World news: China and Japan warn US on shutdown, Serbia seeks bi...

 
 
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Monday October 07 2013
 
 
World News
 
China and Japan warn US on shutdown
 
Beijing says 'the clock is ticking' and urged politicians in Washington to 'ensure the safety of the Chinese investments'
 
 
 
Serbia seeks billions in loans from UAE
 
 
Poll funding case against Sarkozy dropped
 
 
India rolls back emergency bank measures
 
 
Egypt attacks heighten security fears
 
 
Nobel for work on how cells move material
 
 
World Bank cuts East Asia growth forecast
 
 
Sharif to select new Pakistan army chief
 
 
South Korea struggles to cut suicide rate
 
 
Solar seeks its day in the Indian sun
 
 
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The World
 
Argentina's ailing president – what happens next?
 

Cristina Fernández is an aggressive politician with a fragile state of health, which makes for a lousy combination. Credibly diagnosed over the weekend with blood on her brain — a possibly but not necessarily serious condition — doctors have ordered the Argentine president to rest for a month. Just three weeks before mid-term elections, this surprise development has the potential to throw Argentina, its politics and even its creditor discussions wide open. For Ms Fernández it is also a medical misfortune that could, ironically, turn out to be a political gift.

Her government faces a crescendo of problems. Its long-running battle in a New York court with a group of holdout creditors could well end in a technical default. Currency controls are strangling the economy and deterring investment while inflation is running at a privately-estimated 25 per cent (not even ministers believe the official figures.) Corruption scandals are a regular occurrence. Meanwhile, Ms Fernández has also picked a series of fights with her neighbours, most recently Chile and Uruguay, losing Argentina its few remaining international friends. As a result, her ruling coalition is expected to lose big in the mid-term elections on October 27.

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