The US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel, in an interview with the BBC, indicated that the military were ready to execute attacks on Syira, should President Obama give the go ahead.
Mobs of Buddhists carrying swords and sticks burnt down Muslim shops and homes, after a Buddhist monk incited violence against an alleged Muslim criminal in the north-west Burma today.
The Colombian government halted its participation in peace talks with the FARC rebels on Friday, citing FARC's announcement of a "pause" to the talks in order to review the government's plan to put the peace deal up for a vote.
The President Juan Manuel Santos recalled the Colombian negotiating team back from Havana in Cuba where the talks were taking place.
One of the lead FARC negotiators, Pablo Catatumbo, has said in a statement:
After discussions overlast week’s chemical weapons attack in Syria , David Cameron and Barack Obama, agreed that the crisis had been taken to a new level and would require a ‘seriousresponse’.
The former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak has been released from prison and is expected to be placed under house arrest.
Mubarak was arrested after widespread protests forced him from power 2 years ago, and was charged with corruption and involvement in the deaths of protestors and jailed for life, before the conviction was overturned on appeal earlier this year.
The British Foreign Secretary, William Hague, suggested today that the only “plausible explanation” for the deaths of 1300 people outside Damascus on was a chemical attack orchestrated by Bashar Assad’s regime.
An American soldier was sentenced on Friday to life in prison for the killing of 16 unarmed Afghan civilians.
Army Staff Sergeant Robert Bales admitted to killing the villagers, mainly women and children, in two nighttime attacks on their family compounds in Kandahar in March 2012.
Prosecutor Lieutenant Colonel Jay Morse referred to Bales as a "cold blooded killer" and had "wiped out generations and ruined lives forever".
Speaking on Friday about the alleged chemical weapons attack in Syria earlier this week, the US President Barack Obama said that it was a "big event of grave concern" and would "require America's attention".
Despite calls from many states for the Assad regime to effectively 'prove' its innocence by the allowing the UN's chemical weapons inspectors immediate access to the area and investigate, there is no sign of the Assad regime relenting.
Robert Mugabe was sworn in for a new five-year term as Zimbabwe's president following controversial election results last month.
Hitting out at his Western critics, Mugabe said that the "elections have been declared free and credible", except in the eyes of a few "dishonest" countries.
Mugabe also told his supporters:
“We have been on sanctions for over a decade and most likely will remain so for longer.”