ReportWire

Tag: Berlin

  • Meet the art collectors with home galleries: ‘The stock market doesn’t give me any fulfillment’

    Meet the art collectors with home galleries: ‘The stock market doesn’t give me any fulfillment’

    [ad_1]

    Entrepreneur Grant Cardone said collecting and displaying art gives him more fulfilment than investing.

    Grant Cardone

    Multimillionaire Grant Cardone, who has been collecting art for around 15 years, says he’s a spontaneous buyer.

    “I don’t consider myself a connoisseur. I’m very new to the art world. If I like it, I buy it. I don’t care who did it,” he told CNBC. Alongside pieces displayed throughout his home, Cardone also has an art gallery to house his considerable collection.

    CNBC spoke to Cardone by video call — behind him in his Miami home office was an untitled piece by American graffiti artist Retna that Cardone bought in an online auction.

    “I clicked the button — really hadn’t done any research … and got the piece … And it got here and I absolutely freaking loved it,” he said. He paid “maybe $140,000” for the work, he said.

    A piece called “It’s Now Time,” by the artist Fringe, seen in Grant Cardone’s home gallery.

    Grant Cardone

    Along a corridor in Cardone’s home are two pieces by American pop artist Burton Morris, both depicting red Coca-Cola bottles lined up in a repeating pattern named Coca-Cola 50A and Coca-Cola 50B. “This I bought from Tommy Hilfiger … it reminds me of the importance of scaling,” Cardone said — fashion designer Hilfiger is the home’s previous owner.

    Cardone, a real estate investor and author of “The 10 X Rule: The Only Difference Between Success and Failure,” has around 17 million followers on social media and uses his platforms to give occasional advice on art investing.

    “[Followers are] starting to see the art saying, hey, you know, [has] that been good for you? And I’m like, yeah, it’s good for me … It’s better than the dollar or the euro … The stock market doesn’t give me any fulfillment, I don’t go back and look at my Apple shares and feel good about it. But I walk in my gallery or down the kitchen or in my office and I see a piece and I’m like, man, it’s super cool.”

    The gallery in Grant Cardone’s Miami home. A print of a piece by Basquiat is seen bottom left.

    Grant Cardone

    Inside Cardone’s gallery — complete with floor-to-ceiling windows and a security guard — is a work by American contemporary artist Kenny Scharf titled “Blipsibshabshok” (1997), an abstract painting featuring colorful futuristic symbols. Cardone owns a second Scharf, “Controlopuss” (2018), a striking image of a red multi-legged creature, acquiring it for $279,400 from auction house Phillips.

    “This is a Basquiat right here. The original would be $45 million,” Cardone said, pointing to a print of a Jean-Michel Basquiat piece titled “Flexible” (1984/2016). The original was sold by auction house Phillips for $45.3 million in 2018. “This piece I bought with the house,” he said, gesturing to a work above the Basquiat titled “Read More” by American contemporary artist Al-Baseer Holly.

    Grant said he chooses pieces to buy on instinct. “I’ll try to walk away from it. And if I keep seeing it, or I keep thinking about it, then I go back and say, OK, I’m supposed to have this,” he said.

    “I plan on never selling any this stuff. It’s really for my personal enjoyment. And you know, art makes me happy,” he said.

    Female art in Florence

    Former investment banker Christian Levett has a different approach. He’s been collecting art for almost 30 years, starting with old master paintings and Roman, Greek and Egyptian antiquities before moving on to pieces by female abstract expressionists.

    Art collector Christian Levett conducts private tours of his home in Florence, Italy. His collection is largely made up of abstract expressionist works by female artists.

    Christian Levett

    Christian Levett has switched from collecting antiquities to work by female artists, seen here in his Florence home.

    Christian Levett

    “It’s now probably a $15 million to $18 million picture at auction … Mitchell has always been one of the most important female painters of the 20th century,” Levett said.

    He also spoke highly of an Elaine de Kooning oil painting of John F. Kennedy, commissioned as part of a series of portraits of the former U.S. president in 1963. Levett bought the artwork in 2020, paying around $600,000.

    Levett said he opens his home to students in part because doing so might spark an interest in supporting art in future. “The students … are the acorns of the art world,” he said.

    Work by female artists is Levett’s focus, and he is set to re-open his museum in France as the Female Artists Mougin Museum on June 21. He is currently selling the museum’s previous collection of art and antiquities via a series of sales at London auction house Christie’s, which have reached almost £9.5 million ($11.9 million) so far.

    Bunker art

    Christian and Karen Boros’ home is on top the bunker that houses their private art collection, the Boros Collection, in the center of Berlin, Germany.

    John Macdougall | AFP | Getty Images

    At a unique art space in Berlin, husband and wife Christian and Karen Boros live in a 6,000 square foot penthouse apartment above their private collection. The Boros Collection is housed in a former World War II bunker, a vast, high-rise building the couple acquired in 2003 and spent several years converting into a five-floor exhibition space, with their home on the sixth.

    The bunker sheltered up to 4,000 people during the war, after which it was used as a storage facility for tropical fruit before becoming a nightclub. According to Raoul Zoellner, director of the Boros Foundation, 450 tons of concrete ceilings and walls were removed during its conversion into an exhibition space and home.

    An artwork by Cyprien titled “Gaillard Lesser Koa Moorhen,” 2013, part of the Boros Collection.

    Boros Collection, Berlin | Noshe

    Christian, an advertising entrepreneur, bought his first artwork — a spade by German artist Joseph Beuys — when he was 18, he told the Financial Times.

    “The bunker is not a museum … but an exceptional project initiated by an enthusiastic collector couple who could not have imagined how many diamond saws it would take to tear down dozens of bunker walls — or what that would set in motion,” Zoellner said in an emailed statement.

    Karen and Christian Boros live in a penthouse apartment above their art collection in Berlin.

    Max von Gumpenberg

    Nearly 600,000 people have taken guided tours of the bunker since its conversion in 2008, with pieces from the Boros Collection shown on rotation, Zoellner added. At the moment, there are 114 works on view, with a “focus on the human body in a multiplicity of positions,” Zoellner said. “The works home in on the constant compulsion to optimize, the gradual adaptation of our bodies to technological devices,” he said.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Isabelle Huppert On The “Unique Experience” Of Working Without A Script On Hong Sangsoo Berlin Title ‘A Traveler’s Needs’

    Isabelle Huppert On The “Unique Experience” Of Working Without A Script On Hong Sangsoo Berlin Title ‘A Traveler’s Needs’

    [ad_1]

    “This might sound very irresponsible, but I don’t know what I’m doing,” South Korean filmmaker Hong Sangsoo told a Berlinale presser this afternoon when quizzed on his unique directing style. 

    The prolific filmmaker is back at Berlin with A Traveler’s Needs, his seventh film in three years. The film stars French screen veteran Isabelle Huppert and Sangsoo has six credits on the film, including director, screenplay, cinematography, editing, and music and he is also listed as the film’s producer. 

    “I start with some objectives and then I have a recognized working method that I have developed. And I believe in a certain happening between people,” he continued. 

    A Traveler’s Needs is Huppert’s third collaboration with Sangsoo, and she told the Berlinale presser that the Korean filmmaker provides a creative environment like no other filmmaker she has worked with. She said this is largely thanks to his process of working without a script. 

    “It’s very difficult to project yourself into the story or role because there is no role or story. There is just the way he captures the present moment and the state of a person confronting a certain world,” Huppert said of Sangsoo.

    “And this is why I like working with Hong. You really cannot go to work with him the same way you go with another director. It’s really a unique experience.”

    The pic also stars Sangsoo regulars Lee Hyeyoung and Kwon Haehyo. The vague official synopsis reads: This woman who came from who knows where says she came from France. She was sitting on a bench in a neighborhood park, diligently playing a child’s recorder. With no money or means of supporting herself, she was advised to teach French. In that way she became a teacher to two Korean women. She likes to walk barefoot on the ground and lie down on rocks. And when she is up to it, she tries to see each instant in a non-verbal way, and to live her life as factually as possible. But life remains as hard as ever. She relies on Makkeolli every day for a small bit of comfort.

    Finecut is handling international sales on the pic. A Traveler’s Needs debuts this evening in competition in Berlin. 

    The Berlinale runs until February 25.

    [ad_2]

    Zac Ntim

    Source link

  • Tom Tykwer’s ‘The Light’: First Look Image Revealed

    Tom Tykwer’s ‘The Light’: First Look Image Revealed

    [ad_1]

    Tom Tykwer‘s return to the big screen is getting closer. After 7 years working in television, co-creating and co-directing, with Henk Handloegten and Achim von Borries, four seasons of acclaimed period drama Babylon Berlin, the German director of Run Lola Run, The International and Cloud Atlas will mark his movie comeback with the contemporary German-language drama The Light (Das Licht).

    Tykwer’s production house X Filme Creative Pool, German distributor X Verleih and Beta Cinema, who have picked up international sales rights for the film, on Thursday unveiled the first look of The Light. The still, which almost resembles a Renaissance painting, features star Tala al Deen bathed in a radiant glow from a device on the table in front of her.

    Al Deen plays Farrah, a mysterious Syrian woman who enters the lives of the Engels, a middle-class German family whose world is slowly unraveling. Nothing appears to be holding the Engels together but Farrah will put the family’s emotional world to an unexpectedly wild test.

    Lars Eidinger, Nicolette Krebitz, Elke Biesendorfer, Julius Gause and Elyas Eldridge star as the Engels.

    Beta is handling sales on The Light for all territories except German-speaking Europe, France and North America and will start pre-selling the film at Berlin’s European Film Market later this month.

    “After quite a long time, which I spent with Babylon Berlin in the roaring 20s, I can finally turn my attention back to our present,” says Tom Tykwer on his new film. “In The Light, there is arguing, struggling and fighting, but there is also laughter, singing and dancing. The film aims to challenge the spectrum of emotions and the corresponding narrative possibilities. And the characters are very familiar to me. I want to try to reflect their inner turmoil and make their deep bond tangible for the audience.”

    The Light is Tykwer’s first feature film since 2016’s A Hologram for the King starring Tom Hanks and his first German feature since 2010’s ménage à trois drama 3. A figure on the international film scene since his breakout hit Run Lola Run in 1998, Tykwer’s filmography includes The Princess and the Warrior (2000), Heaven (2002) and Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (2006). He co-directed 2012 sci-fi epic Cloud Atlas with the Wachowskis siblings, with whom he also collaborated on the Netflix series Sense 8 and composed music for the score on Lana Wachowski’s The Matrix Resurrections (2021). Babylon Berlin, which he co-created, is the most expensive German TV series of all time.

    The Light, shot in Germany and Kenya, will roll out theatrically in Germany via X Verleih together with Warner Bros. Germany on Oct. 17. Uwe Schott produced the film through X Filme Creative Pool in co-production with ZDF, ARP Séléction, Gold Rush Pictures, Gretchenfilm and B.A. Filmproduktion with subsidy support from Germany’s DFFF film fund, federal film board the FFA and regional subsidies from the Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg and the Film and Medienstiftung NRW.

    [ad_2]

    Scott Roxborough

    Source link

  • Tractors protest & rise of Far Right have turned Germany into sick man of Europe

    Tractors protest & rise of Far Right have turned Germany into sick man of Europe

    [ad_1]

    LIGHTS flashing and horns blaring, 3,000 tractors trundled through Hanover in Germany bringing its streets to a gridlocked standstill.

    Stepping down from his cab, arable farmer Axel Friehe told me his beleaguered nation’s economy is “breaking down”.

    7

    Tractors of protesting farmers line the streets in front of the Brandenburg Gate in BerlinCredit: Getty
    Major German cities have been paralysed by demonstrating agricultural workers, truckers and small business people

    7

    Major German cities have been paralysed by demonstrating agricultural workers, truckers and small business peopleCredit: EPA
    Turnip farmer Christoph Berndt said 'The AfD use the demonstrations to draw attention to themselves'

    7

    Turnip farmer Christoph Berndt said ‘The AfD use the demonstrations to draw attention to themselves’Credit: Louis Wood

    “We hope our protests are the start of something big,” he said of the tractor cavalcade being cheered by locals.

    Farmer Friehe, 51, may soon have his wish.

    Troubled Germany’s major cities have been paralysed by demonstrating agricultural workers, truckers and small business people.

    Some 500 tractors gathered at Berlin’s landmark Brandenburg Gate and 5,000 paraded through Munich’s streets.

    While French farmers have made protesting something of a national pastime — infamously torching a lorry full of British sheep in 1990 — their German counterparts are traditionally less militant.

    Yet a heavy-handed bid by its government to slash a tax break on diesel used in agricultural machinery — worth around £2,500 a year to each farmer — has made zealots of German country folk.

    I watched on Wednesday as locals in Hanover gave farmers hearty cheers and the thumbs up despite the traffic tailbacks in the north German city of 536,000 citizens.

    For the tractor strike is a symptom of a wider malaise gripping Germany.

    The country’s once booming export market made it the industrial powerhouse at the heart of Europe.

    Yet since the pandemic its sluggish economy has grown by just 0.3 per cent — compared to 1.4 per cent in the UK — making it by far the worst performer in the G7 group of nations.

    Stringent green initiatives, including the rolling out of heat pumps, have been unpopular with many.

    ‘Hungry, naked and sober’

    And mass migration — last year Germany had more than 350,000 asylum applications — has become a major political flashpoint.

    Its ruling coalition of the left-of- centre Social Democratic Party, the Greens and liberal Free Democrats have been trying to plug a near £15billion budget black hole.

    Into this economic and social maelstrom has stepped the far-right Alternative for Deutschland, who critics say are “infiltrating” the farmers’ demonstrations.

    A YouGov poll last Sunday showed almost one in four Germans — 24 per cent — backed the AfD.

    Last week it was reported that high-ranking AfD officials were caught at a secret conference where a “masterplan” for the forced deportation of millions of migrants to Africa was discussed.

    The meeting, at a luxury hotel last November, featured a talk by far-right Identitarian Movement activist Martin Sellner, who is permanently banned from the UK for extremism.

    It was claimed that the “remigration” proposals discussed at the event, infiltrated by news network Collectiv, included deporting immigrants with German passports.

    Those in attendance — reportedly alongside neo-Nazis — included Roland Hartwig, a personal aide to AfD leader Alice Weidel, and AfD MP Gerrit Huy.

    The AfD denied it had a “secret plan” but added: “We need passport withdrawal for criminals and remigration!”

    At last week’s Hanover protest, turnip farmer Christoph Berndt, 31, insisted: “The AfD use the demonstrations to draw attention to themselves.

    “They say the farmers are on their side, which isn’t true.”

    Driving nearly 40 miles on his green John Deere tractor to be at the good-natured demonstration, he added: “The politicians in Berlin make it more difficult for us to work and make money.

    “So we go on to the street and try to animate people to understand us and what we do in the fields.”

    German flags fluttered from tractor cabs with signs on their front loaders reading: “No food without us.”

    Another read: “Without agriculture you’d be hungry, naked and sober.”

    Air horns sounded in the sub-zero chill as farmers gathered outside Lower Saxony’s regional parliament building in Hanover.

    Locals cheered the tractor cavalcade

    7

    Locals cheered the tractor cavalcadeCredit: @UNCOFILM

    Expressing the fury felt by many, Volker Hahn, who helped to organise the demo, said: “The Government needs money and they will take it from the farmers. It’s a horrible situation.”

    Volker, 55, who tends pigs, chickens and potatoes at his 600-acre farm, added: “We don’t welcome the support of AfD.

    “They’re extreme.”

    To add to the air of despondency felt by many, Hanover and other German cities have also been crippled by train driver strikes this week.

    At the parliament building I met Sonja Markgraf, from the Rural People of Lower Saxony group, which also helped to organise the tractor protest.

    She said: “The French people were always on the barricades but in Germany everyone felt comfortable.”

    Now, she says, times have changed, with farmers seething at being asked to help plug the Government’s budget gap.

    She added: “We are very happy that the protests are peaceful — but loud. The population stands behind us.”

    Sonja, 53, says people from all backgrounds are facing unrealistic demands on environmental issues.

    She added: “Heat pumps are a good example. It’s not wrong to do it, it’s the way they do it.

    “It was too quick, wasn’t well explained and people are worried about the price.

    “Reforms are necessary but you have to take the people with you.

    “This feeling is in every part of the population, whether you’re poor, rich or middle-class. It’s not great for the general mood.”

    She blames people’s fears over illegal immigration for AfD’s rise, saying: “Even three or four years ago it wasn’t an issue.

    “Now the municipalities say they have no rooms, no flats or apartments so it’s more visible now.

    “So the AfD tries to profit from it.”

    Germany has long been renowned in British minds as a land of efficiency, where everything works.

    It was praised for how it faced up to its Nazi past and built a vibrant, liberal democracy with a turbo-charged economy.

    That booming post-war Germany was summed up in Audi’s 1980s advertising slogan “vorsprung durch technik”, meaning “progress through technology”.

    Now its famed export trade of cars and machinery is in deep trouble.

    German car makers produced almost 40 per cent fewer vehicles in 2022 than they did a decade previously.

    Once reliant on Russian gas, Germany saw energy prices soar after Vladimir Putin’s 2022 Ukraine invasion.

    And politicians have failed to tackle creaking infrastructure, a housing shortage and high-speed internet rollout.

    Labelled the Sick Man of Europe — an historic term that was used to describe Britain in the 1970s — its economy is predicted to perform worse than Britain’s in the next decade.

    Though expected to return to growth this year, Germany — the world’s third biggest economy — is forecast to be overtaken by Japan in 2026 and India in 2027.

    At Hanover’s regional parliament building I met the AfD’s Frank Rinck, who denies his far-right party has “infiltrated” the farmers’ demos.

    The MP and chairman of the Lower Saxony AfD said the group were “simply engaging with these demonstrations like any other political party”.

    Frank, an agricultural contractor, says the Government’s subsidy cut will lead to a “further death” of the farming sector.

    He added: “At some point our domestic agricultural sector will not be able to feed indigenous people.”

    He said it was news to him that AfD politicians had attended a “remigration” conference, describing reports as “a storm in a teacup”.

    He added: “In Germany things like this tend to come up when problems arise and people demonstrate.”

    Watching the AfD’s rise warily are the centre-right Christian Democratic Union party, currently Germany’s leading party in opinion polls.

    Its agriculture spokesman in Lower Saxony’s parliament, Dr Marco Mohrmann, ruled out working with the AfD in a coalition.

    The dad of three told me: “A big part of the AfD is extreme right — and that’s not our way.”

    While accepting Germany should take in asylum seekers and skilled migrants, he admitted Britain’s stuttering Rwanda policy may also be a way forward for his country.

    Conservative-leaning Marco, 59, said: “I think the model the UK is doing with Rwanda is interesting.

    “It’s a third-country solution where you can look at someone and decide if they can get asylum or not.

    “A year ago we couldn’t discuss something like this but now we can, and we have to.”

    German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has tried to contain farmers’ rage by phasing out the diesel tax break over time and scrapping plans to abolish tax exemption on agricultural vehicles.

    Yet the scale of the protests — and their support across German society — suggests he has not done enough.

    Yesterday 5,000 tractors and 10,000 protesters blockaded Berlin in a climax to a week of protest. Fresh talks with Government representatives are set.

    Rural People of Lower Saxony’s Sonja Markgraf insisted: “If it’s not good for the farmers then we say, ‘We go on’.”

    Germany’s Great Tractor Revolution may still only be in first gear.

    Volker Hahn helped to organise the demonstration in Hanover

    7

    Volker Hahn helped to organise the demonstration in HanoverCredit: Louis Wood
    German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has tried to contain farmers’ rage by phasing out the diesel tax break over time and scrapping plans to abolish tax exemption on agricultural vehicles

    7

    German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has tried to contain farmers’ rage by phasing out the diesel tax break over time and scrapping plans to abolish tax exemption on agricultural vehiclesCredit: Getty
    Sonja Markgraf, from the Rural People of Lower Saxony group, also helped to organise the tractor protest

    7

    Sonja Markgraf, from the Rural People of Lower Saxony group, also helped to organise the tractor protestCredit: Louis Wood

    [ad_2]

    Oliver Harvey

    Source link

  • Zelenskyy Prepares For Berlin Talks In Wake Of Germany’s Military Aid Package

    Zelenskyy Prepares For Berlin Talks In Wake Of Germany’s Military Aid Package

    [ad_1]

    BERLIN (AP) — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy arrived in Berlin early Sunday for talks with German leaders about further arms deliveries to help his country fend off the Russian invasion and rebuild what’s been destroyed by more than a year of devastating conflict.

    On the eve of his arrival — which took place amid tight security — the German government announced a new package of military aid for Ukraine with aid worth more than 2.7 billion euros ($3 billion), including tanks, anti-aircraft systems and ammunition.

    “Already in Berlin. Weapons. Powerful package. Air defense. Reconstruction. EU. NATO. Security,” Zelenskyy tweeted Sunday, in an apparent reference to the key priorities of his trip.

    After meeting Chancellor Olaf Scholz and other senior officials at the chancellery, the two leaders are expected to fly to the western city of Aachen for Zelenskyy to receive the International Charlemagne Prize awarded to him and the people of Ukraine.

    Organizers say the award recognizes that their resistance against Russia’s invasion is a defense “not just of the sovereignty of their country and the life of its citizens, but also of Europe and European values.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Berlin to let everyone go topless at public swimming pools

    Berlin to let everyone go topless at public swimming pools

    [ad_1]

    BERLIN (AP) — Women in Berlin will soon be allowed to go topless at the city’s public swimming pools, like men, the Berlin state government said Thursday.

    The new bathing rules allowing everyone to go swimming without covering their torsos followed a discrimination complaint by a woman who was not allowed to go topless in a swimming pool in the capital.

    The woman, whose identity was not revealed, had turned to the senate’s ombudsperson’s office for equal treatment to demand that women, like men, can swim topless, the Berlin senate for justice, diversity and anti-discrimination said in a written statement.

    In reaction to the complaint and the ombudsman’s involvement in the case, the Berliner Baederbetriebe, which runs the city’s public pools, decided to change its clothing rules, the statement said.

    “The ombudsperson’s office very much welcomes the decision of the Baederbetriebe, because it establishes equal rights for all Berliners, whether male, female or non-binary, and because it also creates legal certainty for the staff at the Baederbetriebe,” said Doris Liebscher, the head of the ombudsperson’s office.

    In the past, women who bared their breasts at Berlin pools were asked to cover themselves or to leave the pool, and were sometimes banned from returning.

    “Now it is important that the regulation is applied consistently and that no more expulsions or house bans are issued,” Liebscher said.

    It was not immediately clear when exactly the new bathing rules would be applied.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Germany resists intense pressure over tanks for Ukraine, saying ‘the situation has not changed’

    Germany resists intense pressure over tanks for Ukraine, saying ‘the situation has not changed’

    [ad_1]

    A new Leopard 2 A7V heavy battle tank, the most advanced version of the German-made tank.

    Sean Gallup | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    Germany has again refused to commit to allowing German-made tanks to be sent to Ukraine despite intense pressure.

    German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius said Tuesday there has been no change in Berlin’s position on whether to allow German-made Leopard 2 tanks to be sent to Ukraine, or on permitting other countries with German-made tanks to send their units to Kyiv. He added that the government still needed to assess the situation.

    “I can tell you there is no new information here, the situation has not changed, and we are preparing our decision, which will come very soon,” he said at a joint press conference with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg.

    “We are looking into the matter, what the current status is regarding our Leopard tanks,” he said in translated comments. He noted that Berlin was looking not only at its inventory and industry stocks, but also at the compatibility of its tanks for combat in Ukraine, as well as issues around the logistics of supply and maintenance.

    Aware that Berlin’s reluctance over tanks has attracted widespread criticism, Pistorius insisted that Germany was one of Ukraine’s top military supporters aside from the U.S. and U.K., and that this was “often forgotten in the public discussion.”

    The latest comments from Berlin come after months of pressure on German government to offer Ukraine some of its Leopard 2 tanks, or to allow its allies to export their own German-made battle tanks to the war-torn country.

    A defense summit last Friday at the Ramstein air base failed to deliver an agreement on tanks for Kyiv and, until now, only the U.K. had pledged to send 14 of its own Challenger 2 tanks to Ukraine.

    A Challenger 2 main battle tank on display for The Royal Tank Regiment Regimental Parade, on Sept. 24, 2022, in Bulford, England.

    Finnbarr Webster | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    On Tuesday, NATO’s Stoltenberg sought to defend Germany from what is likely to be inevitable criticism following this latest refusal to budge on tanks, saying he was “confident that we will have a solution soon.”

    He noted that the war had reached a “pivotal moment,” however, and that allies “must provide heavier units to Ukraine. And we must do it faster.”

    Kyiv has for months pleaded with its allies for heavy battle tanks that it says could be decisive in the outcome of the war.

    Germany was believed to be reluctant to send its own tanks unless the U.S. delivered its own Abrams vehicles. Washington has been noncommittal, saying that just the training to maintain and operate its tanks would require months.

    German Defense Minister Pistorius insisted Tuesday that there was no disunity between Berlin and its allies, saying, “there are some partners that are still evaluating their decisions and others want to go a bit faster, but we are not un-united.”

    Allies’ frustration

    Despite Germany’s assurances, Kyiv’s allies have become frustrated with Berlin’s reluctance over tanks.

    On Saturday, the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania issued a joint statement for Germany “to provide Leopard tanks to Ukraine now.” Poland and Finland have repeatedly expressed they are prepared to supply Leopard 2 units, with Reuters reporting that Polish premier Mateusz Morawiecki on Monday signaled Warsaw could proceed without Berlin’s approval.

    “We will ask for such permission, but this is an issue of secondary importance. Even if we did not get this approval … we would still transfer our tanks together with others to Ukraine”, Morawiecki said Monday, according to Reuters. “The condition for us at the moment is to build at least a small coalition of countries.”  Poland’s defense minister confirmed on Tuesday that Warsaw had asked Berlin for permission to re-export its own Leopard 2s to Ukraine.

    Germany’s position seemed to have been thawing over recent days. On Sunday, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock told French news outlet LCI that Berlin would not block Poland from sending its own Leopard 2s to Ukraine. That same day, newly appointed German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius, who only assumed his post last Thursday, on Sunday said that he expected a decision imminently.

    France said it has not excluded sending its own Leclerc tanks to Ukraine. After meeting with his German counterpart Sunday, French President Emmanuel Macron told reporters that he had “asked the army minister to work on it, and nothing has been ruled out.”

    'The art of diplomacy': How the world responds to a pariah state

    He added that a decision would be made based on several criteria: ensuring any offer of tanks is not “escalatory” and accounts for the “reality in terms of capacity, maintenance in operational condition and training times.” The third criteria, Macron said, is not weakening France’s own defense capabilities.

    — CNBC’s Ruxandra Iordache contributed reporting to this story.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • German government sued over failure to meet climate goals

    German government sued over failure to meet climate goals

    [ad_1]

    BERLIN (AP) — A prominent environmental group said Tuesday that it is suing the German government over the failure to meet its own climate targets.

    Friends of the Earth Germany, also known as BUND, said in its submission to the Berlin-Brandenburg administrative court that the government should be required to put forward an emergency program for the transport and building sectors.

    Both sectors have fallen behind on their legally binding targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

    The group, which has more than 450,000 members, argues that time is running out for Germany to meet its national climate goals for 2030 and achieve ‘net zero’ emissions by 2045.

    A report published earlier this month by the think tank Agora Energiewende concluded that Germany’s emissions of planet-heating gas last year were likely higher than the target set for 2020.

    The government has put together an ambitious program to expand the use of renewable energy in the coming years.

    But differences between two members of the coalition government — the environmentalist Greens and the libertarian Free Democratic Party — have stalled efforts to drastically cut fossil fuel use in the transport sector.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Why Germany is struggling to stomach the idea of sending tanks to Ukraine | CNN

    Why Germany is struggling to stomach the idea of sending tanks to Ukraine | CNN

    [ad_1]



    CNN
     — 

    The past 12 months has forced European leaders to seriously rethink their approach to national security.

    If Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has confirmed one thing, it’s that peace on the continent cannot be taken for granted. The status quo – decades of low spending and defense not being a policy priority – cannot continue.

    This is especially true in Germany, which has for years has spent far less on its military than many of its Western allies but is now reconsidering its approach to defense at home and abroad.

    Days after the invasion began last February, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz delivered a head-turning speech to parliament in which he committed to spending €100 billion ($108 billion) to modernize Germany’s military capacity.

    He also vowed that Germany would lift its defense spending to 2% of GDP – meeting a target set by NATO that it had missed for years – and end its deep reliance on Russian energy, particularly gas.

    However, nearly a year on, critics say Scholz’s vision has failed to become reality. And Germany has been accused of dragging its feet when it comes to sending its more powerful weapons to Ukraine.

    The criticism has grown in recent days as US and European leaders have piled pressure on Berlin to send German-made Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine, or at least allow other countries to do so.

    Experts estimate there are around 2,000 Leopard tanks in use by 13 countries across Europe, and they are increasingly being seen as vital to Ukraine’s war effort as the conflict grinds into a second year. But Berlin must grant these nations approval to re-export German-made tanks to Ukraine, and it has so far resisted calls to do so.

    Scholz has insisted that any such plan would need to be fully coordinated with the whole of the Western alliance, and German officials have indicated they won’t approve the transfer of Leopards unless the US also agrees to send some of its tanks to Kyiv.

    On Friday, a key meeting of Western allies in Germany broke up without a wider agreement on sending tanks to Ukraine, after the country’s new defense minister Boris Pistorius said no decision had yet been made by his government.

    Pistorius rebuffed claims that Germany has been “standing in the way” of a “united coalition” of countries in favor of the plan. “There are good reasons for the delivery and there are good reasons against it … all the pros and cons have to be weighed very carefully, and that assessment is explicitly shared by many allies,” he added.

    Germany’s decision to dig in on sending tanks will likely go down badly with its allies, both in the immediate and long-term.

    “It’s like acid eroding through layer after layer of trust,” a senior NATO diplomat told CNN on Friday. The diplomat added that Germany’s hesitance could also have a lasting impact on the rest of Europe and potentially push other members of the alliance closer towards the US, even if Germany is reluctant to do so.

    And the divisions in the alliance have only grown more public in recent days – earlier in the week, Poland’s prime minister described Germany as “the least proactive country out of the group, to put it mildly,” and suggested his country might send Leopards to Ukraine without Berlin’s approval.

    For all of the criticism of Germany’s hesitance on tanks, Berlin has played a crucial role in supporting Ukraine over the past year. The US and the UK are the only two countries to have delivered more military aid to Kyiv than Germany since the invasion began, according to the Kiel Institute.

    Germany’s military support for Ukraine has evolved over time. It ditched its longstanding policy of not delivering lethal weapons to conflict zones and recently has stepped up deliveries of heavier equipment to Ukraine, including armored infantry fighting vehicles and Patriot missile defense systems.

    The government, however, sees tanks as a massive step up from the weaponry it’s delivered to Ukraine so far, and fears that authorizing German tanks to be used against Russia would be seen by Moscow as a significant escalation.

    Experts say the reticence is partly borne of Berlin’s pragmatic approach to conflict in general, and a relatively timid military posture going back decades, informed by what Scholz himself has described as “the dramatic consequences of two world wars that originated in Germany.”

    “Germany has been on a peace-time footing for years. We don’t have the expertise in procedure or procurement to do anything at speed right now. The truth is that for decades, we have seen our defense budget as a gift to our allies because they thought it was important,” said Christian Mölling, deputy director at the German Council on Foreign Relations.

    Whatever happens in Ukraine, Germany will have to ask itself some big questions about security in the coming years. The appetite to improve Germany’s armed forces has grown significantly since the start of the war.

    Last week, Christine Lambrecht resigned as defense minister amid criticism of her efforts to modernize the military. Lambrecht had struggled to do anything of note with the €100bn that Scholz made available to her last year. The head of the Christian Democrats, the main opposition party in Germany, has accused the Chancellor of not taking his own speech last year seriously.

    The person who now gets to spend that money is Pistorius, who German officials see as a safe pair of hands and up to the job. The question that he and Scholz must answer is how far Germany is willing to go in being a serious military presence in Europe.

    In December, Germany admitted that it would not meet Scholz’s pledge to meet the NATO requirement on defense spending in 2022, and said it would likely miss the target again in 2023.

    And its military’s combat readiness is inferior to that of some other European powers. According to the Rand cooperation, it would take Germany roughly a month to mobilise a fully-armored brigade, whereas the British army “should be able to sustain at least one armored brigade indefinitely.”

    Defense experts say Germany will find it hard to move very far or very fast in its efforts to bolster its military.

    “Yes, we have committed to spending more on our security, but without any clear idea of exactly what it should be spent on or how it fits into a broader security strategy,” Mölling said.

    Mölling also believes that German’s defense ambitions could be hamstrung by political will: “Careers have been built on the narrative that Germany is a peace-loving nation. The public mood is shifting and possibly at a tipping point, but it would be very hard to be the leader that drove to make Germany a leading player in European security.”

    European officials and diplomats are pessimistic and think that the reality of German politics means it will ultimately continue resisting serious reform on defense.

    It is often said in diplomatic circles that Germany’s 21st century model for success has been built on three pillars: cheap Chinese labor, cheap Russian energy, and American guarantees of security.

    Many believe this well-known preference for diplomatic pragmatism and subsequent reluctance to pick sides will mean any defense reforms will be severely limited.

    One German official told CNN that it will be hard for mainstream politicians to break free from old habits: “They have an inherent skepticism against siding overtly with the USA and a subtle hope that the relationship with Russia can be fixed.”

    Berlin has also lent its support to Ukraine in other ways, taking action to wean itself off of Russian gas and setting an example for rest of Europe, which has seen its overall consumption of gas go down since the the start of the war. Europe’s relatively warm winter has of course helped, but stopping Putin from weaponizing energy has been an important factor in the Western pushback on Moscow.

    But the security map of Europe has been redrawn, as have the dividing lines in the international diplomacy. Russia’s unprovoked invasion of another country has demonstrated more clearly than ever that moral values are not universal.

    Germany, Europe’s wealthiest country, has undeniably benefited enormously from its policy of keeping feet in two camps. It is protected by NATO membership while maintaining economic relations with undesirable partners.

    That policy has been called out and Germany must now decide exactly what kind of voice it wants to have in the current conversation taking place about global security. The decisions it takes in the next few years could play a crucial role defining the security of the entire European continent for decades to come.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Daniel Barenboim leaves Berlin Staatsoper job after 30 years

    Daniel Barenboim leaves Berlin Staatsoper job after 30 years

    [ad_1]

    BERLIN (AP) — Daniel Barenboim on Friday announced his resignation as the general music director of Berlin’s Staatsoper, a job that he has held for over three decades, saying that his health has become too poor to carry on.

    The renowned conductor and pianist, who turned 80 in November, has been in the post since 1992. In a statement issued by the Staatsoper, he said he will step down on Jan. 31.

    “Unfortunately, my health has deteriorated significantly in the past year,” he said. “I can no longer deliver the performance that is rightly demanded of a general music director.”

    Barenboim said that his years at the opera house on Berlin’s Unter den Linden boulevard “inspired us in every respect in musical and human terms.” And he said he was particularly “happy and proud” that the Staatskapelle orchestra, based at the Staatsoper, made him its chief conductor for life.

    “We became a musical family over the years and will continue to be one,” Barenboim added. He said that he is still ready to conduct in the future.

    In October, Barenboim announced that he was “taking a step back” from some of his performing activities for a period of months after being diagnosed with a “serious neurological condition.”

    He returned on Saturday, conducting a New Year performance of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony sitting down, to loud applause from the audience.

    Barenboim in 2019 was granted a five-year contract extension that would have kept him at the opera house until 2027.

    Germany’s culture minister, Claudia Roth, said that Barenboim’s time at the head of the Staatsoper “was a godsend for Berlin and Germany, because he led the opera house and the Staatskapelle to world renown after the fall of the Wall.” The opera is located in what was communist East Berlin until 1990.

    “I very much regret his resignation, wish him a good recovery and look forward to hopefully many further concerts and opera performances with him,” Roth said in a statement.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • German police union calls for action after New Year attacks

    German police union calls for action after New Year attacks

    [ad_1]

    BERLIN — Germany’s biggest police union called Tuesday for concerted action to prevent a repeat of the violent excesses seen in Berlin and other cities during the New Year’s celebrations, in which officers, firefighters and medical personnel were attacked with fireworks.

    Police in the capital recorded dozens of attacks and said 41 officers were injured. Online videos showing people firing rockets and throwing firecrackers at police cars and rescue vehicles drew widespread condemnation from German authorities.

    The head of the GdP union, Jochen Kopelke, said there should be an “immediate debate” about the causes and consequences of such attacks, adding that they “must not be repeated at the next turn of the year.”

    Kopelke said it was important to discuss the facts of what had happened and avoid blanket accusations against particular social groups.

    Some conservative and far-right politicians have noted that some of the attacks took place in areas of Berlin with large immigrant communities.

    Christoph de Vries, a lawmaker with the center-right Christian Democrats, wrote on Twitter that to tackle the issue of violence toward police officers and firefighters it was necessary to “talk about the role of people (with the) phenotype: West Asiatic, darker skin type.”

    His comments drew accusations of racism, but De Vries said he was “ironically” referring to recent guidance by Berlin police on how to describe suspects’ ethnicity and this should not distract from “the necessary discussion about migration policy and glaring deficits when it comes to integration.”

    Berlin police have so far said only that out of 103 suspects released from detention, 98 were male.

    The German government’s top integration official, Reem Alabali-Radovan, condemned the New Year’s attacks and called for those responsible to swiftly be punished “with the full force of our laws.”

    In an interview with the Funke media group, she also called for the perpetrators to be judged “according to their deeds, not according to their presumed origins, as some are doing now,” warning that this could cause further divisions in society rather than address the social causes of the problem.

    The attacks have also reignited a debate in Germany about the use of fireworks around New Year. The tradition suffered a blow during the pandemic, when the government banned their sale in an effort to ease the pressure on hospitals and discourage large public gatherings.

    Experts say the absence of such a ban may have contributed to the scale of violence and large number of fireworks injuries — including at least one death — seen this year.

    The GdP union’s regional head in Berlin, Stephan Weh, suggested it was time to consider a nationwide ban on pyrotechnics, saying the attacks in the capital had shown how they can be used “as weapons against people.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Live Updates | Reactions to Pope Benedict XVI’s death

    Live Updates | Reactions to Pope Benedict XVI’s death

    [ad_1]

    The latest on the death of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI:

    BERLIN — German Chancellor Olaf Scholz is paying tribute to the German-born Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI as a “formative figure of the Catholic Church.”

    Benedict, the former Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, became the first German pope in centuries when he was elected in 2005.

    Scholz said on Twitter Saturday that “as the ‘German’ pope, Benedict XVI was a special church leader for many, not just in this country.”

    He said that “the world is losing a formative figure of the Catholic Church, a combative personality and a wise theologian.”

    ———

    KEY DEVELOPMENTS:

    Benedict XVI, first pope to resign in 600 years, dies at 95

    Highlights from the life of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI

    ———

    BERLIN — The governor of Benedict XVI’s native German region says that “we are mourning our Bavarian pope.”

    Bavarian governor Markus Soeder said on Twitter Saturday that “with him, society is losing a persuasive representative of the Catholic Church and one of the most influential theologians of the 20th century.”

    Soeder wrote that “many people in his homeland will remember him not just as pope, but also as a humble pastor.”

    He noted that “at the same time, he also had to face responsibility for difficult phases in his work.”

    The governor said that “he always carried his homeland in his heart.”

    The head of the German Bishops’ Conference, Limburg Bishop Georg Baetzing, said that “an impressive theologian and experienced shepherd is leaving us with the death of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI.”

    “We are mourning a personality who imparted hope and direction to the church even in difficult times,” Baetzing said in a statement. He voiced “great respect” for Benedict’s “courageous decision” to resign a decade ago.

    ———

    VATICAN CITY — The Vatican says Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI has died. He was 95.

    Benedict was the first pope in 600 years to resign. Benedict had become increasingly frail during his almost 10 years of retirement.

    Benedict’s dramatic decision in 2013 to resign paved the way for the conclave that elected Pope Francis. The two popes then lived side-by-side in the Vatican gardens in an unprecedented arrangement that set the stage for future “popes emeritus” to do the same.

    The former Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger never wanted to be pope. But he was forced to follow in St. John Paul II’s footsteps, running the church during a period of scandal and indifference.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Tennis ace Boris Becker recalls prison loneliness, friends

    Tennis ace Boris Becker recalls prison loneliness, friends

    [ad_1]

    BERLIN — Tennis great Boris Becker tearfully recounted the moment the door of his single-occupancy cell at Britain’s notorious Wandsworth prison closed for the first time, speaking publicly after serving eight months for bankruptcy offenses.

    “It was the loneliest moment I’ve ever had in life,” Becker said in an interview with German broadcaster SAT.1 that aired Tuesday, recalling how hours earlier he had been unable to say farewell to his loved ones before being led downstairs to the courtroom jail.

    The three-time Wimbledon champion ​​was sentenced to 30 months in prison in April for illicitly transferring large amounts of money and hiding assets after he was declared bankrupt. Becker would normally have had to serve half of his sentence before being eligible for release, but was released early under a fast-track deportation program for foreign nationals.

    Becker, who was deported to his native Germany on Dec. 15, said he prayed daily in the three weeks between his conviction and sentencing, conscious that there was a chance he might not get away with a suspended sentence.

    Arriving in Wandsworth, the 55-year-old Becker said he feared attacks by other inmates.

    “The many films I saw beforehand didn’t help,” he said.

    Becker said prison authorities appeared to have tried to ensure his safety, allocating him a single cell and getting three experienced inmates — or “listeners” — to guide him in his new life behind bars.

    That included coping with the lack of food, Becker said, as prison fare was largely restricted to rice, potatoes and sauce. “Sunday roasts” consisted of a chicken drumstick, he said.

    “I felt hunger for the first time in my life,” said Becker, who won the first of many millions of dollars as a player at the age of 17.

    Violence was a problem, he said, recounting instances at Wandsworth and later at HMP Huntercombe where inmates threatened to harm him until others stepped in.

    In November, fellow prisoners organized several cakes for his birthday, Becker said.

    “I’ve never experienced such solidarity in the free world,” he said, adding that he planned to stay in touch with some of the people he’d met in prison.

    For Becker, who rose to stardom in 1985 at age 17 when he became the first unseeded player to win the men’s singles title at Wimbledon, the prison sentence was a heavy blow.

    Asked about the judge’s statement that Becker had shown “no humility,” he acknowledged in the interview that “maybe I should have (been) even more clear, more emotional.”

    Becker also admitted fault.

    “Of course I was guilty,” he said of the four out of 29 counts he was convicted on.

    Still, Becker said he “it could have been much worse.”

    After retiring from professional tennis in 1999, the six-time Grand Slam champion worked as a coach and television pundit while also engaging in a wide range of investments and celebrity poker games.

    Now he hopes to turn a new page and avoid the mistakes he made in the past — many of which he blamed on laziness and bad financial advice received from others.

    “For years I made mistakes, I had false friends,” he said. “I think this time in prison brought me back.”

    Becker’s time outside the limelight likely won’t last long. Organizers of the annual Berlinale said Tuesday that next year’s film festival will feature the premiere of an as-yet untitled documentary about Becker by Oscar-winning director Alex Gibney.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Part of haul from 2019 German museum jewelry heist recovered

    Part of haul from 2019 German museum jewelry heist recovered

    [ad_1]

    BERLIN (AP) — German authorities said Saturday that they have recovered a significant part of the 18th-century treasures stolen from Dresden’s Green Vault museum in a spectacular break-in more than three years ago.

    Prosecutors and police said in a statement that they secured 31 items in Berlin overnight, including “several pieces that appear to be complete.” They were taken to Dresden, more than 160 kilometers (100 miles) away, where police and then officials from the authority that oversees the city’s art collections plan to check their authenticity and examine whether they are intact.

    Some prominent items are still missing, authorities said.

    Saturday’s statement gave no details of where exactly the items were found and in what circumstances.

    But they said that the find was preceded by exploratory talks between prosecutors and the defense in an ongoing trial over the theft on a possible agreement that would include the return of stolen items. They added that they can give no further information ahead of the next trial session scheduled for Tuesday.

    Six men went on trial in Dresden in January, accused of gang robbery and arson over the Nov. 25, 2019, robbery. The German nationals were accused of stealing jewelry with a total insured value of at least 113.8 million euros ($121 million).

    Officials said at the time that the items taken included a large diamond brooch and a diamond epaulette. The treasury of Augustus the Strong of Saxony was established in 1723 and contains around 4,000 objects of gold, precious stones and other materials on display in Dresden’s Royal Palace.

    Prosecutors have said that the suspects laid a fire just before the break-in to cut the power supply for street lights outside the museum, and also set fire to a car in a nearby garage before fleeing to Berlin.

    Saxony’s regional culture minister, Barbara Klepsch, said officials are waiting to see experts’ assessment and discover what condition the recovered pieces are in.

    “I remain hopeful that the wound opened in the historic Green Vault in the 2019 robbery will soon be closed,” Klepsch said in a statement. “This shows that, even three years after this painful break-in, it is worth not giving up hope and pursuing all tracks that arise.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Part of haul from 2019 German museum jewelry heist recovered

    Part of haul from 2019 German museum jewelry heist recovered

    [ad_1]

    BERLIN — German authorities said Saturday that they have recovered a significant part of the 18th-century treasures stolen from Dresden’s Green Vault museum in a spectacular break-in more than three years ago.

    Prosecutors and police said in a statement that they secured 31 items in Berlin overnight, including “several pieces that appear to be complete.” They were taken to Dresden, more than 160 kilometers (100 miles) away, where police and then officials from the authority that oversees the city’s art collections plan to check their authenticity and examine whether they are intact.

    Some prominent items are still missing, authorities said.

    Saturday’s statement gave no details of where exactly the items were found and in what circumstances.

    But they said that the find was preceded by exploratory talks between prosecutors and the defense in an ongoing trial over the theft on a possible agreement that would include the return of stolen items. They added that they can give no further information ahead of the next trial session scheduled for Tuesday.

    Six men went on trial in Dresden in January, accused of gang robbery and arson over the Nov. 25, 2019, robbery. The German nationals were accused of stealing jewelry with a total insured value of at least 113.8 million euros ($121 million).

    Officials said at the time that the items taken included a large diamond brooch and a diamond epaulette.

    Prosecutors have said that the suspects laid a fire just before the break-in to cut the power supply for street lights outside the museum, and also set fire to a car in a nearby garage before fleeing to Berlin.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Huge Berlin aquarium bursts; housed 1,500 tropical fish

    Huge Berlin aquarium bursts; housed 1,500 tropical fish

    [ad_1]

    BERLIN — A huge aquarium in the center of Berlin burst Friday, causing a wave of devastation in and around the Sea Life tourist attraction, German police said Friday.

    Glass and other debris were swept out of the building, which also contains a hotel and cafes, as 1 million liters of water poured out of the 25-meter (82-foot) -high aquarium shortly before 6 a.m. (0500GMT).

    Berlin’s fire service said two people were lightly injured and rescue dogs were being prepared to search the building for anyone who might be trapped under debris.

    There was speculation that freezing temperatures of down to minus 10 degrees Celsius (14 Fahrenheit) overnight had caused a crack in the tank, which then exploded under the weight of the water. Police said the cause of the incident was still being investigated but there was no evidence that it was the result of an attack.

    Witness Gwendolin Szyszkowitz told German news channel n-tv that she heard a loud bang and initially feared a bomb had exploded.

    Operators say the aquarium has the biggest cylindrical tank in the world and contained 1,500 tropical fish of 80 different species before the incident. The aquarium, which was last modernized in 2020, is a major tourist magnet in Berlin.

    The 10-minute elevator ride through the tank was one of the highlights of the attraction.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Climate activists stage protests at 2 German airports

    Climate activists stage protests at 2 German airports

    [ad_1]

    BERLIN — Climate activists briefly disrupted traffic at Munich airport in southern Germany Thursday, in a protest against the environmental impact of air travel.

    The group Last Generation said some of its members glued themselves to the tarmac in Munich, while others entered the grounds of Berlin airport.

    Henner Euting, a spokesperson for Munich airport, confirmed that the northern runway was briefly closed. Planes had to be routed over the southern runway, causing short delays, he said.

    A spokesperson for Berlin airport, Sabine Deckwerth, confirmed that a police operation was ongoing but said air traffic there was not disrupted.

    A similar protest recently at Berlin airport drew widespread condemnation from government officials and calls for tougher policing to stop activists interfering with air traffic.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Scholz: German offer of air defense system to Poland remains

    Scholz: German offer of air defense system to Poland remains

    [ad_1]

    BERLIN — German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Tuesday that his country’s offer to send Patriot anti-missile systems to Poland remains on the table despite Warsaw’s suggestion that they should go to Ukraine instead.

    Poland’s proposal has received a cool response from Berlin, where some are concerned that deploying Patriots to Ukraine could draw NATO into the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Defense experts say training for the highly sophisticated system could also take years, meaning it would not meet Ukraine’s immediate needs.

    “Our offer to the Polish government to protect their own country is not yet off the table,” Scholz told reporters during a news conference in Berlin.

    After Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, NATO beefed up defenses along its eastern flank. The alliance deployed U.S. Patriot batteries to Poland and German Patriot batteries to Slovakia, as well as a French equivalent system to Romania.

    Scholz said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had thanked Germany during a call Tuesday for the financial and military support it has provided to Kyiv so far, including air defense systems.

    Germany is looking into providing more Gepard self-propelled anti-aircraft guns to Ukraine, as well as the IRIS-T surface-to-air missile system, he said.

    ———

    Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine: https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Climate activists prompt closure of Berlin airport runways

    Climate activists prompt closure of Berlin airport runways

    [ad_1]

    A climate activist glues herself to a runway at the Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER) during a protest, in Berlin, Germany November 24, 2022, in this still image obtained from a handout video. Courtesy of LETZTE GENERATION/Handout via Reuters

    Letzte Generation | Via Reuters

    Berlin Brandenburg Airport on Thursday said it closed its takeoff and landing runways due to unauthorized access of several people, while a climate group said its activists glued themselves to the tarmac.

    The activists from the Last Generation environmental group called on the public to stop travelling by air and on the government to stop subsidizing it, the group said on Thursday.

    “In an airport area that is not open to the public, we encountered several people who had previously gained unauthorized access and some glued themselves,” Berlin police said on Twitter.

    A spokesperson for the airport said police had detained the activists but the runways were closed in order for staff to check for and rule out the presence of further people.

    The spokesperson could not say how many flights were affected.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • IEA chief sees energy crunch for Europe next winter

    IEA chief sees energy crunch for Europe next winter

    [ad_1]

    BERLIN — Europe should be able to cope with the natural gas supply crunch in the coming months thanks to considerable reserves although the continent could face a bigger energy crisis next winter, the head of the International Energy Agency said Thursday.

    Fatih Birol said that, barring unforeseen events, “Europe will go through this winter with some economic and social headaches, bruises here and there” as a result of efforts to wean itself off Russian gas and the wider increase in energy costs resulting from the war in Ukraine.

    “Next winter will be more difficult than this winter” he said.

    Birol cited the fact that Russian gas supplies to Europe may end completely next year, while China’s demand for liquefied natural gas looks set to rebound as its economy recovers from the pandemic.

    Meanwhile, the IEA projects new gas capacity coming online in 2023 to be the lowest in two decades, he said.

    “(This) is the reason Europe needs to prepare today for next year,” Birol said, adding that solidarity among European nations was key.

    Speaking at an energy symposium in Berlin hosted by the German government, the IEA chief said Russia can also expect to feel some costly effects of its falling out with European energy buyers over Ukraine.

    With 75% of Russia’s gas exports and 55% of its oil going to Europe before the war, Moscow needs to find new markets for its output, he said.

    Birol called it “completely wrong” to assume Russia will simply deliver to Asia, noting that pipelines through Siberia would take a decade to build and oil tankers need ten-times longer to reach clients in the East than in Europe.

    Additionally, the departure of specialized oil and gas technology companies from Russia due to the sanctions means production at challenging extraction sites is likely to fall.

    “Russia is set to lose the energy battle big time,” Birol said, adding that the IEA has calculated Moscow will lose about $1 trillion in revenue by 2030 because of its war in Ukraine.

    While noting that the energy crisis also has severe impacts on developing nations, Birol said it would help speed up the transition to alternatives to fossil fuels.

    “When I look at the (efforts to ensure) energy security, climate commitments and industrial policy drivers, I am optimistic that the current energy crisis will be a turning point in the history of energy policy making,” he said.

    Still, this will require a five-fold increase in clean energy investments compared to today, said Birol.

    [ad_2]

    Source link