Taiwan Gas Blast: 20 People Dead, 270 Injured as Underground Gas Explosions Tear Through City


Taiwan Gas Blasts

The five explosions tore up the streets leaving a scene of carnage.AFP / Getty Images



20 people are dead and 270 injured after a series of underground gas explosions in the southern Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung.


Five fire fighters who were investigating the gas leaks in the municipality are among the dead.


Taiwan Premier Jiang Yi-huah said there were at least five explosions affecting an area of two to three square km.


The National Fire Agency said it is unclear what caused the explosions which began in the city's sewer system, however early reports suggest the blasts were caused by ruptured pipelines.


Several petrochemical companies have pipelines built along the sewage system in Chian-Chen district.


Taiwan Gas Blasts

AFP / Getty Images



In a statement, the National Fire Agency added: "The local fire department received calls of gas leaks late Thursday and then there was a series of blasts around midnight affecting an area of two to three square kilometres."


Eye witnesses likened the force of the blast to a powerful earthquake. The explosions caused fires in nearby buildings and over turned cars, while smoke with a "gas-like smell" was seen coming out of drains.


Kaohsiung mayor Chen Chu confirmed the reports saying : "The gas explosions on Thursday night killed 15 people and injured 233 others. Our priority is to save people now. We ask citizens living along the pipelines to evacuate. Rescue efforts are still underway," she said, as she urged everyone to "follow the instructions of rescue teams at the scene, and avoid standing around and watching".


Taiwan Gas Blasts

AFP / Getty Images



"The local government has already requested [gas suppliers] CPC and Hsin Kao Gas cut off the gas supply," she added.


Hundreds of soldiers, and fire fighters from neighbouring Tainan City and Pingtung County, have been deployed to assist with the rescue efforts.


Reports claimed emergency rooms in hospitals in Kaohsiung were packed with casualties. Officials have urged the public to stay out of affected areas while others took shelter at local schools.


The local government has set up an emergency response centre.


The incident comes just a week after a TransAsia Airways plane crashed in Taiwan during bad weather, killing 48 people.



'Hamas Terrorists' Aladdin and Jasmine Feature in Controversial Pro-Israel Cartoon Campaign


Stop Hamas Campaign

AleXandro Palombo's cartoon depicts Family Guy characters being held hostage by 'Hamas' terrorists(alexsandropalombo)



Popular Disney characters Princess Jasmine and Aladdin have been transformed into Hamas terrorists holding other cartoons such as Snow White and Cinderella hostage in a controversial pro-Israel campaign that has already caused an online backlash.


The original aim of the series about the war in Gaza by artist aleXsandro Palombo, who is known for his irreverent cartoon stunts, was for people to "meditate" on it but a writer for blog Jezebel has already deemed it a "fail of epic proportions".


"I meditated and the only feeling I could come up with is disgust," wrote Mark Shrayber, upon receiving the press release about the campaign.


One picture depicts Aladdin and Jasmine wearing Hamas-green dresses and a green headband with the Shahada in Arabic, holding hostage three characters from the Family Guy cartoon: Lois Griffin and the Jewish father-and-son Mort and Neil Goldman.


The poster reads "Stop Hamas" in the characteristic Disney Font. In another image, the Aladdin couple is seen holding hostage Ariel (The Little Mermaid), Snow White, Cinderella and Aurora (Sleeping Beauty).


Stop Hamas Campaign

AleXandro Palombo is known for cartoon stunts but is facing a backlash over this one(alexsandropalombo)



In the last picture of the series, other cartoons turned Hamas terrorists are shown, notably Bart Simpson, Lisa Simpson, Peter Pan, Pinocchio, Meg Griffin, Chris Griffin, and Alice in Wonderland.


"Terrorism is like cancer, something that you have to fight," said Palombo in his press release.


However, netizens flocked to Twitter to express their disapproval at what they considered an insensitive PR stunt over the Gaza tragedy.


Stop Hamas Campaign

alexsandropalombo




Erdogan: Israel 'Keeps Hitler's Spirit Alive' With Gaza Offensive


Turkey's Prime Minister and presidential candidate Tayyip Erdogan speaks during an election rally in Diyarbakir, southeast Turkey

Turkey's Prime Minister and presidential candidate Tayyip Erdogan speaks during an election rally in Diyarbakir, southeast TurkeyReuters



Israel is "keeping Hitler's spirit alive" according to Turkish prime minister and presidential hopeful Recep Tayyip Erdogan.


"What is the difference between what Nazis and Hitler did and what this Israeli administration is doing now?" the outspoken leader of moderate-Islamist AK Party said during a party meeting. "Israeli genocide is reminiscent of Hitler's holocaust because of acting with the same immorality as Hitler."


"Ottomans protected the Jewish people in the past. Don't you have any shame now? How immoral people are you?" he continued.


This is not the first time that Erdogan makes a controversial parallel between Israel and Nazi Germany. Earlier in July, he accused Israel of having "surpassed Hitler in barbarism".


Israel has advised its citizens against travelling to Turkey citing "the public mood" after attacks on Israeli embassies during protests in Istanbul and Ankara.


Erdogan is campaigning to be elected president in August election and has harshly criticised Israel's Operation Protective Edge, the military offensive against Palestinian Hamas militant group in the Gaza Strip that has killed more than 1,300 Palestinians, mainly civilians, and more than 50 Israelis, mainly soldiers.


Last week the New York-based lobby group American Jewish Congress slammed Erdogan for "inciting the Turkish population to violence against the Jewish people" and asked him to hand back an award that was granted to him for his Middle East peace efforts.


Erdogan said he would be "glad" to return the award.


"Take the award and stick it up your head," he said.


Turkey's ambassador to the US Serdar Kilic said Erdogan will continue criticising Israel's actions in Gaza.


"Attempts to depict Prime Minister Erdogan's legitimate criticisms of the Israeli government's attacks on civilians as expressions of anti-Semitism is an obvious distortion and an effort to cover up the historical wrongdoings of the Israeli government," Kilic said in a letter quoted by the Turkish news website Hurriyet.



US Hopeful of WTO Deal with India As Deadline Looms


US Hopeful of WTO Deal with India As Deadline Looms

US Secretary of State John Kerry (R) shakes hands with India's Finance Minister Arun Jaitley as US Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker watches before the start of their meeting in New Delh.Reuters



The US has said it remains hopeful that differences between India and World Trade Organisation (WTO) members over a stalled global trade agreement could be resolved in time, with just hours remaining for the deal to be signed.


US Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker, accompanying Secretary of State John Kerry on an India visit, told news channel NDTV that she was "...hopeful that within the period of today...there is a common ground that is found."


Kerry and Pritzker, who met Indian Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, tried convincing New Delhi to sign the WTO Bali trade deal, an unnamed source told Reuters.


Jaitley, however, reportedly repeated his country's principled stand: India has demanded that a deal be accompanied by a parallel agreement giving the subcontinent more freedom to subsidise and stockpile food grains for its impoverished population.


Deadline Looms


The Bali accord is tipped to inject $960bn (£569bn, €717bn) into the global economy and promises to cut red tape at customs the world over. The deal is expected to create 21 million jobs globally.


The WTO deal must be rubber-stamped in Geneva on 31 July.


A failure could prove disastrous for the WTO as it will stoke doubts about the organisation's negotiating powers.


India Justified?


Indian economists believe India's position is justified.


"I would go with [the Indian government's] stance given that 30% of [India's] population is below the poverty line and [the government] has to feed them," Charan Singh, economist and Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Chair Professor of Economics at the Bangalore-based Indian Institute of Management (IIM) told IBTimes UK.


"70% of India's population survives on agriculture, which accounts for 14% of the country's GDP. India has to protect its rural sector and its farmers. [Prime Minister Narendra] Modi's model of governance in the Gujarat state was about strengthening the rural sector and the [2014 annual] budget has done the same.


"And given India's size, food security is very important," Singh said.


"India has suffered humiliation on food security in the past, during the 70s and during partition. Those scars remain and they have to be taken care of.


"[WTO members] were to discuss India's concerns post the Bali deal. Seven months have passed and I have not seen any development," Singh added.


Earlier, economist V Anantha Nageswaran, in a column published in the Mint, said that "...India is right to take the stance it has taken..."


"Anyone who has a basic understanding of option pricing will know that surrendering a policy option is like throwing away a deep out-of-the-money call option that is unexpired. It carries value. The policy optionality on what to do with India's food security needs and how to go about meeting those needs should rest with the government of India. It is not to be negotiated away in a multilateral forum.


"If India is holding up the trade facilitation deal as a quid pro quo for getting its way on the food security matter, that is fine as far as negotiations go. China issued an ultimatum to Britain on its prime minister meeting the Dalai Lama. Britain meekly obliged. Trade policy as much as foreign policy is not about being liked but about growing a spine..." Nageswaran wrote.


The December 2013 Bali world trade talks were part of a 12-year-old drive to expand multilateral free trade in sensitive areas such as agriculture. Negotiations first began in Doha, Qatar, in 2001.



Kurdish Oil Mystery Deepens as Ship Unloads Cargo in South China Sea


Ceyhan oil worker

A worker walks on top of an oil tanker at Turkey's Mediterranean port of Ceyhan(Reuters)



A tanker carrying Kurdish oil has unloaded part of its cargo in the South China Sea, although the identity of the buyer remains a mystery.


The United Emblem Tanker had left the Turkish port of Ceyhan in June, carrying up to 1 million barrels of crude oil produced in Iraqi Kurdistan and exported by the autonomous region's government without permission from Baghdad.


It is one of three tankers that were loaded and sailed from Ceyhan in June.


A second tanker, the United Kalavrvta, has been anchored off the Texas coast for days amid a protracted legal dispute between Iraq and Kurdistan over the autonomous region's right to sell oil on international markets.


A US judge rejected a request from Baghdad that the US seize the tanker, saying that it was anchored outside of American territorial waters and did not fall under US jurisdiction.


The Kurdistan Regional Government filed a letter with the Texas court, stating that its sales of oil are in line with the Iraqi constitution.


Baghdad has launched a lawsuit against Turkey, accusing Ankara of assisting the Kurds to smuggle oil out of Iraq. It has threatened to pursue legal action against governments if they assist the Kurds with selling the oil.


A senior source at Marine Management Services said the ship-to-ship transfer involving the South China Sea cargo was sound, according to Reuters news agency.


The United Emblem tanker is "fixed to a legitimate charterer and performing legitimate operations", said Kostas Georgopoulos, as quoted by Reuters. He added that "the ship is still in international waters".


Reuters reported that the ship could have offloaded around half of its cargo onto another ship. The ships' destination remain unknown, as does the identity of the buyer.



Libya: Al-Qaeda-linked Militants Declare Benghazi an 'Islamic Emirate'


Militants declare Islamic Emirate in eastern Libya

Fighters from the Benghazi Shura Council, which includes former rebels and militants from al Qaeda-linked Ansar al-Sharia, gesture on top of a tank next to the camp of the special forces in BenghaziReuters



The extremist group Ansar al-Sharia has declared Benghazi an "Islamic Emirate" after claiming total control of Libya's second largest city.


"Benghazi has now become an Islamic emirate," official spokesperson Mohammed al-Zahawi of the group told Radio Tawhid.


The al-Qaeda-linked radicals who rose to prominence during the uprising that overthrew dictator Muammar Gaddafi, was blamed for the attack on the US consulate in 2012.


The trend of proclaiming Islamic caliphates or emirates has gathered pace following the recent declaration of an Islamic State in Iraq spanning a region up to Syria by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis).


The Yemeni-based Al-Qaeda of the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), the most powerful arm of al-Qaeda, has also expressed its intentions to declare eastern Yemen an emirate.


The latest announcement by the Ansar al-Sharia fighters in Libya has been dismissed by pro-government forces.


"The national Libyan army is in control of Benghazi and only withdrew from certain positions for tactical reasons. The claim that Benghazi is under the control of militias is a lie," Khalifa Haftar, a former army general who is aware of the latest developments, told Al Arabiya channel.


The emirate declaration comes a day after the Libyan militants comprising former rebels and Islamist fighters captured the army base in Benghazi killing dozens.


The police have so far found 78 bodies, mostly of soldiers, in Benghazi following the two-day fighting.



Chris Gunness: UN Official Weeps on Camera over Israeli Gaza School Shelling


UN official for Palestinian refugees Christopher Gunness has broken into tears as he described an attack by Israeli forces on a UN-run school in the Gaza Strip.


"The rights of Palestinians even their children, are wholesale denied... and it's appalling," Gunness says during an Al Jazeera Arabic broadcast, before tears well up in his eyes.


He then attempted to clear his throat and continue but just manages to whisper, "My pleasure" to the interviewer before starting to sob. The camera then pans away while Gunness can still be heard crying.


Gunness spoke after 17 people were killed and 90 wounded in the shelling of the Jabalia Elementary School. At least 1,364 Palestinians, mainly civilians, and over 50 Israelis, mostly soldiers, have been killed in fighting between Israel and Islamist militant group Hamas since 8 July.


He later tweeted that the Relief and Works agency was "overwhelmed" in Gaza.


"We have reached breaking point, our staff are being killed our shelters overflowing. Where will it end?"


He also commented on the crying episode:


Gunness claimed that the precise location of Jabalia Elementary Girls School in Gaza which housed 3,000 displaced Palestinians was communicated to Israeli army 17 times.


Israel insists that its troops did not strike UN facilities intentionally but only responded to Palestinian militants fire. The incident, however, is under review by the Israeli Defence Forces.


UNRWA commissioner-general Pierre Krahenbuhl condemned the attack as a "serious violation of international law".


"Last night, children were killed as they slept next to their parents on the floor of a classroom in a UN designated shelter in Gaza. Children killed in their sleep; this is an affront to all of us, a source of universal shame. Today the world stands disgraced."


Palestinians look at a damaged classroom in a United Nation-run school sheltering Palestinians displaced by an Israeli ground offensive, that witnesses said was hit by Israeli shelling

Palestinians study a damaged classroom in a United Nations-run school used as shelters from Israeli bombardment(Reuters)




India's Tata Group to Invest $35bn Over 3 Years to Boost Global Status


Cyrus Mistry, chairman of Tata Group, smiles during the Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. (TCS) annual general meeting in Mumbai

Cyrus Mistry, chairman of Tata Group, smiles during the Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. (TCS) annual general meeting in MumbaiReuters



The Tata Group has announced a massive investment plan over the next three years in areas such as retail and defence, as the Indian conglomerate looks to boost its status as a global employer brand.


While outlining the group's vision for 2025 at an annual gathering of top executives of its group companies, Tata Sons chairman Cyrus Mistry said the company will invest $35bn (£20.7bn, €26.1bn) over the next three years in four new areas – defence and aerospace, retail, infrastructure and finance.


Tata Sons is the holding group of more than 100 Tata companies including Tata Motors, Tata Steel and Tata Consultancy Services, with operations in more than 100 countries.


The group had combined revenues of $103bn for the fiscal year ended in March, with 67% coming from outside India.


"It is correct that the Tata group has outlined its strategy of nurturing group companies by leveraging the parenting advantage of the group centre, harnessing synergies to maximise the performance of companies and optimising its portfolio for sustained future performance. To carry forward this mission in the near term, the group has adopted a vision, to be achieved by 2025," a company spokesperson said in an email response to India's Economic Times.


As part of the vision, the company aims to be "amongst the 25 most-admired corporate and employer brands globally, with a market capitalisation comparable to the 25 most valuable companies in the world".


"Each Tata company will strive to outperform markets, sharply focussing on performance, strive for excellence for global competitiveness, seek to achieve global or national scale, and foster fledgling businesses with a sound evaluation of their growth potential," the spokesperson added.


The group's move comes as some of its key businesses struggle to perform amid weak domestic and international market conditions.


Tata Motors reported lower vehicle sales in recent months for the first time in 12 years, as consumers in India reduced spending amid soaring prices. In May, Tata Steel, which has global operations, reported a net loss for the fourth quarter, primarily due to weak market conditions in Europe.



Massive Gold Mine Discovered in China's Xinjiang Province


gold

New discovery in China's Xinjiang province could have up to 200 tonnes of gold(Reuters)



Geologists have discovered a massive gold mine in China's restive Xinjiang province, according to state news agency Xinhau.


The new find, close to the border with Kyrgzstan, has proven gold reserves of 127 tonnes, Xinhua said. If the estimates are correct, the reserves could be worth around 40 billion yuan ($6.5bn, £3.8bn, €4.8bn.)


It the biggest gold mine discovered in Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region to date.


Prospectors have explored Xinjiang for more than two decades, finding 21 gold ore belts in that time.


The Xinjiang Geology and Mineral Exploration Bureau's Cui Hongbin said 127 tonnes of gold reserves had been reported by June, as cited by Xinhua. The mine could potentially have a capacity of 200 tonnes of gold, said Cui.


Xinjiang Tongyuan Mining Limited led the exploration effort, according to reports in the National Business Daily newspaper.


The South China Morning Post reported that no mining companies have yet made a deal to explore the newly discovered gold.


The discovery is a rare success story in the exploration sector that has suffered in recent years. The mining industry has suffered from the global financial crisis, with companies slashing exploration budgets for nonferrous minerals by 29% in 2013.


Xinjiang Disorder


Xinjiang recently suffered a deadly outbreak of violence, as dozens were killed or injured when an armed gang attacked a police station on Monday.


While information is hard to come by in the tightly censored region, reports suggest that the gang targeted police officers and Han Chinese settlers in a deadly knife attack. Other reports suggest the violence occurred when police cracked down on Uighur Muslims observing Ramadan.


Campaigners for Uighur rights have said China's policies towards the ethnic group in Xinjiang are repressive.



US Confirms it Resupplied Israel with Weapons During Gaza Conflict


gaza fireball

A huge fireball erupts following Israeli air strikes in the east of Gaza City(Reuters)



The US has confirmed it resupplied Israel with weapons and ammunition which could be used during the conflict in Gaza.


The news comes soon after the US condemned an attack on a United Nations (UN) school in Gaza in which at least 16 Palestinians were killed.


Since the 1990s, the US has kept a stockpile of arms inside Israel known as the War Reserves Stock Allies-Israel (WRSA-I), which Israel can use in emergencies.


On 20 July – 12 days after the Gaza strip conflict began - Israel made a request to withdraw 120mm mortar rounds and 40mm ammunition for grenade launchers, which was accepted by the US defence department three days later.


However, it is reported Israel did not cite an emergency as a reason for requesting the supplies which was granted so the US could replenish its stock.


"They didn't ask for it from there [WRSA-I] but we gave it to them so we could rotate our stocks," an anonymous defence official told Reuters.


Pentagon press secretary Rear Admiral Kirby confirmed the recent shipment of ammunition to Israel.


"The United States is committed to the security of Israel, and it is vital to US national interests to assist Israel to develop and maintain a strong and ready self-defence capability," he said.


"This defence sale is consistent with those objectives."


He added: "Both munitions had been in WRSA-I stock for a few years, well before the current crisis."


Kirby told reporters how stocks which are kept in WRSA-I are "in excess to US requirements" as required by law and White House approval was not needed for the transaction as it was "strictly a sourcing decision".


Israel's embassy in Washington has declined to comment on whether the purchased weapons would be used in the current operation in Gaza.


The report of the weapons restock emerged as the White House condemned the shelling of a United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) school in which women, children and humanitarian workers were killed.


Bernadette Meehan, spokesperson for the White House's National Security Council, said: "The United States condemns the shelling of a UNRWA school in Gaza, which reportedly killed and injured innocent Palestinians – including children – and UN humanitarian workers.


"We are extremely concerned that thousands of internally displaced Palestinians who have been called on by the Israeli military to evacuate their homes are not safe in UN designated shelters in Gaza."


Meehan did not directly accuse Israel of the attacks, suggesting there were conflicting reports about the incident.


However, UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon said that "all available evidence" suggests that Israel was responsible for the "unjustifiable" attack.


The US has also criticised the stockpiling of weapons inside UN-run schools in Gaza, but officials have not confirmed whether rockets were inside the UNRWA school in Gaza.


"All of these actions, and similar ones earlier in the conflict, are inconsistent with the UN's neutrality," Meehan said. "This violence underscores the need to achieve a ceasefire as soon as possible."



Tesla and Panasonic Sign Gigafactory Agreement


Tesla battery

Tesla's new Gigafactory will make the electric car manufacturer the world's largest lithium-ion battery producers.(Creative commons)



Plans for a so-called Gigafactory have taken a step closer to being realised after Tesla signed an agreement with Panasonic to construct what will be the world's largest lithium-ion (li-ion) battery factory.


It is estimated that the Gigafactory will be completed by 2020 at a cost of around $5 billion and will allow Tesla to generate its own in-house supply chain of battery packs for as many as half a million vehicles per year.


"The Gigafactory represents a fundamental change in the way large scale battery production can be realised," said JB Straubel, chief technical officer and co-founder of Tesla.


"Not only does the Gigafactory enable capacity needed for the Model 3 but it sets the path for a dramatic reduction in the cost of energy storage across a broad range of applications."


The agreement with Panasonic describes how Tesla will prepare, provide and manage the land, buildings and utilities, while Panasonic will manufacture and supply lithium-ion cells produced in the company's factories in Japan.


"We have already engaged in various collaborative projects with Tesla toward the popularisation of electric vehicles," added Yoshihiko Yamada, executive vice president of Panasonic.


"I believe that once we are able to manufacture lithium-ion battery cells at the Gigafactory, we will be able to accelerate the expansion of the electric vehicle market."


tesla gigafactory panasonic

Construction vehicles at the possible Tesla Gigafactory site in Nevada.(Bob Tregilus)



Tesla has not revealed where the 10-million-square-foot factory will be located, however a recent report suggested that construction had already begun at the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center in Nevada.


Bob Tregilus, a renewable energy consultant and contributor at Transport Evolved, published photos that appeared to show construction vehicles working on the Reno site.



Ebola Outbreak: Australia and New Zealand Brace to Tackle Virus


Ebola

Medical staff working with Medecins sans Frontieres put on their protective gear before entering an isolation area at the Ebola treatment centre in Kailahun, Sierra LeoneReuters



Health experts in Australia and New Zealand are preparing to tackle the deadly Ebola virus in case it reaches their countries.


Although health officials consider the risk of the virus reaching the Oceania region as low, they are closely monitoring the situation and have put in place contingency plans.


"May be we are a little bit lucky. We don't have huge traffic and travel between West Africa and New Zealand at the moment - but a theoretical risk is there. Just think about the 2009 [influenza] pandemic when we had students from Auckland to Mexico coming back; they carried the virus to New Zealand," said Sue Huang, virologist at the Institute of Environmental Science and Research.


She warned that if a traveller infected by the virus reaches New Zealand there is no safe place to test the bodily samples and isolate the virus.


"We will have to forward the sample to a reference lab overseas to deal with that if anything happens - the CDC [Centre for Disease Control and Prevention] in the US or may be Australia. We contacted people at the moment so we can prepare if anything happens," said Huang.


Chief of public health Darren Hunt said: "In the very unlikely event that New Zealand had cases of Ebola virus disease, the ministry would respond as it would to other emerging threats to health, through established protocols and processes such as the National Health Emergency Plan (NHEP)."


Fears of a global Ebola outbreak have risen after a virus-infected man was allowed to travel from Liberia to Nigeria, where he eventually died.


Precautionary measures in Europe


Several countries in Europe and Asia have announced precautionary measures.


The European Union has said the EU is ready to deal with the threat.


Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond told the BBC: "At the moment we don't think any British nationals [abroad] are affected and we are fairly confident there are no cases in the UK. But it is a threat. It is something we need to respond to and we will be doing so through the Cobra mechanism."


At least 1,201 Ebola cases have been registered in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone since March this year, according to the World Health Organisation, and the virus has so far claimed 670 lives.



Sony Delists Shares From London After 44 Years


Electronics giant Sony became the latest Japanese firm to delist its shares from the London Stock Exchange, due to lack of investor appetite.


"The trading volume of Sony's shares on the London Stock Exchange has been extremely low. Sony believes that this delisting would cause no substantial inconvenience to Sony's shareholders and investors," the company said in a stock exchange statement.


Other Japanese companies which have withdrawn from the exchange include Toshiba, Fujitsu and mobile carrier NTT Docomo. The companies blamed poor investor appetite in London for the move.


The company, which has been a LSE-listed entity for some 44 years, will apply to each of the UK Listing Authority and the London Stock Exchange for the cancellation of the listing of its shares of common stock, including depositary receipts representing such shares.


The delisting of Sony's shares is expected to take effect on or around 29 August. Meanwhile, Sony's zero coupon convertible bonds due 2017 will continue to trade on the exchange.


The company listed its shares on London stock exchange in 1970.


The shares will continue to be listed on Tokyo Stock Exchange and New York Stock Exchange, the company added.


Hurt by declining sales in a number of divisions, Sony reported a loss of $1.26bn for its latest fiscal year. The company earlier announced a restructuring which involves billions of dollars worth of asset sales among other cost cutting measures.


For the three months to June, the company reported a net profit of 25.7bn yen ($250m, £148m), up from 3.1bn yen in the previous year, helped by its gaming console division, where sales rose about 96%.


In addition, the results were boosted by a gain of 14.8bn yen on the sale of certain buildings and other assets.


Nevertheless, the company still expects a net loss of 50bn yen for the financial year ending in March 2015.



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Samsung Galaxy Note 4 and Galaxy S5 Prime Confirmed As Smartphone Sales Drop


Samsung Galaxy Note 4 and Galaxy S5 Prime Confirmed

A Samsung executive has confirmed a new large screen smartphone and one using "new materials" will launch before the end of the year.Reuters



On Wednesday Samsung announced its most recent set of results which showed that smartphone sales had dipped 12% compared to the year before while profits from mobile were even worse hit, dropping 31%.


This all goes to show that the smartphone business, even for the company that dominates it, is tough.


However Samsung is not giving up. In an earnings call after the results were announced Kim Hyun-joon, a senior vice president at Samsung's mobile communications business, told reporters and analysts that the company was planning to launch two major new smartphones before the end of the year.


While Kim wouldn't go into more detail, it is almost certain that the two products he is talking about are the large-screen Galaxy Note 4 and a premium version of its Galaxy S5 set to be called either the Galaxy F or Galaxy S5 Prime.


Galaxy Note 4


The Galaxy Note 4 will be launched at the IFA trade show in Germany at the beginning of September and the company will be hoping its latest phablet will continue the success of the line which popularised the large-screen smartphone.


The Galaxy Note 4 will likely keep the 5.7in screen size of last year's model but boost the resolution - potentially to UHD quality (2560 x 1440).


Also expect to see the fingerprint sensor from the Galaxy S5 and the same colour options make the transition to the bigger phone while it is likely the Galaxy Note 4 will also use Qualcomm's Snapdragon 801 chip.


Galaxy S5 Prime/F


As for the Galaxy S5 Prime/F, the "new materials" Kim mentioned in the earnings call is likely a reference to the metallic construction widely rumoured to be used in the new premium smartphone.


Samsung Galaxy F/Galaxy S5 Prime

A leaked image of the Galaxy S5 Prime/F @EVLeaks



Some analysts had predicted Samsung would ditch the plastic construction it is known for with its Galaxy S5 model earlier this year, but since that didn't happen, it looks like the company will launch an updated model to try and attract those customers who are put off by the cheaper-feeling S5.


The new phone would go head-to-head with the likes of the iPhone 5s and HTC One M8 in terms of design and use of premium materials and would help fill a gap in Samsung's portfolio.


A release date for this smartphone is not quite so clear, though Samsung could launch it alongside the Galaxy Note 4 in Germany.


Competition


Samsung sells hundreds of different types of smartphones, with screen sizes ranging from 3.5in to over 6in and has come to dominate the market by offering a product to fit every budget and need.


However with sales slowing and competition from Chinese companies increasing daily, the company will be worried about the future of its smartphone business, one which has been incredibly profitable for the electronics company.


The company said it was also planning to release new smartphones in the mid-to-low segment which will have enhanced specifications.



India Pune Landslide: Emergency Personnel Race Against Time to Find 150 Missing People


India Pune landslide

National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) personnel clear the debris from the site of a landslide at Malin village, in the western Indian state of MaharashtraReuters



Emergency personnel are racing against time to find more than 150 missing people who are feared trapped under mud and debris following a massive landslide near the western India city of Pune.


Most of the victims were asleep when the landslide struck.


Twenty-seven people have been killed so far in the landslide triggered by heavy rain in a remote tribal village.


Rescue personnel have been able to pull out alive only eight people from the debris of mud and rock.


The entire village, with a population of 700, has been swallowed by the landslide leaving only rocks and slush in the area.


"At least 44 houses were washed away... About 158 people were residing in these houses... Maharashtra government will support the residents of Malin village," said Prithviraj Chavan, chief minister of Maharashtra state, where the village is located.


Troops have been deployed to assist the local authorities in the rescue efforts which have been hampered by continuing heavy rain and difficult terrain.


"Approaching the area was very difficult. It took a lot of time for us to reach as rain and mud made it difficult," said Alok Avasthi, an official from the National Disaster Response Force.


The authorities estimate it could take another 48 to 72 hours for the rescue operations to be over.


More than 100 ambulances have been pressed into service at the scene of the disaster.


Long years of deforestation in the region topped by torrential rain have weakened the soil leading to the disaster, say environmental activists.


An NGO has said that forests were cleared to make way for cultivable plots under a government scheme.



Gaza Strip: Israel Calls up 16,000 More IDF Reservists


Israel-Gaza crisis

An Israeli soldier from the Givati Brigade walks back to a staging area after returning to Israel from GazaReuters



Amid intensifying fighting in the Gaza Strip region, the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) has called up more than 16,000 reservists, bringing the total number of reservist troops to 86,000.


The latest move is to give the Israeli forces "some breathing room", a senior military official was quoted as saying in local dailies.


Meanwhile, the US has reaffirmed its support for the Israeli side.


US Secretary of Defence Chuck Hagel held a telephone conversation with his Israeli counterpart Moshe Ya'alon assuring the "US's support for Israel's security and its right to defend itself".


A statement from Hagel's office read: "Secretary Hagel also expressed the United States's continued concern about the rising number of Palestinian civilian deaths and loss of Israeli lives, as well as the worsening humanitarian situation in Gaza."


"Secretary Hagel stressed the need for a humanitarian ceasefire that ends hostilities and leads to a permanent cessation of hostilities based on the November 2012 ceasefire agreement, and reaffirmed the US view that any process to resolve the cries in Gaza in a lasting and meaningful way must lead to the disarmament of Hamas and all terrorist groups."


In a separate development, the US allowed Israel to obtain grenades and mortar rounds from a local US stockpile as part of a bilateral agreement between the two countries.


Pentagon's press secretary Rear Admiral John Kirby said: "Both munitions had been in WRSA-I [War Reserves Stock Allies-Israel] stock for a few years, well before the current crisis. All stocks in WRSA-I, as required by law, are 'in excess of US requirements'. Issuing munitions from the WRSA-I stockpile was strictly a sourcing decision and White House approval was not required."


The Israel-Gaza conflict, which began on 8 July, has only shown signs of escalating despite several ceasefire attempts.


So far, at least 1,360 Palestinians, mostly civilians, have been killed in the fighting, according to Gaza health ministry figures.


On the Israeli side, 56 soldiers and two civilians have been killed.



Drug-Resistant Malaria Spreading to Borders of Southeast Asia 'Poses Serious Global Threat'


malaria indonesia

Baby being treated for malaria in Indonesia.(Getty Images)



Drug-resistant malaria is spreading to "critical border regions" of Southeast Asia, posing serious threats to global malaria control, experts have said.


Researchers have found resistance to the artemisinin, used to treat Plasmodium falciparum - the most deadly form of malaria-causing parasite – is now established in Western Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, Eastern Myanmar and Northern Cambodia.


The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, also found signs of resistance in Central Myanmar, Southern Laos and Northeastern Cambodia.


Researchers said that at present, there are no signs of resistance in Kenya, Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of Congo, but that this could change.


Jeremy Farrar, Director of the Wellcome Trust says: "If resistance spreads out of Asia and into Africa much of the great progress in reducing deaths from malaria will be reversed. Our ability to respond to these rapidly emerging health problems depends on swift gathering of evidence, which can be quickly translated into public health and clinical interventions that are then implemented.


"Antimicrobial resistance is happening now. This is not just a threat for the future, it is today's reality."


malaria thailand

Meow, 6, is tested to ensure a malaria bug she caught a month ago is no longer in her system(Reuters)



Researchers used samples from 15 sites in 10 malaria-epidemic countries over two years. They examined responses of malaria-infected people to artemisinin. Their blood was analysed to measure if the parasite had been cleared from the patient's blood.


Patients who had parasites in their blood 72 hours after treatment – the test for artemisinin resistance - ranged from 0% in Kenya to 68% in Eastern Thailand.


Nicholas White, senior author of the study, said: "It may still be possible to prevent the spread of artemisinin resistant malaria parasites across Asia and then to Africa by eliminating them, but that window of opportunity is closing fast. Conventional malaria control approaches won't be enough –we will need to take more radical action and make this a global public health priority, without delay."


Experts said that while artemisinin treatments are still very effective at curing patients, it is important to be vigilant as cure rates begin to fall and resistance becomes established.


While new malaria medicines are being developed, they are still unlikely to be available for several years. "The artemisinin drugs are arguably the best antimalarials we have ever had. We need to conserve them in areas where they are still working well," said Elizabeth Ashley, lead scientist of the TRAC study.



Rio Tinto Exits Mozambique Coal Venture after $3bn Writedown


Rio Tinto Exits Mozambique Coal Venture After $3bn Writedown

Rio Tinto exits Mozambique coal venture after $3bn writedown.Reuters



Anglo-Australian mining firm Rio Tinto will sell its Mozambique coal assets, purchased through the near $4bn acquisition of Riversdale Mining in 2011, for just $50m to an Indian investment group.


The sale of Rio Tinto Coal Mozambique to International Coal Ventures (ICVL) includes the Benga coal mine and other projects in the Tete province.


Rio Tinto's other assets in Mozambique remain unaffected by the transaction, the London-based firm said in a statement.


The sale is subject to 'certain conditions precedent and regulatory approvals. The transaction is expected to close in the third quarter of 2014', the statement added.


Rio Tinto's stock was trading 0.58% lower to 3,455 pence at 1409 BST in London, after shedding 0.70% to 3,450 pence in early trading. The stock has gained 1.33% so far this year.


ICVL


The deal, for Rio's Mozambique coal unit, marks ICVL's first acquisition.


The Indian firm, formed to buy coking coal mines abroad, is backed by investments from Coal India, steelmakers Steel Authority of India (SAIL) and Rashtriya Ispat Nigam, iron ore producer NMDC and power generator NTPC.


Nomura analysts said: "The sale is not overly surprising given the new management team has little interest in major greenfield projects where they don't have much experience and coal in general has also fallen out of favour."


Mozambique Hit


Rio Tinto's move will slow down the Southeast African nation's attempts to become a major coal exporter.


Rival miner Vale is also looking to sell a stake in its Mozambique coal assets which includes its Moatize mine.


In an interview over the weekend, Mozambique's transport minister Gabriel Muthisse, said the government remained committed to developing the coal industry as an economic growth driver, Reuters reported.


In January 2013, Rio Tinto marked down its coal operations in Mozambique by $3bn (£1.8bn, €2.2bn), partly owing to a failure to obtain a permit to ship coal by barge down Mozambique's Zambezi River.



Libyan Militants Seize Benghazi Special Forces Base


A general view shows fire burning at a fuel depot near the airport road in Tripoli

Fires burning at a fuel depot near the airport road in TripoliReuters



An umbrella group of Libyan Islamist fighters and former rebel militias have seized a key special forces base in the eastern flashpoint city of Benghazi after a battle that killed at least 38 people.


The site was attacked by a coalition including Ansar al-Sharia, a militant Islamist group classified as a terrorist organisation by the US, and ex-rebels of the Benghazi Shura Council.


A government MiG warplane crashed during the fighting but the pilot managed to parachute to ground, according to Reuters. Two special forces spokesmen confirmed the militants took control of the army base.


Special forces have joined with renegade former army general Kahlifa Haftar who launched a campaign to clear the city of Islamist militants.


Libya, since the fall of Gaddafi, is chaotic with a fragile government and armed forces unable to impose their authority on competing political factions and the brigades of former rebels who refuse to disarm.


Fresh fighting erupted two weeks ago as France and other foreign states were forced to pull diplomats out of the North African state. A rocket struck a fuel depot near Tripoli airport two days ago causing a massive fire.


Italy and Italian oil group ENI offered to help extinguish the blaze.


At least 97 people have been killed in fighting between rival militias battling for control of Tripoli's main airport in the past week.


The development came as the French government said it has evacuated French and British nationals from Libya. According to French sources, 40 French citizens and seven British nationals had been evacuated by ship.



#DirenKahkaha: Turkish Women in Social Media 'Laugh Protest' against Erdogan's Deputy


DirenKahkaha Turkey women laugh

Turkish women took to social media in response to claims they should not laugh by a government minister.(Instagram/@diilanyldz)



Thousands of Turkish women have flooded social media with photos of themselves laughing and smiling in a backlash against a government minister who said it is an indecent behaviour.


The hashtag #DirenKahkaha - ResistLaugh - climbed to the top 10 world trends on Twitter, hours after Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arınc claimed honest women should not laugh in public.


"Laughing is a revolutionary act," tweeted a group of female members of the opposition People's Democratic Party.


The Twitter protest was also backed by radical feminist group Femen.


User @Sibellgul tweeted:


Arınc, a prominent member of Recep Tayyip Erdogan's conservative government, made the controversial remark during a meeting of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) held during Turkey's celebration of Eid, the day marking the end of Islam's holy month of Ramadan.


Praising traditional values, the 66-year-old politician listed some rules women should abide to, saying: "She will not laugh in public. She will not make display of her attractiveness."


Lamenting what he said was Turkey's moral decadence, Arınc also accused women of using mobile phones too often.


Mocking a woman chatting on the phone, he said: "Is there nothing else going on? What happened to Ayse's daughter? When's the wedding?'. . . People should say these things face to face."


The comments were seized on by opposition leader Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, who is running against Erdogan in the presidential elections in August.


He tweeted: "What our country needs the most is to hear the merry laugher of our women and of everyone else."



Three Jewish Youths Arrested for Beating Arabs with Iron Bars


A wounded Palestinian protester lies on the ground during clashes with Israeli troops, at a protest against Israeli offensive in Gaza,

A wounded Palestinian protester lies on the ground during clashes with Israeli troops, at a protest against Israeli offensive in GazaReuters



Three Jewish youths have been arrested after over the brutal beating of two Arab residents of east Jerusalem with iron bars and baseball bats.


The two Palestinians, 20-year-olds Amir Shweiki and Samer Mahfouz, were attacked last Friday by a Jewish mob of 12 men as they were walking in the settlement of Neve Yaakov and beaten unconscious, according to Haaretz. They had just finished an iftar dinner following the Ramadan's fast.


One of the men was in intensive care but conscious and "doing well", according to a spokeswoman for Jerusalem's Hadassah Ein Kerem hospital, where the youths were taken.


The other was in a surgical ward. He told Haaretz that a Jewish man approached him asking for a cigarette. "I told him I don't have any, and he heard I'm Arab and went away, coming back with his friends, maybe 12 people. They had sticks and iron bars and they hit us over the head."


Tensions in annexed east Jerusalem increased when a 17-year-old Palestinian, Mohammed Abu Khudair, was kidnapped on 2 July and later found burned alive. Police arrested six alleged Jewish extremists as suspects and charged three of them.



Interpol Offices in South Africa Burgled: Laptops Containing Details of International Drug Cartels Out in Open


Interpol laptops stolen in South Africa

A file photo taken at the Interpol headquartersReuters



Laptops feared to be containing high-profile sensitive information about Nigerian drug cartels, international criminals from Russia, Ukraine and China are out in the open after they were stolen from the Interpol offices in Pretoria, South Africa.


The police have confirmed the theft at the international policing agency's offices but the extent of the jeopardy is still unclear.


"We have registered a case of robbery. Several items were taken, including laptops, cameras, and tablets. Police became aware of the incident on Sunday and did not say if anybody else was in the building at the time, or if there were injuries," said a police spokesperson.


No arrests have been made so far amid the risk of sensitive data landing up in the wrong hands.


The authorities are tight-lipped about the particulars that were in the stolen equipment and refused to answer specifics while the investigation is on.


The officials are probing the motive of the attack and the kind of details that were present in the electronic gadgets.


"There were other valuable items, including ammunition, which was left behind. In one of the offices, which was burgled twice, the thieves took a laptop and a tablet, but left another tablet and two R5 rifle magazines behind," an investigating source told the daily Times.


The burglars are thought to have been equipped with access cards and key codes to gain access into the buildings.



Top 10 Best Selling Products in the World: Harry Potter, Angry Birds and Rubik's Cubes


When we think about who sells the most products across the world, we may instantly turn to those who advertise the most – namely Coca Cola and Apple.


However, according to financesonline.com, the top 10 most sold products in the world span across the music sector, the toy industry and crisps.


Furthermore, with the rise in smartphone and tablet use, applications - commonly known as apps - have become worldwide phenomenons and have captured the minds (and wallets) of billions of people across the globe.


Check out the results below.



India: Scores Buried by Landslide in Pune


india landslide

A mudslide surrounds a building in Pune district the western Indian state of Maharashtra(STR/AFP/Getty Images)



Scores of people are feared trapped under a landslide that buried some 50 houses in western India.


Rescues workers are trying to reach the village of Ambe, in the Pune district of Maharashtra state, to look for survivors.


More than 150 people have reportedly been buried by the landmass that swept the village.


Local commissioner Prabhakar Deshmukh said continuing rains and poor roads are slowing down rescue teams.


"There are constraints. It's a hilly area and heavy rains are still continuing," Deshmukh told CNN-IBN.


Meanwhile local residents have reportedly started to clear the debris.


"The exact number of causalities is not known as we are moving slowly to ensure that those trapped are removed safely," local official Saurav Rao told the Indian Express. "About 30 ambulances have been rushed from adjoining areas to extend medical help to the victims."


The landslide was said to be caused by heavy rains that lashed the region in recent days.


Pune is about 151km (94 miles) southeast of Mumbai. The area is not new to landslides especially during the monsoon season, which runs from June through September.



Between Iraq and a Hard Place: $100m Kurdish Crude Tanker Waits Outside US Waters


oil tanker

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



A US judge ruled that a disputed tanker carrying Kurdish crude oil could not be seized by American officials as it was too far from the American shore.


The United Kalavrvta Tanker was anchored in the Gulf of Mexico, around 60 miles from Texas coast, meaning the Texas court did not have jurisdiction.


Federal magistrate Nancy K Johnson had previously ordered US Marshals to seize the ship's cargo. But the judge has now called for the dispute between Iraq's central government and the autonomous region of Iraqi Kurdistan to be resolved in Iraq.


Baghdad filed a lawsuit with a US court on Monday, claiming that Kurdistan sold the crude oil without permission from the central government, in violation on the Iraqi constitution.


Kurdistan has insisted that it has the right to sell oil produced in its territory without Baghdad's approval.


Mindful that Baghdad has been weakened by a fierce insurgency and is at risk of breaking up, Washington has warned companies against buying oil directly from Iraqi Kurdistan.


The tanker is thought to be carrying around 1 million barrels of crude oil, worth about $100m.


Kurds Emboldened


The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has taken increasingly bold steps to break away from Baghdad in recent months.


Having completed an oil pipeline from KRG territory to Turkey, the Kurds have loaded a number of tankers at the Mediterranean port of Ceyhan in a bid to sell oil on international markets.


One of these attempts has proved successful, after a tanker unloaded its cargo at the Israeli port of Ashkelon in June.


However, fierce opposition from Iraq's central government has stifled other moves to sell oil.


Baghdad has filed lawsuits against Turkey for assisting the Kurds, while it has also warned governments that it would take legal action if a port accepted a cargo of Kurdish crude.


Meanwhile, Baghdad is facing a grave political crisis as Sunni militants, led by the Islamic State, tighten their grip on northern Iraqi cities.


With central government security forces on the defensive in the north, Kurdish militias secured the key city of Kirkuk, while the KRG leadership has called for a referendum on independence.



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