Tag: InternationalNews

  • Bolivian Journalist Attacked in Studio, Burnt

    {{A Bolivian radio journalist Fernando Vidal has been attacked while he was conducting a radio show in the southern city of Yacuiba.}}

    Staff at Radio Popular said four masked men broke into the studio, poured petrol over presenter Fernando Vidal and set him alight.

    Mr Vidal, 78, and another staff member are being treated for burns.

    Relatives said Mr Vidal had been reporting on smuggling in the border area when the attack happened.

    Mr Vidal suffered burns on his face, arms and chest, according to his son-in-law, Esteban Farfan.

    A studio technician, Karen Anza, was also injured in the attack.

    Some eyewitnesses said the attackers had also thrown Molotov cocktails.

    Mr Farfan said his father-in-law had been a harsh critic of the provincial government and had voiced his criticism on air.

    He said he believed there were political reasons for the attack, but police have not yet commented on possible motives.

    Three people have been arrested on suspicion of taking part in the attack.

    Yacuiba is only three kilometres (less than two miles) from the Argentine border.

    And while there is a high-volume of cross-border commerce, journalists such as Mr Vidal had been denouncing a rise in smuggling, particularly of liquid petroleum gas.

  • Obama Warns of Dangerous Hurricane

    {{Barack Obama, the US president, has said the public needs to prepare for Hurricane Sandy to make landfall on the East Coast on Monday evening and predicted millions of people will be affected by the storm.}}

    Obama said those in the region affected by the Hurricane should listen to local and state officials on whether or not to evacuate.

    The president expressed confidence that emergency crews are prepared to tackle the storm preparations needed and the clean-up that will be necessary in the coming days.

    “This is going to be a big and powerful storm and all across the Eastern Seaboard I think everybody is taking the appropriate preparations,” he told reporters after having a briefing on the storm in the White House Situation Room.

    “This is a serious storm and it could potentially have fatal consequences if people haven’t acted quickly.”

  • Honda Lowers Profit Forecast

    {{Honda has cut is annual profit forecast after anti-Japan protests in China hurt its sales in the country, its second-largest market.}}

    The protests, triggered by a row over disputed islands, saw Chinese consumers shun Japanese products. Honda’s sales in China dipped by 40% in September.

    The carmaker has forecast a net profit of 375bn yen ($4.7bn; £2.9bn) for the financial year ending 31 March 2013.

    That is down from its earlier projection of 470bn yen.

    Honda’s shares fell 4.7% to 2,399 yen on the the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The firm said it expected income at its China unit to decline further in wake of the dispute between the two countries.

    Japanese firms usually release their earnings after the close of markets, but Honda posted its latest report on its website three hours ahead of schedule by mistake.

  • Iran Warships Dock in Sudan

    {{An Iranian naval task force has docked in Sudan, carrying with it a “message of peace and security to neighbouring countries”, Iranian state media reported.}}

    The vessels, which include a corvette and freighter, set sail from Iran last month, the Irna news agency said.

    Their arrival comes six days after explosions destroyed an arms factory in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum.

    Sudan has complained to the UN that Israel bombed the factory, which is believed to have been operated by Iran.

    Israel has neither confirmed nor denied responsibility for the incident.

    The Iranian navy was quoted as saying the visit was aimed at “conveying the message of peace and friendship to the neighbouring countries and ensuring security for seafaring and shipping lanes against marine terrorism and piracy”.

  • Racism Spoiling English Soccer

    {{Racism, a problem that English soccer thought it had solved, has returned to haunt the country that gave birth to the game, with the English Premier League’s global popularity on the line after a succession of scandals.}}

    With Luis Suarez and John Terry having already earned bans for racist abuse, the issue lurched into new territory on Sunday when top flight referee Mark Clattenburg was accused of racially abusing Chelsea’s John Mikel Obi.

    It came after a match between Chelsea and Manchester United that had been a memorable encounter, full of incident and intrigue, but when the accusations against Clattenburg emerged a few hours later, the mood soured.

    The seriousness of the claims was not lost on commentators on Monday.

    “If a match official has used racial insults or language to a player, then he’s for the high jump,” former Premier League referee Jeff Winter told BBC radio. “It’d probably be the end of his career, if proven.”

    The allegations are being seen as all the more shocking because English soccer was supposed to have banished the monkey chants and banana-throwing of the 1970s and 1980s during the period of aggressive gentrification heralded by the launch of the Premier League in 1992, as ticket prices and television exposure soared.

    England came to be seen as a safe haven for black footballers and by 2002, Arsenal were fielding teams containing as many as nine black or mixed race players.

    When English teams have found themselves the target of racial abuse, it has been portrayed in the national media as a problem that now belongs to other parts of the world.

    After footage emerged of England’s Danny Rose being taunted with monkey noises by fans during an under-21 match in Serbia earlier this month, the shock reflected the fact that such scenes have not been witnessed in England for decades.

    News24

  • Israel Deports African Migrants

    {{Israel has turned back dozens of African asylum-seekers, mostly Eritreans, trying enter the country from Egypt, Human Rights Watch and two other NGOs said on Sunday.}}

    “Since June, Israeli forces patrolling Israel’s newly constructed … border fence with Egypt’s Sinai region have denied entry to dozens of Africans, mostly Eritreans,” HRW and Israeli NGOs the Hotline for Migrant Workers and Physicians for Human Rights said in a joint statement.

    “Thousands of (Eritrean asylum-seekers) flee persecution in their country every year.

    “In forcing asylum seekers and refugees to remain in Egypt and in deporting others, Israel is putting them at risk of prolonged detention in Egyptian prisons and police stations where they cannot claim asylum,” it added.

    They also face “forcible return to Eritrea, and serious abuse by traffickers in the Sinai region.”

    The NGOs implored Israeli to abandon its policy, reminding the Jewish state it signed the 1951 Refugee Convention in Geneva, which requires “all countries to respect the principle of nonrefoulement,” a principle of international law which prohibits turning over a victim of persecution to his persecutor.

    “Not only are there credible reports that Israeli soldiers are blocking asylum seekers at the border, but also that they are using violence to do so,” HRW lawyer Gerry Simpson said.

    According to the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), more than 80 percent of Eritreans seeking asylum throughout the world are recognised as refugees, the statement added.

  • Benin President’s Doctor Plotted to Poison Leader

    {{The Benin state prosecutor said last week that the doctor of President Boni Yayi, along with his niece and a government minister, were behind a failed to plot to poison him. The trio were arrested.}}

    The Benin president’s doctor and his niece were a part of a failed plot to poison the leader of the West African nation by changing his medicine with something toxic, the state prosecutor said.

    Prosecutor Justin Gbenameto said Tuesday that Dr. Ibrahim Mama Cisse, one of the president’s nieces Zouberatou Kora and Former Minister of Trade Moudjaidou Soumanou have been charged with conspiracy and attempted murder.

    The three were arrested Sunday and have been in a civil prison in Cotonou since.

    Gbenameto said that the niece and doctor were each promised payment of 1 billion CFA ($1.9 million) if they carried out the poisoning, and that a fourth person was involved in the plot, businessman Patrice Talon.

    The plot to poison Benin President Boni Yayi, however, was foiled the president’s niece had informed her sister who then told the president, the state prosecutor said.

    The prosecutor said the plot was largely planned during the president’s recent visit to Brussels, Belgium.

    “The niece who accompanied President Boni Yayi during this trip would have been contacted and invited to the hotel where the businessman Patrice Talon was staying,” he said, adding that Talon asked Kora to give her uncle the drugs through the physician.

    “I will deliver an international arrest warrant against Mr. Patrice Talon. He must respond to his acts,” said Gbenameto.

    The prosecutor said they determined that Soumanou picked up drugs at the Cotonou airport on Oct.19, and gave them to Dr. Cisse.

    The drugs from Soumanou are “drugs that the head of state usually takes but were this time substituted and replaced by toxic ingredients,” according to the prosecutor’s statement.

    “The judge will decide what happens next,” Gbenameto said.

    The lawyer for Dr. Cisse and the former minister said, “We can’t say under what conditions the statements were obtained and what was in those statements. I have not even been able to consult them.”

    “There is sufficient evidence to suggest that a plot may have existed, but we can’t say by what side at this moment,” said the lawyer Joseph Djogbenou.

  • Google To Meet President Hollande over Content Bill Dispute

    {{Google’s executive chairman Eric Schmidt will meet with French President Francois Hollande on Monday as the Internet giant wrangles with Paris over a bill that would force search engines to pay for content, a government source said.}}

    Schmidt’s meeting with the president will be preceded by one with Communication and Culture Minister Aurelie Filippetti, the source said on condition of anonymity.

    Google has warned that it would exclude French media sites from its search results if France adopts a bill that will force search engines to pay for content.

    A letter sent by Google to several French ministerial offices this month said it “cannot accept” such a move and the company “as a consequence would be required to no longer reference French sites”.

    Google said a law which would require it to make payments to media sites for displaying links to their content, would “threaten (Google’s) very existence”.

    Leading French newspaper publishers last month called on the government to adopt a law imposing a settlement in the long-running dispute with Google, forcing it and other search engines to share some of the advertising revenue from user searches for news contained on media websites.

    Their demand follows the German government approving in August draft legislation that would force search engines to pay commissions to German media websites.

    The culture minister Filippetti told a parliamentary commission last week that she was in favour of the idea, calling it “a tool that it seems important to me to develop”.

    She said she was surprised by the tone of Google’s letter, telling AFP that “you don’t deal with a democratically-elected government with threats.”

    AFP

  • Mega Earth Quake Strikes off Canadian Coast

    {{A magnitude 7.7 earthquake struck off the west coast of Canada, but there were no reports of major damage. }}

    Residents in parts of British Columbia were evacuated, but the province appeared to escape the biggest quake in Canada since 1949 largely unscathed.

    The U.S. Geological Survey said the powerful temblor hit the Queen Charlotte Islands just after 8 p.m. local time Saturday at a depth of about 3 miles (5 kilometers) and was centered 96 miles (155 kilometers) south of Masset, British Columbia.

    It was felt across a wide area in British Columbia, both on its Pacific islands and on the mainland.

    “It looks like the damage and the risk are at a very low level,” said Shirley Bond, British Columbia’s minister responsible for emergency management said. “We’re certainly grateful.”

    The National Weather Service issued a tsunami warning for coastal areas of British Columbia, southern Alaska and Hawaii, but later canceled it for the first two and downgraded it to an advisory for Hawaii.

  • 30 Killed in Iraq Bomb Attack on Eid al-Adha

    {{At least 30 people have been killed in a series of attacks around Iraq, with dozens more injured.}}

    Twin bomb attacks in Baghdad’s mainly Shia neighbourhood of Sadr City on Saturday evening killed at least 13.

    Hours earlier, a bomb near a playground in the Bawiya neighbourhood of the capital killed several people, including at least three children.

    Authorities had put security measures in place to try to prevent attacks over the four-day holiday of Eid al-Adha.

    Another bomb exploded near Baghdad on a bus carrying Shia pilgrims, some of whom are reported to be Iranian.