• Falluja hospital hit by government shelling

    A hospital in the Iraqi city of Falluja was hit by shelling from the Iraqi army on Sunday, a day after Premier Haider al-Abadi ordered Iraqi air-forces to halt strikes on civilian areas in their fight against the Islamic State (IS), who are in control of the city.

  • US military to lead training exercises in Ukraine as fighting escalates

    Clashes broke out between Ukrainian troops and armed separatist in the country’s east, killing at least 6 people in Donetsk, despite the ongoing ceasefire.

    According to reports, the Ukrainian military blamed rebels who launched an attack on the city’s airport.

  • United Nations takes over peacekeeping in CAR

    The United Nations has officially taken over peacekeeping in the Central African Republic, as UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon made a fresh call for an “immediate end” to the violence in the country.

    African-led peacekeeping forces (MISCA) transferred authority to the United Nations mission (MINUSCA) on Monday, with 5,000 African and 2,000 French troops stationed in the country.

    The UN Secretary General called for "all Central African stakeholders to sustain their commitment to an inclusive political process to ensure the successful completion of the country's transition."

    Minusca chief Gen Babacar Gaye of Senegal said,

    "Our mission can be summed up in a triptych: to protect the population, back the political process and contribute to the restoration of the authority of the state."

  • Up to 500 feared dead after migrant boat sinks

    As many as 500 migrants are thought to have been killed off the coast of Malta, after their boat was rammed by traffickers last week, said the International Organisation for Migration on Monday.

    IOM spokeswoman Christiane Berthiaume said,

    “Survivors have testified that the traffickers arrived aboard two boats and ordered the migrants to change vessels in the middle of the sea. The migrants said it was too dangerous and refused. There was a violent altercation and the traffickers used their boat to ram the migrants' boat.”

    "Some 500 people were on board - Syrians, Palestinians, Egyptians and Sudanese. They were trying to reach Europe."

    News of the incident comes after a boat carrying approximately 250 migrants sank off the Libyan coast on Sunday, killing at least 100 people.

  • Catalan politicians set to pass legislation legalising independence referendum
    Catalan’s regional parliament on Monday began the process of establishing new legislation that would allow for an independence referendum to be held on 9 November this year, reports the Guardian.

    The Catalan leader argued that an independence referendum would exhibit an “impressive level of democracy” in Spain.
  • Ukraine looks to provide autonomous powers to separatist regions
    The Ukrainian government is considering a draft legislation that will great “special status” to the separatist controlled regions of Donetsk and Luhansk for 3 years, reports the New York Times.
  • British aid worker executed by Islamic State

    The Islamic State (IS) released a video, showing the execution of British aid worker David Haines.

    The 44-year-old from Perth, was captured by militants in Syria last year. IS executed two American journalists in the last few weeks, saying it was in response to American air strikes on the group in Iraq. The militants had threatened to execute Haines in earlier videos, calling on the US and Britain to cease supporting the Iraqi and Kurdish armies.

    Prime Minister David Cameron said the murder of an innocent aid worker was "despicable and appalling".

  • Pakistan arrests opposition protesters
    Pakistani police have arrested scores of opposition activists who have been staging sit-in protests in the capital of Islamabad, reports the Guardian.

    The most recent arrests have stalled talks between the Pakistani government and opposition protesters.

    Commenting on the latest arrests, the Interior Minister said,
  • China to invest billions into India's railways
    China is to invest billions of dollars into India's railways, following a visit by the Chinese premier Xi Jinping to India this week, reports Reuters.

    According to the Times of India, the Chinese investment into the railways, aimed at bringing high speed rail links and modernised stations, could be close to $50 billion.

    "India has a strong, real desire to increase its cooperation with China and other countries to perfect and develop its rail system, and has concrete cooperation ideas," China's Assistant Foreign Minister Liu Jianchao told journalists last week.

  • Hundreds of pro-democracy protesters march through Hong Kong
    Hundreds of pro-democracy protesters marched through Hong Kong on Sunday, against Beijing's refusal to allow fully democratic elections for the city's chief executive in 2017, reports SCMP and Reuters.

    “Beijing has failed to fulfill its promise that Hong Kong people can have democracy,” said the co-founder of the Occupy Central movement told SCMP.

    “What can Hong Kong people do? We need to press ahead with a civil disobedience campaign.”

    The protesters dressed in black with yellow ribbons and marched in silence, holding banners stating that they felt betrayed by Beijing.

  • Greece criminalises Armenian genocide denial
    The parliament of Greece on Tuesday ratified a bill criminalising the denial of the Armenian genocide, last week.

    The revised bill entitled “Fight Against Xenophobia,” adopted by parliament on Thursday, made the crime punishable by

  • Iraqi premier halts air-strikes on civilian areas in fight against IS
    Iraq’s prime minister, said that he had ordered Iraqi air-forces to halt strikes on civilian areas in their fight against the Islamic State (IS), reports Reuters.

    Haider al-Abadi, said that his order to protect civilians had been issued a day after talks with the US Secretary of State John Kerry in Baghdad.
  • Chile MP charged with 1981 killings

    A Chilean MP has been charged with the killing of three opponents of the military dictatorship of Gen Augusto Pinochet in 1981.

  • ‘Russia is a threat to global order’ warns Ukrainian PM as clashes continue in Donetsk

    Ukraine's Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk has condemned Russia as a “threat to global order”on Saturday, as Ukrainian troops claimed to have successfully defended Donetsk airport from an attack by pro-Russian separatists.

  • Hundreds of Boko Haram fighters reportedly killed as Nigerian army 'repels offensive'

    The Nigerian government claimed to have killed some 200 Boko Haram militants, including a leading commander from the organisation, as they repelled an attack on a key town in the North-East of the country.

    Nigerian government forces claimed to have successfully defended the town of Konduga, approximately 35km from Borno state-capital Maiduguri, which was under attack by the Boko Haram militants.

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