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Germany updates: Thousands join Cologne's CSD parade – DW – 07/06/2025

Germany updates: Thousands join Cologne's CSD parade – DW – 07/06/2025

DW06-07-2025
The western German city has been preparing for this year's Pride event with some 60,000 participants expected. Meanwhile, Pride events also took place in eastern Germany, amid far-right protests. Follow DW for more.
Cologne's annual Pride event, Christopher Street Day (CSD), kicked off on Sunday with hundreds of thousands of people expected to attend.
The annual celebration of the LGBTQ+ community is one of the biggest in Europe and attracts people from around the world.During a visit to NATO-member state Lithuania on Sunday, German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier assured the country of German support for its security.
"With the stationing of a German brigade in Lithuania, we're giving a lasting promise: Your security is our security."
Steinmeier was visiting Vilnius during its national day. The Baltic country, along with Estonia and Latvia, forms part of the NATO border with Russia.
"Whoever defends Lithuania, is defending Europe and is defending European values," Steinmeier said.
A German tank division is being stationed in Lithuania in 2027, including 5,000 soldiers.
The number of people in monastic orders in Germany is sinking, with many convents and monasteries facing dissolution.
But what happens to the buildings, traditions, and the communities they once housed?
Read the full story on Germany's disappearing monasteries and convents.
A report by the research services of the German parliament has expressed "substantial doubt" that strikes by Israel and the US on Iran can be legally justified.
The report was produced at the request of Left Party lawmaker Ulrich Thoden.
The research services said an "overwhelming number of experts in international law" consider the necessary criteria for Israel's claim of self-defense in accordance with Article 51 of the UN Charter as unfulfilled.
The 54-page report said that Israel would have had to prove that Iran was directly about to build a nuclear weapon, not just that it had a sufficient amount of nuclear material. It also said Israel would need to prove Iran was planning to use a nuclear weapon against it.
It did not exclude the option that Israel's secret service had further information. "Nevertheless, Israel is now obliged to legally justify its military actions against Iran," the report said.
The German government did not immediately respond to the report, but Chancellor Friedrich Merz gave his outspoken support to the strikes, saying that Israel was doing the "dirty work for all of us" in Iran.
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Following the decision of the German government to turn back migrants at the border, several individuals have launched lawsuits after their asylum applications were immediately rejected.
Germany's magazine reported on Sunday that the government was facing three more lawsuits after a court in June ruled in favor of three Somali nationals who were turned back at a checkpoint on the German-Polish border.
"There are currently three further court cases pending in connection with the rejection of asylum seekers," quoted a spokesman for the Interior Ministry as saying.
A Berlin Administrative Court made its ruling, which was a blow to Chancellor Friedrich Merz, against the government argument that since they were coming from a safe third country — Poland — officials did not have to consider their application.
The court found the immediate transfer of the Somali nationals back to Poland without an adequate review of their applications was unlawful.
The government had feared that the ruling would result in a wave of lawsuits, however, this has not appeared to be the case.
Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt said that Berlin would take the case to the European Court, saying he was "convinced that our actions are in line with European law."
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Polish officials are set to begin carrying out checks on the border with Germany at midnight on Sunday, following German plans to increase spot checks on its side of the border.
Germany had already been conducting spot checks on the border with Poland, but the new Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt announced in May, shortly after taking office, that the checks would be increased as a measure to tackle irregular migration.
Poland said that for its side, no physical barriers would be set up, but signs would tell drivers to slow down and spot checks would be carried out with a focus on buses and cars with multiple passengers.
Polish authorities will also introduce checks on the border with Lithuania.
Both Poland and Germany are part of the Schengen Zone that allows cross-border travel without checks, however, countries are allowed to introduce temporary measures as "last resort" and "in exceptional situations."
Germany introduced limited checks on the Polish border in October 2023, but has repeatedly renewed the temporary measures. Germany last extended its border checks until September 15, 2025 in March, citing "Serious threats to public security and order posed by continued high levels of irregular migration and migrant smuggling, and the strain on the asylum reception system."
More than 1.4 million German pensioners are still working after having retired, according to a response from the Bundestag to a question from the Left Party and reported by the RND network.
Almost 375,000 of those working pensioners were holding down jobs that counted as more than a small side job.
The numbers provided by the Bundestag were dated to December 31, 2023.
Dietmar Bartsch, from the Left Party, remarked that Germany is the biggest economy in Europe, but its pension level — the relation between the average income of workers and the average income of pensioners — is ten points lower than the EU average.
"Austria, the Netherlands or Denmark are at more than 80%, we're below 50%, no wonder then that more and more old people continue working — many not because they want to, but because they must."
Bartsch also called for a "major pension reform" in line with the Austrian system.Cologne is preparing for hundreds of thousands of people to show up for the Christopher Street Day (CSD) demonstration on Sunday at 11:30 a.m. (0930 GMT).
Organizers and police are expecting around 60,000 participants. Some 90 floats are also expected to join the march.
CSD traces its origins back to the Stonewall riot in New York on June 28, 1969, when people at the Stonewall LGBTQ+ bar fought back against a police raid. The incident is an important historical date for the LGBTQ+ community.
The Stonewall bar was on Christopher Street, hence the name for the Cologne event.
The motto for this year's CSD is "For queer rights. Many. Together. Strong."
Cologne's CSD is one of the biggest Pride events in Europe and attracts people from around the world.
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Several hundred people on Saturday celebrated the Christopher Street Day (CSD) parade to promote diversity and tolerance for the LGBTQ+ community in Falkensee, a town in the eastern German state of Brandenburg.
On the same day, several dozen participants protested against Pride events.
Police say both the march and the counter demonstration remained peaceful.
Paris Saint-Germain have booked a spot in the Club World Cup semifinals after a tense 2-0 win over Bayern Munich — but the match was overshadowed by a gruesome injury to young German star Jamal Musiala.
Desire Doue opened the scoring in the 78th minute after Joao Neves robbed Harry Kane near midfield and sparked a quick counter that ended with Doue's left-footed shot beating Manuel Neuer at the near post.
PSG finished with nine men after late red cards for Willian Pacho and Lucas Hernandez, but clung on as Bayern threw everything forward. Ousmane Dembele sealed the win deep into stoppage time with a breakaway goal.
Bayern had two goals ruled out for offside, including a Harry Kane header, and saw a late penalty overturned by VAR.
Musiala's injury stunned both teams. In first-half stoppage time, PSG keeper Gianluigi Donnarumma collided with Musiala's left ankle while diving for a loose ball, leaving the 22-year-old's foot hanging at an unnatural angle. Donnarumma was visibly shaken as Musiala was stretchered off.
PSG will face either Real Madrid or Borussia Dortmund in Wednesday's semifinal at East Rutherford, New Jersey.
Saturday's quarterfinal drew 66,937 fans to Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta — the city's biggest crowd yet ahead of next year's World Cup.
A father and his child have gone missing after a boating accident on the Eibsee, an Alpine lake in southern Germany, police said on Saturday.
The family of four was out on a pedal boat when the six-year-old fell into the water and the father jumped in to rescue them — but neither resurfaced.
Emergency responders are caring for the mother and the couple's other child, aged four.
Police said the family is from Bavaria. A major rescue operation is underway with helicopters and divers searching the lake.
Firefighters and emergency personnel continue to battle the forest fire in the Gohrischheide region on the border between the eastern German states of Saxony and Brandenburg.
The situation on the Saxony side remains more difficult. Around 700 firefighters were deployed on Saturday afternoon, according to a statement from the Meissen district office.
The situation in the Saalfelder Höhe in Thuringia has been stabilized, according to authorities. Emergency services were able to prevent the fire from spreading overnight."Our emergency services have the situation under control," the Thuringian State Chancellery, which called the forest fire "the largest of its kind" in the state in over 30 years, posted on X.
The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party leader Alice Weidel says the cente-left Social Democrats' (SPD) push to consider banning her party reminds her of "very dark times."
Speaking in Berlin on Saturday, Weidel compared the idea to Adolf Hitler's crackdown on other parties and the press.
The SPD's party conference last weekend called for constitutional bodies to prepare conditions to file an application to have the AfD declared unconstitutional.
Any party ban would have to be decided by Germany's Constitutional Court and requested by the federal government or parliament.
Calls for a ban have gained momentum after Germany's domestic intelligence service upgraded its assessment of the AfD, citing "confirmed right-wing extremist tendencies." The party is challenging this label in court.
Meanwhile, AfD lawmakers passed a new code of conduct on Saturday, with co-leader Tino Chrupalla aiming to polish the party's image ahead of any future term in office. The code calls for a united and moderate front in parliament, along with rules to prevent corruption and conflicts of interest.
Germany captain Giulia Gwinn will miss the rest of the Women's Euros in Switzerland due to a left knee injury, the German football federation (DFB) announced on Saturday.
"Our captain sustained a medial ligament injury in her left knee yesterday in the match against Poland. She is expected to be out for several weeks.", the DFB posted on X.
Gwinn had to be helped off the field in tears in the 40th minute of Germany's opening 2-0 victory over Poland on Friday in St. Gallen.
She suffered an injury after making a crucial tackle on Poland's striker, Ewa Pajor.
It was originally feared that she had suffered a third anterior cruciate ligament tear since 2020.
Anti-German graffiti has appeared on shops and cars on the Spanish island of Mallorca, a popular holiday destination for many Germans, the German-language newspaper reported on Saturday.
The perpetrators defaced dozens of German-owned shops and cars with foreign licensed plates with slogans such as "Germans out" and "Foreign buyers go to hell" in the small southern village of Santanyi.
Police have confirmed the incidents to German news agency
"It is frightening to feel such a wave of hatred after 34 years on the island, where I pay taxes and currently employ nine people," one man affected was quoted as saying by the newspaper.
In recent years, there have been rising tensions between tourists, foreign property owners, and locals on the holiday island.
Thousands have protested at regular rallies against mass tourism and a housing shortage.
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from Bonn!
We are continuing our coverage of news from Germany over the weekend.
Anti-tourist graffiti was sited on the Spanish Mediterranean island of Mallorca, a beloved holidaying spot for Germans.
Wildfires continued to rage in eastern Germany.
Stick around for the latest on these stories and much more from DW.
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Sri Lanka: Farmers fight solar plans on ancestral lands   – DW – 08/04/2025
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Germany is to give older parents a higher pension than before, thanks to the Bavarian CSU. But businesses and economists say the 'mother's pension' is an extra burden on younger generations. The Christian Social Union (CSU), the Bavarian sister-party to Chancellor Friedrich Merz's conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU), appears to have persuaded its big sibling to implement one of its own pet projects: Raising the pension subsidy for older parents — colloquially known as the or "mother's pension" — one year earlier than planned. The pension rise for parents who had children before 1992 comes with a price tag of around €5 billion annually and is now set to be implemented on January 1, 2027, despite major cuts elsewhere in Germany's federal budget. According to German media reports, the government still has a gap of some €172 billion ($198 billion) for its financial planning for the years 2027 to 2029. 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Despite the name, all parents are eligible for the "mother's pension," as are foster parents and grandparents, if the child lived with them for a significant amount of time. Peter Haan, specialist in state finance policy at the German Institute for Economic Research (DIW), and co-author of a study on the pension, thinks it's not an effective way to close the "gender pension gap." The key question, as far as Haan is concerned, is who actually benefits. It does, he admitted, make superficial sense for older mothers to get the same benefits as those who had their children after 1992. "But the pensions for that generation were significantly higher than for the younger generation," Haan told DW. "And secondly, it's a 'watering can' measure that is equal for all mothers, and so doesn't specifically do anything to combat poverty among older people." The €20 per child per month might certainly be useful for many older people with lower incomes, but the very poorest women won't profit from it anyway — because the "mother's pension" is actually deducted from any welfare benefits they receive. The mother's pension dates back to 2013, when the CSU pushed through the plan under Angela Merkel's government as a way to compensate parents — in practice mainly mothers — who took time off to raise children and therefore paid less into the pension system. Since then, the CSU has made the plan one of its key policies, not least because it is popular among its own Bavarian electorate — many of whom are older people. In the intervening years, keeping the mother's pension has been the CSU's line in the sand in negotiations with its coalition partners the CDU and the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD). 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"[Raising the mother's pension] is another signal that more and more tax money or social insurance money is being distributed to older generations at the expense of active workers," Röder told DW. "It has to be financed somehow, and this is just a big loan to be paid in the future." This money would be better invested in infrastructure, she added, which benefits both businesses and society at large, rather than a particular group. Röder also argued that older parents are already financially privileged, because they benefited from pension conditions that favored mothers in the past — for instance, before 1999, women could legally start drawing an old age pension earlier than men. According to Haan, there are cheaper ways to help older poor people, such as checking income and wealth so that only those who actually need it get the extra money. "If you really want to reduce the gender pension gap, you have to change the labor market relations between men and women, by promoting more participation on the labor market for women," said Haan. "For example, with better childcare." "In times when the state pension coffers are under pressure, it is difficult to take on such an expansion of costs," he concluded. "Especially for a measure like this. Of course, you can see the justification for it, but there are other measures that I think are more important."While you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter, Berlin Briefing.

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