Tag: Angela Merkel

  • Modi’s arrival at the G20 summit ‘announced with Apu meme’

    Apu from The Simpsons Image copyright TCFFC Symbol caption A Few Indian-Americans have complained that the Simpsons personality is racist

    An Argentine news channel has come under fire for displaying a picture of the Simpsons personality Apu as Indian Top Minister Narendra Modi arrived in Buenos Aires.

    Cronica TV used the headline “Apu arrives” because the Indian PM’s plane touched down for the G20 summit.

    A Few say the portrayal of the Indian shopkeeper is racist.

    Social media users replied angrily to the use of the image.

    Apu Nahasapeemapetilon has been part of the animation series seeing that 1990 and is voiced via Hank Azaria, a white actor, who places on a heavy Indian accessory.

    Image Copyright @Pat_Gillespie @Pat_Gillespie

    Indian-American comic Hari Kondabolu made a documentary about the character in 2017, arguing that Apu used to be founded on racial stereotypes.

    Mr Kondabolu instructed the BBC on the time that the character was tricky as a result of he’s defined via his activity and how many children he has in his arranged marriage. Others defended the display and mentioned all its characters were stereotypes.

    Not all Indians assume Apu is a racist stereotype

    In response to Cronica’s use of the character Mr Kondabolu tweeted: “this could not be true, proper?”

    Image Copyright @harikondabolu @harikondabolu

    Others pointed out that the comparability was disrespectful to a overseas leader.

    Image Copyright @JayantBhushan1 @JayantBhushan1

    Mr Modi’s arrival at the G20 was no longer the one one to fire up social media controversy.

    When French President Emmanuel Macron arrived on Thursday he was greeted through an empty runway, because the Argentine delegation had now not arrived on time to fulfill him.

  • In Pictures: International leaders accumulate for G20 summit

    World leaders have been arriving in the Argentine capital Buenos Aires ahead of the G20 summit.

    The meeting brings in combination the leaders of the 20 such a lot industrialised international locations to talk about topics including business and climate modification.

    French President Emmanuel Macron and wife Brigitte Macron walk with Vera Vigevani de Jarach and Lita Boitano during a visit to the Remembrance Park in Buenos Aires. 29 Nov 2018 Symbol copyright AFP Image caption French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife, Brigitte, visited the Remembrance Park in Buenos Aires which honours the 30,000 people who disappeared or had been killed beneath Argentina’s 1976-1983 army regime. They walked arm in arm with veteran campaigners Vera Vigevani de Jarach and Lita Boitano US President Donald Trump (L) and US First Lady Melania Trump after arrival at Ezeiza International airport in Buenos Aires province, 29 November (local time) 2018 Symbol copyright AFP Symbol caption US President Donald Trump And First Woman Melania Trump flew in on Air Force One past due on Thursday evening native time. Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and wife Sophie Gregoire Trudeau arrive ahead of the G20 leaders summit in Buenos Aires, Argentina November 29, 2018. Image copyright Reuters Symbol caption Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, pictured arriving with spouse Sophie Gregoire Trudeau, is anticipated to signal a business pact with Mexico and the us Chinese President Xi Jinping arrives ahead of the G20 leaders summit in Buenos Aires, Argentina November 29, 2018 Symbol copyright Reuters Image caption Business issues – specifically with the us – will even be top at the agenda for Chinese President Xi Jinping Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman arrives at Ministro Pistarini in Buenos Aires, Argentina, November 28, 2018 Image copyright Reuters Symbol caption Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who arrived in Argentina on Wednesday, is attempting to fix his international popularity after the homicide of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his wife Emine Erdogan step off their plane upon arrival in Buenos Aires on November 29, 2018 Image copyright AFP Symbol caption Reports say Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan might dangle talks with the Saudi crown prince on the sidelines of the summit. Ties had been strained following the murder of Khashoggi in Istanbul Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi greets attendees at the Peace through Yoga meeting in Buenos Aires, Argentina, November 29, 2018 Symbol copyright Reuters Symbol caption Indian High Minister Narendra Modi is expected to raise the problem of volatility in international oil costs at the summit. But on Thursday he attended a “Peace Via Yoga” experience in Buenos Aires The Airbus A340 government aircraft that was carrying Chancellor Angela Merkel to the G20 summit in Buenos Aires and forced to land at Cologne, November 29 Symbol copyright Reuters Symbol caption One person who would possibly not be arriving in time for Friday’s opening of the G20 is German Chancellor Angela Merkel whose airplane used to be compelled to land in Cologne after a technical drawback. She is expected to resume her adventure in a while Friday British Prime Minister Theresa May arrives in Buenos Aires for the G20 on November 29, 2018 Symbol copyright Getty Photographs Symbol caption For British High Minister Theresa Might, the summit comes as she attempts to get her Brexit deal through parliament Prime Minister of Japan Shinzo Abe and his wife Akie Abe arrive in Buenos Aires on November 29, 2018 Image copyright Getty Pictures Image caption Jap Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who arrived with his spouse Akie Abe, is predicted to fret the importance of unfastened trade

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  • Merkel’s aircraft makes unscheduled landing after technical hitch

    Fire engines are seen from the inside of the plane Konrad Adenauer in Cologne, Germany, 29 November 2018 Symbol copyright EPA Image caption The aircraft used to be met at the tarmac in Cologne by emergency vehicles

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel will leave out the opening of the G20 summit in Argentina after her aircraft was pressured to land shortly after leaving Berlin.

    Her administrative center says Mrs Merkel and delegates made a secure, however unscheduled, landing in Cologne after the airplane advanced a technical downside.

    The aircraft turned back while it was over the Netherlands, Germany’s dpa information agency says.

    Reports say Mrs Merkel will travel on to Buenos Aires on Friday.

    No details were given concerning the technical problem.

    Image copyright EPA Symbol caption Mrs Merkel is expected to fly from Cologne to Buenos Aires on Friday Image copyright AFP Image caption The plane, Konrad Adenauer, takes the German chancellor on state visits

  • Brexit: Might heads to Brussels on eve of an important ECU summit

    Theresa May during a meeting with Chancellor of Austria Sebastian Kurz Symbol copyright EPA Symbol caption Theresa Would Possibly is going through hindrances to her Brexit plan at house and in Europe

    Theresa Might is heading to Brussels later prior to a important ECU summit to officially sign off the Brexit deal.

    The top minister will cling talks with top EUROPEAN officers, sooner than leaders of all 28 countries meet to suggest the agreement on Sunday.

    However, Spain has stated it will no longer attend except a last-minute spat over Gibraltar is taken care of out.

    Even if the eu approves the deal, Mrs Might must nonetheless persuade sufficient MPs to strengthen it which could turn out difficult.

    In The Meantime the chief of the DUP – which Mrs Would Possibly depends upon for fortify in Parliament – will reiterate her competition of the deal at her celebration conference later, after threatening to appear again on the trust and provide agreement with the Conservatives if it gets thru Parliament.

    Symbol copyright Reuters Image caption Mr Sanchez is pro-Ecu and it’s no longer in his nature to scupper EUROPEAN plans, the BBC’s Katya Adler stated

    Even If one us of a on its own can not block the withdrawal agreement being approved, there’s “no means the european can rubber stamp a textual content when an present member is so strongly adverse”, stated BBC News’ Europe editor Katya Adler.

    Will EUROPEAN Brexit summit crash on the Rock? Gibraltar: What’s it were given to do with Brexit?

    Gibraltar is believed to be the one outstanding issue ahead of the summit.

    France, Denmark and the Netherlands had raised considerations over what the political statement mentioned about fishing rights in UK waters – but this issue is known to were resolved.

    What occurs after the summit?

    If the european indicators off the withdrawal deal, Mrs May will then need to persuade MPs in her personal Parliament to again it.

    A vote in Parliament is expected to happen in December.

    Labour, the Liberal Democrats, the SNP and the DUP have all stated they’re going to vote against the federal government’s deal.

    a few of Mrs Would Possibly’s personal Conservative MPs – the hardline Brexiteers – are also highly vital of the deal and are not going to give a boost to it, whilst other Remainer Tory MPs might also vote towards it.

    What happens if MPs reject Theresa May’s deal?

    If MPs again the deal, it then has to be ratified by way of the ecu Parliament.

    As Soon As The United Kingdom leaves the european on 29 March 2019 – so one can occur with or and not using a deal – the main points of a long-term industry deal might be worked out all through a 21-month transition period till December 2020.

    However if the deal is defeated, a number of items could occur – including leaving in March with no deal, a 2nd attempt to get the Brexit deal handed, any other referendum or a common election.

    What does Theresa Would Possibly say in regards to the deal?

    On Friday, the PM stated The Uk shouldn’t wish for a “better deal” from the ecu if MPs reject her Brexit agreement.

    But she declined to say whether The Uk could be better off out of doors the eu, announcing only it could be “other”.

    Meanwhile, the Telegraph said it has noticed leaked Cupboard papers which recommend the PM is making plans to “reframe the Brexit debate around migration” – through making plans restrictions on low-skilled migrants coming to The United Kingdom – in a bid to attract the enhance of exhausting Brexiteers prior to the home of Commons vote.

    Media playback is unsupported for your software

    Media captionMichael: “What to your honest opinion is best for The United Kingdom, your deal or the deal we had if we stayed in the eu?”

    Does the DUP’s reinforce matter?

    Sure. After the 2017 basic election, Mrs Might’s Conservative Birthday Celebration got 318 seats – four wanting the quantity she needed to rule with a majority govt.

    The DUP formed a confidence and provide settlement with the Tories, promising that its 10 MPs would vote with the federal government, and therefore enable it to win key votes in Parliament.

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    The DUP opposes the Brexit deal as a result of the “backstop” – the final resort again-up plan to ensure that a hard border between Northern Eire and the Republic Of Eire never happens.

    It will simplest come into effect if The United Kingdom and ECU fail to agree a protracted-time period business deal. but the backstop would imply that Northern Ireland – however now not the rest of The Uk – would nonetheless practice some EUROPEAN rules on things such as food products.

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  • Angela Merkel: Arms sales to Saudis are on hold

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Friday her country is not ready to export arms to Saudi Arabia until the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi is properly investigated.

    ISTANBUL (AP) — German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Friday her country is not ready to export arms to Saudi Arabia until the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi is properly investigated.

    Speaking in Prague through a translator after meeting her Czech counterpart Andrej Babis, Merkel said it’s necessary to clarify the background of the crime that took place in the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul.

    She said Germany has made it clear that until then, “we won’t deliver any arms to Saudi Arabia.”

    Merkel also again said that Saudi Arabia has to ensure access for humanitarian aid to get into Yemen, which has been ravaged by a 3½-year war between the Saudi-led alliance and Shite rebels.

  • Angela Merkel’s Germany immigration policies set for referendum in Bavaria elections

    When it comes to regional politics here, no state is more influential than Bavaria, the nation’s economic powerhouse and an unabashed conservative stronghold often described as Germany’s Texas. But th

    BERLIN — When it comes to regional politics here, no state is more influential than Bavaria, the nation’s economic powerhouse and an unabashed conservative stronghold often described as Germany’s Texas.

    But the elections Sunday in Bavaria are expected to represent a referendum on center-right Chancellor Angela Merkel’s policies over the past few years and on her conservative allies to the south, who have repeatedly caused trouble for her since her decision to allow more than 1 million refugees into the country three years ago.

    In fact, for the first time in decades, Bavaria’s conservative Christian Social Union finds itself under threat in its own backyard from the Germany’s resurgent far right — and from the left.

    “They tried to fight fire with fire at the beginning of the year with regard to the migration crisis,” said Olaf Boehnke, a senior adviser in Berlin with Rasmussen Global, a Brussels-based think tank, referring to Bavaria’s conservatives. “But they’re realizing that if you try to be more extreme than the extremists, it’s a lost cause.”

    For 12 of the past 13 elections in Bavaria, the Christian Social Union (CSU), the conservative sister party of Ms. Merkel’s Christian Democrats (CDU), has ruled with an absolute majority — a rarity in German politics, where compromise and coalition-building between parties is the norm. The party has held an absolute majority in the state legislature for all but five years over the past six decades.

    That has allowed the CSU in Bavaria, home to automotive giant BMW and the Oktoberfest, to create a conservative, semiautonomous cultural and political bubble in Germany’s south. The state, for example, recently enacted laws mandating that crosses be hung in all administrative buildings, much to the ire of Berlin.

    But the elections Sunday will likely rock the political impregnability of the CSU. The party is polling only at 33 percent, according to German broadcaster ZDF, down a whopping 15 percent from 2013, when Bavaria held its last state elections. In the stable world of German democracy, such a decline amounts to an electoral earthquake.

    Meanwhile, the environmentalist Greens are polling second at 18 percent and the far-right, anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD), once a fringe party that didn’t run a single candidate in 2013, is at 10 percent, according to the ZDF poll.

    Regional elections in Germany can have huge impacts on national politics, though election outcomes typically reflect a mix of local and national factors, Carsten Brzeski, chief economist for ING Germany, wrote in an analysis of the upcoming election.

    But this time, the reason for the decline of the CSU in Bavaria is clear.

    “The CSU tried to make the election a kind of referendum on Merkel’s stance on refugees,” Mr. Brzeski said. “The continuous nagging and trouble-seeking in Berlin, initiated by the CSU, has completely turned this around.”

    Ms. Merkel’s conservative bloc lost over 1 million votes to the AfD in last year’s federal elections, a development largely connected to popular unhappiness with her 2015 decision to open the nation’s borders to over 1 million, mostly Muslim refugees fleeing violence in the Middle East and elsewhere.

    Bavarian backlash

    It was a decision that particularly affected Bavaria, a Catholic stronghold that served as the main entry point for those who traveled through the Balkans to reach Germany, Mr. Boehnke said.

    That gave Bavaria and the CSU “a special role to play as to how to cope with this,” he said. “They not only reject free-floating migration, but also were the first victims who were subject to this new trend.”

    With refugee policy a hot-button issue in the state and the AfD gaining ground, the CSU — which forms a “grand coalition” government in Berlin with Ms. Merkel’s CDU and the center-left Social Democrats (SPD) — sought to move refugee and immigration policy to the right to protect their political base.

    In doing so, however, they almost toppled Ms. Merkel’s fragile coalition multiple times in recent months.

    In June, Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, who is also the CSU’s party chairman, threatened to order German police to turn away refugees at the Bavarian-Austrian border, with or without the federal government’s blessing. Such a move would have undermined Ms. Merkel’s authority and shattered her coalition. She was forced to hold an emergency summit on asylum policy with European partners in order to calm her unruly coalition partner.

    Intergovernmental tensions spiked again in September, when two refugees were accused of killing a German-Cuban man in the eastern city of Chemnitz, prompting riots and right-wing violence that lasted for a week.

    Some of the violence was caught on video but dismissed by the head of the nation’s domestic security unit, sparking public outrage and calls for his resignation. Being a close ally of Mr. Seehofer’s, however, he was instead given an interior ministry posting — once again demonstrating, Mr. Brzeski said, the CSU’s ability and willingness to “hijack” the government in Berlin in an effort to win back votes locally.

    But the abysmal poll numbers ahead of the Sunday elections indicate that voters are tired of the CSU’s political maneuvering in Berlin — a positive signal for an embattled Ms. Merkel as she struggles to keep her government together, Mr. Boehnke said.

    “They cannot play the blame-Merkel card too excessively,” he said. “They tried to make her a bogeyman, but there’s not much to this.”

    But the anticipated outcome of the elections is also indicative of a larger trend of political fragmentation in Germany, said Georg Neugebauer, a political scientist at Berlin Free University.

    With the leftist Greens and the ultraconservative AfD exploiting voter dissatisfaction with mainstream parties, a more segmented political environment is taking hold and ultimately will put Germany in the same precarious political situation as once-stable nations such as Sweden and Austria.

    That would mark a sharp change for Germany under Ms. Merkel, which had come to be seen as a rock of stability and the economic powerhouse of the European Union during her 13 years in power.

    “We’re currently seeing a breakdown of society, or at the very least in this case a breakdown of large political milieus into many smaller ones,” Mr. Neugebauer said.

    Such a consequential political trend has expanded the scope of how elections in Germany’s Texas can impact the nation and beyond.

    “Things are changing on a bigger scale, and Bavaria is a perfect example,” said Mr. Boehnke. “The political system is on the move.”

  • Chemnitz protests: Germany probes banned Nazi salutes

    Image copyright AFP Symbol caption The a ways-proper placards say: “Stop the asylum flood!”

    Police said they had now not expected this type of fast and massive mobilisation of a ways-proper supporters on the streets.

    On Monday evening there were 591 police officers confronting about 7,000 demonstrators, who had rallied by the use of social media. a minimum of 20 other people were injured as fireworks and other gadgets had been thrown.

    Saxony Inner Minister Roland Wöller mentioned a ways-right activists had temporarily travelled to Chemnitz not just from different portions of japanese Germany but also from the western areas of Decrease Saxony and North Rhine-Westphalia.

    Learn extra on an identical topics:

    German police in a long way-proper protest row Should Germany pay its migrants to depart? Simply how a ways to the right is AfD?

    How did the difficulty get started?

    The stabbing came about at about 03:15 (01:15 GMT) on Sunday, at the sidelines of a side road festival.

    The a long way-right demonstration in the town centre on Sunday led to the pageant to be cancelled abruptly.

    The stabbing victim, a chippie elderly 35, died in health facility. He had a German mom and a Cuban father.

    Image copyright EPA Image caption The spot where the fatal stabbing took place is now a makeshift shrine

    Two other German males with him, elderly 33 and 38, had been significantly harm, police say.

    The Syrian detainee is 23 and the Iraqi 22.

    Police have denied rumours on social media that the fight was linked to the sexual harassment of a girl.

    A part-Cuban lady who grew up with Daniel H, Nancy Larssen, told Deutsche Welle news that media misreporting had helped gas the “terrible” far-right protest.

    “It’s sad that within the media they are simply pronouncing that a German has died, and that’s why all the neo-Nazis and hooligans are out, however the media should describe who died, and what skin color he had, because i don’t assume they’d be doing all this in the event that they knew,” she mentioned.

    What did the federal government say?

    “we don’t tolerate such unlawful assemblies and the hounding of people who look different or have different origins and makes an attempt to spread hatred at the streets,” Mrs Merkel’s spokesman, Steffen Seibert, told reporters.

    “That has no position in our towns and we, because the German executive, condemn it in the strongest terms. Our fundamental message for Chemnitz and past is that there is no position in Germany for vigilante justice, for teams that wish to unfold hatred at the streets, for intolerance and for extremism.”

    Why is the migrant factor so thorny?

    In 2015, Chancellor Merkel decided to let in a file 890,000 asylum seekers. Syrians fleeing the civil war comprised the largest workforce – a 403% upward push on Syrian arrivals the previous yr, the German migration administrative center reported.

    She and her allies were punished by way of voters ultimately yr’s general election, while AfD entered parliament – the Bundestag – for the primary time, winning 12.6% of the vote and NINETY FOUR seats.

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  • Kofi Annan death: World leaders honour former UN leader

    Symbol copyright AFP Image caption Kofi Annan’s spouse, Nane, was once by means of his side when he died

    Mr Guterres led the tributes to his predecessor. “in lots of techniques, Kofi Annan was the United Nations. He rose during the ranks to steer the supplier into the brand new millennium with matchless dignity and determination,” he stated in a statement.

    UN high commissioner for human rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein stated in a tweet he was grief- over Annan’s death:

    Image Copyright @raad_zeid @raad_zeid

    Mr Obama, the primary African American to win the White House, mentioned: “Long after he had damaged limitations, Kofi never stopped his pursuit of a better international.”

    President Putin said the reminiscence of Annan could “ceaselessly are living in the hearts of Russians”.

    Meanwhile, Indian PM Narendra Modi said “the world has misplaced not just an ideal African diplomat and humanitarian but additionally a conscience keeper of world peace and safety”.

    Remembering Kofi Annan

    By Imogen Foulkes, BBC’s UN reporter in Geneva

    Kofi Annan will be remembered for the way in which he drew consideration, over and yet again, to the plight of those caught up in struggle, environmental crisis, or simply grinding poverty.

    the best way he quietly however firmly reminded international leaders, on the other hand tough, that they had to placed their accountability to their citizens above their political careers.

    Read more from Imogen

    UK PM Theresa Might and Nato leader Jens Stoltenberg were also amongst folks that paid tributes.

    Image Copyright @jensstoltenberg @jensstoltenberg Symbol Copyright @theresa_may @theresa_may

    Report

    Twitter post by @theresa_may: Sad to hear of the death of Kofi Annan. A great leader and reformer of the UN, he made a huge contribution to making the world he has left a better place than the one he was born into. My thoughts and condolences are with his family. Image Copyright @theresa_may @theresa_may

    Record

    Ghanaian President Nana Akufo-Addo announced every week of nationwide mourning, calling Annan “one in all our greatest compatriots”.

    Symbol Copyright @NAkufoAddo @NAkufoAddo Image copyright AFP Image caption Annan attended an event marking Nelson Mandela’s one hundredth beginning anniversary in Johannesburg remaining month

    the same year, he give up his put up as UN envoy to Syria after most effective six months, mentioning the failures of global powers to fulfil their commitments. He was once later quoted as saying: “I misplaced my troops on the way in which to Damascus.”

    His most up-to-date position used to be chairing an independent commission investigating Myanmar’s Rohingya crisis.

    Annan’s wife, Nane, and three kids were “by way of his aspect all the way through his final days”, the Kofi Annan Basis said.

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  • Europe’s migration crisis: Could it end the eu?

    Migrants on an inflatable boat boarding the Lifeline sea rescue boat at sea on June 21, 2018 Symbol copyright AFP Image caption The splits inside the EU were highlighted by Italy’s refusal to just accept migrants carried through NGO rescue boats within the Mediterranean

    Hardened Eurosceptics may like to think the ecu’s in bother, but as leaders accumulate in Brussels for his or her summer season summit on Thursday, dedicated Europhiles are also sounding the alarm.

    “The fragility of the ecu is expanding,” warns ECU Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker. “The cracks are growing in dimension.”

    it has been simple to get distracted this remaining couple of weeks by way of the new Italian govt and its headline-grabbing rejection of NGO migrant rescue boats.

    However Mr Juncker is true: EU fissures go deeper and are extra widespread.

    Migration pits southern Europe in opposition to the north.

    Which brings me to the next layer of European splits provoked via migration: inside nationwide governments to boot as between nations.

    Germany is the most dramatic example.

    UK told ‘little time left’ for Brexit deal Merkel’s Bavarian best friend threatens migration mutiny Can the european reach a brand new deal on migrants?

    Mrs Merkel has clearly been weakened at house by means of her earlier open-door migrant policy.

    Before considered as politically untouchable, the German chancellor has now been given an ultimatum by means of her personal internal minister.

    “By Way Of the tip of this Brussels summit, you need to come back home with a potential pan-European solution to forestall abnormal migrants bleeding into Germany,” Horst Seehofer has threatened her. “Or I Will Be Able To unilaterally slam Germany’s borders shut.”

    The Austrian executive advised me this week it could then straight away observe swimsuit, causing a border-ultimate domino effect across Europe – with a seismic affect on the ecu’s prize political and economic mission: the open-border Schengen settlement.

    What a blow for Brussels and nightmare for Europe’s export-king Germany that may be.

    of course we aren’t there yet.

    Push for migrant centres outdoor ECU

    In real European Union style, as soon as gathered spherical a table right here in Brussels, there will unquestionably be emphasis on what unites rather than divides member international locations.

    On migration, EU leaders will simply comply with strengthen their Frontex border defend.

    Symbol copyright AFP Symbol caption Italy’s populist Inner Minister Matteo Salvini believes migrant reception centres should be arrange in Niger, Mali, Chad and Sudan

    Gloomy German government assets instructed me they gave the venture a 3 out of 10 likelihood of survival thanks to the increasingly nationalistic nature of many European governments.

    “And if Schengen does fail,” they are expecting, “that may be the start of the top of the eu Union.”

    It Is too early really to usher in the dying of the ecu and even the end of Mrs Merkel’s profession in government as a result of this very political migrant crisis in Europe.

    But, as ECU summit host Donald Tusk mentioned to EU leaders at the eve of their arrival: “The stakes are very high. And time is short.”

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    Obtain the BBC News App.

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