- New Orleans killer acted alone, professed loyalty to jihadist group: FBI
- UK's biggest dinosaur footprint site uncovered
- Former Australia coach Langer to take charge of London Spirit
- Most UK doctors suffer from 'compassion fatigue': poll
- Everton boss Dyche unconcerned by Maupay jibe
- FBI probes potential accomplices in New Orleans truck ramming
- Secret lab developing UK's first quantum clock: defence ministry
- Premier League chief fears Club World Cup's impact on Man City and Chelsea
- US mulls new restrictions on Chinese drones
- Rosita Missoni of Italy's eponymous fashion house dies age 93
- 27 sub-Saharan African migrants die off Tunisia in shipwrecks
- UK grime star Stormzy banned from driving for nine months
- Neil Young dumps Glastonbury alleging 'BBC control'
- Swiatek battles back to take Poland into United Cup semis
- Electric cars took 89% of Norway market in 2024
- Rival South Korea camps face off as president holds out
- French downhill ace Sarrazin out of intensive care
- Djokovic cruises past Monfils as rising stars impress in Brisbane
- Montenegro mourns after gunman kills 12
- Sales surge in 2024 for Chinese EV giant BYD
- Agnes Keleti, world's oldest Olympic champion, dies at 103
- Andreeva, Mpetshi Perricard showcase Australian Open potential
- Afghan refugees suffer 'like prisoners' in Pakistan crackdown
- Coach tight-lipped on whether Rohit will play in final Australia Test
- Blooming hard: Taiwan's persimmon growers struggle
- South Korea's impeached president resists arrest over martial law bid
- Knicks roll to ninth straight NBA win, Ivey hurt in Pistons victory
- 'Numb' New Orleans grapples with horror of deadly truck attack
- Asia stocks begin year on cautious note
- FBI probes 'terrorist' links in New Orleans truck-ramming that killed 15
- 2024 was China's hottest year on record: weather agency
- Perera smashes 46-ball ton as Sri Lanka pile up 218-5 in 3rd NZ T20
- South Korea police raid Muan airport over Jeju Air crash that killed 179
- South Korea's Yoon resists arrest over martial law bid
- Sainz set to step out of comfort zone to defend Dakar Rally title
- New Year's fireworks accidents kill five in Germany
- 'I'm Still Here': an ode to Brazil resistance
- New Orleans attack suspect was US-born army veteran
- Australia axe Marsh, call-up Webster for fifth India Test
- Jets quarterback Rodgers ponders NFL future ahead of season finale
- Eagles' Barkley likely to sit out season finale, ending rushing record bid
- Syria FM hopes first foreign visit to Saudi opens 'new, bright page'
- At least 10 dead in Montenegro restaurant shooting: minister
- Arteta reveals Arsenal hit by virus before vital win at Brentford
- Palestinian Authority suspends Al Jazeera broadcasts
- Arsenal close gap on Liverpool as Jesus stars again
- Witnesses describe 'war zone' left in wake of New Orleans attack
- Cosmetic surgery aficionado Jocelyne Wildenstein dies aged 79: partner
- Tschofenig takes overall Four Hills lead after second leg win
- 10 killed in New Year's truck ramming in New Orleans, dozens hurt
RBGPF | -5.05% | 59.02 | $ | |
RYCEF | 2.34% | 7.25 | $ | |
CMSD | 1.09% | 23.384 | $ | |
NGG | 0.44% | 59.68 | $ | |
VOD | 0.18% | 8.505 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.93% | 23.145 | $ | |
SCS | -0.25% | 11.79 | $ | |
RIO | -0.11% | 58.745 | $ | |
JRI | 0.08% | 12.14 | $ | |
RELX | -0.15% | 45.35 | $ | |
AZN | 0.73% | 66 | $ | |
GSK | 0.34% | 33.935 | $ | |
BCC | -0.37% | 118.42 | $ | |
BCE | 0.19% | 23.225 | $ | |
BTI | 0.42% | 36.475 | $ | |
BP | 1.19% | 29.915 | $ |
Germany's embattled Scholz trades blows with rivals as election looms
Germany's embattled Chancellor Olaf Scholz, mired in a government crisis, traded blows with his rivals Wednesday in combative parliament speeches as all sides ready for elections in February.
"I will certainly not regret having proposed compromises every day and until the end, until the last common day of this government coalition," a defiant Scholz told the Bundestag a week after his coalition imploded.
Conservative opposition leader Friedrich Merz, whose party has a clear lead in the polls, poured scorn on Scholz and labelled his address the "witching hour" of a failed government.
Social Democrat Scholz's motley alliance with the Greens and Free Democrats collapsed a week ago, on the day Trump secured re-election to the White House, and at a time when Europe's largest economy faces serious headwinds.
The chancellor said he had a "good conversation" with Trump by phone on Sunday and stressed that German-US ties "have been the foundation of our country's success for decades".
"We should do everything we can in the coming decades, regardless of who is in power here or there, to ensure that this relationship continues to develop well," he said.
Trump's election victory has cast doubt internationally on the level of future US support for Ukraine, now in its third winter of war as it fights back against Russia.
Scholz -- whose government has been the second largest supplier of military aid to Kyiv after Washington under President Joe Biden -- pledged that German support will not stop.
"We have a responsibility to ensure that (Ukraine) won't be left alone," he said, adding that Kyiv "can rely on our country and our solidarity".
He said it was equally important that "we do everything we can to ensure that this war does not escalate any further and that we do not become a party to the war".
- 'Lightweight' -
Speaking after the chancellor, Merz charged that Trump would best remember the chancellor for the chaotic days of anti-globalisation riots that erupted during a G20 summit in Hamburg in 2017 when Scholz was the city's major.
"Donald Trump knows your name from the G20 summit in Hamburg, which you organised so brilliantly," Merz said sarcastically.
He told Scholz that he would have "no authority" to speak to the next American president who would regard the chancellor as "a lightweight".
Merz -- who has rained withering fire on the fractious coalition for months -- said that what Germany needs "as soon as possible" is "a stable and effective government".
Vowing a "fundamentally different" style of politics, Merz also pledged that a conservative-led government would "regain control over immigration" by turning illegal migrants back at the borders.
The top challenge now was "to restore the international competitiveness of our economy," said Merz, a former corporate lawyer.
The world's third-largest economy has been battling woes from a manufacturing slowdown to weak demand for its crucial exports, and is on course to shrink for the second straight year.
An influential economic panel issued a scathing report Wednesday that judged that "by international standards, Germany is lagging far behind economically," held back by "structural problems".
The head of Germany's central bank, Joachim Nagel, told Die Zeit weekly that Trump's plan to hike tariffs on all imports could knock one percent off German economic output.
Feuding over economic and fiscal policy were key drivers that led to the breakup of Scholz's coalition last Wednesday, when the liberal Free Democrats left.
Scholz told parliament that spending on security or support for Ukraine are crucial but must not lead to cuts in pensions, welfare or the health sector at home.
Stressing the need for social cohesion, he said that "I do not want one issue to be played off against the other".
Merz fired back and told Scholz: "You are dividing the country, Mr Chancellor. You are the one responsible for these controversies and for this division in Germany."
L.Carrico--PC