

At around 2.30 am, a residential building that included a shop on the ground floor on the corner of Lichtstraße and Grafenberger Allee in the Flingern district caught fire. 

Several parked cars, which had been parked in front of the shop, also caught fire.

A rescue operation was launched. According to the fire brigade, 16 people were treated by emergency services and taken to hospital – including two people with life-threatening injuries. Three people were found dead by emergency services.

The fire was extinguished during the night, police said on Thursday morning. 

Investigations are continuing. 

Fast food giants Taco Bell and Krispy Kreme coming to Germany

Two of the USA’s most well-known fast food chains are coming to Deutschland.

Taco Bell will start by opening ten locations in Berlin, possibly as early as July – with Krispy Kreme following later in the year.

Within the next five years, the two chains are planning to have anywhere between 100 and 150 locations all around Germany – with the first locations outside the capital slated to go up in Frankfurt.

Daily dilemmas of living in Germany: what’s the best fast food in Berlin?

German Police Union says €29 ticket risking security in capital

The Chief of the Berlin chapter of the German Police Union (GdP) is criticising the city’s government for planned cuts of about €32 million planned for the capital’s police and fire services.

GdP Berlin Chief Stephan Weh blasted the city government, saying that its search for the hundreds of millions necessary for the capital’s incoming €29 a month public transport ticket was coming at the expense of everything else – following the announcement of a list of cuts.

“This list shows it clearly to everyone. The €29 ticket is being financed at the cost of our security,” said Weh.

GdP Berlin says the cuts may mean less money to investigate organised crime or to replace aging police vehicles in the capital – to use just two examples.

READ ALSO: Everything you need to know about Berlin’s €29 ticket

German economy ‘showing signs of recovey’

The German economy is likely to pick up this year after a period of weakness but still faces significant headwinds, a group of influential experts said this week. 

The assessment from the government’s council of economic advisors chimes with other recent forecasts that predict Europe’s top economy is slowly getting back on its feet.

Last year output shrank slightly due to soaring inflation, a slowdown in the crucial manufacturing sector and poor demand from key trading partners, particularly China.

Despite continued challenges, the experts expect “the German economy to gain some momentum over the course of 2024,” said council member Martin Werding in the group’s latest report.

Growing overseas shipments, boosted by recovering international trade, as well as improving consumer demand on the back of rising salaries will drive the recovery, they said.

Nevertheless the experts expect only a modest, 0.2-percent rise in gross domestic product (GDP) this year before an increase of 0.9 percent in 2025.

This is largely in line with other recent forecasts, with the government predicting 0.3-percent growth in 2024.

Scholz ‘deeply shocked’ by ‘cowardly attack’ on Slovak PM

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said he was “deeply shocked” after Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico suffered life-threatening gunshot wounds in an assassination attempt on Wednesday.

“I am deeply shocked by the news of the cowardly attack on Slovakian Prime Minister Fico,” Scholz said on X, formerly Twitter, also calling for an end to violence in European politics.

Passengers urged to plan ahead over holiday weekend

The ADV airport association is advising travellers in Germany to leave plenty of extra time this coming weekend, as passenger volumes are set to be higher than usual.

About 2.5 million passengers are expected to travel through German airports over the upcoming Whit Monday long weekend.

READ ALSO: Passengers in Germany urged to prepare for crowded airports over holiday weekend

German court convicts stateless man over train rampage killings

A German court on Wednesday sentenced a stateless man of Palestinian origin to life in prison over a knife attack on a train that claimed two teenagers’ lives.

The accused, named by the court only as Ibrahim A., 34, had gone on a stabbing spree in January 2023 on a train travelling between the northern cities of Kiel and Hamburg.

A 17-year-old girl and a 19-year-old man who were acquainted with each other were killed in the attack and five people wounded.

Given the severity of the crime, the court, in its verdict also ruled out any early release usually offered after 15 years’ imprisonment for life sentences.

As well as being convicted for the two killings, the accused was convicted of three counts of attempted murder.

The man had arrived in Germany in 2014 and had several previous convictions, including for violent crimes, dating back to 2015.

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