Tag: Six In The Morning

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

 Hundreds arrested at Occupy Oakland; protesters break into City Hall

By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

Sgt. Christopher Bolton of the Oakland Police Department told msnbc.com that the number arrested was likely between 200 and 300. “We are still processing the arrests,” he said. He was speaking after the release of a statement on the Oakland City website that put the number of arrests at 200. “That figure is probably on the low side and we don’t have a confirmed total yet,” said. Sgt Bolton. In the statement, released in a PDF file format, Oakland Mayor Jean Quan said: “Once again, a violent splinter group of the Occupy Movement is engaging in violent actions against Oakland. The Bay Area Occupy Movement has got to stop using Oakland as their playground.” The statement also said there were reports of damage to exhibits inside City Hall during the protest.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Apple hit by boycott call over worker abuses in China

Is Sarkozy about to throw in the towel?

A Papua New Guinea wedding: Face paint, grass aprons and pigs

Nigeria pressured to end Boko Haram violence

Active 200-km fault found off Honshu’s Kii Peninsula

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Gingrich wins South Carolina primary  

Former US house speaker raises the possibility of a lengthy campaign by beating the Republicans’ favourite, Romney.

Last Modified: 22 Jan 2012 07:30

Gingrich, the former speaker of the House of Representatives, took roughly 40 per cent of the vote. His victory means that three different candidates have won the first three contests in the state-by-state Republican primary, reflecting a party electorate that has yet to make up its mind.

Rick Santorum, a former senator from Pennsylvania, won the Iowa caucuses on January 3, and Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts, won the New Hampshire primary on January 10.

Speaking at a late-night victory rally in Greenville on Saturday, Gingrich complimented his rivals before laying into Obama, whom he called a “radical” who would transform the United States into a European-style socialist state.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Beijing releases pollution data after public pressure

Thousands of women could be at risk from ‘silent Thalidomide’

Writers’ protest runs foul of Indian law

For activists, Egypt revolution still on a year later

A Point of View: The tyranny of unwelcome noise

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Blacks in New Orleans cry foul over French Quarter curfew

The City Council says stricter rules are meant to protect kids, but critics accuse members of wanting to keep low-income blacks out of sight of tourists.

By Richard Fausset, Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Atlanta– From a distance, it seemed like common sense: an ordinance meant to keep children away from an open-air night-life zone with more than 350 places to buy booze, an abundance of strip joints and a 300-year-old reputation for iniquity.

But last week, as the New Orleans City Council approved a strict curfew for youths 16 and younger in the French Quarter, it sparked an incendiary debate that laid bare some of the tensions over race and police priorities that the Louisiana city – which suffers from the nation’s highest per capita murder rate – is struggling to resolve as it navigates its post-Hurricane Katrina future.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Syria unrest: Arab League to discuss observer mission

Cambodia’s lost temple, reclaimed from the jungle after 800 years

Burma’s opposition prepares for the unexpected after Aung San Suu Kyi agrees to contest elections

Men of steel revive the heart of Gotham

ANC centenary draws praise from African leaders

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

US president signs controversial defence bill

 Barack Obama signs into law new provisions regarding counterterrorism and fresh sanctions against Iran.

Last Modified: 01 Jan 2012 04:44

Barack Obama, the US president, has signed a wide-ranging defence bill into law, putting into place new provisions that regulate the detention, interrogation and prosecution of those suspected of terrorism, as well as imposing fresh sanctions on Iran.

In a statement accompanying his signature to the $662bn bill, Obama said that he was signing it despite having “serious reservations” about the provisions relating to terrorism, contending that politicians in the US congress were attempting to restrict the ability of counterterrorism officials to protect the country.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Syria accused of reneging on Arab League pledge to release 700 prisoners

China’s sights on moon

Cameroon pins hopes on Mobilong diamond field

Mexico’s drugs war: Lessons and challenges

Strange case of a fake Ibsen play that has gripped Scandinavia

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

 Pope calls for worshipers to remember ‘essence’ of Christmas

 

By the CNN Wire Staff

December 25, 2011

Pope Benedict XVI presided over Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve, delivering a homily that focused on the “essence” of the holiday rather than the “commercial celebration” it has become.

“Today Christmas has become a commercial celebration, whose bright lights hide the mystery of God’s humility, which in turn calls us to humility and simplicity,” the pope said after recalling the story of Christmas. “Let us ask the Lord to help us see through the superficial glitter of this season, and to discover behind it the child in the stable in Bethlehem, so as to find true joy and true light.”




Sunday’s Headlines:

Sudan army ‘kills’ key Darfur rebel Khalil Ibrahim

Iraqi VP refuses to face court in Baghdad

New sign of rising power for new North Korean leader’s uncle

For politically aware songs, the ’00s were all for naught

CALIF. Tenn Becomes Youngest To Climb 7 Summits

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

‘The war is over’: Last US soldiers leave Iraq

The last American troops crossed the border from Iraq into Kuwait early Sunday, ending the U.S. military presence there after nearly nine years.

By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

As the last convoy left Iraq at daybreak Sunday, soldiers whooped, bumped fists and embraced each other in a burst of joy and relief, The Associated Press reported.

NBC News’ Richard Engel tweeted from the border: “The gate to #iraq is closed. Soldier just told me, ‘that’s it, the war is over.'”

The final column of around 100 mostly U.S. military MRAP armored vehicles carrying 500 U.S. troops trundled through the night along an empty highway, across the southern Iraq desert to the Kuwaiti border.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Force-fed and beaten – life for women in jail

Philippines steps up search for flood survivors

Is Puerto Rico becoming a narco-state?

Gabon’s ruling party set for easy victory

Angelina Jolie’s harrowing war film startles the critics

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

UN climate conference approves landmark deal

New accord will put all countries under the same legal requirements to control greenhouse gases by 2020 at the latest.

Last Modified: 11 Dec 2011

The president of a United Nations climate conference in South Africa has announced agreement on a programme mapping out a new course by all nations to fight climate change over the coming decades.

The 194-party conference agreed on Sunday to start negotiations on a new accord that would put all countries under the same legal regime to enforce their commitments to control greenhouse gases. Approved by 2015, it would take effect by 2020 at the latest.

However, key components of the accord remain to be hammered out, and observers say the task will be arduous. Thorny issues include the still-undefined legal status of the accord and apportioning cuts on emissions among rich and poor countries.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Immigrant cleaner leads revolt against Spanish mortgage trap

Defecting Syrian soldier tells of his marriage torn apart by brutal conflict in Homs

Good heavens, it’s a dream come true

ANC offers Zanu-PF a hand

Police employ Predator drone spy planes on home front

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

In Gaza, lives shaped by drones

 

By Scott Wilson, Sunday, December 4

GAZA CITY – The buzz began near midnight on a cool evening last month, a dull distant purr that within moments swelled into the rattling sound of an outboard motor common on the fishing boats working just offshore.

At a busy downtown traffic circle not far from the dormant port, a pickup truck full of police pulled up abruptly. The half-dozen men spilled into the streets.

“Inside, inside,” the officers, all of them bearded in the style favored by the Hamas movement that runs Gaza, urged passersby. Then, pointing to the sky, one muttered, “Zenana, zenana.”




Sunday’s Headlines:

Revealed: true cost of the Christmas toys we buy from China’s factories

Inside the shell of Gaddafi’s gleaming city

Contemporary art world ‘can’t tell good from bad’

Russians vote in nationwide parliamentary poll

Mexico drug war casualty: Citizenry suffers post-traumatic stress

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Mexico seeks to fill drug war gap with focus on dirty money

The evolving anti-laundering campaign could change the tone of the Mexican government’s battle by striking at the heart of the cartels’ financial empire, analysts say.

By Ken Ellingwood and Tracy Wilkinson, Los Angeles Times

November 27, 2011


Reporting from Mexico City– Tainted drug money runs like whispered rumors all over Mexico’s economy – in gleaming high-rises in beach resorts such as Cancun, in bustling casinos in Monterrey, in skyscrapers and restaurants in Mexico City that sit empty for months. It seeps into the construction sector, the night-life industry, even political campaigns.

Piles of greenbacks, enough to fill dump trucks, are transformed into gold watches, showrooms full of Hummers, aviation schools, yachts, thoroughbred horses and warehouses full of imported fabric.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Looming Congo election sparks deadly violence

Rich nations accused of climate-change ‘bullying’

News that’s fit to spin: meet the Fox of China

Govt launches campaign to sell FDI in multi-brand retail

Conservatives mount expensive air assault on Obama

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Around the Fukushima plant, a world left behind

 

By Chico Harlan, Published: November 20

Namie, JAPAN – Eight months ago, people left this place in haste. Families raced from their homes without closing the front doors. They left half-finished wine bottles on their kitchen tables and sneakers in their foyers. They jumped in their cars without taking pets and left cows hitched to milking stanchions.

Now the land stands empty, frozen in time, virtually untouched since the March 11 disaster that created a wasteland in the 12-mile circle of farmland that surrounds the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Syrian Baath Party building ‘hit by rockets’ in Damascus

Tibet rocked by wave of self-immolation

Spain election: Rajoy’s Popular Party predicted to win

Hiking the Redwoods with California’s ‘Squatchers’

Kenya finds cleaner government is just a keystroke away

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