Poland has promised Netanyahu safe passage to an Auschwitz memorial service. Former and current EU officials are speaking out.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu missed the ceremony celebrating the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz as he deals with legal woes at home and the threat of arrest abroad.
Poland’s government is facing possible legal action after it said that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would not be arrested ... Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said: "I confirm, whether it is the prime minister, the president, or the ...
DW looks back at the heated debate in Poland triggered by the decision.There are places on Polish soil that hold a deep significance not only for Poles but also for Jews and many people in Israel. According to Gaza's Health Ministry,
The visit will make the Israeli prime minister the first foreign leader to be invited to Trump's residence since he took office last week.
The Israeli prime minister has to navigate complicated domestic politics with his aim of destroying Hamas and the need to keep the US on side.
When asked whether the Gaza ceasefire will hold, President Donald Trump declared that he wasn't confident. He might as well be talking about his pet diplomatic project in the Middle East.
A ceremony Monday marking 80 years since the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Nazi concentration camp will be attended by heads of state from around the world, but will focus on the voices of survivors some of whom may not live to see another commemoration .
Elon Musk told a rally the German far-right AfD party, just before Holocaust Remembrance Day, that Germany should get over "past guilt."
Some of the last living survivors spoke of worrying signs that safeguards of “never again” are falling away while antisemitism rises.
Eighty years ago, on 27 January 1945, the concentration and extermination camp known as Auschwitz-Birkenau was liberated by the Soviet Red Army. Over a million people declared by the Nazis as “opponents of the regime” or “sub-human” were murdered there between 1940 and 1945.
More than 1.1 million people were murdered at Auschwitz and historians say that most of them, about one million, were Jewish but the victims also included Poles, Roma and Soviet prisoners of war.View