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TODAY IN GERMANY

Today in Germany: A roundup of the latest news on Thursday

30 injured in May Day parade in southern Germany, unions call for better working conditions in rallies, Germans want a shorter working week, and other news from around Germany.

Participants in a demonstration by IG Metall and the DGB Hesse-Thuringia in Erfurt on Labour Day stand with flags and banners.
Participants in a demonstration by IG Metall and the DGB Hesse-Thuringia in Erfurt on Labour Day stand with flags and banners. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Martin Schutt

30 injured, 10 seriously in German May Day parade accident

Around 30 people were injured, 10 of them seriously, after a float being pulled by a tractor overturned at a May Day parade in southwest Germany, police said.

It toppled as the tractor pulling it made a turn, they said in a statement.

Some of the injured were flown out for treatment, with some helicopters flying in from nearby Switzerland to help.

The accident happened around 1:05 pm on a road near the town of Kandern, which lies near the French border between the German city of Freibourg im Breisgau and Basel in Switzerland.

The scene of the accident near Kandern, which lies near the French border between the German city of Freibourg im Breisgau and Basel in Switzerland.

The scene of the accident near Kandern, which lies near the French border between the German city of Freibourg im Breisgau and Basel in Switzerland.. Photo: picture alliance/dpa/Oberbadisches Verlagshaus | Gudrun Gehr

Unions demand ‘tariff turnaround’ and better working conditions in Labour Day rallies

Unions called for better working conditions and more collective bargaining at Labour Day rallies and events across Germany on Wednesday.

“More wages, more free time, more security,” said the chairwoman of the German Trade Union Confederation (DGB), Yasmin Fahimi, at a rally in Hanover.

In Münster, her deputy Elke Hannack spoke out in favour of more investments and more staff in the public sector.

The state should “fulfil its tasks at all levels and meet the needs of our citizens,” said Hannack, warning against austerity in education policy.

“It is important to have more educators, more teachers and more social work in schools and daycare centres, which need to be better equipped.”

Fahimi, meanwhile, called for a “tariff turnaround”.

Only half of all employees in Germany are now under the direct protection of a collective agreement, said the DGB chairwoman.

“Tariff flight” by employers causes economic damage of 130 billion euros every year, while collective agreements make employees free in the world of work, said Fahimi.

Such agreements ensured higher wages, fair pay and regular working hours.

There should be “not a cent of tax money for tariff evasion and wage dumping,” said Fahimi, adding that the government should take measures that go beyond the Federal Tariff Compliance Act so that 80 percent of jobs are once again bound by collective agreements.

SPD leader Klingbeil expects Ukraine to need support for years to come

SPD leader Lars Klingbeil expects Germany will need to provide financial and military support to Ukraine for years to come.

“We may have to mobilise money and weapons for another ten years to help Ukraine,” Klingbeil told the t-online portal, according to a statement on Wednesday. “We need the people’s mandate to do this,” he said, added that Germany’s security was also being defended in Ukraine.

Klingbeil also called for the public debate to focus on more than just arms deliveries. “Peace initiatives are being talked about all over the world, the peace conference in Switzerland is coming up, and we as Germany support that,” he said.

“We cannot allow the concept of peace to be occupied only by the Wagenknechts [left-wing party Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance] and the right-wing radicals from the AfD,” he added. Both parties understood peace to be a “surrender” to Russian head of state Vladimir Putin “and that is wrong,” he said.

At the same time, the SPD leader pointed out that Putin currently does not want to negotiate and that nothing will change in Germany’s Ukraine policy.

“The strategy remains to make Ukraine so strong that it can negotiate from a position of strength at the right time,” he said.

Left-wing protest in Stuttgart broken up after attacks on police

A demonstration by left-wing activists on Labour Day in Stuttgart was broken up after police officers were attacked.

Police said they cleared the area using pepper spray and batons, stating earlier that there had been “attacks on our colleagues”.

The police said they had asked participants in the demonstration to leave the meeting point in the city centre individually or in small groups.

Police in other German cities, including Berlin and Hamburg, were also preparing for large-scale operations at left-wing demonstrations on May 1st. 

Germans want shorter working week

Germans want to work less, according to an unpublished study by the Institute of the German Economy (IW) seen in advance by the Rheinische Post newspaper. 

Employees up to 25 wanted to work 35 hours per week in 2021, three hours less than in 2007.

26-40-year-olds wanted to work 34 hours per week, or two hours less than at the time of the previous survey, while over 40s wanted to work 32 hours per week, almost three hours less than before.

The IW study is based on regular surveys of tens of thousands of employees on a Socio-Economic Panel. The panel were asked how many hours they would like to work, with the knowledge that if working hours were reduced, they would also earn less money.

The desired weekly working hours of low-income workers up to the age of 25 saw some of the sharpest falls since 2007 – 6.3 hours per week, but even those on higher incomes wanted to work three hours less.

READ ALSO: How Germany is trialling the four day working week 

For younger workers up to the age of 25 with low incomes, the desired working hours have fallen particularly sharply since 2007 – by 6.3 hours per week. But younger people with higher incomes also want to work three hours less. “The thesis that younger people are reducing their job offer because they are saturated and have lower consumer desires cannot be confirmed with the available data,” said the IW.

Among schoolchildren and students, the desire to work full-time fell from 62 to 48 percent between 2007 and 2021.

“The development of young people’s working time preferences indicates that their preference for leisure time has increased – in this respect, the hypothesis of leisure-oriented Generation Z could be seen as confirmed,” the IW study said.

But “the leisure time preference of older age groups did not increase to a lesser extent, so this is not something that is unique to the younger generation.”

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TODAY IN GERMANY

Today in Germany: A roundup of the latest news on Thursday

Three people have died and two others are critically injured after a fire broke out in Düsseldorf, concerns over the funding of Berlin's €29 ticket and more news from around Germany.

Today in Germany: A roundup of the latest news on Thursday

Three die and several injured after fire in Düsseldorf 

Three people have died and several are injured following a suspected explosion and fire at a building in the city of Düsseldorf in the early hours of Thursday. 

At around 2.30 am, a residential building that included a shop on the ground floor on the corner of Lichtstraße and Grafenberger Allee in the Flingern district caught fire. 

Several parked cars, which had been parked in front of the shop, also caught fire.

A rescue operation was launched. According to the fire brigade, 16 people were treated by emergency services and taken to hospital – including two people with life-threatening injuries. Three people were found dead by emergency services.

The fire was extinguished during the night, police said on Thursday morning. 

Investigations are continuing. 

Fast food giants Taco Bell and Krispy Kreme coming to Germany

Two of the USA’s most well-known fast food chains are coming to Deutschland.

Taco Bell will start by opening ten locations in Berlin, possibly as early as July – with Krispy Kreme following later in the year.

Within the next five years, the two chains are planning to have anywhere between 100 and 150 locations all around Germany – with the first locations outside the capital slated to go up in Frankfurt.

Daily dilemmas of living in Germany: what’s the best fast food in Berlin?

German Police Union says €29 ticket risking security in capital

The Chief of the Berlin chapter of the German Police Union (GdP) is criticising the city’s government for planned cuts of about €32 million planned for the capital’s police and fire services.

GdP Berlin Chief Stephan Weh blasted the city government, saying that its search for the hundreds of millions necessary for the capital’s incoming €29 a month public transport ticket was coming at the expense of everything else – following the announcement of a list of cuts.

“This list shows it clearly to everyone. The €29 ticket is being financed at the cost of our security,” said Weh.

GdP Berlin says the cuts may mean less money to investigate organised crime or to replace aging police vehicles in the capital – to use just two examples.

READ ALSO: Everything you need to know about Berlin’s €29 ticket

German economy ‘showing signs of recovey’

The German economy is likely to pick up this year after a period of weakness but still faces significant headwinds, a group of influential experts said this week. 

The assessment from the government’s council of economic advisors chimes with other recent forecasts that predict Europe’s top economy is slowly getting back on its feet.

Last year output shrank slightly due to soaring inflation, a slowdown in the crucial manufacturing sector and poor demand from key trading partners, particularly China.

Despite continued challenges, the experts expect “the German economy to gain some momentum over the course of 2024,” said council member Martin Werding in the group’s latest report.

Growing overseas shipments, boosted by recovering international trade, as well as improving consumer demand on the back of rising salaries will drive the recovery, they said.

Nevertheless the experts expect only a modest, 0.2-percent rise in gross domestic product (GDP) this year before an increase of 0.9 percent in 2025.

This is largely in line with other recent forecasts, with the government predicting 0.3-percent growth in 2024.

Scholz ‘deeply shocked’ by ‘cowardly attack’ on Slovak PM

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said he was “deeply shocked” after Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico suffered life-threatening gunshot wounds in an assassination attempt on Wednesday.

“I am deeply shocked by the news of the cowardly attack on Slovakian Prime Minister Fico,” Scholz said on X, formerly Twitter, also calling for an end to violence in European politics.

Passengers urged to plan ahead over holiday weekend

The ADV airport association is advising travellers in Germany to leave plenty of extra time this coming weekend, as passenger volumes are set to be higher than usual.

About 2.5 million passengers are expected to travel through German airports over the upcoming Whit Monday long weekend.

READ ALSO: Passengers in Germany urged to prepare for crowded airports over holiday weekend

German court convicts stateless man over train rampage killings

A German court on Wednesday sentenced a stateless man of Palestinian origin to life in prison over a knife attack on a train that claimed two teenagers’ lives.

The accused, named by the court only as Ibrahim A., 34, had gone on a stabbing spree in January 2023 on a train travelling between the northern cities of Kiel and Hamburg.

A 17-year-old girl and a 19-year-old man who were acquainted with each other were killed in the attack and five people wounded.

Given the severity of the crime, the court, in its verdict also ruled out any early release usually offered after 15 years’ imprisonment for life sentences.

As well as being convicted for the two killings, the accused was convicted of three counts of attempted murder.

The man had arrived in Germany in 2014 and had several previous convictions, including for violent crimes, dating back to 2015.

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