• UN helicopter reportedly shot down in South Sudan, 3 dead

    Three people have been killed after a United Nations helicopter crashed in South Sudan, with unconfirmed reports that it had been shot down.

    The helicopter crew were all Russian citizens. The helicopter’s owners, Russian airline UTair, stated that,

  • Ukraine detains Russian soldiers
    Ukraine detained a group of Russian paratroopers that had crossed the border into eastern Ukraine , on Tuesday, reports the Washington Post.
  • South Sudan rebels deny shooting down UN helicopter

    Rebels in South Sudan have denied shooting down a UN helicopter, which crashed on Tuesday, killing 3 and injuring one of those on board.

    The rebel SPLM dismissed the claims made by the South Sudanese army as government propaganda.

    "The SPLM/SPLA [in Opposition] would like to take this opportunity to refute these malicious allegations levelled by the propaganda machine of the Government of the Republic of South Sudan (GRSS)," said the statement, which bore the signature of Mabior Garang de Mabior, the chairperson of the committee for information and public relations.

    "The area in which the plane was reportedly shot down is government-held territory, if indeed the aircraft was shot down. It is unfortunate that the GRSS propaganda machine is trying to capitalise on this unfortunate event to score political points,"

    According to the Sudan Tribune, rebel brigadier-general Lul Ruai Koang pledged to assist any investigations.

  • 5 Serbs indicted for war crimes in Kosovo
    Five Serbs were indicted in Kosovo for alleged war crimes against ethnic Albanians during 1999 and 2000.

    The five, which includes a leading Kosovo Serb politician, Oliver Ivanovic, pleaded not guilty at the opening of the trial on Tuesday.

    "I am absolutely not guilty," said Ivanovic, who was arrested in January and accused of inciting paramilitaries to commit atrocities against civilians on April 14, 1999.

    The other four indicted Serbs are Dragoljub Delibašić, Ilija Vujačić, Nebojša Vujačić, and Aleksandar Lazović.

  • Syria and rebels committed war crimes – UN

    The UN has accused the Syrian government and rebels opposed to it of committing war crimes in Syria.

    A report released by the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic details abuses by Islamic State and other rebel groups fighting Bashar al-Assad’s regime.

    The government is thought to have conducted chemical attacks eight times this year alone and used barrel bombs on civilian areas.

    "In some instances, there is clear evidence that civilian gatherings were deliberately targeted" by government forces, the investigators said.

    "In government prisons, detainees were subjected to horrific torture and sexual assault."

  • ‘Long-term truce’ agreed between Palestinians and Israel

    A long-term truce has been agreed between Israelis and Palestinians, after intense negotiations, brokered by Egypt.

    Palestinian and Egyptian officials announced the end to 7-weeks of fighting, which killed over 2,200 people, mostly Palestinian civilians.

    Hamas spokesperson Sami Abu Zuhri said in a statement, “An agreement has been reached between the two sides and we are awaiting the announcement from Cairo to determine the zero hour for implementation.”

    Ismail Haniya, the former Hamas prime minister in Gaza, told Al Aqsa television that “we are at the doors of political understandings that will crown our people’s steadfastness and the performance of our armed resistance.”

  • Obama authorises reconnaissance flights over Syria

    President Barack Obama has approved surveillance flights over Syria to gain information on Islamic State militants.

  • Nigerian soldiers flee into Cameroon after Boko Haram clashes

    Nearly 500 Nigerian soldiers have fled into Cameroon after severe clashes with Boko Haram fighters, according to Cameroon’s army.

    Spokesman Lt Col Didier Badjek told the BBC that the soldiers have been disarmed and are being accommodated in schools in Maroua, around 80km from the Nigerian border.

  • Russian tanks enter southeast Ukraine

    Ukrainian troops have engaged in clashes with Russian troops which crossed the border in the southeast of the country.

    Ukrainian military spokesperson Andriy Lysenko said Russian military vehicles with the insignia of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic “violated the state border of Ukraine” in the southern part of Donetsk region.

    Lysenko said at least 10 tanks, two armored vehicles and two trucks from Russia crossed into the country on Monday soon after which they engaged in clashes with a Ukrainian military border unit.

  • Syria offers to help US in fight against IS

    The Syrian government says it will help the US fight Islamic State militants, who have seized huge swathes of land across Syria and Iraq.

    Foreign Minister Walid Muallem said Syria was "the centre of the international coalition to fight Islamic State", adding that the US must coordinate with Syria before launching attacks in its territory.

    "Anything outside this is considered aggression," he said.

  • Egypt proposes ceasefire initiative to end Israeli blockade on Gaza
    Egyptian mediators have proposed a new ceasefire deal that would see Gaza’s borders opened reports the BBC.

    The latest initiative, proposed on Monday, calls for an indefinite ceasefire, immediate openings of Gaza's crossings with Israel and Egypt for aid and long-term talks on easing the blockade on Gaza, reports Reuters.

    "There is an idea for a temporary ceasefire that opens the crossings, allows aid and reconstruction material, and the disputed points will be discussed in a month," a Palestinian official told AFP.

  • UAE and Egypt carry out secret airstrikes against Libyan militants
    Egypt and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have secretly worked together to launch airstrikes against militants battling for control of Libya’s capital Tripoli, reports the New York Times.
  • Holocaust survivors condemn Israel’s 'genocide' in Gaza

    Over 300 Holocaust survivors and descendents have signed a letter condemning Israel’s “genocide” in Gaza.

  • Boko Haram declares Islamic caliphate in captured town
    Boko Haram’s leader declared an Islamic caliphate, in northeast Nigeria town seized by the militants last month.

    “Thanks be to Allah who gave victory to our brethren in (the town of) Gowza and made it part of the Islamic caliphate,” Abubakar Shekau said in a video obtained by the Agence France Presse.
  • Iran downs Israeli drone over nuclear enrichment site
    Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guard said that it brought down an Israeli stealth drone above one of its nuclear enrichment sites on Sunday, reports AlJazeera.
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