Tag: Germany

  • Spain crushes Germany 6-0 to reach UEFA Nations League final four

    Spain crushes Germany 6-0 to reach UEFA Nations League final four

    Spain forward Ferran Torres scored a first career hat-trick as his side crushed helpless Germany 6-0 at home on Tuesday to storm into the final four of the UEFA Nations League.

    Goals from Alvaro Morata, Ferran and Rodri gave Luis Enrique’s side a convincing 3-0 lead at half-time, while Ferran struck again early in the second half and completed his treble with a classy finish.

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    Substitute Mikel Oyarzabal tapped in the sixth goal in the 89th minute to adorn an incredible Spain display and deepen four-times world champions Germany’s misery.

    The victory saw Spain finish top of League A4 with 11 points after six games, while the Germans, who only needed a draw to progress to the final phase, came second with nine.

    Spain suffered an early injury setback when Sergio Canales was taken off but his replacement Fabian Ruiz had an immediate impact.

    This was when he sent in a superb delivery from a corner-kick and Morata rose unmarked at the far post to head home in the 17th minute.

    Morata netted again soon after by connecting with a cross from Ferran but his strike was incorrectly ruled offside, with no VAR in operation in the UEFA Nations League.

    However, Spain quickly shrugged off their sense of injustice as Ferran smashed in their second goal on the rebound in the 33rd minute.

    This was after Dani Olmo had glanced against the post, while Rodri headed home a corner-kick from Koke five minutes later.

    Spain lost captain Sergio Ramos to a suspected muscle injury towards the end of the first half, but they grew ever more confident after the break as Germany continued to wilt.

    Dani Olmo spurned a simple chance to add to Spain’s lead, allowing Germany’s Manuel Neuer to make a rare save in a match in which his principal task was picking the ball out of the net.

    But Ferran showed no mercy, making the most of a generous pass from ex-Valencia team mate Jose Gaya to score his second.

    He then showed his confidence by receiving a pass from Fabian and beating Neuer with a first-time finish from outside the box.

  • England U21 boss Boothroyd says Bayern wonderkid Musiala could still choose Germany

    England U21 boss Boothroyd says Bayern wonderkid Musiala could still choose Germany

    England Under-21 manager Aidy Boothroyd admits the future of Bayern Munich’s Jamal Musiala is still undecided amid an ongoing battle with Germany over his international future.

    For now, the 17-year-old attacking midfielder has chosen to be with the Three Lions after his maiden call-up to the U21 side as the DFB have backed down in their pursuit.

    Despite having played for Germany at the U16 level, Maikel Schonwitz, head of youth coaches at the DFB, confirmed to Sport1 that Musiala recently rejected them.

    Musiala, who was born in Stuttgart and grew up in England, has a German mother and Nigerian father, making him also eligible for the Super Eagles. Boothroyd said it’s up to the teenager to decide his own international future.

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    “Nothing is written in stone and we are just doing what we would do with any other player at this moment in time,” Boothroyd said. “He is a good player who deserves to be stretched and that’s why he is in the U21 team.

    “After that, it is completely down to him. He has to get past the competition in terms of the players ahead of him [to reach senior level]. He needs to push himself further to grow to get into his club team in Germany. It won’t be an issue that he plays in that country so we want to create an environment that he flourishes in.

    “If he joins us, then great, but we can’t do too much about it.”

    Musiala’s breakthrough at Bayern has vindicated his decision to leave Chelsea as he became the European champions’ youngest Bundesliga goalscorer and appearance-maker in recent months. Boothroyd has quickly been impressed by the youngster’s first few training sessions.

    “He is a very, very talented player,” he added. “He has got very good feet, he can play off the left or right. Tactically, I have been really impressed at how quickly he takes things on. He has looked the part.

    “Watching him playing for his club, the younger teams and you get a clear idea of him. But having looked at him up close, he is probably not finished growing so there’s a lot to come from him physically but technically and tactically I have been really impressed.”

    The youngster has co-captained England at U17 level with Borussia Dortmund’s Jude Bellingham. The Bayern midfielder was looking forward to linking up with his close friend and fellow Bundesliga star before he got promoted to Gareth Southgate’s senior squad.

    “It has to be said that Jamal was really excited to get into the U21s but he had his best mate going out of the group in less than two days after Jude went into the senior players so some of the other players got around him and helped him to settle.

    “Without putting pressure on either of the guys, they are both in a system that allows players to grow if you do well which means you get opportunities, like Jude shows. That’s whether he comes back to us or not and he won’t be the last player to get into that senior area.

    “We are pleased for him and excited about what he can do in the future.”

    In Bellingham’s absence, Boothroyd said his former Blues teammate Callum Hudson-Odoi is helping him adapt to the group: “Callum, I have to say, is a very friendly character so like the other boys he has taken Jamal under his wing to help him relax and play his football.”

  • Germany announces second national lockdown to curb Coronavirus spread

    Germany announces second national lockdown to curb Coronavirus spread

    Germany has announced second national lockdowns to curb coronavirus spread. 

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel, said her nation will enter a four-week lockdown from 2 November.

    Germany’s restrictions will see:

    • Bars and pubs to shut
    • Restaurants to close except for takeaway
    • Gyms, cinemas and theatres to shut
    • Indoor gatherings banned for more than 10 people and between more than two households
    • Hotels to close to tourists – staying open only for “essential reasons”
    • Shops to stay open but with a maximum of one person per 10 square metres

    Ms. Merkel said schools, nurseries, and day care centres will stay open. She also revealed that she “wants to make sure” nursing homes can still have visitors during the lockdown.

    The German Chancellor explained that the “tough measures” were necessary to prevent hospitals from being overwhelmed as Germany faces soaring coronavirus deaths and cases.

    “We need to take action now,” she said, adding the key to defusing the “very serious” situation was to reduce contacts while limiting damage to the economy.

    The chancellor said the number of filled intensive care beds had doubled in 10 days, but believed this short lockdown could help curb down the spread and ensure hospitals can continue to cope. 

    “If the pace of infections continues like this, then we’ll reach the limits of what the health system can manage within weeks,” she said.

    Earlier on Wednesday  October 28, Germany’s disease control agency confirmed a record 14,964 new confirmed coronavirus cases in one day, taking the national total to 449,275. 

    It also reported 27 more deaths, raising its total to 10,098, the Robert Koch Institute said

  • COVID-19: Nigeria, Germany meet over airports’ reopening

    COVID-19: Nigeria, Germany meet over airports’ reopening

    Ahead of the June 21 resumption date for domestic flights in the country, the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria has met with the management of the Munich International Airport, Germany.

    FAAN Managing Director, Hamisu Yadudu, who attended the virtual meeting with management staff, said in a statement that the aim of the meeting was to assess the readiness of FAAN to gradually begin operations.

    He explained that it was worth learning from the team of experts at the Munich International Airport which has successfully reopened for domestic and international flights.

    “While FAAN is responding to the guidelines set by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority for gradual airports’ reopening and post COVID-19 operations, it is important also to compare notes with other airports in the world to make sure we are on the right track and join the global industry in building back travel confidence,” Yadudu said at the meeting on Wednesday.

    MIA team lead, Herbert Keffel, who was in attendance with his colleagues; Georgios Elkolids and Julian Duerdoth, highlighted the steps and considerations which the airport adopted for reopening.

    Daybreak reports that the Federal Government had shut the country’s airports and airspace in March to curb the spread of the coronavirus disease.

    But the Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 earlier this month said the aviation sector should prepare for a gradual resumption of domestic flights, effective June 21.

    In preparation for the restart, the NCAA ordered the reopening of five airports in the country including the Lagos and Abuja airports.

  • Germany’s Audi announces €5m in coronavirus aid

    Germany’s Audi announces €5m in coronavirus aid

    German carmaker Audi has announced 5 million euros (5.5 million dollars) in emergency aid to support medical and care facilities both at home and abroad during the coronavirus pandemic.

    “The corona pandemic presents extreme challenges for all of us worldwide, for us as a company and for the society as a whole,” said Markus Duesmann, who became chairman of the carmaker’s board on Wednesday.

    “I would like to thank all the Audi employees who are looking ahead, doing their bit and helping where they are needed in this extraordinary time,’’ he said in a statement.

    Audi says that a growing number of employees are signing up to volunteer for the crisis-response efforts.

    The millions of euros in aid from the Ingolstadt-based Volkswagen subsidiary comes on top of 600,000 euros already announced on Monday for hospitals in the luxury carmaker’s home city and the city of Heilbronn, where it has a factory.

    Audi’s production lines have been still for over a week now, with just under half of the company’s 61,000-strong workforce placed initially until Easter on the German government’s short-time work scheme, helping to cover the bulk of their wages while there’s no work to do.

    A company spokeswoman said Audi was fielding lots of calls requesting help and donations.

    Employees are helping in a number of ways, she said, such as helping with the harvest in southern Germany’s hop-planting region of Hallertau.

    She added that Audi vehicles have been provided to the Technisches Hilfswerk civil protection organisation.(dpa/NAN)

  • Coronavirus in Europe: Germany ‘at start of epidemic’

    Coronavirus in Europe: Germany ‘at start of epidemic’

    The German health authorities predicted a rapid spread of the new coronavirus through the country, as at least 10 new cases were confirmed and the search for other infected people continued on Thursday.

    “We are at the start of a coronavirus epidemic in Germany,” Health Minister Jens Spahn said in Berlin late on Wednesday.

    “The infection chains can to some extent – and this is new – not be tracked,” he said.

    Spahn said he was increasingly of the view that “the chance that this epidemic will pass Germany by will not be fulfilled.”

    Five new cases were reported in the most populous state of North Rhine Westphalia, with the health authorities urgently seeking for any new cases.

    Around 300 people who attended a carnival celebration earlier in the week in the town of Gangelt on the Dutch border were urged to report to the authorities. And in the south-western state of Baden-Wuerrtemberg, the associates of a cluster of four infected people were being monitored.

    The military authorities were checking troops after a soldier was found to be infected in the Koblenz area.

    Denmark reported its first confirmed coronavirus case on Thursday, saying the patient was a man who had returned earlier this week from a ski holiday in northern Italy.

    The man, his wife and son were all tested but only the man was diagnosed with the virus, the Danish Health Authority said.

    The man, a journalist with broadcaster TV 2, has been isolated in his home together with his family.

    “We are of course deeply shocked that what we thought was an unlikely event, is now a reality,” the reporter, Jacob Tage Ramlyng, wrote on Facebook.

    Health authorities said the family were doing well and efforts were under way to trace his contacts.

    The novel coronavirus causes the Covid-19 lung disease, which can be fatal, although most people who catch the bug experience mild symptoms or none at all.

    In Italy, which has seen the worst outbreak so far in Europe, a top public health official said that the number of declared cases in the country – currently at least 400 – is probably exaggerated.

    “There is a high chance of overestimating the positives” from the way authorities have tested for the virus, Walter Ricciardi, a government advisor on the current crisis, says in an interview with Corriere della Sera.

    Only “about 190” have been confirmed by Italy’s National Health institute (ISS), he said.

    In Switzerland, an upcoming annual trade show of the Swiss watchmaking industry in Geneva was cancelled in view of the coronavirus, the organizers announced.

    In contrast, two other Swiss trade shows that attract international attention, the Geneva International Motor Show and the Baselworld watch fair, are still set to start as scheduled in early March and late April, respectively.

    Taiwan on Thursday issued an official travel warning for Italy, urging its citizens to avoid all non-essential travel there. Passengers entering Taiwan from Italy will have to undergo 14-day quarantine at home. (dpa)

  • Flu wave hits Germany: records 79,000 cases, 130 deaths

    Flu wave hits Germany: records 79,000 cases, 130 deaths

    Germany recorded 79,263 cases of current winter flu wave with 130 people deaths, Germany’s federal disease control agency reported on Thursday.

    “The current winter flu wave hitting Germany has resulted in a total of 79,263 cases confirmed in laboratory testing since the autumn, around a half of them in the past two weeks,’’ it said.

    According to the report from the Robert Koch Institute in Berlin, 130 people have died resulting from an infection with the flu virus this season.

    A total of almost 13,300 have been hospitalised.

    The institute noted that the reported cases were only part of the picture.

    In the serious flu wave in the 2017-18 winter, 10 million patients attended their family doctors, the institute said.

    Creches, hospitals and schools were prime spreaders of infection, it said. (dpa/NAN)

  • Nigeria, Germany pledge greater ties on migration

    Nigeria, Germany pledge greater ties on migration

    The Federal Government of Nigeria and Germany on Wednesday pledged to deepen bilateral cooperation towards addressing regular and irregular migration.

    Mr Basheer Mohammed, Federal Commissioner for Refugees, Migrants and IDPs, and Mrs Annette Widmann-Mauz, Minister of State of German Federal Chancellery made the pledge at the latter’s visit to Abuja.

    Widmann-Mauz, German Commissioner for Migration, Refugees and Integration, spoke through an interpreter, Amb. Brigitt Ory, Ambassador of Germany to Nigeria.

    According to her, the cooperation has become important to further strengthen efforts by the two countries to tackle issues that surrounded regular and irregular migration.

    Widmann-Mauz, “We have to inform people before they leave their country of origin, in this case Nigeria; to inform them about legal regular pact of migration, especially over our skills migration Act.

    “We want to make very clear conditions are set by the new law and we will like to support them in fulfilling these criteria.

    “We will like to give advice and inform, but more than that, we will also like to offer language courses and trainings.

    “Therefore we have the centres of information and advice, which will enhance the qualification, especially for the labour market.

    “We will not only like to give information about the criteria for legal migration, but at the same time make clear if they are some wrong expectations about migration to Germany.

    She said that explanations would be made to clarify issues on what illegal migration results to, saying our target is to support people not to go this very dangerous way.

    She further said that an advice centre would be established to promote the cause, not just as qualification, but also to serve as vocational training centres.

    On his part, Mohammed, commended the German government for the partnership, saying it would enhance efforts by the Nigerian government to tackle migration issues.

    “This migration policy of the commission is working at a high level; this success can be attributed to President Muhammadu Buhari’s commitment in tackling the issue of migration.

    “We have received a delegation from Ghana, they were here to study our best practices on migration governance and today, we are hosting a high powered delegation from Germany.

    “This engagement has been a success and I am sure it will yield the right result, especially towards addressing the issue of regular and irregular migration,”he said. (NAN)

  • Past ‘evils’ are resurfacing, Germany and Israel warn at Holocaust event

    Past ‘evils’ are resurfacing, Germany and Israel warn at Holocaust event

    The “evil spirits” of racism and anti-Semitism are re-emerging, the presidents of Germany and Israel warned in Berlin on Wednesday as they marked 75 years since the liberation of the Auschwitz death camp.

    Speaking at a special parliamentary session in the Bundestag, Frank-Walter Steinmeier said Germans had a responsibility to never forget their Nazi past and to stop hatred from spreading.

    “The evil spirits of the past are reappearing today under a new guise,” he said.

    “More still, they are presenting their ethno-nationalist, authoritarian thinking as a vision, as a better answer to the questions of our time.”

    Israeli President Reuven Rivlin echoed those concerns in his own speech, warning that the continent was being “visited by ghosts from the past”.

    “Ugly and extreme anti-Semitism is hovering over the whole of Europe,” Rivlin told German lawmakers.

    Both men were speaking after attending high-profile anniversary events in Jerusalem and at Auschwitz-Birkenau in Poland in recent days.

    The solemn occasions were dominated by fresh fears over the safety of Jews in Europe, more than seven decades after the Nazis murdered over six million Jews during World War II.

    Sitting in the audience in Berlin were MPs from the far-right AfD party, whose leaders have openly railed against Germany’s remembrance culture and its ongoing atonement for the atrocities committed under Adolf Hitler’s Nazi regime.

    Leading AfD lawmaker Alexander Gauland in 2018 described the Nazi era as “a speck of bird shit” in German history.

    Quoting Holocaust survivor Primo Levi, Steinmeier warned: “It happened, so it can happen again.”

    – ‘Very negative influence’ –

    Rivlin was only the second Israeli president to speak at the German parliament’s annual remembrance event, after Shimon Peres in 2010.

    Peres used his speech at the time to issue an emotional plea for the world to bring the remaining perpetrators of Nazi crimes to justice.

    But faced with a dwindling number of people who lived through World War II, attention is shifting to making sure that the horrors of the Holocaust are not forgotten.

    On the eve of their Bundestag speeches, Rivlin and Steinmeier visited a centuries-old Jewish secondary school in the German capital.

    “We have the fourth, fifth and sixth generation after the Holocaust and World War II,” Rivlin told students.

    “Now we have to find a way to let you, and to let your children know what happened, and prevent it from happening again.”

    Steinmeier urged young people to complement their history lessons with real-life “experiences” by travelling to Israel and visiting concentration camps like Auschwitz, where 1.1 million people were killed.

    The German president, who serves as a kind of a moral arbiter for the nation, also voiced concern about the “very negative influence” of social media.

    He said his speech at Israel’s memorial event last Thursday, in which he urged Germans to confront their past, attracted an “unbelievable” amount of negative reactions on Facebook.

    – ‘Mass exit’ of Jews? –

    Alarm about anti-Jewish hatred has catapulted to the top of Germany’s political agenda after a suspected neo-Nazi gunman tried to storm a synagogue filled with worshippers in the city of Halle in October.

    After failing to break down the door, he shot dead a female passer-by and a man at a kebab shop instead.

    According to government figures, Germany recorded 1,799 anti-Semitic offences in 2018, up nearly 20 percent on the year before. Of those, 69 were classed as violent attacks.

    German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas warned this week that nearly one in two Jews has considered leaving the country.

    Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government has already taken steps in recent months to tighten legislation on anti-Semitic crimes and punish online hate speech.

    Germans “bear the responsibility of making everyone feel safe at home in Germany and in Europe”, Merkel said recently.

    As a close diplomatic ally, Germany treads carefully when commenting on Israeli politics.

    But Berlin joined a lukewarm European response Tuesday to the Middle East peace plan unveiled by US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    “Only a negotiated two-state solution, acceptable to both sides, can lead to a lasting peace between Israelis and Palestinians,” Maas said.