
Germany updates: Thousands to join Cologne's CSD parade – DW – 07/06/2025
Cologne's annual Pride event, Christopher Street Day (CSD), is kicking off on Sunday with hundreds of thousands of people expected to attend.
The annual celebration of the LGBTQ+ community is one of the biggest in Europe and attracts people from around the world.
Cologne is preparing for hundreds of thousands of people to show up for the Christopher Street Day (CSD) demonstration on Sunday at 11:30 a.m. (0930 GMT).
Organizers and police are expecting around 60,000 participants. Some 90 floats are also expected to join the march.
CSD traces its origins back to the Stonewall riot in New York on June 28, 1969, when people at the Stonewall LGBTQ+ bar fought back against a police raid. The incident is an important historical date for the LGBTQ+ community.
The Stonewall bar was on Christopher Street, hence the name for the Cologne event.
The motto for this year's CSD is "For queer rights. Many. Together. Strong."
Cologne's CSD is one of the biggest Pride events in Europe and attracts people from around the world.
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Several hundred people on Saturday celebrated the Christopher Street Day (CSD) parade to promote diversity and tolerance for the LGBTQ+ community in Falkensee, a town in the eastern German state of Brandenburg.
On the same day, several dozen participants protested against Pride events.
Police say both the march and the counter demonstration remained peaceful.
Paris Saint-Germain have booked a spot in the Club World Cup semifinals after a tense 2-0 win over Bayern Munich — but the match was overshadowed by a gruesome injury to young German star Jamal Musiala.
Desire Doue opened the scoring in the 78th minute after Joao Neves robbed Harry Kane near midfield and sparked a quick counter that ended with Doue's left-footed shot beating Manuel Neuer at the near post.
PSG finished with nine men after late red cards for Willian Pacho and Lucas Hernandez, but clung on as Bayern threw everything forward. Ousmane Dembele sealed the win deep into stoppage time with a breakaway goal.
Bayern had two goals ruled out for offside, including a Harry Kane header, and saw a late penalty overturned by VAR.
Musiala's injury stunned both teams. In first-half stoppage time, PSG keeper Gianluigi Donnarumma collided with Musiala's left ankle while diving for a loose ball, leaving the 22-year-old's foot hanging at an unnatural angle. Donnarumma was visibly shaken as Musiala was stretchered off.
PSG will face either Real Madrid or Borussia Dortmund in Wednesday's semifinal at East Rutherford, New Jersey.
Saturday's quarterfinal drew 66,937 fans to Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta — the city's biggest crowd yet ahead of next year's World Cup.
A father and his child have gone missing after a boating accident on the Eibsee, an Alpine lake in southern Germany, police said on Saturday.
The family of four was out on a pedal boat when the six-year-old fell into the water and the father jumped in to rescue them — but neither resurfaced.
Emergency responders are caring for the mother and the couple's other child, aged four.
Police said the family is from Bavaria. A major rescue operation is underway with helicopters and divers searching the lake.
Firefighters and emergency personnel continue to battle the forest fire in the Gohrischheide region on the border between the eastern German states of Saxony and Brandenburg.
The situation on the Saxony side remains more difficult. Around 700 firefighters were deployed on Saturday afternoon, according to a statement from the Meissen district office.
The situation in the Saalfelder Höhe in Thuringia has been stabilized, according to authorities. Emergency services were able to prevent the fire from spreading overnight."Our emergency services have the situation under control," the Thuringian State Chancellery, which called the forest fire "the largest of its kind" in the state in over 30 years, posted on X.
The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party leader Alice Weidel says the cente-left Social Democrats' (SPD) push to consider banning her party reminds her of "very dark times."
Speaking in Berlin on Saturday, Weidel compared the idea to Adolf Hitler's crackdown on other parties and the press.
The SPD's party conference last weekend called for constitutional bodies to prepare conditions to file an application to have the AfD declared unconstitutional.
Any party ban would have to be decided by Germany's Constitutional Court and requested by the federal government or parliament.
Calls for a ban have gained momentum after Germany's domestic intelligence service upgraded its assessment of the AfD, citing "confirmed right-wing extremist tendencies." The party is challenging this label in court.
Meanwhile, AfD lawmakers passed a new code of conduct on Saturday, with co-leader Tino Chrupalla aiming to polish the party's image ahead of any future term in office. The code calls for a united and moderate front in parliament, along with rules to prevent corruption and conflicts of interest.
Germany captain Giulia Gwinn will miss the rest of the Women's Euros in Switzerland due to a left knee injury, the German football federation (DFB) announced on Saturday.
"Our captain sustained a medial ligament injury in her left knee yesterday in the match against Poland. She is expected to be out for several weeks.", the DFB posted on X.
Gwinn had to be helped off the field in tears in the 40th minute of Germany's opening 2-0 victory over Poland on Friday in St. Gallen.
She suffered an injury after making a crucial tackle on Poland's striker, Ewa Pajor.
It was originally feared that she had suffered a third anterior cruciate ligament tear since 2020.
Anti-German graffiti has appeared on shops and cars on the Spanish island of Mallorca, a popular holiday destination for many Germans, the German-language newspaper reported on Saturday.
The perpetrators defaced dozens of German-owned shops and cars with foreign licensed plates with slogans such as "Germans out" and "Foreign buyers go to hell" in the small southern village of Santanyi.
Police have confirmed the incidents to German news agency
"It is frightening to feel such a wave of hatred after 34 years on the island, where I pay taxes and currently employ nine people," one man affected was quoted as saying by the newspaper.
In recent years, there have been rising tensions between tourists, foreign property owners, and locals on the holiday island.
Thousands have protested at regular rallies against mass tourism and a housing shortage.
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from Bonn!
We are continuing our coverage of news from Germany over the weekend.
Anti-tourist graffiti was sited on the Spanish Mediterranean island of Mallorca, a beloved holidaying spot for Germans.
Wildfires continued to rage in eastern Germany.
Stick around for the latest on these stories and much more from DW.
German Education Minister Karin Prien recently suggested she could be open to introducing limits to the number of foreign-born students allowed into German classrooms.
The minister is a member of the conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU).
Prien, speaking on a recent broadcast of the show Welt TV, said a Danish model limiting the number of foreign students in a given classroom could be one that might work in Germany.
Without advocating one model or another, Prien — who can only make suggestions as education is a state, not a federal responsibility in Germany — said that the most important factor defining a child's chances of success was whether he or she could speak German.
The education minister said she strongly believes in language proficiency tests for pre-schoolers, "because every child in this country deserves to have the same chances."
Prien's oppenness to the idea of limiting foreign-born students in schools was not warmly greeted by everyone. Federal Government Commissioner for Migration, Refugees, and Integration Natalie Pawlik, for instance, said, "Germany doesn't need classroom quotas," adding that they won't solve the problems the country's education system faces.
Pawlik did, however, agree with Prien that every child in Germany should be able to speak the language, whether they are foreign-born or not. She, too, advocated for intensifying language lessons at the pre-school level.
Pawlik belongs to the center-left Social Democrats (SPD), which is the CDU's junior coalition partner.
Gerhard Brand, federal chairman of the German Education Association (VBE), summed up his view of the matter by assessing, "Confronting a real situation with unrealistic suggestions will not help anyone."
German Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt is set to host his counterparts from neighboring countries for talks on tightening European migration rules at a meeting on Germany's highest mountain on July 18.
The summit on the Zugspitze — a 2,962-metre (9,718-foot) peak on the German-Austrian border — aims to give fresh momentum to a tougher European migration policy, according to the Interior Ministry.
Interior ministers from France, Poland, Austria, Denmark and the Czech Republic, along with EU Commissioner for Internal Affairs and Migration Magnus Brunner, have been invited.
They plan to discuss ways to combat people smuggling and improve deportations during the gathering some 100 kilometers (just over 60 miles) south-west of Munich.
EU member states have long debated tightening the bloc's common asylum system, known as GEAS, due to be fully in place by 2026. Under the latest reform, countries cannot deport asylum seekers outside the EU if there is no connection to that country — a rule some states want removed.
The Zugspitze is the highest point in Germany. It sits on the border between Germany and Austria, in the Bavarian Alps, and is a well-known destination for skiing, hiking and mountaineering.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz reportedly held a phone call with US President Donald Trump on Thursday, German magazine reported on Friday, citing government sources.
There was little information released about the content of the conversation, but the magazine said the two leaders discussed Ukraine, including strengthening its air defenses, and trade issues.
The call came after the US announced a pause in certain arms deliveries to Ukraine.
For more on the latest from Ukraine, follow our live blog.
One of the leaders of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), Tino Chrupalla, said on Thursday that his party was in talks with the left-wing, anti-immigrant populist Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) on a federal level.
Wagenknecht on Friday denied that there were any ongoing talks with the AfD, however, she said that her party was also open to possible talks.
The two parties already held talks in the state of Thuringia following last year's election that saw the AfD come out as the largest party. However, due to other parties refusing to work with the far-right, the state government was eventually formed from the center-right CDU, center-left SPD and the BSW.
"Exclusion and speaking bans are undemocratic and a slap in the face of these voters who will only feel more connected to the AfD," Wagenknecht said of the other parties.
"The firewall politics has made the AfD even stronger and should not be continued," she added.
Wagenknecht formed her eponymous party after splitting from the Left Party after years of discord between her and other parts of the party for her populist and anti-immigrant rhetoric.
But the BSW failed to make it across the 5% threshold to get into the Bundestag in February's federal election by a razor-thin margin. The AfD secured the second-highest vote share with 20% of the votes.
The comments from the AfD and the BSW come after Wagenknecht said her party will vote with far-right parties in the European Parliament in a no-confidence vote against European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen.
Other German parties have criticized Wagenknecht for cozying up to the far-right, with Janis Ehling from her former Left Party saying: "Whoever snuggles up with fascists betrays everything it means to be a left-winger."
Police have searched 21 properties in Burgenlandkreis in the south ofSaxony-Anhalt and five more in Saxony as part of an investigation led by the Halle public prosecutor's office.
Six men aged 25 to 36 have been taken into custody in the two eastern states.
Officers seized about 70 kilograms (about 155 pounds) of marijuana, six kilograms of crystal meth, 3.5 kilograms of cocaine and one kilogram of ecstasy — with a street value estimated at €1.3 million ($1.5 million).
They also found two high-end vehicles, several thousand euros in cash, knives, blank-firing guns and banned fireworks.
Authorities suspect organized trafficking of large quantities of drugs and cannabis products. The six suspects are due to appear before a judge on Friday.
A new survey of major German retailers has found a rise in theft, committed by organized gangs or by individuals who find it ever more difficult to make ends meet.
But some criminologists doubt the figures.
Read the full story on the reports of increasing shoplifting cases in Germany here.

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Budapest police say won't prosecute Pride participants – DW – 07/08/2025
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DW
3 hours ago
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Budapest police relent in prosecution of Pride participants – DW – 07/08/2025
Hungarian police said that they will not prosecute participants of the Pride parade, despite the event being banned. This year's Pride attracted a record crowd, with organizers reporting over 200,000 participants. Police in Budapest announced Monday that they will not initiate any legal proceedings against participants of the Pride parade that occurred in the Hungarian capital at the end of June, despite the ceremony being prohibited. The decision from the police came amid fears from opposition politicians that those who took part could face fines and with organizers facing up to a year in prison. Pride parades are held across the globe in support of LGBTQ+ rights. Budapest police said in a statement that this year's organizers created public uncertainty about the event's legal status. Among them was Budapest's liberal mayor, Gergely Karacsony, who declared Pride an official municipal event and argued this renders the government's ban irrelevant. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video According to the law in Hungary, municipal and state occasions are exempt from public assembly decisions. Karacsony has been under police investigation for four days, with organizers of prohibited gatherings under threat of up to one year in prison. Right-wing populist Prime Minister Viktor Orbandescribed the event as "repulsive and shameful" and accused the EU of orchestrating the march. Orban's government had amended legislation and the constitution as part of a broader anti-LGBTQ+ agenda. In March, lawmakers from his Fidesz party passed a law in March allowing the ban of Pride marches, claiming it was motivated by the need to protect children. Taking part in banned events is considered an administrative offence in Hungary, punishable by financial penalties of up to €500 ($586). Authorities used facial recognition software to identify Pride participants in advance. Despite these measures, Budapest Pride 2025 attracted a record crowd, with organizers reporting over 200,000 participants, far higher than the previous record turnout of 35,000. Orban is facing a growing challenge from center-right opposition leader Peter Magyar's Tisza party, with elections due for next year. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video


DW
3 hours ago
- DW
Budapest police relent in pursuit of Pride participants – DW – 07/08/2025
Hungarian police said that they will not prosecute participants of the Pride parade, despite the event being banned. This year's Pride attracted a record crowd, with organizers reporting over 200,000 participants. Police in Budapest announced Monday that they will not pursue investigations against participants of the Pride parade that occurred in the Hungarian capital at the end of June, despite the ceremony being prohibited. The decision from the police came amid fears from opposition politicians that those who took part could face fines and with organizers facing up to a year in prison. Pride parades are held across the globe in support of LGBTQ+ rights. Budapest police said in a statement that this year's organizers created public uncertainty about the event's legal status. Among them was Budapest's liberal mayor, Gergely Karacsony, who declared Pride an official municipal event and argued this renders the government's ban irrelevant. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video According to the law in Hungary, municipal and state occasions are exempt from public assembly decisions. Karacsony has been under police investigation for four days, with organizers of prohibited gatherings under threat of up to one year in prison. Right-wing populist Prime Minister Viktor Orbandescribed the event as "repulsive and shameful" and accused the EU of orchestrating the march. Orban's government had amended legislation and the constitution as part of a broader anti-LGBTQ+ agenda. In March, lawmakers from his Fidesz party passed a law in March allowing the ban of Pride marches, claiming it was motivated by the need to protect children. Taking part in banned events is considered an administrative offence in Hungary, punishable by financial penalties of up to €500 ($586). Authorities used facial recognition software to identify Pride participants in advance. Despite these measures, Budapest Pride 2025 attracted a record crowd, with organizers reporting over 200,000 participants, far higher than the previous record turnout of 35,000. Orban is facing a growing challenge from center-right opposition leader Peter Magyar's Tisza party, with elections due for next year. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video