Tag: Six In The Morning

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Israel strikes Syrian military research center, US official says

By Robert Windrem, Jim Miklaszewski and Andrea Mitchell, NBC News

Israeli jets bombed a military research facility north of Damascus early Sunday, a senior official told NBC News — the second Israeli attack on targets in Syria in recent days.

Heavy explosions shook the city, and video shot by activists showed a fireball rising into the sky after Sunday’s strikes, according to Reuters.

Syrian media also reported that the target was the Jamraya military research center, which Israel hit in January, Reuters said. The center is about 10 miles from the Lebanese border.

Reuters reported that a Western intelligence source said the operation hit Iranian-supplied missiles that were en route to the Hezbollah militia in Lebanon.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Exclusive: Syrian aid in crisis as Gulf states renege on promises

Expats take their vote home for opposition

China’s Africa ‘master plan’ debunked

Hundreds protest against China chemical plant

Bahrain’s medics politicised by crisis

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Dhaka building collapse: Frantic effort to reach survivors

28 April 2013 Last updated at 07:42 GMT

Rescuers are frantically trying to save about nine people located in the wreckage of a collapsed factory complex in the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka.

The BBC’s Anbarasan Ethirajan at the scene says it is a race against time before officials bring in heavy machinery.

He says the smell of decomposing bodies is making some rescuers ill.

More than 350 people have died since Wednesday’s disaster and hundreds more are missing.

On Sunday, two more people were pulled alive from the rubble of the eight-storey building in the suburb of Savar as the rescue operation entered its fifth day.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Election favourite’s daughter takes to the streets to win the heart of Punjab

Syria and sarin gas: US claims have a very familiar ring

North Korea set to stage major military drill

We are heading to Khartoum: Sudan rebels

U.S. role at a crossroads in Mexico’s intelligence war on the cartels

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

 Boston bombs: Officials wait to question Dzhokhar Tsarnaev

21 April 2013 Last updated at 02:38 GMT

A top US interrogation group is waiting to question the surviving suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings.

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19, was arrested late on Friday when he was found seriously injured in a suburban backyard after a huge manhunt.

He is under armed guard in hospital. Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick said the suspect was stable, but not yet able to communicate.

The teenager’s brother, Tamerlan, died after a shoot-out with police.

Three people were killed and more than 170 others injured by Monday’s twin bombing, close the finish line of the Boston Marathon.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Chinese earthquake kills more than 150

Worldwide, 20 per cent of children go unvaccinated

Flotilla raid fallout haunts Israel-Turkey talks

Egyptian police crack down on armed protesters

Paraguay election preview: Right-leaning Colorado Party likely to win

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Kerry in Japan for talks on North Korean tensions

14 April 2013 Last updated at 08:00 GMT

The BBC

US Secretary of State John Kerry has arrived in Japan, the last stop of his four-day Asian tour which has focused on tensions on the Korean peninsula.

North Korea has recently threatened attacks against South Korea and the US, sparking alarm in the region.

After meeting China’s top leaders on Saturday Mr Kerry said China was “very serious” in its pledge to help resolve tensions with North Korea, its ally.

Mr Kerry has said the US will defend itself and its allies from any attack.

Speculation has been building that the North is preparing a missile launch, following reports that it has moved at least two Musudan ballistic missiles to its east coast.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Guantanamo Bay – President Obama’s shame: The forgotten prisoners of America’s own Gulag

Film-maker captures Israeli spy chiefs’ doubts over covert killing operations

Anti-terror march in Munich ahead of NSU trial

Africa’s economic boom: Five countries to watch

Venezuela tightens security ahead of vote

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Iran nuclear talks unproductive

Officials from six world powers and Iran have ‘long and intensive discussions’ in Kazakhstan, but don’t get far on the nuclear issue, an EU official says.

By Paul Richter, Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON – The latest round of international negotiations over Iran’s disputed nuclear program concluded Saturday with no sign of progress and the future of the fitful diplomatic effort uncertain.

Officials from Iran and the six world powers had “long and intensive discussions” in the two-day session in Kazakhstan, but ended “far apart on the substance,” Catherine Ashton, the European Union foreign policy chief, said in Almaty.

The group didn’t schedule another meeting, as they usually have done in the past to show that diplomacy would continue with at least low-level conversations. Officials also said the two sides did not narrow their differences in the final minutes, as often happens.




Sunday’s Headlines:

NORTH KOREA

Diplomats stay put despite North Korean warning to leave

Long road ahead for CAR’s shaky leadership

Are Sharia councils failing vulnerable women?

Venezuela’s interim President Maduro addresses a topic Chávez largely avoided – crime

Hollywood’s China syndrome: Plots and characters changed to suit huge new audience

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Libya’s south teeters toward chaos – and militant extremists

Libya’s long-neglected, isolated southern region has grown more lawless since the fall of Moammar Kadafi. Only ill-trained tribal militias hold Islamist extremists at bay.

By Jeffrey Fleishman, Los Angeles Times

SABHA, Libya – Their fatigues don’t match and their pickup has no windshield. Their antiaircraft gun, clogged with grit, is perched between a refugee camp and ripped market tents scattered over an ancient caravan route. But the tribesmen keep their rifles cocked and eyes fixed on a terrain of scouring light where the oasis succumbs to desert.

“If we leave this outpost the Islamist militants will come and use Libya as a base. We can’t let that happen,” said Zakaria Ali Krayem, the oldest among the Tabu warriors. “But the government hasn’t paid us in 14 months. They won’t even give us money to buy needles to mend our uniforms.”




Sunday’s Headlines:

Nato alarm over Afghan army crisis: loss of recruits threatens security as handover looms

Egyptian comic arrested for insulting president

North Korea feels it is ‘being provoked’

Algeria sanctions imam union to stem Salafist influence

The speeches written but never given

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

A decade after Iraq invasion, America’s voice in Baghdad has gone from a boom to a whimper

By Ernesto Londoño, Sunday, March 24, 7:35 AM

BAGHDAD – The United States set the tone for its new relationship with Iraq a decade ago with a bombing campaign dubbed “shock and awe,” and spoke with a booming voice during the ensuing years as it shaped the country’s future.

Today, America’s voice here has been reduced to a whimper.

With no troops on the ground to project force and little money to throw around, the United States has become an increasingly powerless stakeholder in the new Iraq. It has failed to substantively rein in what it sees as government abuses that have the potential to spark a new sectarian war. It also has had little success in persuading Baghdad to stop tacitly supporting Iran’s lethal aid to Damascus, an important accelerant in the neighboring conflict.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Cyprus bankruptcy crisis talks set to go to the wire with new deal including 20% levy on large deposits at main bank

France confirms death of North African warlord Abou Zeid

Will Mexico see a new narco reality under President Peña Nieto?

Sri Lanka’s anti-Muslim campaign fuels discord

A Point of View: Chess and 18th Century artificial intelligence

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Chinese President Xi Jinping calls for renaissance

17 March 2013 Last updated at 04:57 GMT

The BBC

The new Chinese President, Xi Jinping, has said he will fight for “the great renaissance of the Chinese nation,” in his first speech as head of state.

He was speaking at the end of the annual National People’s Congress.

At a rare news conference later, new Premier Li Keqiang said Beijing would “win the trust of the people”, pledging to cut government spending.

The comments come as the Communist government has completed a once-in-a-decade leadership transition.

Mr Li, who already holds the number two spot in the Communist Party, is now taking over the day-to-day running of the country, succeeding Wen Jiabao.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Iraq war 10 years on: ‘We don’t stay out late because we’re still afraid’

The Antarctic is left defenceless to tourism

Cypriots rush to banks in wake of bailout levy

Top Syrian general ‘defects to rebels’

Count begins after candlelight vote in Zimbabwe

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Under cover of darkness, Afghan women head to battle

By Mandy Clark, Correspondent, NBC News

KABUL, AFGHANISTAN — Severely outgunned, the battle was going badly. It seemed like certain defeat. Then, from out of the crowd stepped a young girl of around 14. She grabbed the pole from the fallen flag-bearer, held it up, and called out to her brothers-in-arms to fight to the death.

Though she was shot dead, her rallying cry was seen as the turning point of the 1880 Battle of Maiwand; a triumph for the Afghans, and a devastating loss for British forces during the Second Anglo-Afghan War. Her name was Malalai, Afghanistan’s Joan of Arc.

“If you go back into history, before we only had one female soldier named Malalai, but now I have a lot of Malalais in my Special Forces,” said Colonel Jalauddin Yaftaly, who heads the elite units. There are more than 1,000 women in the Afghan Army – and about two dozen have made it into Special Forces.




Sunday’s Headlines:

How a U.S. Citizen Came to Be in America’s Cross Hairs

Letters and secret files reveal the tormented life of Lina Prokofiev

Argentina’s worry over Falklands

Can Nicaragua protect the waters it won?

Kazakhstan’s independent media under fire

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

‘A concentration camp for little boys’: Dark secrets unearthed in KKK county

Excavators discover 50 bodies buried in the grounds of a boys’ borstal, which was only shut in 2010

DAVID USBORNE   FLORIDA  SUNDAY 03 MARCH 2013

For years, almost no one at the Dozier School even knew about the burial ground in a clearing in the woods on the edge of campus. It was forbidden territory. The soil here, churned in places by tiny ants, holds more than the remains of little boys. Only now is it starting to give up its dark secrets: horror stories of state-sanctioned barbarism, including flogging, sexual assault and, possibly, murder.

That the Arthur G Dozier School – a borstal for delinquent boys founded in 1900 – was not a gentle place was well-established. Boys as young as six were chained to walls, lashings with a leather strap were frequent and, in the early decades, children endured enforced labour, making bricks and working printing presses. When it was closed in 2011, it had already been the subject of separate federal and state investigations.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Chadian army chief claims troops killed al-Qaida terrorist behind Algeria plant attack

Three sisters raped and murdered: the tragedy that engulfed an Indian village

Kenya’s neighbors apprehensive as polls near

Hamas leader plays to win

Analysis: Castro brothers’ successor may inherit a very different Cuba

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