WORLD NEWS

World News

Latest news from and about the homeland

In recent weeks Yemen’s Houthi armed group has shot down seven US Reaper drones worth over $200m. The drones destroyed between 31 March and 22 April mark Washington's most significant material loss.  Three of the drones were destroyed in the past week, suggesting an improvement in the Houthis’ ability to strike high-altitude US aircraft.  The drones were conducting surveillance or…

Jail for Pakistani doctor who helped CIA

A doctor who helped the US secret service has been jailed for 30 years by a tribal court.

Dr Shakil Afridi ran a fake vaccination programme is Abottabad to gather information on its residents for the CIA.

The information gathered may have led to the killing of Osama bin Laden in a covert US operation in Abbottabad in 2011.

Islamabad reacted with anger at the operation, which it saw as a violation of its sovereignty.

US approves tightening of Iran sanctions

The US senate has passed a bill approving the tightening of sanctions on Iran.

The sanctions are designed to put pressure on Iran to halt its nuclear programme.

The bill will make it mandatory for US firms to disclose any business related to Iran and will target the Iranian Revolutionary Guard and its activities.

Opposition leader charged over rally - Malaysia

The Malaysian opposition leader, Anwar Ibrahim, was charged on Tuesday for participating in an electoral reform rally last month.

Two fellow members of the People's Justice Party were also charged with violating a new law that overseas public gatherings.

The rally, held in Kuala Lumpur, was banned by court order.

 

Tunisa to extradite former Libyan PM

Tunisia is to extradite the former Libyan prime minister, Al Baghdadi Ali al-Mahmoudi, who served under the Gaddafi regime, for trial in Libya, reports the Reuters news agency. 

See report here.

According to Noureddine Bouheiri, Tunisia's minister for justice, the extradition could take place in "days or weeks", making Ali al-Mahmoudi the first senior Gaddafi regime official to face trial.

Syrian conflict spills over into Beirut

Clashes between Sunni pro- and anti-Assad groups in the Lebanese capital Beirut have left at least two people dead and 18 injured.

On Sunday, two anti-Syrian sheikhs were shot dead at an army checkpoint while they were on their way to a rally, sparking the latest violence.

The Lebanese Army immediately took responsibility for the incident, saying it had formed a committee to investigate the killings.

The Army said in a statement that Abdul-Wahed and Mereb died of “fatal gunshot wounds in a regrettable incident near an Army checkpoint in the village of Kwaikhat.”

Bahrain defends human rights record at UN

Bahraini officials have defended their human rights record during their Universal Periodic Review (UPR) at the UN Human Rights Council.

The human rights minister of the gulf kingdom, Salah bin Ali Mohammed Abdulrahman said the government is quickly improving their human rights record after the allegations of serious violations by Bahraini security forces.

“We reaffirm the importance of national dialogue,” he said.

NGOs boycott Navi Pillay meeting in Zimbabwe

The UN's high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, has begun a five day trip to Zimbabwe at the invitation of the the president, Robert Mugabe.

Pillay said,

 "It is very, very important that the government has invited [the] U.N. commissioner for human rights. I am here to assess the human rights situation and to see how the United Nations can help to advance human protection here,"

Syria UN visit marred by bomb attack

A road side bomb exploded in a suburb of Damascus, as UN observers was nearby, touring the area.

The blast detonated about 150 meters away from the visiting UN peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous and chief of the UN observers in Syria Maj. Gen. Robert Mood.

An UN observer team, numbering over 250, has failed to stop the bloodshed in Syria, with violence raging unabated in several cities across Syria.

Israel slams South African proposal to ban labelling of settlement products as Israeli

The South African Department of Trade and Industry are preparing a proposal, prohibiting the labelling of products from Jewish settlement in the West Bank as Israeli.

Trade Minister Rob Davies released a statement last week saying that South African customers should not be misled by the incorrect labelling of products originating from the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

Israel slammed the decision, saying such measures are not proposed about other countries where territorial conflicts exist.

World leaders meet at NATO summit

Over 50 world leaders have gathered in Chicago to discuss the withdrawal of NATO forces from Afghanistan by 2014.

The biggest ever summit of the alliance is the first ever to be held on US soil.

"Our summit has three key priorities: keeping Afghanistan secure now and in the years to come, keeping NATO strong and capable in the 21st century and keeping our global network of partners solid," NATO chief Anders Rasmussen told reporters.