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Tag: Germany

  • Scholz promises new budget plans ‘very quickly’ amid German spending crisis

    Scholz promises new budget plans ‘very quickly’ amid German spending crisis

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    BERLIN — German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Wednesday his ruling coalition would seek to present new budget plans “very quickly” to Parliament, after a constitutional court ruling last week plunged his government and its finances into disarray.

    The chancellor is facing mounting criticism that he still hasn’t managed to offer a proposal on how to make up Germany’s yawning budgetary shortfall one week after the bombshell court ruling blew a €60 billion hole in the books.

    It’s an accounting mess that now throws into doubt future payments for energy, the green transition of industry and microchip manufacturing.

    Crucially, last week’s ruling means not only a delay to next year’s budget — which became evident on Wednesday when a parliament committee postponed a preliminary adoption of spending plans for 2024 — but may also require a supplementary “emergency” budget for this year to deal with the fallout of the court decision.

    Speaking at a press conference with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni in Berlin, Scholz evaded specifics on what happens next, arguing the consequences of the ruling must still “be examined very carefully,” which should now be done “very swiftly and promptly.”

    The Social Democratic chancellor argued his three-party coalition, which also includes the Greens and the liberal Free Democratic Party (FDP), was determined to “very quickly” move forward with new budget plans, and “ensure that what we have set out to do — for good cohesion in Germany, for the further development of our welfare state, for the modernization of our economy — can actually be pursued further.”

    Still, he did not say where he could make the spending cuts that appear to be needed to make this possible.

    Scholz had already sounded upbeat on Tuesday that, despite budget cuts, Germany could still pay subsidies to chipmakers Intel and TSMC for building new plants in eastern Germany.

    A key consequence of last week’s ruling is that it will probably limit the ability of German leaders, both at the federal and state level, to use money from a variety of special funds that have been established to circumvent the debt brake. This mechanism restricts the federal deficit to 0.35 percent of GDP, except in times of emergency.

    During a budgetary committee hearing on Tuesday, several legal experts argued Scholz’s government would have to present a supplementary “emergency” budget for this year to account for more than €30 billion of expenses for energy subsidies. These subsidies had been financed via a special fund outside the regular budget — a practice that is likely to be unlawful in the light of last week’s ruling.

    Controversially, such a decision would probably require the suspension of the debt brake for this year.

    Questioned by POLITICO during an event in Berlin on Tuesday evening, German Finance Minister Christian Lindner, who has expressed great pride about upholding the debt brake in the past, evaded making a clear reply on potentially relaxing debt rules for this year.

    Lindner also argued the 2024 budget would be “a little less moderate and a little more restrictive.”

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  • Geert Wilders is the EU’s worst nightmare

    Geert Wilders is the EU’s worst nightmare

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    THE HAGUE — One line in Geert Wilders’ inflammatory pitch to Dutch voters will haunt Brussels more than any other: a referendum on leaving the EU. 

    Seven years after the British voted for Brexit, a so-called Nexit ballot was a core plank of the far-right leader’s ultimately successful offer in the Netherlands. 

    And while Wilders softened his anti-Islam rhetoric in recent weeks, there are no signs he wants to water down his Euroskepticism after his shock election victory

    Even if Dutch voters are not persuaded to follow the Brits out of the EU — polling suggests it’s unlikely — there’s every indication that a Wilders-led government in The Hague will still be a nightmare for Brussels.

    A seat for Wilders around the EU summit table would transform the dynamic, alongside other far-right and nationalist leaders already in post. Suddenly, policies ranging from climate action, to EU reform and weapons for Ukraine will be up for debate, and even reversal.

    Since the exit polls were announced, potential center-right partners have not ruled out forming a coalition with Wilders, who emerged as the clear winner. That’s despite the fact that for the past 10 years, he’s been kept out by centrists. 

    For his part, the 60-year-old veteran appears to be dead serious about taking power himself this time. 

    Ever since Mark Rutte’s replacement as VVD leader, Dilan Yeşilgöz, indicated early in the campaign that she could potentially enter coalition talks with Wilders, the far-right leader has worked hard to look more reasonable. He diluted some of his most strident positions, particularly on Islam — such as banning mosques — saying there are bigger priorities to fix. 

    On Wednesday night, with the results coming in, Wilders was more explicit: “I understand very well that parties do not want to be in a government with a party that wants unconstitutional measures,” he said. “We are not going to talk about mosques, Qurans and Islamic schools.”

    Even if Wilders is willing to drop his demand for an EU referendum in exchange for power, his victory will still send a shudder through the EU institutions. 

    And if centrist parties club together to keep Wilders out — again — there may be a price to pay with angry Dutch voters later on. 

    Brexit cheerleader Nigel Farage showed in the U.K. that you don’t need to be in power to be powerfully influential.

    Winds of change

    Migration was a dominant issue in the Dutch election. For EU politicians, it remains a pressing concern. As migrant numbers continue to rise, so too has support for far-right parties in many countries in Europe. In Italy last year, Giorgia Meloni won power for her Brothers of Italy. In France, Marine Le Pen’s National Rally remains a potent force, in second place in the polls. In Germany, the Alternative for Germany has also surged to second place in recent months. 

    In his victory speech, Wilders vowed to tackle what he called the “asylum tsunami” hitting the Netherlands. 

    “The main reasons voters have supported Wilders in these elections is his anti-immigration agenda, followed by his stances on the cost of living crisis and his health care position,” said Sarah de Lange, politics professor at the University of Amsterdam. Mainstream parties “legitimized Wilders” by making immigration a key issue, she said. “Voters might have thought that if that is the issue at stake, why not vote for the original rather than the copy?”

    For the left, the bright spot in the Netherlands was a strong showing for a well-organized alliance between Labor and the Greens. Frans Timmermans, the former European Commission vice president, galvanized support behind him. But even that joint ticket could not get close to beating Wilders’ tally. 

    Next June, the 27 countries of the EU hold an election for the European Parliament. 

    On the same day voters choose their MEPs, Belgium is holding a general election. Far-right Flemish independence leader Tom Van Grieken, who is also eyeing up a major breakthrough, offered his congratulations to Wilders: “Parties like ours are on their way in the whole of Europe,” he said. 

    Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán was celebrating, too: “The winds of change are here!”

    Pieter Haeck reported from Amsterdam and Tim Ross reported from London.

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    Tim Ross, Pieter Haeck, Eline Schaart and Jakob Hanke Vela

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  • Germany’s Protestant leader quits but denies ignoring sex abuse allegations

    Germany’s Protestant leader quits but denies ignoring sex abuse allegations

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    Annette Kurschus says she is stepping down ‘to prevent damage to my church’.

    The head of the Protestant Church in Germany has resigned amid accusations she turned a blind eye to allegations of sexual assault at a church she pastored in the 1990s.

    Annette Kurschus, a senior theologian who led Germany’s largest Protestant federation, said on Monday that she had no knowledge of the alleged abuse at the time but would step down to “prevent damage to my church”.

    “At every moment, I acted to the best of my knowledge and my conscience,” Kurschus said at a press conference announcing her resignation. “But public trust in my person has been damaged.”

    The 60-year-old theologian has been dogged by media reports that she was informed “in detail” of allegations of sexual abuse against a church colleague in the 1990s and took no action.

    The colleague — who served as a vicar in the church district of Siegen, where Kurschus worked — is now being investigated by police.

    Kurschus said she had been aware of the man’s “homosexuality and unfaithfulness in marriage” at the time but heard allegations of sexual abuse only this year.

    “I have never – and I stress this – never sought to shirk my responsibility, withhold important facts, cover up facts or even cover up for an accused person,” she said.

    Anna-Nicole Heinrich, who heads the Protestant Church’s synod, said Kurschus’s resignation “shows the importance placed by the church on firm action on the issue of sexual violence”.

    History of abuse

    While the Catholic Church has for years been rocked by sexual assault allegations against clergy, German Protestant institutions, which represent 19 million people, have faced little scrutiny.

    A study commissioned by the German Bishops’ Conference in 2018 concluded that 1,670 Catholic clergymen in the country had committed some form of sexual attacks against 3,677 minors from 1946 to 2014.

    The real number of victims is thought to be much higher.

    An 800-page report on just the Cologne diocese, released in 2021, found 202 alleged perpetrators of sexual assault and 314 victims from 1975 to 2018. More than half of the victims were under 14.

    The Catholic Church’s payouts for victims of abuse in Germany were increased in 2020 to up to 50,000 euros ($54,600), from about 5,000 euros ($5,460) previously, but campaigners say the sum is still inadequate.

    Last year alone, about 28 million euros ($30m) in payments were approved.

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  • Anti-green backlash hovers over COP climate talks

    Anti-green backlash hovers over COP climate talks

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    This article is part of the Road to COP special report, presented by SQM.

    LONDON — World leaders will touch down in Dubai next week for a climate change conference they’re billing yet again as the final off-ramp before catastrophe. But war, money squabbles and political headaches back home are already crowding the fate of the planet from the agenda.

    The breakdown of the Earth’s climate has for decades been the most important yet somehow least urgent of global crises, shoved to one side the moment politicians face a seemingly more acute problem. Even in 2023 — almost certainly the most scorching year in recorded history, with temperatures spawning catastrophic floods, wildfires and heat waves across the globe — the climate effort faces a bewildering array of distractions, headwinds and dismal prospects.

    “The plans to achieve net zero are increasingly under attack,” former U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May, who set her country’s goal of reaching climate neutrality into law, told POLITICO.

    The best outcome for the climate from the 13-day meeting, which is known as COP28 and opens Nov. 30, would be an unambiguous statement from almost 200 countries on how they intend to hasten their plans to cut fossil fuels, alongside new commitments from the richest nations on the planet to assist the poorest.

    But the odds against that happening are rising. Instead, the U.S. and its European allies are still struggling to cement a fragile deal with developing countries about an international climate-aid fund that had been hailed as the historic accomplishment of last year’s summit. Meanwhile, a populist backlash against the costs of green policies has governments across Europe pulling back — a reverse wave that would become an American-led tsunami if Donald Trump recaptures the White House next year.

    And across the developing world, the rise of energy and food prices stoked by the pandemic and the Ukraine war has caused inflation and debt to spiral, heightening the domestic pressure on climate-minded governments to spend their money on their most acute needs first.

    Even U.S. President Joe Biden, whose 2022 climate law kicked off a boom of clean-energy projects in the U.S., has endorsed fossil fuel drilling and pipeline projects under pressure to ease voter unease about rising fuel costs.

    Add to all that the newest Mideast war that began with Hamas’ attack on Israel on Oct. 7.

    On the upside, investment in much of the green economy is also surging. Analysts are cautiously opining that China’s emissions may have begun to decline, several years ahead of Beijing’s schedule. And the Paris-based International Energy Agency projects that global fossil fuel demand could peak this decade, with coal use plummeting and oil and gas plateauing afterward. Spurring these trends is a competition among powers such as China, the United States, India and the European Union to build out and dominate clean-energy industries.

    But the fossil fuel industry is betting against a global shift to green, instead investing its profits from the energy crisis into plans for long-term expansion of its core business.

    The air of gloom among many supporters of global climate action is hard to miss, as is the sense that global warming will not be the sole topic on leaders’ minds when they huddle in back rooms.

    “It’s getting away from us,” Tim Benton, director of the Chatham House environment and society center, said during a markedly downbeat discussion among climate experts at the think tank’s lodgings on St James’ Square in London earlier this month. “Where is the political space to drive the ambition that we need?”

    Fog of war

    The most acute distraction from global climate work is the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza. The conflagration is among many considerations the White House is weighing in Biden’s likely decision not to attend the summit, one senior administration official told POLITICO this month. Other leaders are also reconsidering their schedules, said one senior government official from a European country, who was granted anonymity to speak about the sensitive diplomacy of the conference.

    The war is also likely to push its way onto the climate summit’s unofficial agenda: Leaders of big Western powers who are attending will spend at least some of their diplomatically precious face-time with Middle East leaders discussing — not climate — but the regional security situation, said two people familiar with the planning for COP28 who could not be named for similar reasons. According to a preliminary list circulated by the United Arab Emirates, Israeli President Isaac Herzog or Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will attend the talks.

    A threat even exists that the conference could be canceled or relocated, should a wider regional conflict develop, Benton said. 

    The UAE’s COP28 presidency isn’t talking about that, at least publicly. “We look forward to hosting a safe, inclusive COP beginning at the end of November,” said a spokesperson in an emailed statement. But the strained global relations have already thrown the location of next years’ COP29 talks into doubt because Russia has blocked any EU country from hosting the conference, which is due to be held in eastern or central Europe.

    The upshot is that the bubble of global cooperation that landed the Paris climate agreement in 2015 has burst. “We have a lot of more divisive narratives now,” Laurence Tubiana, the European Climate Foundation CEO who was one of the drafters of the Paris deal, said at the same meeting at Chatham House.

    The Ukraine war and tensions between the U.S. and China in particular have widened the gap between developed and developing countries, Benton told POLITICO in an email. 

    Now, “the Hamas-Israel war potentially creates significant new fault lines between the Arab world and many Western countries that are perceived to be more pro-Israeli,” he said. “The geopolitical tensions arising from the war could create leverage that enables petrostates (many of which are Muslim) to shore up the status quo.”

    Add to that the as yet unknown impact on already high fossil fuel commodity prices, said Kalee Kreider, president of the Ridgely Walsh public affairs consultancy and a former adviser to U.S. Vice President Al Gore. “Volatility doesn’t usually help raise ambition.”

    The Biden administration’s decisions to approve a tranche of new fossil fuel production and export projects will undermine U.S. diplomacy at COP28, said Ed Markey, a Democratic U.S. senator from Massachusetts.

    “You can’t preach temperance from a barstool, and the United States is running a long tab,” he said.

    U.N. climate talks veterans have seen this program before. “No year over the past three decades has been free of political, economic or health challenges,” said former U.N. climate chief Patricia Espinosa, who now heads the consulting firm onepoint5. “We simply can’t wait for the perfect conditions to address climate change. Time is a luxury we no longer have — if we ever did.”

    The EU backlash

    Before the Mideast’s newest shock to the global energy system, the war in Ukraine exposed Europe’s energy dependence on Russia — and initially galvanized the EU to accelerate efforts to roll out cleaner alternatives.

    But in the past year, persistent inflation has worn away that zeal. Businesses and citizens worry about anything that might add to the financial strain, and this has frayed a consensus on climate change that had held for the past four years among left, center and center right parties across much of the 27-country bloc.

    In recent months, conservative members of the European Parliament have attacked several EU green proposals as excessive, framing themselves as pragmatic environmentalists ahead of Europe-wide elections next year.  Reinvigorated far-right parties across the bloc are also using the green agenda to attack more mainstream parties, a trend that is spooking the center. 

    Germany’s government was almost brought down this year by a law that sought to ban gas boilers — with the Greens-led economy ministry retreating to a compromise. In France, President Emmanuel Macron has joined a growing chorus agitating for a “regulatory pause” on green legislation.

    If Europe’s struggles emerge at COP28, the ripple effect could be global, said Simone Tagliapietra, a senior fellow at the Brussels-based Bruegel think tank. 

    The “EU has established itself as the global laboratory for climate neutrality,” he said. “But now it needs to deliver on the experiment, or the world (which is closely watching) will assume this just does not work. And that would be a disaster for all of us.”

    U.K. retreats

    The world is also watching the former EU member that stakes a claim to be the climate leader of the G7: the U.K.

    London has prided itself on its green credentials ever since former Prime Minister May enacted a 2019 law calling for net zero by 2050 — making her the first leader of a major economy to do so.

    According to May’s successor Boris Johnson, net zero was good for the planet, good for voters, good for the economy. But under current Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, the messaging has transformed. Net zero remains the target — but it comes with a “burden” on working people.

    In a major speech this fall, Sunak rolled back plans to ban new petrol and diesel car sales by 2030, bringing the U.K. into line with the EU’s 2035 date. With half an eye on Germany’s travails, he said millions of households would be exempted from the gas boiler ban expected in 2035.

    In making his arguments for a “pragmatic” approach to net zero, Sunak frequently draws on the talking points of net zero-skeptics. Why should the citizens of the U.K., which within its own borders produces just 1 percent of global emissions, “sacrifice even more than others?” 

    The danger, said one EU climate diplomat — granted anonymity to discuss domestic policy of an allied country — was that other countries around the COP28 negotiating table would hear that kind of rhetoric from a capital that had led the world — and repurpose it to make their own excuses.

    Sunak’s predecessor May sees similar risks.

    “Nearly a third of all global emissions originate from countries with territorial emissions of 1 per cent or less,” May said. “If we all slammed on the brakes, it would make our net zero aspirations impossible to achieve.”

    Trump’s back

    The U.S., the largest producer of industrial carbon pollution in modern history, has been a weathervane on climate depending on who controls its governing branches.

    When Republicans regained control of the U.S. House of Representatives in 2022, it created a major drag on Biden’s promise to provide $11.4 billion in annual global climate finance by 2024.

    Securing this money and much more, developing countries say, is vital to any progress on global climate goals at COP28. Last year, on the back of the pandemic and the energy price spike, global debt soared to a record $92 trillion. This cripples developing countries’ ability to build clean energy and defend themselves against — or recover from — hurricanes, floods, droughts and fires.

    Even when the money is there, the politics can be challenging. Multibillion-dollar clean energy partnerships that the G7 has pursued to shift South Africa, Indonesia, Vietnam and India off coal power are struggling to gain acceptance from the recipients.

    Yet even more dire consequences await if Trump wins back the presidency next year. 

    A Trump victory would put the world’s largest economy a pen stroke away from quitting the Paris Agreement all over again — or, even more drastically, abandoning the entire international regime of climate pacts and summits. The thought is already sending a chill: Negotiations over a fund for poorer countries’ climate losses and damage, which Republicans oppose, include talks on how to make its language “change-of-government-proof” in light of a potential Trump victory, said Michai Robertson, lead finance negotiator for a bloc of island states.

    More concretely for reining in planet-heating gases, Trump would be in position to approve legislation eliminating all or part of the Inflation Reduction Act. Biden’s signature climate law included $370 billion in incentives for clean energy, electric vehicles and other carbon-cutting efforts – though the actual spending is likely to soar even higher due to widespread interest in its programs and subsidies – and accounts for a bulk of projected U.S. emissions cuts this decade.

    Trump’s views on this kind of spending are no mystery: His first White House budget director dismissed climate programs as “a waste of your money,” and Trump himself promised last summer to “terminate these Green New Deal atrocities on Day One.”

    House Republicans have attempted to claw back parts of Biden’s climate law several times. That’s merely a political messaging effort for now, thanks to a Democrat-held Senate and a sure veto from Biden, but the prospects flip if the GOP gains full control of Congress and White House.

    Under a plan hatched by Tubiana and backed by former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, countries would in the future log their state and local government climate plans with the U.N., in an attempt to undergird the entire system against a second Republican blitzkrieg.

    The U.S. isn’t the only place where climate action is on the ballot, Benton told the conference at Chatham House on Nov. 1.

    News on Sunday that Argentina had elected as president right-wing populist Javier Milei — a Trump-like libertarian — raised the prospect of a major Latin American economy walking away from the Paris Agreement, either by formally withdrawing or by reneging on its promises.

    Elections are also scheduled in 2024 for the EU, India, Pakistan, Taiwan, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and Russia, and possibly the U.K. 

    “A quarter of the world’s population is facing elections in the next nine months,” he said. “If everyone goes to the right and populism becomes the order of the day … then I won’t hold out high hopes for Paris.”

    Zack Colman reported from Washington, D.C. Suzanne Lynch also contributed reporting from Brussels.

    This article is part of the Road to COP special report, presented by SQM. The article is produced with full editorial independence by POLITICO reporters and editors. Learn more about editorial content presented by outside advertisers.

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  • Commerzbank becomes the first German bank to secure crypto custody license

    Commerzbank becomes the first German bank to secure crypto custody license

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    Commerzbank becomes the first major German bank to receive a cryptocurrency custody license, signaling a strategic move into digital asset services.

    Commerzbank AG, Germany’s fourth-largest banking institution, has obtained a regulatory custody license for cryptocurrencies. This makes Commerzbank the first German full-service bank to acquire such a license, marking a significant step in integrating digital assets into traditional banking services.

    The authorization, under Article 1 Section 1a Sentence 1 No 6 of the German Banking Act (KWG), allows Commerzbank to offer extensive services centered around digital assets. This move aligns with the bank’s strategic vision to leverage innovative technologies in enhancing its service offerings, especially in cryptocurrencies.

    In the initial phase, Commerzbank aims to launch a robust and secure platform, complying with strict regulatory standards, to facilitate the custody of crypto assets for its institutional clients. This platform will be grounded in blockchain technology, ensuring a high level of security and reliability for its users.

    Dr. Jörg Oliveri del Castillo-Schulz, the Chief Operating Officer of Commerzbank, emphasized the significance of this development. He emphasized that this achievement lays a solid foundation for the institute to support its clients in navigating the emerging landscape of digital assets. 

    Germany has recently seen significant developments in cryptocurrency adoption from institutional entities. Blockchain funding in the country increased by 3% this year, and it hosted several key blockchain events throughout the year. Coinbase also recently selected Germany as a key hub for talent development, because of the region’s growing adoption of web3 technologies compared to the U.S. 


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  • My dad escaped Nazi death by stealing dog food – we must learn from the past

    My dad escaped Nazi death by stealing dog food – we must learn from the past

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    THE daughter of a Nazi death camp survivor has told her father’s incredible story for the first time — after being shocked by anti-Jewish hate triggered by the Hamas attacks.

    Mum-of-three Maja Klausner, 49, had kept silent on the heart-stopping story of her late father Wladyslaw Rath, an Auschwitz inmate who was on the real-life Schindler’s list.

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    The international Jewish community has been shocked by anti-Jewish hate triggered by the Hamas attacksCredit: Alamy
    Mum-of-three Maja Klausner is the daughter of a Nazi death camp survivor

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    Mum-of-three Maja Klausner is the daughter of a Nazi death camp survivorCredit: Doug Seeburg

    But she contacted The Sun after being moved by our front page showing the faces of 32 child hostages held by Hamas terrorists in Gaza.

    And yesterday she told how her peace campaigner dad would have been horrified by the rise of anti-Semitic hate set to be paraded again this Remembrance weekend.

    Housewife Maja, 49, said: “My father could not bring himself to describe what happened to him in Auschwitz until two years before his death.

    “It was too painful.

    “But when the film Schindler’s List was released, he began telling us he had been a part of that story and was one of the lucky ones who lived.

    “I had never intended to reveal what he told me but feel I have to say something as we remember the Second World War, because I fear the wheel of history has come full circle again.

    “There is so much hate — on both sides — but I would appeal to everyone planning to protest, please remember the lessons of the past.”

    Wladyslaw Rath was the 15-year-old son of a successful Jewish factory owner in Krakow, Poland, when the Nazi invasion decimated his well-to-do family’s life in 1939.

    ‘Huge, ferocious dogs’

    The youngster, his older sister Dora, then 19, their father Max and mother Amalia lost everything and were marched from their townhouse to Krakow’s ghetto at gunpoint.

    Amalia was gassed in a Nazi extermination camp and Max collapsed and died on a forced “death march” days before the end of the war.

    But Wladyslaw and Dora survived the horrors of Plaszow, Buchenwald and Auschwitz concentration camps thanks to Holocaust hero Oskar Schindler.

    The German industrialist saved 1,200 Jews by creating fake jobs for them in his Krakow armaments factory to keep them out of death camps.

    Wladyslaw and Dora were numbers 231 and 200 respectively on the record of employees immortalised as Schindler’s List in Steven Spielberg’s 1993 Oscar-winner.

    Before his death aged 71 in 1996, Wladyslaw told Maja he was saved by Schindler — played by Liam Neeson in the film — and how he thanked him after the conflict.

    But he also haltingly recounted his near-death ordeal at the hands of sadistic Plaszow camp commandant Amon Göth, chillingly portrayed by Ralph Fiennes in the film.

    Maja told The Sun: “My father was saved by Oskar Schindler but first had to survive Göth in Auschwitz.

    “In the movie Göth was seen delighting in shooting dead prisoners for fun with a sniper rifle, and my father endured this torment.

    “One day he was carrying a ladder through the camp with a man who was taller than he was when Göth appeared and began shooting.

    “A bullet went through my father’s hair and grazed his scalp but hit the taller man, killing him instantly.

    “My father was traumatised but had seen so much death in the camp by then that he just picked up the ladder and carried on walking.

    “While many lost the will to live and were shot, gassed, starved or worked to death, he somehow managed to stay strong and carry on.”

    Maja told how her father also recalled the horror of watching Jew-hating Göth’s huge, ferocious hunting dogs savage camp inmates to death.

    She told The Sun: “Göth had two enormous dogs which he had trained to kill.

    “They were vicious cross breeds as big as a Great Dane.

    “He would set his dogs into crowds of starving, exhausted prisoners and laugh as they tore people to pieces.

    “My father was in the crowd several times when this happened and somehow avoided being the victim.

    “And Göth later gave him the job no one wanted — feeding the dogs.”

    Maja told how her determined father, by then in his late teens, turned the feared chore to his advantage.

    Wladyslaw Rath was held in auschwitz but survived the war

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    Wladyslaw Rath was held in auschwitz but survived the warCredit: Doug Seeburg
    Wladyslaw survived by pretending to be an experienced factory machinists to enable him to be added to Schindler’s list

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    Wladyslaw survived by pretending to be an experienced factory machinists to enable him to be added to Schindler’s listCredit: Doug Seeburg

    She continued: “He had a way with animals which enabled him to control them.

    “He began stealing the dogs’ food to enable himself and other inmates to survive.

    “Everyone was terrified of them, so he would hide the food he stole as he walked with them and trained them to snarl at any camp guard who approached him.

    “That food kept them alive when many more starved.

    “He also managed to save Dora’s life by hiding her from the guards when she fell ill with typhoid.

    “Any prisoner unwell in Auschwitz was routinely gassed or shot immediately because they were of no further use to the Nazis.

    “This was the very peak of anti-Semitism of the kind we are seeing rising again now, the mass murder of millions of people just because they were Jewish.

    “It must never be allowed to happen again.”

    Wladyslaw and Dora survived by pretending to be experienced factory machinists to enable them to be added to Schindler’s list of fake forced labourers.

    Schindler, who died aged 66 in 1974, had his workers deliberately make dud shells to hamper Adolf Hitler’s war machine before Krakow and nearby Auschwitz were liberated in 1945.

    Maja said: “At the end of the war Oskar Schindler’s workers feared he would be mistaken for a Nazi and shot.

    “So my aunt Dora and others escorted him to surrender to the Allied soldiers to save his life.

    “Years later my father met him especially to say thank you.

    “He told me it was an incredibly emotional moment for them both.”

    Wladyslaw only survived the war because he was on Schindler's list

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    Wladyslaw only survived the war because he was on Schindler’s listCredit: AFP

    After the war, Wladyslaw moved to the Austrian capital, Vienna, where he ran a successful cinema business.

    He was invited to the world premier of Schindler’s List in the city in 1993.

    ‘Risk of attack too high’

    He also managed to track down and buy the wartime ID card of his nemesis Göth — which is now on display on the Auschwitz holocaust museum site.

    Maja said: “My father was a very positive person and always tried to look forward rather than back.

    “He never really talked about what happened in the war until a couple of years before his death.

    “He firmly believed that what happened to him and millions of others changed the world for ever, and I’m glad he is not alive to see what is happening today.

    “People were marching against Israel and celebrating the Hamas massacres on the streets even before Israelis retaliated.

    “I’m not a practising Jew but I have Jewish friends who are afraid to go out.

    “Others have removed Jewish names from their doorbells fearing they will be attacked.

    “I won’t be going to the Christmas markets in Vienna, which I love every year, because the risk of an attack by extremists is too high.

    “And while I am determined to speak out, I don’t want to give you the names of my three children in case they are put at risk.

    “This is the climate we are living in again, at a time of year when we are remembering those sacrificed during World War Two.

    “It feels as though history is going backwards and that we have learned nothing.”

    Maja — whose children are aged eight, ten and 12 — said she had been heartbroken by the suffering of Israelis and Palestinians triggered by the October 7 atrocities.

    And she was particularly moved by the plight of innocent youngsters caught in the crossfire, including the 32 Israeli child hostages pictured on a powerful Sun front page last month.

    Maja, who lives in Vienna and saw our front page online, said: “Children should play no part in this conflict, no matter which side they are on.

    “I learned a lot from my father and I make a point of reading newspapers from all over the world.

    “When I saw those faces on your front page I had to get in touch.

    “News organisations like your BBC were very quick to blame Israel when a Hamas rocket blew up a hospital and it’s very clear that people have taken sides.

    “But the faces of innocent children now cowering in terror in tunnels under Gaza tell the real story.

    “Like the innocent Palestinian children being killed, they are the real victims here.

    “We must save the children — and we must not let hate win.”

    Wladyslaw was forced into Plaszow concentration camp near Krakow

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    Wladyslaw was forced into Plaszow concentration camp near KrakowCredit: Bridgeman Images
    Wladyslaw recounted his near-death ordeal at the hands of sadistic Plaszow camp commandant Amon Göth

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    Wladyslaw recounted his near-death ordeal at the hands of sadistic Plaszow camp commandant Amon GöthCredit: Alamy
    Goth was chillingly portrayed by Ralph Fiennes in Schindler's list

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    Goth was chillingly portrayed by Ralph Fiennes in Schindler’s list
    Schindler died aged 66 in 1974

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    Schindler died aged 66 in 1974Credit: Rex
    Oskar Schindler has a permanent exhibition dedicated to him in the Mestske museum in his native town

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    Oskar Schindler has a permanent exhibition dedicated to him in the Mestske museum in his native townCredit: Alamy

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    Nick Parker

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  • US-EU unity ruptures over climate damage payments

    US-EU unity ruptures over climate damage payments

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    A Brussels promise has exposed the yawning gap between the United States and European Union over payments to climate-ravaged countries — just ahead of a major climate summit.

    The vow came Monday from Wopke Hoekstra, the EU’s climate commissioner, who said the EU was “ready to announce a substantial financial contribution” for a new climate damage fund. 

    The pronouncement flew in the face of the more cautious U.S. approach — and will inevitably raise pressure on Washington and other wealthy governments to follow suit. 

    The emerging divide reflects how contentious the debate is over a fund to support countries scarred by extreme weather and other global warming harms, often referred to as “loss and damage.” Even settling on a framework for the fund faced challenges until climate negotiators reached a fragile agreement earlier this month in Abu Dhabi. 

    The dispute has often pitted rich, heavy-emitting countries like the U.S. and the EU against the developing countries facing the impacts of those emissions. But long-simmering differences between Brussels and Washington are now also bubbling over as the new fund takes shape — especially as calls mount for wealthy countries to pay up.

    In Abu Dhabi, Germany’s lead negotiator went out of her way to clarify that even though she was speaking for a group of developed countries, “our constituency is not one single group with one single voice.” 

    That transatlantic divide risks complicating rich countries’ efforts to get developing nations to sign up for more ambitious climate action at the COP28 climate summit starting later this month in Dubai. Cracks in the EU-U.S. alliance will make negotiating against the likes of China and Saudi Arabia trickier, and Washington’s reluctance to pay is impeding efforts to build trust between the poorest and most vulnerable nations and those with the resources to help them. 

    U.S. climate envoy John Kerry told an event on Friday he was “confident” that Washington would contribute “several millions,” though it’s unclear when it could be delivered. The Biden administration has struggled to get finance for international climate efforts through Congress and tends to take a more hardline stance on climate disaster funding — for both strategic and ideological reasons. 

    The EU is no longer waiting around. 

    “We, the EU, are not only prepared to lead, but we are capable of showing leadership,” a senior EU diplomat, granted anonymity to speak candidly about the matter, told POLITICO. 

    Differing philosophies 

    The divide stems partly from a different sense of the moral responsibility borne by the U.S. and EU. 

    As the climate talks earlier this month concluded in Abu Dhabi, European representatives reluctantly supported the framework, while the U.S. continued to press for changes even after the meeting had ended, claiming the adopted text was “not a consensus document.” 

    A house destroyed by the sea on the island of Carti Sugtupu, in the Indigenous Guna Yala Comarca, Panama | Luis Acosta/AFP via Getty Images

    A State Department official told POLITICO the U.S. “did not consider it sufficiently clear what the members were being asked to agree to, particularly on the issue of sources of funding.” The text has now been clarified, the official added, putting the U.S. in a position to welcome the negotiators’ recommendations. 

    “So I hope we’re going to avoid an implosion in Dubai because we now have agreed … on the way in which we can manage this fund,” Kerry said on Friday. 

    But the tiff over punctuation — the Americans were largely concerned about the placement of a comma they argued could indicate developed countries had a particular responsibility to pay — is another sign of the divergence between Washington and Brussels. 

    The EU and the U.S. are aligned on core issues: Both want a fund for vulnerable countries that doesn’t pin a unique responsibility on developed countries to provide the cash. 

    But Europe has been more comfortable with a document calling on wealthy nations to take the lead on money. “These distinctions can cut in both directions — if we’re taking the lead, then we’re expecting someone else to follow,” the EU diplomat said. 

    The EU’s more relaxed approach stands in contrast to Washington’s obsession with legally watertight language. The U.S. worries that any suggestion that rich polluting nations might have a responsibility toward countries hit by climate disasters could lead to legal obligations to pay compensation. 

    “As always, the European team is more flexible, and they’re the first who are ready to invest,” said Gayane Gabrielyan, Armenia’s deputy environment minister, who participated in the Abu Dhabi talks.

    America’s political trump card

    Cash-strapped countries argue such financial pledges are the incentive they need to make their own emissions-slashing commitments.

    “You can’t ask developing countries to have a faster, greater green transformation than any developed country ever did and then on the other side say, ‘Oh, well we feel no obligation, and feel no responsibility for their climate loss and damage,’” said Avinash Persaud, climate envoy of Barbados, who participated in the talks in Abu Dhabi. 

    “I think the Europeans get that but our American partners don’t always appear to — or local politics trumps that,” he added. 

    Those politics are quite tricky for the U.S., however. President Joe Biden must get international climate finance pledges through Congress — a momentous challenge given the Republican-controlled House and a slim Democratic majority in the Senate, not to mention a potential looming government shutdown that would stall all funding bills. 

    Officials bring that challenge with them into climate finance negotiations, observers say. 

    President Joe Biden must get international climate finance pledges through Congress | Stefani Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

    “They try to create funds or agreements that are going to be more palatable in Congress,” said Brandon Wu, director of policy and campaigns at ActionAid USA. “But historically, the results of that has been the U.S. has just consistently watered stuff down and has not been a reliable partner in joining agreements or contributing funds.”

    That’s true for all kinds of climate funding, not just loss and damage. When Germany hosted a replenishment conference of the U.N.’s Green Climate Fund last month, Berlin put forward a record €2 billion, with other EU countries also contributing. The U.S. pledged nothing. 

    In another interview on Friday in Singapore, Kerry promised that Washington would “make a good-faith effort” when it comes to helping victims of climate disasters. 

    “But we need everyone to take part — it can’t be just a few countries, we need everyone to help to the degree that they can,” he said. 

    Leading or ceding leverage?

    Some see the Europeans’ flexibility as a strategic mistake. 

    A former U.K. official, granted anonymity in order to discuss a sensitive diplomatic matter, said that at last year’s COP27 in Egypt, the European Commission team undermined the position of other wealthy countries by backing a climate disaster fund before developing countries had agreed to cut emissions in return.

    The EU appears to have taken that message on board this year, with Hoekstra strongly implying Brussels will use climate disaster funding as a bargaining chip to obtain emission-cutting concessions.

    If countries make enough pledges at COP28 to slash emissions, the new climate disaster fund “can be launched in Dubai, with the first pledges, too,” he said in a speech in Kenya last week. “Because if we don’t cut greenhouse gas emissions, no amount of money will be able to pay [for] the damages.” 

    But the EU is already gathering money. A senior European climate negotiator, who could only speak on condition of anonymity because of their sensitive position, said Hoekstra had been touring European capitals asking them to prepare contributions, something the Commission would not confirm but did not deny. 

    No official POLITICO spoke to would say on the record whether and how much their country would pay into the fund — except for Denmark’s climate minister Dan Jørgensen. 

    “We were the first country to pledge money last year … and we will also be ready to do that again now,” Jørgensen told POLITICO and four European newspapers last week, promising a “generous pledge.” 

    Asked for more details later, his office asked POLITICO not to publish the comment — implying that the minister should not have revealed Denmark’s intention to pay just yet. 

    Still, the EU let the cat out of the bag on Monday with its promise to pay into the fund, even as it declined to detail how much. The precise amount, a diplomat from a European country represented at the recent loss and damage talks, was the “big fat carrot” in the COP28 negotiations.  

    But asked if Brussels was also bringing a stick to Dubai, the diplomat conceded: “I think the Americans are the ones swinging a stick.” 

    Abby Wallace contributed reporting. 

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    Zia Weise, Sara Schonhardt and Karl Mathiesen

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  • Europe can’t keep its promise to Ukraine, defense chief admits

    Europe can’t keep its promise to Ukraine, defense chief admits

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    BRUSSELS — The EU will deliver a million artillery shells to Ukraine — but not by the March deadline leaders had agreed, the CEO of the European Defence Agency Jiří Šedivý told POLITICO.

    The agency has been at the heart of efforts to transform the bloc’s military industry by matching contractors with capitals in massive joint ammunition deals targeted at boosting local production and supplying arms to Ukraine.

    The million shell target was decided by EU leaders last March to support Kyiv in its fight against invading Russian forces, but there were deep divisions over the success of the policy during Tuesday’s meeting of defense ministers in Brussels.

    Some, like Germany Defense Minister Boris Pistorius, said the target wouldn’t be reached and questioned the sense of setting it in the first place, while others, like Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton, said the bloc was capable of producing enough ammunition — as long as governments sign contracts with arms-makers.

    The EDA chief leans toward a more optimistic assessment.

    “The target of 1 million will be achieved — maybe even beyond that — but indeed, the timeline is too ambitious,” Šedivý said in an interview just hours after meeting defense ministers in his role as the chief of the bloc’s technical agency.

    So far, EU countries have dispatched around 300,000 shells to Ukraine, with the EDA running a second track to jointly procure ammo to refill national stocks as well as provide further support to Ukraine.

    In October, the agency said seven member countries agreed to place orders for critical 155 millimeter ammunition under a fast-track joint procurement scheme.

    While the EDA won’t disclose the total volume of those contracts, Šedivý said that, coupled with national orders from larger countries like Germany, France and Sweden, it would add up to “lower 100,000s of ammunition” which would still put the bloc well beneath the 1 million mark.

    “The orders are just being placed,” Šedivý, a former Czech defense minister, said. “The industry is just being engaged.”

    The EU’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, said Tuesday at the ministerial that contractors should be urged to boost deliveries to countries supplying Ukraine by curbing exports to non-EU clients.

    But that’s easier said than done.

    Some, like Germany Defense Minister Boris Pistorius, said the target wouldn’t be reached and questioned the sense of setting it in the first place | Tobia Schwarz/AFP via Getty Images

    “It’s quite unrealistic to imagine that customers outside the EU would accept any reprioritization,” Šedivý said.

    Instead, governments need to start committing to contracts running “five to 10 years” to spur investment in the EU, Šedivý added, in the same way that healthcare firms got bulk orders to build up stocks of COVID masks and testing kits during the pandemic.

    “We will not achieve this [million rounds] target by March 2024, most probably,” he said. “But at the same time we are getting there.”

    Laura Kayali contributed reporting.

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    Joshua Posaner

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  • Germany suggests UN take control in Gaza after Israel-Hamas war ends

    Germany suggests UN take control in Gaza after Israel-Hamas war ends

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    Germany has floated that the United Nations could take control in Gaza once the Israel-Hamas war is over, according to a document seen by POLITICO. 

    However, both the Palestinians and some EU diplomats have serious doubts about the feasibility of the idea, with a senior Palestinian figure in Europe calling it “unacceptable.”

    Israel has been striking the densely populated Gaza Strip in reaction to an attack by Hamas on October 7, during which the militant group killed around 1,200 Israelis. According to data from the Palestinian Authority, the Israeli strikes have killed more than 11,000 Palestinians.  

    Discussions are ongoing about how to allow more humanitarian aid into Gaza and how to stop the fighting. But there are also increasing discussions on scenarios for after the war. 

    U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said last month that an “effective and revitalized Palestinian Authority” should ultimately govern Gaza but offered no indications on how to make it “effective” or overcome Israeli opposition. Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had stated earlier that his country would take “overall security responsibility” for Gaza “for an indefinite period.” 

    That is a no-go for the EU and the United States.

    The EU’s top diplomat, Josep Borrell, on Monday stressed that Israel cannot stay in Gaza after the war, when he presented his vision for what happens post conflict ahead of a trip to Israel and the Palestinian territories. He also said, “we believe that a Palestinian authority must return to Gaza,” stressing he meant “one Palestinian authority, not the Palestinian Authority.”

    Blinken has also warned that Israel cannot reoccupy Gaza after its war with Hamas ends.

    The German proposal — a two-page, nonofficial document (or non-paper in EU-speak) — is dated October 21, so before Israel’s decision to launch the second phase of its military operation against Gaza at the end of October.

    Berlin, one of Israel’s staunchest allies within the EU, writes that “Israel’s goal is a goal we share: never again should Hamas be in a position to terrorize Israel and its citizens.” Yet at the same time, “it is clear that these goals are hard to achieve with military means only … Its radical ideology and agenda cannot be fought by military means.”

    It floats five different scenarios about the future of the Gaza Strip, including Israeli re-occupation of Gaza, and either the Palestinian Authority (PA) or Egypt taking control. 

    The U.N scenario is also on the list. In Berlin’s words, the scenario means an “internationalization of Gaza under the umbrella of the United Nations (and regional partners)” with “a carefully organized transition” toward Palestinian self-administration, “ideally” through elections “and in combination with an international coalition that provides necessary security.”

    The document described this scenario as one that “could offer a political perspective since neither the PA nor Egypt are willing or able to take over and a return to the status quo ante or an Israeli re-occupation are politically not desirable.” 

    But Berlin also warned that “this scenario would require significant investment of political capital and financing as well as an international coalition to engage on security issues alongside the U.N.”

    U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said last month that an “effective and revitalized Palestinian Authority” should ultimately govern Gaza but offered no indications on how to make it “effective” or overcome Israeli opposition | Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

    The document says that “the EU should take over a pro-active role in shaping this [the post-war] discussion” and it ends by emphasizing that the situation in the Gaza Strip “can only be sustainably stabilized through a relaunch of the Middle East Peace Process.” 

    European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen echoed the U.N. idea in her speech last week to EU ambassadors, saying that after the conflict the world has to ensure Gaza is no longer a safe haven for terrorists. To ensure that, von der Leyen said “different ideas are being discussed on how this can be ensured, including an international peace force under U.N. mandate.” 

    But several diplomats — granted, like others in this article, anonymity to discuss the sensitive subject — said that the German suggestion didn’t go far enough. It came in the very early stages of the conflict, it was not circulated among all member countries and was not intended to be discussed by foreign ministers.

    When German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock stated Berlin’s line more recently, she said that “Gaza must not be occupied, but ideally be placed under international protection” without explicitly mentioning a U.N. role.  

    One EU diplomat described the document as “stillborn.” 

    Palestinian no-go 

    The German suggestion has angered Palestinian officials, already unhappy at EU statements that don’t mention a cease-fire in Gaza.

    When German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock stated Berlin’s line more recently, she said that “Gaza must not be occupied, but ideally be placed under international protection” without explicitly mentioning a U.N. role | Sean Gallup/Getty Images

    That feeling extends across Muslim countries. The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) — which has 57 Muslim countries as members — held a press conference in Brussels on Monday morning, at the same time as EU foreign ministers were meeting, to argue that they don’t want to talk about the future of the Gaza Strip as long as there’s no cease-fire. 

    The 27 EU member countries have agreed on a call for “humanitarian corridors and pauses” but there’s no unanimity on a cease-fire, which is being pushed by Spain but objected to by the likes of Germany and Austria for several reasons, including that it could put Israel and Hamas on the same level, as the former is a country and the latter classed as a terrorist organization by the bloc.

    For Abdalrahim Alfarra, the head of the Palestinian Mission to the EU, Belgium and Luxembourg, the U.N taking control of Gaza would be “unacceptable.”

    He told POLITICO that a U.N role in providing international protection at the borders — like the blue helmets in the south of Lebanon — to protect the frontier between two future countries, Israel and Palestine, is “what we need.”

    The problem with the German document is that it doesn’t talk about U.N protection at the borders but rather about U.N “control of Gaza,” he said. 

    Alfarra said that the Palestinian Authority has not been consulted about the document and also criticized it for not mentioning any form of cease-fire before addressing the future of the region. 

    “They didn’t talk about how we’re going to protect the men and women now. Right away: the future of Gaza,” he said.

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    Jacopo Barigazzi and Barbara Moens

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  • Western air defenses turn Kyiv into a rare safe spot in war-torn Ukraine

    Western air defenses turn Kyiv into a rare safe spot in war-torn Ukraine

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    KYIV — Inna Kozich, a communications specialist from Kyiv, still cries when she remembers the first weeks of last year’s Russian siege of the Ukrainian capital.

    “At one moment my kids and I slept in a corridor for three weeks. I was going to bed, not sure if we all wake up the next day,” Kozich remembers.

    But the air defenses now protecting the capital make her feel safer in Kyiv than anywhere else in Ukraine — so much so that she’s afraid of venturing beyond the city.

    “I was even afraid to take my kids for a summer vacation because I knew other regions unfortunately do not have as strong air defense as we now do. And I feel so much pain for Ukrainians from other regions, who are still forced to live under daily Russian bombardment,” Kozich said.

    When the full-scale Russian invasion launched on February 24, 2022, a desperate President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called for the West to close Ukraine’s skies to Russian aviation and missiles. That didn’t happen, but Ukraine’s allies have steadily sent some of their best air defense systems to help protect the country’s cities, and especially Kyiv.

    When the war broke out, Kyiv relied on Soviet-era S-300 and Buk M1 medium-range anti-missile systems — a problem as replacement missiles are largely made by Russia.

    Those defenses have now been beefed up by short-range Gepard systems from Germany and Avenger Short-Range Air Defense from the U.S. to knock down drones and cruise missiles. At medium range, Ukraine is using MIM-23 Hawks from the U.S. made by Raytheon; NASAMS, developed by Raytheon and Norway’s Kongsberg; and Germany’s IRIS-T SLM. Long-range defenses are provided by the U.S. Patriot PAC-3 and the Eurosam SAMP/T supplied by France and Italy.

    Ukrainian air defense troops have shown they are capable of integrating modern systems with Soviet ones, Serhiy Popko, head of Kyiv’s military administration, told POLITICO.

    “We continue to expect support from allies and partners. We need more air defense. Diverse. And not only for the capital but also for every Ukrainian city. Each anti-aircraft missile complex is worth its weight in gold,” Popko said.

    After Russia first put the Patriots to the test, unsuccessfully attacking the capital for more than 20 days in May, Kyivans felt relatively safe for the first time.

    “We were waiting for those Patriots like manna from heaven,” Kozich said. “It was such a relief.”

    Soon, people from other regions, where air defense is not as strong, started moving to Kyiv and the surrounding region, even though it is still frequently attacked. This weekend Russia sent waves of drones against Kyiv, most of which were shot down.

    Ukrainian air defense troops have shown they are capable of integrating modern systems with Soviet ones | Sergei Supinsky/AFP via Getty Images

    “Your accuracy, guys, is literally life for Ukraine,” Zelenskyy said in a weekend public address. “As winter approaches, there will be more Russian attempts to make the strikes more powerful. It is crucial for all of us in Ukraine to be one hundred percent effective.”

    Safe haven

    Ukraine’s cities have become lifeboats for people fleeing Russian attacks. Kyiv and the surrounding region now host almost 600,000 displaced people from other parts of Ukraine, the U.N.’s International Organization for Migration estimated in September. Other large cities are also seeing influxes of internal refugees, with about half a million now sheltering each in the Dnipropetrovsk and Kharkiv regions.

    “The first active phase of internal migration began immediately after the liberation of the Kyiv region. People from cities where active hostilities were taking place were coming at that time. Then, when Patriot arrived, people from Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia began to actively move and look for housing in Kyiv, explaining this by the fact that Kyiv is protected and fewer missiles are flying here than in their cities,” said Oleksandr Zhytiuk, a local realtor.  

    “Ukrainians from abroad also started to return after this May, when Russians were shelling us almost daily, proving the effectiveness of air defense. Today people believe it is calmer in Kyiv,” he added.

    That’s led to a jump in local real estate prices from a collapse in the early months of the war.

    Before the full-scale invasion, about 3.9 million people lived in the Ukrainian capital. By the spring of 2022, however, 1.9 million had fled, said Denys Sudilkovsky, brand and business director of LUN, an online real estate platform. Most are now back.

    “Back then it was not uncommon to find offers to rent apartments in Kyiv for the cost of utilities,” Sudilkovsky said.

    Rental prices had almost returned to pre-invasion levels by the fall of 2022, according to LUN data.

    “The return of people slowed down when Russians started shelling energy infrastructure. However, the winter of 2022-2023 showed Kyiv is capable of protecting its skies with modern Western air defense systems, and already from the spring of 2023, we began to observe a further increase in demand for long-term rental housing in Kyiv,” Sudilkovsky said.

    Still a war zone

    But the capital isn’t entirely safe — as this weekend’s attacks showed. Air raid sirens still howl almost daily, and Ukrainian officials urge people to remain cautious, Popko said.

    “With the additional air defense systems, the level of protection of the capital from air attacks has become better. But I never get tired of repeating that the best defense is to go to the shelter during an air alert. Bitter experience proves that even shot-down missiles carry a deadly threat due to numerous debris,” he said.

    While people in Kyiv do feel safer, those in Ukraine’s eastern and southern regions are still suffering from daily bombardments. Russians are hitting Odesa and its strategic port, as well as the regions of Kherson, Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia.

    “I still remember the sound I heard when our Patriot shot down the first [Russian hypersonic] Kinzhal missile this summer. After that I know whatever Russians shoot at us, our air defense will shoot it down. However, other cities still cannot allow the luxury of feeling like I do,” Kozich said, adding she is still afraid to leave the city to go to her country house.

    The Ukrainian government has been urging its allies to provide more air defenses to cover other cities.  

    “The more protected the Ukrainian skies, Ukrainian cities, and villages are, the more opportunities our people will have for economic activity, for production, among other things, [for] defense industries, ” Zelenskyy said in a video statement.

    The Ukraine president also said Kyiv wants to co-produce weapons with its partners, and expects its allies to send more air defense systems by the end of the year to fend off Russia’s anticipated winter attacks on energy infrastructure.

    “Russians are insidious, and intimidation of civilians with missile terror is one of their strategies. They will never give up shelling civilians and infrastructure. Therefore, we must be sure we have something to protect our people,” Kozich said.

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    Veronika Melkozerova

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  • Hamburg airport hostage standoff ends with child freed, suspect arrested

    Hamburg airport hostage standoff ends with child freed, suspect arrested

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    The 18-hour drama started after a man drove his car through the airport gate with his four-year-old daughter inside.

    Police in Germany’s Hamburg city have arrested a man and rescued a child at the centre of a hostage standoff at the airport, ending an 18-hour crisis that had forced authorities to close the busy air hub.

    A man, who police on Sunday said was suspected of carrying a gun and possibly explosives, drove a vehicle through the gates of the airport on Saturday night, officers said.

    Police said the 35-year-old man was with his four-year-old daughter and was thought to be involved in a custody dispute.

    “The hostage situation is over,” the city’s police force wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

    “The suspect got out of the car with his daughter. The man was arrested by the emergency services without resistance. The child appears to be unharmed.”

    The apparent family drama started on Saturday in Stade in nearby Lower Saxony, where the man’s wife was staying. The woman had contacted the state police about a possible abduction.

    The Hamburg police wrote on X that they were “assuming that a custody dispute is the background to the operation”.

    The man, 35, held the girl hostage in the car, as she could be heard in the background during the negotiations which were conducted in Turkish, a police spokeswoman told dpa news agency.

    The man broke through the airport gate around 8pm (19:00 GMT) on Saturday, shot into the air and threw incendiary devices from the car. His car was then parked next to a Turkish Airlines plane for more than 18 hours.

    The police tried for hours to end the hostage-taking without bloodshed – finally succeeding early on Sunday afternoon.

    For the Hamburg police, it was “one of the longest and most challenging operations in recent history,” according to Andy Grote, the interior senator for Hamburg, who thanked the police for ending the standoff.

    “I wish the mother, the child and her family a lot of strength to cope with this terrible experience,” Hamburg Mayor Peter Tschentscher wrote on X.

    The Hamburg airport said it was working to resume operations as quickly as possible. A total of 286 flights with around 34,500 passengers had been scheduled for Sunday, authorities earlier said.

    The episode raised concerns over security at the airport less than four months after climate activists got onto its runway and blocked planes.

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  • German airport closed after armed driver breaches gate, fires gun

    German airport closed after armed driver breaches gate, fires gun

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    The airport in the northern German city of Hamburg was closed to passengers, and flights were canceled Saturday night after a vehicle broke through security and entered the premises, German news agency dpa reported.

    Federal police said an armed man had broken through a gate with his vehicle and fired twice into the air with a weapon. Police also said that the man’s wife had previously contacted them about a possible child abduction.

    Hamburg police later reported that there were at least two people in the vehicle, including a child. A standoff was ongoing. Police said they had made contact with the suspect.

    Federal police spokesman Thomas Gerbert told dpa that a large number of officers from state and federal police were on site and in the vicinity of the vehicle.

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  • Maddie suspect Christian B’s bombshell ‘MM’ text to fellow paedo is revealed

    Maddie suspect Christian B’s bombshell ‘MM’ text to fellow paedo is revealed

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    A SICK online exchange between prime suspect in the Madeleine McCann case Christian B and another paedophile has been revealed.

    The vile messages “could be a hint” that finally leads investigators to answers for the toddler‘s grieving family, according to the case’s lead prosecutor.

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    Convicted sexual predator Christian B is the prime suspect in Madeleine’s caseCredit: BILD
    Madeleine McCann vanished from a Portuguese resort in 2007 while on holiday with her family

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    Madeleine McCann vanished from a Portuguese resort in 2007 while on holiday with her familyCredit: PA:Press Association
    A lead prosecutor said messages could 'hint' at what happened to the toddler

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    A lead prosecutor said messages could ‘hint’ at what happened to the toddlerCredit: BBC / Prime Suspect: Who Took Madeleine McCann?

    Convicted sexual predator Christian B is yet to be formally charged but was named by cops as the prime suspect after the three-year-old vanished in 2007 while on a family holiday in Praia da Luz, Portugal.

    Sixteen years on, German prosecutor Hans Christian Wolters has told BBC‘s Panorama that online messages sent between Christian B and and another paedophile might include a reference to Madeleine.

    In the chat discovered on one of Christian B’s computers, the suspect detailed his desires to abduct and kill a little girl – and “document it”.

    He then spoke of “destroying evidence” to which the paedophile replied: “mm.”

    Read more on Madeleine’s case

    Of the exchange, Mr Wolters said: “It could be a hint.

    “Of course, it’s important to us. It could be piece for the big puzzle.”

    The suspect’s extensive online chat history is known to contain disturbing messages pointing to his paedophile fantasies.

    He allegedly discussed kidnapping and sexually abusing a child in a chatroom exchange in September 2013, and claimed he would make a lot of films if he were to capture a “little one”.

    Christian B is currently serving a seven-year sentence for the brutal rape of a pensioner in Portugal at a high-security prison known as the “Alcatraz of the North” in the German city of Oldenburg.

    He could face trial as early as February next year for a string of heinous alleged crimes including three rapes and two sex attacks on children, it was reported this month.

    Two of the alleged rapes are said to have taken place at his former residence outside Praia da Luz, where Madeleine disappeared.

    German authorities have indicated a trial related to Madeleine’s case could take place shortly after Christian B’s upcoming trial, The Olive Press reports.

    Mr Wolters added: “I can only say that we have only one suspect at the moment.

    “[She died] in Portugal and we think maybe we know where it happened.”

    In the Panorama documentary, a woman said Christian B ran a “rebellious gang” in Würzburg, Germany when he was a teenager.

    She said: “They were very rebellious and destroyed a lot of stuff.

    “They were always out and about, escaping through windows and gone.”

    Others who encountered Christian B in the years following Madeleine’s disappearance spoke of his violent and aggressive nature.

    A bar manager, Brigitte Szegedi, recalled the “fits of rage” she witnessed him have with other patrons, while a former employee of the suspect claimed he once confronted him with a knife.

    The unnamed man told the BBC: “He had this long knife and wanted to stab me. He was drunk or on drugs.

    “His eyes glistened like mad and he was filled with rage.”

    The man added Christian B’s girlfriend, who was a teenager when the suspect was in his late 30s, was assaulted by him.

    He claimed: “I met her at the bus stop and asked her where she had got those strangulation marks from and she told me he strangled her and beat her.

    “She was scared stiff of him, she told me a lot of things. She was really scared of him.”

    The main said he had no doubts Christian B was capable of the crimes he is accused of, explaining: “In the beginning he is sweet but once you get to know him, he is a psychopath.

    “He has several faces. This man is highly, highly dangerous.”

    A third man, who previously employed Christian B in the Algarve in Portugal, said Christian B once broke his nose in an argument.

    It was also revealed in the programme that Portuguese police apologised to Madeleine’s parents for the way they handled their daughter’s disappearance.

    Kate and Gerry McCann were made arguidos – or suspects – in the investigation into Madeleine’s disappearance.

    Both were questioned by Portuguese detectives, who believed they had staged an abduction and concealed their daughter’s body.

    Kate McCann has said she was offered a deal to admit covering up her daughter’s death in exchange for a shorter sentence.

    The couple’s arguido status was lifted in 2008, but they remained under suspicion in Portugal for years.

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    Jessica Baker

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  • British PM Rishi Sunak secures ‘landmark’ deal on AI testing

    British PM Rishi Sunak secures ‘landmark’ deal on AI testing

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    BLETCHLEY, England — The British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on Thursday said that under a new agreement “like-minded governments” would be able to test eight leading tech companies’ AI models before they are released.

    Closing out the two-day artificial intelligence summit in Bletchley Park on Thursday, Sunak announced the agreement signed by Australia, Canada, the European Union, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Korea, Singapore, the U.S. and the U.K. to test leading companies’ AI models. 

    “Until now the only people testing the safety of new AI models have been the very companies developing it. That must change,” said Sunak to a room full of journalists. 

    “Like-minded governments and AI companies have today reached a landmark agreement. We will work together on testing the safety of new AI models before they are released… it’s made possible by the decision I have taken along with Vice President Kamala Harris for the British and American governments to establish world leading AI safety institutes with public sector capability to test the most advanced frontier models.”

    Sunak said the eight companies — Amazon Web Services, Anthropic, Google, Google DeepMind, Inflection AI, Meta, Microsoft, Mistral AI and Open AI — had agreed to “deepen” the access already given to his Frontier AI Taskforce, which is the forerunner to the new institute. The access is currently given on a voluntary basis, though under its Executive Order, the U.S. government has put binding requirements to hand over certain safety information. 

    Sunak also announced further details of an agreement reached with countries yesterday to establish an international advisory panel on frontier AI risks. 

    Modeled on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), it will be formed from representatives from the 28 countries attending the summit. The British government said it would provide secretariat support for it.

    The panel will also support academic Yoshua Bengio in producing a “State of Science” report into the risks and capabilities of frontier AI. The report will not make policy recommendations, but is designed to inform international and national policy making. It will be published ahead of the next safety summit in South Korea in the first half of next year.

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    Vincent Manancourt

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  • Anne Frank kindergarten in Germany discusses changing name, sparking uproar

    Anne Frank kindergarten in Germany discusses changing name, sparking uproar

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    A German kindergarten’s longstanding discussion around changing its name from “Anne Frank” to “World Explorer” was criticized by Jewish community members and local politicians in recent days amid the backdrop of the Israel-Hamas war.

    The discussion has been ongoing “long before the current discussions and events,” the press release from Tangerhütte, where the kindergarten is based, clarified on Monday. “The discussion arose at the beginning of 2023 to make this fundamental change in concept visible to the outside world by giving the institution a different name in order to visibly mark this fundamental new beginning,” the release said.

    The months-long discussions suddenly sparked a storm over the weekend as Germany grapples with both a resurgence of antisemitism and issues of anti-Muslim sentiment as the fallout of the war between Israel and Hamas plays out across Europe.

    Anne Frank — a young girl who kept a diary while hiding in Amsterdam from Adolf Hitler’s forces in the 1940s — was one of the most prominent victims of the Holocaust carried out by the Nazis in World War II, during which around six million Jewish people were killed.

    According to television outlet n-tv, the city council said that some parents and employees requested to the change the name. The daycare center manager Linda Schichor said that children struggle to understand the name, while parents with a migration background often don’t relate to Anne Frank, German media Volksstimme first reported over the weekend. “We wanted something without a political background,” Schichor said.

    Andreas Brohm, the mayor of Tangerhütte in the state of Saxony-Anhalt, said the name change was in discussion but there was no concrete decision yet. “That wasn’t even up for debate, that’s the crazy thing. It wasn’t up for decision before Saturday, it’s a discussion process that’s ongoing” Brohm told POLITICO on Monday.

    The plan was to find something “that has a more positive connotation, not because Anne Frank has a negative connotation, but because people associate what they associate with it and with the day-care center concept,” Brohm said.

    POLITICO reached out to the head of the daycare for clarification on how the discussion originated and did not receive an immediate reply Monday evening.

    Saxony-Anhalt’s Jewish group and senior politicians were outraged by the proposal.

    “With all due respect to the conceptual changes of the institution and the fact that the story (not a fairy tale, but a true story) of the Jewish girl is difficult to grasp for small children (it was just as difficult to grasp a year ago and 50 years ago), this name change creates an unpleasant aftertaste right now,” Max Privorozki, chairman of the State Association of Jewish Communities in Saxony-Anhalt, told POLITICO in an emailed statement.

    Economy minister of Saxony-Anhalt, Sven Schulze, said that his party, the center-right CDU, “will of course not agree to the renaming of the Anne Frank daycare centre. I hope all the other councillors won’t either. Not only in this day and age, but in general, such a proposal is completely absurd, instinctive and small-minded.”

    Hamas, the political party that has governed Gaza since 2007, and which has an armed wing, attacked Israel on October 7, killing more than 1,400 Israelis and taking more than 200 hostages to Gaza. Israel retaliated with a “complete siege” of Gaza, and daily airstrikes which, according to the Hamas-controlled health authorities in Gaza, killed more than 10,000 Palestinians in one month.

    The months-long discussions suddenly sparked a storm over the weekend as Germany grapples with a resurgence of antisemitism | Sean Gallup/Getty Images

    Local politicians also have reacted, promising to stop a possible name change. “On Wednesday, the town council will unanimously position itself against the proposal to rename the daycare center,” Werner Jacob (CDU), chairman of the town council, told German news outlet WELT.

    “The reference to parents with a migration background, who often can’t relate to Anne Frank’s name, is the best argument against the name change in particular,” Privorozki said.

    Instead of changing the kindergarten’s name, Privorozki invited parents to read Anne Frank’s diaries.

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    Laura Hülsemann

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  • Picture Tree Int’l Boards Alireza Golafshan’s ‘Everything’s Fifty Fifty’ & Posts Deals For German B.O. Hit ‘Weekend Rebels’ – AFM

    Picture Tree Int’l Boards Alireza Golafshan’s ‘Everything’s Fifty Fifty’ & Posts Deals For German B.O. Hit ‘Weekend Rebels’ – AFM

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    EXCLUSIVE: Picture Tree International (PTI) has boarded sales on German Iranian director Alireza Golafshan’s comedy Everything’s Fifty Fifty about a divorced couple who embark on a family vacation, ahead of the AFM.

    Laura Tonke (Jupiter) and Moritz Bleitreu (The Experiment, Manta Manta Legacy) play a divorced couple who head to Italy for a family holiday with their young son and the former’s new boyfriend, played by David Kross (The Reader, The King’s Man).

    Planned with the best of intentions, the trip exposes cracks in their parenting, forcing them to reappraise their approach and work out how to function as a family again.

    The movie follows Golafshan’s Ibiza-set hen party caper JGA and reunites him with producers Justyna Muesch, Quirin Berg and Max Wiedemann at Leonine-company Wiedemann & Berg, best known for The Lives Of Others, Never Look Away and Who am I.

    They are lead producing in co-production with Seven Pictures Film and Leonine Licensing. Leonine Studios has set a tentative theatrical release date of on January 18 2024.

    The sales acquisition follows PTI’s successful collaboration with Wiedemann & Berg on Marc Rothemund’s Weekend Rebels, which is nearing 600,000 admissions in Germany following its theatrical release there on September 28.

    The heart-warming tale, based on a true story, stars Florian David Fitz as a father who bonds with his autistic son through soccer.  

    PTI has unveiled a first round of salse on the title to South Korea (Jinjin) (South Korea), Japan (SDP), Taiwan (Swallow Wings), Latin America (Encripta), Israel (Nachshon) Ukraine (Svoekino), Czech Republic and Slovakia (AQS), the Netherlands (VPRO) and airlines (Encore).

     PTI’s AFM slate also features A Whole Life, adapted from Robert Seethaler’s classic novel about a man living in dignity in the Austrian Alps in the face of hardship and loss. The film played at IFF Newport Beach and Whistler, after world premiering in Zurich, ahead of a release in Germany by Tobias Film on November 9.

    Further titles include Chris Kraus’s retribution drama sequel 15 Years starring Hannah Herzsprung (The Reader, Who Am I) and Albrecht Schuch (All Quiet on the Western Front, System Crasher); 2020 Vienna terrorist attack drama Woodland by Elisabeth Scharang, which debuted at Toronto and Zurich, and Venison.

    The latter title is the ninth instalment in Ed Herzog’s Constantin Film-produced Bavarian Rhapsody franchise and was one of the year’s biggest box office hits in Germany with 1.5 million theatrical admissions.

    PTI will also present the first made-for-television titles to come out of its recently announced sales collaboration with Bavaria Media, under which it is handling territories outside of Europe on the historical dramas A Stolen Life – The Destiny Of Martha Liebermann, The Heart Of Cape Town and White Silence.

    As part of the venture, PTI is also entering the sales of serial programs including the crime series Dark Lake and Cold Valleys as well as family series Dr. Dog.

    The collaboration broadens PTI’s portfolio beyond theatrical feature films as its also heads to Ventana Sur and the Asia Television Forum (ATF) in Singapore after the AFM

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  • Kate & Gerry McCann finally get apology for being treated as suspects

    Kate & Gerry McCann finally get apology for being treated as suspects

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    PORTUGUESE police have apologised to the parents of Madeleine McCann for the way they handled their daughter’s disappearance.

    Three-year-old Madeleine went missing during a family holiday on the Algarve in May 2007.

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    Portuguese police have apologised to Gerry and Kate McCann over how they treated them while investigating the disappearance of their daughter MadeleineCredit: Getty – Contributor
    Disgraced former Portuguese cop Goncalo Amaral previously branded suspect Christian B a 'scapegoat’ on Portuguese TV

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    Disgraced former Portuguese cop Goncalo Amaral previously branded suspect Christian B a ‘scapegoat’ on Portuguese TVCredit: The Sun
    Madeleine went missing in May 2007 during a family holiday in the Algarve

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    Madeleine went missing in May 2007 during a family holiday in the AlgarveCredit: Rex

    The cops have told BBC’s Panorama that a delegation of senior officers travelled from Lisbon to London earlier this year.

    They met Gerry McCann, Madeleine’s father, and apologised for the way detectives investigated the case and treated the family.

    In September 2007, Kate and Gerry McCann were made arguidos – or suspects – in the investigation into Madeleine’s disappearance.

    Both were questioned by Portuguese detectives, who believed they had staged an abduction and concealed their daughter’s body.

    Read More on Maddie McCann

    Kate McCann has said she was offered a deal to admit covering up her daughter’s death in exchange for a shorter sentence.

    The couple’s arguido status was lifted in 2008, but they remained under suspicion in Portugal for years.

    Much of the damage was caused by one man – the original lead detective, Goncalo Amaral.

    He was sacked from the investigation but went on to write a book and present a TV documentary accusing the McCanns of being involved in their daughter’s disappearance.

    As well as apologising, the Portuguese police have told Panorama that they also briefed the McCann family on the ongoing investigation.

    They gave their support to German prosecutors who believe 46-year-old Christian B killed Madeleine McCann.

    Portuguese detectives now also think he’s the prime suspect.

    Christian B is currently serving a seven-year prison term in Germany for rape and drug trafficking.

    The German denies killing Madeleine.

    For the past five years, the German authorities have been investigating him in connection with Madeleine McCann’s disappearance.

    But Christian B hasn’t been charged.

    Hans Christian Wolters, one of the German prosecutors on the case, said they hoped to complete their investigation next year.

    “It’s a big puzzle and we have some important pieces but some pieces are missed.

    “So, we hope to find as many pieces as we could get, so the picture will be a complete one.

    “We think that he was involved in the disappearance of Madeleine McCann and we think that he murdered Madeleine McCann.”

    Mr Wolters also welcomed the Portuguese apology to the McCann family.

    He said: “It’s a good sign and it shows that in Portugal there’s development in the McCann case.

    I think it’s a good and right decision.”

    Christian B has already been charged with a further three rapes, sexual assault, and sexual assault of a child.

    The five offences are alleged to have been committed on the Portuguese Algarve.

    Mr Wolters confirmed that they would go to trial in February.

    Christian B’s lawyer, Friedrich Fulscher, said his client was exercising his right to silence.

    He said: “We know the contents of the files, and I think the charges are all based on very, very shaky foundations.”

    The McCann family have not commented on the apology.

    The Panorama programme Prime Suspect: Who Took Madeleine McCann? airs tonight at 8pm on BBC1.

    The investigation into what happened to Madeleine continues

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    The investigation into what happened to Madeleine continuesCredit: PA
    Madeleine's parents were made arguidos - or suspects - in September 2007

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    Madeleine’s parents were made arguidos – or suspects – in September 2007Credit: AFP – Getty

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    Rob Pattinson

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  • Siemens Energy shares fall 40% after company seeks government support amid wind-turbine woes

    Siemens Energy shares fall 40% after company seeks government support amid wind-turbine woes

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    Siemens Energy AG is in talks with the German government about securing as much as €16 billion ($16.9 billion) in state guarantees as problems at its wind-turbine unit spread to the rest of the business. Shares plummeted 40%.

    The company is seeking backstops over a two-year period after major shareholder and former parent company Siemens AG indicated it was no longer willing to help, according to people familiar with the matter. The company said Thursday it’s also speaking to banks, and the government confirmed the talks.

    Siemens Energy needs the guarantees to win new large-scale contracts to build transmission networks and gas turbines. While those units are profitable, they’re now threatened by the strain that the string of losses from the Gamesa wind unit is putting on the company’s balance sheet in what has become one of Germany’s biggest industrial debacles.

    The guarantees have become crucial after the company earlier this year forecast a €4.5 billion loss for fiscal 2024 despite assurances it had finally come up with a plan to address problems with certain wind turbines. S&P in July downgraded it to BBB-minus with a stable outlook from BBB with a negative outlook.

    While the company has been working on a broad review of the turbine unit, final findings have yet to come through.

    Siemens Energy shares took their the biggest intraday drop since the company was spun out of Siemens in September 2020. The slump triggered multiple trading halts and cut the manufacturer’s market capitalization by around €3.4 billion. It was the biggest drop for a stock listed on Germany’s DAX index since the collapse of Wirecard in June 2020.

    The paper value of Siemens AG’s stake was cut by more than €800 million. Its shares fell as much as 5.9%.

    “Siemens is now in close and continuous talks with all parties involved,” the company said in a statement. “As we have always said, we will make our decisions in line with the interests of Siemens AG and its shareholders.”

    Siemens Energy doesn’t have acute liquidity problems, according to the people familiar with the talks. But the guarantees are important for securing the financing it needs for longer term projects, particularly in its gas and power division.

    “We are therefore initiating measures to strengthen our balance sheet and are in talks with the German government on how to secure guarantee structures in the fast-growing energy market,” Siemens Energy spokesman Oliver Sachgau said.

    Economy Minister Robert Habeck, speaking in Ankara, said the talks are “good and constructive.”

    “We have already been talking intensively since Siemens Energy made this public and contacted us, and we have increased this intensity in the last 2 weeks,” Habeck said.

    Read more: Siemens Energy Bonds Drop on Talks Over State Aid

    The company still has €110 billion in back orders. Germany’s RWE AG plans to build over 1 gigawatt of onshore wind farms with Siemens Gamesa turbines in the next four years, but declined to comment on whether the projects can still be carried out as planned.

    Net losses and cash outflow are now expected to exceed market forecasts for the year, the manufacturer said.

    Citi analysts led by Vivek Midha said uncertainty about the fourth quarter remains “very high.”

    “The magnitude of the shortfall to estimates is unspecified, though clearly if it were minor, it is unlikely that it would have been flagged,” they said in a note. “Even if ENR has no near-term liquidity issue, the comment around measures to strengthen balance sheet is broad, meaning that investor concerns around an equity raise are likely to intensify.”

    — With assistance by Eyk Henning, Kamil Kowalcze, Jan-Patrick Barnert, Joe Easton, and Allegra Catelli

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      Wilfried Eckl-Dorna, Petra Sorge, Bloomberg

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    1. Lost Nazi plane found 80 years after pilot charged at 1,000 US aircraft

      Lost Nazi plane found 80 years after pilot charged at 1,000 US aircraft

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      A LONG-LOST Nazi fighter jet that was shot down when a fanatical pilot charged at 1,000 US warplanes has been found 80 years later.

      The well-preserved Messerschmitt – the backbone of the Hitler’s renowned Luftwaffe’s fighter force – crashed into a lake in Hungary after a fierce air battle during World War II.

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      The plane was encased in mud for over 80 yearsCredit: Newsflash
      It was finally located in 2020 and recovered from its watery grave earlier this month

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      It was finally located in 2020 and recovered from its watery grave earlier this monthCredit: Newsflash
      An in-tact propeller of the fighter plane that was downed in 1941

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      An in-tact propeller of the fighter plane that was downed in 1941Credit: Newsflash

      After being submerged in mud for the good part of a century, the fighter plane was finally recovered this month in Veszprem County, western Hungary.

      It was shot down on July 2, 1944 when the Americans launched their largest-ever air attack against Hungarian targets.

      The Royal Hungarian Air Force was able to send just 18 fighters into battle against an incredible 620 four-engine bombers and 300 fighters of the United States 15th Air Force.

      Most of the Hungarian fighters were downed, but only three were killed, including the pilot of the crashed plane, platoon leader Sandor Beregszaszi.

      reda more on world war II

      His body was recovered from Hungary’s Lake Balaton, but the location of the plane was then lost for decades.

      That was until a military historian, Ensign Karoly Mago, underwent the pain-staking research to locate it.

      Together with a team of divers, they found the fighter plane lying under almost a metre of mud that appears to have helped preserve it in September, 2020.

      However, only a few pieces of the wreckage were able to be brought to the surface.

      The researchers were amazed by the quality of the plane’s remains and made the decision to recover the rest.

      On October 10, Beregszaszi’s plane was pulled from the lake encased in mud and silt.

      Incredible footage of the recovery shows the plane’s twisted propeller and cowl being winched from the water with what appears to be the engine crankshaft – mostly intact.

      Other parts, like exhaust pipes and the plane’s battery, are seen being cleaned up by experts from the modern Hungarian Air Force and military historians.

      A spokesperson for the Hungarian Ministry Of Defence said that the wreckage “represents an inestimable value not only from the point of view of military history but also from the point of view of industrial history”.

      Five expert units worked to bring the aircraft and a large number of its weapons to the surface.

      Research leader Mago said: “This find is special because, apart from the one that has now been found after nearly 80 years, there is no other surviving Hungarian Messerschmitt fighter aircraft known in the world.”

      Speaking of the recovery, he said: “Cleaning is the first and most important part of the procedure so that everything is in the right condition by the end of the excavation.

      “We also continued to clean the riverbed.

      “It turned out that much more sediment had been deposited on the wreckage than we expected.

      “Our primary task now is to clean up the area around the wreck and, of course, the wreck itself.

      “We need to be able to measure exactly how big the piece of wreckage is.”

      The Messerschmitt Bf 109 was attached to the Hungarian Air Force, which fought alongside the German Luftwaffe during World War II.

      The 18 pilots were praised for their incredible bravery on what was for several of them a suicide mission as they tackled the much larger American force.

      Hungary’s wartime pilots flew alongside the Nazi Luftwaffe after the country declared itself an Axis power in 1941.

      The country first joined Hitler in his war with the Soviet Union in June 1941 by December had declared war against the US.

      The Messerschmitt 109 was key to the success of the Luftwaffe and was famous for its speed and manoeuvrability but it was eventually beaten in the air by the British Spitfire.

      A team of divers were needed to first locate the plane at the end of 2020

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      A team of divers were needed to first locate the plane at the end of 2020Credit: Newsflash
      It was left untouched deep in the mud for 80 years

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      It was left untouched deep in the mud for 80 yearsCredit: Newsflash
      Plenty of the wreckage is in incredible condition

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      Plenty of the wreckage is in incredible conditionCredit: Newsflash
      Words can still be seen etched into the plane's foliage

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      Words can still be seen etched into the plane’s foliageCredit: Newsflash
      A Hungarian soldier holds up a mashed up part of the fighter

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      A Hungarian soldier holds up a mashed up part of the fighterCredit: Newsflash
      The team has to recover the plane from under 1m of mud

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      The team has to recover the plane from under 1m of mudCredit: Newsflash
      The grave of Sandor Beregssaszy who was killed in his Messerschmitt as he battled 1,000 US warplanes

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      The grave of Sandor Beregssaszy who was killed in his Messerschmitt as he battled 1,000 US warplanesCredit: Newsflash

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      Iona Cleave

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    2. French Jews live in fear amid rising antisemitism following Hamas attacks

      French Jews live in fear amid rising antisemitism following Hamas attacks

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      Voiced by artificial intelligence.

      SARCELLES, France — In the usually lively “Little Jerusalem” neighborhood of Sarcelles, the only people loitering are gun-toting French soldiers on patrol.

      Since Hamas’ deadly assault against Israel on October 7, this largely Jewish enclave in the northern suburbs of Paris has gone eerily quiet, with locals keeping their movements to a minimum, and with restaurants and cafés bereft of their regular clientele — fearing an increasing number of antisemitic attacks across France.

      “People are afraid, in a state of shock, they’ve lost their love for life” said Alexis Timsit, manager of a kosher pizzeria. “My business is down 50 percent, there’s no bustle in the street, nobody taking a stroll,” he said in front of a large screen broadcasting round-the-clock coverage of the war.

      France has seen more antisemitic incidents in the last three weeks than over the past year: 501 offenses ranging from verbal abuse and antisemitic graffiti, to death threats and physical assaults have been reported. Antisemitic acts under investigation include groups gathering in front of synagogues shouting threats and graffiti such as the words “killing Jews is a duty” sprayed outside a stadium in Carcassonne in the southwest. The interior minister has deployed extra police and soldiers at Jewish schools, places of worship and community centers since the attacks, and in Sarcelles that means soldiers guard school pick-ups and drop-offs.

      “I try not to show my daughter that I’m afraid,” said Suedu Avner, who hopes the conflict won’t last too long. But a certain panic has taken hold in the community in the wake of the Hamas attacks, in some cases spreading like wildfire on WhatsApp groups. On one particularly tense day, parents even pulled their children out of school.

      France is home to the largest Jewish community outside Israel and the U.S., estimated at about 500,000, and one of the largest Muslim communities in Europe. Safety concerns aren’t new to France’s Jewish community, as to some degree, it has remained on alert amid a string of terror attacks on French soil by Islamists over the last decade.

      Israel’s war against Hamas is now threatening the fragile peace in places like Sarcelles, one of the poorest cities in France, where thousands of Jews live alongside mostly Muslim neighbors of North African origin, from immigrant backgrounds, and in low-income housing estates.

      Authorities meanwhile are often torn by conflicting imperatives — between the Jews, who are fearful for their safety, and the Muslims, who feel an affinity for the Palestinian cause. During his visit to Israel and the Palestinian Territories, French President Emmanuel Macron himself struggled to strike a difficult balance between supporting Israel in its fight against Hamas, and calling for the preservation of Palestinian lives.

      A community under threat

      For Timsit, the threat is very real. His pizzeria was ransacked by rioters a couple of months ago, when the fatal shooting of a teenager by a police officer in a Paris suburb caused unrest in poor housing estates across France.

      The attack was not antisemitic, he said, but was a violent reminder. In 2014, a pro-Palestinian demonstration protesting Israel’s ground offensive against Gaza degenerated into an antisemitic riot against Jewish shops. “All you need is a spark to set it off again,” said Timsit.

      France’s Jews have seen an increase in antisemitic attacks since the early 2000s, a reality that cuts deep into the national psyche given the memories of France’s collaboration with Nazi Germany in the Second World War.

      “The fear of violence [in France] appeared with the Second Intifada,” said Marc Hecker, a specialist on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with IFRI think tank, with reference to the uprising against Israeli occupation in Palestinian Territories.

      Patrick Haddad, the mayor of Sarcelles, is working to keep the communities together | Clea Caulcutt/POLITICO

      “Every time the situation in the Near East flares up, there’s an increase in antisemitic offenses in France,” he added. The threat of antisemitic attacks has led to increased security at Jewish schools and synagogues, and has discouraged many French Jews from wearing their kippahs in some areas, according to Jewish organizations.

      In addition to low-level attacks, French Jews are also a prime target for Islamists as France battles a wave of terrorist attacks that have hit schools, bars and public buildings, among other targets, in the last decade. In 2012, three children and a rabbi were shot dead at a Jewish school in Toulouse at point-blank range by Mohamed Merah, a gunman who had claimed allegiance to al-Qaida. In 2015, four people were killed at a kosher supermarket near Paris.

      While Hamas, al-Qaida and ISIS networks are separate, Hecker warned that the scale of Hamas’s attack against Israel has “galvanized” Islamists across the board, once again sparking deep fears among France’s Jews.

      Delicate local balance

      Many of Sarcelles’ Jews are Sephardic — that is, of Spanish descent — and ended up in North Africa when Spain expelled its Jewish population in the Middle Ages. Most came to France after having lived in the former French colonies of Algeria and Tunisia. Sarcelles’ Muslim population therefore shares a cultural and linguistic history with its Jewish community, and the two groups have lived together in relative harmony for decades.

      In his office, the mayor of Sarcelles, Patrick Haddad, stands under the twin gazes of Nelson Mandela and Marianne, the symbol of French republicanism, with pictures of both adorning his wall, as he reflects on the thus-far peaceful coexistence among the local population.

      “There’s been not a single antisemitic attack in Sarcelles since the attacks … It’s been over two weeks, and we are holding things together,” he said, smiling despite the noticeable strain. Relations between the city’s Muslims and Jews are amicable, said Haddad, and locals on the streets are proud of their friendship with people of a different religion.

      Israel’s war on Hamas is testing relations in Sarcelles, one of France’s poorest cities | Clea Caulcutt/POLITICO and Bertrand Guay/AFP via Getty Images

      “Relations are easy, we share a similar culture, a lot of the Jews are originally from Tunisia, Algeria, they even speak some Arabic,” said Naima, a Muslim retiree who did not want to give her surname to protect her privacy. “My family, my husband and my children respect the Jews, but I know many who are angry with Israel,” said Naima, who moved to France from Algeria as a young adult.

      “I’ve got Muslim friends, we get along fine, we don’t go around punching each other,” said Avner.

      But for many, politics — and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict — is off-limits, and communities live relatively separate lives, with most Jewish pupils enrolled in religious schools. Many Jews from Sarcelles have also chosen to emigrate to Israel in recent years.

      But Israel’s image as the ultimate, secure sanctuary for Jews has been shattered after Hamas killed more than 1,400 Israelis in horrific attacks, said Haddad.

      “Where are [Jews] going to go if they are not safe in Israel? People’s fears have been magnified, they fear what is happening here, and they are anguished about what is happening in the ‘sanctuary state’ for Jews,” he said.

      In a twist of the many tragic reversals of Jewish history, several French families have returned from Israel since the Hamas attacks to find temporary shelter in the relative peace of Sarcelles.

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      Clea Caulcutt

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