Tag: Six In The Morning

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Eric Garner ‘chokehold’ death: A grand jury blind to the evidence before it

Out of America: The decision not to bring charges after the death of a black man in police custody suggests a fatal flaw in the system

RUPERT CORNWELL Sunday 7 December 2014

At least Eric Garner has his epitaph. “I can’t breathe,” he gasped as he was forced to the ground and held by a New York police officer in the chokehold that caused his death. The phrase now serves not only as a chant by demonstrators in cities across the land. It will go down as history’s shorthand for the persecution of black suspects by law enforcement and the judicial system across the US that seems virtually routine.

Anyone – not just black people sick and tired of racist victimisation by police – who has watched the video of Garner, father of six and 43 years old, being wrestled to the ground as if he’d just committed a murder, will be astonished that a grand jury declined to bring any charges against the officer last week – even though the medical examiner at Garner’s autopsy ruled that the death was a homicide.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Thousands in shelters as Hagupit lashes Philippines

The media giant, the cleaners and the £40,000 lost wages

Oil wars: Saudi Arabia makes enemies as prices tumble

Can reforms change Mexico’s corrupt police culture?

Israel and the Palestinians: A conflict viewed through olives

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

WHO reports sharp rise in Ebola deaths

New toll of 6,928 shows a leap of about 1,200 since Wednesday and appears to include previously unreported deaths.

Last updated: 30 Nov 2014 05:40

The death toll from the worst Ebola outbreak on record has reached nearly 7,000 in West Africa, according to the World Health Organisation.

The toll of 6,928 dead showed a leap of just over 1,200 since the WHO released its previous report on Wednesday, according to a Reuters news agency report.

The UN health agency did not provide any explanation for the abrupt increase, but the figures, published on its website, appeared to include previously unreported deaths.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Red Bull-drinking jihadists, crucifixions and air strikes: inside Raqqa, the Islamic State’s capital

Bhopal 30 years on: The women of India are battling the poisonous legacy of the world’s worst industrial accident

The Jihad Cult: Why Young Germans Are Answering Call to Holy War

Death and the goddess: The world’s biggest ritual slaughter

‘Putin’s Kleptocracy,’ by Karen Dawisha

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Iran nuclear talks: Doubts over deal as deadline looms

23 November 2014 Last updated at 05:00

BBC

Doubts are growing that Monday’s deadline for a deal on Iran’s controversial nuclear programme will be met at talks in Vienna in Austria.

Both the US and Germany said the sides were working to close “big gaps”, with some suggestions that the deadline could be extended.

Six world powers want Iran to curb its nuclear programme in return for the lifting of United Nations sanctions.

Iran rejects claims that it is seeking to build nuclear weapons.

It says its programme is purely peaceful for energy purposes.

Representatives of the so-called P5+1 group – Britain, China, France, Russia, the US plus Germany – are taking part in the negotiations with Iran in the Austrian capital.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Isis in Iraq: The trauma of the last six months has overwhelmed the remaining Christians in the country

Protesters clash with police in France over young activist killed by grenade

Iran nuclear talks near ‘moment of truth’

China upholds life sentence for Uighur academic

Saudi Arabia ‘intensifies Twitter crackdown’

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

 War with Isis: Islamic militants have army of 200,000, claims Kurdish leader

Exclusive: CIA has hugely underestimated the number of jihadis, who now rule an area the size of Britain

PATRICK COCKBURN  IRBIL  Sunday 16 November 2014

The Islamic State (Isis) has recruited an army hundreds of thousands strong, far larger than previous estimates by the CIA, according to a senior Kurdish leader. He said the ability of Isis to attack on many widely separated fronts in Iraq and Syria at the same time shows that the number of militant fighters is at least 200,000, seven or eight times bigger than foreign in intelligence estimates of up to 31,500 men.

Fuad Hussein, the chief of staff of the Kurdish President Massoud Barzani said in an exclusive interview with The Independent on Sunday that “I am talking about hundreds of thousands of fighters because they are able to mobilise Arab young men in the territory they have taken.”




Sunday’s Headlines:

Pussy Riot: ‘When friendly people like us become enemies of the state, it is very strange’

Hong Kong student activists blocked from flying to Beijing to press free election case

Mexico: soldiers face charges, but not officials who tried to hide massacre

The man who was kidnapped by pirates – twice

FIFA turbulence intensifies, Rauball moots UEFA split

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

 Germany marks anniversary of fall of Berlin Wall

9 November 2014 Last updated at 02:09

BBC

Celebrations are being held in Germany to mark the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Concerts and exhibitions are being staged in the city and Chancellor Angela Merkel will later attend a huge open-air party at the Brandenburg Gate.

White balloons marking a stretch of the wall will be released to symbolise its disappearance.

The Berlin Wall was built in 1961 to stop people fleeing from Communist East Germany to the West.

Its fall in 1989 became a powerful symbol of the end of the Cold War.




Sunday’s Headlines:

War with Isis: The militants will remain until the region’s Sunnis feel safe

Protesters set fire to Mexican palace as anger over missing students grows

Heavy shelling, unmarked military columns observed in eastern Ukraine

Japanese MP’s surprise encounter paved way for meeting of leaders

Hong Kong’s post-handover leader says China won’t change mind on democracy: paper

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Virgin Galactic crash: SpaceShipTwo probe ‘may take year’

2 November 2014 Last updated at 08:38

BBC

The investigation into the Virgin Galactic spacecraft crash in California’s Mojave Desert could take about a year, the head of the US transport safety agency has said.

Christopher Hart said Virgin Galactic would be able conduct further test flights while the investigation took place.

SpaceShipTwo broke up in mid-air during a test flight on Friday.

One of the pilots was killed and the other injured.

Virgin chief Sir Richard Branson says he is “determined to find out what went wrong” and learn from the tragedy.




Sunday’s Headlines:

The West is silent as Libya falls into the abyss

Kurds march for Kobani as peshmerga arrive

Republicans favoured in ‘the Seinfeld election’

In missing students case, Mexico draws world attention it doesn’t want

Police reputation and morale at stake in Hong Kong protests

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Ebola outbreak: US nurse criticises quarantine treatment

26 October 2014 Last updated at 00:31

BBC

A nurse quarantined on her return to the US from treating Ebola patients in Sierra Leone has criticised the way she was dealt with at Newark airport.

Kaci Hickox said the experience was frightening and could deter other health workers from travelling to West Africa to help tackle the Ebola virus.

Illinois has become the third state after New York and New Jersey to impose stricter quarantine rules.

Meanwhile the US ambassador to the United Nations is to visit West Africa.

Samantha Power will travel to Guinea on Sunday, continuing later to Liberia and Sierra Leone – the three worst-hit countries.




Sunday’s Headlines:

The mystery of the 1,000 greyhounds who retire and then vanish

The Zombie System: How Capitalism Has Gone Off the Rails

ISIL waterboarding hostages, says John Cantlie

Uruguay votes for new president; marijuana reform hangs in balance

Open-air art display in D.C. meant to show plight of Syria’s refugees

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Catholic synod: Gay rights groups ‘disappointed’

19 October 2014 Last updated at 01:32

BBC

Catholic gay rights groups say they are disappointed after bishops rejected a call for wider acceptance of gay people, which had the Pope’s backing.

The draft report, which also urged more tolerance for divorcees who remarried, failed to win two-thirds backing at the bishops’ synod in Rome.

The final report says only that anti-gay discrimination is “to be avoided”.

Pope Francis has asked for the full draft document, including the rejected paragraphs, to be published.

The synod will meet again in a year’s time in an expanded form.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Ebola deaths in Liberia are ‘far higher than reported’ as officials downplay epidemic

Thai scholar may face jail for insulting king who died in 1605

Foreign interests trying to exploit my fragile nation, says Timor PM Xanana Gusmao

Abbas vows legal measures to prevent Al-Aqsa ‘attacks’

Water crisis squeezes Sao Paulo state

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Cyclone Hudhud pounds India’s Andhra Pradesh and Orissa

 12 October 2014 Last updated at 08:07

BBC

Cyclone Hudhud is pounding the eastern Indian coast, causing extensive damage and prompting the evacuation of some 300,000 people.

The cyclone, classed “very severe” and bringing winds of up to 195km/h (120mph), is passing over the coast near the city of Visakhapatnam.

Hundreds of trees have been uprooted and power lines brought down in Andhra Pradesh and Orissa states.

Two people have so far been reported killed in Andhra Pradesh.

It is feared a storm surge of up to two metres could inundate low-lying areas and hundreds of relief centres have been opened in the two states. Disaster relief teams have also been sent.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Girls worldwide are ‘living in fear of abuse’

Italy’s city mayors go to the barricades to defend same-sex marriages performed abroad

The fight to keep ‘macho men’ off election ballots in Bolivia

China detains scholar on charge of troublemaking

Gunther Holtorf’s journey around the world could be the longest road trip

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Hong Kong protesters promise to keep up occupation

Demonstrators say they will stay put as Monday deadline approaches, but offer to open access lanes

Tania Branigan in Hong Kong

The Guardian, Sunday 5 October 2014 09.20 BST


Pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong have vowed to keep up their occupation as a Monday deadline fast approaches, but are seeking compromise by offering to open access lanes.

The Hong Kong chief executive, Leung Chun-ying, announced on Saturday that protests had to be removed by Monday morning so that life could return to normal. He said officials and police would take “all necessary actions” to restore order.

In a Sunday lunchtime statement, the government said it was ready to offer a dialogue on constitutional reform with the Hong Kong Federation of Students – but only if demonstrators cleared the roads and lifted the blockade around government facilities in the downtown Admiralty area.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Muslims call for stricter hate crime laws to go with national security powers

Mexico’s train of death: Entry into the Land of the Free isn’t merely unlikely – it’s potentially lethal

Germany’s controversial Euro Hawk drone may take flight again

Nobel Prize in literature: Have you heard of these front-runners?

Here’s North Korea’s version of the iPhone

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Al-Qaeda-linked group warns US-led coalition

 Nusra Front vows retaliation over military operation in Syria as air raids target ISIL fighters besieging Kurdish town.

Last updated: 28 Sep 2014 07:10

A group linked to al-Qaeda has pledged retaliation over the ongoing air strikes in Syria, as the US-led coalition widens its assault on ISIL targets in Syria and British warplanes fly their first combat missions over neighbouring Iraq.

In its first reaction to the military operation aimed at destroying ISIL, or the Islamic State of Syria and the Levant, the Nusra Front, al-Qaeda’s Syrian branch, said the air strikes in Syria were a “war against Islam”, and threatened to attack the worldwide interests of participating Western and Arab countries.

A US attack on a Nusra base in Aleppo on the first day of the air campaign killed dozens of the group’s fighters.




Sunday’s Headlines:

War against Isis: It’s started, but do we know what we’re doing?

Hong Kong activists carry out pro-democracy protest threat

Grim life awaits refugees in Cambodia

Leader of Catalonia calls for independence referendum

Questions linger over Hamas’ role in West Bank kidnapping that led to Gaza war

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Alan Henning’s wife appeals to IS to release him

 21 September 2014

BBC

The wife of a British taxi driver being held hostage by Islamic State has pleaded with the militants to “see it in their hearts” to release him.

Alan Henning, from Eccles in Salford, was seized while on an aid mission to Syria last December.

In a statement released via the Foreign Office, his wife Barbara said he had been driving an ambulance stocked with food and water at the time.

Mrs Henning said she had sent messages to IS but had received no response.

The militants issued their threat to kill the 47-year-old in a video released last Saturday which showed the killing of another British man, David Haines.

‘Selfless man’

The full statement released from the Henning family read:

“I am Barbara Henning, the wife of Alan Henning.

“Alan was taken prisoner last December and is being held by the Islamic State.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Scientists reveal ‘fair system’ for countries to tackle climate change

Blasphemy laws silence another voice in Karachi

Ghana goes green with bamboo bikes

The Middle East and its armies

From gangsta rapper to Islamist militant

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