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Showing posts from August, 2019

US and China begin imposing new tariffs as trade war escalates

Chinese exports worth $125bn will face new taxes from 1 September, while China places levy on oil as agreement becomes more distant China and the United States have begun imposing additional tariffs on each other’s goods in the latest escalation of their bruising trade war that has sent shockwaves through the global economy. A new round of tariffs took effect from 0401 GMT on Sunday, with Beijing’s levy of 5% on US crude oil marking the first time the fuel has been targeted since the world’s two largest economies started their trade war more than a year ago. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/32gkwRB

Albanese says NSW Labor in 'diabolical situation' after Icac donation revelations

‘I knew nothing about this,’ opposition leader says as he pledges a comprehensive review of the party’s structures The federal opposition leader, Anthony Albanese, says Labor in New South Wales is in a “diabolical situation” as he braces for further revelations from the state’s corruption hearings and pledges a “comprehensive” review of the party’s structures. Saying the work of Icac needed to proceed “unencumbered” over the next six weeks, Albanese said the party would overhaul its procedures in NSW to ensure the “damaging” alleged conduct could not be repeated. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZIYa9E

Trump revels in 'chopper talk' as White House press lectern gathers dust

Official briefings have all but been abandoned by a president who prefers to communicate before boarding Marine One Stephen Colbert, the late night TV host, dubs it “chopper talk”. Related: Washington's great mystery: Trump’s affinity for Putin and populists baffles experts Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/32pmvTP

Joker review – Joaquin Phoenix’s villain has last laugh in twisted tale

Todd Phillips’s daring reboot of the DC Comics antihero is brilliantly brought to life by its star – with a little help from Martin Scorsese Joaquin Phoenix provides a comic-book hero for the left behind with Joker , a brilliantly insurrectionist origins story that landed like a firecracker in the midst of this year’s Venice film festival. Playing the role of Cain to the sunny Abel of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Todd Phillips’s blockbuster charts the formative years of Batman’s nemesis, rewinding to his time as a failed standup in grubby Gotham City, when he was lonesome and lost and out of joint with the world. Audaciously, it’s a film that invites us to love the monster. Eyes rolling, jaw working, Phoenix stars as Arthur Fleck, rattling with seven different medications and brandishing a laminated card that reads: “Forgive my laughter. I have a condition.” He longs to be a comedian, but goes to pieces on stage. He’d like to work as a party entertainer, but is fired when he drops a...

Call Sign Chaos review: James Mattis pulls a flanking manuever on Trump

In a memoir that is part hymn to the constitution, the former secretary of defense offers only veiled criticism of the president James Mattis was Donald Trump’s defense secretary for less than two years, resigning in December 2018. The general’s departure came with headlines but little surprise. His resignation letter omitted any praise for the commander-in-chief. “Because you have the right to have a secretary of defense whose views are better aligned with yours,” he wrote, “I believe it is right for me to step down.” Mattis had been on thin ice for a long time. At an infamous cabinet meeting in June 2017, Mattis praised the men and women of the military instead of gushing over the president. Just months later, a White House official told me Mattis had shown insufficient loyalty to Trump. But because North Korea was on the front burner – before “Little Rocket Man” had started sending Trump love letters – the president felt he needed generals around him. In the end, everyone in Trum...

US and Taliban close to deal to allow peace talks, Trump envoy says

Zalmay Khalilzad, the US envoy for peace in Afghanistan, says agreement would reduce violence and allow ‘intra-Afghan’ talks US and Taliban negotiators are close to an agreement that would reduce fighting and allow full peace talks among Afghans, a top US official said on Sunday, a day after insurgent forces stormed the strategic northern city of Kunduz. Zalmay Khalilzad, the Afghan-born US diplomat overseeing negotiations for Washington, said he would travel to the Afghan capital of Kabul on Sunday for consultations after wrapping up the ninth round of talks with Taliban officials in Qatar. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2NL9pfd

Nick Kyrgios goes out of US Open in straight sets

Australian loses 6-7, 6-7, 3-6 to Russia’s Andrey Rublev Tournament marred by series of clashes with officialdom Nick Kyrgios has crashed out in the third round of the US Open tennis in New York after losing to the Russian player Andrey Rublev in straight sets. After a run of clashes with officials at the last grand slam of the season, the Australian was dumped out after Rublev took the first two sets on tie-breaks and then won 6-3 in the third. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2NHMIIV

Arnold Schwarzenegger pays tribute to 'best friend' Franco Columbu, who dies aged 78

Actor turned politician salutes bodybuilder and former Mr Olympia who was his ‘partner in crime’ in his rise to fame The Italian bodybuilder and actor Franco Columbu, whom Arnold Schwarzenegger called his “best friend” in a moving tribute on social media, has died aged 78. A two-time Mr Olympia, Columbu appeared alongside Schwarzenegger in The Terminator , the Running Man and Conan the Barbarian. He died in hospital in his native Sardinia on Friday afternoon after taking ill while swimming in the ocean, the Associated Press reported. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZJzNZo

Blood cancer taskforce seeks to tackle diseases that kill 20 Australians a day

$150,000 fund is aimed at increasing survival rates for leukaemia, lymphoma and myeloma Blood cancer kills 20 Australians each day on average, with death rates due to double by 2035 unless something is done. The federal government has announced a $150,000 taskforce aimed at increasing survival rates for leukaemia, lymphoma and myeloma. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2NIcGMz

Boston 'straight pride' parade dwarfed by large counter-protest

Milo Yiannopoulos was ‘grand marshal’ for rightwing event Houston: Islamic group sees rightwingers rally A controversial “straight pride” parade in Boston on Saturday drew more than 1,000 counter-protesters and a few hundred supporters. The rightwing provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos was “grand marshal” of the event, for which a group calling itself Super Happy Fun America (SHFA) acquired a permit in June. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZvhWu4

Tanya Plibersek flags 'problem' with religious discrimination bill overriding states

Labor frontbencher says party would find legislation ‘difficult to support’ and negotiation required before ALP backs changes Labor frontbencher Tanya Plibersek says she sees a “real problem” with how the government’s proposed religious discrimination law overrides state legislation as she flags the need for further negotiation before the party backs the changes. The senior leftwinger said while the Labor party’s MPs were “absolutely supporters of religious freedoms”, the inclusion of a specific clause that overrides Tasmania’s Anti-Discrimination Act would be difficult for the opposition to support. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2LbKfVC

Social services minister refuses to say whether Newstart adequate

Anne Ruston says ‘it wouldn’t be easy’ to live on the $40-a-day unemployment benefit and says it’s only intended as a ‘safety net’ Social services minister Anne Ruston has refused to endorse the Newstart payment as adequate amid growing calls for it to be lifted, saying the payment was always intended as a “safety net”. Ruston said the prime minister, Scott Morrison, had already made clear the government was not considering boosting the payment. She repeatedly declined to say the unemployment benefit was enough for daily living costs such as heating and food. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2PxLxhV

Australians to rally to save Biloela Tamil family from deportation

Day of protests planned across country for asylum-seeker family flown to Christmas Island after a temporary injunction halted their removal to Sri Lanka Rallies will be held in all capital cities in Australia and the town of Biloela calling on the federal government to save a Tamil family from deportation. Australians are refusing to remain silent with a day of rallies planned across the country in the hope of saving a Tamil asylum seeker family from deportation. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2HCzCZT

Three males held over north London stabbing of teenage boy

Boy, 15, remains in critical condition after stabbing in Tottenham on Friday Three males have been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after a 15-year-old boy was stabbed in north London. The victim remains in a critical condition in hospital. Police were called to the scene on the Broadwater Farm estate in Tottenham at around 11.14am on Friday. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZpxIXj

Reporting on Hong Kong: 'What will happen to this wonderful city?'

The Guardian journalists who worked on the ground and from afar to report on the unrest in Hong Kong explain the particular challenges this story has presented The Hong Kong protests have been one of the most important stories I’ve covered this year. The outpouring from the public, the polarisation of society and the difficult situation Beijing finds itself in have been unprecedented. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2zyZoK3

Four weddings, four babies, one pair of lost knickers: celebrating 10 years of Blind date

Blind date blogger the Guyliner goes behind the scenes of the Guardian column – and finds out what happened next on five of his favourite dates Did Saturdays even exist before the Blind date column ? Not as far as I’m concerned. The start of the weekend was a joyless desert until, in 2009, Weekend magazine started sending two hapless (my words) strangers out for dinner in the hope that three courses, a bottle of house white and the terror of appearing in a national newspaper would be the accelerant a romantic spark needs to go full inferno. I have been obsessed with Blind date for most of its 10-year existence. Its simplicity is deceptive: what the daters say leaves plenty of room for interpretation. On the surface, the questions are formulaic – somewhere between inane smalltalk at a stranger’s house party and the sexless interrogation of a dietary questionnaire from your GP. But in the context of the column, they are traps – and I love to see the participants fall right in, reveali...

Hong Kong braced for weekend of protests despite cancellation of march

After 13 weeks of defiance, the movement faces a watershed amid wave of arrests and growing violence Hong Kong has braced for another weekend of mass protests as demonstrators prepared to defy a police ban and mark the anniversary of a decision by Beijing to limit democratic reforms in the semi-autonomous Chinese territory. Activists were planning protests in locations across the city on Saturday even after organisers of a major march planned for the afternoon cancelled the event, following a wave of arrests of prominent pro-democracy activists and lawmakers on Friday. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/32fbaWb

Thousands expected to join protests against Boris Johnson ‘coup’

Jeremy Corbyn calls on people to hit the streets as more than 80 demonstrations are planned Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators are expected to take to the streets across the country on Saturday to protest against Boris Johnson’s move to suspend parliament. Organisers are backing the use of civil disobedience during the wave of protests, in which demonstrators will “resist the parliament shutdown” in dozens of towns and cities. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2NIXyyC

Taliban launches 'massive' attack on Kunduz in northern Afghanistan

Assault comes as US continues to seek agreement with insurgent group on ending what is America’s longest war The Taliban have launched a new attack on one of Afghanistan’s largest cities, Kunduz, the government said on Saturday, even as the insurgent group continued negotiations with the US on ending America’s longest war. The militants, who have demanded that all foreign forces leave the country, now control or hold sway over roughly half of the country and are at their strongest since their 2001 defeat by a US-led invasion. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2MNDQSm

Queensland extinguishes native title over Indigenous land to make way for Adani coalmine

Palaszczuk government did not announce decision Wangan and Jagalingou people say makes them trespassers on their own land The Queensland government has extinguished native title over 1,385 hectares of Wangan and Jagalingou country for the proposed Adani coalmine in Queensland’s Galilee Basin - without any public announcement of the decision. The decision could see Wangan and Jagalingou protesters forcibly removed by police from their traditional lands, including lands used for ceremonies. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2HB2wJI

Space wars: Trump's ready for his next big fight – in orbit

New space command reveals fears over vulnerability of superpowers’ satellites Donald Trump’s declaration that space represents “the next warfighting domain” comes at a time when nervous superpowers are taking an idea that once belonged to the realms of fiction increasingly seriously. US military briefings leading to Trump’s formal announcement of a new, separate space command argued that “an emergent China and a resurgent Russia” have eroded what Washington traditionally believed was an arena it could dominate. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/30MJhVa

Judy review: Renée Zellweger goes full rainbow in vanilla biopic

Zellweger rises to the challenge superbly in a standard-issue heartwarmer, premiering in Telluride, that sugarcoats the sadness For Judy Garland fans, the final station of the cross in the ordeal of her last years was a five-week booking at the Talk of the Town nightclub in London in 1969, which she desperately needed for the money. In those famous and often chaotic concerts she appeared frail, unwell, tipsy or bleary-eyed: mannerisms that she had long since semi-consciously incorporated into her live act. But they were real at some level. Also real were the many flashes of the old magic; emotional arias made more glorious for having been wrenched from her battered heart. This movie is about that troubled period: a defiant last stand in full view of her passionately supportive fans. It was Judy’s emotional Alamo in the face of parasitic husbands, spiteful press and misogynist showbiz overlords – beginning with studio chief Louis B Mayer, who ruined her childhood on the yellow brick r...

Inside al-Hawl camp, the incubator for Islamic State's resurgence

Camp for Iraqis and Syrians fleeing caliphate flooded by families of Isis fighters, brewing deeper problems The vast scale of al-Hawl can be seen from miles away, on the road that leads to the camp from the west. The white tents housing the displaced women and children of Islamic State stretch out over the dusty landscape far beyond the adjacent town’s outskirts, the furthest away encroaching upon the foot of a hill. The women of al-Hawl now call it Jabal Baghuz, or Baghuz Mountain, named for the oasis town on the Euphrates River where their husbands were finally defeated in March. Deep inside the section reserved for foreigners and beyond the control of the camp’s overwhelmed guards, Jabal Baghuz is now the only place where the militant group’s so-called caliphate lives on. It is from here that the seeds of the Isis resurgence are being sown. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZzWdQV

Sirhan Sirhan, assassin of Robert Kennedy, stabbed in prison

The 75-year-old killer was hospitalised after being wounded in jail in San Diego Sirhan Sirhan, the man imprisoned for more than 50 years for assassinating Robert Kennedy, has been hospitalised after being stabbed by a fellow inmate in prison. A statement from the California corrections department said the stabbing occurred on Friday afternoon at the Richard J Donovan correctional facility near San Diego. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZDScH7

Trump tweets photo of Iran rocket site and says US 'not involved' in failed launch

US president’s release of high resolution photo raises concerns over disclosure of classified information President Donald Trump has released a photograph of an apparently failed Iranian rocket launch and said the US had nothing to do with it, prompting concerns he disclosed classified information. Tehran has made no official comment on the indications from aerial photos that a rocket exploded on Thursday on the launch pad at the Semnan Space Center in northern Iran. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2Zpy3Jq

Saudi Arabia shakeup brings in new oil minister and royal court chief

As the Aramco listing is revived, crown prince appoints a businessman to lead the oil sector and gets a new gatekeeper Saudi Arabia has announced the creation of a new natural resources ministry, separating it from the energy ministry, while replacing the head of the royal court in a wide-ranging shakeup of the government. As plans for the massive $2 trillion stock market listing of the state-owned oil company Aramco are stepped up, the kingdom’s de facto ruler and crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, has brought in a prominent businessman to head the new ministry of industry and mineral resources. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2Pu4t16

'Red hot angry': the fallout from yet another NSW Labor scandal at Icac

Its general secretary is gone but the question remains: how do you fix a party branch synonymous with sleaze and scandal? One of Labor’s favourite Chinatown eateries was packed as Kaila Murnain readied herself to speak. It was 2014, the year before the fateful Labor fundraiser at the centre of this week’s explosive anti-corruption hearings. But the scene was largely the same. The Eight Restaurant in Haymarket was at capacity, the room full of wealthy donors cosying up to some of the most powerful Labor figures in the state. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2PsBwCv

Valerie Harper, Emmy award-winning star of TV series Rhoda, dies aged 80

Harper was a breakout star on The Mary Tyler Moore Show, then the lead of her own series, Rhoda Valerie Harper, who stole hearts and busted TV taboos as the brash, self-deprecating Rhoda Morgenstern on back-to-back hit sitcoms in the 1970s, has died aged 80. Longtime family friend Dan Watt confirmed Harper died on Friday, adding the family was not immediately releasing any further details. She had been suffering from cancer for years, and her husband said recently he had been advised to put her in hospice care. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZASWRq

'An earthquake': racism, rage and rising calls for freedom in Papua

At a pivotal moment in the region’s struggle for self-determination, there is seething anger as well as hope At the base of the verdant mountains of Sentani, where dense, tropical jungle overlooks a sprawling teal lake, worshippers stream into church, men in suits and ties and sandals or batik shirts, women with colourful woven bags strung from their foreheads and slung over their backs. Grey clouds hang low over the house of worship, a wood and tin shed with concrete floors and large open windows that let in the thick humid air. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZrXyd3

Great Barrier Reef outlook now 'very poor', Australian government review says

Five-yearly report says climate change is escalating the threat and window of opportunity for action is now The outlook for the Great Barrier Reef has deteriorated from poor to very poor according to an exhaustive government report that warns the window of opportunity to improve the natural wonder’s future “is now”. The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority ’s outlook report, published every five years, finds coral reefs have declined to a very poor condition and there is widespread habitat loss and degradation affecting fish, turtles and seabirds. It warns the outlook will not improve unless there is urgent national and global action to address the climate crisis. Failure to address what it describes as the major threat facing the reef could affect the qualities that led to it being world heritage listed. Related: Cane growers support front group working to undermine Great Barrier Reef science Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/34d0s48

Eric Cantona speech: humans 'will become eternal' – unless crime or war intervene

Former star baffles audience at the Uefa Champions League draw by quoting from King Lear, before concluding: ‘I love football’ Given previous form, perhaps it should be no surprise that Eric Cantona has again prompted bafflement with a philosophical monologue loosely based on football. The player-turned-actor elicited furrowed brows from the audience at the Champions League draw with a brief but wide-ranging speech that alluded to science, immortality and war. Channelling the spirit of 1995, the year he delivered his famous “when the seagulls follow the trawler” speech, the Frenchman kicked off with a quote from King Lear as he accepted the Uefa president’s award on stage at the ceremony in Monaco. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2Ue9ppu

'Cheeky but not offensive': serial Sydney protester Danny Lim wins appeal over sign

Magistrate finds ‘CVN’T’ sandwich-board worn by prominent activist was merely ‘provocative and cheeky’ Sydney sandwich-board wearer Danny Lim’s signs displaying “CVN’T” may be cheeky but they are not criminally offensive, a Sydney magistrate has ruled. Lim, aged in his mid-70s, challenged a $500 fine for offensive behaviour after he was arrested in January in Barangaroo while wearing a sign saying “SMILE CVN’T! WHY CVN’T?” Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/32iEStx

German elections: AfD finds rich seam ​in city clinging on to coal​

Far-right party insists it is pro-women as it attacks government’s green agenda before regional polls In the 30 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall, Doreen Mohaupt has experienced the downsides and the upsides of German reunification. Born in the coal-rich Lusatia Lake District close to the Polish border, the 43-year-old was raised in an area that was once the pride of the socialist East German economy, employing about 80,000 workers. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZJqkWh

'Invest or pay the price': more than half of refugee children not in education

UN refugee chief warns of generation condemned to grow up unable to find work, as special education envoy Gordon Brown calls for urgent funding More than half of the world’s 7.1 million school-age refugee children are failing to get an education despite recent spikes in enrolment rates, the UN refugee agency has found. School shortages, oversubscribed classrooms and a lack of teachers in host countries are among the barriers faced by the 3.7 million refugee children aged five to 18 who are currently out of school, according to a UNHCR report published on Friday. The vast majority are missing out on secondary school. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/30NS1ui

Spread of measles to at-risk Pacific Islands 'inevitable' after major New Zealand outbreak

Health professionals scrambling to stop spread after more than 700 measles cases recorded in Auckland this year Public health experts are warning the spread of measles to the Pacific Islands is “inevitable” as the most serious outbreak in 20 years grips New Zealand. More than 700 cases of measles have been recorded in Auckland this year, with more than 400 of them in the more deprived suburbs of south Auckland. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZFSr4B

Asian markets rally after China's trade comments soothe nerves

Stocks in Asia rallied on Friday, following Wall Street's lead. Markets are getting a boost after China gave investors a bit of a reason to be optimistic about trade talks with the United States. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/32fjTI4

Papua protests: capital Jayapura burns during night of violence

Indonesian president calls for calm after more than 1,000 protesters take to streets amid unrest over racial slurs and calls for independence Protesters in Indonesia’s easternmost region of Papua have set buildings ablaze in the provincial capital Jayapura, forcing the state power firm to cut off electricity in some districts, state media and an executive of the utility said. Police fired tear gas to disperse demonstrators who also set fire to cars and threw stones at shops and offices on Thursday, state news agency Antara said. Protesters also torched a local parliament office. “Several public facilities and properties were damaged by rioters,” national police spokesman Dedi Prasetyo said. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2UdUDiz

The tiny islands that could explode the China-Vietnam relationship

"The Paracel Islands!" the teacher shouts. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/32a431h

South Koreans just aren't having enough kids

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Bolsonaro bans land-clearing fires in Amazon

Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro has banned the use of fire to clear land throughout the country for 60 days, in response to the massive increase in blazing fires in the Amazon rainforest that has caused international outrage. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/2ztjHZp

Former Labor MP accused of lying to Icac over $100,000 table at Bill Shorten dinner

Ernest Wong tells inquiry table was not sold for $100,000, despite being presented with email he allegedly wrote confirming it had been The former state MP, Ernest Wong, has been accused of repeatedly lying to an anti-corruption probe about whether he sold seats at then Labor leader Bill Shorten’s table to Chinese billionaire and banned donor, Huang Xiangmo, for $100,000. Wong, a state upper house member until earlier this year, helped organise a Chinese Friends of Labor fundraising dinner featuring Shorten and other high-profile Labor figures shortly before the 2015 state election. That dinner is now at the centre of an investigation by the Independent Commission Against Corruption, which has already led to the suspension of Labor boss, Kaila Murnain. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/30GFSHk

Australia cast itself as the hero of East Timor. But it was US military might that got troops in | Paul Daley

Newly released diplomatic cables show the realpolitik behind the scenes as Indonesian militias prepared to torch Dili Australia’s precise role in bringing independence to Timor-Leste two decades ago continues to simmer as unsettled business at the heart of modern Australian diplomatic and military history. Twenty years is the blink of an eye, of course. And my memories of having a front-row seat on the Australian domestic politics, and the diplomatic and military movements preceding and following the East Timorese autonomy ballot, are vivid. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2HxB0Ni

White women reap the benefits of colonialism – and we’re letting them off the hook | Ruby Hamad

We will never understand the impact of colonial oppression if we underestimate white women’s role in it, writes Ruby Hamad On 21 September 2018, at the peak of the #MeToo movement that had supposedly shattered the silence around the sexual assault and harassment of women, 75 women, most of them white, convened in Washington DC to profess their support for the embattled supreme court justice nominee, Brett Kavanaugh. A psychology professor, Christine Blasey Ford, had claimed Kavanaugh had sexually assaulted her decades earlier when she was just 15. Ford’s testimony was buttressed by two other women with similar allegations, but this was not enough to stop Kavanaugh being confirmed. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2UhDjcd

Biden pushes back against report that he told an inaccurate war story

The Democratic presidential candidate jumbled the elements of the tale, the Washington Post reported, but he’s standing by his word Joe Biden, the frontrunner in the Democratic primary race, has sought to dismiss a media report that he told a war story on the campaign trail strewn with false and inaccurate details. The former US vice president jumbled elements of multiple events in his tale about a navy captain rejecting a silver star for retrieving the body of a dead comrade, according to the Washington Post. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2L8Beg6

Hong Kong pro-democracy leader Joshua Wong arrested

The campaigner was bundled into a van while walking along street, says protest group as pro-independence politician Andy Chan also detained Hong Kong democracy activist Joshua Wong has been arrested in Hong Kong on unknown charges, according to a statement by his political organisation Demosisto. The group said Wong was “forcefully pushed into a private minivan on the street” while walking to a subway station at about 7.30am. He was then taken to police headquarters in Wan Chai. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2UdMI4P

Westminster looks at giving France money to curb Channel crossings

Priti Patel discusses increasing financial support amid hike in attempted crossings The UK government is considering increasing the amount it pays France to help deal with people trying to make the perilous Channel crossing to England using small boats, Paris has said. The proposal was discussed during talks on Thursday between the British home secretary, Priti Patel, and her French counterpart, Christophe Castaner, that were prompted by an increase in the number of such attempted crossings over the summer. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/30Lp8Pk

Italy's unlikely coalition a big blow to Salvini

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Lives at risk from surge in measles across Europe, experts warn

Measles kills 37 in first half of 2019 as number of cases tops figure for whole of last year The dramatic surge in measles across Europe is putting lives at risk, experts have said, as official figures showed the number of cases in the first half of 2019 outstripped that for the whole of last year. Data released by the World Health Organization (WHO) revealed nearly 90,000 cases and 37 deaths were reported across 48 of the 53 countries in the WHO European region in the first six months of 2019. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/30FOCNS

Why is China hiding its oil tankers from US trackers?

Signs Beijing may be importing Iranian oil as Trump’s two biggest foreign policy headaches converge In early June, a Chinese-owned supertanker abruptly went dark in the Indian Ocean, the tracking system signalling its course apparently deactivated. It was not the first ship to vanish from the monitors. The deactivation of transponders that generate a unique ID issued to ships by the International Maritime Organisation (IMO) has become increasingly familiar in recent weeks to the companies that track tankers. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2NCIkLq

Intellectually disabled man held in solitary confinement for six years in 'outrageous' case

Adrian was held in seclusion 99% of the time between 24 September 2012 and 18 June 2018 Disability advocates have expressed outrage at revelations an intellectually disabled man judged unfit to face criminal charges was effectively detained in permanent solitary confinement for six years. The case of Adrian, whose real name has been suppressed to protect his identity, is contained in a scathing report by the Queensland ombudsman into the state’s forensic disability services system . Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2MIDCfp

Religious discrimination bill: Coalition accused of weakening state human rights law

Christian Porter releases bill, which will stop employers from limiting workers’ religious expression in private following fallout from Israel Folau’s sacking A new religious discrimination bill will prevent employers from limiting the religious expression of workers in their private capacity, and will explicitly override a Tasmanian anti-discrimination law, in a move likely to spark criticism from minority groups. Releasing the long-awaited legislation following a speech at the Great Synagogue in Sydney on Thursday, the attorney general, Christian Porter, said the new laws would ensure religious people were protected in what was a “necessary and difficult balancing exercise”. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZysVy3

Fury at Townsville mayor after she attacks charities for 'enabling' homeless people's 'lifestyle'

Indigenous leader says homeless people are treated ‘like animals’, after Jenny Hill claims people with homes are choosing to stay in parks Homeless people in Townsville are treated “like animals”, a prominent Indigenous community leader has said, after the city’s mayor reprimanded charities and outreach groups for providing food and services to people living in parks. The Townsville mayor, Jenny Hill, told reporters on Wednesday she intended to confront agencies and “literally put them on the mat” for feeding and providing laundry services for the homeless, which she said “enable” them to “live a lifestyle” in public spaces. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2NEd0M4

Chinese troop movement into Hong Kong prompts unease

Movements, which have been portrayed as a scheduled troop rotation, come days ahead of anti-government protests Chinese military vehicles have been seen moving across the border into Hong Kong, in what the military said were regular troop movements, as fears rose that the city could see a Beijing-led crackdown after months of political unrest. Following witness reports of the movements in the early hours of Thursday, state-run news agency Xinhua released a report that the Hong Kong Garrison of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) was making a scheduled rotation and that it was an “annual normal routine”. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2Nz6MgJ

Witness K lawyer alleges 'extraordinary unexplained roadblock' in funding his case

Counsel for the former Australian spy tells court he applied for legal aid more than a year ago in his ‘complex’ case Counsel for the former spy Witness K has launched a broadside at Legal Aid ACT, accusing it of an “extraordinary unexplained roadblock” in approving funding for the whistleblower’s case. Witness K has decided to plead guilty in the ACT magistrates court to one charge of communicating secret information obtained in the course of his duties as an Australian Secret Intelligence Service agent by revealing Australia’s spying on Timor-Leste in 2004 during talks to carve up resources in the Timor Sea. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZzDSiE

Photos reveal ominous threat from North Korea

Satellite photos reveal what appears to be new activity at a North Korean shipyard where its submarines are built. CNN's Brian Todd reports. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/2LczMIi

Kaila Murnain breaks down at Icac saying she was 'scared' for Labor's reputation

Suspended NSW Labor boss tells inquiry she followed advice not to report potentially illegal donations out of concern for party The suspended boss of the New South Wales Labor party broke down on Thursday morning while explaining that she kept quiet about potentially illegal donations because she was “scared” for the “reputation of the party”. Kaila Murnain was removed overnight from her role as NSW Labor’s general secretary following explosive evidence to the Independent Commission Against Corruption on Wednesday that she knew as early as 2016 that Labor had likely taken unlawful donations. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2zqF4dx

The Government Just Lost In Court Over Refugee Medical Transfers

But refugees cannot ask the courts to order for transfers to Australia. View Entire Post › from BuzzFeed News https://ift.tt/2PlnqD4

Indigenous mothers losing child custody due to housing policy failure, report says

Research finds children are ending up in out-of-home care simply because they don’t have a safe place to stay Indigenous women and children have so few ways to escape domestic and family violence that mothers are losing custody of their children simply because they don’t have a safe place to stay. New research has found Indigenous women are losing their children to the out-of-home-care system “through no fault of their own, but rather as a consequence of systemic failures in housing policy and availability.” Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2NCQvaz

Safe-injection site activists arrested after blocking New York governor's office

Hundreds of drug safety advocates urge governor to approve plan for spaces they argue could save lives amid opioid crisis Thirteen activists supporting safe drug injection sites were arrested Wednesday afternoon for barricading the entrance of New York governor Andrew Cuomo’s office building. About 200 other drug safety advocates marched in front of the building in Manhattan in an attempt to pressure Cuomo to support the opening of safe injection sites in New York City – a plan that has been waiting for the governor’s approval since May 2018. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2UfTabl

Manus refugees' allowance and food rations stopped amid relocation push to Port Moresby

Men in Port Moresby seeking medical treatment also report their allowances cut Manus Island refugees have had their weekly allowances and daily food rations stopped as the Papua New Guinea government begins plans to relocate refugees and asylum seekers to Port Moresby. A 28-year-old Rohingya refugee Haroon Rashid, who is married to a local woman with whom he has two children, has had his weekly allowances and food rations stopped since June this year. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZxoIKI

Babies develop 'werewolf syndrome’ after medicine mix-up in Spain

Authorities say there are 17 known cases so far after hair loss treatment mistakenly put in reflux medicine bottles At least 17 children developed so-called “werewolf syndrome” after a major medicine mix-up, Spain’s health ministry has said. The children – some of them babies – began growing hair all over their body after being given what was thought to be omeprazole, a drug that helps with gastric reflux. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2MJuUgO

At least three dead in West Papua as protest turns violent

At least one Indonesian soldier and two civilians were killed on Wednesday in the restive Papua region At least one Indonesian soldier and two civilians were killed on Wednesday in a violent protest in the country’s restive Papua region, police have said. National police spokesman Dedi Prasetyo said a peaceful protest by 150 people against racism at the Deiyai district chief’s office turned violent when more than a thousand others tried to storm the building with arrows and machetes. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/347a3cK

James Packer's sale of Crown Resorts shares on hold amid inquiry into casino group

Melco Resorts’ plans paused while gambling authority conducts hearings in response to allegations of Crown’s links to money-laundering operations Hong Kong billionaire Lawrence Ho has put the purchase of shares in Crown Resorts from James Packer on ice as a key gambling authority prepares to conduct public hearings into the casino group. In May, Ho’s Melco Resorts group agreed to pay Packer’s private company, Consolidated Press Holdings (CPH), $1.75bn for almost 20% of Crown. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/32cmTF2

Tanya Day's arresting officer says he didn't think she needed medical attention

Constable dismisses suggestion that according to police checklist he should have taken her to hospital The police officer who arrested Tanya Day at Castlemaine train station said he did not think she needed medical attention despite police guidelines stating that intoxicated people who cannot provide intelligible answers should be sent to hospital. Senior Constable Stephen Thomas told an inquest into the 55-year-old Yorta Yorta woman’s death in custody that he also did not tell her she had been placed under arrest, saying it was “the most low-key arrest I have ever done”. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2MI6J2g

New law needed to take on far-right extremism, says Blair thinktank

Legislation would allow for hate groups to be punished before they turn to violence A new law allowing for hate groups to be designated and punished before they turn to violence is needed in order to tackle far-right extremists, according to a report by Tony Blair’s thinktank, which also seeks powers to ban marches and media appearances. Generation Identity, a racist movement that promotes a conspiracy theory that white people are being replaced by non-whites in Europe, would be among the groups targeted by new legislation, the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change report said. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/30HNNnY

New Zealand bans swimming with bottlenose dolphins after numbers plunge

Conservation research shows humans are ‘loving the dolphins too much’ in Bay of Islands region The New Zealand government has banned tourists from swimming with bottlenose dolphins in an attempt to save the struggling species. According to the department of conservation [DoC] research has shown that humans were “loving the dolphins too much” and human interaction was “having a signifiant impact on the populations resting and feeding behaviour”. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2PeHeI2

Yang Hengjun: Australia presses for writer's release as China warns against interference

Marise Payne says arrest on spying charges does not appear to be retribution for any Australian policies to Beijing Australia will continue to press for Yang Hengjun’s release, despite the Chinese government demanding Canberra stop interfering in the high-profile case , Australia’s foreign minister has said, insisting the Australian’s arrest on espionage charges is not a case of “hostage diplomacy”. Yang, an Australian author and pro-democracy blogger, has been detained, largely in solitary confinement, for seven months, and authorities in China have now announced he will be charged with espionage, an offence which potentially carries the death penalty. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZyhoTi

Global stocks mixed as the US-China trade war looms

Asian stocks were mixed Wednesday. Uncertainty about the future of US-China trade relations is still clouding markets. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/2UiKUaR

Papua New Guinea debt crisis: PM accused of veering between Australia and China

Former PM Peter O’Neill says successor James Marape delivering only ‘attractive rhetoric’ after being banished from government benches Papua New Guinea’s former prime minister Peter O’Neill has hit out at his successor, saying he was “taking PNG backwards” and condemning him for allegedly flip-flopping on asking Australia and China for assistance with PNG’s debt. O’Neill’s attack on James Marape came after he was ousted from the government benches by Marape on Tuesday. Marape asked O’Neill’s party to join the opposition because of the party’s “negative influence” and due to its “attempts to undermine this government”, the latest instance of political tumult in the country. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2HqQORO

Dave Chappelle under fire for discrediting Michael Jackson accusers in Netflix special

Standup comedian also takes aim at callout culture that sees public figures held to account by audiences Dave Chappelle has come under fire for his latest Netflix special in which he claims he does not believe Michael Jackson sexually assaulted young boys, and makes jokes at the expense of Jackson’s accusers. In a standup set that seemed designed to provoke precisely the backlash that it was critiquing, Chappelle took aim at a prevailing callout culture that sees celebrities being held to account by audiences and in the media for perceived or actual crimes and for the offensive things they say. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2UcOjrp

Naplan results 2019: year 7 and 9 writing skills have declined

Education experts say test results show more needs to be done to build foundations in primary school and help children transition to high school The latest national education test results show the writing skills of year 7 and 9 students have gone backwards over the past decade, with experts saying more needs to be done to assist struggling high school students. Preliminary results from this year’s Naplan tests, which cover reading, writing, spelling, grammar and punctuation, as well as numeracy, were released on Wednesday. While the performance of primary school students was above the 2008 average in many areas, the improvements were not seen in secondary school. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/320FsMi

Man 'dumbfounded' by invoice for $5,000 Labor donation he never made, Icac told

Evidence adds weight to suspicions fake donors used to mask origin of cash given to NSW Labor by banned donors A witness has told an inquiry probing a potentially unlawful donations scheme he was “dumbfounded” to receive an invoice for a $5,000 donation to Labor, saying he has never given any money to the party. But the man said he feared he would be the target of revenge if he spoke out, and was told by his bosses at a Chinese property development firm to go along with it. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2zmEZb0

This startup helps you find anywhere without an address

Traditional addresses don't work. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/2ZoctjK

Airline reappears 20 years after vanishing

After a delay to flights that lasted nearly 20 years, Uganda Airlines has once again taken to the skies above Africa, restoring its status as the country's national carrier. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/2NzQzrn

Brazil rebuffs $20 million in aid for Amazon fires

Opinion: Bolsonaro's ego stands in the way of saving the Amazon from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/2PjqVK0

Lotto winner's 'endless lunch break' begins

An Australian father said he was pretty sure he'd quit his job after winning the $96 million prize Tuesday in the Lucky Lotteries Mega Jackpot, according to the Australian lottery website The Lott. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/2Hu6uE1

Not-for-profit superannuation funds surge into top spot after banking inquiry

Industry funds receive 13.8% increase, while retail sector run by big banks and finance companies grow by just 0.51% Not-for-profit superannuation funds have moved into a clear position of dominance in Australia’s $2.87tn retirement savings industry following the banking royal commission, new figures show . Statistics released by the prudential regulator on Wednesday show the amount of money looked after by industry funds, which are jointly run by employers and unions, surged by $87.3bn, or 13.8%, in the year to the end of June. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/34676sS

'Shooting the messenger': water experts say NSW minister wrong to question drought findings

Correspondence shows NSW Natural Resources Commission anger at being criticised by water minister Melinda Pavey over Barwon-Darling findings The New South Wales Natural Resources Commission has warned the water minister she is “shooting the messenger” over their findings that water management in the Barwon-Darling river had brought on drought conditions in the Lower Darling three years early. The Sydney Morning Herald has obtained correspondence from the commission in which it strongly refutes the minister’s assertions that its report on management of NSW’s largest river was wrong or tarnished by a conflict of interest by its scientific expert, Professor Fran Sheldon. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2HrYX8M

1MDB global scandal: Malaysian former PM faces court over missing $540m

Najib Razak, who was toppled from power last year, is facing 25 charges in biggest trial linked to the scandal-plagued government fund The long-awaited trial of former Malaysian prime minister Najib Razak, who is charged with embezzling millions from the state in the 1MDB corruption scandal , has opened in Kuala Lumpur after months of delays. Najib, who served as Malaysia’s prime minister for nine years before being toppled from power last year, is facing 25 charges including abuse of power, and is accused of laundering 2.3bn ringgit ($540m) of a Malaysian government fund, known as 1MDB, for his own financial reward. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2znHTvV

Trans birth certificate campaign turns to other states after Victoria passes reform

Victorian MPs vote 26 to 14 to allow trans and gender-diverse people to change sex recorded on birth certificate Campaigners are setting their sights on New South Wales, Western Australia and Queensland after Victoria passed a new law to allow trans and gender-diverse people to change their recorded sex on their birth certificates on Tuesday, following a heated debate. Despite some reservations from independent members of parliament, the Victorian legislative council overwhelmingly voted in favour of the bill, 26 to 14 on Tuesday night. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZiufcZ

North Korea's new warheads could penetrate missile shield, says Japan

Pyongyang’s new short-range missile have irregular trajectory, which could outsmart interceptor missiles, minister warns North Korea appears to be developing warheads to penetrate a missile shield defending Japan, the country’s defence minister has said. Minister Takeshi Iwaya said on Tuesday Japan believed the rockets were a new short-range ballistic missile, pointing to their irregular trajectories, which theoretically could outsmart existing defence systems. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZzP4ji

Palestinian Harvard student says he was barred from US over friends' social media posts

Ismail Ajjawi, 17, was detained for hours at Boston airport and his visa was eventually cancelled A Palestinian teenager admitted to Harvard said he was detained for hours at Boston’s airport and refused entry into the United States after officers disapproved of his friends’ political comments on social media. Ismail Ajjawi, who lives in Lebanon, said that an officer also asked him about his religion during eight hours of questioning Friday at Logan international airport, according to an account he provided to the campus newspaper, the Harvard Crimson. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2MFwqAJ

'Russians have special status': politics and mining mix in Guinea

Activist alleges Russian mining companies are given advantages in country that gets third of its revenues from extractive sector When Alpha Condé started hinting he wanted to change Guinea’s constitution to allow himself a third term as president, he found a fervent supporter in an unexpected quarter. Describing Condé as “legendary”, the Russian ambassador to Guinea backed a change of the constitution to allow the octogenarian president to “reinvigorate” the country. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2MFUmUo

Brisbane city council loses court bid to prevent protest march

Magistrate says he was not satisfied by LNP-led council’s arguments the protest should be stopped because of traffic disturbance A Queensland court has upheld the rights of civil liberties protesters to march through the streets of Brisbane on Wednesday morning, after the LNP-led city council attempted to refuse authorisation because it would disrupt traffic. The Queensland chief magistrate, Terry Gardiner, ruled that he was not satisfied the council’s bid to refuse permission on grounds the protest would cause significant public disturbance “was reasonable … in a democratic society”. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2U3qJNU

Victorian murderer never to be released for horrific killing of Karen Chetcuti

Michael Cardamone will die in jail for what judge calls crime of the ‘utmost cruelty’ Sadistic Victorian murderer Michael Cardamone will remain in jail until the day he dies after losing his appeal against a life behind bars. Cardamone was jailed for life for killing his neighbour Karen Chetcuti-Verbunt in “horrifying, depraved and disgusting” circumstances near Wangaratta in January 2016. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2MDwX67

Current NSW Labor secretary saw Aldi bag filled with cash after banned donor visit, Icac hears

Inquiry told Kaila Murnain saw large bag of cash at ALP state headquarters following a visit by Huang Xiangmo The current New South Wales Labor secretary saw an Aldi bag filled with cash after a visit to the party’s state headquarters by Chinese billionaire and banned donor, Huang Xiangmo, a corruption inquiry has heard. The Independent Commission Against Corruption inquiry is currently examining the circumstances behind $100,000 in cash donations given to NSW Labor in 2015, about the time of the state election. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2KWQz31

The US has crushed Huawei's once-big ambitions

Huawei once had big ambitions to grow its presence in the United States. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/33WAySe

Above a burning Amazon, 'all you can see is death'

Bolivia's Amazon is on fire too from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/30B6qts

Hong Kong's summer of discontent is now longer than 2014's Umbrella Movement ... and isn't over yet

No one predicted this. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/2PgM2gg

Magazine publishes image of wrong model

from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/325ORlQ

We Asked Asylum-Seeking Kids Forced To Wait In Mexico What They Hoped Their Futures Would Look Like In The US

“In my country it’s hard to dream like that, you have to leave in order to reach your dream." View Entire Post › from BuzzFeed News https://ift.tt/2MBObB3

The Government Has Paid Car Washes Thousands Of Dollars To Take On Interns

"Making kids wash cars for $4 an hour doesn't boost their skills or somehow magically fix what's broken in our labour market." View Entire Post › from BuzzFeed News https://ift.tt/342V8jI

Johnson & Johnson opioid ruling explained – the key points

An Oklahoma judge has ordered the company to pay $572m for its role in creating the state’s opioid epidemic Full story here By Chris McGreal in Washington An Oklahoma judge has ordered Johnson & Johnson to pay $572m for its role in driving Oklahoma’s opioid epidemic. The landmark ruling will have wide-ranging consequences for the other opioid makers, distributors and pharmacy chains facing thousands of lawsuits across the country. Judge Thad Balkman determined that Johnson & Johnson ran a “false and dangerous” sales campaign that led to addiction and death in the state, as well as helping to fuel the worst drug epidemic in US history. These are the key points from his damning 42-page decision. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/3252sJV

John Setka: union boss' bid to fight Labor party expulsion thrown out of court

Victorian supreme court dismisses Setka’s attempt to prevent his expulsion from the ALP Union boss John Setka’s legal fight against expulsion from the Australian Labor party has been thrown out of court. The under-fire secretary of Victoria’s Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union is in the sights of federal Labor leader Anthony Albanese, who wants to expel him from the party. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2HsJqpf

Putin follows through on his threat to US

CNN's Frederik Pleitgen reports on rising fears as Russia fires nuclear-capable missiles near NATO's borders. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/327yTHP

Can You Locate Nine Of The Most Popular Countries In The World? I Say You Probably Can't

Time to put the passport down and pull the map out. View Entire Post › from BuzzFeed News https://ift.tt/2zpSCpH

Bangladesh to remove the word 'virgin' from Muslim marriage certificates

Verdict from country’s top court will see ‘virgin’ replaced with ‘unmarried’ on in landmark victory for campaigners The word “virgin” must be removed from Muslim marriage certificates in Bangladesh, the country’s top court has said, a landmark verdict after campaigners challenged the “humiliating and discriminatory” term. Under the South Asian country’s Muslim marriage laws , a bride has to select one of three options on the certificate – whether she is a Kumari (virgin), a widow or divorced. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/33ZBk0P

Ferdinand Piech, Porsche patriarch and VW saviour, dies at 82

Brilliant engineer ranks with Henry Ford and Gottleib Daimler for transforming struggling Volkswagen into world-beater Ferdinand Piech, the Porsche family patriarch who transformed Volkswagen from a struggling carmaker into a global powerhouse, has died at the age of 82. Piech, the grandson of sports car and VW Beetle pioneer Ferdinand Porsche, died on Sunday in Rosenheim, Bavaria, his wife said. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2NzrUDB

Tanya Day died in custody because of inadequate police checks, inquest hears

A coronial inquest is investigating whether racism played a part in the death of 55-year-old Indigenous woman Aboriginal woman Tanya Day died in custody because police failed to conduct adequate checks and did not see her sustain the significant head injury that caused her death, a coronial inquest has heard. Day, 55, died in Melbourne’s St Vincent’s hospital on 22 December 2017 from a brain haemorrhage caused by a traumatic brain injury sustained when she fell in the Castlemaine police cells on 5 December 2017. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZpCjYN

Dunfermline school fire: 80 firefighters battle 'very large and complex' blaze

Emergency crews were called to Woodmill high school at around 5pm on Sunday as fire burned in main building More than 80 firefighters are battling a “very large and complex” blaze at a high school in Dunfermline, Scotland. The blaze at Woodmill high school was being fought by 15 fire engines after the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service was called at 5.05pm on Sunday. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2U4tmz5

West Papua: thousands expected at fresh protests after week of violence

Rallies that began after military taunted Papuans with racist slurs have led to the government blocking internet in the region Thousands of protesters were expected to take to the streets in six regions of West Papua on Monday, one week after violent demonstrations flared across Indonesia’s easternmost provinces, leaving one dead and dozens injured. Activists expect thousands will join the protests as the population of highland areas is largely comprised of indigenous Papuans, compared with coastal towns such as Jayapura, where migrants from across Indonesia make up half of the population. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2Hqxsfz

Hong Kong protests take violent turn

Police drew their guns as protesters threw bricks and petrol bombs during one of the most violent nights Hong Kong has seen over 12 consecutive weekends of protests. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/340z09Z

The man who tried to unite India's fragmented economy has died

The man who implemented India's biggest economic reforms of the 21st century has died. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/2L9OcZJ

The hardest Trump story for the press to cover

Are members of the news media tiptoeing around obvious questions about President Trump's instability? What do the daily lies, distortions and contradictions add up to? from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/2KWmv7K

These luxury beach homes are made to cozy up to nature

While Leslie and Clifford Cohen were dreaming up the home they planned to build on a wetland property on the North Fork of Long Island in New York, their architect arrived with an unusual tool for an empty property: a 12-foot ladder. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/31ZHlsr

NSW Labor got $100,000 in cash from Chinese billionaire, Icac inquiry told

Banned donor Huang Xiangmo allegedly took cash to the former NSW Labor boss Jamie Clements at party headquarters An elaborate scheme was allegedly used to hide a $100,000 cash payment from the Chinese billionaire and banned donor Huang Xiangmo to then NSW Labor boss, Jamie Clements, the state’s anti-corruption body has heard. The Independent Commission Against Corruption on Monday began its inquiry into a complex and potentially unlawful donations scheme designed to hide the identity of Chinese donors and property developers. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/320luRK

After flight delay, agents held worst driver's license photo contest

For travelers, there are few things more annoying than a delayed flight. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/2PdZfGy

Hong Kong protests: dozens arrested as government warns of 'very dangerous situation'

Twelve-year-old among those detained after violent clashes that involved the police using water cannon and firing a warning shot Dozens of people, including a 12-year-old, have been arrested after a night of escalating violence in Hong Kong that saw police fire a warning shot near protesters and use water cannon for the first time. Police said they arrested 29 men and seven women, aged 12 to 48, for offences including unlawful assembly, possession of offensive weapons and assaulting police officers. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2HqqRSl

Australian share market drops sharply amid US-Chinese trade tensions

ASX200 index down 108.5 points as energy and tech shares lead losses The Australian share market opened sharply lower on Monday amid a new flare-up of US-Chinese trade tensions. The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was down 108.5 points, or 1.66% at 10.15am AEST, while the broader All Ordinaries was down 107.7 points, or 1.63%. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2ZqWiCr

Disney reveals new details about Star Wars hotel, Avengers Campus

Visitors to Disney's "Star Wars"-themed land in Orlando can stay immersed in a galaxy far, far away by spending two nights in a themed hotel that will be called "Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser." from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/2ZhIvCE

Trump suggests 'nuking hurricanes' to stop them hitting America – report

US president reportedly asked more than once about why national security could not bomb hurricanes Donald Trump has reportedly suggested on more than one occasion that the US military should bomb hurricanes in order to disrupt them before they make landfall. According to US news website Axios , the US president said in a meeting with top national security and homeland security officials about the threat of hurricanes: “I got it. I got it. Why don’t we nuke them?” “They start forming off the coast of Africa, as they’re moving across the Atlantic, we drop a bomb inside the eye of the hurricane and it disrupts it. Why can’t we do that?” Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/33UBG97

Placido Domingo gets standing ovation in first performance since sexual harassment claims

Concert in Salzburg marks opera singer’s first outing since nine women accused him of harassment Opera singer Placido Domingo on Sunday received a standing ovation at the Salzburg festival, his first performance after being accused of sexually harassing women. “Triumph in Salzburg, standing ovation for Domingo despite the Me Too affair,” read a headline in the regional daily Kleine Zeitung, following his performance in the Giuseppe Verdi opera Luisa Miller at the annual music and drama festival in Austria. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2PePgko

Aircraft production down 24% globally after Boeing 737 Max crashes

Aerospace lobby group slashes 2019 deliveries forecast and says prospect of no-deal Brexit making things worse Global aircraft production has fallen by a quarter after the grounding of Boeing’s 737 Max jet following two fatal accidents. ADS, the British aerospace lobby group, said 88 aircraft were delivered in July, down 24% on the same month a year ago, with the fall largely due to the slump in production of single-aisled planes such as the 737. The number of aircraft delivered in the year to date has now reached 716 but that is more than 11% lower than in 2018. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2Ntu9bg

Trump official calls Zarif's G7 appearance a 'curveball'

President Donald Trump said he had "no comment" after Iran's Foreign Minister Javad Zarif made an unexpected arrival at the G7 summit to meet with French President Emmanuel Macron. from CNN.com - RSS Channel - World https://ift.tt/2KVrUMv

Hong Kong protests: fears of clashes with triad gangsters loom in latest march

Demonstrations will take place in Tsuen Wan, leading some to fear a repeat of previous confrontations Hong Kong is braced for fresh demonstrations on Sunday in an area noted for its links to triad gangsters as the police revealed they arrested 29 people during clashes with protesters on Saturday night. Fears have been expressed among many local residents that Sunday’s march in the district of Tsuen Wan, which has a high proportion of low-income mainland migrants, will also end in violence. Many worry that pro-government gangsters might attack protesters and civilians again. Nearly two weeks ago a group of stick-wielding men wearing white shirts clashed with black-clad anti-government demonstrators and residents in Tsuen Wan , leaving several injured. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2NrMFkt

No deal will mean so many compromises for Britain: Trump will make sure of that

Concessions on food standards, data protection, taxes on tech giants … EU membership was never like this Britain’s abject weakness as a trading nation is on full display in Biarritz at this weekend’s G7 summit . The warm embrace from Donald Trump for his old friend Boris Johnson and the talk of favourable access to American markets cannot disguise how ill-prepared the UK is for life outside the European Union’s protective wall. Like a medieval tribe piously leaving the citadel even as its enemies are massing on the horizon, Britons are discovering that Brexit is going to demand many more compromises than were ever forced on it by majority voting inside the EU. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2Nr594F

নিজভূমে নির্যাতিত, পরভূমে আশা-নিরাশার দোলাচলে ৭ লক্ষ ৩০ হাজার রোহিঙ্গা

মায়ানমারে, যেখানে তারা জাতিগত নিধনের শিকার হয়েছে, সেখানে তাদের জন্য কি অপেক্ষা করছে তার আতঙ্কই রোহিঙ্গাদের মায়ানমারে ফিরে যেতে বাঁধা দিচ্ছে। কিন্তু বাংলাদেশের শরণার্থী শিবিরে জীবন কঠিন। কোথাও যাওয়ার মত একটি জায়গাও তাদের নেই। from World News https://ift.tt/2Hnfk6c

Something rotten? Trump's state over Denmark at heart of a madcap week

As the president rants about buying Greenland and battling China, some say the TV presidency has finally jumped the shark “I am but mad north-north-west,” declares Hamlet. “When the wind is southerly, I know a hawk from a handsaw.” Related: Trump seems to think he's an emperor – but we are not entertained Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2KRvKGi

The Observer view on Syria and the west’s shameful failure to act | Observer editorial

The slaughter in Idlib is intensifying and millions have nowhere to go. The whole stability of the Middle East is at risk The crisis in Syria does not feature high on the agenda at this weekend’s G7 summit in Biarritz. The absence of two key players – Russia and Turkey – means any substantive initiatives are unlikely. Donald Trump has washed his hands of the conflict, although Pentagon chiefs are resisting his demand to withdraw all US forces. European leaders, beset by many other urgent problems, seem to prefer not to think about Syria at all. This attitude is intolerably shortsighted. Western governments’ neglect of the eight-year war and, in particular, its impact on civilians is a sadly familiar phenomenon, but no more acceptable for being predictable. Their involvement has been sporadic and uneven, spurred from time to time by headline events such as chemical weapons attacks or war crimes too horrific to ignore. The campaign against Islamic State (Isis) was given priority. Co...

Russian officials blame food for traces of radiation in doctor treating blast victims

Authorities say one man had cesium-137 in his muscle tissue, probably from ‘fish, mushrooms, lichens, algae’ A doctor who helped treat victims of the mysterious nuclear blast in Russia more than two weeks ago has traces of radiation in his muscle tissue, said regional officials, who blamed the readings on his diet rather than the explosion. “Cesium-137 ... has the feature of accumulating in fish, mushrooms, lichens, algae,” Russian specialists told regional officials on Friday, according to Meduza , an independent Russian media organisation. “With a certain degree of probability, we can assume that this element got into the human body through the products of food.” They said the man was not in danger. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2KV2dLS

The Observer view on Jair Bolsonaro and the Amazon wildfires | Observer editorial

The ecological carnage we are witnessing will reverberate far beyond the borders of Brazil Smoke from the wildfires burning in the Amazon plunged São Paolo, 1,700 miles from the scenes of destruction, into an eerie darkness last Monday afternoon. The temporary blackout made it impossible for residents of Brazil’s largest city to ignore the ecological carnage taking place on the other side of their country. But the ruin of rainforest we are currently witnessing will reverberate far beyond the borders of Brazil in decades to come. Home to 3m species – one in 10 of all known plants and animals on Earth – the Amazonian rainforest is the most biodiverse place on the planet. Three-quarters of plant species there are unique to the rainforest. The Amazon is also home to a million indigenous people, thousands of whom have lost their lives in recent decades defending the forest against commercial interests. Continue reading... from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2L5rMc8