
Ukraine says at least 5 killed in Russian strikes on Kyiv – DW – 06/23/2025
Ukrainian officials reported a "massive" overnight strike in Kyiv. Five people were reported to have been killed as rescuers worked to bring the injured to safety. DW has the latest.
These are the updates from Russia's war in Ukraine from Monday, June 23, 2025.
Russia launched a total of 352 drones and 16 missiles overnight to target Ukrainian territory, the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces said in social media posts on Monday.
"The main direction of impact is the city of Kyiv," the statement said.
The attacks reportedly began from 8 pm local time (7pm CET) on Sunday.
Ukrainian defense forces repelled the air attack, the General Staff said.
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Money is set to dominate the upcoming NATO summit, which is scheduled to begin in The Hague on Tuesday.
NATO member states are expected to commit to a massive boost in defense spending, not only to deter Russia but also to please United States President Donald Trump.
Trump has demanded an increase in Europe's defense spending since day one. So, will the NATO Summit be a big success for the US president?
Read DW's in-depth analysis here.
At least five people were killed in overnight Russian attacks in and around the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv.
Ukraine on Monday described the drone and missile strikes as "massive," with officials reporting scores of injuries and fires in residential areas.
"Another massive attack on the capital. Possibly, several waves of enemy drones," a statement from Tymur Tkachenko, head of Kyiv's military administration, said.
Visuals posted by Ukraine's State Emergency Service showed rescue workers taking people to safety from several structures as fires burned.
At least four people were killed in Kyiv's bustling district of Shevchenkivskyi where the entire entrance of a high-rise residential building was destroyed, Ukraine's Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko posted on Telegram.
Klymenko added that there was damage in six of the city's 10 districts.
A 68-year-old woman was killed in the aerial bombardment in the broader Kyiv region, its governor Mykola Kalashnik said in a statement.
The strikes come a day after Ukraine's commander-in-chief, Oleksandr Syrsky, vowed to step up strikes on Russia.
There was no immediate comment from Russia on the attack.
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We are following the latest developments concerning Russia's war in Ukraine.
An overnight Russian drone and missile attack on Ukraine's Kyiv has left at least five people dead, Ukrainian officials have said.
The attack triggered fires in several residential buildings and structures in the Kyiv region.
Meanwhile, diplomatic attempts to end the three-year war are hamstrung. The last round of peace talks between the two sides was held three weeks ago. There are no follow-up talks scheduled so far.
Stay tuned for more news and analyses.
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Israel strikes Iran's Evin prison in Tehran – DW – 06/23/2025
Israel said its carrying out strikes inside Iran with 'unprecedented intensity,' destroying numerous security offices and damaging the gate at Tehran's infamous Evin Prison. DW has the latest. Israel's defense secretary said the IDF hit Evin Prison in Tehran among numerous other targets Iran says it's military is deciding on 'timing, nature, scale' of response to US strikes on nuclear facilities US President Donald Trump suggests regime change in Tehran to 'Make Iran Great Again' Iranian media on Monday reported damage in and around the country's infamous Evin Prison. Semi-official broadcaster Tasnim reported that an electricity feeder in the capital's northern Evin neighborhood was hit, though said there had been no reports of widespread power outages. Iranian state television also reported a suspected Israeli strike on the gate of the prison, which often houses dual-nationals, Westerners and political prisoners. The facility is on numerous Western sanctions lists and run by the country's Revolutionary Guard. Defense Minister Israel Katz on Monday announced that "the IDF is now attacking with unprecedented force regime targets and government repression bodies in the heart of Tehran, including the Basij headquarters, Evin Prison for political prisoners and opponents of the regime, the 'Destruction of Israel' clock in Palestine Square, the internal security headquarters of the Revolutionary Guards, the Ideology Headquarters, and other regime targets." Iran has repeatedly threatened the US with retaliation for its bombing of nuclear facilities in the Islamic republic. US military installations in the Middle East, the closest targets, are on high alert. So where are US troops and materials? Here a partial list of the most important US bases in the region: Bahrain: Bahrain houses the headquarters of US Naval Forces Central Command and the 5th Naval Fleet — responsible for overseeing the Persian Gulf, Red Sea, Arabian Sea and sections of the Indian Ocean. The facility has been called a priority target by top Iranian advisors. Those calls also coincide with others urging the closure of the nearby Strait of Hormuz — a major chokepoint — to international shipping. Kuwait: Camp Arifjan, one of several US military installations in Kuwait, serves as the forward headquarters of US Army Central Command. Others include Ali Al Salem Air Base near the Iraqi border, known as "The Rock" for its isolated, rugged environment; and Camp Buehring, a staging post for US Army troops deploying into Iraq and Syria. Qatar: The largest US base in the Middle East is Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. A sprawling 24-hectare complex in the desert outside the capital Doha, Al Udeid houses around 10,000 troops and serves as the forward headquarters of US Central Command — which directs US military operations from Egypt in the west to Kazakhstan in the east. Iraq: Iraq's Al-Asad Air Base in western Anbar province is home to US forces supporting Iraqi security forces and NATO. Iran targeted Al Asad in 2020 in retaliation for the US killing of Iranian General Qasem Soleimani. Erbil Air Base in northern Iraq's semi-autonomous Kurdistan Region serves as a training hub for US and coalition forces. Jordan: Jordan's Muwaffaq al Salti Air Base near the capital Amman houses the US Air Force 32nd Expeditionary Wing, which is responsible for conducting missions across the Levant. Saudi Arabia: In 2024, some 2,321 US troops were stationed in Saudi Arabia. There they operate in coordination with the Saudi government and supply air and missile defense capacity and support to US military aircraft operating in the region. The US has also stationed military defense assets such as Patriot missile batteries and Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense or THAAD systems at Saudi Arabia's Prince Sultan Air Base outside Riyadh. United Arab Emirates (UAE): Al Dhafra Air Base in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is a critical US air hub operated together with the UAE Air Force. The base is used as a launching pad for mission support in the region as well as for reconnaissance deployments. And although it is not a formal military site, Jebel Ali Port is the US Navy's largest port of call in the Middle East. Iran on Monday said the US would face "serious consequences" for bombing its nuclear facilities. "This hostile act ... will widen the scope of legitimate targets of the armed forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran and pave the way for the extension of war in the region," said armed forces spokesperson Ebrahim Zolfaghari. "The fighters of Islam will inflict serious, unpredictable consequences on you with powerful and targeted [military] operations," Zolfaghari said on state television. Zolfaghari ended his recorded statement in English, saying, "Mr. Trump, the gambler, you may start this war, but we will be the ones to end it." As the world looks to the Middle East in the wake of US attacks on Iran, Fawaz Gerges, a professor of Middle Eastern politics and international relations at the London School of Economics, told DW what he thinks the world can expect from both parties in the coming days and weeks. He addresses the risk that US President Donald Trump could turn Iran in 2025 into a remake of the 2003 Iraq disaster by pursuing an unnecessary and hard-to-end war based on misinformation. Overall, Gerges offers a dark outlook, telling DW that Iran "could really make a massive, massive mess in the Gulf," and that he doesn't think there is "any hope for view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Opinions are divided over the US entering Israel's conflict with Iran. Now the world is waiting to see what happens next. Find out how we got here and what we can expect in this background article by Matthew Ward Agius. Russia's Tass news agency on Monday reported that Tehran and Moscow are working to closely coordinate their responses to escalations in the Israel/US/Iran conflict. The news came as Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi was in Moscow for meetings with Russian leadership. Iran enjoys close ties to Russia, as well as to China and North Korea. Iran's judiciary on Monday announced that "Mohammad-Amin Mahdavi Shayesteh was hanged this morning for intelligence cooperation with the Zionist regime," according to Iran's semi-official Tasnim news. Shayesteh was arrested in late 2023. On Monday, Tasnim described him as "the head of a cyber-team affiliated with Mossad," Israel's intelligence service." On Sunday another man was executed after being convicted of being an agent for Mossad. Iran has carried out multiple arrests of people suspected of spying for Israel since the start of its bombing campaign against the Islamic republic on June 13. The Israel Defense Force (IDF) took to the social media platform X to announce that its fighter jets were "attacking military infrastructure in Kermanshah, Iran," on Monday. Israel began attacks on Kermanshah and Hamedan late Sunday. Israeli bombs also targeted the Iranian capital Tehran, as well as what it described as a missile production site in Shahroud. North Korea on Monday condemned recent US attacks on Iran's nuclear program, calling them a violation of Iran's sovereignty. "The Democratic People's Republic of Korea [North Korea] strongly denounces the attack on Iran by the US which ... violently trampled down the territorial integrity and security interests of a sovereign state," a government spokesperson was quoted as saying on state broadcaster KCNA. North Korea lashed out at what it called Israel's "ceaseless war moves and territorial expansion." "The just international community," read a statement, "should raise the voice of unanimous censure and rejection against the US and Israel's confrontational acts." Iran and North Korea have maintained friendly ties for decades and have been suspected of cooperating on arms projects including the development of ballistic missiles. UN monitors have previously claimed the two had resumed work on long-range missile projects. Though experts doubt North Korea will be willing to help Iran on the nuclear end of its arms program — for fear of undermining its own deterrence — North Korea could help with the non-fissile elements of a nuclear bomb. North Korea is thought to have secretly built at least a dozen nuclear warheads of its own as well as developing various ballistic missile systems to deliver them. The Iranian Parliament has reportedly approved a measure to close the Strait of Hormuz, a critical oil transit choke point, after the US bombed three nuclear sites in Iran, according to Iranian state media. The final decision rests with the country's Supreme National Security Council. Iran has previously threatened to block the strait when faced with Western pressure. But experts say the move doesn't make sense as it's likely to hurt Iran itself, while exporters have other options to fall back on if it does. The slim waterway between Oman and Iran connects the Persian Gulf with the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea. Large volumes of crude extracted by OPEC countries such as Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Iraq from oil fields across the Persian Gulf region and consumed globally flow through the strait. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video US President Donald Trump said the biggest damage done to the nuclear sites happened "far below ground level" as shown by satellite images, though it was not clear which images he was referring to. "Monumental Damage was done to all Nuclear sites in Iran, as shown by satellite images. Obliteration is an accurate term! The white structure shown is deeply imbedded into the rock, with even its roof well below ground level, and completely shielded from flame," Trump posted on Truth Social. Trump is also set to meet with his national security team on Monday afternoon in the Oval Office, according to a schedule seen by CNN. The Israeli army's spokesman, Effie Defrin, said earlier that Israel and the US were working together to assess the damage to Iran's nuclear program. The UN nuclear watchdog said earlier that it was too early to assess the damage at the Fordo underground nuclear facility. Iran's UN Ambassador Amir Saeid Iravani told an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council, of which the US is a permanent member, that the US decided to "destroy" diplomacy by launching attacks on Iranian nuclear sites. "What conclusion can be drawn from this situation?" Iravani asked. "From the perspective of Western countries, Iran must 'return to the negotiating table.' But, as Iran's foreign minister mentioned, 'how can Iran return to something it never left — let alone.'" Irvani said the Iranian military will decide the "timing, nature and scale of Iran's proportionate response." Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said after US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities that his nation "reserves all options" in responding to the attack. "The events this morning are outrageous and will have everlasting consequences,' he said in a statement on X. "In accordance with the UN Charter and its provisions allowing a legitimate response in self-defense, Iran reserves all options to defend its sovereignty, interest, and people." Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese backed calls for de-escalation following US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, writing: "We urge Iran not to take any further action that could destabilize the region." The comments follow Foreign Minister Penny Wong's statement of support for US strikes on nuclear facilities because she said her country was in favor of any action to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon. But she added that Australia was joining calls from Britain and other countries for Iran to return to the negotiating table, telling reporters in Canberra that "We do not want to see escalation." There are around 2,900 Australians in Iran and 1,300 in Iraq who are seeking to leave. On Saturday (US time), US President Donald Trump announced US forces had attacked Iran's Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan nuclear facilities. The Pentagon on Sunday confirmed seven B-2 Spirit bombers flew non-stop from a US Air Force base in Missouri to launch the attacks before returning home. Among the payload were 30,000-pound (13,600-kilogram) "bunker-busting" warheads, thought to be the only weapon capable of penetrating deep below the surface to strike at Iran's subterranean nuclear facilities, and a key reason why the US entered into the conflict. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 videoFrance is mobilizing military planes to help evacuate its citizens from Israel to Cyprus if the Israeli government allows it, the French Foreign Ministry said. The French government already repatriated 160 French citizens on an evacuation flight from Jordan on Sunday, and plans similar flights Monday and Tuesday, the ministry said in a statement. The flights were announced after French President Emmanuel Macron held an emergency security meeting about the conflict in the Middle East. France has warned its nationals against traveling to Israel, and urged all French citizens in Iran to leave.


DW
an hour ago
- DW
How China wields rare earths as a strategic weapon – DW – 06/23/2025
China's grip on rare earths — vital for smartphones, EVs, and military tech — has left the US, Europe and India vulnerable. Until global supplies increase, Beijing wields great power over the West's critical industries. China's chokehold on rare earths — the minerals essential for electronics, automotive and defense systems — gave it significant leverage over the United States during recent tariff talks in London. Controlling about 60% of global rare-earth production and nearly 90% of refining, China tightened its grip in April by imposing export controls on seven rare-earth elements and permanent magnets. The curbs, partly in response to sky-high tariffs on Chinese exports imposed by US President Donald Trump, exposed US vulnerabilities, as the country lacks domestic refining capacity. "The whole world economy relies on these magnets from China," Jost Wübbeke, managing partner at the Berlin-based Sinolytics research house specializing in China, told DW. "If you stop exporting those, it will be felt across the globe." The resulting supply chain disruptions have hit American industries hard. US carmaker Ford, for example, announced two weeks ago (June 13) it had been forced to scale back SUV production in Chicago due to shortages, while auto parts suppliers Aptiv and BorgWarner said they were developing motors with minimal or no rare-earth content to counter supply constraints. Michael Dunne, a China-focused automotive consultant, told the that China's curbs "could halt America's automotive plants entirely." A survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in China revealed that 75% of US firms expect their rare-earth stocks to be exhausted within three months. US producers urged Washington to negotiate an end to the restrictions, and in London, China agreed to speed up export license approvals, although a large backlog persists. It is also unclear whether the deal includes access for US military suppliers, who rely on these minerals for fighter jets and missile systems. China's strategic use of rare earths as a geopolitical tool is not new. In 2010, Beijing halted exports to Japan for two months amid a territorial dispute, triggering price spikes and exposing supply chain risks. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Gabriel Wildau, managing director at New York-based CEO advisory firm Teneo, warned that China's export licensing regime is a permanent fixture, not merely a response to Trump's tariffs. In a note to clients, he wrote that "supply cutoffs will remain an ever-present threat," signaling China's intent to maintain leverage over Washington. The US is not the only country facing a rare-earth shortage. The European Union relies on China for 98% of its rare-earth magnets needed for auto components, fighter jets and medical imaging devices. The European Association of Automotive Supplies (CLEPA) warned earlier this month the sector was "already experiencing significant disruption" due to China's export curbs, adding that they had caused "the shutdown of several production lines and plants across Europe, with further impacts expected in the coming weeks as inventories deplete." Alberto Prina Cerai, a research fellow at the Italian Institute for International Political Studies (ISPI), told DW that Brussels urgently needed to "buy time." "In terms of scale, we [the West] cannot catch up with China," Prina Cerai warned. "They have an integrated, mine-to-magnet supply chain that is very hard to replicate." But while a complete decoupling from China is "unthinkable" in the short term, he said the EU should "manage this interdependence with a coherent industrial strategy." The European Commission, the bloc's executive arm, aims to produce 7,000 tons of EU-based magnets by 2030 under the Critical Raw Materials Act, with several mining, refining, and recycling projects underway. A huge rare-earth processing plant is due to open in Estonia later in the year, and another large facility in southwestern France will be operational next year. After meeting with his Chinese counterpart earlier this month, EU Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic called China's curbs "extremely disruptive" to Europe's auto and industrial sectors. China did propose a "green channel" to expedite license approvals for EU firms, but experts warn approvals could still take up to 45 days. Despite having the world's fifth-largest rare-earth reserves, at 6.9 million metric tons, India contributes less than 1% of the global supply of rare earths. The South Asian country lacks the refining capacity to process them for use in high-tech applications. India also relies on Chinese exports, which have also faced restrictions. Although New Delhi has stepped up efforts to diversify its supply through deals with the US, Australia and Central Asian nations, progress has so far been slow. News agency Reuters reported recently that New Delhi ordered its state-run miner IREL to stop exports of the domestically produced minerals, including to Japan, to safeguard supplies for the country's producers. Last year, IREL delivered a third of the 2,900 metric tons of the rare earths it mines to Japan, via a Japanese processing firm. With China's stranglehold unlikely to be rivaled anytime soon, G7 leaders meeting in Canada on June 15 tentatively agreed on a strategy to anticipate critical rare-earth shortages, vowing a joint response to deliberate market disruption, such as China's, as well as moves to diversify production and supply. "Recognizing this threat to our economies, as well as various other risks to the resilience of our critical minerals supply chains, we will work together and with partners beyond the G7 to swiftly protect our economic and national security," the group of advanced economies said in a document called G7 Critical Minerals Action Plan. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video ISPI's Prina Cerai told DW that access to rare earths will become more critical for the West as advanced technologies emerge, noting how "robotics and humanoids might be an important market" in the medium term. After China's 44 million tons of rare-earth deposits, Brazil, India and Australia have the next largest deposits, collectively around 31.3 million tons, according to the US Geological Survey. Around 20 million tons were recently discovered in Kazakhstan. The US and Australia are the most advanced in ramping up their own rare-earth mining and processing output, while other countries' plans are still in the early to mid-stages, requiring 5-10 years, environmental considerations and billions in investment. Another future source could be Greenland, despite its harsh weather conditions. The US and EU have already signed cooperation agreements, and in 2023, the Tanbreez Project, in southern Greenland, was ranked as the top rare earth project by mining industry data provider Mining Intelligence, with an estimated 28.2 million tons of minerals. Reuters reported earlier this month that the US Export-Import Bank was set to approve a loan of up to $120 million (€104 million) to the firm running Tanbreez, in what would be the Trump administration's first overseas investment in a mining project. Trump has repeatedly threatened to acquire Greenland for US strategic purposes, but the island nation, which is a Danish territory, has rejected the overture. The EU, meanwhile, has identified 25 of the 34 minerals on its official list of critical raw materials in Greenland, including rare earths, in another sign of the country's increasingly crucial role in the global economy. But until alternative rare-earth supplies are significantly scaled up, China will continue to wield this critical resource as a powerful geopolitical weapon, holding global industries and nations in its grip. Sinolytics' Wübbeke is skeptical about whether other countries will ever tackle China's stranglehold on rare earths due to the market leader's huge cost advantage. "Once China takes down export controls, prices will go down and the supply situation will ease. Nobody will talk about it [overrealiance on China] again because then it'll be about prices," Wübbeke told DW. "Non-Chinese mines and refineries have to compete with these prices and normally they cannot."


DW
an hour ago
- DW
Germany: Racism against Sinti and Roma increasing – DW – 06/23/2025
A new report about antiziganism in Germany has revealed alarming figures — and criticized the media for feeding clichés. But the community is counting small successes. Sinti and Roma are especially affected by prejudice, discrimination, racism, according to the Antiziganism Reporting and Information Center in Germany (MIA), which has documented the nature and scale of antiziganism in Germany in its latest annual report. The report recorded 1,678 antiziganism cases in 2024, ranging from verbal abuse to assaults — a significant increase on the 621 reported in its first edition, published for the year 2022. "The incidents documented in this report clearly show that verbal stigmatization and antiziganism propaganda paves the way for discrimination and for physical attacks up to life-threatening violence," Mehmet Daimagüler, Germany's first ever federal commissioner against antiziganism, wrote in the foreword. A lawyer by profession, Daimagüler was appointed in 2022, but was replaced by the new German government in June this year with Michael Brand, a member of the Bundestag for the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and state secretary at the Family Ministry, which supported the MIA report. Brand took over the office in difficult times. "It is absolutely clear, in light of the increase in extremism fanned from within and outside Germany, that we must now especially protect minorities such as the Sinti and Roma from the effects of extremism and discrimination," the conservative politician said. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video The significantly higher number of antiziganist incidents can be attributed to the growing awareness of the MIA's work. But beyond the raw figures, the report shows that those affected are reporting a generally hostile atmosphere. The almost 70-page report includes numerous concrete examples of degrading, sometimes violent discrimination: In one incident caught on camera, a Sinti boy who was bullied in school was held down by several boys after school one day, tied to a bench and beaten. According to the report, the incident escalated further when the parents of the boy and two of their relatives confronted the parents of the perpetrators: Several people joined the row and attacked the Sinti family, one of whom suffered a broken foot. Another was threatened with a knife and injured. A study has shown that such excesses are occurring repeatedly in German kindergartens and schools. The root of this development is what the MIA calls an increasingly hostile political debate: "The MIA observes that anti-Roma and Sinti statements, especially by right-wing parties, are poisoning the social climate." To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Romani Rose, who has headed the Central Council of German Sinti and Roma since 1982, draws a pessimistic conclusion in the MIA report. "Unfortunately, we must acknowledge that despite our almost 50 years of political work in this country, a change in consciousness has only just begun," he said. Rose also recalled the systematic extermination of his ethnic group by the National Socialists. By the end of the Second World War, more than half a million Sinti and Roma throughout Europe had been persecuted or murdered. Today, an estimated 80,000 – 140,000 live in Germany. Europe-wide, their population numbers between 10 and 12 million. The MIA also blamed the media for shaping the clichéd image of Sinti and Roma. Distorted or false portrayals are found in commercial media outlets and public service broadcasters alike, the report found, and there have been more frequent complaints about stigmatizing or false depictions. One documented case concerned the supposed large-scale misuse of public funds by Roma allegedly posing as Ukrainian refugees: "More than 5,000 cases of social fraud via fake Ukrainians," read a March 2024 article published by the Ippen media group, which appeared on numerous German news outlets. The background to the text was stories circulating shortly after Russia's invasion of Ukraine about people said to have posed as refugees. According to the MIA report, this was a typical case of media failure, as the story was specifically directed against Roma, who were accused either of travelling to Germany with forged Ukrainian passports or concealing possible Ukrainian-Hungarian dual citizenship. In fact, Ukrainian Romani people have suffered discrimination in Germany. The publishing of the report in the newspaper was the trigger for a successful complaint to the German Press Council, the self-regulating body for Germany's print media and their online channels. According to the council, the reports violated fundamental journalistic principles: Instead of scrutinizing the numbers, other media outlets were simply taken as a source. The council went on to condemn the story on three counts: Violating journalistic due diligence, the non-discrimination rule, and disregarding the presumption of innocence. Due to limited resources, the MIA is still unable to carry out its own systematic media monitoring: "Nevertheless, we closely follow the discourse and developments in media coverage," the organization's annual report said. The MIA welcomed the fact that the post of an antiziganism federal commissioner had been retained after all — something that had been in doubt because there was no commitment to the post in the coalition agreement of Germany's new federal government. Now the MIA team can breathe a sigh of relief and appeal to policymakers to strengthen the office with the appropriate resources and personnel. The initial statements by the new antiziganism commissioner are likely to raise hopes in the Sinti and Roma community: "Where discrimination occurs, it must be clearly and decisively confronted – by the state and society alike," emphasized Brand, adding: "It is important to me to also highlight the many positive examples of cooperation between the majority society and minorities." 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.