CSU boss
Markus Söder has to stop India due to gastrointestinal infection
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Markus Söder has been traveling in India’s capital Neu-Delhi since Saturday. Shortly before the onward journey into the southwest of the country, he now had to throw his plans over the pile.
CSU boss Markus Söder has to stop his trip to India due to an acute gastrointestinal infection. For health reasons, he could not continue the planned travel program, said a spokesman for the State Chancellery in Neu-Delhi. It was initially unclear where Söder infected himself.
In the evening, Söder actually wanted to continue traveling from the capital Neu-Delhi to the Bavarian partner province of Karnataka. His delegation continued the trip under the direction of State Chancellor Florian Herrmann (CSU). Söder himself initially stayed in the hotel in Neu-Delhi and will go home from there.
Return to Germany was planned for Wednesday
The capital of the province of Karnataka, Bengaluru, is considered Silicon Valley India, a high-tech center that is also known for its shops. Here Söder wanted to have political conversations, visit a market and a temple complex. In addition, an agreement should be signed to further deepen the partnership between Bavaria and Karnataka. This should now take over Herrmann.
Söder has been a guest in India since Saturday. Since then he has made a large number of political and cultural appointments. The return trip for the night from Tuesday to Wednesday is officially planned.
In the morning the world was still in order for Söder. He used the time in Neu-Delhi, among other things, to visit an aid project for children from poor quarters. “There is only poverty and no education in slums. No child can decide where it is born in the world. We all were extremely lucky and therefore have the duty to help others,” said the CSU boss when visiting the “Sunshine” project, said 10,000 euros for Bayern.
“Heart concern” for Markus Söder
“Sunshine” enables children in poor quarters to form free schooling. It is financed by donations. Since there is no compulsory schooling in India, many parents from poor conditions send their children to work and beg instead of to school. At “Sunshine” (in German sunshine) the children learn to read and write. The aim is to break the spiral of poverty. A former student of the project told Söder in German that he now had a job as a translator.
Söder emphasized that the help for children is also “a heart of the heart”: “As a Free State of Bavaria, we are very happy to support this important social project.”
Dpa
EPP
Source: Stern

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