World news: Spanish judge orders arrest of ex-bankers, ECB consi...

 
 
To view this email as a webpage, click here
 
 
Wednesday November 06 2013
 
 
World News
 
Spanish judge orders arrest of ex-bankers
 
Arrests are part of an investigation into the collapse of Alicante-based savings bank CAM, a high-profile casualty of the financial crisis
 
 
 
ECB considers options as prices fall
 
 
BAE move sparks warning on Scottish jobs
 
 
Dahdaleh lawyers accused of halting trial
 
 
NY elects first Democratic mayor in 24 years
 
 
Public sector strikes in Athens over cuts
 
 
Explosions rock Chinese party building
 
 
Security fears fail to quell Kurdistan boom
 
 
Rakuten chief attacks Abe over U-turn
 
 
Population projected to hit 73m by 2037
 
 
Advertisement1
 
 
The World
 
Smart Reads November 6, 2013
 

By Luisa Frey
♦ "Assad is using starvation to commit his murders", says FT columnist David Gardner. The many Syrians who face starvation are victims of a "silent massacre", which does not seem to call as much international attention as the use of sarin nerve gas did.
♦ In Roula Khalaf's opinion, Egypt is in the wrong path and deposed president Mohamed Morsi's trial is a clear sign of that. As military rule creeps back, it seems that a much broader intolerance is setting in.
♦ Somalia's pirate king Mohamed Abdi Hassan wanted to be immortalized on the big screen as a seafaring bandit and got arrested instead. He was caught by the police in Belgium, where he wanted to consult on the film based on his life. Known as “Afweyne” (“big mouth”), the pirate made Somali piracy into an organized, multimillion-dollar industry.
♦ Somali piracy is so lucrative that the Global Post asks: "Do you earn more money than a Somali pirate?" The World Bank, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and Interpol's Maritime Piracy Task Force estimate that the owners of 179 ships hijacked between since 2005 paid out ransoms totalling over $400m.
♦ In Murder on the Mekong, a report supported by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, Jeffe Howe writes about the largest massacre of civilians outside of China in over half a century. It all happened in 2011 in the Golden Triangle – the borderlands between Burma, Laos and Thailand – and was first explained by Thai military commandos as a regular confrontation with drug runners.

Continue reading »
 
 
 
 
 
Manage email
  
Forward this email
 
Feedback
  
Manage portfolio
 
Subscribe to the FT
 
Follow the FT
twitter facebook google plus linkedin
 
Unsubscribe | My Account | RSS | Privacy Policy | About Us | Help
 
You have received this email because you have signed up from the NBE preference page.
This email was sent by a company owned by Pearson plc, registered office at 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL.
Registered in England and Wales with company number 53723.