World
Blizzards 'risk to life' as storm batters UK
A highly-unusual red weather warning for snow is in force for south-west England and south Wales until the early hours of Friday.
UK roads, railways and airports are being severely hit by snow for a third day, with thousands of schools shut.
A seven-year-old girl has died after a car crashed into a house in Looe, Cornwall.
A 75-year-old woman has been found dead in a snowy street in Leeds. She was found partially hidden beneath a car in the Farsley area of the city.
Elsewhere, a 46-year-old man has died in a road crash after a collision with a lorry in icy conditions on the A34 near Tot Hill services, Berkshire.
Earlier, a baby was born in a car in snowy conditions on the A66 at Elton near Stockton in County Durham. The mother and baby have since been taken to hospital.
National Grid says there may not be enough gas to meet demand on Thursday in the UK, leading to possible shortages for industrial users.
If suppliers cannot provide more gas, industry, large businesses and gas-fired power stations will be asked to use less but this advice would only be passed on to consumers as a last resort.
Schools are closed in south Wales, southern England and Scotland.
Several sports fixtures have been disrupted by the weather conditions including the postponement of four Super League rugby league games and the Premier League Darts in Exeter being cancelled.
A red alert for snow in Scotland - the country's first- has been lifted but an amber alert remains in place.
More than 300 people were stranded on a motorway in Scotland in freezing temperatures overnight on Wednesday - some for 20 hours.
First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has urged people there not to travel, while Wales' transport secretary has also warned against driving.
Blizzards, biting winds and significant travel disruption are also affecting southern, western and central England, parts of Wales and Northern Ireland.
This is the third day of disruption caused by heavy snowfall, with reports of "near zero visibility" on some roads in Cumbria.
The Met Office says the cold weather could last into next week and possibly the following week.
There is potential for up to 50cm (19.6 inches) of snow over parts of Dartmoor and Exmoor, the Met Office added, with up to 20cm (7.8 inches) falling in southern England, Wales and the West Midlands.
Source : BBC
In One Tweet, Kylie Jenner Wiped Out $1.3 Billion of Snap’s Market Value
Snap Inc.’s flagship platform has lost some lustre, at least according to one social-media influencer in the Kardashian-Jenner clan.
Shares of the Snapchat parent company sank 6.1 percent on Thursday, wiping out $1.3 billion in market value, on the heels of a tweet on Wednesday from Kylie Jenner, who said she doesn’t open the app anymore. Whether it’s the demands of her newfound motherhood, or the recent app redesign, the testament drew similar replies from her 24.5 million followers. Wall Street analysts too have begun to notice, citing recent user engagement trends noticed since the platform’s redesign.
Jenner’s tweet was followed late Thursday by one from Maybelline New York, asking its followers if it should stay on the Snapchat platform. The beauty-product brand owned by Paris-based L’Oreal SA said its “Snapchat views have dropped dramatically,” but it still wanted to connect with its followers.
Citigroup analyst Mark May downgraded the stock to sell from neutral earlier this week after seeing a “significant jump” in negative reviews of the app’s redesign. He expects the reviews could cause user engagement to fall, hurting financial results.
Meanwhile, as the app takes criticism, Chief Executive Evan Spiegel may become one of the highest paid executives in the U.S. After the company’s IPO last March, Spiegel got a $636.6 million stock grant that will be payable through 2020.
Source : Bloomberg
India politician who 'ran over' children surrenders
A local leader of India's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has given himself up to police after allegedly running over and killing nine children in the northern state of Bihar.
Police said Manoj Baitha was driving the SUV involved in the deaths, but he denies this. The party has suspended him for six years.
Baitha had been on the run since the incident on Saturday, police say.
At least 10 other children were injured when his SUV hit a crowd of students.
The students - who were aged between seven and 13 - were returning home from school when the incident took place. They were crossing a highway, as the village is located on one side and the school on the other.
Indian media reports said he had lost control of the vehicle after running down a 65-year-old woman near the school.
Officials began investigating the accused after a local resident, whose granddaughter was one of those killed, filed a complaint.
"We ran to the spot as soon as we found out about the accident," Anwarul Haq told BBC Hindi's Manish Shandilya, who travelled to the village soon after the incident.
One of Haq's daughters died in the accident while her sister escaped because she was on the other side of the road. "The children were strewn around. The impact of the attack was so strong that a few of them were even hanging on trees."
Indradev Sahni's nine-year-old daughter was killed in the incident while her younger brother was injured.
"Nothing is under control at home," said Sahni. "I couldn't attend my daughter's cremation. My father, brother and some neighbours organised her funeral. We had hoped that she would grow up to become an educated and bright woman."
Baitha is currently in hospital and is reportedly being treated for injuries related to the incident.
The opposition party in the state, which the BJP governs, has accused him of being intoxicated at the time.
Deputy chief minister, Sushil Kumar Modi, has told the police to take the "sternest possible action" against him.
Source : BBC
400kg of cocaine found in Russian embassy
Around 400 kilos of cocaine was siezed by Police from the Russian embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentine Minister for Security Patricia Bullrich announced.
Addressing a press conference, Bullrich said that the drugs were discovered in an annex of the Russian embassy and had a street value of around $50 million.
“A gang of narco-criminals was trying to use the diplomatic courier service of the Russian embassy to ship the drugs to Europe,” she said.
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Bullrich told reporters that Russian and Argentine police had decided to mount a sting operation after the Russian ambassador informed them of the drugs find in December 2016.
“The cocaine was replace by flour and monitoring devices were placed to monitor delivery” of the 16 bags of the drug, Bullrich said. She said the sting had resulted in the arrest of five suspects — two in Argentina and three in Russia.
The drug, of “very high purity,” was destined for Russia and probably also Germany, where the suspected mastermind lives. “We believe the German police will arrest this fugitive,” Bullrich said.
The minister said Russian security service agents “came to Argentina on three occasions to assist in the investigation” that took more than a year.
One of the two people arrested in Argentina is a naturalized Russian who was a member of the police force in Buenos Aires, said Bullrich.
Investigators believe the cocaine likely originated in Colombia or Peru.
(AFP)
Former first lady arrested in graft case
Military police searched the home of former Honduran President Porfirio Lobo on Wednesday and arrested his wife as part of a corruption inquiry by an international team of investigators.
Police arrived at the Lobo home outside the capital in six vehicles and searched the residence before leaving with former First Lady Rosa Elena Bonilla and her brother-in-law Mauricio Mora. Authorities did not say whether Lobo was present.
The arrest was announced by an anti-corruption mission of the Organization of American States, a team the government agreed to accept after large street protests against graft in 2016.
Investigators for the nongovernmental National Anti-corruption Council have told prosecutors that Bonilla deposited $600,000 in government funds into her personal bank account five days before Lobo ended his four-year term in January 2014. They also say she hasn't accounted for at least $6 million in government funds for her office during Lobo's administration.
"Today is a great step against impunity," council director Gabriela Castellanos said on her Twitter account.
Julio Ramirez, Bonilla's attorney, told journalists that his client "is innocent and I will prove it in the courts."
Past corruption cases involving public figures have generally ended without convictions, and the chief of the OAS mission, Juan Jimenez Mayor, resigned in mid-February, complaining of a lack of support from the Honduran government and the OAS.
In December, the mission announced corruption complaints against five Honduran legislators who were accused of shifting public money through a charity and into their own accounts. A month later, Congress passed a measure protecting them from prosecution by freezing any civil or criminal action over public spending until auditors have studied such cases for three years.
Jimenez then called that step a "pact of immunity" and said the mission's investigators had found strong indications that at least 30 current and former legislators had committed crimes.
Even so, the OAS mission's investigations led last week to the arrest of three high-ranking military officers accused of illegal association, false testimony and conspiracy involving a case in which civilians had been detained and tortured. Eight lower-ranking soldiers were previously convicted in the case. They had said they were only following orders.
Source : Los Angeles Times
Pakistan court bans Nawaz Sharif from leading his party
Pakistan’s supreme court has barred Nawaz Sharif from his position as president of the country’s ruling party, ordering the reversal of all decisions he has taken in the role, in a move that plunges the country’s politics into fresh uncertainty.
The former prime minister, who was sacked by the supreme court last year, had managed to retain power by driving through a law that allowed disqualified politicians to lead political parties.
Twice-deposed in coups during the 1990s, the 68-year-old has long claimed his most recent eviction as prime minister is the result of a shadowy, anti-democratic conspiracy concocted between the judiciary and – behind the scenes – the army.
“This is only going to add to the wave of support for the PML-N [Sharif’s party],” Daniyal Aziz, a cabinet minister, told the Guardian. “The public think the party is being victimised.”
It was not unexpected that the supreme court would debar Sharif as party head. The same five judges originally ordered his dismissal as prime minister on the grounds that, in failing to declare a foreign bank account, he fell short of the vague constitutional requirement that politicians be “honest” and “righteous”.
But the verdict goes further. In a five-page judgement, the chief justice, Saqib Nisar, ruled that all “orders passed, directions given and documents issued” by him as party chairman since then “have never been passed, issued or given.”
Most immediately, this nullifies all of the tickets given out by Mr Sharif to PML-N candidates for senate elections, on which his career partly hinges. If the party win enough seats to cobble together a majority in the 102-seat senate, Sharif would be able to remove the clause in the constitution which prevents his return as prime minister.
The Election Commission of Pakistan is expected to delay the vote planned for 3 March. This will give time for a new PML-N head to reappoint the party’s candidates.
The most likely replacement for Sharif as PML-N chief is his wife, Kalsoom, who is currently undergoing treatment for cancer in London, analyst Hasan Askari Rizvi told the Guardian. “Through his wife,” Rizvi said, “Mr Sharif would still be able to control the party.”
Source : The Guardian
Sridevi Kapoor: 'Case closed' in Bollywood star's death
Police in Dubai has closed the case into the death of Bollywood star Sridevi Kapoor after handing over her body to relatives.
The actress, 54, died on Saturday "due to accidental drowning following the loss of consciousness", police said. She was found in a hotel bathtub.
It had earlier been reported that she died of cardiac arrest while at a family wedding in Dubai.
Her body has been embalmed and is being flown to India for her funeral.
Crowds have gathered outside her home in Mumbai to pay their last respects ahead of the ceremony, which will take place in the city today.
Police had been holding the body pending the results of a post-mortem examination.
Prosecutors say a "comprehensive investigation into the circumstances of her death" is now complete.
The full post-mortem report has not yet been released to the public and will be expected to explain how the original report of cardiac arrest and the listing of "accidental drowning" are linked.
Source : BBC
Indian film star Kamal Haasan launches political party
Indian film star Kamal Haasan has launched his new political party in the southern state of Tamil Nadu.
Haasan, 62, made the announcement in the town of Madurai before crowds of his party supporters. The state has a history of actors-turned-politicians - three have even served as chief ministers.
In December, Rajnikanth, another Tamil movie star, told his fans that he would form a political party before the next state election due in 2021.
Haasan said in October he wanted to enter politics. His new party is called Makkal Needhi Mayyam, which roughly translated means Centre for People's Justice, the Press Trust of India reported. He had said he would work towards becoming the state's chief minister so he can "right the wrongs of corruption and communalism" in the state.
Tamil Nadu has been politically unstable since the death last year of Chief Minister Jayalalithaa Jayaram, also a former film star.
Source : BBC
Xi set to tighten grip on China by scrapping presidential term limit
Four months after a historic Chinese Communist party congress was expected to answer most questions about Xi Jinping’s second five-year term in office, China’s president has demonstrated that he can still “shock and awe” his political rivals.
Until Sunday afternoon, most guessing games ahead of the March 5 opening of China’s annual parliamentary session focused on the imminent political reincarnation of Wang Qishan, the recently retired head of Mr Xi’s anti-corruption campaign, and the race to succeed Zhou Xiaochuan, the veteran central bank governor.
But the party’s announcement that its central committee had recommended scrapping the two-term limit for the state president and vice-president was a reminder that in Mr Xi’s China, such personnel reshuffles matter much less now. One person with close ties to China’s leadership says that people worried about Mr Xi’s authoritarian tendencies are “not just scared, they are desperate”.
The person adds that scrapping the two-term limit “has put us back 30 years”, by threatening painstaking efforts to institutionalise peaceful party and government leadership transitions every 10 years This is not what anyone was expecting at the beginning of the reform era Kevin Carrico, Macquarie University After the chaos of the Cultural Revolution, the two-term limit on the presidency and vice-presidency was written into China’s state constitution by Deng Xiaoping, who launched China’s era of “reform and opening” in the late 1970s and wanted to prevent a return to the excesses of one-man rule experienced under Mao Zedong.
“We’ve had so many steps backwards [under Xi],” adds Kevin Carrico, a lecturer in Chinese studies at Macquarie University in Australia. “Media controls have become stricter, internet controls have become stricter. And now one of the few seemingly effective checks on a senior leader’s power that he can only be in power for two terms is now just being completely cast aside. This is not what anyone was expecting at the beginning of the reform era.”
While last October’s Congress made it clear that Mr Xi would remain the party’s dominant figure as long as he were alive and healthy, Sunday’s announcement paves the way for him to retain the presidency indefinitely, too.
Source : The Financial Times
Singapore to pay bonus to all citizens after surplus budget
All Singapore citizens aged 21 and above will get a one-off “SG Bonus” of up to S$300 each as the 2017 budget came in with a surplus of almost S$10 billion (US $7.6 billion), the city-state’s finance minister announced on Monday.
Finance minister Heng Swee Keat made the announcement during his budget speech in Parliament, describing the bonus as a “hongbao”, the Mandarin word for a monetary gift given on special occasions.
He said this “reflects the government’s long-standing commitment to share of the fruits of Singapore’s development with Singaporeans”, according to Channel News Asia.
The “SG Bonus” will cost the government S$700 million (US $533 million).
The bonus will be paid according to people’s assessable income. About 2.7 million people will get the payouts, which are due by the end of 2018.
Those with an income of S$28,000 or below will be eligible to receive S$300, those whose incomes ranging from S$28,001 to S$100,000 will receive S$200, and those with incomes in excess of S$100,000 will receive S$100.
Singapore’s revised budget for fiscal 2017 showed a surplus of S$9.61 billion, thanks to contributions from statutory boards and higher-than-expected stamp duty.
The surplus will also be used in other ways. Heng said S$5 billion will be set aside for the Rail Infrastructure Fund to save up for new railway lines that Singapore is building.
Another S$2 billion will be set aside for premium subsidies and other forms of support for Eldershield, an insurance scheme that helps senior citizens with severe disabilities to cope with the financial demands of their daily care.
Source : The Hindustan Times
Israelis demand Netanyahu resignation over looming corruption charges
Some 1,500 people have rallied in central Tel Aviv demanding the resignation of Benjamin Netanyahu over corruption allegations and a recent Israeli police recommendation that charges be brought against the Prime Minister.
The “Bibi Netanyahu go home” slogan once again united the Israeli crowd holding their weekly anti-government corruption protest in Tel Aviv. Waving signs that read “Bibi, you are not above the law,”“Love Israel, separate from Netanyahu,” they chanted, “A mafia country and a corrupt Prime Minister.”
Earlier this month Israeli police recommended that Benjamin Netanyahu be indicted over allegations of bribery, fraud and breach of trust. Despite the pressure and daily calls to resign, Netanyahu maintains his innocence, further exacerbating the public anger.
“In the past, whenever there was an indictment recommendation with the police, politicians used to resign,” one protester told RT’s Ruptly video agency. “It's very difficult to see Bibi resigning. He’s not the kind of [person] who resigns.”
“I came here to protest and to defend the democracy in Israel because it’s important that people will fight corruption wherever it is because the government here forgot that they need to serve us and not we need to serve them,” noted another activist present at the rally.
Police earlier announced that they gathered sufficient evidence to start legal proceedings against the premier in two separate probes – Case 1000 and Case 2000. Although the recommendations were submitted to the attorney general, it may take months before the decision is made.
Case 1000 alleges that Netanyahu, along with his wife Sara, received lavish gifts worth thousands of dollars from Hollywood producer Arnon Milchan and Australian billionaire James Packer, in exchange for favors. The other probe revolves around suspicions of Netanyahu conspiring with the owner of the top-selling Israeli newspaper, Arnon Mozes, to get a more positive coverage of himself. The Prime Minister has repeatedly denied the allegations as “baseless.”
Cyclone Gita: Christchurch declares state of emergency
Christchurch and two other districts on New Zealand's South Island have declared a state of emergency as former cyclone Gita hit the country.
Dozens of schools have been shut and roads closed on the South Island as the storm made landfall on Tuesday. New Zealand's national airline has cancelled all flights in and out of the capital, Wellington, on North Island.
Residents were told to expect floods and winds of up to 150km/h (90mph). The Grey District and Buller Districts on South Island have now also declared a state of emergency.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said that troops had been sent out to areas that were likely to be hardest hit by the storm. She added that the national Civil Defence office in Wellington was also on standby.
Gita last week left a trail of destruction in the Pacific island nations of Tonga and Fiji. Tonga, in particular, is reeling from the storm, which injured people and destroyed buildings including the parliament.
Source : BBC News
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