Monday 26 September 2016

Uganda takes on ‘world’s most dangerous road’

Mpigi, Uganda: Wearing pristine white with her woollen socks pulled high, Ugandan traffic police officer Edith Nanteza exudes natural authority at the roadblock, barely lifting a hand as she waves motorists over.
This is no routine exercise. Nanteza is on the front line of operation “Fika Salama” — Swahili for “arrive safely” — a high-profile attempt by the government to regain control of what the country fears has become the planet’s deadliest highway.
From the top of a hill, Nanteza surveys the road, a heat haze shimmering over the tarmac highway stretching into the distance.

Drug lord Guzman ‘serene’ ahead of extradition ruling

Mexico City: A Mexican judge could rule on Monday whether Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman can be extradited to the United States, but the drug kingpin’s lawyers vow to appeal if he loses.
One of Guzman’s lawyers, Jose Refugio Rodriguez, said the Sinaloa drug cartel leader was “very serene” as he waits for the decision by a court in Mexico City.
The foreign ministry gave the green light to Guzman’s extradition in May, but the former most wanted man won a

Brazil police arrest ex-finance minister Palocci in graft probe, source says

Rio de Janeiro: Brazilian police on Monday arrested Antonio Palocci, a former finance minister and presidential chief of staff in recent leftist Workers Party governments, in the latest phase of a sweeping anti-corruption probe, prosecutors said in a statement.
They said Palocci acted as a liaison between the Workers Party and Latin America’s largest engineering and construction conglomerate, Odebrecht SA, between 2006 and 2013 in a political kickback scheme centred on contracts at state-controlled oil company Petroleo Brasileiro SA, or Petrobras.

Video claiming drilling into iPhone 7 will reveal hidden headphone port goes viral

A video claiming that users can add a headphone socket to the iPhone 7, which only has a Lightning port, by drilling into the bottom of their phone has been watched almost 10 million times.
The prank video shows a man drilling a 3.5mm hole into the bottom left edge of the iPhone 7 held in a vice. It points to the row of small holes on the left side that replaced the headphone socket present on the iPhone 6S and claims that drilling into the second hole on the left reveals a hidden socket.
Once the hole has been drilled the video shows an iPhone 7 playing

Daesh militants kills 5 civilians in Egypt’s Sinai

Al Arish: Egyptian officials say Daesh militants have killed five Egyptian civilians and dumped their bodies, wearing orange jumpsuits, in a restive corner of the Sinai Peninsula.
They say two of the men were beheaded and the others shot in the head over accusations they had collaborated with the Egyptian army, which is fighting the insurgents in the area around the city of Rafah and the town of Shaikh Zuweid, where the bodies were found. The officials spoke

Australian immigration officers strike at airports, ports

Canberra: Australia’s Immigration and Border Force officials on Monday commenced a two-week long strike in airports and cruise ship ports across the country protesting against a long-running dispute with the government over pay rise, authorities said.
Members of the Community and Public Sector Union (CPSU) had previously said a strike would not occur if the government agreed to a 12.5 per cent pay rise, but the union’s national secretary Nadine Flood said workers

Candidates with two contrasting messages

Washington: Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are spoiling for an extraordinary clash over race and gender that could come as early as Monday’s debate, with both presidential candidates increasingly staking their fortunes on the cultural issues that are convulsing the nation.
Clinton helped pressure the police in Charlotte, North Carolina, to release video footage Saturday of an officer’s shooting of a black man. She expressed concern that too many African-Americans feel that their lives are disposable. And she has repeatedly denounced Trump for making racist

Saudi Arabia cuts public sector bonuses, ministers’ salaries

Manama: Saudi Arabia’s government has decided to curb to some financial perks for public sector employees, the government said following its weekly session on Sunday chaired by King Salman Bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud.
A royal decree announced a cut to ministers’ salaries by 20 percent and to members of the appointed Shura Council by 15 percent.
The decision comes as low oil prices have pushed energy-rich Gulf Arab states to rein in lavish public spending.
No annual bonus will be given for the next Islamic year, due to start on October 2, and the renewal or extension of existing contracts will not include any salary increases.

Sunday 25 September 2016

Suspect in mall shooting north of Seattle 'zombie-like' when arrested

The 20-year-old suspect in the deadly Washington state mall shooting said nothing and appeared "zombie-like" when he was arrested by authorities nearly 24 hours into an intense manhunt, authorities said.

Island County Sheriff's Lt. Mike Hawley said he spotted Arcan Cetin from a patrol car Saturday evening in Oak Harbor, Washington, and immediately recognized him as the suspect who killed five people at the Cascade Mall in nearby Burlington, 108 kilometres north of Seattle.
Hawley said at a news conference they had received information that Cetin, of Oak Harbor, was in the area. Cetin, who immigrated to the U.S. from Turkey, is a legal permanent resident who has been living in Oak Harbor, authorities said. He had been arrested once before in the county for assault, Hawley said.

"I literally hit my brakes, did a quick turn, I jumped out," Hawley said. "We both jumped out with our guns, and he just froze."Cetin was unarmed and was carrying a satchel with a computer in it.
"He was kind of zombie-like," Hawley said.

The suspect's arrest capped a frantic search following the slayings of five people the day before.

Shooting began at Macy's makeup counter

The first 911 call came in just before 7 p.m. on a busy Friday at the Cascade Mall: A man with a rifle was shooting at people in the Macy's department store.

By the time police arrived moments later, the carnage at the Macy's makeup counter was complete. Four people were dead, and the shooter was gone, last seen walking toward Interstate 5. The fifth victim, a man, died in the early morning hours Saturday as police finished sweeping the building."There are people waking up this morning, and their world has changed forever. The city of Burlington has probably changed forever, but I don't think our way of life needs to change," Burlington Mayor Steve Sexton said Saturday at a news conference.

Authorities said it now appears the rifle was brought into the mall from a suspect vehicle that was there, Mount Vernon police Lt. Chris Cammock said Saturday night.

Cetin has not been charged, Cammock said. He will be booked into the Skagit County Jail and is expected to appear in Skagit County District Court on Monday.

Assault charges were filed against suspect

The Seattle Times reports that Skagit County court records show three domestic-violence assault charges against Cetin. The victim was identified as Cetin's stepfather.The newspaper reports Cetin also was arrested for drunken driving.

Cetin was told by an Island County District Court judge on Dec. 29 that he was not to possess a firearm, the newspaper reported.

However, the stepfather urged the judge not to impose a no-contact order, saying his stepson was "going through a hard time."

As the small city absorbed the tragic news, critical questions remained, including the shooter's motive.

Initially the suspect was described as Hispanic, but Hawley said that was based on initial witness statements to the shooting at the mall.

Surveillance video captured the suspect entering the mall unarmed and then recorded him about 10 minutes later entering the Macy's with a "hunting type" rifle in his hand, Cammock said.

Suspect arrested, town in mourning after Washington state mall shooting
Border guards 'on high alert' in case shooting suspect tries to enter Canada
Authorities did not say how the suspect may have obtained the weapon — whether he retrieved it from outside or picked it up in the mall — but they believe he acted alone. The weapon was recovered at the scene.

The identities of the victims — four women who ranged in age from a teenager to a senior citizen — were withheld pending autopsies and notification of family. The identity of the man who was fatally shot was also withheld and may not be released until Monday.Earlier Saturday as police scrambled to find the shooter, people in the small city waited and worried.

The community of 8,600 people is too far from Seattle to be a commuter town, but its population swells to 55,000 during the day because of a popular outlet mall, retail stores and other businesses. Burlington is the only major retail centre within 48 kilometres in a region where agriculture is king.

Residents gathered Saturday to comfort each other at a community gathering in a city park.

"It's too scary. It's too close to home," said Maria Elena Vasquez, who attended the gathering with her husband and two young children.

Those who survived were still trying to process what happened as their community became the latest entry on a list of places known by the rest of world for mass shootings.

Theatre evacuated

Joanne Burkholder, 19, of nearby Mount Vernon, was watching the movie The Magnificent Seven in the mall's theatre when security guards came in and told them to evacuate immediately. Dozens of panicked moviegoers gathered in the hallway, and Burkholder heard screaming as the officers escorted them to safety in a parking lot.

As she drove home later, she had to pull over because she was shaking so hard, she told The Associated Press.

"I'm just very thankful for my life this morning. I've never been so terrified in my life," she said Saturday, trying to hold back tears as she attended the community vigil.

People who believed they may have lost loved ones were being sequestered at a church three blocks from the mall, where counsellors and a golden retriever therapy dog were present.

Cancer survivor, 16, among victims

The Seattle Times reported that one of the victims in the deadly Washington state mall shooting is a 16-year-old girl.

Sarai Lara's mother said she had survived cancer as a young girl and was a happy student.

Evangelina Lara told the newspaper through a translator that she was shopping Friday night at the Cascade Mall in Burlington, Washington, with Sarai and her younger sister, but they split up.

Evangelina Lara says it was confirmed at 2 a.m. Saturday that her daughter was among the five people killed.

Dozens of people attended a Saturday evening prayer service for the victims. The gathering was held at Central United Methodist Church in nearby Sedro-Woolley, Washington.

The Rev. Cody Natland lit five candles on a table in front of the church, one for each victim.

Jordanian writer Nahed Hattar killed outside court before trial over cartoon

A prominent Jordanian writer on Sunday was shot dead in front of the courthouse where he was set to go on trial for sharing a cartoon deemed offensive to Islam.

There were no immediate details on the identity or motive of the gunman. But a witness described the shooter, who was immediately arrested, as wearing a long grey robe and long beard characteristic of conservative Muslims. The shooting was the latest in a string of deadly security lapses in Jordan.

Canadian taken hostage in Libya

Canada confirmed on Sunday it has become aware of a citizen taken hostage in Libya and is "diligently pursuing all appropriate channels to obtain more information."

Libyan authorities said last week a Canadian and two Italians had been kidnapped in the country's southwestern desert, possibly by a criminal gang. 

3 foreign workers kidnapped in

Russian actions in Aleppo 'barbarism,' not counter-terrorism, says U.S. ambassador at UN

Russia's actions in Syria amount to "barbarism," not counter-terrorism as Moscow insists, Samantha Powers, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said on Sunday.

Airstrikes carried out by the Assad regime and the Russians recently "may indeed be war crimes," she told a meeting of the UN Security Council.

French Ambassador Francois Delattre went further, saying the use of

Marc Wabafiyebazu, Canadian diplomat's son, deported from Florida

A teenager caught up in a double shooting in Florida that left his older brother dead has been quietly deported to Canada following a remarkable standoff between U.S. federal authorities and the state judge who sentenced him.

American immigration agents escorted Marc Wabafiyebazu from Miami to Montreal earlier this month where he was reunited with his mother, Roxanne Dube, The Canadian Press has learned.

US guidelines on self-driving cars get good reception at G-7

TOKYO: US Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said Sunday that his counterparts in the Group of Seven nations welcomed US guidelines on regulating self-driving cars and have agreed to work together on creating such standards to maintain safety.
“There was actually a very enthusiastic reception to the policy,” he said. “We did a good job of inventorying what each country is doing and laying out areas that we want to explore further.”
Such issues include cybersecurity,

DNA collection controversy resurfaces amid Kuwait’s shift to electronic passports

Manama: Kuwait’s decision last year to collect DNA samples of its 1.2 million citizens and 2.3 million foreigners has stirred up a robust debate in the country over security versus personal privacy.
Parliament passed the DNA law in July 2015 as a way to combat cases where people fraudulently obtained the Kuwaiti citizenship, with some cases dating back to 40 years ago.
The DNA information will also be used to help build a database of convicted terrorists and criminals.
The issue has resurfaced recently as Kuwait’s decision to implement

Body of Omani who went missing at sea found

Muscat: The body of a 28-year-old Omani man who went missing in the sea on Friday was found in Auqad area of Salalah province, southern part of Oman, on Saturday evening.
The body was recovered by residents of the village, according to the Public Authority for Civil Defence and Ambulance (PACDA).
Personnel at PACDA and residents had combed the area for one day, with the help of a helicopter, divers and rescue boats.
Last week, the body of 10-year-old who went missing in the sea in Sharqiyah governorate also was found after three days.

Hope lies buried in the ruins of Aleppo

AMMAN: Warplanes bombed a strategic camp on the northern edge of Aleppo on Sunday as Syrian government and rebel forces battled for control of the high ground in a Russian-backed offensive that has left Washington’s Syria policy in tatters.
Planes also continued to pound residential parts of the town, flattening buildings, rebels and residents said. More than 250,000 civilians are trapped in the besieged opposition sector and there is growing concern about the escalation in violence since a ceasefire, announced just two weeks ago, unravelled.

Modi urges calm, vows action against Uri perpetrators

New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday said there was pan-India fury after the Uri terror attack, in which 18 soldiers were killed, but urged the people to exercise restraint and channel their energies in a constructive way to help the country progress.
Opening his monthly radio broadcast Mann ki Baat with condemnation against the “cowardly” cross-border terror strike, Modi vowed that its perpetrators would not be spared.

25K aspirants turn up to serve as SPOs in Kashmir

Srinagar: Defying militant threat and separatists’ call, thousands of youth across Kashmir have turned up to fill 10,000 posts of Special Police Officers (SPOs) despite the ongoing unrest that has claimed 82 lives.
“We have received over 25,000 applications from the aspiring candidates willing to serve as SPOs from across the 10 districts of the Valley,” a senior official supervising the recruitment process said here.
On September 22, the centre had approved the recruitment of an additional 10,000 SPOs with immediate effect to strengthen the

Merkel rules out assistance for Deutsche Bank: reports

Berlin: Chancellor Angela Merkel has ruled out any state assistance for Deutsche Bank AG in the year heading into the national election in September 2017, Focus magazine reported, citing unidentified government officials.
The German leader also declined to step into the Frankfurt-based bank’s legal imbroglio with the US Justice Department, which may seek as much as $14 billion (Dh51.4 billion) in sanctions against Deutsche Bank’s mortgage-backed securities business, the magazine said. A German government spokesman declined to comment on the report Saturday. A

Saturday 24 September 2016

North Korea tells UN ‘going nuclear’ is only option

United Nations, United States: North Korea’s foreign minister on Friday told the United Nations that “going nuclear” is his country’s only way to defend itself and vowed to further bolster its nuclear military forces.
Speaking to the General Assembly, Ri Yong-ho said his country will “continue to take measures to strengthen its national nuclear armed forces in both quantity and quality.”
He spoke just two weeks after North Korea’s fifth and most powerful nuclear test provoked worldwide condemnation, prompting the UN Security Council to begin work on a new sanctions resolution.

Four Al Qaeda members killed in Yemen drone strike

Sana’a — Four members of Al Qaida’s Yemen branch, including a local commander, were killed in a suspected US drone strike on a vehicle travelling east of the capital Sana’a, two local officials said on Saturday.
They said the attack in Marib province, controlled by forces loyal to President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi, occurred late on Friday. A local commander of the militant Al Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), known as Abu Khalid Al Sana’ani, was killed along with three associates, they said.

Triple suicide attack north of Baghdad kills 11 troops

Baghdad: A triple suicide bombing against a security checkpoint north of Baghdad on Saturday killed at least 11 members of the security forces, a police officer said.
The spokesman for the Salahuddin province police force, Col Mohammad Al Jabouri, said three militants rammed their explosives-laden vehicles early Saturday morning into the main checkpoint near the town of Al Salam at the province’s northern entrance. Al Jabouri added that 34 other security officers were wounded.

Corbyn re-elected leader of UK's opposition Labour

Liverpool: Left-winger Jeremy Corbyn was re-elected as leader of Britain's main opposition Labour party on Saturday, seeing off a challenge from his MPs with an increased majority.
Supporters in Liverpool, northwest England, cheered as official results confirmed Corbyn had defeated rival Owen Smith with 61.8 percent of the vote to 38.2 percent.
That represents an increased mandate from when he was first elected as leader this time last year with 59.5 percent of the vote.
Speaking after the results were announced, Corbyn looked to the future following a divisive contest.

Obama: African-American museum tells ‘story of all of us’

WASHINGTON: President Barack Obama on Friday celebrated the pending opening of the Smithsonian’s new African-American museum and said the institution, decades in the making, is a powerful place because it tells “the story of all of us,” not just the famous.
Obama also said he hoped the museum would help people bridge divides that were re-exposed by the latest fatal, police-involved shootings of black men.
The country’s first black president,

Aleppo residents cower under air strike frenzy

Aleppo: Residents in Syria’s battleground city of Aleppo cowered indoors on Saturday as fierce air strikes toppled buildings and killed at least 25 civilians, after diplomatic efforts to revive a ceasefire failed.
Nearly two million civilians were without water in the devastated northern city after regime bombardment damaged a pumping station and rebels shut down another in retaliation, the United Nations said.
Rebel-held districts in east Aleppo came under intense air and artillery fire for a fifth night as the army prepared a ground offensive to recapture the whole of the divided city.

The US presidential debate: what you need to know

WASHINGTON: Monday’s US presidential debate, a combat of titans pitting the Democrat Hillary Clinton against the Republican Donald Trump, is sure to be a major moment in the campaign, with just six weeks left before the November 8 election.
This first of three debates will give the candidates a chance to introduce themselves — or reintroduce themselves — to sceptical American voters who will be watching closely for the slightest misstep, awkward gesture or fatal altercation.
The debate could break all records for a US political audience, given the sharply contrasting personalities — and positions — of Trump and Clinton.
Time and place —

DNA samples taken in case of abandoned girl

Muscat: Omani authorities have collected DNA samples as part of an investigation into the case of two-year-old Dana, who was abandoned in Buraimi Public Park in April, Gulf News has learnt.
Dana was found crying alone in the park, after an Omani woman took her there and called the police to come retrieve her. The woman, along with an Omani man, believed to be the girl’s father, were held in police custody for months but later released on bail. DNA samples were collected from Dana and the Omani man.
The names of the people involved in the case have not been revealed by authorities as the investigation is currently under review.

Sanchez nets winner for Betis against Malaga in high-voltage clash

Sevilla: Midfielder Joaquin Sanchez headed in the only goal to give Real Betis a 1-0 win over Malaga in a heated Spanish league match on Friday.
A total of 10 yellow cards were shown at the Benito Villamarin Stadium in Seville, six to Malaga players and four to the hosts.
Sanchez, who left the field because of a deep cut on his forehead after a collision with an opponent, headed home from near the penalty spot midway through the first half.
Malaga’s best chances came from Uruguay defender Federico Ricca, who hit the woodwork once in each half.
Betis jumped up to eighth place with eight points, while Malaga dropped to 16th place with five.

League leader Real Madrid plays at Las Palmas on Saturday.
Meanwhile, the Spanish Anti-Violence Commission has agreed to declare the Champions League clash between Atletico Madrid and Bayern Munich at the Vicente Calderon on Wednesday as a high risk fixture.
On Thursday, the commission also declared the Atletico’s match against Deportivo next Sunday as high risk, reported Efe on Friday.
Violence had broken out between fans of the two Spanish sides hours before their match in November 2014, leading to the death of a fan from his injuries.

Turkey cut to junk as Moody’s concludes its post-coup review

Istanbul: Turkey’s sovereign credit rating was cut to junk by Moody’s Investor Service, which concluded a review initiated after an unsuccessful coup attempt on July 15.
Moody’s cited rising risks related to Turkey’s external financing needs and a weakening in credit fundamentals as economic growth slows. The rating was cut to Ba1 from Baa3, leaving Fitch Ratings as the only major ratings company to keep Turkey at investment grade.
Erdogan Doesn’t Care at All If Turkey Gets Downgraded to Junk
“The risk of a sudden, disruptive

50pc Indians disapprove of Modi's Pakistan policies, Pew survey finds

A Pew survey published recently on Indian attitudes shows that nearly half of respondents across the border do not approve of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's policies concerning Pakistan.

The survey aims to shed light on what Indians think about their country, their government and potential for the future.

Unfavourable view of Pakistan

China to support Pakistan against foreign aggression

LAHORE: In the wake of rising tensions at borders with India, China has assured in unequivocal terms its support in case of any foreign aggression and also supported Pakistan’s stance on the Kashmir dispute, according to a press release issued by the Punjab Chief Minister Office.

“In case of any [foreign] aggression our country will extend its full support to Pakistan,” Consul General of China in Lahore Yu Boren was quoted as saying by the CM Office on Friday.

Rouhani uses UN to hit US over nuclear deal

UNITED NATIONS: Iran used the UN General Assembly on Thursday to accuse the United States of failing to meet its commitments under a historic nuclear deal.

President Hassan Rouhani complained that America is dragging its feet on its side of the bargain.

“The lack of compliance [with the deal] on the part of the United States in the past several months represents a flawed approach that should be rectified forthwith,” Rouhani told the world body.

Missiles batter Aleppo as Syria army readies ground assault

ALEPPO: Missiles rained down on rebel-held areas of Syria’s Aleppo on Friday, causing widespread destruction that overwhelmed rescue teams, as the army prepared a ground offensive to retake the city.

Nearly 30 civilians including several children were killed and dozens wounded in the raids by Russian warplanes and regime aircraft, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group.

Turkey arrests top journalist day after release

ANKARA: A Turkish court on Friday put a prominent journalist under arrest just a day after he was released over accusations related to the failed July coup, in a case that has sparked global concern.

Journalist and writer Ahmet Altan was detained late on Thursday, after he had been freed earlier in the day after almost two weeks behind bars.

The new arrest warrant was issued following an appeal by prosecutors.

India weighs Brahamdagh Bugti’s asylum request

NEW DELHI: In an indication that the Indian government is serious about the Baloch cause, the home ministry has said that it had received Baloch separatist leader Brahamdagh Bugti’s request for an Indian identity card and travel papers and was examining it, The Hindu said on Friday.

It said the request was forwarded by the ministry of external affairs on Wednesday.

A home ministry official said that though a time frame could not be given for the request to be processed, it would be done at the earliest. Mr Bugti will have to undergo multiple layers of verification. The final call will be taken by Prime Minister Narendra Modi himself.

Orthodox Jews demonstrate against Netanyahu

NEW YORK: Hundreds of members of New York’s Orthodox Jewish community staged a demonstration in front of the United Nations on Thursday as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was addressing the session of the UN General Assembly.

They slammed the Israeli regime for what they called “degrading” the community by forcing its members in Israel to serve in the military. They carried placards rejecting Israeli leadership.

US lauds accord between Afghan govt, Hekmatyar’s group

WASHINGTON: The United States on Friday described the agreement between Afghan government and Hezb-i-Islami as an important step towards restoring peace and stability in Afghanistan.

The Afghan government on Thursday signed a peace agreement with the Islamist group, headed by Gulbadin Hekmatyar. The pact paves the way for Hekmatyar, who spent decades fighting successive governments in Kabul, to return to the political mainstream.

Obama vetoes 9/11 bill, risks override by Congress

WASHINGTON: President Barack Obama has vetoed a bill that would have allowed the families of 9/11 victims to sue the government of Saudi Arabia.

The move sets Obama up for a possible first veto override by Congress. Both chambers had passed the bill by voice vote. The House sent Obama the bill just before the 15th anniversary of the attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania on Sept 11, 2001.

PML-N woman activist accuses party leaders of harassment

PESHAWAR: PML-N women wing’s Chitral district president Bibi Jan has accused some of her party’s local leaders of hatching a conspiracy to kill her and demanded of the top leadership to take serious notice of the party’s situation in the area.

Speaking at a press conference at Peshawar Press Club on Friday, Bibi Jan said that she had started her political career from student life and took part in social gatherings, but later joined PML-N to serve the people of her district.

Three dead in shooting at Washington state mall

LOS ANGELES: A manhunt was underway after a gunman killed at least three people and wounded two others late Friday during a shooting at a mall in the US state of Washington.

Police spokesman Sergeant Mark Francis said there was at least one suspect in the shooting at Cascade Mall in Burlington, describing him as a “Hispanic male wearing gray”.

Officials initially released a still from video surveillance of the younger-looking suspect holding what appears to be a rifle, before releasing a closely cropped image of the same still showing only the suspect's head and torso.

Friday 23 September 2016

Arabian Gulf League: Bani Yas boss Pablo Repetto demands victory over Dibba

Abu Dhabi: The Bani Yas boss, Pablo Repetto, will accept nothing less than victory against Dibba in today’s home Arabian Gulf League match after losing his two first domestic games of the new season.
Dibba downed the Sky Blues 3-2 earlier this month in the Arabian Gulf Cup, while Repetto’s side were unfortunate to lose 1-0 away to Al Ain in their AGL opener last Sunday following a battling display.
Repetto, who is in his first season in the

Poor fear losing ‘a lifetime opportunity’ if industry closes

ANAND, India
At a hostel for dozens of pregnant women, impoverished widow Sharmila Mackwan weighs up her decision to carry twins for another couple - her only ticket out of poverty - as the government moves to close India’s multi-million dollar surrogacy industry.
She has left her own children at an orphanage for the whole nine months of her pregnancy because her contract stipulates she has to stay at the housing facility, which is attached to the hospital she will deliver at in western Gujarat state.
She also knows the Rs400,000

Surrogacy bill stirs womb trade row

New Delhi
On August 24, India’s external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj announced cabinet approval for the new surrogacy bill. The draft Surrogacy (Regulation) Bill 2016 that aims to safeguard the rights of surrogate mothers, in the process, proposes a complete ban on surrogacy, a practice wherein a woman gives birth to a child for a couple with the intention of handing over the child to them after birth.
The bill bans “commercial” surrogacy wherein the surrogate mother is paid a lump sum amount to bear the child by the couple. It allows ‘altruistic’ surrogacy for Indian couples, which means no monetary benefits, will be provided to the surrogate mother, who, necessarily, has to be a close relative of the couple.

Trump is headed for a win, says professor who’s predicted 30 years of presidential outcomes correctly

Washington: Professor Allan Lichtman, who’s correctly predicted every presidential election since 1984, is placing his bets on Republican nominee Donald Trump to clinch the title this year.
Lichtman, a distinguished professor of history at American University, sat down with us this week to reveal who he thinks will win in November, and why 2016 was the most difficult election to predict yet.

Can you tell me about the keys, and how you use them to evaluate the election from the point where — I

Yahoo hack steals personal info from at least 500m accounts

SAN FRANCISCO: Computer hackers swiped personal information from at least 500 million Yahoo accounts in what is believed to be the biggest digital break-in at an email provider.

The massive security breakdown disclosed Thursday poses new headaches for beleaguered Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer as she scrambles to close a $4.8 billion sale to Verizon .

The breach dates back to late 2014, raising questions about the checks and balances within Yahoo, a fallen internet star that has been laying off staff and trimming expenses to counter a steep drop in revenue during the past eight years.

India signs $8.8bn deal to buy 36 French Rafale fighter jets

NEW DELHI: India signed a formal agreement Friday to buy 36 Rafale fighter jets from France's Dassault for a reported $8.8 billion, one of its biggest defence deals in decades.

India's Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar and his French counterpart Jean-Yves Le Drian signed the agreement at a ceremony in New Delhi after years of tortuous negotiations between the two countries.

Explore: India needs more than Rafale jets to match China: experts

Indian court clears pair over 15-year-old British girl's rape and murder

PANAJI: A court in India cleared two men Friday who had been on trial for raping and causing the death of 15-year-old British schoolgirl on a Goa beach in 2008.

"I find them not guilty of all charges," Judge Vandana Tendulkar said after the trial of Samson D'Souza and Placido Carvalho in the state capital Panaji.

Russian troops arrive for first ever joint military exercise with Pakistan

RAWALPINDI: A contingent of Russian ground forces arrived in Pakistan on Friday for the first ever joint Pak-Russian exercise kicking off Sept 24.The two-week-long exercise is expected to continue until Oct 10, Director General Inter-Services Public Relations Asim Bajwa said.

The exercises with Russian ground forces come at a time when tensions between Pakistan and India are running high following an attack on the Uri military camp in India-held Kashmir.Around 200 military personnel of both countries will participate in the drills, Radio Pakistan reported.
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