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  • Suicide Bombers Attack Mali Military Base

    Suicide Bombers Attack Mali Military Base

    {{Four suicide bombers blew themselves up at an army barracks in northern Mali on Saturday, killing two civilians in an upsurge in violence against the military since the failure of peace talks with rebel groups.}}

    The bombers let off explosives in a car in front of an army camp in the desert city of Timbuktu, also wounding six soldiers, the government said, just 24 hours after troops in the rebel bastion of Kidal were hurt in a grenade attack.

    “The government strongly condemns the suicide bombing… by four terrorists at the military camp in the city of Timbuktu,” it said in a statement.

    “This cowardly attack resulted in the death of six people, including two civilians and four terrorists who were killed on the spot. The explosion resulted in extensive damage.”

    An African military source from the United Nations’ MINUSMA peacekeeping mission confirmed the attack, the first suicide bombing in the mainly Tuareg and Arab northern fabled caravan town since March.

    Mali has been the target of a series of attacks claimed by Islamist insurgents since France launched a military operation in January against Al-Qaeda-linked groups occupying the north of the country.

    The French-led operation forced the extremists from the cities they seized in the chaotic aftermath of a military coup that overthrew Mali’s government in March 2012.

    Residual groups of these fighters are no longer able to carry out coordinated assaults, but are still capable of regular small-scale attacks, mainly against Malian and French soldiers.

    On March 21, a suicide bomber blew up a car near the Timbuktu airport at the start of an overnight assault on the city, killing a Malian soldier.

    Saturday’s attack came a day after two men threw hand-grenades at Malian troops in the ethnic-Tuareg northern town of Kidal, wounding two soldiers.

    The incidents follow the suspension of peace talks on Thursday between Tuareg and Arab rebels who want autonomy for northern Mali and the government.

    The government urged Malians to remain calm, saying security was being enhanced across the country.

    “The multiplication of these attacks shows that the war against terrorism is not over and that the security situation remains fragile throughout the Sahel-Saharan region,” it said.

    MINUSMA chief Bert Koenders said the peacekeeping mission would “continue to support the Malian people and authorities in restoring peace and stability in the entire country”.

    The Tuareg National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA) took control of Kidal in February after the French-led military operation ousted Al-Qaeda-linked fighters who had piggybacked on the latest Tuareg rebellion to seize most of northern Mali.

    The Al-Qaeda-backed militants had chased out their former MNLA allies and imposed a brutal form of Islamic law.

    The Malian authorities reclaimed the city after signing a ceasefire deal with the MNLA in June but the situation has remained tense.

    The June 18 Ouagadougou accord between the rebels and the government allowed the Mali military to return to Kidal to prepare the way for presidential elections in July which brought Ibrahim Boubacar Keita to power.

    Under the deal signed in Burkina Faso, the government and rebels agreed to respect the country’s territorial integrity and to hold peace talks, focused on the status of northern Mali, which the Tuareg movements call Azawad.

    But the rebels said on Thursday the government had not kept to its commitment under the deal to start prisoner releases, and announced they were pulling out.

    The central government is unwilling to discuss autonomy for northern Mali and there have been sporadic clashes between Malian troops and local populations in the desert region since the deal was signed.

    AFP

  • Nigerian  Islamist Gunmen Attack College

    Nigerian Islamist Gunmen Attack College

    {{A number of students are feared dead after suspected Islamist gunmen struck a college in north-eastern Nigeria.}}

    The students were shot dead as they slept in their dormitory at the College of Agriculture in Yobe state.

    North-eastern Nigeria is under a state of emergency amid an Islamic insurgency by the Boko Haram group.

    Boko Haram is fighting to overthrow Nigeria’s government to create an Islamist state, and has launched a number of attacks on schools.

    The number of casualties in the latest attack is unclear but there are fears the death toll could be high.

    A military spokesman in Yobe state, Lazarus Eli, told Agence France-Presse news agency said the gunmen had also set fire to classrooms.

    The college is in the rural Gujba district.

    In June, Boko Haram carried out two attacks on schools in the region.

    At least nine children were killed in a school on the outskirts of Maiduguri, while 13 students and teachers were killed in a school in Damaturu.

    In July in the town of Mamudo, Islamist militants attacked dormitories with guns and explosives, killing at least 42 people, mostly students.

    {wirestory}

  • Kipsang Sets New  Marathon World Record

    Kipsang Sets New Marathon World Record

    {kipsang from Kenya}

    {{Kenyan Wilson Kipsang has broken the marathon world record by 15 seconds as he claimed the Berlin title on Sunday.}}

    The 31-year-old clocked a time of two hours three minutes 23 seconds to better the previous mark set by compatriot Patrick Makau two years ago.

    That was also in the German capital, when Makau ran 2:03:38.

    Fellow Kenyans Eliud Kipchoge (2:04:05) and Geoffrey Kipsang (2:06:26) finished second and third respectively in this year’s marathon.

    Makau was not competing in the event after withdrawing two weeks ago with a knee injury.

    Having trained specifically for breaking the world record in Berlin, Wilson Kipsang took control of the race in the final 10km, breaking away from the leading pack as the tempo dropped.

    “I’m very happy that I have won and broken the world record,” Kipsang said.

    “I was really inspired by [fellow Kenyan] Paul Tergat when he broke the world record here 10 years ago and I’m very happy that I was in a position to break the record on the same course.”

    His victory takes his total marathon wins to seven since competing in his first in Paris three years ago.

    Kipsang won the London marathon last year and also claimed bronze in the marathon at last year’s Olympic Games.

    The Berlin win was his first marathon victory this year. Despite being among the favourites, he only managed to finish fifth in the London event in April.

    agencies

  • Moyes: Man Utd Must Move on From Worst League Start

    Moyes: Man Utd Must Move on From Worst League Start

    {{David Moyes insisted Manchester United should be judged on how they “move on” after their worst start for 24 years.}}

    Goals from Morgan Amalfitano and Saido Berahino for West Brom either side of a Wayne Rooney free-kick kept United on seven points, the same tally they had after six games of the 1989-90 season.

    They now travel to Shakhtar Donetsk on Wednesday in the Champions League.

    “You’re always going to have bad results in football, it is how you deal with them,” the Old Trafford boss said.

    “We will move on and look forward to the next one. There are lots of games here and you get ready for the next one.

    “I’m concerned after the game but only because we didn’t play well. We can put it right.”

    Moyes, whose side have won just two Premier League games since he replaced the retired Sir Alex Ferguson in the summer, bemoaned the champions’ below-par performance.

    “We did not defend well at all but we did not attack well,” the former Everton manager told reporters. “We had a lot of the ball in the first half but didn’t make the most of it.”

    On-loan Marseille midfielder Amalfitano opened the scoring in the second half when he ran who through the United defence before lifting the ball stylishly over United goalkeeper David De Gea.

    Rooney responded for United when his free-kick – which was intended as a cross – found the net, but Berahino got the winner with a low strike as the hosts pushed for a second of their own.

    “When we got back in I expected us to win it with the talent we have got,” added Moyes.

    “Our intensity was not good enough in the first half, we tried to pick it up in the second half but we got done by it as well [on the break].”

    The win for the Baggies was just their second this season in the Premier League and their first on the road. It was also their first victory at Old Trafford since 1978.

    Manager Steve Clarke was keen to praise his players rather than focus on United’s poor display.

    “We deserve a lot of credit,” he said. “We came here to be positive. We made some good late additions in the transfer window and now hopefully the supporters and everyone else can see we can have another good season.”

    wirestory

  • Israel Arrests Suspected Iranian Spy

    Israel Arrests Suspected Iranian Spy

    {{Israel’s Shin Bet security service on Sunday announced the arrest on September 11 of an Iranian “spy” carrying photographs of the US embassy in Tel Aviv.}}

    News of the arrest was released just hours after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu left for Washington and New York, determined to expose what he described as “sweet talk” by Israel’s arch-foe Iran.

    The suspect, holding a Belgian passport, was sent to Israel by Iran’s elite Republican Guards and arrested at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion international airport, Shin Bet charged in a statement.

    The domestic intelligence service identified him as Ali Mansouri, 58, and said he had enrolled in a “special operations unit of the Revolutionary Guards responsible for numerous terrorist attacks around the world.”

    He had been using the fake identity Alex Mans after being recruited last year, the agency said, naming his four alleged handlers as senior Iranian officials.

    The Shin Bet said that under questioning, the suspect had said he had been promised $1 million to use his position as a businessman to set up companies in Israel on behalf of the Iranian intelligence services to “harm Israeli and Western interests.”

    He had previously visited Israel in July 2012 and last January. An Iranian national, the suspect had in 2006 married a Belgian woman whom he had since divorced.

    On the diplomatic front, Netanyahu has been dismissive in his response to the drive by Iran’s new President Hassan Rouhani to mend fences with the international community, which culminated in a historic 15-minute telephone conversation with US President Barack Obama on Friday.

    Israel, the Middle East’s sole if undeclared nuclear-armed power, remains adamant that Iran is bent on developing a nuclear weapons capability, something it regards as a threat to its existence.

    Israeli leaders have repeatedly vowed to take military action rather than see Iran develop a bomb and have called on its US ally to take tougher action against Tehran, saying they see no real change of policy under Rouhani.

    AFP

  • French Believe Roma Should Leave France

    French Believe Roma Should Leave France

    {{A new poll published on Saturday finds a whopping 77% of French people agreeing with a recent statement by Socialist Interior Minister Manuel Valls, who said that Roma immigrants are inherently “different” and “will have to return to Bulgaria and Romania” .}}

    According to the survey, carried out by French polling agency BVA and commissioned by TV channel i-Télé and daily newspaper Le Parisien, only 22% disagree with Valls, saying “he should not stigmatise a segment of the population”.

    As for the issue of how well this particular group of immigrants adapts to French society, 93% of those polled responded that the Roma are poorly integrated. That opinion crosses political lines, with 98% of right-leaning participants and 84 percent of left-leaning participants in agreement on the question.

    The poll referred specifically to Valls’ September 24 statement, which said it was “illusory to think that we will solve the Roma problem through integration”, since, according to the interior minister, only a minority of Roma want to assimilate into French society.

    {{French left voices outrage}}

    The comments set off a storm of indignant reactions from fellow left-wing politicians.

    Housing Minister Cécile Duflot, a member of the Green Party, told fellow party members in the Western city of Angers on Thursday: “It’s not acceptable to say that there are categories [of people] within a society whose background makes it impossible for them to assimilate.”

    Valls’ comments were also slammed by Social Affairs Minister Marisol Touraine and François Lamy, a junior minister in charge of urban centres, both of whom met with President François Hollande to express their opposition, according to daily newspaper Le Monde.

    Forced evictions of Roma reached a record 10,000 in 2013, Amnesty International said in a report published this week.

    france24

  • Bombs kill 33 in Northwestern Pakistan

    Bombs kill 33 in Northwestern Pakistan

    {{Islamist violence has been on the rise in Pakistan in recent months, undermining Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s efforts to tame the insurgency by launching peace talks with the Taliban.}}

    The blasts hit outside a police station in an area crowded with shops and families. Police said it appeared at least one of the explosions had been a car bomb.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

    A crowd gathered outside the Lady Reading Hospital in Peshawar, where many of the victims had been taken. Distraught relatives frantically tried to dial mobile phone numbers of those caught up in the blasts but were unable to get through.

    Women sobbed as ambulances pulled up with more bodies.

    “Who is burning Peshawar, who is burning Peshawar?” screamed one woman in a long headscarf.

    Shopowner Sher Gul said he had made repeated trips on his motorbike to bring six people to hospital. Gul cursed a provincial government minister who came to visit the victims.

    “Why have you come so late?” Gul shouted.

    The blasts follow an attack by a Taliban faction on Peshawar’s Anglican church last Sunday that killed more than 80 people, the deadliest attack on Christians in predominantly Muslim Pakistan.

    The Taliban have repeatedly rejected Pakistan’s constitution and have called for the full implementation of Islamic law and for war with India.

    Sharif is due to meet Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly later on Sunday, only hours after Singh described Pakistan as the “epicenter of terrorism in our region”.

    Another Pakistani politician, former cricket player Imran Khan, has suggested the Taliban might open an office in Pakistan to negotiate but the suggestion drew an angry response from those caught up in Sunday’s blasts.

    “The government wants to open an office for the Taliban? What office? They are killing us, for how long do we have to suffer like this? I have no hope,” said Waheed Khan as he searched for his nephew, a rickshaw driver, among the dead and wounded.

    agencies

  • Big reform plans for China’s newest trade zone set high expectations

    Big reform plans for China’s newest trade zone set high expectations

    {{China has formally announced detailed plans for a new free-trade zone (FTZ) in Shanghai, touted as the country’s biggest potential economic reform since Deng Xiaoping used a similar zone in Shenzhen to pry open a closed economy to trade in 1978.}}

    In an announcement on Friday from the State Council, or cabinet, China said it will open up its largely sheltered services sector to foreign competition in the zone and use it as a testbed for bold financial reforms, including a convertible yuan and liberalized interest rates. Economists consider both areas key levers for restructuring the world’s second-largest economy and putting it on a more sustainable growth path.

    No specific timeline was given for implementing any of the reforms, though these should be carried out within 2-3 years, it said, adding financial liberalization may depend on adequate risk controls. Chinese state media have cautioned that dramatic financial reforms are unlikely this year.

    An executive at a foreign multinational in Shanghai said his firm was waiting for more clarity. “Is this Shenzen 2.0 heralding the beginning of a new era in trade, or a flash in the pan to simply boost economic confidence?”

    LOW-HANGING FRUIT

    Frances Cheung, economist at Credit Agricole CIB, wrote in a note that the initial focus would be on promoting trade. “We note that one thing that is relevant to the RMB (renminbi) is under Point 2, where eligible Chinese banks in the FTZ are allowed to do offshore business, which is not the opening-up of the onshore RMB market as some might have looked for.”

    The zone, formally titled the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone, is slated to open on Sunday, and China will suspend certain national laws governing the establishment of foreign businesses in the zone effective October 1.

    In addition to setting goals for improving financial services, trade and governance, the announcement details initiatives covering 18 different industries ranging from shipping and insurance to education and foreign banks.

    The creation of the zone is hoped to reinvigorate Shanghai’s economy, which has begun to lag the rest of China, and help it compete with Hong Kong as a financial centre.

    In addition, state media have announced that China will soon join negotiations for an agreement on trade in services with the World Trade Organization, and many have speculated the Shanghai FTZ is also an opening move to position China for membership in the U.S.-led Trans Pacific Partnership initiative.

    The document made no specific mention of allowing access to blocked foreign websites such as Facebook (FB.O) or Twitter from within the zone, as reported in some foreign media. However, a clause did say foreign companies might be allowed to offer “specialized telecommunications services” in the zone, and permission to offer services that break existing Chinese laws might be granted on a case-by-case basis by the state council.

  • President Kagame in Canada for Rwanda Day

    President Kagame in Canada for Rwanda Day

    {{President Paul Kagame is in Toronto, Canada where he will address the 5th edition of Rwanda Day bringing together over 3000 Rwandans living in Canada and the United States to celebrate their unifying culture and renew their commitment to the country’s progress.}}

    Themed Agaciro: Investing in our Future, the event will focus on the next chapter of Rwanda’s development and how the country will achieve its ambition of becoming a middle-income country by 2020.

    Rwanda Day comes shortly after the government announced the second phase of its Economic Development and Poverty Reduction Strategy (EDPRS2), which, over the next five years, targets economic growth of 11.5% per annum and to reduce poverty to under 30%.

    Through the previous strategy, 1 million Rwandans lifted themselves out of poverty, as the economy grew by more than 8% each year.

    This year, Rwanda also launched a landmark Eurobond, which was more than 300 times oversubscribed. It signaled to Rwanda’s intention to become a modern and dynamic economy, which is increasingly interconnected to global markets.

    As well as celebrating Rwanda’s social economic transformation, the event also seeks to bring together Rwandans to discuss new ideas about how to sustain this.

  • Kenya Intel Knew About Nairobi Terror Attacks–Report

    Kenya Intel Knew About Nairobi Terror Attacks–Report

    {{Kenya’s Intelligence apparatus had learnt of a terror plot targeting parts of Nairobi that was planned for between September 13 and 21.}}

    Reports from Kenya show that an unprecedented leak of Intelligence briefings covering the past year paint the picture of a government fully informed of an impending Al Shabaab attack ahead of the Westgate massacre.

    The leak, coming days before the National Intelligence Service ( NIS) Director General Michael Gichangi is grilled by MPs on Monday, appears to draw a line in the sand as accusations are traded over the responsibility for the attack in which at least 67 were killed.

    The 8,800-word dossier details terrorist plots and other activities by the militant group, including a direct warning of a terror plot in Nairobi between September 13 and 21.

    This is likely to be Gichangi’s line of defence when he appears before the Defence and Foreign Relations Committee. If Gichangi’s assertions cut ice, the tide could turn against other security organs and senior officials who must answer question as to what they did or did not with the Intelligence provided.

    {{Intelligence gap}}

    At a closed-door meeting of a joint committee of the House that is investigating the matter, the MPs admonished Gichangi for Intelligence gaps and security lapses that allowed terrorists to plan and execute the bloody attack.

    Defence and Foreign Relations Committee chairman Ndung’u Gethenji said “it is now time for people to take responsibility and to audit our security system.”

    The Intelligence leak claims that a security survey on key installations and shopping malls, including Westgate, essentially assessed their vulnerability to terrorist attacks and the requisite recommendations made.

    Reports by NIS are normally shared with Interior Cabinet Secretary Joseph ole Lenku and his PS Mutea Iringo, Secretary to the Cabinet Francis Kimemia (meaning President Uhuru Kenyatta must have been briefed), Inspector General David Kimaiyo and his two deputies and CID boss Ndegwa Muhoro.

    NIS submitted a Situation Report dated September 21, 2002 — Serial No.184/2012 — which indicated that at least three suspected terrorists were in Nairobi planning suicide attacks on undisclosed dates.

    {standard}