Tag: Six In The Morning

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

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

ISIS Extremists Claim to Behead British Hostage David Haines

 

 By Phil Helsel

Terrorist group ISIS released a video Saturday purportedly showing the execution of British aid worker David Cawthorne Haines.

If confirmed, it is the third time the organization, which has seized large swaths of Iraq and Syria, beheaded a captive and released a video of the execution, intending to send a message to Western nations. Britain recently said it would send machine guns and ammunition to Iraq to help that government battle the militants, and it is weighing whether to participate along with the U.S. in possible airstrikes in Syria against the terror group.

Haines, 44, like others in taped executions by the terror group, is forced in the new video to read a script in which he blamed his death on British Prime Minister David Cameron and the British government’s decision to join the U.S. in its battle against ISIS.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Pakistan floods: military blows up dikes to save cities from floodwaters

Social media heats up Scottish referendum

‘Turkey directly supported al-Qaeda in Syria’

‘SA spooks fixed Guinea poll’

Mystery, beauty, and a dash of menace: Twin volcanoes in Lake Nicaragua are little known adventure destination

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Ukraine crisis: Ceasefire shaken by fresh shelling

 7 September 2014 Last updated at 07:58

 

There has been fresh shelling near Donetsk airport in eastern Ukraine, raising fears that a 36-hour-old ceasefire is near to collapse.

The truce held for much of Saturday but overnight shelling in Mariupol was followed by the explosions near Donetsk airport early on Sunday.

The truce and 12-point peace roadmap was signed at talks involving Ukraine, Russia, the rebels and the OSCE.

Fighting in the east has left some 2,600 people dead since April.

Before the ceasefire was agreed on Friday, the separatists had been advancing on both Donetsk airport and Mariupol, a key city on the route to Crimea and an economic prize for any possibility of independence for the eastern Ukraine region.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Ebola outbreak: Why has ‘Big Pharma’ failed deadly virus’ victims?

How will robotic surgery help Indians failed by basic healthcare in the country?

Charity criticises Sierra Leone’s proposed Ebola lockdown from September 19

Qatar confirms arrest of UK rights workers

What’s a ‘hairy monkey’? Chinese artists share their secret

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

US jets target IS positions in Iraq

 Warplanes attack fighters in besieged northern town of Amerli and airdrop humanitarian aid to civilians trapped there.

 Last updated: 31 Aug 2014 06:34

The US military has attacked Islamic State positions in the besieged northern Iraqi town of Amerli and airdropped humanitarian aid to civilians trapped there, the Pentagon has said.

US aircraft delivered over a hundred bundles of emergency supplies and more aid was dropped from British, French and Australian planes, officials said on Saturday.

Iraqi army and Kurdish forces closed in on Islamic State fighters on Saturday in a push to break the Sunni fighters’ siege of Amerli, which has been surrounded by the fighters for more than two months.

US jets and drones have also attacked the Islamic State group’s positions near Iraq’s Mosul Dam.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Weary? In need of some sun? Relax and unwind with a trip to… Iraqi Kurdistan

Doubts over India’€™s ability to handle nuclear power expansion

African, Somali troops recapture town from al Shabaab

Bahrain arrests top human rights activist

Fukushima fallout: Resentment grows in nearby Japanese city

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

The teenage girl whose baseball success provides a flimsy bridge across America’s great racial divide

 Out of America: Mo’ne is a black 13-year-old bringing a small ray of light against the dark backdrop of Missouri

 RUPERT CORNWELL Sunday 24 August 2014

At last there’s a good news story from America. Put aside the chaos abroad and the beheadings in Iraq, the sense of a president adrift and aloof, and the violence in Ferguson, Missouri, ripping open racial wounds that seemed to be healing. Instead, consider the feats of Mo’ne Davis.

Mo’ne is a black girl, aged 13, who hails from inner-city Philadelphia – and right now she’s probably the most famous baseball player on the planet. She’s on the cover of the latest Sports Illustrated; Michelle Obama has tweeted about her and every talk show in the land has tried to land her.

Baseball is a game for males, right? Not in the case of the Taney Dragons little leaguers, for whom Mo’ne is star pitcher and hitter. Little League has its own version of the World Series, for children between 11 and 13. Girls have featured in it before, but none with the impact of Mo’ne.




Sunday’s Headlines:

China executes eight for terrorist activities including Tiananmen attack

Militias turn Libya’s capital Tripoli into no-go zone for govt, travellers

Israeli airstrikes level Gaza buildings

Separatists plan victory parade on Ukraine’s Independence Day

Pentagon struggles to defend ‘militarization’ of police forces

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Dozens defy Missouri curfew in riot-hit Ferguson

 17 August 2014 Last updated at 07:32

 BBC

US police fired smoke bombs and tear gas at a crowd which defied an overnight curfew in Ferguson, where a black teenager was shot dead by police last week.

About 150 protesters refused to disperse before a midnight (05:00 GMT) deadline in the St Louis suburb.

The governor of Missouri has imposed the curfew until 05:00 (10:00 GMT).

The move comes after a week of violent clashes between heavily armed local police and protesters.

Michael Brown, 18, was shot dead on a street in Ferguson on 9 August.

Hundreds of protesters gathered on the main road in Ferguson in poor weather conditions hours before the curfew was due to go into force on Saturday evening.




Sunday’s Headlines:

On race, America has far to go. Ferguson won’t be the last flash point

Iraq crisis: Iraqi minority says massacre of civilians not over yet

Ukraine separatists ‘receive recruits trained in Russia’

China promotes mixed marriages in Tibet as way to achieve ‘unity’

New restrictions in Kenya for travelers amid Ebola fears

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Iraq conflict: US in new air strikes on militants

 10 August 2014 Last updated at 08:20

 BBC

The US military says it has carried out a third round of air strikes on Sunni Muslim militants to defend civilians in northern Iraq.

It said jet fighters and drones had destroyed armoured vehicles that were firing on members of the Yazidi sect trapped by jihadists on Mount Sinjar.

The US authorised the strikes last week to halt the lightning advance of Islamic State (IS) in Iraq.

France’s foreign minister has arrived in Iraq to discuss the crisis.

Laurent Fabius, who landed in the capital Baghdad on Sunday morning, will also oversee the first delivery of French aid for displaced people in the Sinjar region.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Iran plane crash kills dozens

Indonesia’s five-year-old child jockeys stare down death to stave off poverty

Libya insecurity forces aid workers to leave

Aung San Suu Kyi’s party faces dilemma as Myanmar constitution bars her rise to presidency

As Erdogan makes presidential bid, Turkish media airs ‘Truman Show’

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Health crisis looms over Gaza’s death and destruction

 August 3, 2014 – 4:22PM

 Ruth Pollard

Middle East Correspondent


Gaza City: Mohamed Badran is just 10 years old but already he has lost more than most people will in a lifetime.

He is the only surviving member of his immediate family of 10 following an Israeli air strike on his home in the crowded Nuseirat Camp in central Gaza on July 30.

And now he is blind, rendered sightless in the attack that stole his family from him, in one of dozens of “mass family deaths” at the hands of the Israel Defence Forces since this latest round of hostilities began on July 8.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Syria’s dispossessed speak out: What does “home” mean now to the million refugees forced to flee across the border to Turkey?

On Monet’s beloved cliffs, villagers fight to save church from conversion into chip shop

China makes Xinjiang death toll public

Is your wardrobe human-trafficking free?

New York Times To Run Ad From Marijuana Company

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Israel-Gaza conflict: Secret report helps Israelis to hide facts

 World View: The slickness of Israel’s spokesmen is rooted in directions set down by pollster Frank Luntz

 PATRICK COCKBURN Sunday 27 July 2014

Israeli spokesmen have their work cut out explaining how they have killed more than 1,000 Palestinians in Gaza, most of them civilians, compared with just three civilians killed in Israel by Hamas rocket and mortar fire. But on television and radio and in newspapers, Israeli government spokesmen such as Mark Regev appear slicker and less aggressive than their predecessors, who were often visibly indifferent to how many Palestinians were killed.

There is a reason for this enhancement of the PR skills of Israeli spokesmen. Going by what they say, the playbook they are using is a professional, well-researched and confidential study on how to influence the media and public opinion in America and Europe. Written by the expert Republican pollster and political strategist Dr Frank Luntz, the study was commissioned five years ago by a group called The Israel Project, with offices in the US and Israel, for use by those “who are on the front lines of fighting the media war for Israel”.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Worldwide rhino horn trade continues unabated

China’s military muscle-flexing ensnarls air traffic

Nigeria on red alert after first Ebola death

Donetsk residents flee fighting; Russians report spike in Ukrainian refugees

Hundreds of human skeletons found in Bolivian mining city

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Cameron in new EU sanctions warning to Russia over plane

 20 July 2014 Last updated at 07:13

 BBC

Tougher EU sanctions against Russia will be needed if Moscow does not change its “approach” to the downing of the Malaysia Airlines plane over Ukraine, David Cameron has indicated.

The PM said the EU should stand up for its principles, amid claims Russia-backed rebels were involved.

Writing in the Sunday Times, he said it may be “time to make our power, influence and resources count”.

The Russian ambassador to the UK warned sanctions would have a negative effect.

Alexander Yakovenko said he regretted recent decisions by the US and EU to impose sanctions, claiming it “can only encourage the Ukrainian authorities to continue violence”.




Sunday’s Headlines:

The day the Rana Plaza garment workers died: New documentary tells the stories of those who survived the collapse of a clothing factory near Dhaka

New hope for Antarctic Ocean?

Aid workers free after month in captivity in Darfur: UN

Chinese tourists abandon Vietnam after oil rig row

Record-Breaking Wildfires Bear Down on Washington Communities

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