• Croatia joins EU

    Croatia has joined the EU, becoming its 28th member. It has been over two decades since it split away from Yugoslavia in order to secure its independence.

    Amidst widespread celebrations, Croatia's president Josipovic said, it was "a great and joyful day for our homeland".

  • Egyptian army gives political parties 48 hour ultimatum

    The Egyptian army gave the country’s rival parties 48 hours to resolve the deadly political crisis, today.

  • Cameron urged to discuss human rights issues in Kazakhstan

    Whilst on a visit to strengthen trade relations with Kazakhstan, British Prime Minister David Cameron has been urged to bring human rights issues to the table in discussions.

  • Bomb blasts in Pakistan as UK PM visits 

    Over 40 people where killed in bomb blasts in Pakistan whilst the UK prime minister visited the country to hold talks with the newly elected prime minister Nawaz Sharif. 

    One bomb by checkpoint near a Shiite Muslim mosque in the south-western city of Quetta killed over 20 people, whilst a car bombing in Peshawar, killed 17. 

  • West should have talked to the Taliban decades ago says UK general 

    One of the UK's top generals in Afghanistan has told the Guardian that the West should have tried to talk to the Taliban over a decade ago as it would have been easier to find a solution in 2002 when the Taliban were on the run.  

    General Nick Carter said,   

  • Taliban should join “peace process” – Cameron

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said during a visit to Afghanistan that the Taliban should join the political process.

    "I believe that the Taliban, watching all this progress, are beginning to realise that they are not going to secure a role in Afghanistan's future through terror and violence but by giving up their arms and engaging in a political process.

  • HRW urges EU to act on detainment in Bahrain

    Human Rights Watch urged the European Union High Representative, Catherine Ashton, to push for the immediate release of 13 high profile activists that were detained in Bahrain for peacefully exercising their rights.

  • US ends Bangladesh's trade benefits over garment industry standards

    The United States cut its long standing trade benefits with Bangladesh on Thursday in move said to be in response to the poor working conditions within the country's garment industry. 

  • Mali coup leader apologises

    The army captain who led the coup in Mali last year has apologised to the people of the country.

    Captain Amadou Sanogo said he wanted "to ask for forgiveness from Malians as a whole" for the coup which overthrew the government, leading to conflict with Tuareg rebels and Islamists, who gained control of the north of the country, costing hundreds of lives.

  • ICC postpone Kenyatta trial
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  • UN investigates chemical weapons in Syria

    After being refused entry to Syria, inspectors appointed by the United Nations, have entered Turkey to gather information about the possible use of chemical weapons in the Syrian civil war.

  • Student protesters arrested in Chile
    122 students, including many teenagers have been arrested in Santiago, Chile as police raided schools to clear occupy protests across the city.

    Government officials claimed that the evictions of the occupations, part of a two-year campaign for education reforms, had been largely peaceful.

    The schools were cleared by pre-dawn police raids, in time to be used as polling stations in Sunday's presidential candidate elections.
  • Boston bombing suspect indicted
    The surviving suspect of the Boston marathon bombing has been indicted, facing 30 charges including the killing of three marathon-goers and shooting dead a policeman.

    19-year-old Tsarnaev faces life in prison or even the death penalty if convicted, prosecutors said.
  • US marine war crimes conviction overturned

    The United States military’s prosecution of Iraqi war crimes received a huge blow today, after the US military’s highest court overturned a murder conviction against a US marine.

  • Israel authorises 69 housing units in East Jerusalem
    Amidst a renewed push for Israeli-Palestinian peace talks by the US Secretary of State John Kerry, the Israeli government has authorised 69 housing units in a Jewish settlement in East Jerusalem on Wednesday, reports Reuters.

    Kerry is due to meet both leaders on Thursday in a bid to restart negotiations that ended in 2010.
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