'Billions wasted on migrant hotels' and 'Trudeau, madly, deeply' A report on the Home Office's handling of asylum hotels and singer Katy Perry's relationship with ex-Canadian PM make the papers. Inside Syria's jail for IS suspects as officials say attacks by group are rising Kurdish counter-terrorism officials tell the BBC so-called Islamic State cells in Syria are regrouping and increasing attacks. Gazan activist decried as 'disobedient perpetrator' by family after publishing anti-Hamas op-ed The family of Moumen al-Natour, a Gazan lawyer and activist, published a statement distancing themselves after al-Natour wrote an anti-Hamas op-ed in The Washington Post. On This Day: Israel, Jordan sign 1994 peace treaty, ending forty-six years of war Following Egypt in 1979, Jordan was the second Arab country in the Middle East to sign a peace treaty with Israel. |
US warship arrives in Trinidad and Tobago - as Venezuela hits out at 'military provocation' A US warship has docked in the capital of Trinidad and Tobago, as US President Donald Trump increases military pressure on Venezuela. From Dublin to Cape Verde: ‘Apart from family and friends the only thing I miss is the odd bag of Tayto crisps’ Amy Keenan Molloy moved with her husband to Cape Verde in 2005, where she has run bars, set up a charity and become an author of children’s books Sixty-five nations sign first UN treaty to fight cybercrime, in milestone for digital cooperation Sixty-five nations have signed a landmark United Nations treaty in Hanoi aimed at tackling cybercrime - a move Secretary-General António Guterres hailed as a historic step toward a safer digital world. |
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