Poisoned food found at German kindergarten
By DW
31 March 2019 |
9:21 am
Police suspect someone purposefully poured detergent in a sauce and disinfectant in a soup before they were supposed to be fed to the kids. Day care employees were able to sniff out the poisoned food in the nick of time.
In this article
Related
31 Mar 2019
Police suspect someone purposefully poured detergent in a sauce and disinfectant in a soup before they were supposed to be fed to the kids. Day care employees were able to sniff out the poisoned food in the nick of time.
12 Oct 2020
The German government has provided states with billions of euros in subsidies for daycare centers. Despite this massive investment, one in seven toddlers won't get a spot in a publicly funded day care.
Latest
4 hours ago
A year ago, the Taliban retook Kabul. In their first press conference after seizing power in Afghanistan, they surprised the world with the announcement of moderate policies. A key pledge was to address women's rights.
4 hours ago
Translation and language-learning giants like Google and DuoLingo are expanding language databases available online, in a push to widen representation and reduce bias in artificial intelligence systems. Residents in countries like Uganda where the native tongue Luganda is not taught in schools, say adding their languages to these platforms could be a game changer.
4 hours ago
Germany's €9 monthly travel pass has boosted rail usage, particularly in more rural and tourist areas, the latest statistics suggest. However, road usage is virtually unchanged, suggesting little impact on commuters.
5 hours ago
Beijing's military threats against Taiwan after Nancy Pelosi's visit are unprecedented. For the time being, however, not much will likely change as neither country can do without the other as a trading partner.
5 hours ago
The top German official for antiziganism says Romani people face structural discrimination in Ukraine. Roma make up 1-1.5% of the country's population.
5 hours ago
Among the dangers posed by the war in Ukraine is the risk of a nuclear catastrophe at Europe's largest nuclear plant, which is now under Russian control — in a war zone. The director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael Grossi, spoke to DW about his concerns over the situation at the Zaporizhzhia plant.