Israel Hits Hamas Targets in Gaza Strip Following Teenagers' Deaths


Israel teenagers murder

Flames are seen after a blast on the top floor of the family home of an alleged abductor in the West Bank City of HebronReuters



Israel pounded dozens of targets in the Gaza Strip overnight as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed that military action will not be over until the teenagers' murderers are found.


Following the discovery of the bodies of the three teenagers in the West Bank, the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) has said the Operation Brother's Keeper is far from over.


The IDF said at least 34 suspected Hamas and Islamic jihadist targets were hit.


An IDF statemet said: "Following over 18 rockets which were fired at Israel since Sunday evening, IAF aircraft carried out a precision strike against 34 targets in the Gaza Strip."


"The IDF will continue to act in order to restore the peaceful living to the civilians of the state of Israel. The Hamas terror organisation and its extensions are solely responsible for any terror activities emanating from the Gaza Strip."


The three young men - Eyal Yifrach, 19, Gil-ad Shaar, 16 and Naftali Fraenkel, 16 – who went missing on 12 June were found dead in Halhul, near Hebron.


Reports from Palestine suggest houses in Beit Lahia suffered heavy damage in the Israeli helicopter bombing.


The Israeli attack was said to be in response to the rocket fire from Hamas.


"We want to make clear that if the silence brought by Operation Pillar of Defence [in 2012] is violated and the shooting continues, there are two options: Either Hamas will stop the rocket fire or we will," said Netanyahu.


Expressing "great sorrow" for the teenagers' deaths, he said they were "kidnapped and murdered in cold blood by animals... Hamas is responsible and Hamas will pay".


The Israeli cabinet is also set to hold an emergency meeting at 09:30am local time in the backdrop of the latest events.


Besides, a large contingent of Israeli ground forces has been stationed in the West Bank as the situation escalated.



China Worried as Hong Kong Braces for Mass Pro-Democracy Protest


Hong Kong Referendum

Organisers of a pro-democracy referendum empty a ballot box in Hong Kong.Reuters



Hong Kong is braced for its largest pro-democracy demonstration in more than a decade as almost 800,000 people voted for democratic reforms in an unofficial referendum.


Organisers of an annual protest march, marking the day the territory returned to China on July 1, 1997, said they expected several hundred thousands of people to take to the streets in opposition to Beijing's influence in choosing Hong Kong leaders.


"We can see that Beijing is eroding the autonomy of Hong Kong, and we want to show we don't fear central government oppression," said Johnson Yeung, convenor of the Civil Human Rights Front, one of the organisers of the march.


The rally comes days after pro-democracy activists who organised an online vote on ways to enhance Hong Kongers' say in the election of the territory's chief executive said that a total of 792,808 residents cast their ballots.


The referendum was slammed by China as "Illegal", while the Hong Kong government said it had no legal value.


Locals were asked to select what they felt was the best democratic method to appoint the chief executive, who is currently picked by an elite pro-Beijing committee.


China has pledged to allow Hong Kongers to vote a new leader from a shortlist of candidates, after current chief executive Leung Chun-ying concludes his term in 2017.


Pro-democracy activists, however, fear only candidates vetted and approved by Beijing will be allowed to run.


They say universal suffrage should be implemented in the city of seven million and opposition candidates should also be allowed to run.


Since the end of British rule, the July 1 march has been an occasion for residents to air complaints over a range of grievances.


Organisers said that this year the general unhappiness over stunted democratic development might result in a record turnout, higher than in 2003 when half a million people demonstrated against proposed anti-subversion laws.


"Hong Kong people are ready for true democracy without any pre-screening, that's the key message," said Edward Chin, leader of a group of banking and finance workers backing the Occupy Central with Love and Peace movement that organised the democracy referendum.


"This is a strong signal to Beijing that Hong Kong people can express their views in a non-violent way."


Democracy calls have caused concern in Beijing.


A central government "White Paper", claiming that Hong Kong's autonomy is subject to Beijing's authorisation and the leader must be patriotic to China, caused a backlash stirring more support for democratic movements.


Communist Party mouthpiece Global Times has warned Hong Kongers to stay away from the demonstration in an editorial.


"Hong Kong's radical opposition forces are trying with all means to build a war chariot and get as many Hong Kong citizens as possible onto this chariot by deception. Its crashing target is the central government and all the people of the country," the paper wrote.


"[Residents should] not board this war chariot."



NFC Meets Beauty: Japanese Deco Nails That Light Up When You Take a Call


Lumi Deco Nails - false nail stickers that light up from NFC radio waves

Lumi Deco Nails - false nail stickers that light up from NFC radio wavesAFP



Japanese toy company Takara Tomy has come up with an unusual application for Near Field Communications (NFC) – the company has launched a line of deco false nails for women that light up when you take a phone call.


Deco nails, or rather, false nails are a hugely popular fashion accessory in Japan and often come encrusted with gems and even tiny plastic shapes like flowers, hearts, teddy bears – you name it.


Takara TOMY wants to take it one step further with Lumi Deco Nail, a line of pretty nail stickers in different designs.


Lumi Deco Nails - a wide range of nail stickers targeted at young people

Lumi Deco Nails - a wide range of nail stickers targeted at young peopleAFP



Measuring just 0.5mm thick, the nails include micro-thin LEDs that light up when NFC radio waves pass near to your nails, be it when making a phone call on your mobile phone or using an NFC-enabled smartphone or tapping your contactless travel card or payment card on a reader.


NFC, which has the support of MasterCard, Visa, Samsung, EE and the GSMA among others, enables smartphones and POS payment terminals to communicate at short range by being tapped together, using NFC tags and other small transmitters to send and receive information.


As the deco nails are designed to work primarily with the radio waves associated with contactless communications, the phones that Takara Tomy recommends for use with the deco nails are all Android phones by Japanese and Korean brands, such as Samsung, HTC, Sony Xperia, NEC, Sharp, Fujitsu and LG.


Now on sale in Japan, a pack of 16 nail stickers, including a nail file, costs 1,200 yen ($12, £6.95).



Gold Prices Hover Near Two-Month High on Geopolitical Tensions


Gold Prices Hover Near Two-Month High

Gold prices set to drop next week.Reuters



Gold prices hovered near a two month high in London on 30 June as geopolitical tensions in Iraq and the Ukraine propped up the precious metal.


Spot Gold was trading at $1,314.99 an ounce at 9:32 BST in London, Bloomberg data showed. Prices struck $1,325.95 an ounce on 24 June, the highest since 15 April, 2014.


Prices have risen some 2.4% in the second-quarter of 2014.


US Gold for delivery in August shed 0.3% to $1,315.70 on the Comex.


Barclays said in a note to clients: "Gold's recent gains are unlikely to last over the longer term.


"If and when geopolitical tensions ease, we continue to expect gold to return to its downward trajectory."


Commerzbank Corporates & Markets said in a note: The [US] CFTC's data on the market positioning of speculative financial investors on the COMEX, published [27 June] showed that net long positions in silver and gold had been hugely expanded in the week to 24 June...Net long positions in gold doubled to almost 100,000 contracts, putting them at their highest level since the end of March.


"This was attributable both to the covering of short positions and to the expansion of long positions. As such, there is much to suggest that the price recovery seen in recent weeks was largely speculatively driven and that correction potential has built up as a result. According to the All India Gems & Jewellery Trade Federation, only 150 [tones] of gold were imported to India in the first half of [2014], following the unusually high figure of 650 [tones] in the same period [of 2013].


"According to the Federation, gold imports in the second half of the year will depend to a major extent on what political decisions are taken. In July, the new federal budget will be approved for the [2014-15] fiscal year, which is likely to have an impact on imports, for it will then be revealed whether the import restrictions for gold are to be reduced or indeed entirely lifted under the new Prime Minister [Narendra] Modi."


India Gold Imports


Gold and silver imports into India plunged 40% to $33.46bn (£19.66bn, €24.50bn) in the financial year 2013-14 in the wake of hard-hitting government restrictions.


Three upward revisions to the import duties on gold in 2013, to a record 10%, and restrictions tying purchases to exports, discouraged gold buying in Asia's third-largest economy in 2013.


While official imports in 2013 reached 750 tonnes, an additional 200 tonnes was believed to have been smuggled to India, according to estimates from the World Gold Council (WGC).



Newborn Baby Found Stabbed to Death in Cape Town


A Knife

A knife was found protruding from the baby's chestCredit: Flickr/Walt Stoneburner



A newborn baby has been found stabbed to death in a shallow grave in Cape Town, South Africa.


The child had a knife protruding from its chest when it was discovered wrapped inside a black bag and newspapers in Devon Park, Eersterivier.


James Konja and his friend Dennis Marks were searching for firewood when they stumbled upon the corpse.


"We were on our way to cut wood. Then I saw a hole next to a tree stump," Konja told the Daily Voice.


"I asked Dennis, 'what that is [sic]?' then we saw it is a person."


He said he could see the baby's eyes, and a knife had been put through its chest.


"The backside part of the baby was under the ground. I saw the eyes," said Konja. "The hole, it was a grave, but it wasn't covered with sand and it was deep. The knife was through the baby's chest."


Konja called his wife, a 58-year-old retired nurse called Phoebe, to the scene.


"I am no detective, but there was no blood splatter there and the hole looked neat, like a spade was used," said.


"The persons who did this, the mother or the father, must bandiet [go to jail]."


Marks said: "We do not know who the mother is, but if we hear anything, we will contact the police".


Police spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Andrè Traut said a concealment of birth case has been opened and no arrests has been made.



India's PM Narendra Modi Proposes Satellite Dedicated to South Asia


India PSLV-23 launch

India's Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-C23), carrying five satellites, lifts off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, north of the southern Indian city of ChennaiReuters



As India successfully fired off its Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV)-23 carrying five satellites into space, Prime Minister Narendra Modi proposed a satellite exclusively for the south Asian region.


Modi, who has been keen on strengthening the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (Saarc) since his takeover, said the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) should develop a dedicated satellite that could be used in disaster management and as a tool to fight poverty.


"You should develop a Saarc satellite. We should dedicate this satellite to our neighbourhood as India's gift ... India is rooted in our age-old ethos of 'Vasudeva Kutumbakam' [Entire world is a family]. Our space science reflects that. We should share the fruit of this with our neighbouring countries," he said, congratulating the scientists behind the launch of the satellites at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in the southern city of Sriharikota.


The 230-tonnne launch vehicle, with a height of 44.4 metres, was carrying payloads of one each from France, Germany, Singapore and two Canadian satellites.


Modi saw the launch of the satellites of developed nations as "global endorsement of India's space capabilities", adding: "This fills every Indian's heart with pride and I can see it reflected in the joy and satisfaction on your faces."


"We are proud that our programme is indigenous. Generations of scientists have worked to make India a self-reliant space power. Technology has a critical role in realising the vision of a Digital India - the power of 1.2 billion connected Indians. Such technology is fundamentally connected with the common man. As a change agent, it can empower and connect, to transform his life."


In the multi-billion dollar space market, India has emerged as a key player putting 35 foreign satellites into orbit so far.


Countries such as the UK, Denmark, Austria, Switzerland, Israel, Italy, Belgium, South Korea, Indonesia, Argentina, The Netherlands, Algeria and Luxembourg have used Indian launch vehicles to put their satellites in space.



Uruguay President Jose Mujica Brands Fifa 'Old Sons of Bitches' Over Luis Suarez Bite [VIDEO]


Uruguayan President Jose Mujica branded FIFA a bunch

Uruguayan President Jose Mujica branded Fifa a bunch "a bunch of old sons of bitches"YouTube



Uruguay's president has made an un-statesmanlike attack on Fifa by branding football's governing body "old sons of bitches" for booting Luis Suarez out of the tournament in Brazil.


Jose Mujica insisted Sepp Blatter and his ilk were nothing but "a bunch of old sons of bitches" in a video uploaded to the web.


Mujica - who has a reputation for being unconventional - theatrically covered his mouth after uttering the anti-Fifa slur.


He was reacting to the punishment meted to Suarez for biting Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini on the shoulder during a World Cup group game. The Liverpool striker was subsequently banned for nine international games, barred from all football-related activity for four months and fined 100,000 Swiss Francs (£66,000).


Journalist Sergio Gorzy posted footage of Mujica's outburst online, below, after Mujica told him "publish it".


The ban has been interpreted in Uruguay as a conspiracy amplified by the English-speaking media against Suarez, who has now bitten opponents three times in his professional career.


Mujica stands out among national leaders for shunning wealth and all the trappings of power in Uruguay. He lives a frugal life on a farm with a goat.



Malaysia: Strutting Serama Chicken Wins $10,000 in Poultry Pageant


serama chicken

A serama chicken is strutting on a judge table during a poultry pageantAFP/Getty Images



One of the world's smallest chickens has won $10,000 (£5,873) in a beauty contest for tiny poultry in Malaysia.


The Malaysian Serama Chicken - first discovered in the country in the 1960s – is characterised for its particular upright posture.


The bird, which weighs no more than 500g, has been often exhibited in contests in Malaysia, where the animal is particularly loved.


Mohamad Hatta Yahaya, the owner of the chicken which won the contest in Kampung Pandan, Kuala Mapur, said the bird is his hero.


"There are people who want to buy my bird. But I am not selling it. It is part of my family," Hatta told the Jakarta Post.


Judges scored chickens on posture, feather quality, colour and temperament.


Before the show, the birds are subjected to hours of grooming during which their plumage is embellished with additional feathers, taped to them.


Oils are also applied to make the plumage shine.


Norzamini Tukiban, head of the district chapter of Malaysia's Serama Association, said: "These beautiful tiny birds give you great pleasure to own.


"They are warm and tame and this allows you to hold them, making serama birds adorable household pets."


Bred for royalty


There are an estimated 250,000 serama chickens in Malaysia, according to Ahmad Fauzi Mohamed, president of the Malaysia branch of the World Serama Federation.


The small birds were originally used as pets by the state sultans in the country. The word serama is believed to have originated from "Rama" — a term referring to Thailand's royalty.


The popularity of this breed has also spread to Europe and America, where serama clubs can be found.


Many Malaysians eat the sarama chicken, which is believed to alleviate the symptoms of asthma and also hgave aphrodisiac effects.


The tiny birds are believed to have originated from the mating between Japanese and Malaysian bantams – small chickens.


Fauzi Osman, a breeder from northern Malaysia, said breeding is very difficult and "die-hard enthusiasts like those from Indonesia will get someone to smuggle baby chicks for about $200 each."



Japan's Factory Output Bounces Back


Japan's Factory Output Bounces Back

A factory in the Keihin industrial zone in Kawasaki, south of Tokyo.Reuters



Japan's factory output bounced back in May from a decline following 1 April's national sales tax hike, accentuating views the world's third-largest economy will soak up the increase largely unharmed.


Factory output rose 0.5% month-on-month and followed a 2.8% drop in April, government data showed on 30 June. A Reuters poll of economists forecast a 0.9% monthly increase in output


Manufacturers surveyed by the government expect output to fall 0.7% in June but grow 1.5% in July, the data showed.


Market reaction was passive. The benchmark Nikkei 225 share average finished 0.44% higher on 30 June. The index has gained 3.62% for the month as a whole.


The factory output data comes ahead of the release of the Bank of Japan's second-quarter Tankan business sentiment survey, on 1 July.


Standard Chartered said in a note to clients: "...We expect the current diffusion index of large manufacturers to have dropped to 14 in Q2 from 17 in Q1 as the April sales-tax hike temporarily stalled private consumption, hurting business sentiment.


"However, large manufacturers' outlook likely rebounded to 18 from 8 previously. This would support our view that the contraction in business activity after the tax hike was short-lived and that the economy will gradually stabilise in H2."


"The Tankan survey of companies' inflation expectations, which was launched in Q1-2014, will also be closely watched. The results are likely to show a moderate pick-up in inflation expectations given the current uptrend in inflation," the British firm added.


"Output is recovering. But it is still in the stage of adjustments given falling shipments and rising inventory," Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchukin Research Institute in Tokyo told Reuters.


Sales Tax Revision


Japanese consumer prices struck a 23-year high in April, in the wake of the 1 April sales tax hike, a positive development in Tokyo's near two-decade-long battle against deflation.


But higher prices resulted in a bigger-than-expected drop in consumer spending and a higher-than-expected slowdown in factory activity that month, raising concerns about the pace of economic recovery of the Japanese economy.


Manufacturers cut production in April, to prevent piling up inventories, after Japan raised the national sales tax rate from 5% to 8%, the first increase in 17 years, to curb its huge public debt and battle falling prices.



Nigerian Troops Hid in the Bush as Boko Haram Islamists Burnt Down Chibok Churches


Nigeria Boko Haram atrocities

Members of a vigilante group of traditional hunters pose for a picture at their camp in MaiduguriReuters file photo



Nigerian troops reportedly hid in the bush as Boko Haram militants stormed the Chibok area, where hundreds of girls were kidnapped, burning down churches and slaughtering dozens of people.


The Nigerian military apparently did not respond to the distress calls made by the locals in the region.


"They [Nigerian soldiers] just went and got a hiding place in the bush," Enoch Mark, a local leader from Chibok, told the AFP.


The Islamist insurgents on Sunday (29 June) had set at least five churches ablaze in yet another surprise attack in Chibok, which has been gripped by Boko Haram fear in the last few months.


As many as 56 people including women and children have been killed in the onslaught although the authorities are yet to ascertain the exact death toll.


Most of the victims were Christians as they were attending morning prayers. The assault was well-coordinated and the extremists were armed with several guns and explosives.


"The attackers killed and burnt houses after attacking worshippers in five churches in Kwada, before moving to Kautikari less than 8 kilometres to Chibok town, killing and burning down people's houses and property. The security operatives were not on ground to defend us. In fact, those who ran into the bush were pursued and killed by the murderers," a resident in the region named Amos Bulus told Vanguard daily.


Local authorities have urged the Nigerian federal government to take more measures to protect the local communities from the deadly Boko Haram outfit.



North Korea Renews Nuclear Tantrums Ahead of Chinese President's Seoul Visit


North Korea's nuclear program

North Korea renews nuclear tantrums ahead of Chinese president's Seoul visitReuters



North Korea has yet again insisted it will press ahead with its nuclear programmes even as the Chinese President Xi Jinping is set to visit the isolated nation's neighbouring rival South Korea.


As part of its chest-beating exercise, Pyongyang said South Korea is in "stupid delusion" if Seoul thinks it can make North Korea abandon its contentious nuclear ambitions.


"If nuclear problems are to be resolved in the Korean Peninsula, nuclear threats and risks of attacking the North raised by the US and the South Korean puppet group of traitors should be eliminated first," said a report carried by the North Korean mouthpiece Rodong Sinmun.


It added: "Expecting us to make changes in our policies and stances is equivalent to anticipating that the sky falls."


The Chinese head of state is scheduled to be on official visit to South Korea later this week in order to discuss Pyongyang's nuclear programme.


China, one of the few close allies of North Korea, is increasingly distancing itself from the communist regime in recent years as Pyongyang is becoming a political burden for Beijing.


Xi is also expected to hold bilateral talks with his South Korean counterpart Park Geun-hye when he visits the latter's state on Thursday and Friday (3 and 4 July). This will be the first time a Chinese leader is visiting South Korea before touring North Korea, signalling a sharp change in Beijing's foreign policy affairs.


Meanwhile, in a separate development, North Korea's latest announcement has come when the country has said it will put the two detained American men on trial for their "hostile acts" against the state.


The state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said Miller Todd and Jeffery Fowle will face judicial proceedings.


"According to the results of the investigation, suspicions about their hostile acts have been confirmed by evidence and their testimonies," the KCNA said.


Fowle was arrested in April when he was touring North Korea while Miller was taken into custody after he tore up his tourist visa and sought asylum in the country.



Sunni Jihadists Declare Medieval Style Caliphate Straddling Iraq and Syria


Isis declares Caliphate

A fighter of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis) holds an Isis flag and a weapon on a street in the city of MosulReuters



Sunni Islamist jihadists, who made massive territorial gains in Iraq and Syria, have said they are establishing an Islamic caliphate extending from Aleppo in northern Syria to Diyala province in eastern Iraq.


The dreaded al-Qaeda offshoot, which waged a long campaign for the establishment of a hardline Sunni rule under the banner of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, has renamed their outfit as the "Islamic State" and named its leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi as the "Caliph", according to a statement the group posted on the internet.


"He is the imam and khalifah (Caliph) for the Muslims everywhere ... Accordingly, the 'Iraq and Sham' (Levant) in the name of the Islamic State is henceforth removed from all official deliberations and communications, and the official name is the Islamic State from the date of this declaration," the group's spokesman Abu Muhammad al-Adnani said in the statement.



"Listen to your caliph and obey him. Support your state, which grows every day."


- Isis spokesman



The ultra hardline faction, which sees Shia Muslims as heretics deserving death, has been disowned by the al-Qaeda leadership and is viewed by Sunni leaders in Gulf Arab states as a long-term security threat.


The rebels capitalised on the Iraqi Sunnis' deep sense of alienation under the Shiite-led administration of Nouri al-Maliki in Baghdad to push their long-term goal of setting up a medieval style caliphate straddling Iraq and Syria.


They have called upon Muslims everywhere to pledge allegiance to the new ruler, Caliph Ibrahim, and "reject democracy and other garbage from the West".


The statement reveals the group's plan to extend its control over more territories. "The legality of all emirates, groups, states and organisations becomes null by the expansion of the caliph's authority and the arrival of its troops to their areas," the statement said.


"Listen to your caliph and obey him. Support your state, which grows every day."


Meanwhile, the battle for Tikrit raged for the second consecutive day even as the militants appeared to have repelled the security forces' efforts to wrest control of key areas.


The Iraqi army said it was in control of Tikrit University where it raised a government flag. "It is a matter of time before we declare the total clearing of Tikrit," army spokesman Qassim al Moussawi said.



Prince Harry Shows Off His Dance Moves at Children's Day Care Centre in Chile


Prince Harry

Prince Harry showed off his best dance moves at a centre for mentally disabled children.AFP / Getty Images



It's not every day that a girl gets to dance with a real life prince, but for a group of children in Chile it was a dream come true.


Prince Harry showed off his best dance steps as he met with children at the Fundacion Amigos de Jesus day care centre in Santiago, during the third day of his royal tour of Chile.


The centre looks after children with mental and physical disabilities.


The party prince put his best foot forward to join the children for a dance on the steps of the day care centre, much to the amusement of it's patients and onlookers.


Prince Harry

AFP / Getty Images



He stayed at the centre for the whole day, taking time to chat and play with the children.


Harry demonstrated the natural warmth and compassion for which his mother Princess Diana was famed as he interacted with the children.


In a series of heart-warming images the Prince is seen high-fiving a four-year-old boy named Russell.


And he broke into spontaneous laughter when seven-year-old Pascal Vasquez stole the microphone from him as began to make a speech.


Prince Harry

AFP / Getty Images



Prince Harry was also seen bonding with teenagers in the centre and the staff, who were more than happy to hang out with the young royal.


On Friday (27 June) he visited the Sagrada Familia kindergarten school in Chile, where he spent an afternoon playing games and musical instruments with underprivileged children from the Mapuche indigenous community.


And while visiting a slum in the village of El Vergel yesterday, the prince revealed he's quite the handy man as he repaired a family's television set, just in time for them to watch the Brazil v Chile World Cup match.


Prince Harry

AFP / Getty Images



The Prince went to the slums to view the rebuilding work in the area, which was devastated following a forest fire in April that destroyed nine in ten of the self-made homes.


Prince Harry embarked on the Royal tour of Chile to support the England football team.


.



FIFA World Cup 2014: Brazil Fan Dies of Heart Failure During Dramatic Penalty Shoot



Brazil Penalty Shoot Out

Neymar of Brazil walks forward to take his penalty in the shoot-out during the match between Brazil and Chile at Estadio Mineirao.AFP / Getty Images



A Brazilian fan has died while watching his country's World Cup penalty shootout victory over Chile.


While the match against Chile finished 1-1 after extra time, the hosts Brazil won 3-2 in a dramatic penalty shoot out.


The 69-year-old man was watching the match in a bar close to the Mineirao Stadium in Belo Horizonte.


During the game, he complained of feeling unwell, and died shortly after being taken to hospital.


It was reported that he suffered heart failure.


Health officials treated 100 people who were taken ill or over wrought by the excitement during the match.


This included a 50-year-old woman for a heart problem during the shootout and a young man whose nose was broken in a fight.




Fifa World Cup 2014: Brazil v Chile Match Leaves One Dead and 100 in Care


Brazilian fans World Cup 2014 Brazil Chile

Brazilian fans react after the 2014 World Cup round of 16 game between Brazil and Chile, in Recife.Reuters



One Brazil fan died and almost 100 others needed medical treatment during Brazil's tense penalty shootout victory over Chile at the World Cup.


A 69-year-old man suffered heart failure during the round of 16 knockout match, which he was watching in a bar close to the Mineirao Stadium in Belo Horizonte.


The man complained of feeling unwell just before the penalties and was rushed to a local hospital, where he died a couple of hours later.


Health officials in the southeastern Minas Gerais region said he was diabetic and suffered from hypertension.


The State Health Secretariat added that another 98 people required medical attention during the Saturday afternoon clash.


At least 60 of those were fans who were watching the match live at the stadium, including a 50-year-old who had a heart attack during the shootout.


Brazil eventually made it to the to the quarter-finals of the World Cup, beating Chile 3-2 in the shootout at the end of an emotionally charged game, after the regular 90 minutes and 30 minutes' extra time finished 1-1.


Julio Cesar Brazil saves penalty Alexis Sanchez Chile

Julio Cesar of Brazil saves a penalty by Alexis Sanchez of ChileBuda Mendes/Getty Images




Iraqi Army Drives Sunni Rebels from Central Tikrit but Maliki's Days at Helm Numbered


Army retakes Tikrit

Military vehicles of the Iraqi security forces take part in an intensive security deployment on the outskirts of the city of SamarraReuters



The Iraqi army has retaken the northern city of Tikrit from Sunni rebels following a massive offensive, the state media has reported.


The counter-offensive that drove fighters from the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isis) from former dictator Saddam Hussein's hometown was presumably supported by US military advisers.


Iraqi state television said the army took control of the governor's headquarters and other government buildings in Tikrit. The army surrounded the rebels from all four sides of the city, pounding the Sunni militants, who had captured the city on 11 June, with firing from tanks and helicopter gunships.


The state media said at least 60 fighters from the Isis, including senior commanders, were killed in the attack.


A spokesman for the Sunni militia confirmed heavy fighting was going on around Tikrit but claimed the army's attack had failed, BBC reported.


The New York Times said independent sources could confirm that the army offensive pushed Isis fighters from key government buildings in the centre of Tikrit as well as from important roads and strategic positions.


"Reports and surveillance show that Isis leaders have ordered a retreat," Gen Qassim Atta, a spokesman for the Iraqi military, told the NYT.


Citing military sources, BBC said the army's counter-offensive, the most successful yet on the surging Sunni militants, was co-ordinated with American military advisers.


According to Reuters, the army's move to recapture the key northern city was planned days in advance.


While snipers from Iraqi special forces had been airdropped inside Tikrit University days on Thursday, more troops landed in key pockets inside the city.


The government army's move to Tikrit from the southern town of Samarra, where the militants' advance had been checked earlier, was aided by some Sunni tribes and Shia militias.


Meanwhile, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the spiritual leader of Shiites in Iraq, asked political parties to arrive at a consensus over who would be the next prime minister before the newly elected parliament meets, piling pressure on Nouri al-Maliki, who is looking for a third term in office.


In signs that the days of Maliki at the top of a divisive administration in Baghdad are numbered, Saudi King Abdullah told US Secretary of State John Kerry that he would use his influence over Iraqi Sunni leaders to agree a power- sharing deal that can go a long way in defusing the current crisis that threatens to rip the country apart on sectarian lines.



10 People Die as New Delhi Apartment Building Collapses


Rescue workers clear the debris from the site of a collapsed building in New Delhi

Rescue workers clear the debris from the site of a collapsed building in New DelhiReuters



An apartment block in New Delhi has collapsed, killing at least 10 people, including five children and two women, and injuring another two.


The four-storey building, built nearly 50 years ago, crumbled at around 9am local time. Rescuers are scrambling to find survivors as two people are feared trapped inside.


Deputy Commissioner of Police Madhur Verma told reporters an investigation into the cause of the collapse had been launched.


"This is a 50-year-old building. They have illegally built floor after floor," Rajesh Bhatia, a senior municipal official, told NDTV news channel.


"Building collapse in Delhi brings forth need to adhere to safety requirements," tweeted Vijay Goel, a lawmaker from the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, which controls the Municipal Corporation of Delhi.


Building collapses are common in India's large cities and have killed about 100 people in the last year. In the worst incident of this kind, a five-storey building collapsed in the Mazagon area of Mumbai city on 27 September 2013, killing at least 61 people and injuring other 32.



Suarez Punished for Biting Italy and England Out of World Cup Says Venezuela President



Venezuela's populist President Nicolas Maduro has defended Uruguay's striker Luis Suarez, claiming that he was unjustly punished for eliminating football powers - Italy and England - from the World Cup.


The Liverpool striker was banned by Fifa from all football for four months and handed a nine-match international ban after biting Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini during a group stage match against Italy, which was won 1-0 and allowed Uruguay and Costa Rica to progress to the knockout stage at the expense of the Europeans.


Suarez also scored two goals against England in a 2-1 victory.


"They can't forgive Uruguay that a son of the people has eliminated two of football's big nations, so they invented a whole case," Maduro said late on Friday.


"It's very painful this disproportionate punishment that Fifa has taken against Luis Suarez, a great striker who belongs to all of us in South America," the president, who succeeded late Venezuelan socialist leader Hugo Chavez, continued.


Maduro Venezuela

Venezuela's President Nicolas MaduroReuters



"No one denies some corrective measures were needed, but to suspend him for four months from football where he shines? To take him out of the World Cup? Latin America views this with outrage and we reject it totally."


Suarez's biting provoked international criticism but there is also a growing feeling that the punishment is excessive.


Chiellini himself claimed the ban was "excessive" and "alienating" for a player. "Now inside me there's no feelings of joy, revenge or anger against Suarez for an incident that happened on the pitch and that's done. There only remain the anger and the disappointment about the match," Chiellini wrote on his official website.


Maduro's comments came after Suarez told Fifa's disciplinary panel that he did not deliberately bite the Italy defender.


"In no way it happened how you have described, as a bite or intent to bite," he said. "After the impact...I lost the balance, making my body unstable and falling on top of my opponent."


"At that moment I hit my face against the player leaving a small bruise on my cheek and a strong pain in my teeth," Suarez said.




Life In the Golan Heights: How Ordinary People Learn to Prosper in a Crucible of Hate


Nimrod Castle

Nimrod Castle, which dominates a section of the Golan Heights and provided the backdrop for our visit.Wikipedia



When you consider the history of the Golan Heights, it's hard to imagine any sort of society surviving there. This rugged, rocky strip straddling the border of Israel and Syria has been a crucible of conflict for centuries; it was even mentioned as a scene of turmoil in the Bible.


Conquered by the Arabs in the seventh century and by the Ottomans in the 16th, it was controlled first by France and then Syria during the early 20th century, before the majority was captured by Israel during the bloody Six-Day War of 1967.


Today the Syrian civil war rages just miles away, and Israeli media claim Hezbollah are opening up a new front in the region. Someone with no knowledge of the area would imagine it barren and desolate, a buffer zone bubbling with fear and hostility.


Yet, like the trees and flowers that proliferate on the craggy mountainside, a vibrant society has defied the odds and taken root on the Israeli side. This feat is even more remarkable given the ethnic complexity of the community.


Jews live side-by-side under the Israeli flag with Christians and members of the Syrian Druze sect, whose faith contains elements of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. It sounds like a recipe for tumult, especially given the Syrian civil war is raging just miles away. Yet today the Golan Heights is far less turbulent than other border areas, and certainly far more peaceful than other flashpoint areas such as the Gaza Strip.


Today, along with a handful of journalists from the English broadsheets, I have the chance to witness this minor miracle for myself. We have been invited by a former IDF commander to take a tour of the Heights, and to meet two members of the local community in a valley below Castle Nimrod, a medieval Crusader fortress which is now the centrepiece of a national park that bears its name. This is the sort of assignment that made you want to become a journalist in the first place.


We arrive at a roadside restaurant whose layout is, frankly, unremarkable, with its white breezeblock façades, faded signage and wooden tables. It´s the sort of restaurant you find anywhere in the Middle East. The restaurant stands completely alone, accessible only by a road snaking up the mountainside. It's quiet, almost eerily so. Yet at the top of the mountain we can clearly see the ruined fortress glowering down at us – a reminder that the area wasn't always this calm.


Restaurant

The restaurant we dined inGareth Platt



The two locals introduce themselves as Guy, a 33-year-old quantum mechanics student who lives in a kibbutz in the nearby town of Snir, and Taleah, a 47-year-old who teaches geography and English and lives a few miles away in the Druze community. Both men speak excellent English and are immediately relaxed in our company. Yet, inevitably, the conversation soon drifts to the turbulent history of the land they call home.


Of the past conflict, Guy says: "All my life I felt it. As children we saw the army all the time, the border wasn´t so quiet as it is now, we could hear the gunfire, helicopters all around, it's something you live with, and all the time we think about it. We don´t live in fear, but in a state of post-trauma. We hear about Syrians coming over the border all the time to escape the fighting, and the war in Syria is obviously close, even if you don't see it."



As children we saw the army all the time, the border wasn´t so quiet as it is now


Guy, local student



Taleah, meanwhile, recalls his father telling him that an Israeli soldier took him home and put him in shelter during a bombing raid in the 1973 war, when Syria attacked the Heights. Like Guy, he says he doesn't really feel the Syrian civil war, which seems remarkable given there have been "one of two" bombings nearby, and shelters are dotted around his village. Across the border, 120,000 Syrian Druze have been forced to flee their land for Europe and America, driven out by the ferocity of the conflict and the possibility of persecution by the hard-line Islamist rebels.


It is immediately clear that Taleah is fiercely proud of his sect. He wastes no time in telling us that our lunch of falafel, kebab and maklava rice is "typical Druze food", and claims he sees himself as Druze rather than any particular nationality. Yet despite his religious devotion, and the fact that Arabic is his first language, he shows a clear affinity for Israel, referring to its people as "our brothers."


Ten percent of his local community are Israeli and, although there is some pro-Syrian sentiment, the majority of the rest identify with the Jewish state; many serve in the IDF, and according to Taleah, "are more motivated than the Jews themselves".


There are many reasons for this sense of kinship. Taleah claims it dates back to the biblical prophet Jethro, who helped the Israelites escape Egypt and is also revered in the Druze religion. Yet he also says Druze believe it is vital to show loyalty to the country they live in – a tenet perhaps born of the instability that has scarred their region, and a pragmatic need to adapt. And, of course, there is a common enemy. "We and the Alawites in Syria are afraid of the Sunnis," Taleah says. "Our brothers here in Israel are afraid, too."



We and the Alawites in Syria are afraid of the Sunnis. Our brothers here in Israel are afraid, too.


Taleah, local Druze



We finish lunch and Guy has to leave. Taleah, however, refuses to end it here; he is determined to show us his community and give us some Druze hospitality, so we pile into his car for the 30-minute drive to his home. Taleah reveals he is the sixth generation of a Druze sheikh, and gives us an effusive overview of his people.


He claims that the majority are plant eaters – "they like land, they have a close relationship with the land" - and education is highly prized, with a high percentage going to university.


"All the parents here want their children to speak English. We have special respect for the English people, not because you yourself are English but in London they have respect, civilisation and culture." The women dress in clothes not dissimilar to a Muslim burqa, black with a white shawl, yet there are no restrictions on what young girls can wear, and women have been able to drive for 30 years.


Majdal Shams

The town of Majdal ShamsGareth Platt



We pass through Majdal Shams, an affluent town with shops advertising western clothes and signs in English, Hebrew and Arabic, before stopping at "Shouting Hill", a small ridge crossed by the Syria border fence. Following the partition of the Druze community in 1967, those separated by the towering border fence would meet at this hill to bond, gossip and even flirt over the barbed wire.


Today, however, an Assad stronghold sits on the Syrian side and any interaction across the divide would be highly risky; families torn asunder by the 1967 partition have little chance of seeing each other.


Then it's on to one of the many cherry orchards which, Taleah says, are integral to the local economy, and then eventually we arrive at Taleah's house, a modern two-storey stone building in a small, remote village. Like many houses in the village, the property is flanked by a fleet of cars, proof that the area has remained prosperous and vibrant despite the conflict close by.


Taleah house

The house we visited in the Golan HeightsGareth Platt



Taleah's wife and one of his sons greet us with cakes, fruit, coffee and tea, although in truth we are still completely full from lunch, and the vast majority of the food remains untouched. Our host doesn't seem to mind; he is proud to have given us a glimpse of his life, of his people, and of the warm kernel of hope which has enabled this amazing community to survive in the most unforgiving of circumstances.



Man Arrested in China For Ripping Out and Eating Man's Heart


Noodles

Flickr/skolbwilliams



A Chinese man has been killed in an astonishing attack by a man who stabbed his victim, then ripped his still beating heart out of his chest, then bit into it after a row over a bowl of noodles escalated into murder.


Bo Tuan, 29, brutally attacked Yul Liao, after an argument which ensued after Tuan asked Liao to share his bowl of noodles.


When the 48-year-old victim refused, the pair began arguing, before eyewitnesses said Bo pulled out a knife and drew it across Liao's throat.


Witnesses fainted in shock and fled in terror after the violent scenes in Suizhou, in the Hubei province of China.


An eyewitness told the Daily Mirror: "It was bloody and horrifying and I can't get the images out of my mind. He sliced the man open like he was a bag of rice, and pulled his heart out in front of us all, I swear it was still beating. Several people fainted; I wish I could have fainted. I can't stop seeing it even when I close my eyes."


She said that Tuan had carried the heart in his hands as he wandered outside the noodle bar where the man's dead body lay on the ground. He occasionally bit into the dead man's heart, and made no attempt to resist arrest or escape when police arrived on the scene.


Locals criticised police for arriving slowly. They claimed it had taken officers 40 minutes to arrive and arrest Tuan, who they feared might attack witnesses or passers-by.



Nigeria: Suspected Boko Haram Bomb Kills 10 at Bauchi Brothel


Nigeria Terror Boko Haram

A bomb blast in Nigeria's capital of Abuja rocked a popular shopping complex as Boko Haram continues its insurgency in the country's northern regions.Twitter / @EricEkwere



An explosion at a brothel in Bauchi, north-east Nigeria, has killed 10 people and wounded 14 others, according to police.


"The entire building has been cordoned off and the scene secured. No arrest has been made but an investigation has commenced to ascertain the cause," said Bauchi state police spokesman Haruna Mohammed.


Mohammed added that 14 people were rushed to hospital following the blast at the People's Hotel brothel in the Bayangari area of the city.


No group has yet claimed responsibility for the blast but Boko Haram has targeted spots in northern Nigerian cities considered "un-Islamic" such as brothels and bars.


Bauchi straddles Nigeria's "Middle Belt" where the Christian south and Muslim north collide. The region has seen fewer attacks than Boko Haram's north-eastern heartland but blasts have previously struck the city of Jos.


Last month, dozens were killed in an explosion at a packed open-air venue in the city while a twin car bomb attack killed at least 130 people at the city's busy marketplace.


The group, which wants to create an Islamic caliphate within Nigeria, kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls in April in the village of Chibok, bringing global attention to the west African nation's fight against terrorism.


Three northern states - Borno, Yobe and Adamawa - have been under a state of emergency since May last year.



Iraqi Sunni Group Announces Ramadan Month Beginning on Sunday


Volunteers, who have joined the Iraqi Army to fight against predominantly Sunni militants from the radical Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), carry weapons during a parade in the streets in Al-Fdhiliya district, eastern Baghdad

Volunteers, who have joined the Iraqi Army to fight against predominantly Sunni militants from the radical Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis), carry weapons during a parade in the streets in Al-Fdhiliya district, eastern BaghdadReuters



The main Iraqi Sunni religious outfit has announced that the Islamic Ramadan month is beginning on Sunday (28 June) amid the raging Shiite-Sunni fighting in the country.


The Sunni Endowment in Iraq has said the month of Ramadan, considered to be holy for Muslims, will bring celebrations to the strife-torn country.


"Next Sunday will be the first day of the Holy month of Ramadan. The Sunni Endowment congratulates the Islamic nation and Iraqis in particular on this occasion," said the body's chief Mahmoud al-Sumaidae.


The occasion comes at a time when the Iraqi Shiite-led administration is fighting against the rapidly advancing Sunni militants of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis).


On the eve of Ramadan, at least seven people have been killed in skirmishes between security forces and extremists.


The military base in the town of Jurf al-Sakhar was attacked by the insurgents in southern Baghdad.


Ramadan is beginning on Sunday in Saudi Arabia and most other Middle East countries except Yemen where the month starts on Saturday.


Meanwhile, US President Barack Obama has congratulated Muslims around the world on the occasion.


An official statement said: "A time for self-reflection and devotion through prayer and fasting, Ramadan is also an occasion when Muslims around the world reaffirm their commitment to helping the less fortunate, including those struggling because of economic hardship and inequality."


"At a moment when too many people around the world continue to suffer from senseless conflict and violence, this sacred time reminds us of our common obligations to pursue justice and peace and to uphold the dignity of every human being."


What is Ramadan?


During the 30 days, Muslims fast and practice abstinence from dawn to dusk to mark the month when the Quran was said to have been revealed to Muhammad.


The month is one of the so-called five pillars of Islam.



Argentina Accuses US Judge of Abusing Power And Trying to Provoke Default


Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner

Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de KirchnerReuters



The Argentine government has criticised the US judge who blocked the country's payment to creditors, saying the judge "has abused his power."


Earlier, US District Judge Thomas Griesa blocked Argentina's attempt to pay coupons on its bonds due 30 June.


The country had deposited about $832m (£489m, €610m) in New York banks to make interest payments, without paying the holdout creditors, who did not take part in the country's bond restructurings and demanded full payments.


A statement from the government said Griesa was trying to "provoke a default" in Argentina by blocking the payment.


"By doing this he has abused his power and gone outside of his jurisdiction because the holders of restructured bonds are not the object of this litigation," it said, describing Griesa's decision as "senseless and unheard of."


Argentina has been engaged in a long legal battle with hedge funds, Elliott Management and Aurelius Capital, which refused to take part in the country's debt restructurings. About 92% of the country's creditors agreed to swap debts and accept less money.


Earlier, Griesa ordered that Argentina compensate the holdout creditors at the same time it pays investors, who took part in its debt restructuring.


Argentina claimed that if the country paid the suitors on their terms, it would lead to claims from other holdouts of around $15bn in debt.


Following the adverse ruling, Argentina said it was willing to negotiate with the so-called "vulture funds" to settle the 12-year-long legal dispute, and asked the court to stay its order to "allow the Republic to engage in a dialogue with the plaintiffs in a reasonable time frame".


Without the stay, Argentina would not be able to make the 30 June coupon payment on its restructured bonds. If it does not make the payment, it is likely to fall into technical default after a 30-day grace period.


Agentina's Economy Minister Axel Kicillof earlier said the judge's ruling "constitutes a sophisticated way to try and bring us to our knees before global usurers".



Iraq Isis Crisis: Armed US Aircraft Securing Baghdad Airspace


Iraq Isis Crisis: Armed US aircraft securing Baghdad airspace

Iraq Isis Crisis: Armed US aircraft securing Baghdad airspaceReuters file photo



The US's armed unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are flying over Baghdad airspace to protect Washington's interests in the Iraqi capital from the Sunni Islamists.


The surveillance drones are intended to collect intelligence about the activities of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis) militants.


"What I would tell you is that we continue to fly both manned and unmanned aircraft over Iraq at the... Iraqi government's request, predominantly for reconnaissance purposes. Some of those aircraft are armed," Pentagon spokesperson Real Admiral John Kirby told reporters.


The New York Times had earlier reported that Predator drones, fitted with Hellfire missiles, are circling over Baghdad.


Averaging about three dozen sorties every day, the US air force has been operating the flights for more than a week. The jets have been pressed into service following the deployment of US advisers on Iraqi soil to assist the Shiite-led administration in its fight against the Sunni extremists.


"The reason that some of those are armed is primarily for force protection now that we have introduced into the country some military advisers whose objective will be to operate outside the confines of the embassy," Kirby said.


Of the 300 planned US troops, nearly two-thirds have already arrived in the Iraqi capital.


"We're flying a great deal (of) manned and unmanned...intelligence and reconnaissance assets, and we're building a picture so that if the decision were made to support the Iraqi security forces as they confront (Isis), we could do so," head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey, told a radio interview.


The Obama administration has so far refrained from ordering airstrikes on the Islamists' positions.



'Child Abuse' Archbishop Josef Wesolowski Defrocked in Vatican Trial Sentencing


Josef Wesolowski Vatican Child Abuse

Archbishop Josef Wesolowski was found guilty of sex abuses by a Vatican court.Reuters



The former Holy See envoy to the Dominican Republic has been convicted and defrocked over child abuse in an unprecedented trial at the Vatican.


The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican office tasked with overseeing the Church's integrity, also known as the Holy Office, found Polish archbishop Josef Wesolowski guilty of sex abuse during his tenure as papal nuncio in Santo Domingo.


The canonical trial's verdict conferred a sentence of laicization - the banishment of a priest from the clergy. It is the harshest penalty possible the Holy Office can hand to a cleric.


The 66-year-old is also facing the prospect of imprisonment in the Vatican's tiny jail, as, when all appeals are exhausted, he will be tried by a criminal tribunal of the city state.


Wesolowski has two months to appeal. During that time, the Vatican said that he will be placed under some unspecified restrictive measures.


The Polish clergyman served as the Apostolic nuncio to the Dominican Republic from 2008 to August 2013, when he was recalled to the Holy See after the archbishop of Santo Domingo, Cardinal Nicolas de Jesus Lopez, told Pope Francis about claims that Wesolowski had sexually abused teenage boys.


Wesolowski had been exposed by a local television station, which alleged he hired "rent boys".


A 13-year-old boy working as a shoeshiner told NCDN channel that the archbishop paid him to masturbate in his presence and filmed the act on his mobile phone.


The case caused great embarrassment to the Vatican as Wesolowski was an official representative of the Pontiff and had been ordained as a priest and bishop by Pope John Paul II, who has recently been made a saint.


Wesolowski is the highest-ranking Vatican official ever to be investigated for sex abuse, and has become the first top papal representative to receive a defrocking sentence.



Oil Prices Set for First Weekly Drop Since Iraq Crisis


Crude Prices Set for First Weekly Drop Since Iraq Crisis

A member of the Kurdish security forces guards an oil refinery on the outskirts of Mosul, Iraq, on 22 June, 2014.Reuters



Crude oil prices are on course to log their first weekly-loss in three weeks amid rumours that oil output from Iraq, Opec's second-largest crude producer, will not be hit by the ongoing Sunni insurgency in that country.


Brent August contract was trading at $113.34 a barrel at 11:17 BST in London.


WTI August contract was trading at $105.48 a barrel in electronic trading in New York.


Both contracts are down 1.3% since 20 June.


Commerzbank Corporates & Markets said in a note to clients: "The oil market appears to be gradually pricing out the fear premium associated with Iraq again. Brent is trading at $113 per barrel this morning and has thus shed nearly $3 from the 9½-month high it achieved last week.


Iraq Oil Production

The Iraqi picture.Bloomberg, Commerzbank Research



"Increasingly, investors are convinced that the fighting in the north of Iraq will have no impact on the oil supply in the south. There are also signs from the north that give rise to hopes that the oil supply there might soon return to the market. For example, the regional government in Kurdistan intends very soon to double oil exports to 250,000 barrels per day."


"By year's end, an export volume of 400,000 barrels per day is targeted. Oil production is also recovering slowly in Libya: now that a smaller oil field in the west of the country has gone back into operation and a smaller export terminal in the east has reopened, Libyan oil production has climbed to 300,000 barrels per day. All of this points to a continuation of the moderate downturn in the Brent price.


"That said, the continuing tail risks of disruptions to supply in Iraq argue against any sharper price fall, meaning that the price is likely to remain above $110 per barrel. WTI dropped to a two-week low of $105 per barrel [on 26 June]. Speculation about a relaxation of the crude oil export ban in the US, which drove the WTI price up for a while this week, already appears to be abating again. What is more, we do not expect any decision to be taken on this matter before the congressional elections in November," Commerzbank added.


Commerzbank Corporates & Markets said in a separate note: "Against the backdrop of continued fighting in Iraq, the price of Brent oil should stay well above $110 per barrel for the time being. That said, new estimates of [Opec] production are likely to confirm that oil production in Iraq has not been affected by the advance of the Sunni terror group in northern and western Iraq.


"The oil market therefore remains in plentiful supply. Furthermore, as we do not expect significant outages in the south of the country in the medium-term either, the oil price should surrender its gains again in the coming weeks."



BDS Scores Another Victory with Italy and Spain Warning Against Business in Israeli Settlements


An ultra-Orthodox youth walks past a construction site in the West Bank Jewish settlement of Modiin Illit

An ultra-Orthodox youth walks past a construction site in the West Bank Jewish settlement of Modiin Illit (Reuters)



Spain and Italy's governments have warned their citizens against doing business with Israeli settlers in the occupied Palestinian territories of the West Bank, East Jerusalem and in the Golan Heights.


Following the advice of French foreign ministry, which issued a similar notice to their nationals, Madrid and Rome said that any business conducted in the settlements entails legal risks as they are built upon land occupied by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War.


The European Union and its members do not recognise Israeli rule there, which is illegal under international law.


"The current situation could lead to disputes over land, water, quarries or natural resources that were acquired or in which money was invested," read the statement from the Spanish Foreign Ministry. "Companies must take into account that [financial activity in the settlements] is liable to lead to their involvement in breaking international law and violating human rights."


Spain officially opposes sanctioning or boycotting Israel, foreign ministry officials explained. The warning was an implementation of a decision by the European Union and alignment with actions taken by other European countries. The UK and Germany issued similar warnings several months ago.


Italy's foreign minister Federico Mogherini also cautioned Italians "not to get involved in financial activity and investments" in settlement. The warning was given "in accord with other European countries" said Mogherini, in a bid to implement a political decision taken earlier.


Earlier, France's foreign ministry said that financial activity in the settlements "such as money transfers, investments, acquisition of property, provision of supplies or the performance of any other economic activities that benefit the settlements involves risks".


The statement continued to warn of the risks posed by settlement investment because of the international community's refusal to recognise them as part of Israel.


"This could lead to a high likelihood of land disputes or disagreements regarding water, quarries or other natural resources," the French statement added.


"This involves risk to the image of those who carry out such economic activity... We call upon citizens or businesspeople who are considering becoming involved in economic activity in the settlements to seek appropriate legal advice before going ahead."


An Israeli diplomat told Haaretz that the warnings were unwelcome at a time when three Israeli teenagers remain missing after being kidnapped in the occupied West Bank.


Dani Dayan, the chairman of the YESHA (Hebrew acronym for Yehuda Shomron, Aza) Council of Jewish Communities in Judea and Samaria tweeted that French citizens "keep joining" the West Bank's Jewish communities and that their "investment won't stop".


The warning from Italian, French and Spanish governments comes as a victory for the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement as the decision, though not legally-binding, is likely to lead to an increased boycott of the countries' financial activity within the settlements.



Argentina Blames US Court's 'Absurd' Ruling for Assisting 'Global Usurers'


The Economy Ministry building is seen in Buenos Aire

The Economy Ministry building is seen in Buenos AireReuters



A US judge has scheduled a hearing today to consider Argentina's stance on payments to holdout creditors, as the country struggles to avoid slipping into another debt default spiral.


Earlier, the court blocked the country's attempt to pay its restructured bondholders. Argentina had deposited about $832m (£489m, €610m) at New York banks to make interest payments, which were due 30 June on its foreign-currency bonds, without paying the holdout creditors.


Agentina's Economy Minister Axel Kicillof said: "The absurd ruling...constitutes a sophisticated way to try and bring us to our knees before global usurers."


Argentina has been engaged in a long legal battle with hedge funds, Elliott Management and Aurelius Capital, which refused take part in the country's debt restructurings. About 92% of the country's creditors agreed to swap debts and accept less money.


Earlier, US District Judge Thomas Griesa ordered that Argentina must compensate the holdout creditors at the same time it pays investors, who took part in its debt restructuring.


Argentina claimed that if the country paid the suitors on their terms, it would lead to claims from other holdouts of around $15bn in debt.


Following the adverse ruling, Argentina said it was willing to negotiate with the so-called "vulture funds" to settle the 12-year-long legal dispute, and asked the court to stay its order to "allow the Republic to engage in a dialogue with the plaintiffs in a reasonable time frame."


Without the stay, Argentina would not be able to make the 30 June coupon payment on its restructured bonds. If it does not make the payment, it is likely to fall into technical default after a 30-day grace period.


The lawsuits have kept the country from accessing the international capital markets since defaulting on its debt in 2001.



Gold Hovers Near Two-Month High on Weak Asia Demand and Uneven US Recovery


Gold Hovers Near Two-Month High Amid Weak Asia Demand and US Recovery

Gold prices hover near two-month high in London on 27 June.Reuters



Gold prices hovered near a two-month high in London on 27 June amid reports of weak Asian demand and after recent data highlighted that the US's road to economic recovery appears to be an uneven one.


Spot Gold prices hovered at $1,317.09 an ounce at 9:16 BST in London, according to Bloomberg data.


Gold for delivery in August inched up 0.1% to $1,318 on the Comex in New York.


Commerzbank Corporates & Markets said in a note to clients: "According to data from the Census and Statistics Department of the Hong Kong government, Chinese gold imports from the former British crown colony declined [in May 2014] on a net basis for the third consecutive month to total just 52.6 [tonnes].


Chinese Gold Imports Disappoint

China picture.Hong Kong Statistics Dept, Reuters, Commerzbank C&M



"Although this marked their lowest level since January 2013, prices hardly responded at all, unlike following the announcement of the April figures - which were likewise poor - four weeks ago..."


"407 [tonnes] of gold have been imported net from Hong Kong to China since the beginning of [2014]; extrapolated to the year as a whole, this would imply net imports of well under 1,000 [tonnes] and thus a noticeable decline year-on-year. Both the World Gold Council and the Shanghai Gold Exchange had recently expressed the expectation that Chinese gold demand would probably achieve roughly the same level as [2013].


"That said, gold could increasingly have been imported via the Shanghai free trade zone, meaning that the data from Hong Kong no longer give a complete picture of Chinese gold demand. This may explain the reaction of the gold price [on 26 June]. However, statements by the regional [Federal Reserve] President Bullard, who said that US key interest rates might already be raised in the first quarter of 2015, were also ignored by the market," Commerzbank added.


China Scandal


China's commodities trading sector has been dealt a fresh blow after its National Audit Office (NAO) discovered that tens of billions of renminbi (RMB) in loans were obtained on the back of false gold transactions.


The NAO on 26 June said that RMB94.4bn ($15.2bn, €11.2bn, £8.9bn) worth of loans had been backed by falsified gold transactions.


Meanwhile, a Standard Bank report on 26 June said gold demand in Asia, the leading consumer of the precious metal, remained weak.


US Data


Data from the US on 26 June showed that American consumer confidence held near its 2014 high during the week ended 21 June.


Earlier, data released on 25 June showed that the US economy experienced its worst quarter for five years over the first three months of 2014. The news weighed on the US dollar, which dropped to a seven-week low.


Revised statistics from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) showed that the world's leading economy contracted by 2.9% in the first quarter, having grown by 2.6% over the final quarter of 2013.


Asia Pricing


China and Singapore are competing to provide viable gold pricing benchmarks in Asia.


China, on 25 June said at an industry conference that it wants to increase its influence on the global gold market and that it hopes to have its own price "fix".


Singapore said at the same conference it will roll out a physical gold contract on an exchange, to set up a transparent form of pricing.


The moves, to establish localised pricing of the yellow metal, come ahead of a World Gold Council (WGC) meeting that hopes to "explore reform of the London Gold Fix", an age-old pricing of gold twice daily that has drawn regulatory scrutiny for its alleged lack of transparency.



30,000 Indian Shia Muslims Ready to Fight Isis 'Bare Handed' in Iraq


Iraq elections

Men scramble to get election pamphlets from the United Iraqi Alliance, a coalition of various Shia political and religious parties, at Buratha Mosque in Baghdad, in the run-up to national elections - File photo.hris Hondros / Getty Images



Some 30,000 Indian Shia Muslims have submitted their passports and are ready to travel to Iraq to defend Shiite holy shrines from the advancing Sunni Islamist insurgents by any means available.


According to recruiters a further 100,000 have pledged support for the cause and are also willing to travel and defend their faith.


Shia Muslim organisations said many of the volunteers are well-educated, have filled out forms and are "ready to go any moment".


Syed Bilal Hussain Abidi, a senior Shia cleric said: "The volunteers are educated young men from different backgrounds. We do not plan to train them in arms. We will go there to fight them bare handed."


India is home to around 175 million people of Islamic faith. Although the majority of the country's Islamic population are Sunni, Shia Muslims are estimated to make up between 40 million and 50 million.


Apparently the aim is to build a volunteer corps of a million people who will "form a human chain around the holy shrines of Karbala and Najaf".



"We are looking at a million volunteers to form a human chain around the holy shrines of Karbala and Najaf, in case the Isis attacks. We will do everything to stop the advance of the enemies."


- Syed Bilal Hussain Abidi, leader of Anjuman E Haideri



One of the organisations that recruits the "fighters" has said it plans to march to the Iraqi embassy in New Delhi to submit the visa applications.


"We could travel to Iraq to form a human chain to save people from being tortured. We could fetch water and donate blood and do anything to save our shrines," Abidi of Anjuman E Haideri, told Reuters.


Anjuman E Haideri, whose headquarters is located off Karbala Road in New Delhi, is only one of such organisations that recruit people in an unprecedented campaign to save the faith.


Earlier, the All India Shia Husaini Fund (AISHF) had said around 4,000 people volunteered to travel to Iraq and fight against the Isis militants.


However, the government of India has said it would not allow Indians to travel to Iraq because of security issues, and it's not clear how the Iraqi embassy in India will deal with the visa applications.


Moreover, the recruiters do not seem to have a clear idea about what the faith-driven fighters will do in Iraq.


AISHF Secretary General, Syed Hasan Mehdi, told IBTimes UK the "fighters" are amateurs and have been given no combat training. He said the volunteers would primarily be involved in aiding the efforts to rescue abducted Indians in Iraq and protect the holy Shiite shrines.


When pressed further whether the group was putting the lives of thousands in danger, Mehdi replied "Allah is with us."


Among those who signed up are engineers, police officers and students. They application form that they signed states: "I firmly believe that terrorism of all kinds including the one which is being inflicted by known terror groups in Iraq is not only a serious threat to innocent Iraqis (irrespective of their religious beliefs) but is also a threat to the entire humanity."


Syed Bahadur Abbas Naqvi, the general secretary Anjuman E Haideri, said they had to step in and send fighters to Iraq as the government of India did not have plans to send forces to Iraq.


"We have nearly 30,000 volunteers who have filled in the forms and given their passports and are ready to go any moment. Another hundred thousand have got in touch with us and have pledged their support. We are looking at a million volunteers to form a human chain around the holy shrines of Karbala and Najaf, in case the Isis attacks. We will do everything to stop the advance of the enemies," added Abidi, according to news portal Iraqi News.



Thailand: Buddhist Monk Jailed for Raping 15-year-old Girl in his Temple


singapore monks

The National Office of Buddhism (NOB) launched a 24-hour hotline to report monks behaving badly.Reuters



A Buddhist monk has been jailed for raping a teenage girl in his temple in Bangkok, Thailand.


Sanan Kamsridaeng, 65, was sentenced to five and a half years in jail after he confessed to raping the girl at his temple.


The victim, who was reportedly aged under 15 at the time the rape took place, had also been detained against her will in the temple by the monk.


"He was sentenced on Thursday to six years in jail for the first count... and five years for the second count. But because he confessed, the judge cut his sentence to five years and six months," a Bangkok criminal court official told AFP.


The conviction comes as the leader of Thailand's military junta, General Prayuth Chan-ocha, expressed concern over the image of Buddhism.


"There have been a lot of cases regarding bad behaviour related to monks, so we just want to fix this problem," said the junta spokesman Werachon Sukondhapatipak, in a report in The Guardian.


Last September, according to that same report, authorities seized nearly US$800,000 (£469,971) worth of assets - including a Porsche and a Mercedes-Benz - from a monk who was defrocked after travelling in a private jet and following accusations that he'd fathered a child by an underage girl a decade earlier.


In response to the growing concern regarding monks' misbehaviour, the National Office of Buddhism (NOB) launched in June a 24-hour hotline to report monks' bad conduct.


Napparat Benjawattananant, head of the office, said at the time the hotline was launched, "People can file a complaint if they see monks are involved in irreligious things. For example if they see fake monks collecting donations.


"We don't have enough staff to check every monk, so we need to mobilise the general public."


The hotline has received 142 complaints against unruly monks so far.


"But for sexual complaints we have to carry out in depth investigation," Benjawattananant said, adding monks found to have had sex should also face criminal charges.