Anti-Islamic rally expands in Germany
Anti-Islamic rallies are expanding rapidly in eastern Germany. The country's leaders are concerned that the movement could lead to broader social unrest.
A demonstration in Dresden drew about 15,000 people on Monday. Participants rallied against Islamic extremism and demanded restrictions on the inflow of Muslim refugees from the Middle East.
The weekly event was started in October by a group calling itself Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West. It initially drew about 500 people, but soon grew sharply. Similar rallies are now being held in other cities.
Most participants are ordinary citizens, but some are thought to be members of far-right groups with xenophobic ideals.
Chancellor Angela Merkel told a news conference on Monday that there's freedom of assembly in Germany, but there's no place for incitement and lies about people who come from other countries.
More than 500 young people are said have traveled from Germany to join the Islamic State militant group in Iraq and Syria. Germans are concerned about the possibility of terrorist attacks by the returning recruits.
German leaders are alarmed that the anti-Islamic rallies could inflame animosity against an estimated 4 million Muslims in the country, and lead to social unrest.
A demonstration in Dresden drew about 15,000 people on Monday. Participants rallied against Islamic extremism and demanded restrictions on the inflow of Muslim refugees from the Middle East.
The weekly event was started in October by a group calling itself Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West. It initially drew about 500 people, but soon grew sharply. Similar rallies are now being held in other cities.
Most participants are ordinary citizens, but some are thought to be members of far-right groups with xenophobic ideals.
Chancellor Angela Merkel told a news conference on Monday that there's freedom of assembly in Germany, but there's no place for incitement and lies about people who come from other countries.
More than 500 young people are said have traveled from Germany to join the Islamic State militant group in Iraq and Syria. Germans are concerned about the possibility of terrorist attacks by the returning recruits.
German leaders are alarmed that the anti-Islamic rallies could inflame animosity against an estimated 4 million Muslims in the country, and lead to social unrest.
US, Iran resume nuclear talks
Diplomats from the United States and Iran have resumed talks on Iran's nuclear program after Iran and 6 major powers failed to meet the November deadline for a deal.
Foreign ministers of the 5 permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany agreed with their Iranian counterpart on November 24th to extend their deadline for an agreement on Iran's nuclear development until the end of June next year.
The ministers said that while progress had been made, there are still some serious gaps to close.
The Iranian media reported that the acting deputy secretary of the US State Department, Wendy Sherman, met Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi in Geneva on Monday.
Foreign ministers of the 5 permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany agreed with their Iranian counterpart on November 24th to extend their deadline for an agreement on Iran's nuclear development until the end of June next year.
The ministers said that while progress had been made, there are still some serious gaps to close.
The Iranian media reported that the acting deputy secretary of the US State Department, Wendy Sherman, met Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi in Geneva on Monday.
119 journalists abducted in 2014
An international media advocacy group says 119 journalists were kidnapped this year, an increase of 32 from last year.
The Paris-based Reporters Without Borders said in a report that 66 journalists were killed in 2014, 5 fewer than in the previous year.
The group installed a shipping container in front of the Eiffel Tower on Tuesday to highlight the case of an imprisoned journalist.
It said a number of journalists were kidnapped for ransom by Islamic State militants and others. 47 journalists were kidnapped in Syria and Iraq.
The group says the beheading of journalists for propaganda purposes had rarely taken place before.
It says the murders have become more barbaric and the number of abductions is growing rapidly in an attempt to prevent independent news coverage.
The Paris-based Reporters Without Borders said in a report that 66 journalists were killed in 2014, 5 fewer than in the previous year.
The group installed a shipping container in front of the Eiffel Tower on Tuesday to highlight the case of an imprisoned journalist.
It said a number of journalists were kidnapped for ransom by Islamic State militants and others. 47 journalists were kidnapped in Syria and Iraq.
The group says the beheading of journalists for propaganda purposes had rarely taken place before.
It says the murders have become more barbaric and the number of abductions is growing rapidly in an attempt to prevent independent news coverage.
Abbott orders ‘sweeping investigation’ into deadly hostage crisis
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott on Wednesday ordered a sweeping investigation into this week’s deadly Sydney hostage crisis, Reuters said. The decision came after tough new security laws and the courts failed to stop a convicted felon from walking into a Sydney cafe with a concealed shotgun. Three people were killed, including hostage taker Man Haron Monis, when police stormed a cafe in the city early Tuesday. Australia passed sweeping security laws in October aimed at stopping its citizens from going to fight alongside jihadists in conflicts in Iraq and Syria.
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott on Wednesday ordered a sweeping investigation into this week’s deadly Sydney hostage crisis, Reuters said. The decision came after tough new security laws and the courts failed to stop a convicted felon from walking into a Sydney cafe with a concealed shotgun. Three people were killed, including hostage taker Man Haron Monis, when police stormed a cafe in the city early Tuesday. Australia passed sweeping security laws in October aimed at stopping its citizens from going to fight alongside jihadists in conflicts in Iraq and Syria.
China to build 3rd Beijing airport over congestion problems
China has approved a third airport for the capital, Beijing, to reduce congestion and chronic delays, AP said. The massive new airport will be built 46km south of the city center and take five years to build, according to a China Daily report. It is expected to handle 72 million passengers per year and will take the pressure off Beijing Capital International Airport in the northeast. This world’s second-busiest airport handled more than 83 million passengers last year.
China has approved a third airport for the capital, Beijing, to reduce congestion and chronic delays, AP said. The massive new airport will be built 46km south of the city center and take five years to build, according to a China Daily report. It is expected to handle 72 million passengers per year and will take the pressure off Beijing Capital International Airport in the northeast. This world’s second-busiest airport handled more than 83 million passengers last year.
Bulgaria detains 3 foreigners bound for Syria
Bulgaria has detained three foreigners, wanted in Spain on terrorism charges, on their way to take part in the conflict in Syria, Reuters said. The two Moroccans and a Brazilian were held on Monday at a border crossing with Turkey, according to Bulgaria’s state security agency. Extradition procedures will be initiated as Interpol had issued arrest warrants for the three suspects.
Bulgaria has detained three foreigners, wanted in Spain on terrorism charges, on their way to take part in the conflict in Syria, Reuters said. The two Moroccans and a Brazilian were held on Monday at a border crossing with Turkey, according to Bulgaria’s state security agency. Extradition procedures will be initiated as Interpol had issued arrest warrants for the three suspects.
4 Pakistani Taliban killed by US drone strike in Afghanistan
A US drone strike in eastern Afghanistan killed four Pakistani Taliban members and seven other insurgents, Reuters reported. The missiles killed the militants on Tuesday afternoon as members of the Pakistani Taliban were attacking a school in the Pakistani city of Peshawar, according to Mahlem Mashuq, the governor of Sherzad district in Nangarhar province. “Eleven insurgents, four of them Pakistani Taliban, were traveling in a pickup truck that was hit by a drone strike, killing all of them,” Mashuq said. The Pakistani and Afghan branches of the Taliban are loosely allied and operate across the porous border.
A US drone strike in eastern Afghanistan killed four Pakistani Taliban members and seven other insurgents, Reuters reported. The missiles killed the militants on Tuesday afternoon as members of the Pakistani Taliban were attacking a school in the Pakistani city of Peshawar, according to Mahlem Mashuq, the governor of Sherzad district in Nangarhar province. “Eleven insurgents, four of them Pakistani Taliban, were traveling in a pickup truck that was hit by a drone strike, killing all of them,” Mashuq said. The Pakistani and Afghan branches of the Taliban are loosely allied and operate across the porous border.
An urgent need for dialogue, ceasefine in Ukraine
President Vladimir Putin has held a teleconference with the German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and his Ukrainian and French counterparts, Petro Poroshenko and Francois Hollande. Ukrainian crisis and the urgent need for a lasting ceasefire in the Donbass region topped the agenda, the Kremlin announced. The Kremlin noted that one of the “priorities” now is to exchange hostages, and the removal of heavy weapons from the demarcation line. Providing economic and aid assistance to east Ukraine was also stressed. All sides agreed on the “importance” of holding a contact group meeting to facilitate the Minsk Accord.
Afghan Taliban condemns deadly school attack in Pakistan
The Afghanistan Taliban movement condemned the attack by the Pakistani Taliban on a military school that killed 141 people, mostly children, on Tuesday. "The intentional killing of innocent people, children and women is against the basics of Islam and this criteria has to be considered by every Islamic party and government," the movement’s spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement as quoted by Reuters. The Pakistani Taliban is not directly affiliated with the Afghan Taliban movement.
NATO doubles number of flights near Russian borders - Russia top brass
NATO has boosted the number of intelligence flights near Russian borders, Russian Air Force chief Viktor Bondarev said. Over 3,000 flights have been registered in total in the border zone in 2014, thus doubling the figures of 2013. The routes are very close to the border which allows taking intelligence from areas almost 500 km over the border, Bondarev said. The statement comes shortly after a Russian plane was accused of a dangerous approach with a Swedish civil plane last Friday. The Air Force Chief stressed that such reports are used to divert attention from NATO concentrating its forces near Russia.
At least 25 killed in Yemen’s Houthi areas as 2 car bombs explode
At least 25 people were killed when two car bombs exploded in Radaa city in Yemen’s central province of al-Bayda, Reuters reported, citing local and medical sources. The first car bomb exploded near a checkpoint manned by Shiite Houthi rebels while a school bus was passing, killing 15 students. The second car blast happened near the house of an official in the area rumored to support Houthis, killing 10. Radaa is seen as a bastion of the Yemen-based Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. The Houthis captured the capital Sanaa on September 21.
Obama, Kerry condemn Taliban attack on Pakistan school
US President Barack Obama on Tuesday said the school attack that left more than 100 children dead in Pakistan’s Peshawar demonstrates the “depravity” of the terrorists responsible. Obama said later the US government was committed to working with Pakistan to combat terrorists. US Secretary of State John Kerry, speaking in London, said the culprits behind the siege served a “dark and almost medieval vision." He added that “this act of terror angers and shakes all people of conscience.”
35 Turkish football fans go on trial over ‘attempt to stage coup’
Thirty-five Turkish football fans have gone on trial accused of attempting to stage a coup during mass protests last year, Reuters said. The Besiktas supporters face charges described by rights groups as an abuse of justice. Prosecutors are seeking life sentences for them, accusing the fans of helping organize the protests that erupted in Istanbul’s Taksim Square in May 2013. The protests grew into a challenge to the then prime minister, now president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
More than 6,800 dead from Ebola – WHO
The Ebola death toll has risen to more than 6,800 people, almost all of them in West Africa, the World Health Organization said Monday. As of December 13, there had been 18,464 cases of infection from the deadly virus in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, and 6,841 people had died, AFP reported. Sierra Leone last week overtook Liberia as the nation with the most infections, with 8,273 cases and 2,033 deaths as of December 13.
Kerry lobbies Palestinian negotiators to avert UN ‘end occupation’ resolution
US Secretary of State John Kerry was in last-minute talks with Palestinian negotiators last night over a UN bid to force Israel to withdraw from Palestinian land, AFP said. Kerry met chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat to persuade him not to rush ahead with a draft UN resolution seeking to set a two-year timetable for an end to the Israeli occupation. It was expected to be submitted to the UN as early as tonight. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier warned that European backing for the Palestinians could harm his country.
Israel’s Arrow ballistic missile shield ‘fails’ 1st live interception test
Israel’s upgraded Arrow ballistic missile shield failed its first live interception test on Tuesday, Reuters said, citing security sources. Operators of the Arrow 3 battery at Palmahim Air Base on the Mediterranean coast reportedly canceled the launch of its interceptor missile after it failed to lock on to a target missile fired over the Mediterranean. “There was a countdown to the launch, and then nothing happened,” according to one source. The Defense Ministry said that a target missile was launched and carried out its trajectory successfully. Arrow 3 interceptors are designed to fly above the Earth’s atmosphere to destroy incoming nuclear, biological or chemical missiles.
7 arrested in Spain for recruiting women for Islamic State
Spanish and Moroccan police have arrested seven people suspected of recruiting women to go to Syria and Iraq to support Islamic State insurgents, Reuters said. Four women and a man were arrested in Barcelona and the Spanish North African enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla, the Spanish Interior Ministry said Tuesday. Two men were detained in the Moroccan town of Fnideq, close to Ceuta. Those arrested were accused of forming a network to find, recruit and send women to Syria and Iraq. It was not clear whether any of the affected women were being recruited specifically to fight for the ultra-radical jihadist movement.
Iran says ‘good atmosphere’ in nuclear talks with US
Tehran said on Tuesday that bilateral nuclear talks with the US were proceeding in a good atmosphere, Reuters said. Monday’s session “lasted more than six hours and proceeded in a good ambience,” according to Iran’s chief negotiator and deputy foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi. “Solutions exist in some cases, in others there is need for more effort and discussions,” he said in televised remarks. Differences between the two sides remain over key issues such as Tehran’s uranium enrichment capacity and how fast economic sanctions should be lifted.
100 Syrian soldiers, 80 jihadists killed in fight over Idlib military base – report
Around 100 Syrian soldiers and 80 Islamist fighters were killed during a two-day battle over the Wadi al-Deif military base, Reuters reported, citing the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. Al-Qaeda’s Syria wing, the Al-Nusra Front, overran the base, situated next to the country’s main north-south highway in Idlib province on Monday, the monitoring group said. Two other Sunni Muslim militant groups, Jund al-Aqsa and Ahrar al-Sham, also took part in the battle.
Britain reopens embassy in Cairo after 9-day suspension
The British Embassy in Cairo reopened on Tuesday after suspending public services nine days ago for security reasons, Reuters said. Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said he was “very grateful for the close co-operation from the Egyptian government which has made this re-opening possible.” The embassy was closed to the public on December 7. The Canadian embassy closed a day later.
Pakistani Taliban take hundreds of students, teachers hostage at Peshawar school
Taliban gunmen in Pakistan reportedly took hundreds of students and teachers hostage on Tuesday in a military-run school in the northwestern city of Peshawar. At least three students were killed and 28 injured in the attack, Reuters said citing a hospital official. At least six armed men had entered the Army Public School, and about 500 students and teachers were believed to be inside, the military said. Taliban spokesman Muhammad Umar Khorasani said that “suicide bombers have entered the school, they have instructions not to harm the children, but to target the army personnel.”
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