Tag: Angela Merkel

  • Merkel: Admittance of refugees in 2015 was an`humanitarian exception’

    Merkel: Admittance of refugees in 2015 was an`humanitarian exception’

    German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, said on Tuesday that her decision, two years ago, to allow hundreds of thousands of migrants to enter Germany was a “humanitarian exception’’.

    She said that the decision was “not the basis for a long-term strategy.’’

    Merkel said at her annual summer news conference ahead of a general election that steps had been taken in the wake of that decision to ensure that such an influx would not repeat itself.

    She is running for a fourth term in office in the Sept. 24 election.

    Her Christian Democrats (CDU) currently has a 13-per-cent-point electoral lead on their main challenger, the Social Democrats (SPD).

  • Pope to G20: Give ‘absolute priority’ to poor, marginalised

    Pope to G20: Give ‘absolute priority’ to poor, marginalised

    Pope Francis on Fridau urged world leaders taking part in the G20 summit in Hamburg to give “absolute priority” to the problems of the poor and marginalised and to efforts to end wars.

    “There is a need to give absolute priority to the poor, refugees, the suffering, evacuees and the excluded, without distinction of nation, race, religion or culture, and to reject armed conflicts,” Francis wrote to summit host, German Chancellor, Angela Merkel.

    According to the pontiff, the G20 target of achieving more inclusive and sustainable global economic growth is “inseparable from the need to address ongoing conflicts and the worldwide problem of migrations.”

    The leader of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics made “a heartfelt appeal for the tragic situation in South Sudan, the Lake Chad basin, the Horn of Africa and Yemen.

    He said that these were where 30 million people are lacking the food and water needed to survive.

    In what could be seen as coded criticism of the U.S. pulling out of the Paris Agreement on climate change, Francis also urged G20 leaders “to respect and honour international treaties, and to continue promoting a multilateral approach.”

    “I ask God’s blessings upon the Hamburg meeting and on every effort of the international community to shape a new era of development that is innovative, interconnected, sustainable, environmentally respectful and inclusive of all peoples and all individuals,” he concluded.

  • President Xi arrives in Germany in advance of G20 summit

    President Xi arrives in Germany in advance of G20 summit

    Chinese President, Xi Jinping, arrived in Berlin on Wednesday, part of a flurry of diplomatic meetings in advance of G20 summit slated for Friday and Saturday in Hamburg.

    Xi was greeted with military honours by German President, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, before heading off to a meeting with Chancellor Angela Merkel.

    He stopped on the way to sign the guest book at Bellevue Palace, the president’s official residence.

    Next on his agenda was a visit to Berlin’s zoo with Merkel, where the two are to view a pair of pandas that recently arrived in the German capital, a gift from China.

    The evening will be rounded out with a banquet hosted by the German president.

    Xi and Merkel will both attend the G20 summit, where they are expected to discuss a host of topics with other world leaders, including joint policies on climate change and world trade.

    NAN reports that Xi had a stop over in Russia where he met with President Vladmir Putin on Monday where they discussed bilateral cooperation and coordinate positions on a range of international issues ahead of the G20 Summit in Hamburg.

  • G20 summit: Germany expects 8,000 violent protesters in Hamburg

    G20 summit: Germany expects 8,000 violent protesters in Hamburg

    German security forces expect some 8,000 violent protesters to converge on the northern city of Hamburg where Chancellor Angela Merkel will host leaders of the G20 leading economies.

    Interior Minister said on Tuesday that some 20,000 police officers will secure the Friday and Saturday event in Germany’s second-largest city where anti-capitalist protesters are expected to riot.

    NAN reports that on June 20, German police unveiled a mass detention centre built in anticipation of protests against the summit.

    Authorities say roughly 8,000 of those are prepared to use violence.

    The 11,000-square-metre centre in Hamburg’s southern Harburg district has 70 group cells and 50 single cells that can hold as many as 400 detainees, according to police spokesman Timo Zill.

    A supermarket once stood at the location, which was most recently used as refugee accommodation, Zill said.

    Refurbishing the venue as a mass detention centre was meant to cost three million euros (3.4 billion dollars), but Zill said it remained to be seen whether the project would exceed the budget.

  • Brexit: UK offer, a good start – Merkel

    Brexit: UK offer, a good start – Merkel

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel has described United Kingdom plans to ensure the rights of European Union citizens in Britain after Brexit as “a good start.”

    However, she said there were “many, many other questions” about Brexit and there was “still a lot to do.”

    The UK proposal was unveiled by Prime Minister Theresa May at an EU summit in Brussels on Thursday.

    The BBC reports that it would grant EU migrants who had lived in the UK for five years at the cut-off date new “UK settled status.”

    The cut-off date has yet to be announced, but will be sometime between March 2017 and the moment the UK actually leaves the EU.

    Those who qualify for settled status will be allowed to stay in the country and access health, education and other benefits.

    The plan is expected to affect 3.2 million EU citizens now living in the UK, around a million of whom have lived in the country less than five years.

    Their rights – and the rights of UK citizens living in the rest of the EU – are among the thorny issues that have to be resolved early on in Brexit talks, along with the UK’s divorce bill and the Northern Ireland border.

    The European Commission President, Jean-Claude Juncker, described the offer as a “first step,” but added it was “not sufficient.”

    Mrs. Merkel was more positive, calling it a “good start.”

    “Theresa May made clear today that EU citizens who have been in Great Britain for five years can keep their full rights. That’s a good start,” she said at the end of Thursday’s talks.

  • Attackers plow van into London crowd and stab revelers, kill seven

    Attackers plow van into London crowd and stab revelers, kill seven

    Assailants drove a van into pedestrians at high speed on London Bridge on Saturday night before stabbing revellers on nearby streets, killing at least seven people and wounding dozens.

    Police suspect it was a terrorist attack.

    Armed police rushed to the scene and within eight minutes of receiving the first emergency call shortly after 10 pm local time had shot dead the three male attackers in the Borough Market area near the bridge.

    At least 48 people were injured in the attack – the third to hit Britain in less than three months – which came days ahead of a parliamentary election on Thursday.

    The ruling Conservative Party, opposition Labour Party and the Scottish National Party all suspended national campaigning on Sunday.

    “I can confirm that the terrible incident in London is being treated as a potential act of terrorism,” Prime Minister Theresa May said in a statement as events unfolded.

    Flags were flying at half-mast over her Downing Street residence on Sunday morning.

    London Bridge is a major transport hub and nearby Borough Market is a fashionable warren of alleyways packed with bars and restaurants which is always bustling on a Saturday night.

    The area remained cordoned off on Sunday, with train stations closed while forensic investigators could be seen working on the bridge, where buses and taxis stood abandoned.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the latest attack to hit Britain and Europe.

    Less than two weeks ago, a suicide bomber killed 22 people, including children, at a pop concert by U.S. singer Ariana Grande in Manchester in northern England.

    In March, in a similar attack to Saturday’s, a man killed five people after driving into pedestrians on Westminster Bridge in central London.

    Grande and other acts were due to give a benefit concert at Manchester’s Old Trafford cricket ground on Sunday evening to raise funds for victims of the concert bombing and their families. The event was being prepared amid tight security.

    The three attackers had been wearing what looked like explosive vests that were later found to have been hoaxes.

    The BBC showed a photograph of two possible attackers shot by police, one of whom had canisters strapped to his body.

    Hours after the attack the area remained sealed off and patrolled by armed police and counter-terrorism officers.

    The London Ambulance Service said 48 people had been taken to five hospitals across the city and a number of others had been treated at the scene for minor injuries.

    London Mayor Sadiq Khan said some of those who had been injured were in a critical condition.

    Khan said the official threat level in Britain remained at severe, meaning an attack is highly likely. It had been raised to critical after the Manchester attack, then lowered again days later.

    The mayor also said he did not think Thursday’s election should be postponed because of events in London.

    “One of the things that we can do is show that we aren’t going to be cowed, is by voting on Thursday and making sure that we understand the importance of our democracy, our civil liberties and our human rights,” Khan said.

    Roy Smith, a police officer, who was at the scene during the unfolding emergency, expressed his shock on Twitter.

    “Started shift taking photos with children playing on the South Bank. Ended it giving CPR to innocent victims attacked at London Bridge,” he wrote, adding a broken heart emoji.

    Witnesses described a white van careering into pedestrians on the bridge.

    “It looked like he was aiming for groups of people,” Mark Roberts, 53, a management consultant, told Reuters.

    He saw at least six people on the ground after the van veered on and off the pavement. “It was horrendous,” he said.

    A taxi driver told the BBC that three men got out of the van with long knives and “went randomly along Borough High Street stabbing people.”

    Witnesses described people running into a bar to seek shelter.

    “People started running and screaming, and the van crashes into the railing behind. We went towards Borough Market and everyone went inside (the bar),” one witness, who gave his name as Brian, 32, told Reuters.

    Another witness, who declined to be named, his white top covered in blood, described a scene of panic in the bar.

    “They hit the emergency alarm. There was a line of people going down to the emergency exit. And then people started screaming coming back up,” the 31-year-old said.

    “Around the corner there was a guy with a stab wound on his neck … There was a doctor in the pub and she helped him. They put pressure on the stab wound.”

    BBC radio said witnesses saw people throwing tables and chairs at the attackers to protect themselves.

    The BBC showed dozens of people being escorted to safety through a police cordon with their hands on their heads. Islamic State, losing territory in Syria and Iraq to an advance backed by a U.S-led coalition, sent out a call on instant messaging service Telegram early on Saturday urging its followers to launch attacks with trucks, knives and guns against “Crusaders” during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

    British Prime Minister May was due to chair a meeting of the government’s Cobra security committee later on Sunday.

    U.S. President Donald Trump took to Twitter to offer U.S. help to Britain.

    The White House said he had been briefed on the incidents by his national security team. German Chancellor Angela Merkel issued a statement expressing her sympathy.

    “Today, we are united across all borders in horror and sadness, but equally in determination. I stress for Germany: in the fight against all forms of terrorism, we stand firmly and decisively at the side of Great Britain,” she said.

    French president Emmanuel Macron said on Twitter that “France is standing more than ever side by side with the UK”.

    Two French nationals were among those injured in the London attack, Macron’s office said in a statement.

    Australia also said two of its citizens were caught up in the attack and that one was in hospital.

    The Manchester bombing on May 22 was the deadliest attack in Britain since July 2005, when four British Muslim suicide bombers killed 52 people in coordinated attacks on London’s transport network.

  • Merkel: Paris climate pact needed for sake of Mother Earth

    Merkel: Paris climate pact needed for sake of Mother Earth

    Chancellor Angela Merkel on Friday pledged Germany’s continued commitment to the Paris climate agreement in the wake of U.S. President Donald Trump’s withdrawal, saying the deal was a “cornerstone” of attempts to stop global warming.

    Merkel, one of the strongest advocates of the global pact to curb emissions of gases that speed climate change, said there was no turning back from the path that began with the 1997 Kyoto climate protocol and led to 2015’s Paris deal.

    “The decision of the U.S. to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement is very regrettable, and I’m expressing myself in a very reserved way when I say that,” she said, adding that the deal was needed to protect the environment.

    “We need this Paris agreement to preserve our Creation,” she said – a rare use of religious imagery by Merkel, a pastor’s daughter who is usually intensely private about her faith. “Nothing can or will stop us from doing that,” she added.

    Trump’s decision would not stop those who feel committed to protecting the planet, she said: “On the contrary, in Germany, in Europe and in the world, we will join forces to take on and successfully tackle big challenges facing humanity.”

    She said the agreement, which Trump rejected because he said it would impose “unfair” costs on U.S. industry, would ultimately result in more prosperity and greater opportunities for the world.

    “To everyone for whom the future of our planet is important, I say let’s continue down this path so we’re successful for our Mother Earth,” she said.

    German industry associations also criticised Trump’s decision to withdraw from the climate deal, warning that the move would harm the global economy and lead to market distortions.

    Germany’s DIHK Chambers of Commerce and the VDMA engineering industry association warned that U.S. companies could gain short-term advantages by Trump’s decision.

    “Climate protection can be pushed forward in an effective and competetion-friendly way only by all states,” said DIHK President Eric Schweitzer.

    Schweitzer said other countries should stick to their commitments, but warned that attempting to compensate for the U.S. withdrawal by other countries redoubling their commitments would be self-defeating.

     

  • Macron to visit Merkel in first foreign trip as French president

    Macron to visit Merkel in first foreign trip as French president

    The French president-elect, Emmanuel Macron, plans to visit German Chancellor Angela Merkel shortly after his inauguration, according to Sylvie Goulard, a member of the European Parliament and a close confidante of Macron.
    Macron, who was voted in as president on Sunday with a large majority over Marine Le Pen of the National Front, will visit Merkel as his first foreign trip as France’s head of state, Goulard told French broadcaster CNews.
    Merkel and Macron held a telephone conversation late Sunday after the result was announced, according to Steffen Seibert, Merkel’s spokesman.
    Merkel told Macron that she is “looking forward to trustful cooperation … in the spirit of the traditionally close Franco-German friendship,” Seibert said.
    Macron will officially take over from French President Francois Hollande next Sunday, but an exact date for the meeting between the new president and Merkel has not been set.
    Hollande is expected in Berlin later on Monday for his last official bilateral meeting with Merkel before he leaves office.

  • Merkel’s party won’t partner with SPD after victory

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats (CDU) on Monday ruled out the possibility of entering a grand coalition with their centre-left rivals in Schleswig-Holstein, one day after beating the Social Democrats (SPD) in the northern German state.

    Daniel Guenther, the CDU candidate in the strongly Protestant state, said that after such a crushing defeat, the SPD cannot be part of any future coalition because it would send the wrong signal to voters.

    Merkel’s CDU won 32.0 per cent of the vote, while the SPD which currently governs the state in a coalition with the Greens and Der Südschleswigsche Wählerverband., a regional party that represents the Danish and Frisian minorities, won just 27.2 per cent of the vote.

    It is a strategically important win for Merkel, who is running for a fourth term in office in September’s general election

  • Merkel to stand for fourth term

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel has announced that she will run for a fourth term in office.

    Speaking at a meeting of her Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in Berlin, Merkel said she expected her toughest campaign to date, and vowed to “fight for our values and our way of life.”

    General elections are expected in Germany next year, the BBC reports.

    The chancellor’s poll ratings have slipped since the height of her popularity but she retains wide support.

    Merkel, who has been in office since 2005, is being challenged by the populist right-wing AfD party.

    The chancellor announced she would stand again after meeting party leaders at CDU headquarters.

    She told reporters that the decision to run for a fourth term had been “anything but trivial after 11 years in office.”

    Merkel added that she expected challenges from both the right and the left of the political spectrum.