Monday, July 29, 2013

World News Briefs -- July 29, 2013



Egypt's Acting Leader Hints At State Of Emergency; Fierce Crackdown Expected -- CNN

Cairo (CNN) -- Egypt's interim president has allowed for the prime minister to assume presidential powers in the case of a state of emergency -- stoking fears of a violent crackdown on supporters of the recently ousted president.

It's the latest power move in a country beset by deadly protests after President Mohamed Morsy was overthrown in a coup on July 3. Interim President Adly Mansour made the decision on the presidential powers Sunday, the state-run EGYnews website reported.

In Egypt, "state of emergency" is a loaded term. For almost 30 years, Egyptians were under a state of emergency during the rule of President Hosni Mubarak. The decree barred unauthorized assembly, restricted freedom of speech and allowed police to jail people indefinitely.

Some anti-Morsy activists have already said they would reject any return to a state of emergency.

Read more ....

MIDDLE EAST

Reports: Syrian troops, Hezbollah consolidate gains in Homs.

Embassy Row: Sounding an alarm on Iran’s support for Syria.

Mideast talks to restart today after Israel cabinet acts.

Wave of car bombings in Iraq kills at least 51.

PKK sets ultimatum for Turkey peace deal.

Turkish PM Erdogan threatens to sue Times over open letter.

ASIA

Japan's top diplomat heads for China, seeking better ties.

Pakistan: Stronger ties with US would help Afghan peace efforts.

Cambodia opposition claims massive poll fraud.

South Korea offers North 'final' talks on Kaesong.

More boats arrive despite tough Australian asylum plan.

India records sharp drop in poverty rate.

AFRICA

Egypt crisis: Morsi supporters stage defiant marches.

EU urges Egypt rulers to end stand-off with Brotherhood.

Army seals off Tunis square after rival protesters clash.

JEM rebels launch fresh attacks on Sudanese army in South Kordofan.

Nigeria Islamists kill 20 in attack on northeast: military.

Malian authorities salute voter turnout in Presidential poll.

MDC holds final rally ahead of Zimbabwe polls.

EUROPE

Bank of Cyprus depositors lose 47.5 pct of savings.

Spanish train driver charged with negligent homicide. Spain train crash driver 'admits being careless'. Spain to mourn train crash victims; driver freed pending trial.

Thousands in Germany protest NSA surveillance.

Bus plunge crash kills 39 in southern Italy.

Robber steals $53 million worth of jewels in Cannes, police say.

Pope Francis: Who am I to judge gay people?

AMERICAS

Pope Francis celebrates Brazil Mass on Copacabana beach.

Mexican Admiral Carlos Salazar killed in Michoacan ambush.

Colombia says Farc 'accountable' for violence as talks resume.

Venezuelan president meets with Fidel Castro.

Foreign service workers to walk out of 15 Canadian embassies around the globe.

Falklands set rules for oil and gas development, to the benefit of Islanders current and future generations.

Detroit looks at grim economics of garage sale.

TERRORISM/THE LONG WAR

US launches 1st drone strike in Yemen in 7 weeks.

The world’s biggest, newest terrorist haven.

Guantánamo medics: Forced-feedings aren’t torture.

ECONOMY/FINANCE/BUSINESS

Apple faces new China worker abuse claims.

Amazon hiring 7,000 workers.

The Wolverine slashes his way to top of US box office.

No comments:

Post a Comment