Description
Added on the 08/12/2020 22:54:31 - Copyright : Euronews EN
IN THE PAPERS - Friday, November 9: It's the German "day of fate" and papers are marking a series of anniversaries, notably 80 years since hundreds of Jews were killed during Kristallnacht, "the night the mass murder began." In France, the football world is rocked by revelations that recruiters from Paris Saint-Germain racially profiled players. We also look at US Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's health scare and the story of a statue that fought back against a fascist vandal.
USA
Media Watch takes a look at the latest developments after Chelsea fans' racist abuse of a black man on the Paris metro. Also the insults hurled at a man dressed as an imam on the streets of Milan. Plus, how a haircut can transform our opinion of the homeless. And finally, a lucky escape for Arnaud Montebourg.
The actor has been accused of rape and cannibalism; a new documentary explores the allegations and his dark family past.
The tour in Croatia's capital is aimed at reviewing objectively the legacy of Josip Broz Tito, the former Yugoslavia's Communist leader who still sparks heated debate more than four decades after his death.
U.S.-led air strikes hit 10 units of Islamic State fighters in Syria in recent days as well as militants with the al Qaeda-linked Khorasan Group. Jillian Kitchener reports.