• China-India pledge closer ties on day 2 of Xinping's visit to India

    Photographs Xinhua


    China and India pledged closer cooperation on shared interests with leaders from both countries
    signing a five year economic and trade development plan on Thursday, reports NDTV.

    Talks took place in New Delhi
    , during the second day of the President Xi Jinping's three day tour of India.

    Xinping who is currently in Delhi for extensive talks with the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, visited Modi's home state of Gujarat yesterday on arrival, where three pacts were signed, promoting twinning relationship between the Chinese province of Guangdong and Gujarat, as well as an MoU between China's Development Bank Corporation and Gujarat Industrial Development Corporation.



  • France to launch air strikes against IS in Iraq
    The French president today said that he had agreed to the Iraqi government’s request for air support to fight Islamic State militants.

    French air strikes would only target the IS positions in Iraq and not Syria Francis Hollande told reporters on Thursday.
  • California signs bill to teach students about Armenian genocide
    The Governor of California signed a bill on Thursday that will see teaching on the Armenian genocide brought into public schools across the state.
  • Obama pledges 3,000 troops to tackle Ebola outbreak

    US President Barack Obama pledged to send 3,000 military personnel to West Africa in an attempt to combat the outbreak of the Ebola virus, as he warned the epidemic was “spiralling out of control.”

    In remarks delivered to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, the US President called the outbreak a “potential threat to global security”, adding

  • Dozens killed by Syrian government air strikes

    At least 48 people have been killed in Syrian government air strikes on opposition-held towns in the Homs province, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights on Wednesday.

  • UN brokers deal which will allow reconstruction Gaza

    The United Nations announced a deal has been agreed by Israeli and Palestinian officials that will enable reconstruction of the Gaza strip.

    Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, Robert Serry told the UN Security Council that the agreement will see building materials allowed into Gaza, to help repair some of the “truly shocking levels of destruction to infrastructure, hospitals and schools.”

  • Kurdish people will never give up right to self-determination says Kurdistan's president
    Kurdistan’s president reiterated the people would never abandon their right to self-determination, in a statement made on Tuesday.

    Speaking on Islamic State militant attacks against the Kurdish Peshmerga forces, the Anadolu news agency quoted Massoud Barzani as saying,
  • Russia welcomes devolution of autonomous powers to eastern Ukraine
    Russia welcomed Ukraine’s recent law that granted greater powers of autonomy to separatist held areas in Eastern Ukraine, on Wednesday.

    The Foreign Ministry, praised the new Ukrainian law as “a step in the right direction,” reports the Wall Street Journal.
  • Westminister leaders sign pledge of more powers for Scots if they vote no
    The leaders of the main three Westminster parties made a joint pledge to grant and safeguard more powers to Scotland if Scots vote no in Thursday's independence referendum, in an eleventh hour desperate plea to voters.

    The pledge, published in the Daily Record newspaper and signed by David Cameron, Ed Miliband and Nick Clegg, promises "permanent and extensive new powers for [the Scottish] parliament will be delivered by the process and to the timetable agreed and announced by our three parties, starting on 19th September." See image below.

    The pledge, which goes on to also promise the "sharing of resources equitably across all four nations to secure the defence, prosperity and welfare of every citizen", has been criticised by some within the main three Westminster parties, as "handing over the keys to Westminster" in order to keep Scotland within the union, reports the BBC.


  • UN panel highlights Assad atrocities in Syria

    The UN commission investigating atrocities in Syria has placed much of the blame on President Bashar al-Assad, saying that the Syrian regime was responsible for the majority of civilian deaths.

    The head of the UN commission, Paulo Sergio Pinheiro said Islamic State and other militants are not "the sole agents of death and destruction inside Syria."

    “The Syrian government remains responsible for the majority of the civilian casualties, killing and maiming scores of civilians daily, both from a distance using shelling and aerial bombardment and up close, at its checkpoints and in its interrogation rooms,” Pinheiro told the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.

  • Eastern Ukraine granted limited self-rule

    The Ukrainian parliament has adopted a law giving limited self-rule to the east of the country, large parts of which are under separatist control.

    The move is part of the ceasefire agreement signed earlier this month by President Peter Poroschenko.

  • Nato troops killed by Taliban attack in Kabul

    Three soldiers have been killed and five wounded after a car packed with explosives rammed into the gates of a United States military base in the Afghan capital of Kabul on Tuesday.

    Two of the soldiers were identified as American and a third Polish, all of whom were part of the International Security Assistance Force, the US-led coalition of armed forces in Afghanistan.

  • US General says ground troops possible in Iraq

    A top US General stated American ground troops may still be deployed in the fight against Islamic State (IS) militants if the current strategy of airstrikes fails to defeat them.

  • Migrant boat sinks off Libyan coast, hundreds feared dead

    A boat thought to have been carrying up to 250 migrants has sunk off the coast of Libya, according to the latest reports, with hundreds reportedly killed.

  • Far-right makes gains in Sweden as Social Democrats lead government

    Sweden’s Social Democrats won their first election for 12 years, but fell short of a parliamentary majority, as far-right parties showed strong gains in the country’s general election on Sunday.

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