Tag: Six In The Morning

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Copenhagen shootings: Police kill ‘gunman’ after two attacks

     15 February 2015 Last updated at 08:10



Police in Copenhagen say they have shot dead a man they believe was behind two deadly attacks in the Danish capital hours earlier.

Police say they killed the man in the Norrebro district after he opened fire on them.

It came after one person was killed and three police officers injured at a free speech debate in a cafe on Saturday.

In the second attack, a Jewish man was killed and two police officers wounded near the city’s main synagogue.

Police say video surveillance suggested the same man carried out both attacks. They do not believe any other people were involved.

“We assume that it’s the same culprit behind both incidents, and we also assume that the culprit that was shot by the police task force… is the person behind both of these assassinations,” Chief Police Inspector Torben Molgaard Jensen told a news conference.




Sunday’s Headlines:

It’s the little lies that torpedo the news stars – as Brian Williams has found to his cost last week

 The War Next Door: Can Merkel’s Diplomacy Save Europe?

War against Islamic State settling into new regional ‘normal’

S Korea mulls law against abuses after ‘nut rage’

Mainstream Japanese society slowly working to accommodate sexual minorities

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

India election: Kejriwal party ahead in Delhi – exit poll

   7 February 2015 Last updated at 15:32

BBC

Voting has ended in the Delhi state elections which are seen as a popularity test for Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The anti-corruption Common Man party (Aam Admi) of former tax inspector Arvind Kejriwal is in the lead and could win, early exit polls suggest.

Mr Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has fielded former policewoman Kiran Bedi as its pick for chief minister.

Turnout is estimated at more than 60%. Official results are due on Tuesday.

Over 13 million people were eligible to vote.

The turnout underlines the significance of the vote which is seen as the first real test for the prime minister since his convincing victory in general elections last summer, says the BBC’s Sanjoy Majumder in Delhi.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Brutal killing of a samba ‘queen’ exposes dark world behind the glitter of carnival

Isis in Iraq: Britain has no plan for tackling the militants, and no idea who’s in charge

Poroshenko: Ukraine ready for ‘unconditional ceasefire’

Taliban justice winning favour in Afghanistan

Nigeria postpones elections, focuses on major offensive against Boko Haram

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

ISIS: Japanese hostage beheaded

 

By Steve Almasy, CNN

Updated 0255 GMT (1055 HKT) February 1, 2015


A newly distributed ISIS release appears to show the decapitated body of captive Japanese journalist Kenji Goto, after an English-language lecture is given by masked ISIS member “Jihadi John” to the people of Japan.

The video, 67 seconds long, was released Saturday as others before it, by ISIS media wing Al Furqan Media, and cannot be authenticated by CNN.

“We are deeply saddened by this despicable and horrendous act of terrorism and we denounce it in the strongest terms,” Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said in Tokyo, according to broadcaster NHK. “To the terrorists, we will never, never forgive them for this act.”




Sunday’s Headlines:

Blogger takes on Mexico’s drug gangs by publishing vital news on the latest shootouts, abductions and cartel roadblocks

Showdown looms for Beijing and Hong Kong

Palestinians in Syria cut off from aid once more

Why Paris terrorist wore a GoPro

The Swedish Schindler who disappeared

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

ISIS claims it’s beheaded one Japanese hostage, offers a swap for the other

 

By Jason Hanna and Greg Botelho, CNN Updated 0419 GMT (1219 HKT) January 25, 2015

A picture and audio posted online Saturday purport to show that one of two Japanese hostages held by ISIS has been killed after a deadline for ransom passed. It also appears to relay the group’s new demand for the other’s freedom: a prisoner exchange.

The static image, shown in a video file posted by a known ISIS supporter, shows surviving Japanese hostage Kenji Goto, alone, in handcuffs and dressed in orange, holding a photo of what appears to be beheaded compatriot Haruna Yukawa.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said Sunday that the video is “highly credible.” U.S. authorities said they had no reason to doubt its authenticity.

Abe told Japanese broadcaster NHK that the killing was “abominable” and “unforgivable,” demanding the immediate release of Goto.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Asylum seekers forcibly removed from Darwin detention in middle of the night

America: Land of the free, home of the political dynasty

Greece to choose between austerity and change in parliamentary polls

Attention turns to a prisoner named Sajida al-Rishawi as Islamic State makes new demands after killing hostage Haruna Yakuwa

Experts agree, the tide is turning in fight against Ebola

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

 Pope Francis: Huge crowds gather in Manila for Mass

  18 January 2015 Last updated at 05:27

BBC

Huge crowds have gathered to see Pope Francis celebrate an outdoor Mass in the Philippine capital Manila.

Thousands of people arrived at Rizal Park on Sunday morning, hours before the Mass is due to begin.

Twenty years ago, more than five million people attended a Mass celebrated here by Pope John Paul II.

The Vatican said Pope Francis would dedicate the service in part to the victims of Typhoon Haiyan, which devastated the country in 2013.

The Mass will be the Pope’s final full day in the Philippines, where there are 80 million Catholics, concluding his six-day tour of Asia.




Sunday’s Headlines:

If all right-thinking people are united against terrorism, where are the ‘Je suis Nigeria’ banners?

“Islamic State” releases hundreds of elderly Yazidis

Executions a ‘headache’, but must go ahead, says Indonesian A-G

Niger death toll rises after cartoon protests

New Snowden documents show that the NSA and its allies are laughing at the rest of the world

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Paris attacks: A city reeling after 72 hours which saw the staff of a satirical magazine gunned down, two police officers shot dead and two sieges end violently

  Cole Moreton charts the chain of bloody events that stunned France

COLE MORETON   Sunday 11 January 2015

They got what they wanted. From the moment the Kouachi brothers climbed out of their black Citroën in a quiet street in Paris on Wednesday morning it was inevitable that they would die.

Everything they did and said in the following 48 hours suggested they wanted to be martyrs. Not for Islam, whatever they claimed, but for a corruption of that faith, a cult that takes the name of Allah but worships death and power.

“I was ready to die in battle,” said Chérif Kouachi as long ago as 2007, but that sounds noble and this was not. Instead he put on military clothing and a balaclava, loaded a pair of Kalashnikovs and walked with his brother towards the office of a satirical magazine called Charlie Hebdo, in the middle of a chilly morning in Paris.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Assad’s Secret: Evidence Points to Syrian Push for Nuclear Weapons

Another massacre? Why Nigeria struggles to stop Boko Haram

China’s Secretive Space Program Takes A Step Into The Open

No Internet in Cuba? For some, offline link to world arrives weekly

The Scottish mother of Japanese whisky

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

 Sony cyber-attack: North Korea calls US sanctions hostile

 4 January 2015 Last updated at 07:52

BBC

North Korea has described new sanctions imposed in response to a major cyber-attack against Sony Pictures as part of a hostile and inflammatory US policy.

The US placed sanctions on three North Korean organisations and 10 individuals after the FBI blamed Pyongyang for the cyber-attack.

North Korea praised the attack on Sony but denied any involvement in it.

It came as Sony was about to release The Interview, a comedy about a plot to assassinate North Korea’s leader.

Sony initially cancelled plans to show the film, before deciding to release it online and at a limited number of cinemas.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Dresden crowds tell a chilling tale of Europe’s fear of migrants

War with Isis: The West is wrong again in its fight against terror

The year ahead in science

Jewish settlers attack US officials visiting West Bank

Villagers: Boko Haram abducts 40 boys, young men in northeastern Nigeria

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

NATO to hold ceremony closing Afghan mission

Event arranged in secret due to threat of Taliban strikes in Afghan capital, which has been hit by repeated bombings.

Last updated: 28 Dec 2014 07:10

NATO will hold a ceremony in Kabul formally ending its war in Afghanistan, officials said, after 13 years of conflict and gradual troop withdrawals that have left the country in the grip of worsening conflicts with armed groups.

The event was arranged in secret due to the threat of Taliban strikes in the Afghan capital, which has been hit by repeated suicide bombings and gun attacks over recent years.

On January 1, the US-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) combat mission will be replaced by a NATO “training and support” mission.

The closing of NATO’s combat mission comes at the end of the country’s deadliest year during the war, which saw at least 4,600 Afghan soldiers and police killed and many other civilian deaths.

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Gunman kills two New York police officers

21 December 2014 Last updated at 06:33

BBC

A gunman has shot dead two police officers sitting inside a patrol car in New York before killing himself.

The head of the New York police said the men had been “targeted for their uniform”. The gunman then ran into a subway station where he shot himself.

Earlier he had shot and injured his ex-girlfriend and had posted anti-police messages on social media.

President Barack Obama – who is on holiday in Hawaii – said he condemned the killings unconditionally.

“Officers who serve and protect our communities risk their own safety for ours every single day and they deserve our respect and gratitude every single day,” he said in a statement.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Pakistan dares to ask: will school attack finally end myth of the ‘good Taliban’?

Banda Aceh ten years on: A decade after the tsunami, the province is slowly rebuilding itself

West’s sanctions on Russia bite, but backlash could hurt

Cuba harbours one of US’s most wanted fugitives, Assata Shakur

Tunisians set to vote in landmark elections

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

UN members agree climate deal at Lima talks

14 December 2014 Last updated at 07:36

BBC

United Nations members have reached an agreement on how countries should tackle climate change.

Delegates have approved a framework for setting national pledges to be submitted to a summit next year.

Differences over the draft text caused the talks in Lima, Peru, to overrun by two days.

Environmental groups have criticised the deal as a weak and ineffectual compromise, saying it weakens international climate rules.

The talks proved difficult because of divisions between rich and poor countries over the scale and scope of plans to tackle global warming.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Ten years on, a survivor’s fear of torture doesn’t go away

A Greek island – yours for the price of a London flat

Egypt refers hundreds to military tribunals

Farhana Yamin’s simple yet radical idea: zero emissions

‘Stupid’ US sanctions won’t undo my government: Maduro

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