• Former UK PM Margaret Thatcher dies

    Former UK Prime Minister, Baroness Margaret Thatcher, died on Monday at the age of 87.

    Known variously as 'milk-snatcher', 'Iron Lady' and the woman who changed Britain, the Baroness was the United Kingdom's first and only female Prime Minister.

  • Serbia rejects EU deal on Kosovo

    Serbia rejected the EU deal on normalising relations with Kosovo on Monday. Speaking to the press, Serbian Prime Minister Ivica Dacic said:

  • M23 movement re-engage in Congolese peace talks
    Talks aimed at resolving the conflict in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo resumed today in the Ugandan capital Kampala.
    The peace talks between the M23 Rebels and
  • Nigerian militants claim police attack

    The militant group Mend, Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, claimed responsibility for an attack in South Nigeria on Friday which killed 12 police officers.

    The announcement came in an email, and went on to say that the group would relaunch attacks after its leader, Henry Okah, was jailed in South Africa for 24 years for the 2010 bomb attacks in Abuja.

  • Kerry warns Iran about talks

    After a new round of talks failed to make progress, John Kerry, the US Secretary of State, has warned Iran that talks cannot last forever.

    At a start of a trip to the Middle East, Europe and Asia, Kerry said that the process was not an 'interminable' one.

    Kerry also called on Turkey and Israel to restore full diplomatic relations at talks in Istanbul.

  • Serbia struggles to let go of northern Kosovo
    Discussions between Senior Serbian and Kosovo leaders, regarding an European Union mediated plan for Serbian reconciliation with Kosovo, have experienced difficulties over the past few days.
    The EU has given Serbia until Tuesday to decide whether it will relinquish its control over northern Kosovo in exchange of talks to negotiate the start of a Serbian&nbs
  • Religious clashes in Egypt continue

    Religious clashes continued in Egypt on Sunday, with one reported fatality.

    Over eighty people were also wounded in the violence which broke out at the Coptic Orthodox Cathedral in central Cairo, after a funeral service for four Egyptian Christians killed in previous sectarian violence.

  • Religious clashes in Egypt

    Clashes between Christians and Muslims in a town near Cairo have left five killed and eight injured, reports Reuters.

    Violence reportedly broke out when Christian children were found drawing on the walls of a Muslim institute. As well as shooting and fighting several residential and commercial buildings were burned including a child-care centre.

  • South Sudan resumes oil production

    South Sudan has restarted oil production in the country, more than a year after it stopped operations with its neighbour Sudan.

    A deal was inked last month that allowed the resumption of production after the two countries came close to war over the disagreement. Production was halted 14 months ago after disputes over oil revenues.

  • Independent Scotland open to US military bases - SNP

    First Minister of Scotland Alex Salmond has stated that he would be open to an independent Scotland being home to US military bases, as long as they were non-nuclear, reported the Scotsman.

  • Musharaff and others barred from election for religious and 'moral' shortcomings

    An obscure constitutional clause has been invoked in Pakistan to bar candidates from election, including former president Pervez Musharaff.

    The clause involved subjecting candidates to rigorous tests on religious credentials and 'moral character', after which dozens of candidates were ruled out and hundreds more await 'verification'.

  • France calls for Mali reconciliation

    French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius has asked Mali’s government to start a reconciliation process in the country hit by civil war.

    Fabius said Mali would continue to receive military assistance from France and called for elections by July.

  • ICC commend United States efforts in promoting International Justice
    The prosecutor at the International Criminal Court (ICC) , Fatour Bensouda, praised the United States' efforts in helping the court ensure that perpetrators of war crimes are brought to justice.
  • UN suspends aid in Gaza after protests

    The United Nations Relief and Works Agency has suspended their food program in Gaza after demonstrators stormed a compound, protesting against cuts to a cash assistance program.

    A spokesperson for the agency, Adnan Abu Hasna, stated,

  • ICC urged to investigate Sudan for war crimes and crimes against humanity

    The Enough Project and Satellite Sentinel Project have released a new report detailing evidence of Sudan carrying out war crimes and crimes against humanity in the South Kordofan and Blue Nile region, and called on the International Criminal Court to further investigate the situation.

    The report also calls on the United Nations to "immediately establish an impartial commission of inquiry", adding,

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