Monday 1 June 2015

World headlines - 06/31.2015



Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

The US announced in Tokyo on Saturday it will extend its cyber protection program to cover Japan, as its Asian ally faces a growing number of online attacks against its military bases and other key infrastructure such as the electricity grid.




The U.S. Senate, in an unusual Sunday session, has started debating whether to extend its authorization of the country's vast national security surveillance operation, or let it lapse at midnight as the current law expires.

Lawmakers gathered in Washington just hours after the U.S. intelligence chief warned that global terrorists are looking to take advantage of any halt in the spying effort.



Data collected by the Washington Post newspaper suggests that the number of people shot by US police is twice as high as official figures claim.
The paper said that during the first five months of this year, 385 people - more than two a day - were killed.



Security forces allegedly discovered weapons parts on trucks belonging to state intelligence agency in early 2014; Erdogan previously said shipments only carried humanitarian aid.




Emboldened by the Tory election victory and the appointment of Amber Rudd as energy Secretary, writes Ben Lucas, planning applications to frack have been coming in thick and fast - even in densely populated London boroughs.

Even a small earthquake in densely-inhabited London could give rise to considerable property damage, for example from broken porcelain and glassware, slipped tiles, falling chimney pots and cracks in masonry and plaster.

Since the Conservatives won a majority in the general election just over three weeks ago, there has been an increase in the number of planning applications submitted relating to hydraulic fracturing.

This observation comes after a marked rise in the share price of many fracking companies since fracking-friendly Amber Rudd was selected as secretary of state for the Department of Energy and Climate Change.





Francois Bugingo, a veteran French-Canadian journalist accused of fabricating a series of stories over the course of over twenty years, has admitted to his 'errors of judgment', CBC News has reported.




India is concerned that Islamic State militants (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) could get their hands on a nuclear weapon from its regional foe and fellow nuclear power Pakistan.

Indian Defense Minister Rao Inderjit voiced the concerns at the sidelines of the Shangri-La regional security conference in Singapore on Saturday.


ISIS declares war on Shias on Arabian Peninsula – monitoring group



The Saudi division of the Islamic State jihadist group has called on jihadist supporters to clear the Arabian Peninsula of Shia Muslims in an audio recording, according to a US-based monitoring group.

In the 13-minute recording a representative of IS (Islamic State, formerly ISIS/ISIL) militant group's division in Najd Province, a region in the central Arabian Peninsula, urged supporters to declare war on “enemies of Islam, especially Shiites” on the peninsula’s territory, SITE monitoring group reported on Friday. 

The man called Shias “disbelievers and apostates” urging followers to “purify the land” of them. The speaker also made reference to the suicide bombing on May 22 in the town of al-Qadeeh, Qatif province in the east of the country on a Shiite mosque. As the result of the bombing 21 people died and more than 50 were wounded. 



Human Rights Watch has published new evidence alleging the Saudi Arabian-led coalition in Yemen has been using internationally-outlawed cluster bombs. The organization says innocent civilians have been targeted in the raids.

The New York-based organization visited the Saada province in the north of Yemen this month in order to compile its report. Human Rights Watch says it managed to document the use of three types of cluster munitions in the country.



Unclear if Leadership Has Votes for Watered-Down Reform Bill


The USA Freedom Act, an extremely watered down reform bill which some argue actually expands NSA surveillance capabilities, is coming up for a hugely important and likely very close vote Sunday, with the future of the Patriot Act’s Section 215, which the bill renews, in the balance.

Section 215 expires on Monday, and the USA Freedom Act requires 60 votes to pass. Last weekend, the Senate managed only 57 votes in favor of it, but some officials believe that they can come up with the three additional votes to ensure its passage without debate on amendments.


Fear and loathing of the USA PATRIOT Act



Several controversial provisions of the Patriot Act are set to expire Sunday: The Obama administration insists that letting the law lapse would harm US security, while critics counter that it would be a big step in ending NSA abuses as exposed by Snowden








US B-52 bombers lined up at Andersen Air Force Base on Guam in the western Pacific Ocean.

The United States is preparing for a possible war against China and Russia aimed at preventing the collapse of the Western banking system, an American political commentator and activist says.



The source was quoted as saying that the U.S. destroyer Ross was moving along the edge of Russia's territorial waters and heading in their direction.

"The crew of the ship acted provocatively and aggressively, which concerned the operators of monitoring stations and ships of the Black Sea Fleet," RIA quoted the source as saying.

Su-24 attack aircraft demonstrated to the American crew readiness to harshly prevent a violation of the frontier and to defend the interests of the country."

"Apparently, the Americans have not forgotten the April 2014 incident when one Su-24 practically 'blacked out' all of the electronics on board the newest American destroyer Donald Cook," the source said.

Russia's Defence Ministry was not immediately available to comment on the report.

Moscow bans 89 European officials from traveling to Russia



A Russian official said the bans were in response to economic sanctions "unleashed against Russia by some Germany-led countries of the European Union."

Russia banned dozens of European politicians and military leaders from traveling inside its borders in a move the Russian Foreign Ministry characterized as retaliation against economic sanctions, according to officials.

A spokesperson for the European Union on Saturday said several EU politicians had for months been denied entry at the Russian border before Moscow shared a confidential "stop list" that comprised the names of 89 European politicians and military leaders from 17 countries.

Russia’s EU Travel Ban List Hinders Moscow-Brussels Dialogue – Italian FM

Defense: 1.5 Times More Combat Training of Russian Armed Forces in Summer



The intensity of combat training in the Russian Armed Forces will increase 1.5 times in the summer period as compared to the 2015 winter training, the Russian Defense Ministry informs.



BRICS summit in Russia to launch New Development Bank & currency pool – Putin



Russian President Vladimir Putin (RIA Novosti /
Alexei Druzhinin)

Russia expects to launch the $100-billion BRICS New Development Bank along with a currency reserve pool worth another $100 billion at the July summit in Ufa, said Russian President Vladimir Putin.


"We expect to reach agreement in Ufa on the launch of practical operations of the BRICS Bank and a pool of currency reserves," Putin said on Thursday at a ceremony to receive the credentials of ambassadors of foreign states, TASS reports.


At least 1 civilian killed, 4 injured in Ukrainian army shelling of Donbass – reports






The Ukrainian hacking group CyberBerkut warns that possible “acts of information sabotage” may be carried out by US Psychological Operations specialists against the self-proclaimed republics of Donbass and the Russian-speaking population of Ukraine and has called on Ukrainians to be vigilant.

New Zealand’s spy agency forced to apologize for calling Kim Dotcom ‘fatty’



The Security Intelligence Service of New Zealand (SIS) was forced to publicly apologize to internet tycoon Kim Dotcom after the publication of internal emails in which the spies called him a “fatty” who was never going to get far from the cops on foot.


The series of embarrassing emails was released after the New Zealand Weekend Herald newspaper sent a request under freedom of information laws. The correspondence included a letter in which an SIS staff member sent an image of Dotcom to others, saying: “This picture of Dotcom will forever crack me up – what a fatty po po.”


Migrants to be taken to Myanmar state



An image posted by Myanmar's Ministry of Information on Facebook is reported to show the migrant vessel it intercepted on Friday.
An image posted by Myanmar's Ministry of Information on Facebook is reported to show the migrant vessel it intercepted on Friday.

More than 700 migrants found crammed into a fishing boat by Myanmar's navy will be taken to the country's troubled Rakhine state.

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