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Turkey: DW's Alican Uludag released, but trial continues
A Turkish court has allowed DW reporter Alican Uludag to leave detention as his contentious trial opens. He is accused of having "insulted" President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, which in Turkey can carry a jail sentence.
DW exclusive: Germany's far-right AfD vows to 'make history'
The AfD looks set to take power in a German state for the first time. In a DW exclusive, the front-runner in Saxony-Anhalt discusses plans to detain immigrants and revamp the school system, and relations with Russia.
US President Trump accuses Iran of shooting down Apache attack helicopter, says US 'must' respond. Follow DW for more.
Middle East: Trump accuses Iran of shooting down helicopter Published June 9, 2026last updated June 9, 2026What you need to know - Donald Trump said Iran downed a US Apache helicopter over the Strait of Hormuz - Israeli airstrikes hit Tyre in southern Lebanon after the military ordered the entire city to evacuate - Donald Trump says a Middle East peace deal is in the 'final throes' - The US president says the Strait of Hormuz will reopen immediately after a deal is sealed - A US Army Apache...
Germany news: Migration to Germany falls sharply in 2025
Germany news: Migration to Germany falls sharply in 2025 Published June 1, 2026last updated June 1, 2026What you need to know - Around 1.48 million people moved to Germany in 2025, down 13% compared to the previous year - The decline was partly driven by fewer arrivals from major asylum-source countries - A 36-year-old Syrian man has been sentenced to life imprisonment over a serious knife attack on football fans Below, you can review DW's coverage from and about Germany on Monday, June 1,...
As hot summer, blackouts loom, Iraq looks to solar power
As hot summer, blackouts loom, Iraq looks to solar power June 6, 2026Iraq has long suffered through scorching summers that the country's national grid hasn't been able to keep up with. But it was only recently that Hiba al-Amiri's family started to seriously consider getting solar panels installed at home to compensate for the annual summer blackouts. "In the war, Iranian gas was cut and for four days, we had no electricity," the Baghdad-based teacher told DW.
South Africa migration crisis: Ramaphosa's plan faces doubt
South Africa migration crisis: Ramaphosa's plan faces doubt June 9, 2026"I moved to Southern Africa because of their infrastructure," Fifi, a 21-year-old Ghanaian footballer who plays for Bucks Buccaneers in the Namibia Premier League, told DW. After the football season ended, he was in South Africa on holiday when he was caught up in the anti-immigrant protests. Fifi was among a group of Ghanaians who were recently repatriated to Ghanafrom South Africa.
Numerical Study of Dissipative Weak Solutions for the Euler Equations of Gas Dynamics
arXiv:2601.17452v3 Announce Type: replace Abstract: We study dissipative weak (DW) solutions of the Euler equations of gas dynamics using the first-, second-, third-, fifth-, seventh-, and ninth-order local characteristic decomposition-based central-upwind (LCDCU), low-dissipation central-upwind (LDCU), and viscous finite volume (VFV) methods, whose higher-order extensions are obtained via the framework of the alternative weighted essentially non-oscillatory (A-WENO) schemes. These methods...
The German town where locals spend play money to cut CO2
The German town where locals spend play money to cut CO2 June 1, 2026Walk into a bakery or a bookshop in Bavaria's Chiemgau region, and you might spot a customer paying with what looks like play money — colorful banknotes printed with grasshoppers, ladybugs and other insects. "An estimated 10 to 15% of customers pay this way," one bookseller told DW. The locals call it the "Chiemgauer" — and it's a currency they invented themselves.
German town prints its own cash to cut CO2 emissions
German town prints its own cash to cut CO2 emissions June 1, 2026Walk into a bakery or a bookshop in Bavaria's Chiemgau region, and you might spot a customer paying with what looks like play money — colorful banknotes printed with grasshoppers, ladybugs and other insects. "An estimated 10 to 15% of customers pay this way," one bookseller told DW. The locals call it the "Chiemgauer" — and it's a currency they invented themselves.
The German town that prints its own money to cut emissions
The German town that prints its own money to cut emissions June 1, 2026Walk into a bakery or a bookshop in Bavaria's Chiemgau region, and you might spot a customer paying with what looks like play money — colorful banknotes printed with grasshoppers, ladybugs and other insects. "An estimated 10 to 15% of customers pay this way," one bookseller told DW. The locals call it the "Chiemgauer" — and it's a currency they invented themselves.