Monday, July 6

Featured

Netherlands cuts Muslim man’s benefits for refusing to shave beard
Europe, Featured

Netherlands cuts Muslim man’s benefits for refusing to shave beard

    A Dutch court has backed the suspension of a Muslim man’s benefits over his refusal on religious grounds to shave his beard while on training for a job. The unnamed man had been offered a job as an asbestos removal officer but was subsequently told he would need to be clean shaven in order to undergo the training course. When he refused on the basis of his religious convictions, Amersfoort city council suspended payments to both him and his wife for a month under the Participatiewet, which provides a minimum income for every legal resident in the Netherlands. The man appealed the decision at the court of central Netherlands, where he claimed that the removal of his benefits was an infringement of article nine of the European convention on human rights which protect...
Trump mocks Chinese officials
Asia, Featured

Trump mocks Chinese officials

    Donald Trump appeared to mock aides of Chinese president Xi Jinping for wearing glasses during a rambling White House speech. The president used expressive hand gestures to mimic the advisers eyewear during the monologue, in which he claimed to have personally convinced Mr Xi over dinner to release three US college basketball players detained in Hangzhou over allegations of shoplifting. Mr Trump described how he apparently requested at a state function in Beijing in 2017 that his Chinese counterpart do him a favour by letting the group go free. I was having dinner with him at this incredible show that he put on in a ballroom, the likes of which few people have ever seen. It was an incredible evening, he said. Melania is here. And I’m talking. And it just happened ...
PM offers vote on no deal and delay
Featured, United Kingdom

PM offers vote on no deal and delay

    Theresa May has signalled for the first time that Brexit may be delayed if MPs fail to back her own plans for the UK’s divorce from the EU. In a bid to avoid mass resignations from ministers worried about a no-deal exit, the prime minister suggested she would allow a Commons vote to extend the March 29 deadline for leaving the European Union. Keen to head off a possible backlash from hardline Brexiteers, May will also allow a rival vote to let MPs back a no-deal Brexit. Staunch Eurosceptic MP Andrea Jenkyns warned that any delay would “certainly” damage trust in politicians, while DUP leader Arlene Foster said a hard deadline was needed to force the EU into concessions. Speaking in the Commons today, May said a meaningful vote on her deal would be held by Tuesday ...
Chagos claim by UK illegal: UN
Featured, United Kingdom

Chagos claim by UK illegal: UN

    The UK’s claim to sovereignty over the remote Chagos Islands in the Indian Ocean has been ruled to be illegal by the United Nation’s highest court. Although the majority decision by the international court of justice in The Hague is only advisory, the judges announcement is a further, severe blow to Britain’s prestige on the world stage. The case was referred to the court, which hears rival legal submissions over international boundaries, after an overwhelming vote in 2017 in the United Nations assembly in the face of fierce opposition from a largely isolated UK. In its submission to the ICJ last year, Mauritius argued it was coerced into giving up a large swath of its territory, the Chagos Islands. That separation was in breach of UN resolution 1514, passed in 19...
May’s secret plan to delay Brexit
Featured, United Kingdom

May’s secret plan to delay Brexit

    Secret plans have been drawn up by Downing Street to delay Brexit for up to two months, it emerged today. The bombshell plan comes hours after Theresa May sparked MPs' fury by delaying their final Brexit vote until as late as March 12. And facing no chance of a deal in the desert at an EU summit in Egypt today, the Prime Minister admitted it's now only "within our grasp" to leave on March 29 not guaranteed. Her comments sparked furious claims she is running down the clock and an angry row among Tory Brexiteers over fears we will no longer leave on time. Now a delay to Brexit is one of three options in a paper being considered by No10, according to the Daily Telegraph. The others are said to be a meaningful vote on the Brexit deal, as planned, or a conditional vot...
UK government is making an example to forbidding her returning UK as Shamima says
Arab world, Featured

UK government is making an example to forbidding her returning UK as Shamima says

    Jihadi bride Shamima Begum has said the UK government is making an example of her by stripping her of citizenship and forbidding her return. The teenager, who fled London aged 15 to join Islamic State's self-proclaimed caliphate in Syria, also said that she regrets giving interviews about her plans. It comes after Begum said she wants to return to the UK with her newborn son - and will not travel without him. Ms Begum, who had her British citizenship revoked by Sajid Javid, was one of three schoolgirls to leave Bethnal Green to join the terror cult in 2015 and resurfaced heavily pregnant at a Syrian refugee camp last week. Speaking to The Sunday Telegraph from the al-Hol camp in Syria, Ms Begum said: They are making an example of me. I regret speaking to the media...
May’s Brexit deal final vote until March 12
Featured, United Kingdom

May’s Brexit deal final vote until March 12

    MPs may have to wait until March 12 for a meaningful vote on Theresa May's Brexit deal just 17 days before the UK is due to leave, the Prime Minister revealed today. Her first plan was crushed by a record 230 votes in January, forcing her to rethink. She will update the Commons this Tuesday before her latest test on Wednesday, when MPs will try and force her to take a no-deal departure off the table. But finally confirming what was widely thought in Westminster, she admitted MPs will not get a full, second meaningful vote on a revised Brexit deal this Wednesday. Instead she will kick the can down the road yet again for up to another fortnight while officials negotiate with the EU. My team will be back in Brussels again this coming week, she said. As a result, we...
Attempt to hijack plain at gunpoint: The man was shoot dead
Bangladesh, Featured

Attempt to hijack plain at gunpoint: The man was shoot dead

    A passenger armed with a gun and claiming to have a bomb has taken a crew member hostage after trying to hijack a plane flying from Dhaka in Bangladesh to Dubai, according to reports. The man tried to storm the cockpit of the Biman Bangladesh Airlines plane while it was in the air, forcing the pilots to make an emergency landing in Chittagong, Bangladesh, it is said. No injuries have been reported. But hijacker was spot dead by civil authority. The hijacker was still on board the plane with at least one crew member hostage after the jet landed safely and was evacuated, local reports said. The gunman allegedly opened fire on board flight BG147 and demanded to speak to the prime minister of Bangladesh as the drama unfolded on Sunday afternoon. Police immediate...
Shamima’s baby can be UK citizen
Featured, United Kingdom

Shamima’s baby can be UK citizen

    Islamic State's bride Shamima Begum's baby son can be British despite her citizenship being removed, Home Secretary Sajid Javid has suggested. Speaking in the House of Commons on Wednesday, Mr Javid signalled the 19-year-old's child could be allowed into the UK, despite his mother being barred. Shamima Begum, who is seeking to return to Britain having fled to Syria in 2015, recently gave birth in a refugee camp in the country. However, her hopes of being allowed back into the UK to raise her son appear to have been dashed, after a lawyer representing her family revealed the Home Office have stripped her British citizenship. Yet, despite not commenting directly on the case of Shamima Begum, Mr Javid hinted her child's right to be British would be unaffected b...
Three Tory Mps quit party over Brexit
Featured, United Kingdom

Three Tory Mps quit party over Brexit

    Three Conservative MPs have announced they are resigning from their party to join ex-Labour members in the new Independent Group in the House of Commons. Heidi Allen, Sarah Wollaston and Anna Soubry left Theresa May’s Tories after being heavily critical of her approach to Brexit and the growing influence of eurosceptics in the party. It means the Independent Group now has eleven members, as many as the Liberal Democrats, including the eight MPs who have walked out of Jeremy Corbyn’s party in recent days. In a joint statement, the three MPs leavng the Tories said they had wanted their party to broaden its appeal to young people and reflect the diversity of British communities. In a joint statement, the three MPs leavng the Tories said they had wanted their party to...