english news

Obama calls Duterte, highlights shared human rights values

/abonnement/USA –  President Obama has personally called his counterpart in the Philippines with a subtle message about the importance of human rights.

Just weeks ago, in his last campaign speech, President-elect Rodrigo Duterte told a crowd to “forget the laws of human rights.”Duterte’s tough-on-crime stance proved popular with Filipino voters as he won by a landslide, with his two closest rivals pulling out within 24 hours.(CNN/photo: newsoneplace.com and photo2: cbc.ca)…[+]

Maduro pleads for solidarity in Skyped news conference

VENEZUELA –  Embattled Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro tuesday sought to shore up international support for his leadership, but at the same time insisted that his Government would not tolerate any outside interference in the affairs of his crisis-torn country.

Maduro made the appeal in a near four-hour press conference skyped to Venezuela’s embassies across the world, including the mission in Kingston, even as the Opposition urged the public to defy a state of emergency he decreed over a nation sapped by food shortages and a collapsing economy.(Jamaica Observer/photo: thepeninsulaqatar.com)…[+]

‘Loving’ earns praise at Cannes

FRANCE – It wasn’t long after the first press screening of the period drama Loving at Cannes on Monday morning, that the movie was already generating awards-season talk. It’s absurdly early for Oscar to be sure, but it’s also not hard to see why.

In Loving, writer-director Jeff Nichols (Midnight Special, Mud) dramatizes one of America’s most seminal civil rights Supreme Court cases, Loving v. Virginia, but he does so by focusing on the quiet, heartbreaking love story at its center: the marriage of Mildred and Richard Loving (Ruth Negga and Joel Edgerton), a black woman and a white man who were arrested in their home — in their bedroom — in Virginia one night in 1958 because the simple fact of their union violated state law. When the credits for the movie rolled, it received one of the festival’s biggest ovations yet, with more applause for the actors’ names when they appeared onscreen.(yahoomovies)…[+]

Game of Thrones reunites favorite characters

USA – Our reactions to the most recent episode of Game of Thrones ranged everywhere from yes to no to sad tears to the happiest tears we’ve ever cried, ending with a huge round of applause. It was actually kind of exhausting. First, the good news! Our fears from last week were put to rest when Jon didn’t actually leave Castle Black, meaning he was there when Sansa, Brienne, and Podrick arrived, which meant that we got a very long-awaited Stark family reunion between Jon and Sansa. It was actually sweet as hell, even if they couldn’t quite agree on what to do next. Jon just wanted to get out, but he didn’t want to fight anymore, or be responsible for any more deaths. Sansa wanted to head straight back to Winterfell to take back their home from the Boltons. (eonline)…[+]

The app that’s changing religion in West Africa

WEST-AFRICA   –  The first thing Dinah Colecraft does when she wakes up in her house in Ghana’s capital, Accra, isn’t take a shower or make a coffee.

Instead, she downloads a devotion sent by her church, using an app. With Asoriba she can browse the church events taking place that weekend and even make a donation using her credit card. Basically, it’s a one-stop shop for spirituality.  Created by a team of young Ghanaian entrepreneurs, Asoriba the parent company behind the app was deemed Africa’s Best Startup at the Seedstars World event last month in Casablanca, Morocco. In Ghana, Christians normally give tithes or a tenth of their monthly income  to the church.

While nobody knows exactly how much money is in circulation within the Christian church in the West African nation, due to the plethora of small institutions with no collective figures, most agree it’s a huge figure. (CNN.COM)…[+]

Lightning strikes kill 65 people in four days in Bangladesh

BANGLADESH   –   Sixty-five people have been killed by lightning strikes in Bangladesh in four days, as the country endures its annual severe storm season.

Most of the deaths occurred in rural parts of north and central Bangladesh, with the victims predominantly farmers and construction workers, Reaz Ahmed, director general of Bangladesh’s Department of Disaster Management, told CNN on Monday. The deadliest recent day was last Thursday, when 34 people were killed, he said. Twenty-one died the following day, seven on Saturday and three on Sunday. Lightning strikes are relatively common in the low-lying, densely-populated nation, with the country experiencing severe storms with frequent lightning often between March and June, ahead of the onset of the monsoon. .(CNN.COM)…[+]

Thailand’s plan to sell stockpiled rice sparks concerns

THAILAND – Thailand’s plan to accelerate sales of 11.4 million tonnes of rice in stockpiles within two months sparked concerns that it would hurt prices as well as Vietnam’s rice exports. However, some people were optimistic that the impact would not be significant. Thailand planned to sell the amount of rice in a government stockpile in May and June to generate US$2.8 billion, at an average price of US$245 per tonne, in what could be the biggest rice sale clearance ever of the world’s second largest rice exporter after India.

According to Le Van Banh, director of the Department of Agro-Fisheries Processing and Salt Production, the biggest stockpiled rice sell-off from Thailand would certainly have an impact on the global rice market following the law on supply and demand, as well as on Viet Nam’s rice market.  However, the impact on Vietnam’s rice exports would not be significant, at least in the short term, Banh said.  Banh also said that Thailand’s plan to sell 11.4 million tonnes of rice within just two months was not feasible.  (asiannewsnetwork)…[+]

Ukrainian singer’s Eurovision win was political, says Russian senator

RUSSIA   –  Russian senator has said that a Ukrainian singer’s victory in the Eurovision Song Contest was a case of politics prevailing over art, and has suggested Russia skip next year’s contest in response, Russian state media reports.

Jamala of Ukraine won a politically charged edition of the annual event in Stockholm, Sweden, on Saturday night with her performance of “1944,” a somber but controversial song that evoked Moscow’s deportation of members of her Crimean ethnic group during World War II. But many listeners saw the song as a rebuke to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s 2014 military push into Ukraine, when Russia annexed Crimea. The song was labeled anti-Russian by Russian media last week. Russian Senator Frants Klintsevich told reporters Sunday that Jamala’s victory sent an alarming signal, and questioned the future of the contest, state news agency RIA Novosti reported. .(CNN.COM)…[+]

Colombia seizes more than 17,500 pounds of cocaine from drug gang

COLOMBIA   –  Police in Colombia seized more than 17,500 pounds of cocaine from a gang in a series of operations across the country in recent days, authorities said.

The drug bust was part of an offensive against a narcotrafficking criminal gang called Clan Úsuga, authorities said. Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos congratulated police on Twitter for carrying out the operation, which he said resulted in the largest drug seizure ever. The Colombian Defense Ministry called it the biggest cocaine seizure on Colombian territory in history. Pictures released by police showed hundreds of pre-packaged bricks of drugs laid out by police.  Authorities also arrested four men and found a handful of weapons, according to a press release from Colombian National Police. .(CNNC.OM)…[+]

U.S. official: ISIS declares state of emergency in self-declared capital

USA – U.S. military officials are closely watching social media and news reports that say ISIS believes it may soon come under siege in Raqqa, Syria, its self-declared capital.

“We have seen this declaration of emergency in Raqqa, whatever that means”, Col. Steve Warren, the spokesman for the U.S.-led anti-ISIS coalition, told reporters Friday. “We know this enemy feels threatened, as they should.” Media reports have indicated that ISIS is moving personnel around the city and trying to put up covers in certain areas to shield potential targets from airstrikes and ground attacks. “They see the Syrian Democratic Forces, along with the Syrian Arab Coalition, maneuver both to their east and to their west”, Warren said. “Both of these areas becoming increasingly secure, and the Syrian Democratic Forces increasingly able to generate their own combat power in those areas.”(CNN)…[+]