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Germany to Provide €1 Billion to Bangladesh: Rizwana Hasan
Environment, Forest, and Climate Change Advisor Syeda Rizwana Hasan said Germany will provide 1 billion Euro to Bangladesh in the next 10 years, including 15 million Euro this year, to develop its renewable energy sector. She stated this on Tuesday (September 17). Both countries will promote knowledge exchange and cooperation with non-state actors like the private sector, research institutes, academia, and civil society, she said. The environment advisor made the remarks after a meeting with German Ambassador to Bangladesh Achim Tröster at her ministry's office here, an official release said. Rizwana said the collaboration will also involve small ethnic minorities, women, and youth, fostering a multi-stakeholder approach. She thanked the ambassador for Germany's continued support in environmental and climate matters. She emphasized the need for increased international cooperation to address global climate challenges and the importance of sustainable forest management. The envoy expressed Germany's commitment to supporting Bangladesh in its fight against climate change and appreciated the government's efforts in protecting the environment. He also highlighted Germany's expertise in renewable energy and offered technical assistance in Bangladesh's green energy initiatives. During the meeting, the adviser and the envoy discussed strengthening bilateral cooperation on environmental protection, river cleaning projects, and climate change mitigation. They also discussed potential collaboration on sustainable development projects and green technology adoption for tackling environmental and climate-related challenges. The meeting concluded with a mutual agreement to explore further avenues for collaboration, particularly in technology transfer and environmental sustainability projects. Source: BSS
17 Sep 2024,16:01

Germany bans right-wing extremist Compact magazine
Germany's Interior Ministry banned the right-wing extremist Compact magazine, it said on Tuesday. Authorities searched properties related to the magazine in four German states: Brandenburg, Hesse, Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt. The aim of the raid was to confiscate assets and evidence, the ministry said.  The ban also applies to Compact's subsidiary Conspect Film, and prohibits any continuation of previous activities. Why was Compact magazine banned? "It is a central mouthpiece of the right-wing extremist scene. This magazine incites hatred against Jews, people with a history of migration and our parliamentary democracy in an unspeakable manner," said Interior Minister Nancy Faeser. The ban shows "that we are also taking action against the intellectual arsonists who are stirring up a climate of hatred and violence against refugees and migrants and want to overcome our democratic state," Faeser added.   "Our message is very clear: we will not allow ethnicity to define who belongs to Germany and who does not." Compact magazine was classified by the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution as extremist, nationalist and anti-minority in 2021.  The Alternative for Germany party holds a demo featuring Compact magazine's Jürgen Elsässer and others to protest what they perceive as anti-Putin politics in Germany.The Alternative for Germany party holds a demo featuring Compact magazine's Jürgen Elsässer and others to protest what they perceive as anti-Putin politics in Germany. What is Compact magazine? The magazine's holding company is run by Jürgen Elsässer. It has a circulation of 40,000 copies and an online video channel, Compact TV. The company also operates an online store for merchandise, such as a coin with the image of Björn Höcke, the far-right politician from the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party who was recently convicted and fined for using a Nazi slogan. In 2020, Meta's Facebook and Instagram social media platforms removed Compact magazine's accounts over hate speech. 
16 Jul 2024,15:52

Germany arrests 3 for working as foreign intelligence agents
Germany's federal prosecutor says three people have been arrested on suspicion of working for foreign intelligence. The German Federal Prosecutor's office said Friday that three foreign nationals had been arrested on suspicion of working for a foreign secret service.      The three accused were said to have traveled to Germany on behalf of a foreign secret service to collect information on a person from Ukraine who was staying in the country. What we know so far Hesse state police arrested the three men in the German financial hub of Frankfurt am Main and applications for arrest warrants were submitted to an investigating judge. The three appeared in court on Thursday to be placed in custody ahead of a possible indictment. The three were said to have scouted out a cafe in the German financial hub of Frankfurt am Main, where the target individual was believed to be. Prosecutors named the three only as Ukrainian national Robert A., Armenian national Vardges I., and Russian national Arman S. Their full names weren't released in line with German press and privacy rules. A string of spying cases in Germany, involving alleged Russian agents, have garnered widespread attention.  Two Russian-German dual nationals were arrested in April for allegedly scouting potential sabotage targets on German soil. Meanwhile, a top-ranking officer in Germany's foreign intelligence agency (BND) remains on trial in Berlin on charges of treason for allegedly passing top secret information to Russian spies with the help of a co-defendant. An employee of the German European Parliament lawmaker Maximilian Krah, a member of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) was arrested in April on suspicion of spying for China. Also in April, three suspected spies who were allegedly working for China were also arested in Germany. The group was accused of seeking to gather sensitive information about German military technology through a front company.
21 Jun 2024,19:35

Germany floods: Firefighter dies during rescue in Bavaria
A firefighter was killed when the rubber dinghy he was riding on capsized during severe flooding, and at least one person is missing in south Germany as the region braces for more rainstorms.  A firefighter lost his life while trying to reach survivors in a flooded house of a Bavarian town. One person is believed to be missing in a flooded basement. Meteorologists warn of further rainstorms in parts of Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg. Here are the key updates on flooding in Germany on Sunday, June 1. Woman missing in flooded house, divers deployed A woman is missing in Schrobenhausen, Bavaria, after the basement of her home flooded. According to media reports, the 43-year-old was in the basement during a sudden rise in water levels in the area. Police and divers were deployed to the scene but were unable to access the lowest level of the house. On Sunday morning, authorities decided to evacuate the house and the surrounding area. Latest reports indicate a slight drop in water levels. Firefighter dead in Bavaria after boat capsizes A 42-year-old volunteer firefighter was confirmed dead after the rubber dinghy he was riding on capsized in Bavaria overnight. The man and three of his colleagues were attempting to reach and evacuate survivors from a flooded house in the Bavarian town of Pfaffenhofen an der Ilm. The man's body was retrieved on Sunday morning. The other people on the boat were alive and accounted for, officials said. More storms, rain to hit south Germany on Sunday On Sunday, Germany's weather agency DWD issued a new storm and rain warning for the regions of the country already affected by flooding. Meteorologists said parts of northern Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg could see rainfall of 70 liters per square meter (18.5 gallons per 10.8 square feet) on Sunday afternoon. At least ten communities in Bavaria declared a state of emergency due to the rising levels of Danube and other rivers. The latest weather warning, however, indicates that the storms might also affect the central states of Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt, as well as Thuringia.
02 Jun 2024,15:36

Germany has already exceeded its annual ecological limits
Just over four months into the year, Germany has already exceeded sustainable consumption limits for the year, according to the US-based environment NGO Global Footprint Network. According to its calculations, if everybody in the world behaved like the Germans, humanity would need three Earths to provide enough resources to sustainably accommodate their consumption.  So-called overshoot days occur when a country's demand for ecological resources and services in a given year exceeds what the planet can regenerate in that year. The worst offenders, such as Qatar and Luxembourg, already exceeded their limits in February. Other countries, such as Cambodia and Madagascar, will likely stay well below their limits and not overshoot. Last year, Germany overshot its limit on May 4 — one day later than 2024, taking into account the leap year difference. Overshoot Day as a chance to reform "The German Earth Overshoot Day is a reminder to change the underlying conditions in all sectors now so that sustainable behavior becomes the new normal," Aylin Lehnert, education officer at German environmental NGO Germanwatch, said in a press release. "We need a new debt brake, a debt brake in relation to the overloading of the Earth." According to Greenwatch, meat production and consumption  in Germany is one of the main drivers of its overuse of Earth's resources. About 60% of its agricultural land is used for animal feed production, and millions of tons are imported from overseas.  Germany's total imports led to the destruction of 138,000 hectares (341,005 acres) of tropical forest worldwide from 2016 to 2018, according to the international development agency GIZ. The Global South, which largely lives within sustainable limits, shoulders much of the burden of overconsumption through environmental destruction and climate change damage. On Tuesday, Friends of the Earth Germany (BUND) criticized the country's reckless use of soil, water and raw materials. BUND Chairman Olaf Bandt said in a statement, "Our Earth is overloaded. A country that consumes as many resources as we do is operating poorly and recklessly." BUND is calling on the German government to introduce a resource protection law for soil and land, arable and pasture land, fishing grounds, ground and surface water, forests and wood. More consumption does not mean more happiness According to the Happy Planet Index (HPI) released on Thursday, all this overconsumption doesn't necessarily lead to better lives for its citizens. The index, compiled by the Hot or Cool Institute, a Berlin-based public interest think tank, combines data on well-being, life expectancy and carbon footprint to assess how well countries are caring for their citizens without overtaxing the planet. For example, Sweden and Germany have very similar levels of general well-being and life expectancy, but Sweden achieved that quality of life with 16% fewer emissions per capita than Germany and less than half the per capita footprint in the United States. Costa Rica had comparable figures for life expectancy and well-being but almost half the environmental impact of Germany.
02 May 2024,17:23

Germany looks back at Adolf Hitler's coup attempt
A decade before he rose to power with the Nazis, Adolf Hitler failed to overthrow Germany's Weimar Republic in 1923. What became known as the "Beer Hall Putsch" put Hitler on the political map. The Beer Hall Putsch was a major turning point in the rise of Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler. The events that took place in Munich on November 8 and 9, 1923, while unsuccessful in the immediate sense, went on to shape German history — and, with it, the course of the 20th century.  April 1 marks the 100th anniversary of the end of the subsequent trial in 1924, when Hitler's co-conspirator, General Erich Friedrich Wilhelm Ludendorff, was acquitted. At the time, Hitler was just one of several extremist leaders in Germany, or the Weimar Republic as it was known then. Few could foresee that, within a decade, he and the Nazi party he led would take over the country. They would lead Europe into another world war that included Germany's extermination of millions of Jews and members of other groups in the Holocaust. A fateful day in Munich Hitler had at least some of those ambitions in mind in 1923. On the evening of November 8, he led around 2,000 supporters to the Bürgerbräukeller, a beer hall in central Munich. Members of the Bavarian government and other prominent public figures had gathered there to mark the anniversary of the 1918 revolution, which ended the German empire under the Kaiser and led to the Weimar Republic. Hitler hoped to pressure the leaders there into fulfilling their own coup desires. Bavaria was already at odds with national authorities. A state of emergency was in place and the state leader, Gustav Ritter von Kahr, acted with absolute power. If Hitler succeeded, he could have mustered the support to march on Berlin and replace the fledgling parliamentary democracy with a far-right dictatorship. His would-be co-conspirators, however, started to back out and "nothing went as planned," Wolfgang Niess, a historian and author of a new book about the events, told German public broadcaster DLF. Following the overnight occupation of the beer hall, Hitler led the putschists to the Feldherrnhalle, an 18th-century memorial honoring the Bavarian army, but they "didn't have concrete goals," Niess said. As they moved through central Munich, they met Bavarian police and military forces. An exchange of gunfire led to the deaths of at least 14 Nazis and four police officers. The coup was over. Hitler was lightly injured and arrested a few days later. Though sentenced to five years in prison for high treason, he was released on probation barely more than a year after the coup attempt. The former General Ludendorff had a history of challenging Weimar's fragile rule of law and spreading the antisemitic lie that Jews and Marxists were responsible for Germany's defeat in World War I. Perfect conditions for Hitler's putsch Hitler did not take over Germany that day, but the failure succeeded in emboldening him. During his short time in prison, he began writing "Mein Kampf," an autobiography that laid out his fascist vision. The book became a rallying cry for his burgeoning party, which shifted tactics from trying to seize power illegally to taking it legitimately from within. In the years following the putsch effort, the Nazis gained support at the ballot box across the country. The coup attempt came at a time of crushing instability in Germany. The central Weimar government was weak. Officials were assassinated and state authority was threatened by violent forces on the left and right. Hyperinflation ravaged the economy and unemployment was widespread, especially among war veterans who knew how to fight. Germany's capitulation to Allied forces in World War I was a fresh memory and a national humiliation. The Treaty of Versailles, which compelled Germany to pay war reparations, was salt in that wound and added pressure on the country's prospects. It was a powder keg that Hitler and his Nazis were able to light. Though hardly the only domestic threat that Weimar faced, their coup attempt and subsequent rise to power was no accident of history. "Without the 'helping hands' of numerous monarchists, reactionary veterans, influential nationalist voices and political terrorists in the Bavarian metropolis, Hitler's rise through 1923 would have been impossible," Daniel Siemens, a historian, wrote in the FAZ, a German newspaper, reviewing Niess' book. Though the Nazi party was banned immediately following the coup attempt, a like-minded party popped up in its place. It won 30% of the vote in Bavarian state elections the following year, and it wouldn't be long before the Nazis themselves were back with Hitler at the helm. Lessons for today from Germany's Nazi past  The putsch, and the broader Nazi experience it is part of, strongly impacts the country, its laws and its institutions until today. Yet dangers remain. The right-wing populist party, the Alternative for Germany (AfD), is enjoying record support in polls. It placed a distant second in last month's state elections in Hesse, in western Germany, and may do even better when eastern states hold elections next year. In Bavaria, which Hitler called home (he was born in what was then Austria-Hungary) and used as a staging ground for his eventual rise to national power, more than 30% of voters last month went for the AfD or the Free Voters — another populist, right-wing party. While the former remains a political pariah that other parties say they refuse to work with, the latter supports the ruling conservative Christian Social Union in the Bavarian state government. For some historians and political observers, that kind of cooperation carries echoes of the past, and with them a dispiriting sense of deja vu. "If you know what led Germany to ruin a hundred years ago, then you can strengthen Europe and prevent new disasters," Jutta Hoffritz, a journalist who has also written about Hitler's coup attempt, told DLF. "That's why it pays to take a closer look at 1923."  
01 Apr 2024,16:40

Germany deports Iraqi over 'terror' suspicion
The 20-year-old was suspected of planning a "terrorist attack" targeting a Christmas market in eastern Germany. He has been permanently banned from reentering the country. A 20-year-old Iraqi has been deported back to his home country after German authorities suspected he was planning a "terrorist attack," Germany's Interior Ministry announced on Saturday. The Interior Ministry of the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt accused the unnamed man of planning a "serious act of violence." He has been permanently banned from entering Germany.   What did authorities say about the suspect? German authorities said the suspect lived in Saxony-Anhalt but worked in Lower Saxony. The police received a tip regarding the suspect, suggesting he was planning a "serious attack" on a Christmas market, media reported. He was arrested in Lower Saxony on November 21. The ministry said the deportation order was based on "the prevention of a particular threat to the security of the Federal Republic of Germany or a terrorist threat." It was not clear whether any evidence confirming said plans was found. Germany vigilant over 'terror' threats German authorities have been on alert in recent months, citing an increased risk of terror attacks amid a reported global rise in antisemitism and Islamophobia on the backdrop of the ongoing conflict in Gaza. Germany's Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) said last month that the danger of an Islamist terror attack on German soil had significantly increased. The agency said the raised risk of attacks against the Jewish community or "the West as a whole" came in the wake of the October 7 Hamas attacks and Israel's subsequent military campaign in the Gaza Strip. Germany's migrant communities of Arab origins are often the main suspects of such attacks.
17 Dec 2023,17:53

Germany urges 'international responsibility' in Gaza
In a DW exclusive interview, Germany's top diplomat Annalena Baerbock discussed the international community's role in the conflict between Israel and Hamas, and pushed back against criticism over Germany's stance. German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock called for the international community to play a role in Gaza to protect civilians after the current conflict between Israel and Hamas ends. The comments stem from an interview with DW on Monday. Baerbock has visited Israel three times since the conflict broke out on October 7 when the Palestinian militant-Islamist group Hamas attacked Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking some 240 hostages. In response, Israel launched an aerial assault and a large-scale ground operation in Gaza. According to the Hamas-run Health Ministry, over 13,000 people have been killed in Gaza. Speaking with DW's Jaafar Abdul-Karim, Baerbock defended Germany's opposition to a long-term cease-fire, and emphasized that the priority needs to be on getting humanitarian aid to the people in Gaza. Baerbock on the role of the international community Baerbock said that once the current conflict is over, the international community should take responsibility for the stability of the Gaza Strip within the context of a two-state solution. "In order to ensure security, we need international responsibility," Baerbock told DW. The German foreign minister noted that the international community has assumed a similar responsibility in other recent conflicts. "We've learned this from the terrible wars in Europe's Western Balkans. There, too, the international community assumed a responsibility to protect. It was also a situation where the worst crimes had been committed, and actors in the region had simply lost all trust. I see the same thing there [in the Middle East]," she said. Calls have been growing internationally for an immediate cease-fire. However, Germany, the United States, United Kingdom and European Union have instead urged for shorter "humanitarian pauses" to allow much-needed aid into Gaza, arguing that a longer cease-fire could give Hamas time to regroup. "For a cease-fire, Israel and Hamas would have to agree to stop shooting at each other. That would mean Israel would no longer be able to defend itself amid the ongoing barrage of missiles," Baerbock said, adding that "Israel has to protect its population." People in Gaza 'must be protected' Baerbock emphasized that Germany is working with the US and several Arab countries "to do everything possible to ensure the people in Gaza have safe places where they won't be killed, where they can access clean drinking water, medication." During a trip to Israel last month shortly after the conflict broke out, Baerbock said she told the Israeli government "that the people in Gaza must be protected." "Their fight is with a terrorist organization, Hamas, who want to destroy Israel, and not with civilians in Gaza, innocent people, women and children, innocent Palestinians," she said. Germany, along with Israel, the European Union, the United States and others, classify Hamas as a terrorist organization. Baerbock also voiced criticism of the Israeli government's settlement policy in the occupied West Bank, which has been classified as illegal under international law by the International Court of Justice. She urged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to do more to condemn violent attacks by Israeli settlers against Palestinians in the West Bank. "Israel's Prime Minister must condemn settler violence. It must be criminally prosecuted. This is also in Israel's security interest. In terms of security in the West Bank, Israel is also responsible for ensuring the situation there does not escalate further," she said. Criticism of Germany's support of Israel is 'unsettling' Germany, which is one of Israel's closest allies, has faced growing criticism from groups both at home and abroad over its stance on the war, with some accusing the German government of turning a blind eye to the situation in Gaza by staunchly backing Israel. Baerbock said she found the criticism to be "extremely unsettling" and pointed to Germany's historic and moral responsibility to the Jewish people and the Israeli state as a result of World War II and the atrocities committed during the Holocaust. "We are committed to international law, and we are committed to our German responsibility. And that means giving Jewish men and women, whom Germany had tried to annihilate under the Nazi dictatorship, a safe country. That is the state of Israel, and that's why Israel's security is Germany's 'reason of state,'" she said. The term "reason of state" or "Staatsräson" is used to express Germany's commitment to Israel as a fundamental part of Germany's very present-day existence. Baerbock said that Germany's support of Israel "in no way contradicts standing up for international humanitarian law, and for the universality of human rights." "That is why I have been making it so clear that each life is equally valuable, that the dreadful images of Palestinian children keep me up at night just as much as the thought of Israeli children having been kidnapped."
21 Nov 2023,13:12
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