Munich airport suspends flights due to smell of smoke
Published June 6, 2026last updated June 7, 2026
What you need to know
- Munich Airport has temporarily suspended flights
- Germany's Zverev has won his first ever Grand Slam at the French open
- The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party is fielding candidates in three district elections
- Another far-right party could win a mayoral runoff in Saxony
- Merz to join Zelenskyy, Macron in London for talks with UK's Starmer
Read below for a roundup of news from Germany for the weekend of June 6 and 7, 2026.
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Flight operations resume at Munich Airport
Flight operations at Munich Airport are returning to normal after a temporary suspension.
"Following a fire department response, flight operations resumed at 10:15 p.m. (2015 GMT/UTC)," the airport said in a statement on its website.
Earlier, the airport said the tower at the airport was evacuated at 8:33 p.m. local time due to a suspected smoke odor.
"The smell was detected because of a technical malfunction. The problem has been solved," a Munich airport spokesman told AFP.
French Open: Germany's Zverev wins first ever Grand Slam
Alexander Zverev has won his first Grand Slam title at the fourth attempt, beating Flavio Cobolli in a five-set epic in Paris.
In his fourth major final, Zverev beat first-time finalist Cobolli 6-1, 4-6, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-1.
Munich Airport halts flight operations after smoke smelled in tower
Germany's Munich airport said on Sunday evening it temporarily suspended flight operations.
Flights have been halted after workers reported an "intense smell" in the control tower.
The tower was evacuated as a precaution, with take-offs and landings stopped starting at 8:33 p.m. local time (1833 GMT/UTC), the spokesman said.
No fire or smoke was detected in the tower, and authorities are investigating the cause of the odor, the spokesman added.
The workers reported an "intense smell", but responding firefighters found neither fire nor smoke in the tower, and authorities are investigating the cause of the odor, the spokesman added.
It remained unclear when air traffic would resume.
Hamburg: metal shards disrupt Ironman cycling route
Police in the northern German city of Hamburg are investigating a potential act of sabotage at an Ironman event after small bits of metal were found strewn across the cycling route.
Up to 150 participants had to abandon their cycle rides after metal shards measuring about a millimeter damaged their tires, according to the local Hamburger Abendblatt newspaper. Three people were reportedly lightly injured.
Police initially dismissed reports of intentional sabotage as "speculation," but the disruption comes after protests against the event by local residents unhappy at temporary restrictions imposed along the Ironman route.
Placards on walls and houses carried messages such as "You're robbing us of our freedom," leading the Abendblatt to suggest that the shards had indeed been "seemingly maliciously strewn by residents."
The metal shards affected the 3,000-strong amateur field rather than the professional athletes, who nevertheless voiced criticism.
"It's a huge shame because people are trying to send a signal against the event but those affected are athletes who have been preparing for this for years," former German Olympic gold medalist and three-time Ironman world champion Jan Frodeno told the local NDR broadcaster. "Taking that away from someone just because you can't go out for a few hours is too much."
Ironman is an extreme triathlon event consisting of 3.86 kilometers (2.4 miles) swimming, 180.2 kilometers (112 miles) cycling and a 42.2-kilometer (26.2-mile) marathon run.
Police investigating nearby stabbing
Meanwhile, a couple of streets away from the Ironman route, emergency services responded to a stabbing which left a man seriously injured.
Police told the Bild tabloid that the incident had nothing to do with the Ironman event and that officers were looking for the attacker, who fled the scene. The precise details of what happened remain unclear.
German town could elect first neo-Nazi mayor
A leading figure of an extreme right party could become the mayor of a small town in eastern Germany on Sunday evening, the first time a neo-Nazi has been directly elected to the position since 1945.
Stefan Hartung, co-founder of the far-right Free Saxons (Freie Sachsen) party, won the first round of voting in the town of Aue-Bad Schlema last month with 29% support.
But going into Sunday's vote, it was unclear whether his runoff opponent, Marcus Hoffmann of the center-right Christian Democrats (CDU), could drive enough voter opposition to Hartung's appointment to prevent his victory.
Aue-Bad Schlema is a town of about 19,000 people in the eastern state of Saxony.
Freie Sachsen has been campaigning for greater autonomy for Saxony, opposition to the German government's immigration and trade policies.
The party says it also wants to involve the historic Saxon royal family in the state's future.
Polls close at 6:00 p.m. local time (1600 UTC/GMT) and the result is due later in the evening.
Report: Steinmeier no longer rules out 2036 Olympics bid
President Frank-Walter Steinmeier believes Germany could now host the 2036 Olympic Games, despite the controversy around the date, public broadcaster ARD reported.
2036 would mark 100 years since the Berlin Games were organized by the Nazis under Adolf Hitler's rule.
In February, Steinmeier had let it be known through his spokesman that he considered a German bid in that year to be “historically problematic.”
On Sunday, however, ARD cited new comments from Steinmeier's spokesman that while the president's concerns remained, he was now firmly convinced that all those involved would handle the date responsibly — if Germany makes a successful Olympic bid for that year.
"We have great sports venues. We have a sports-mad population. I very much wish that after Munich 1972 the Olympic Games finally take place in Germany again," Steinmeier told ARD.
After a referendum in Hamburg failed, three German cities are battling to host either the 2036, 2040 or 2044 Olympics. They are Berlin, Cologne (Rhine-Ruhr) and Munich.
A decision on who gets to bid and which year to target will be made in September by the German Olympic Sports Confederation (DOSB).
DOSB chief executive Otto Fricke said he was pleased that Steinmeier's change of stance "has now been explicitly clarified."
India and Qatar are among the favourites to host the Olympics in 2036.
Two held for impersonating police officers in Thuringia
Police in Germany's eastern state of Thuringia said Sunday they arrested two men for impersonating police officers while driving a decommissioned patrol car.
A police statement cited eyewitnesses, who noticed the police car with the two uniformed men driving through the village of Langenwetzendorf in the Greiz district on Saturday.
The patrol car was still in its original condition, including all markings and flashing blue lights, the statement added.
The fake officers wore older editions of the police uniform from the neighboring state of Saxony and carried handcuffs and replica pistols.
Upon arrest, the men were ordered to immediately remove their uniforms.
Criminal proceedings have begun against the pair for impersonating a public official and violating weapons laws.
The police statement said the police car, which had broken down in the meantime, was towed away.
Kiel plays host to first Children's Rights Summit
Germany's northern port city of Kiel is welcoming thousands of youngsters to the country's first Children's Rights Summit on Sunday.
Hosted by the Christian-Albrechts University, the summit is billed as designed by children for children, with youngsters actively involved from the early stages.
The main feature is a children’s rights rally, with interactive stations where children playfully learn about their rights based on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.
"We are experiencing genuine participation here," Sophia Schiebe, State Chairwoman of the Child Protection Association for the state of Schleswig-Holstein, told public broadcaster NDR.
"Always with the goal of making children's rights visible and self-evident to children. Because a right that children don't know about is a right they can't demand. This is precisely where our Children's Rights Summit comes in," Schiebe said.
The Kiel summit follows last year's first International Children's Rights Summit, hosted at the Vatican by the late Pope Francis.
New Berlin Hindu temple to be sprinkled with Ganges water
The German capital's newest Hindu temple is being consecrated on Sunday, local media reported.
The Sri Ganesha Hindu Temple, in Berlin's Neukölln district, has taken more than two decades of planning and construction.
Public broadcaster Deutschlandfunk (DLF) reported that water from India's Ganges River and Berlin's Spree River was due to be poured over the top of the building using a crane.
DLF said several religious rituals have already been performed since Thursday to mark the opening.
The colorful and intricately decorated temple cost around €1.1 million ($1.27 million) to build.
Germany has dozens of Hindu temples and worship sites, with Sri Ganesha set to be the country's largest.
Several arrested after shots fired at Cologne snack bar
Police in Germany's western city of Cologne said multiple shots were fired at a snack bar in the early hours of Sunday morning.
The violent incident happened in Köln-Höhenberg, a residential district in the eastern part of the city.
A police spokesperson said a major operation was launched at around 1:30 a.m. local time (2330 UTC/GMT on Saturday), including the use of a police helicopter.
Public broadcaster WDR cited photos taken by a reporter that showed several bullet holes in a window and spent cartridges lying in the middle of the street.
No one was injured in the shooting, police said.
WDR reported that the perpetrator jumped into a vehicle, which was later pursued by police.
Three men were later arrested, with images showing several men being led away in handcuffs.
The police spokesperson declined to comment on whether several arrests made overnight were directly linked to the shooting.
Germany's Armed Forces Day sees record turnout
Events to mark Tag der Bundeswehr (Armed Forces Day) on Saturday drew a new high of about 340,000 visitors, according to Germany's military, up roughly 20% from last year.
The Bundeswehr opened the gates to 10 of its facilities nationwide for public viewing, including the Eckernförde Naval Base on the Baltic Sea and the Laage Air Base in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania.
During the open day, soldiers showed off military equipment and technology, while answering questions and offering career advice. There were also parachute jumps, operational simulations and drone flights.
Chancellor Friedrich Merz flew into Laage, where his government plane was escorted by two Eurofighter jets, while Vice Chancellor Lars Klingbeil took part in an event in the garrison town of Munster in Saxony.
Defense Minister Boris Pistorius, who visited the Bundeswehr University in Neubiberg, near Munich, said the turnout proved that public "interest is enormous."
Referring to Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine and conflicts in the Middle East, Pistorius said it was vital for Germany to "maintain a stable presence at a time when uncertainty is growing all around us."
He also praised the renewed interest among young people in the Bundeswehr, noting how the military had recruited around 25,000 new soldiers last year, which was "more than we have seen in many years."
Merz, Zelenskyy in London for Ukraine war talks
Germany's chancellor, Friedrich Merz, will attend a meeting in London later on Sunday to discuss European governments' ongoing support for Ukraine.
The talks, hosted by UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, will be attended by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and French President Emmanuel Macron.
The four leaders are expected to coordinate efforts on sustaining aid to Kyiv, while ramping up pressure on Moscow to end the four-year war.
On Friday, Russian President Vladimir Putin rejected a proposal to meet Zelenskyy for face-to-face talks, saying he saw "no point" in a meeting until a peace deal had been agreed.
Zelenskyy hit back at Putin's reticence, saying the Russian leader was "weak" and "choosing war again."
Far-right eyes win in typically sleepy eastern elections
Four typically low-turnout elections in eastern Germany are drawing unusually close attention this year.
In three districts, Saalekreis in Saxony-Anhalt, Saalfeld-Rudolstadt in Thuringia and Ostprignitz-Ruppin in Brandenburg, the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party is fielding strong candidates for the powerful position of district administrator (Landrat).
In the Saxony town of Aue-Bad Schlema, a candidate from the even more radical Freie Sachsen (Free Saxons) party is in a runoff for mayor after leading the first round.
The AfD already holds one Landrat position — in Sonneberg, Thuringia. Winning a second would be another symbolic breakthrough for the party currently polling at 29%, versus Chancellor Friedrich Merz's conservative alliance at 21%, according to INSA.
The AfD's candidate in Saalfeld-Rudolstadt, state MP Thomas Benninghaus, belongs to the party's most hardline, far-right faction, led by Björn Höcke.
Meanwhile, the party’s branches in Thuringia, Saxony-Anhalt and Brandenburg are all under surveillance from German intelligence agencies, labeled as right-wing extremist factions.
These four races are seen as an important test ahead of key eastern state elections in Saxony-Anhalt on September 6 and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania on September 20.
Our coverage continues
Hallo, guten Morgen! DW's newsroom in Bonn, in western Germany, continues our coverage of the top stories from across the country.
District elections in four eastern German states that would normally pass without fanfare are being closely watched this time.
The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party is fielding candidates in three of the votes and is polling close to 30% nationally.
In the fourth — a mayoral runoff — the candidate from another small far-right party, Freie Sachsen (Free Saxons), topped the first round of voting last month.
Meanwhile, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz will join his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in London for talks with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
The meeting comes after Russia ruled out face-to-face talks to try to end the Ukraine war.
Germany beat US before World Cup, but injuries cast shadow
Germany made it nine wins out of nine with a 2-1 victory over the United States in their last match before the World Cup.
The win, secured by goals from Kai Havertz and Leroy Sane, means that Germany have won four successive friendlies, as well as their last six World Cup qualifiers. But Julian Nagelsmann knows tougher tests than this are not far away.
Read more about Saturday's game and Germany's bigger concerns ahead of the World Cup here.