Never forget? Germany’s remembrance culture

[analyse_image type=”featured” src=”https://static.dw.com/image/76429921_6.jpg”]

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Transport workers in Magdeburg with a banner meaning ‘Without a strike, nothing will change’Image: Klaus-Dietmar Gabbert/dpa/picture alliance
Skip next section What you need to know

What you need to know

  • Disruption for commuters as many bus and tram workers stage a walkout
  • The states of Hamburg, North Rhine-Westphalia and Saxony-Anhalt particularly badly affected
  • Germany says some 30,000 migrants have been turned away in border checks since last May

 

These live updates have been closed. Thank you for reading.

We’ll be back tomorrow with more news and analysis of what’s happening in Germany. 

Below, you can review headlines from across Germany from Thursday, March 19:

Skip next section Russian-born author wins prize at Leipzig Book Fair

March 19, 2026

Russian-born author wins prize at Leipzig Book Fair

Frankfurt Book Fair 2025 | Author Katerina Poladjan in Frankfurt am Main
Katerina Poladjan, pictured here at the Frankfurt Book Fair last year [FILE: October 2025]Image: dts-Agentur/picture alliance

Russian-born author Katerina Poladjan has been awarded the Fiction Prize at the Leipzig Book Fair.

Poladjan won the prize for her fifth novel, “Goldstrand” (German for “Golden Sands”), the jury said Thursday.

The 160-page-long book centers on Eli, a director reflecting on his life while lying on the couch of an analyst called the “Dottoressa” (Italian for “female doctor”).

The book takes readers on a journey through 20th-century Europe, from the Ukrainian Black Sea port city of Odesa, to Rome, to the socialist “Golden Sands” holiday resort in Bulgaria that lends the book its title.

“Katerina Poladjan masterfully demonstrates how a biography emerges from self-questioning and invention, from storytelling and the circumvention of pain,” the jury said in a statement.

The locations that feature in the novel are drawn from Poladjan’s own experiences. She left the Soviet Union as a child with her family in the late 1970s, living first in Rome before settling in Germany.

The writer emigrated with her family from the Soviet Union to the West as a child in the late 1970s, living first in Rome and later in Germany.

The Leipzig Book Fair Prize is awarded in fiction, non-fiction/essays and translations.

Marie-Janine Calic won the non-fiction category with a book about artists and cultural figures who found refuge in the Balkans during the Nazi era in the 1930s and during the Second World War.

In the translation category, Manfred Gmeiner won for his German adaptation of the novel Vivir Abajo (Spanish for “Living Below”) by Spanish author Gustavo Faverón Patriau.

Winners in each category receive €15,000 ($17,200) in prize money.

The fair, which showcases authors and works from the German-speaking world, runs until Sunday.

https://p.dw.com/p/5Ajr6
Skip next section Memorial directors call for Nazi camps to be added to UNESCO list

March 19, 2026

Memorial directors call for Nazi camps to be added to UNESCO list

A group that preserves memorials at former Nazi concentration camps has called for the sites to be added to the UNESCO World Heritage List.

In a joint statement reported by the AFP news agency, the directors of memorials at Dachau, Buchenwald and Bergen-Belsen warned that “democracy can no longer be taken for granted” as they urged governments to pressure UNESCO to add the former concentration camps to its list of protected cultural sites.

The memorial centers “visibly demonstrate what happens when the dignity of all human beings is not protected,” the directors said in the statement, which was issued during a conference in the Hague.

The threat of antisemitism has come to the fore in recent days in the Netherlands, after explosive devices were placed outside a Jewish school in Amsterdam and a synagogue in Rotterdam.

Micha Gelber, a 90-year-old Dutch survivor of Bergen-Belsen, told AFP that preserving the memorials and the camps’ history was more important than ever, given the rise of far-right parties across Europe.

“I always knew that antisemitism didn’t disappear after the war. It always remained and it has its ups and its downs,” he said, adding that it is “important to support any means, any possibility, of not forgetting.”

The largest Nazi concentration camp, at Auschwitz-Birkenau in Poland, is already on the UNESCO World Heritage list.

Never forget? Germany’s remembrance culture

https://p.dw.com/p/5AjoK
Skip next section Germany announces squad for next international friendlies

March 19, 2026

Germany announces squad for next international friendlies

Jonas Urbig dives for a ball headed toward the net against Borussia Dortmund
Julian Nagelsmann’s latest Germany squad includes a host of new names.Image: Ina Fassbender/AFP

Germany head coach Julian Nagelsmann has selected the 26-man team he will field in a pair of World Cup warm-up matches ahead of soccer’s biggest tournament this June.

There are several new faces in the squad months ahead of the World Cup.

DW’s Jonathan Harding reports: Bayern Munich’s Karl and Urbig in latest Germany squad

https://p.dw.com/p/5AiqM
Skip next section How much have prices at the pump increased in Germany?

March 19, 2026

How much have prices at the pump increased in Germany?

Symbolbild Tankstelle
Germany’s daily average price stood at €2.044 per liter ($8.83 per US gallon) for E10 unleaded gas on WednesdayImage: Vincent Mouchel/MAXPPP/dpa/picture alliance

Fuel prices have been rising sharply since just before the US-Israeli war on Iran began at the end of February.

According to the General German Automobile Club’s data, diesel has increased by €0.42 (about $0.48) per liter, while E10 petrol has risen by nearly €0.27.

The pace of increases has recently been slowing.

On Wednesday, the nationwide daily average price stood at €2.044 per liter ($8.83 per US gallon) for E10 unleaded gas and €2.167 per liter ($9.37 per US gallon) for diesel.

https://p.dw.com/p/5AinI
Skip next section Germany weighs response to rising fuel prices

March 19, 2026

Germany weighs response to rising fuel prices

Germany’s economy minister has been urging caution over new relief measures as fuel prices surge following the US-Israeli war in Iran.

Katherina Reiche told the Bundestag that what Germany does not need “20 days after the war” is “activism,” stressing the government is acting in a measured way.

She said calls for a fuel price cap, discounts, or a windfall tax are being considered, but that they must be weighed against costs and benefits.

The coalition has introduced a fuel pricing package requiring gas stations to raise prices only once daily at noon, while allowing reductions at any time, alongside tighter antitrust rules.

The Bundestag is preparing to pass the package under an expedited procedure. A vote in the Bundestag is targeted for next week, allowing the Bundesrat to take it up the following Friday.

Businesses and consumers suffer from high diesel prices

https://p.dw.com/p/5AiGJ
Skip next section Racism remains widespread in Germany, study finds

March 19, 2026

Racism remains widespread in Germany, study finds

Racism and discrimination remain widespread in Germany, according to a new national monitoring report highlighting persistent attitudes and everyday experiences.

The National Discrimination and Racism Monitor (Nadira), presented in Berlin, combined survey data with reports of direct and indirect discrimination, noting a slight decline that does not change the overall picture.

The study found 36% of respondents believe there are “different human races,” while 66% said some cultures are “more advanced and better” than others, and 48% agreed certain groups are “naturally more hardworking.”

Researchers said such biologically based hierarchies are commonly believed, even though they are scientifically disproven, with terms like “cultures” or “groups” increasingly used instead of “race.”

Many people experience discrimination regularly, including people of color and visibly Muslim individuals.

Among respondents, 25% of Black people and 17% of Muslims said they face insults, harassment, threats, or attacks at least once a month, while about one-third reported such incidents over the past year.

Subtle discrimination is even more widespread, with 63% of Black respondents reporting monthly experiences such as disrespect or unfriendly treatment, compared with 26% among those not perceived as racialized.

What it’s like to be Black in Germany’s health system

https://p.dw.com/p/5AiV2
Skip next section Bavarian glaciers shrinking at record pace

March 19, 2026

Bavarian glaciers shrinking at record pace

Editor
Glacier tunnel made from melting water i
The average temperatures at the Zugspitze in 2024 and 2025 were more than 2 degrees Celsius above the long-term averageImage: imago images/Cavan Images

Glaciers in the Bavarian Alps have been melting at record speed, with scientists warning that only remnants remain in some areas.

Glaciologist Christoph Mayer said glaciers near Berchtesgaden are now just a “small remnant,” while another, the Northern Schneeferner on the Zugspitze plateau, is also nearing its end.

Operators recently announced the dismantling of Germany’s last glacier ski lift after operations had already stopped in the 2023/24 season.

Researchers say that, since 2023, Bavarian glaciers have lost more than a quarter of their area, totaling around 1 million cubic meters of ice.

Average ice thickness has been shrinking by about 1.6 meters (about 5.25 feet) per year — double the rate recorded between 2018 and 2023.

The findings, released ahead of World Glacier Day on March 21, showed the Blaueis and Watzmann glaciers near Berchtesgaden losing around 40% of their area.

Scientists said human-caused climate change is driving the rapid decline, noting that average temperatures at the Zugspitze, the highest peak in Germany, in 2024 and 2025 were more than 2 degrees Celsius above the long-term average. 

https://p.dw.com/p/5Ahwv
Skip next section German intelligence warns of rising hybrid threats

March 19, 2026

German intelligence warns of rising hybrid threats

Germany’s domestic intelligence service has warned that espionage, sabotage, and hostile operations targeting the country are increasing, with attackers showing greater risk-taking and more varied methods.

Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) President Sinan Selen said at a security conference with the VSW that even “assassination operations” cannot be ruled out, adding that Russia increasingly views Germany as an adversary, sometimes even as its “number one enemy.”

He said foreign operations are focusing in particular on logistics, defense, and technology sectors, with Russia the main actor but not the only one.

Estonia’s ambassador Marika Linntam spoke to delegates, citing a suspected Russian-linked arson attack on a Ukrainian restaurant in Tallinn. She described this as an influence operation amplified through social media to spread fear.

Selen said a joint center to counter hybrid threats is close to launching, bringing together intelligence services, police, prosecutors, and private industry to improve information sharing.

Berlin detains German-Ukrainian woman for Russian espionage

https://p.dw.com/p/5AhWw
Skip next section German mathematician Faltings wins Abel Prize

March 19, 2026

German mathematician Faltings wins Abel Prize

German mathematician Gerd Faltings has been awarded this year’s Abel Prize for mathematics, recognizing his major contributions to the field.

The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters announced in Oslo that the prize honors Faltings “for introducing powerful tools in arithmetic geometry.”

The academy described him as “an outstanding figure” in the field of arithmetic geometry.

“Gerd Faltings is a towering figure in arithmetic geometry,” the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters said in a statement.

“His ideas and results have reshaped the field, settling major long-standing conjectures, while also establishing new frameworks that have guided decades of subsequent work,” it added.

The 71-year-old Faltings is a former director of the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in Bonn, who also won the prestigious Fields Medal in 1986 for his proof of the Mordell conjecture.

The Abel Prize, named after the Norwegian mathematician Niels Henrik Abel, was created by Norway’s government, partly to compensate for the lack of a Nobel prize in mathematics.

https://p.dw.com/p/5AhFc
Skip next section Germany reports 30,000 border turnbacks

March 19, 2026

Germany reports 30,000 border turnbacks

Germany has recorded some 30,000 migrant turnbacks at its borders since the current government took office, Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt has said.

Dobrindt told the broadcaster ARD that the figure was significant and showed controls were still necessary.

He said there continued to be a considerable number of attempted entries being refused.

While police unions have been calling for a reduction in border checks, Dobrindt defended the controls, which were extended in February for six months until mid-September.

He said the stricter measures signaled a shift in German policy and increased the risk of detection for smugglers.

At the same time, the minister said he was hoping that new EU asylum rules, to take effect in the summer, would have an impact.

Dobrindt said that if that system were successful, along with stronger protection of the EU’s external borders, Germany could move away from temporary internal border controls.

Poland starts border controls at border with Germany

https://p.dw.com/p/5Agrf
Skip next section Strikes disrupt public transport across Germany

March 19, 2026

Strikes disrupt public transport across Germany

Public transport has been facing widespread disruption as warning strikes have been taking place in several German states.

The union Verdi said Hamburg, North Rhine-Westphalia and Saxony-Anhalt have been particularly affected. In the Bavarian capital, Munich, buses and trams have also remained in depots.

In North Rhine-Westphalia, this is the second strike affecting local transport services this week, with a tram strike also planned for Friday in some areas.

In Saxony-Anhalt, industrial action in many areas is set to continue through Sunday.

Regional and suburban rail services operated by Deutsche Bahn and other rail companies have not been affected.

The strikes are part of an ongoing round of collective bargaining negotiations across Germany’s public transport sector.

In the states of Baden-Württemberg and Schleswig-Holstein, agreements have already been reached.

In the central state of Hesse, home to Germany’s financial capital, Frankfurt, a compromise has been negotiated and is now being put to union members for approval.

Talks are also continuing in Berlin, where the next round of negotiations at the capital’s main public transport operator is beginning.

Verdi deputy chair Christine Behle has said negotiations remain at an early stage in many regions, despite entering the fourth month.

In most states, the dispute centers on working conditions, including hours, break times and rest periods between shifts.

FlixTrain takes on Germany’s national rail operator DB

https://p.dw.com/p/5AghM
Skip next section Welcome to our coverage

March 19, 2026

Welcome to our coverage

| Editor

Guten Tag from the DW newsroom here in Bonn.

Danke schön for joining us as public transport across Germany faces major disruption with strikes spread across several states.

It’s tricky to get around town in many places, including our lovely former capital city, with buses and trams staying behind in depots.

With negotiations still ongoing, more disruption for commuters is likely in the days ahead.

For this and other stories that Germany is talking about, stay with us here.

https://p.dw.com/p/5Agh4
Show more posts
  • Disruption for commuters as many bus and tram workers stage a walkout
  • The states of Hamburg, North Rhine-Westphalia and Saxony-Anhalt particularly badly affected
  • Germany says some 30,000 migrants have been turned away in border checks since last May

 

These live updates have been closed. Thank you for reading.

We’ll be back tomorrow with more news and analysis of what’s happening in Germany. 

Below, you can review headlines from across Germany from Thursday, March 19:

 

These live updates have been closed. Thank you for reading.

We’ll be back tomorrow with more news and analysis of what’s happening in Germany. 

Below, you can review headlines from across Germany from Thursday, March 19:

Frankfurt Book Fair 2025 | Author Katerina Poladjan in Frankfurt am Main
Katerina Poladjan, pictured here at the Frankfurt Book Fair last year [FILE: October 2025]Image: dts-Agentur/picture alliance

Russian-born author Katerina Poladjan has been awarded the Fiction Prize at the Leipzig Book Fair.

Poladjan won the prize for her fifth novel, “Goldstrand” (German for “Golden Sands”), the jury said Thursday.

The 160-page-long book centers on Eli, a director reflecting on his life while lying on the couch of an analyst called the “Dottoressa” (Italian for “female doctor”).

The book takes readers on a journey through 20th-century Europe, from the Ukrainian Black Sea port city of Odesa, to Rome, to the socialist “Golden Sands” holiday resort in Bulgaria that lends the book its title.

“Katerina Poladjan masterfully demonstrates how a biography emerges from self-questioning and invention, from storytelling and the circumvention of pain,” the jury said in a statement.

The locations that feature in the novel are drawn from Poladjan’s own experiences. She left the Soviet Union as a child with her family in the late 1970s, living first in Rome before settling in Germany.

The writer emigrated with her family from the Soviet Union to the West as a child in the late 1970s, living first in Rome and later in Germany.

The Leipzig Book Fair Prize is awarded in fiction, non-fiction/essays and translations.

Marie-Janine Calic won the non-fiction category with a book about artists and cultural figures who found refuge in the Balkans during the Nazi era in the 1930s and during the Second World War.

In the translation category, Manfred Gmeiner won for his German adaptation of the novel Vivir Abajo (Spanish for “Living Below”) by Spanish author Gustavo Faverón Patriau.

Winners in each category receive €15,000 ($17,200) in prize money.

The fair, which showcases authors and works from the German-speaking world, runs until Sunday.

Russian-born author Katerina Poladjan has been awarded the Fiction Prize at the Leipzig Book Fair.

Poladjan won the prize for her fifth novel, “Goldstrand” (German for “Golden Sands”), the jury said Thursday.

The 160-page-long book centers on Eli, a director reflecting on his life while lying on the couch of an analyst called the “Dottoressa” (Italian for “female doctor”).

The book takes readers on a journey through 20th-century Europe, from the Ukrainian Black Sea port city of Odesa, to Rome, to the socialist “Golden Sands” holiday resort in Bulgaria that lends the book its title.

“Katerina Poladjan masterfully demonstrates how a biography emerges from self-questioning and invention, from storytelling and the circumvention of pain,” the jury said in a statement.

The locations that feature in the novel are drawn from Poladjan’s own experiences. She left the Soviet Union as a child with her family in the late 1970s, living first in Rome before settling in Germany.

The writer emigrated with her family from the Soviet Union to the West as a child in the late 1970s, living first in Rome and later in Germany.

The Leipzig Book Fair Prize is awarded in fiction, non-fiction/essays and translations.

Marie-Janine Calic won the non-fiction category with a book about artists and cultural figures who found refuge in the Balkans during the Nazi era in the 1930s and during the Second World War.

In the translation category, Manfred Gmeiner won for his German adaptation of the novel Vivir Abajo (Spanish for “Living Below”) by Spanish author Gustavo Faverón Patriau.

Winners in each category receive €15,000 ($17,200) in prize money.

The fair, which showcases authors and works from the German-speaking world, runs until Sunday.

A group that preserves memorials at former Nazi concentration camps has called for the sites to be added to the UNESCO World Heritage List.

In a joint statement reported by the AFP news agency, the directors of memorials at Dachau, Buchenwald and Bergen-Belsen warned that “democracy can no longer be taken for granted” as they urged governments to pressure UNESCO to add the former concentration camps to its list of protected cultural sites.

The memorial centers “visibly demonstrate what happens when the dignity of all human beings is not protected,” the directors said in the statement, which was issued during a conference in the Hague.

The threat of antisemitism has come to the fore in recent days in the Netherlands, after explosive devices were placed outside a Jewish school in Amsterdam and a synagogue in Rotterdam.

Micha Gelber, a 90-year-old Dutch survivor of Bergen-Belsen, told AFP that preserving the memorials and the camps’ history was more important than ever, given the rise of far-right parties across Europe.

“I always knew that antisemitism didn’t disappear after the war. It always remained and it has its ups and its downs,” he said, adding that it is “important to support any means, any possibility, of not forgetting.”

The largest Nazi concentration camp, at Auschwitz-Birkenau in Poland, is already on the UNESCO World Heritage list.

Never forget? Germany’s remembrance culture

A group that preserves memorials at former Nazi concentration camps has called for the sites to be added to the UNESCO World Heritage List.

In a joint statement reported by the AFP news agency, the directors of memorials at Dachau, Buchenwald and Bergen-Belsen warned that “democracy can no longer be taken for granted” as they urged governments to pressure UNESCO to add the former concentration camps to its list of protected cultural sites.

The memorial centers “visibly demonstrate what happens when the dignity of all human beings is not protected,” the directors said in the statement, which was issued during a conference in the Hague.

The threat of antisemitism has come to the fore in recent days in the Netherlands, after explosive devices were placed outside a Jewish school in Amsterdam and a synagogue in Rotterdam.

Micha Gelber, a 90-year-old Dutch survivor of Bergen-Belsen, told AFP that preserving the memorials and the camps’ history was more important than ever, given the rise of far-right parties across Europe.

“I always knew that antisemitism didn’t disappear after the war. It always remained and it has its ups and its downs,” he said, adding that it is “important to support any means, any possibility, of not forgetting.”

The largest Nazi concentration camp, at Auschwitz-Birkenau in Poland, is already on the UNESCO World Heritage list.

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

Jonas Urbig dives for a ball headed toward the net against Borussia Dortmund
Julian Nagelsmann’s latest Germany squad includes a host of new names.Image: Ina Fassbender/AFP

Germany head coach Julian Nagelsmann has selected the 26-man team he will field in a pair of World Cup warm-up matches ahead of soccer’s biggest tournament this June.

There are several new faces in the squad months ahead of the World Cup.

DW’s Jonathan Harding reports: Bayern Munich’s Karl and Urbig in latest Germany squad

Germany head coach Julian Nagelsmann has selected the 26-man team he will field in a pair of World Cup warm-up matches ahead of soccer’s biggest tournament this June.

There are several new faces in the squad months ahead of the World Cup.

DW’s Jonathan Harding reports: Bayern Munich’s Karl and Urbig in latest Germany squad

Symbolbild Tankstelle
Germany’s daily average price stood at €2.044 per liter ($8.83 per US gallon) for E10 unleaded gas on WednesdayImage: Vincent Mouchel/MAXPPP/dpa/picture alliance

Fuel prices have been rising sharply since just before the US-Israeli war on Iran began at the end of February.

According to the General German Automobile Club’s data, diesel has increased by €0.42 (about $0.48) per liter, while E10 petrol has risen by nearly €0.27.

The pace of increases has recently been slowing.

On Wednesday, the nationwide daily average price stood at €2.044 per liter ($8.83 per US gallon) for E10 unleaded gas and €2.167 per liter ($9.37 per US gallon) for diesel.

Fuel prices have been rising sharply since just before the US-Israeli war on Iran began at the end of February.

According to the General German Automobile Club’s data, diesel has increased by €0.42 (about $0.48) per liter, while E10 petrol has risen by nearly €0.27.

The pace of increases has recently been slowing.

On Wednesday, the nationwide daily average price stood at €2.044 per liter ($8.83 per US gallon) for E10 unleaded gas and €2.167 per liter ($9.37 per US gallon) for diesel.

Germany’s economy minister has been urging caution over new relief measures as fuel prices surge following the US-Israeli war in Iran.

Katherina Reiche told the Bundestag that what Germany does not need “20 days after the war” is “activism,” stressing the government is acting in a measured way.

She said calls for a fuel price cap, discounts, or a windfall tax are being considered, but that they must be weighed against costs and benefits.

The coalition has introduced a fuel pricing package requiring gas stations to raise prices only once daily at noon, while allowing reductions at any time, alongside tighter antitrust rules.

The Bundestag is preparing to pass the package under an expedited procedure. A vote in the Bundestag is targeted for next week, allowing the Bundesrat to take it up the following Friday.

Businesses and consumers suffer from high diesel prices

Germany’s economy minister has been urging caution over new relief measures as fuel prices surge following the US-Israeli war in Iran.

Katherina Reiche told the Bundestag that what Germany does not need “20 days after the war” is “activism,” stressing the government is acting in a measured way.

She said calls for a fuel price cap, discounts, or a windfall tax are being considered, but that they must be weighed against costs and benefits.

The coalition has introduced a fuel pricing package requiring gas stations to raise prices only once daily at noon, while allowing reductions at any time, alongside tighter antitrust rules.

The Bundestag is preparing to pass the package under an expedited procedure. A vote in the Bundestag is targeted for next week, allowing the Bundesrat to take it up the following Friday.

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

Racism and discrimination remain widespread in Germany, according to a new national monitoring report highlighting persistent attitudes and everyday experiences.

The National Discrimination and Racism Monitor (Nadira), presented in Berlin, combined survey data with reports of direct and indirect discrimination, noting a slight decline that does not change the overall picture.

The study found 36% of respondents believe there are “different human races,” while 66% said some cultures are “more advanced and better” than others, and 48% agreed certain groups are “naturally more hardworking.”

Researchers said such biologically based hierarchies are commonly believed, even though they are scientifically disproven, with terms like “cultures” or “groups” increasingly used instead of “race.”

Many people experience discrimination regularly, including people of color and visibly Muslim individuals.

Among respondents, 25% of Black people and 17% of Muslims said they face insults, harassment, threats, or attacks at least once a month, while about one-third reported such incidents over the past year.

Subtle discrimination is even more widespread, with 63% of Black respondents reporting monthly experiences such as disrespect or unfriendly treatment, compared with 26% among those not perceived as racialized.

What it’s like to be Black in Germany’s health system

Racism and discrimination remain widespread in Germany, according to a new national monitoring report highlighting persistent attitudes and everyday experiences.

The National Discrimination and Racism Monitor (Nadira), presented in Berlin, combined survey data with reports of direct and indirect discrimination, noting a slight decline that does not change the overall picture.

The study found 36% of respondents believe there are “different human races,” while 66% said some cultures are “more advanced and better” than others, and 48% agreed certain groups are “naturally more hardworking.”

Researchers said such biologically based hierarchies are commonly believed, even though they are scientifically disproven, with terms like “cultures” or “groups” increasingly used instead of “race.”

Many people experience discrimination regularly, including people of color and visibly Muslim individuals.

Among respondents, 25% of Black people and 17% of Muslims said they face insults, harassment, threats, or attacks at least once a month, while about one-third reported such incidents over the past year.

Subtle discrimination is even more widespread, with 63% of Black respondents reporting monthly experiences such as disrespect or unfriendly treatment, compared with 26% among those not perceived as racialized.

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

Glacier tunnel made from melting water i
The average temperatures at the Zugspitze in 2024 and 2025 were more than 2 degrees Celsius above the long-term averageImage: imago images/Cavan Images

Glaciers in the Bavarian Alps have been melting at record speed, with scientists warning that only remnants remain in some areas.

Glaciologist Christoph Mayer said glaciers near Berchtesgaden are now just a “small remnant,” while another, the Northern Schneeferner on the Zugspitze plateau, is also nearing its end.

Operators recently announced the dismantling of Germany’s last glacier ski lift after operations had already stopped in the 2023/24 season.

Researchers say that, since 2023, Bavarian glaciers have lost more than a quarter of their area, totaling around 1 million cubic meters of ice.

Average ice thickness has been shrinking by about 1.6 meters (about 5.25 feet) per year — double the rate recorded between 2018 and 2023.

The findings, released ahead of World Glacier Day on March 21, showed the Blaueis and Watzmann glaciers near Berchtesgaden losing around 40% of their area.

Scientists said human-caused climate change is driving the rapid decline, noting that average temperatures at the Zugspitze, the highest peak in Germany, in 2024 and 2025 were more than 2 degrees Celsius above the long-term average. 

Glaciers in the Bavarian Alps have been melting at record speed, with scientists warning that only remnants remain in some areas.

Glaciologist Christoph Mayer said glaciers near Berchtesgaden are now just a “small remnant,” while another, the Northern Schneeferner on the Zugspitze plateau, is also nearing its end.

Operators recently announced the dismantling of Germany’s last glacier ski lift after operations had already stopped in the 2023/24 season.

Researchers say that, since 2023, Bavarian glaciers have lost more than a quarter of their area, totaling around 1 million cubic meters of ice.

Average ice thickness has been shrinking by about 1.6 meters (about 5.25 feet) per year — double the rate recorded between 2018 and 2023.

The findings, released ahead of World Glacier Day on March 21, showed the Blaueis and Watzmann glaciers near Berchtesgaden losing around 40% of their area.

Scientists said human-caused climate change is driving the rapid decline, noting that average temperatures at the Zugspitze, the highest peak in Germany, in 2024 and 2025 were more than 2 degrees Celsius above the long-term average. 

Germany’s domestic intelligence service has warned that espionage, sabotage, and hostile operations targeting the country are increasing, with attackers showing greater risk-taking and more varied methods.

Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) President Sinan Selen said at a security conference with the VSW that even “assassination operations” cannot be ruled out, adding that Russia increasingly views Germany as an adversary, sometimes even as its “number one enemy.”

He said foreign operations are focusing in particular on logistics, defense, and technology sectors, with Russia the main actor but not the only one.

Estonia’s ambassador Marika Linntam spoke to delegates, citing a suspected Russian-linked arson attack on a Ukrainian restaurant in Tallinn. She described this as an influence operation amplified through social media to spread fear.

Selen said a joint center to counter hybrid threats is close to launching, bringing together intelligence services, police, prosecutors, and private industry to improve information sharing.

Berlin detains German-Ukrainian woman for Russian espionage

Germany’s domestic intelligence service has warned that espionage, sabotage, and hostile operations targeting the country are increasing, with attackers showing greater risk-taking and more varied methods.

Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) President Sinan Selen said at a security conference with the VSW that even “assassination operations” cannot be ruled out, adding that Russia increasingly views Germany as an adversary, sometimes even as its “number one enemy.”

He said foreign operations are focusing in particular on logistics, defense, and technology sectors, with Russia the main actor but not the only one.

Estonia’s ambassador Marika Linntam spoke to delegates, citing a suspected Russian-linked arson attack on a Ukrainian restaurant in Tallinn. She described this as an influence operation amplified through social media to spread fear.

Selen said a joint center to counter hybrid threats is close to launching, bringing together intelligence services, police, prosecutors, and private industry to improve information sharing.

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German mathematician Gerd Faltings has been awarded this year’s Abel Prize for mathematics, recognizing his major contributions to the field.

The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters announced in Oslo that the prize honors Faltings “for introducing powerful tools in arithmetic geometry.”

The academy described him as “an outstanding figure” in the field of arithmetic geometry.

“Gerd Faltings is a towering figure in arithmetic geometry,” the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters said in a statement.

“His ideas and results have reshaped the field, settling major long-standing conjectures, while also establishing new frameworks that have guided decades of subsequent work,” it added.

The 71-year-old Faltings is a former director of the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in Bonn, who also won the prestigious Fields Medal in 1986 for his proof of the Mordell conjecture.

The Abel Prize, named after the Norwegian mathematician Niels Henrik Abel, was created by Norway’s government, partly to compensate for the lack of a Nobel prize in mathematics.

German mathematician Gerd Faltings has been awarded this year’s Abel Prize for mathematics, recognizing his major contributions to the field.

The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters announced in Oslo that the prize honors Faltings “for introducing powerful tools in arithmetic geometry.”

The academy described him as “an outstanding figure” in the field of arithmetic geometry.

“Gerd Faltings is a towering figure in arithmetic geometry,” the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters said in a statement.

“His ideas and results have reshaped the field, settling major long-standing conjectures, while also establishing new frameworks that have guided decades of subsequent work,” it added.

The 71-year-old Faltings is a former director of the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in Bonn, who also won the prestigious Fields Medal in 1986 for his proof of the Mordell conjecture.

The Abel Prize, named after the Norwegian mathematician Niels Henrik Abel, was created by Norway’s government, partly to compensate for the lack of a Nobel prize in mathematics.

Germany has recorded some 30,000 migrant turnbacks at its borders since the current government took office, Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt has said.

Dobrindt told the broadcaster ARD that the figure was significant and showed controls were still necessary.

He said there continued to be a considerable number of attempted entries being refused.

While police unions have been calling for a reduction in border checks, Dobrindt defended the controls, which were extended in February for six months until mid-September.

He said the stricter measures signaled a shift in German policy and increased the risk of detection for smugglers.

At the same time, the minister said he was hoping that new EU asylum rules, to take effect in the summer, would have an impact.

Dobrindt said that if that system were successful, along with stronger protection of the EU’s external borders, Germany could move away from temporary internal border controls.

Poland starts border controls at border with Germany

Germany has recorded some 30,000 migrant turnbacks at its borders since the current government took office, Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt has said.

Dobrindt told the broadcaster ARD that the figure was significant and showed controls were still necessary.

He said there continued to be a considerable number of attempted entries being refused.

While police unions have been calling for a reduction in border checks, Dobrindt defended the controls, which were extended in February for six months until mid-September.

He said the stricter measures signaled a shift in German policy and increased the risk of detection for smugglers.

At the same time, the minister said he was hoping that new EU asylum rules, to take effect in the summer, would have an impact.

Dobrindt said that if that system were successful, along with stronger protection of the EU’s external borders, Germany could move away from temporary internal border controls.

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Public transport has been facing widespread disruption as warning strikes have been taking place in several German states.

The union Verdi said Hamburg, North Rhine-Westphalia and Saxony-Anhalt have been particularly affected. In the Bavarian capital, Munich, buses and trams have also remained in depots.

In North Rhine-Westphalia, this is the second strike affecting local transport services this week, with a tram strike also planned for Friday in some areas.

In Saxony-Anhalt, industrial action in many areas is set to continue through Sunday.

Regional and suburban rail services operated by Deutsche Bahn and other rail companies have not been affected.

The strikes are part of an ongoing round of collective bargaining negotiations across Germany’s public transport sector.

In the states of Baden-Württemberg and Schleswig-Holstein, agreements have already been reached.

In the central state of Hesse, home to Germany’s financial capital, Frankfurt, a compromise has been negotiated and is now being put to union members for approval.

Talks are also continuing in Berlin, where the next round of negotiations at the capital’s main public transport operator is beginning.

Verdi deputy chair Christine Behle has said negotiations remain at an early stage in many regions, despite entering the fourth month.

In most states, the dispute centers on working conditions, including hours, break times and rest periods between shifts.

FlixTrain takes on Germany’s national rail operator DB

Public transport has been facing widespread disruption as warning strikes have been taking place in several German states.

The union Verdi said Hamburg, North Rhine-Westphalia and Saxony-Anhalt have been particularly affected. In the Bavarian capital, Munich, buses and trams have also remained in depots.

In North Rhine-Westphalia, this is the second strike affecting local transport services this week, with a tram strike also planned for Friday in some areas.

In Saxony-Anhalt, industrial action in many areas is set to continue through Sunday.

Regional and suburban rail services operated by Deutsche Bahn and other rail companies have not been affected.

The strikes are part of an ongoing round of collective bargaining negotiations across Germany’s public transport sector.

In the states of Baden-Württemberg and Schleswig-Holstein, agreements have already been reached.

In the central state of Hesse, home to Germany’s financial capital, Frankfurt, a compromise has been negotiated and is now being put to union members for approval.

Talks are also continuing in Berlin, where the next round of negotiations at the capital’s main public transport operator is beginning.

Verdi deputy chair Christine Behle has said negotiations remain at an early stage in many regions, despite entering the fourth month.

In most states, the dispute centers on working conditions, including hours, break times and rest periods between shifts.

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

Guten Tag from the DW newsroom here in Bonn.

Danke schön for joining us as public transport across Germany faces major disruption with strikes spread across several states.

It’s tricky to get around town in many places, including our lovely former capital city, with buses and trams staying behind in depots.

With negotiations still ongoing, more disruption for commuters is likely in the days ahead.

For this and other stories that Germany is talking about, stay with us here.

Guten Tag from the DW newsroom here in Bonn.

Danke schön for joining us as public transport across Germany faces major disruption with strikes spread across several states.

It’s tricky to get around town in many places, including our lovely former capital city, with buses and trams staying behind in depots.

With negotiations still ongoing, more disruption for commuters is likely in the days ahead.

For this and other stories that Germany is talking about, stay with us here.

[analyse_source url=”https://www.dw.com/en/germany-news-bus-and-tram-strikes-hit-several-states-hard/live-76429001″]


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