Afghan Taliban Attack in Jalalabad Leaves At Least Six Dead


Afghanistan

An Afghan National Army (ANA) soldier keeps watch at the gate of a British-run military training academy Camp Qargha, in Kabul.(Reuters)



At least six people have been killed in a suspected suicide car bomb attack by the Afghan Taliban on an intelligence compound in the eastern city of Jalalabad.


More than 40 people, including several civilians, are reported to be injured in the dawn attack which was followed by intense gunfire.


Police have confirmed the attack but did not provide further details. The number of militant casualties is also yet to be ascertained.


"The first attacker detonated his explosives at the gate of the National Directorate of Security (NDS) office in Jalalabad city at 05:00 AM to open way for his colleague," Ahmad Zia Abdulzai, governor's spokesperson was quoted as saying.


The Taliban has claimed responsibility for the attack.


Intelligence offices and buildings of security forces are often targeted by the Taliban insurgents, who are trying to capitalise on the recent political turmoil over the election of a new president.


The Taliban-led insurgency has been posing a major challenge for Afghan security forces that are set to take over from the outgoing Nato troops.



Prime Minister David Cameron Warns UK Terror Attack is 'Highly Likely'


Prime Minister David Cameron

Cameron has warned that the IS militants cannot be appeased and Britain is at high risk of a terror attack.AFP / Getty Images



David Cameron has said today that a terror attack on the UK is now 'highly likely.'


The government has raised the official threat level from substantial to severe amid growing fears over the number of extremists returning to the UK from Iraq and Syria, where Islamic State (IS) have seized large swathes of territory.


Security forces have stated that there is no intelligence to suggest a terror attack is imminent, but the UK remains a target for the extremist militants.


At a press conference at Downing Street, the Prime Minister said that IS posed a "greater and deeper threat to our security than we have known before.


"We could be facing a terrorist state on the shores of the Mediterranean and bordering a NATO member," he said.



The root cause of this threat to our security is quite clear. It is a poisonous ideology of Islamist extremism that is condemned by all faiths and faith leaders.


- PM David Cameron



"My first priority as Prime Minister is to make sure we do everything possible to keep our people safe. The ambition to create an extremist caliphate in the heart of Iraq and Syria is a threat to our own security here in the UK.


"The terrorist threat was not created by the Iraq war 10 years ago. It existed even before the horrific attacks on 9/11, themselves some time before the war.


"This threat cannot be solved simply by dealing with perceived grievances over Western foreign policy. Nor can it be dealt with by addressing poverty, dictatorship or instability in the region - as important as these things are.


"The root cause of this threat to our security is quite clear. It is a poisonous ideology of Islamist extremism that is condemned by all faiths and faith leaders."


He stressed that the Government had already taken steps to counter the threat of jihadists returning to Britain to commit atrocities, but recognised that it had become clear that there was still a need to fill 'gaps in our armoury'.


He also announced new legislation to make it easier to remove extremists' passports if there are concerns they will travel to the Middle East to join IS.


Government officials believe at least 500 Britons have gone to fight in Syria and potentially Iraq.


Home Secretary Theresa May had earlier stated that while there is no information to suggest an attack is imminent, the public should be vigilant.


"We face a real and serious threat in the UK from international terrorism. The increase in the threat level is related to developments in Syria and Iraq where terrorist groups are planning attacks against the West.


"Some of those plots are likely to involve foreign fighters who have travelled there from the UK and Europe to take part in those conflicts. We face a real and serious threat in the UK from international terrorism.


"I would urge the public to remain vigilant and to report any suspicious activity to the police."


It is feared that IS terrorists may target high profile events in the UK.


Haras Rafiq from counter-extremist think tank the Quilliam Foundation, said: "Next week we have a very important Nato conference in Wales. It would be right to suggest that ISIS may well want to target high-profile targets like that.


"The danger is also from a wider aspect in terms of European fighters. We talk about Britain having a large number of fighters out there, but per captia Belgium is the worst offender. The threat is not just from Britain it's from a wider European perspective."


Police forces say they will increase their patrols in response to the raising of the terror threat and have advised transport hubs and sports stadiums to increase their vigilance and security checks. Airports will also be subject to the heightened threat level increase.


National Policing Lead for Counter-Terrorism, Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley, urged the public to report any suspicious activity. "We need communities and families to bring to our attention anyone they perceive may be vulnerable, a danger or escalating towards terrorism," he said. .


Meanwhile, the White House has said it does not expect to raise the US terror threat level.


Anyone with information is urged to contact the Anti-Terrorist Hotline on 0800 789 321.



Burmese Beauty Queen on the Run with £120,000 Tiara After Being Stripped of Title


Miss Asia Pacific World

May Myat Noe has run off with the Miss Asia Pacific World crown.You Tube



A Burmese beauty queen has run away with a £120,000 jewelled tiara after being dethroned as Miss Asia Pacific World.


May Myat Noe, 18, won the title in May, but was at odds with the organisers of the pageant from the outset, failing to comply with the very particular demands expected of the title holder.


The pageant committee reportedly wanted Noe to undergo a breast enhancement surgery in order to secure her a record deal.


David Kim, director of media for Miss Asia Pacific World, said: "We thought she should be more beautiful ... so as soon as she arrived we sent her to the hospital to operate on her breasts."


Kim explained that the competition's sponsors had paid £6,000 for her breast enhancement. "It's our responsibility. If she has no good nose, then maybe, if she likes, we can operate on her nose. If it's breasts, then breasts."


The pageant organisers paid for a 10-day trip for her and her mother to Seoul, South Korea, for the surgical procedure, but Noe remained in Seoul for three months, at the expense of the pageant.



Everyone knows she is no longer the queen, but she thinks as long as she keeps this crown she's the winner. She's not.


- David Kim, director of media for Miss Asia Pacific World



Noe was given tickets for a flight back to the Burmese capital Rangoon, but did not show up. According to Malaysian news sites she cunningly duped the organisers by boarding an earlier plane.


She is still said to be in possession of the jewel-encrusted Swarovski tiara, worth between £60,000 and £120,000.


The furious pageant organisers are now demanding the valuable headpiece back.


In a statement, they said that she "lied and never had respect for the main organisation, the national director, the manager, media or fans who made her the winner."


Mr Kim said: "Everyone knows she is no longer the queen, but she thinks as long as she keeps this crown she's the winner. She's not."


Meanwhile, Noe's picture has been removed from the pageant's official website with the announcement that she has been officially dethroned.


It is believed that the beauty queen will hold a press conference soon to present her version of events.


Burma started sending contestants to international beauty pageants for the first time in decades in 2012, following half-century of military rule and self-imposed isolation.



Ebola: Senegal Becomes Fifth Affected West African Country


Ebola

Health specialists work in an isolation ward for patients at the Doctors Without Borders facility in Guékedou, southern Guinea(SEYLLOU/AFP/Getty Images)



Senegal has become the fifth African country affected by Ebola as its government confirmed a man infected with the virus was receiving treatment at a Dakar hospital.


The Ministry of Health said the university student arrived in the Senegalese capital from neighbouring Guinea, where the outbreak is said to have begun in December 2013.


It was not immediately clear how and when the student crossed to Sengal as the border with Guinea was shut last week and flights and ships have also been cancelled due to the outbreak that has killed more 1,500 people.


Health minister Awa Marie Coll Seck said the infected individual booked himself into a Dakar hospital giving no indication he might have Ebola.


Health authorities were later alerted by their Guinean counterparts that they had lost track of a man who had been exposed to the deadly virus through contact with sick people.


The man had disappeared three weeks earlier and might have travelled to Senegal, an epidemiological surveillance team in Guinea said.


The student was soon traced and a test confirmed he has Ebola, Seck said. He was immediately placed in quarantine and the World Health Organization (WHO) was been alerted.


Meanwhile, the UN health agency said more than 500 new cases were reported in the past week, the highest increase in reports since the outbreak started.


More than 3,000 people have contracted the virus and the WHO has warned the number could reach 20,000. Beside Senegal and Guinea, cases have been reported in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria.


"Emergency action needs to be taken to reverse the situation to avoid a catastrophe," said Dr Tom Frieden, the director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


Ebola is one of the deadliest diseases in the world and does not have a cure.


The symptoms of the virus include fever, sore throat, diarrhoea, internal and external bleeding. It has a fatality rate approaching 90% (53% in the current epidemic).


The current outbreak has been described by the WHO as the worst that has occurred since the virus was first encountered in 1976.



Police Seize 6.5 Tonnes of Cocaine in Peru's Largest Ever Drugs Bust


Cocaine seized by police in Huanchaco, Peru. (Reuters)

Cocaine seized by police in Huanchaco, Peru. (Reuters)



Peruvian authorities have seized a record 6.5 tonnes of cocaine in a quiet coastal resort, which they claim traffickers planned to smuggle into Europe concealed as a coal consignment.


The cocaine was captured in a warehouse in Huanchaco, near the city of Trujillo in northern Peru, according to president Ollanta Humala.


It was packed into brick-sized packets, and glued inside chunks of coal, images provided by the government showed.


Agents with the US Drug Enforcement Administration co-operated with Peruvian police on a six-week surveillance operation before the raid.


Police are still examining the load, which they originally estimated to be half as large.


Seven Peruvians and two Mexicans were arrested in the raid.


"This is, without doubt, the most important blow to drug trafficking in the history of the republic," announced Humala.


Cocaine seized by police in Huanchaco, Peru. Packets were concealed in hollowed out coal bricks. (Reuters)

Cocaine seized by police in Huanchaco, Peru. Packets were concealed in hollowed out coal bricks. (Reuters)



The companies linked to the planned smuggling operation have been exporting coal to Spain and Belgium since at least 2011, said police.


The suspects are likely to belong to a key global drug cartel, said interior minister Daniel Urresti.


According to the US and the UN, Peru is currently the world's largest grower of coca, the plant used to make cocaine.


Peru overtook Colombia as the world's main supplier of cocaine plants in 2012.


The haul is dwarfed though by 12 tonnes of the drug seized by Colombian authorities along the Mira River in 2005.



Pictures of the Week: Best Photos of Past Seven Days



"Oh no, not bamboo for lunch again!" Bao Bao the giant panda is seen on her first birthday at the US National Zoo in Washington, DC(AFP)



Giant panda triplets are cared for as they turn one month-old at Chimelong Safari Park in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, China

Giant panda triplets are cared for as they turn one month-old at Chimelong Safari Park in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, China(Reuters)



Emperor tamarin twins named Winnie and Piglet cling to their father at London Zoo's Rainforest Life exhibit

Emperor tamarin twins named Winnie and Piglet cling to their father at London Zoo's Rainforest Life exhibitZSL London Zoo



A vet gives medicine to a squirrel at the Simon Bolivar Zoo in San Jose, Costa Rica

A vet gives medicine to a squirrel at the Simon Bolivar Zoo in San Jose, Costa Rica(AFP)



An aerial view of the Nepalese national flag formed by over 35,000 people in Kathmandu in a bid to break the world record, which was set in February 2014 when 28,957 people created the Pakistan flag in Lahore

An aerial view of the Nepalese national flag formed by over 35,000 people in Kathmandu in a bid to break the world record, which was set in February 2014 when 28,957 people created the Pakistan flag in Lahore(AFP)



Dou Ziwang, an employee of a chilli processing factory, proposes to his girlfriend on hearts made of around 100,000 chillies, in Handan, Hebei province, China

Dou Ziwang, an employee of a chilli processing factory, proposes to his girlfriend on hearts made of around 100,000 chillies, in Handan, Hebei province, China(Reuters)



Beyonce reacts as her husband Jay-Z carries their daughter Blue Ivy onstage to present the Video Vanguard Award during the 2014 MTV Video Music Awards

Beyonce reacts as her husband Jay-Z carries their daughter Blue Ivy onstage to present the Video Vanguard Award during the 2014 MTV Video Music Awards(Reuters)



Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Chairman Bruce Rosenblum speaks as Sofia Vergara from

Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Chairman Bruce Rosenblum speaks as Sofia Vergara from "Modern Family" slowly spins on a turntable during the 66th Primetime Emmy Awards in Los Angeles(Reuters)



Performers take part in a rain-soaked Notting Hill Carnival in west London

Performers take part in a rain-soaked Notting Hill Carnival in west London(Getty)



Performers take part in a parade on the second day of the Notting Hill Carnival in London

Performers take part in a parade on the second day of the Notting Hill Carnival in London(AFP)



An artist performs during a fire festival in the village of Ratomka, Belarus

An artist performs during a fire festival in the village of Ratomka, Belarus(AFP)



Malmo supporters hold flares as they celebrate after winning their Champions League play-off second-leg match against Salzburg in Malmo

Malmo supporters hold flares as they celebrate after winning their Champions League play-off second-leg match against Salzburg in Malmo(Reuters)



Assistant manager Ryan Giggs looks at coach Louis van Gaal after Manchester United lost 4-0 to League One minnows MK Dons in Milton Keynes

Assistant manager Ryan Giggs looks at coach Louis van Gaal after Manchester United lost 4-0 to League One minnows MK Dons in Milton Keynes(Getty)



Liverpool's Daniel Sturridge is challenged by Manchester City's Martin Demechelis and Vincent Kompany during their Premier League match at the Etihad stadium in Manchester

Liverpool's Daniel Sturridge is challenged by Manchester City's Martin Demechelis and Vincent Kompany during their Premier League match at the Etihad stadium in Manchester(Reuters)



Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo kisses his Best Player UEFA 2014 Award during the draw ceremony for the 2014/2015 Champions League in Monte Carlo

Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo kisses his Best Player UEFA 2014 Award during the draw ceremony for the 2014/2015 Champions League in Monte Carlo(Reuters)



A black cat runs onto the pitch during the Spanish league football match between FC Barcelona and Elche CF at the Camp Nou stadium

A black cat runs onto the pitch during the Spanish league football match between FC Barcelona and Elche CF at the Camp Nou stadium(AFP)



Shannon Gardiner of South Africa competes in the rhythmic gymnastics individual all-round qualification event at the Nanjing 2014 Summer Youth Olympic Games

Shannon Gardiner of South Africa competes in the rhythmic gymnastics individual all-round qualification event at the Nanjing 2014 Summer Youth Olympic Games(Getty)



Young members of a local karate federation perform during an exercise session at a summer training camp on a bank of the Yenisei River near the town of Divnogorsk, Siberia

Young members of a local karate federation perform during an exercise session at a summer training camp on a bank of the Yenisei River near the town of Divnogorsk, Siberia(Reuters)



USA's Kelly Slater rides a wave during the third day of the Billabong Pro Tahiti surf event

USA's Kelly Slater rides a wave during the third day of the Billabong Pro Tahiti surf event(Gregory Boissy/AFP)



An aerial picture shows magma along a one-kilometre-long fissure in a lava field north of the Vatnajokull glacier, which covers part of Bardarbunga volcano system in Iceland

An aerial picture shows magma along a one-kilometre-long fissure in a lava field north of the Vatnajokull glacier, which covers part of Bardarbunga volcano system in Iceland(Reuters)



Ecuador's Tungurahua volcano erupts near Banos. Tungurahua, which means

Ecuador's Tungurahua volcano erupts near Banos. Tungurahua, which means "Throat of Fire" in the local Quechua language, has been classified as active since 1999(Reuters)



The sun emits a mid-level solar flare in this image captured by Nasa's Solar Dynamics Observatory

The sun emits a mid-level solar flare in this image captured by Nasa's Solar Dynamics Observatory(Nasa/Reuters)



A riot policeman is engulfed in flames as a molotov cocktail is thrown by a protester in San Cristobal, Venezuela

A riot policeman is engulfed in flames as a molotov cocktail is thrown by a protester in San Cristobal, Venezuela(AFP)



A combination of pictures shows a missile that was fired by an Israeli aircraft hit the house of Palestinian senior Islamic Jihad leader Nafez Azzam in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip

A combination of pictures shows a missile that was fired by an Israeli aircraft hit the house of Palestinian senior Islamic Jihad leader Nafez Azzam in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip(Reuters)



Palestinian men watch and then run as an Israeli bomb drops down and hits a building in Gaza

Palestinian men watch and then run as an Israeli bomb drops down and hits a building in Gaza(AFP)



An Israeli military armoured personnel carrier is loaded onto a truck as the army dismantles a deployment area near the Israeli border with the Gaza Strip

An Israeli military armoured personnel carrier is loaded onto a truck as the army dismantles a deployment area near the Israeli border with the Gaza Strip(AFP)



A Palestinian man walks past a fire in a street lined with shattered homes in Shejaiya in Gaza City

A Palestinian man walks past a fire in a street lined with shattered homes in Shejaiya in Gaza City(AFP)



Palestinians sit amidst the rubble of their house, which witnesses said was destroyed in an Israeli offensive, in the east of Gaza City

Palestinians sit amidst the rubble of their house, which witnesses said was destroyed in an Israeli offensive, in the east of Gaza City(Reuters)



A militant holds a baby boy as Hamas celebrates

A militant holds a baby boy as Hamas celebrates "a victory" over Israel, in Gaza City(Reuters)



Children hold up guns as Palestinians gather in the streets of Gaza City to celebrate, after a deal was reached between Hamas and Israel to end seven weeks of fighting in the Gaza Strip

Children hold up guns as Palestinians gather in the streets of Gaza City to celebrate, after a deal was reached between Hamas and Israel to end seven weeks of fighting in the Gaza Strip(AFP)



People watch as a fire consumes a school in Donetsk after shelling

People watch as a fire consumes a school in Donetsk after shelling(AFP)



A group of Russian servicemen detained by Ukrainian authorities attend a news conference in Kiev. Ukraine said its forces had captured a group of Russian paratroopers who had crossed into Ukrainian territory on a

A group of Russian servicemen detained by Ukrainian authorities attend a news conference in Kiev. Ukraine said its forces had captured a group of Russian paratroopers who had crossed into Ukrainian territory on a "special mission" - but Moscow said they had ended up there by mistake(Reuters)



Russia's President Vladimir Putin reacts during a meeting with Ukraine's President Petro Poroshenko in the Belarussian capital Minsk

Russia's President Vladimir Putin reacts during a meeting with Ukraine's President Petro Poroshenko in the Belarussian capital Minsk(AFP)



German Chancellor Angela Merkel embraces the statue of Saint James in the cathedral in Santiago de Compostela, Spain

German Chancellor Angela Merkel embraces the statue of Saint James in the cathedral in Santiago de Compostela, Spain(Getty)



A gust of wind blows Pope Francis's mantle over his face as he leads the weekly general audience at St Peter's square in the Vatican

A gust of wind blows Pope Francis's mantle over his face as he leads the weekly general audience at St Peter's square in the Vatican(AFP)



Michael Brown Sr yells out as his son's coffin is lowered into the ground at St Peter's Cemetery in St Louis, Missouri

Michael Brown Sr yells out as his son's coffin is lowered into the ground at St Peter's Cemetery in St Louis, Missouri(Reuters)




Libya – Democracy's Complex Child


Libya Tripoli Airport

A building on fire, which witnesses say was hit by a rocket, burns after clashes between rival militias in the Sarraj district in Tripoli.(Reuters)



On 13 September 2013, the slim, bearded Saif al-Islam Gaddafi faced a judge in a courtroom to hear the prosecutors' case against him. The second son of Libya's former dictator Muammar Gaddafi, wearing a blue prison uniform, stood or sat in a steel cage in the courtroom to listen to a numerous and open-ended charge sheet that included the ordering of, or incitement to commit, everything from vandalism to looting and killing during Libya's civil war in 2011.


These proceedings led Amnesty International to conclude that "Libya is not capable of ensuring (the defendant) be brought to justice through a fair trial" and therefore Mr Gaddafi should be sent to The Hague for trial before the International Criminal Court (ICC).


The ICC had already brought charges against Mr Gaddafi with greater legal rigour and precision which highlighted his attempts to quell the uprising against his father between 15 February and at least 28 February 2011 and both the ICC and Amnesty International demanded that the Libyan Government comply and take action accordingly.


For its part, the Libyan government, at this point of time the General National Congress which had been elected in July 2012 and had taken over from the National Transitional Council, was in high dudgeon.


The real cause of their anger and frustration, was less that the judge had adjourned the original trial on lack of evidence, much more the fact that Saif al-Islam Gaddafi was not facing justice under the Government's legal authority but was being put on trial by the Militia Court of the Abbu Baker al-Siddiq Brigade in the town of Zintan, some 85 miles southwest of the capital Tripoli, in the militia-controlled Nafusa Mountains.


As of this moment, although legal proceedings of sorts have taken place by video link with Tripoli, Mr Gaddafi is still incarcerated in Zintan with no sign of his captors handing him over to the ICC or any authority in Tripoli. Is this just a case of a militia group having more muscle than the government and proving a point?


Mr Gaddafi appears to being treated well by his captors and their justice seems no better or worse than might be expected if he were to be held in Tripoli. It would seem however that the Zintan militia have little or no trust in the government in the capital or wherever that body might be presently sitting. What government is left in Tripoli by the way? Or Tobruk, or anywhere else in Libya?! For sure, it is in a sorry state of affairs and could soon be changing nomenclature and locale again.


The General National Congress was formed after elections on 7 July 2012 in the hope that it would prove a vehicle for reconciliation, under the leadership of Mohammed Magariaf, a noted, and therefore brave, anti-corruption politician during the Colonel's dictatorship. When he was elected President he was leader of the National Front Party and both his past career and the small size of his political base forced him to resign after nine months in office. Looking at the structure of Congress, some might wonder that he lasted so long!


A parliament of 200 seats, the National Forces Alliance had come close to winning half the vote yet only held 39 out of 200 seats in Congress. This was largely due to the way Congress was structured with only 80 members being elected through direct proportional representation and 120 members deemed Independent as representing multiple-member districts.


The National Forces Alliance, describing itself as "liberal" and "democratic", though not secularist, its weakness surely was the fact that the party itself was/is a grand coalition of 58 political organisations.


As for Mr Magariaf's National Front, they had won the fourth highest vote with 4.1 per cent and three representatives in Congress. A further 19 other political parties by name were represented in one or two seats and there were 120 Independents.


One party, Al-Watan, "Homeland", though winning 3.45 per cent of the turnout were denied seats for being too closely linked to the Muslim Brotherhood and for demanding that Libya be placed under Sharia Law.


There were great hopes in August 2012 that this new government would soon be able to form a modern constitution and the BBC noted that despite continued fighting in parts of the country, Libya could celebrate its first peaceful transition of power, commenting that the country's last national vote had been in 1965 "when no political parties were allowed". Such a pity then that a question more and more being heard: Is Libya a Failed State?


On 29 August 2011, the eve of the fall of Ghadames to National Transitional Council (NTC) forces, many members of Colonel Gaddafi's family fled across the nearby border to Algeria. With virtually the whole of Tripoli under NTC control by 1 September, Russia recognised its legitimacy as the legal government of Libya and China followed suit on 12 September.


The victorious opposition to Gaddafi, comprised of some 1,700 militias with no unifying feature other than their desire to destroy the Colonel and his regime. Very few if any of these armed groups had any notion of democracy or wish to see such established and soon started fighting amongst themselves for territory and resources.


The Libyan Army has fought a number of these militias on several different fronts with little success, whilst at the same time these armed bands have fought each other. On 23 August 2014, fighters of the Libyan Central Shield, designated an Al-Qaeda linked terrorist group, with another similar group, the Libya Revolutionaries Operations Room (LROR), captured Tripoli International Airport after heavy fighting against the Zintan Brigade (which was friendly to the Government).


On 4 August 2014, a newly elected Council of Deputies took charge after the failure of the General National Congress to meet its constitutional duties. The turnout at the 25 June Election had been miserable – less than 20 per cent – due mainly to security concerns – but the undoubted losers were the Muslim Brotherhood and like supporters who had little electoral support.


Can't have that! The Brotherhood believe democracy is some evil plot of the West anyway. Let the country have two parliaments. Their armed militias, the Shield and LROR, having captured Tripoli International Airport now controlled the capital as well, forced the legitimate and recognised Council of Deputies/House of Representatives to Tobruk, whilst they, as the Justice and Construction Party, sit in the "national parliament" as the General National Congress.


Was this what Presidents Obama and Sarkozy and Prime Minister Cameron had in mind when they led the coalition that toppled the Colonel? I suppose it could be called democracy of a sort.



North Korea's £238m Bill for 1970's Volvos


Not coming back: Sweden still waiting for payment of 1,000 Volvo Sedans shipped to North Korea in 1974

Boxy but they're good: Sweden still waiting for payment for 1,000 Volvo Sedans shipped to North Korea in 1974(Getty)



North Korea owes auto giant Volvo an astronomical £238m for a fleet of old cars shipped from Sweden to the international pariah more than 40 years ago.


The huge bill is owed by Kim Jung-un's regime for 1,000 of the Volvos which the podgy dictator's grandfather Kim Il-sung ordered back in 1974.


Sweden's 40 year-long wait for payment for the Volvos looks certain to continue for several decades more, with North Korea's foreign debts today totalling a reported £10.8bn - which equates to trillions of won.


But the Volvos continue to be used to this day in North Korea by taxi drivers, a testament to Swedish engineering. Newsweek reported the vehicles are kept in pristine condition despite their age, although their condition under the bonnet might be a different story.


Given the basket case status of Kim Jung-un's personal kingdom, with reports of grinding poverty and poor social conditions endured by millions, it is easy to question how it doing such a deal could be considered a good idea by Sweden.


North Korea is not in great shape to service hundreds of millions of debt, with its stagnant economy and poverry affecting many citizens. However, in the early years of the regime founded by Kim Il-Sung in 1948 things were looking up and it actually outperformed its neighbour and deadly foe to the south of the Korean Peninsula. At that time North was seen as a legitimate trading partner.


This consensus was soon blown away as the North began defaulting on its debts and was later cast in to the outer darkness by the international community for indulging in regular bouts of sabre-rattling with its nuclear arsenal.


But the Volvos continue trundling around Pyongyang to this day.



UK Terror Threat: Who is Planning to Attack Britain?


Isis fighters

A group of Isis fighters pose for the cameraZaid Al Fares



The British Home Office has said that the terror threat level has been raised from "substantial" to "severe", which means that an attack on the UK is now "highly likely".


The recent beheading of US journalist James Foley by an Isis (also known as Islamic State) militant with a British accent has further heightened the British public's fears over the participation of British citizens in the conflagrations in Syria and Iraq.


The Met Police Commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe also recently confirmed there could be as many as 250 suspected Jihadis in the UK who have recently returned from fighting in Syria and Iraq.


Home Secretary Theresa May said that the decision meant a terrorist attack was "highly likely" but added that there were no signs this was "imminent".


She added that the raising of the threat level was related to possible attacks by jihadist groups based in Syria and Iraq against the West. "Severe" is the second-highest of all possible threat levels.


"The Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre (JTAC) is responsible for setting the national threat level. That informs the decisions of security professionals across the public and private sectors about the appropriate level of security in place across the United Kingdom," May said.


"JTAC's judgements about that threat level are made on the basis of the very latest intelligence and are independent of ministers," she continued.


"JTAC has today raised the threat level to the UK from international terrorism from substantial to severe. That means that a terrorist attack is highly likely, but there is no intelligence to suggest that an attack is imminent."


Mark Rowley, assistant commissioner for the national policing lead for counter-terrorism, said: "We continue to urge the public to remain vigilant and to report any suspicious activity to police. We need communities and families to bring to our attention anyone they perceive may be vulnerable, a danger or escalating towards terrorism."


The British coalition government has come under pressure to impose tougher penalties on UK citizens fighting in the Middle East.


George Carey, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, said jihadists should be stripped of their British passports and barred from returning to the UK.


His sentiments were echoed by David Davis, the Conservative backbencher. He said: "Lawyers would say you cannot render someone stateless. Perhaps, perhaps not," said Davis. "Whitehall lawyers have been wrong before. Democracies have a right to defend themselves."


Home Secretary Theresa May said she already has the power to remove citizenship from extremists with dual nationalities. Naturalised Britons can also lose their passport according to recently approved legislation.


But she warned she could not strip people born in Britain of their citizenship because it is illegal "for any country to make its citizens stateless".



Kurdish Oil Mystery Deepens as Tanker Loaded With Crude Disappears off US Coast


oil tanker

Still image from video taken by a US Coast Guard HC-144 Ocean Sentry aircraft shows the oil tanker United Kalavyrta(Reuters/US Coast Guard)



A tanker carrying Iraqi Kurdish oil has that had been anchored off the coast of Texas has disappeared from satellite tracking.


The United Kalavrvta tanker, loaded with $100m of crude oil exported from Iraqi Kurdistan, had waited off the US coast after Baghdad launched a legal challenge to prevent the oil from being sold in the US.


Reuters news agency cited ship-tracking data that showed the tanker, which had been carrying one million barrels of oil, had disappeared from the radar.


A number of tankers carrying disputed Iraqi Kurdish crude oil have turned off their tracking systems in recent weeks, as they offloaded their cargoes around the world.


One such case involved the Kamari tanker, which had been tracked to an area north of Egypt's Sinai Peninsula in August. After going dark, the vessel reappeared on ship tracking systems off the Israeli coast two days later without a cargo.


Baghdad has fought attempts to sell oil independently of central government, accusing the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) of piracy.


Infuriated by the Kurds' efforts to export the oil, Baghdad has launched legal action against Turkey over its role in the oil sales, while it sent out warnings to governments over its objections to sales of Iraqi Kurdish oil.


Iraq filed a lawsuit with an American court which initially issued an order to seize the United Kalavrvta tanker's cargo if it entered US territory but the court subsequently threw out the order.


Meanwhile, Reuters reported that Iraqi Kurdistan has shipped more than eight million barrels of oil from the Turkish port of Ceyhan since May.


An oil pipeline that runs from the semi-autonomous region to the Turkish border was completed early in 2014, although exports from Turkey did not start until May as Arbil and Baghdad disputed the rights to sell oil produced in KRG territory.



Alessandro Del Piero Urged by Italian Rightwinger to Snub Indian Team Over Marines Case


Alessandro Del PIero

Alessandro Del Piero of Australia's A-League All Stars reacts as he leaves the field during their friendly soccer match against Juventus at Stadium Australia in SydneyReuters



An Italian right-wing politician has called on former Juventus FC legend Alessandro Del Piero to refuse an alleged offer to play for the Indian Super League Delhi Dynamos team until the two Italian marines detained in Kerala state are returned.


Italian marines

Italian marines Salvatore Girone (L) and Massimiliano Latorre sit in a private boat after appearing at the police commissioner office in Kochi November 14, 2012.Reuters



Marines Massimiliano Latorre and Salvatore Girone are accused of shooting dead two Indian fishermen off the southern state in February 2012. They were part of a security team aboard a cargo ship when they began shooting at a boat they claim they mistook for pirates.


The case has strained diplomatic relationship between India and Italy, which claimed that the offence took place in international waters and thus the pair should be tried in Italy under international maritime law. However India maintains it has jurisdiction over the case.


The 39-year-old former Italy playmaker and striker signed for the Delhi Dynamos after playing a similar ambassador role for the Australian A-League, in the Sydney FC.


He said on Twitter:


But his decision angered Giorgia Meloni, president of the right-wing nationalistic party Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) who urged Del Piero to "refuse the offer to play in India until our marines will come back to Italy".


"Del Piero does not need money and fame because he's a symbol of Italian football and a worldwide icon of this sport. Such a stance will not go unnoticed and could represent an important signal against the Indian government and the international community," she said.


Early on August, Italy's PM Matteo Renzi phoned his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi to seek a diplomatic solution to the case. In March, India put legal proceedings against the duo on hold in response to a petition challenging New Delhi's jurisdiction on the case, according to AFP.



Egypt Seeks Free Trade Zone Talks with Gulf States in Bid to Boost Economy


Egypt Sisi President

Egypt President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi(Reuters)



Egypt is set to push forward with plans to establish a free trade zone with the Gulf countries before the end of the year, according to reports in Egyptian media.


Ministers from the Economic Group, which includes trade, finance, planning and investment, will seek to boost investment and trade exchange between Egypt and the Gulf, Egypt Independent reported, citing a source at the Trade and Industry Ministry.


The initial meeting is set to be followed by bilateral meetings with potential Gulf partners.


Economic ties between Egypt and the Gulf have increased markedly since the country's first elected President was ousted in a coup in July 2013. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates provided massive aid packages worth $12bn (£7.1bn, €8.8bn) to the country's interim government, designed to salvage the country's ailing economy.


After the former head of the armed forces won the country's presidential elections in June, the Saudis and Emiratis pledged a further $20bn worth of financial assistance. The figure included low interest loans for infrastructure projects and deposits to the central bank as Cairo sought to prop up its sagging currency.


The Gulf states were mightily relieved by the downfall of the Muslim Brotherhood's Mohamed Morsi last year. Gulf monarchies perceive political Islam as an existential threat and have invested heavily to quell similar movements in their own territory.


While the Gulf countries initially provided assistance in the form of hand-outs and cheap loans, a free trade zone would represent a new level of cooperation between the allies.



Africa's Richest Woman Folorunsho Alakija: University Not Necessary For Success


Folorunsho Alakija

The Nigerian billionaire has admitted she never went to university.Getty



Nigerian oil tycoon Folorunsho Alakija has admitted that she did not go to university, insisting that higher education is not compulsory for success.


Speaking to students of the University of Lagos during the 2014 UN International Youths Day, the 63-year-old chairwoman of Famfa Oil and Africa's richest women said that although a degree is important, it wasn't more valuable than hard work and persistence.


"I never went to a University and I am proud to say so because I don't think I have done too badly," the billionaire said.


"You do not have to have a University education to be able to make it so count yourselves privileged to have that education as part of the feather in your cap".


Alakija started out as a secretary at a bank in the 1970s before launching her own fashion line. Although she got her biggest break when she ventured into oil, she said the road to riches was far from smooth.


She continued: "I could have stayed a secretary as my father desired according to his plan for me but I had bigger aspirations. I dreamt big. God strengthened me and gave me wisdom. I had a passion and burning desire to succeed.


"Being a secretary, a banker, a fashion icon, a cooperate promoter and printer, a real estate owner, an oil magnate, that I can assure you was no easy feat. It has not been a rag to riches fairytale"


The mother-of-four, who is worth $2.5billion (£1.5bn), closed her speech by urging the students not to give up on their dreams.


"Hard work...am trying to tell you how I got to where I am if you want those billions. Hard work, diligence, persistence...days where you nearly gave up but I chose not to give up."


She lists her other achievements, which include being a wife for almost 40 years, a mother, grandmother, and working in ministry, counselling, outreach, NGO Rose of Sharon Foundation for widows as well as author of several inspirational books.


"So I am 63 and I am not yet done. So what is your excuse?"