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Hitler's Austrian hometown renames two streets honouring Nazis

Hitler's Austrian hometown renames two streets honouring Nazis

Straits Times7 hours ago
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VIENNA - The Austrian hometown of Adolf Hitler has decided to rename two streets commemorating Nazis following years of complaints by activists, officials said on July 3.
Austria is regularly criticised for not fully acknowledging its history. Annexed in 1938 by Hitler's Germany, it was only from the late 1980s that the country began to examine its own responsibility in the Holocaust.
Numerous places and streets throughout Austria have been renamed, including one in the city of Linz named after Ferdinand Porsche, the founder of the car company, because of his Nazi past.
Hitler's hometown Braunau decided late on July 2 to rename two streets named after Hitler associate Josef Reiter and propagandist Franz Resl, municipal councillor Martina Schaefer told AFP.
'There was a secret vote regarding the Josef Reiter and Resl streets – 28 elected officials voted in favour and nine against,' said Ms Schaefer of the opposition Social Democrats.
Braunau's municipal government, led by the conservatives, which also rule the country, did not respond to AFP's request for comment.
The Austrian Mauthausen Committee, which has long pushed for the streets to be renamed, welcomed a 'decision with symbolic significance'.
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Reiter's honorary citizenship in Braunau was 'revoked on March 19 at our instigation', committee board member Robert Eiter told AFP.
In 2016, the Austrian government bought the house in the small town on the German border where Hitler was born in 1889 and began transforming it into a police station to avoid it becoming a neo-Nazi pilgrimage site.
The Mauthausen Committee, however, advocates for 'a commemorative use of the house', Mr Eiter said.
The Mauthausen Committee, named after the former concentration camp, works to maintain the memory of the crimes committed during the Holocaust.
In total, 65,000 Austrian Jews were killed and 130,000 forced into exile during the Holocaust. AFP
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‘Bro found peace': Stuck F-35 warplane now a top tourist draw in India's Kerala state
‘Bro found peace': Stuck F-35 warplane now a top tourist draw in India's Kerala state

Straits Times

time36 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

‘Bro found peace': Stuck F-35 warplane now a top tourist draw in India's Kerala state

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox An X post from The ChalaToka has an anthropomorphised F-35 eating banana chips with three men having palm wine. With its scenic lakes, lagoons, coastlines and cliffs, India's southern state of Kerala usually sparks 'separation anxiety' among those who travel there for a brief stay. The desire to linger in 'God's own country' for a few more days is often irresistible – apparently even for an US$82 million (S$104 million) F-35 fighter jet. That is what Kerala's tourism office has been laying out, in a memes-worthy campaign meant to reel in tourists as the summer travel season comes into full swing. The British F-35 has been stuck at Kerala's Thiruvananthapuram airport since June 14. It was diverted there after it ran into bad weather during a sortie in the Indian Ocean and was unable to return to HMS Prince of Wales, the Royal Navy's flagship carrier. 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Trump says countries to start paying tariffs on Aug 1, floats range of 10% to 70%
Trump says countries to start paying tariffs on Aug 1, floats range of 10% to 70%

Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • Straits Times

Trump says countries to start paying tariffs on Aug 1, floats range of 10% to 70%

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Blistering heat, empty chairs and the C-word mar UN's flagship development event
Blistering heat, empty chairs and the C-word mar UN's flagship development event

Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • Straits Times

Blistering heat, empty chairs and the C-word mar UN's flagship development event

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres speaks during the opening segment of the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development, in Seville, Spain, June 30, 2025. REUTERS/Claudia Greco SEVILLE - Brutal heat scorched Spain this week, a blistering reminder of the climate change that is battering the world's poorest countries - stretching their finances even as government debt climbs to new heights. But at a once-a-decade UN development finance conference in Seville, two key ingredients were in less abundance: money and power. Just one G7 leader - France's Emmanuel Macron - attended the event, where he and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez addressed rooms filled with dozens of empty chairs. Organisers initially said they expected 70 heads of state; that was whittled to 50 as the conference got underway. 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