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Austria To Ban Knives For Migrants

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Proposed amendments to the country’s weapons law would extend the prohibition on non-EU migrants owning firearms and now also bladed weapons.

This law will enter into force from January 1st, 2019. According to the press, Herbert Kickl (FPÖ), minister of Interior, introduced this amendment because of the higher number of attacks with bladed weapons.

Between 2013 and 2017, the number of such attacks doubled. In 2013, the police investigated 1,550 suspects using these kind of weapons, five years later it was 3,282 suspects.

The statistics say, that the attacks are caused mostly by Afghans (287), Turks (169), and people from the Russian Federation (111), especially Chechens. If they have a knife, they will commit an administrative offense for which they can be fined or even imprisoned.

Concerning stabbing and cutting weapons, Austrian legislation, perhaps in comparison with Germany, is rather benevolent. There was not explicit designation in the Austrian Weapons Law that governs the ownership of so called “cold weapons” till now.

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Ukraine: Russian ‘Good Friday’ missile attack kills one, injures 82

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A Friday morning Russian missile attack on the northeastern city of Kharkiv in Ukraine killed at least one person and injured no fewer than 82 others, including six children.

According to emergency services, the strikes damaged apartment buildings, an educational institution and a business.

“This is how Russia began this Good Friday – with ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, Shaheds – maiming our people and cities,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on X.

Footages showed emergency workers giving first aid to people with bleeding wounds near one of the apartment buildings.

“Everything went flying in all rooms, the windows shattered. My husband died,” a resident Inna Khrystych said while speaking to reporters.

Another resident, Andriy Ponomarenko, said he and his wife were woken by the strike and rushed to find their four-year-old daughter amid the smoke and shattered glass.

“We first thought the blood was mine but turned out she got a cut by her eye,” he added.

According to Ukraine’s foreign minister, Andriy Sybiha, Russia launched four missiles at Kharkiv, three of them ballistic and carrying cluster warheads.

“Russia is a terror machine. It will only stop if we confront it with true strength,” Sybiha added.

The mayor of Ukraine’s second biggest city,
Ihor Terekhov, said the attack damaged 15 apartment buildings based on preliminary information.

It will be recalled that Russia and Ukraine agreed to a US-brokered moratorium on strikes against energy infrastructure last month, but both sides have accused each other since of violating it.

Ukrainian leader told a press conference in Kyiv on Thursday that in total, Russia was launching the same number of missiles and drones at Ukraine as before the agreement.

Zelenskyy further said that Russia has reduced the number of its strikes on Ukrainian energy facilities, but was attacking civilian infrastructure instead.

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WTO Chief ‘Very Concerned’ As Tariffs Cut Into Global Trade

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Global trade is expected to plummet this year in the wake of President Donald Trump’s tariff offensive, fuelling uncertainty that threatens “severe negative consequences” for the world, the World Trade Organization warned Wednesday.

Since returning to office, Trump has imposed a 10 percent tariff on imports of goods from around the world along with 25 percent levies on steel, aluminium and cars.

While Trump made a U-turn on steeper tariffs for dozens of countries, he has escalated a trade war with China, slapping 145 percent levies on Chinese goods while Beijing retaliated with a 125 percent duty on US products.

“I’m very concerned,” WTO chief Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told reporters, adding that the organisation expected to see trade volumes between the United States and China crumble by a whopping 81 percent.

“The enduring uncertainty threatens to act as a brake on global growth, with severe negative consequences for the world, the most vulnerable economies in particular,” she warned in a statement.

At the start of the year, WTO expected to see global trade expand in 2025 and 2026, with merchandise trade seen growing in line with global GDP, and trade in services growing even faster.

But in the organisation’s annual global trade outlook published Wednesday, it determined that as things stand, world merchandise trade is on course to fall 0.2 percent this year, “before posting a modest recovery of 2.5 percent in 2026”.

The 2025 number, calculated in line with the tariff situation on April 14, is already nearly three percentage points lower than what would have been expected without the tariffs Trump has slapped on countries around the globe.

The WTO warned that “severe downside risks” could see trade “shrink even further, to 1.5 percent in 2025, if the situation deteriorates”.

The WTO also cautioned that services trade, while not directly subject to tariffs, was also “expected to be adversely affected”.

The global volume of commercial services trade was now forecast to grow by 4.0 percent — around a percentage point less than expected.

This year, the impact of the tariffs was expected to be felt quite differently in different regions, the WTO said.

“Under the current policy landscape, North America is expected to see a 12.6-percent decline in exports and 9.6-percent drop in imports in 2025,” the organisation said.

“The region’s performance would subtract 1.7 percentage points from world merchandise trade growth in 2025, turning the overall figure negative,” it pointed out.

Asia was projected to post “modest growth”, with both exports and imports set to swell by 1.6 percent.

Chinese merchandise exports in particular were forecast to rise by between four and nine percent across all regions except North America, “as trade is redirected”, WTO said.

And European exports were on track to grow by one percent, and imports by 1.9 percent.

The WTO said its economists expect global gross domestic product (GDP) to grow 2.2 percent this year, and 2.4 percent in 2026.

The organisation said it expected tit-for-tat tariffs to have only a “limited” direct impact on that figure.

But Okonjo-Iweala told reporters the “sharp projected decline in US-China bilateral trade” risked more “far-reaching consequences”.

While US-China trade accounts for just around three percent of world merchandise trade, she warned that what appears to be the ongoing “decoupling of the two economies” could lead to “a broader fragmentation of the global economy along geopolitical lines into two isolated blocks”.

In that scenario, “our estimates suggest that global … GDP would be lowered by nearly seven percent in the long term”, by 2040, she said.

“This is quite significant and substantial.”

Faced with this crisis, Okonjo-Iweala called for reform, urging countries to “inject dynamism” into the WTO.

In particular, she called for the organisation, which only acts through consensus — a painstakingly slow process –, to “streamline decision-making, and adapt our agreements to better meet today’s global realities”.

“We shouldn’t waste this crisis.”

AFP

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‘Wacky Crook’ – Trump calls on New York Attorney General to resign immediately

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US President Donald Trump has called on New York Attorney General, Letitia James, to resign immediately.


Trump labelled James as a ‘wacky Crook’ and a totally corrupt politician.

He stated this in a post on his Truth Social media account on Sunday night.


According to him, New York can never be great again with James in office.

“Letitia James, a totally corrupt politician, should resign from her position as New York State Attorney General, Immediately,” Trump wrote.

“Everyone is trying to make New York great again, and it can never be done with this wacky crook in office.”


James is facing questions surrounding a real estate transaction she executed in August 2023, just weeks before she filed a high-profile civil fraud lawsuit against Trump.

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