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Revolting Europe - London-based writer, journalist and regular Morning Star contributor Tom Gill focuses on developments in the European left, trade union and social movements

 



World

World news in brief

Friday 22 February 2013

Protester dies from head injury

BAHRAIN: An opposition official said today that a 20-year-old protester has died from injuries suffered during clashes with security forces.

Shi'ite group Al Wefaq spokesman Hadi al-Musawi said the protester died early today from a head injury sustained on February 14 when he was hit with a tear gas canister fired by police.

The death is the second this month blamed on riot police in the US-backed Gulf kingdom.

Militants release one of seven hostages

PHILIPPINES: Police say al-Qaida-linked militants have released a Filipino hostage but there is no word on the fate of six foreign captives.

Sulu provincial police chief Antonio Freyra says shop-owner Edgar Fabella was released by Abu Sayyaf today near the port on Jolo island.

The militants are still holding a Jordanian journalist, birdwatchers from Switzerland and Holland, a Malaysian, a Japanese treasure-hunter and an ex-soldier from Australia.

Nature reserve opened to drilling

UNITED STATES: Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has signed a management plan which opens up nearly half the 23 million-acre National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska site to oil and gas drilling.

The plan lays out a roughly 50-50 split of land between conservation and petroleum development.

Conservation areas include Teshekpuk Lake, renowned for its bird habitat.

April 6 group plans space trip for Morsi

EGYPT: An opposition group is using a novel way to protest against President Mohammed Morsi - signing him up for a chance to win a trip to space.

The April 6 Youth Movement said on Thursday that it had entered the Islamist leader's name in an online contest because it wanted to be rid of him.

It called on supporters to vote for the president so he'd have a chance to win the trip into space.

There was no immediate response from the president's press office.

Islamists protest at atrocity trial

BANGLADESH: Police in Dhaka have fired tear gas to disperse about 2,000 supporters of Jamaat-e-Islami protesting against a war crimes trial.

today's clashes broke out when about 2,000 stone-throwing members and supporters of Bangladesh's largest Islamist party took to the streets of central Dhaka and tried to overrun police barricades.

A tribunal has convicted party assistant secretary Abdul Quader Mollah of mass killings and sentenced him to life in prison.

Another eight party leaders are on trial on charges of atrocities.

US troops go to Niger to support Mali war

UNITED STATES: President Barack Obama said today that about 100 US military personnel have been deployed to Niger.

In a letter to Congress, Mr Obama said the forces will focus on "intelligence sharing" with French troops fighting Islamist militants in neighbouring Mali.

He said the US forces have been deployed with weapons "for the purpose of providing their own force protection and security."

The Pentagon is also considering plans to base spy drones in Niger.

Police crack down on radio receivers

ZIMBABWE: Media freedom campaigners say police are breaking the law by seizing and banning small radio receivers that can tune-in to stations not linked to the state.

The Media Institute of Southern Africa said today that no regulations outlaw the hand-cranked, solar-powered radios that democracy and election support groups plan to use ahead of elections.

Police insist that radios and cheap smartphones are being supplied by "subversive organisations" and pose a security threat.

Airline Iberia's job cuts spark demo

SPAIN: Several thousand protesters charged into the largest terminal of Madrid's international airport today blowing whistles and air horns in a demonstration against national carrier Iberia's plan to cut 3,800 jobs.

Ground staff and cabin crew unions are holding 15 days of strikes.

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Editorial

Iraq ruling is no vindication

Defence Secretary Philip Hammond believes himself vindicated by the High Court ruling that his Iraq Historic Allegations Team (IHAT) is independent.

Features

Turmoil set to continue

by Tom Gill

A look at the causes and possible outcomes of Silvio Berlusconi and his right-wing coalition's lead in the polls.

Our government has put us at risk

by Lindsey German

Attacks such as yesterday's horrific murder in Woolwich didn't happen before the 'war on terror.' It's time we recognised the consequences of the conflicts we've unleashed