• Catalan regional government to call off November 9 independence referendum

    The Catalan regional government has called off plans to hold an independence referendum according to Spanish Media reports.

    A Catalan presidential spokesperson said that Artur Mas would be holding a news conference on Tuesday 08:00 GMT, reports the BBC.
  • Taliban attack kills 22 in Afghanistan

    At least 22 members of the Afghan security forces have been killed after an ambush on their convoy by Taliban militants in the Sar-e-Pol province, in the north of the country.

    Officials say 22 Taliban fighters died in the ensuing fire fight.

  • Death sentences for Xinjiang ‘attacks’

    A Chinese court has sentenced 12 people to death in connection with attacks earlier this year which left dozens dead.

    According to the government, attackers had stormed a police station and government offices in July, killing 37 civilians. 59 of the attackers were shot dead by security forces.

    Fifteen individuals were given suspended death sentences, nine were imprisoned for life and another 20 received jail sentences ranging between four and 20 years.

    The government’s Tianshan Newsv reported that they were convicted of "organising, leading or participating in organised terror crimes, homicide, illegal construction of explosive devices, arson, kidnapping and harming public safety".

    Activists at the time disputed the government’s version of events, saying that Uighurs were protesting "against Chinese security forces' heavy-handed Ramadan crackdown... and extrajudicial use of lethal force in recent weeks in the county".

  • Turkey agrees to US use of military bases

    Turkey will be allowing the United States and coalition forces to use its military bases in the fight against Islamic State, and has also agreed for moderate Syrian rebels to be trained on its soil.

    Although Turkey has so far refused to send troops into Syria, MPs voted to allow foreign forces to use its bases for activities in Syria and Iraq.

  • Scotland calls for Palestinian statehood recognition
    The Scottish Government called on the United Kingdom government to officially recognise the state of Palestine, ahead of a motion in the British Houses of Parliament on Monday.

    Backing calls for official recognition, Scotland also invited Palestine to open its first European Consulate in Edinburgh.

    In a letter to UK Foreign Minister Phillip Hammond, Scotland's External Affairs Minister Humza Yousaf said,
    "The Scottish Government urges the UK Government to formally recognise the State of Palestine and as an immediate step in that precognition process, upgrade the political representation to a fully functioning embassy. In that vein, the Scottish Government would welcome the opening of a Palestinian Consulate in Scotland."

  • UK troops to train Kurdish forces in Iraq
    Britain's Ministry of Defence announced that UK troops will be training Kurdish forces in Iraq, as they continue to battle against Islamic State militants.

    A “specialist team” of 12 soldiers from the UK's Yorkshire regiment will be training Kurds how to use UK-supplied machine guns, reports the BBC.

    Last month the UK supplied the Kurdish Peshmerga with heavy machine guns and almost half-a-million rounds of ammunition.

    The announcement comes as fighting continues between Islamic State and Kurdish forces for the town of Kobane. US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel acknowledged that US airstrikes had made “some progress” but said the situation in Kobane remained “dangerous”.

  • Calls for Western Sahara self-determination at UN Fourth Committee
    Several states called for a self-determination referendum to be held in Western Sahara, whilst speaking at the UN Fourth Committee for Special Political and Decolonization, in New York on Thursday, reports SPS.
  • United States pledges $212 million in aid for Gaza
    The United States has pledged $212 million towards reconstruction in Gaza at a donor conference held in Egypt.

    The Palestinian Authority is calling for $4billion in order to reconstruct the region, after an estimated 18,000 homes were destroyed and 100,000 displaced during the seven-week conflict with Israel.

    US Secretary of State John Kerry addressed the conference in Cairo, saying, "the people of Gaza do need our help desperately, not tomorrow, not next week, but they need it now."

    "Out of this conference must come not just money but a renewed commitment from everybody to work for peace that meets the aspirations of all, for Israelis, for Palestinians for all people of this region,” continued Kerry, adding “I promise you the full commitment of president Obama, myself and the United States to try to do that."

  • Ntaganda trial date set by ICC
    The trial of the former M23 rebel commander, Bosco Ntaganda (also known as 'The Terminator') who is accused of committing mass atrocities in the Democratic Republic of Congo, has been set for next year, reports AFP.

    “The Trial Chamber scheduled the opening of the trial on June 2,” the International Criminal Court (ICC), said Friday.

    A pre-trial hearing took place earlier this year, where Fatou Bensouda, Chief Prosecutor at the ICC, said Ntaganda had "played a key role in planning assaults against the civilian population in order to gain territory… He persecuted civilians on ethnic grounds, through deliberate attacks, forced displacement, murder, rape, sexual enslavement and pillaging."

  • FC Barcelona signs Catalan self-determination pact
    FC Barcelona, the city's world famous football club, backed the call for Catalan self-determination, despite a threat from Spain's football league that it would be excluded if the region chose to secede.


    Photograph Yes Catalonia Facebook

    In a statement on Friday, FC Barcelona, said it had signed the Catalan National Pact for Self-Determination.

    "The Club formalised their adhesion in a formal letter from President Josep Maria Bartomeu to the Pact Co-ordinator Joan Rigol. The Pact brings together over 3,500 organisations and associations from a wide spectre range of social and political positions which endorse the Catalan people's right to self-determination," the club said.

    Pointing to a previous declaration made by the club president in 2013, FC Barcelona added:
    "FC Barcelona has already signalled its position in favour of self-determination for Catalonia in a declaration made in the President’s Report at the 2013 Members Representatives Meeting – the maximum authority of the Club."

  • BBC accused of giving voice to genocide deniers by Rwandan survivors groups
    The BBC have “made no effort to seek out the voices of those who witnessed and suffered through the genocide in 1994,” said Rwanda survivors’ groups in a joint letter to the broadcasting channel.
  • Boko Haram releases 27 hostages

    Islamist militant group Boko Haram has released 27 hostages including 10 Chinese workers and the wife of Cameroon's vice-Prime Minister Amadou Ali, according to a statement from Cameroon President Paul Biya’s office.

  • UK MPs set to vote on Palestinian statehood

    Lawmakers in Britain are set to vote on a historic motion on Monday, where they will decide whether the UK will officially recognise Palestine as a state.

    The motion, which states "this House believes that the government should recognise the state of Palestine alongside the state of Israel", was proposed by Labour backbencher Grahame Morris.

    Morris told the Independent he felt it was “time to shout out loud that this should be done” adding, “not only is statehood the inalienable right of the Palestinian people, but recognizing Palestine will breathe new life into a peace process that is at an impasse.”

     Shadow foreign secretary Douglas Alexander also commented on the motion, saying,

    "Labour believes statehood for the Palestinians is not a gift to be given but a right to be recognised: That is why since 2011 Labour has supported Palestinian recognition at the United Nations and called on the government to support this important principle."

  • UN Special Envoy urges Turkey to allow fighters into Kobani

    UN Special Envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura, has implicitly appealed to Turkey to allow fighters across the Syria border to protect the city of Kobani from Islamic State.

    Speaking at a press conference in Geneva on Friday, Mistura stressed the dangers of an impending invasion of Kobani by Islamic State said,

    "Please take action to protect the civilians, in this case of Kobani –Ayn al-Arab. Do we have an international scenario to justify any type of action?… Everyone who can should be doing what he can in order to control and hopefully stop this atrocious terrorist movement, especially when they are clearly indicating where they are going."

    "We would like to appeal to the Turkish authorities in order to allow the flow of volunteers at least and their own equipment in order to be able to enter the city and contribute to a self-defence operation. And if they can, to support the deterrent actions of the collation through whatever means from their own territory."

  • Mali requests UN 'rapid intervention force' to battle Islamic militants
    Malian Foreign Minister Abdoulaye Diop requested the United Nations send a rapid intervention force in order to fight Islamist militants in the North of the country.

    The request comes following a wave of attacks on UN peacekeepers in the country, with a Senegalese soldier killed on Tuesday. Nine peacekeepers from Niger were reportedly killed by militants earlier this week. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon said he was “outraged” by the attack.

    Diop, who was addressing the UN Security Council via a video link, called for “urgent measures” to bolster the nearly 10,000 UN peacekeepers already in Mali. He warned that Northern Mali was at “risk of becoming the destination of hordes of terrorists” and said,
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