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Bob McDonnell trial: Jonnie Williams denies affair with Maureen McDonnell

Jonnie R. Williams, the key witness in a corruption trial of ex-Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell and his wife Maureen, has testified the former first lady sought gifts and loans in return for help with his business.

Prosecutors say Jonnie Williams gave Bob and Maureen McDonnell gifts and loans totaling $165,000 (£97,000).

Bob McDonnell denies wrongdoing. His wife says their marriage was frayed and she had a “crush” on Jonnie Williams.

On Thursday, Jonnie Williams said buying gifts for the couple was poor judgment.

Jonnie Williams, the head of a vitamin supplements company called Star Scientific, said buying a $6,000 Rolex watch on the request of Maureen McDonnell was “a bad decision on my part”.

“I shouldn’t have had to buy things like that to get the help I needed,” Jonnie Williams told jurors as they inspected the watch in question.

He also denied being friends with the McDonnells.

Prosecutors say Jonnie Williams gave Bob and Maureen McDonnell gifts and loans totaling $165,000
Prosecutors say Jonnie Williams gave Bob and Maureen McDonnell gifts and loans totaling $165,000

Prosecutors say Bob McDonnell was in financial need and traded on his position to win gifts of travel and cash from Jonnie Williams, for whom he arranged meetings with state officials.

However, Bob McDonnell argues he was only doing for Jonnie Williams what he would for any Virginia businessman.

On Wednesday, Jonnie Williams testified Maureen McDonnell asked him for money and to pay for high-end shopping trips, offering to connect him to the governor in return.

Jonnie Williams, to whom prosecutors have granted immunity, said he insisted on speaking to the governor before giving her any cash, and testified that the governor subsequently thanked him for his generosity.

As his testimony resumed on Thursday, the chief executive said he refused some of Maureen McDonnell’s requests because he believed they would be too visible – including vehicles for two of Bob McDonnell’s children and purchasing the couple’s money-losing rental properties.

Jonnie Williams also said he decided against a secret stock transfer to Bob McDonnell because he could not have hid the transaction from US regulators.

Bob McDonnell, once a rising star in the Republican Party with aspirations for national office, left office in disgrace in January at the end of his term. Virginia governors are barred from running for a second consecutive term, and he was succeeded by Democrat Terry McAuliffe.

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Taiwan gas explosions kill 25 people in Kaohsiung

Several gas explosions in the southern Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung has killed 25 people and injured 267 others, officials say.

The blasts rocked the city’s Cianjhen district, scattering cars and blowing deep trenches in roads.

The exact cause of the gas leaks is not clear, but reports say the blasts were caused by ruptured pipelines.

Images of the scene showed major fires, upturned vehicles, bodies covered in debris and streets split in two.

The explosions happened late on Thursday night, with witnesses reporting huge fireballs soaring into the air. Taiwan’s prime minister said there were at least five blasts.

“The local fire department received calls of gas leaks late Thursday and then there was a series of blasts around midnight affecting an area of two to three sq km [one sq mile],” the National Fire Agency said in a statement.

The blasts rocked the city's Cianjhen district, scattering cars and blowing deep trenches in roads
The blasts rocked the city’s Cianjhen district, scattering cars and blowing deep trenches in roads (photo AFP)

Four firefighters who were investigating reports of a gas leak were said to be among the dead.

People in the area were evacuated to schools as teams battled the blazes. By Friday morning most fires were reported to have been extinguished.

The exact cause of the blasts had not yet been identified but several petrochemical companies had pipelines running along the sewage system in the district.

“The cause of the gas leak is still not clear at this moment. We suspect the leaked gas could be propylene,” said Economic Affairs Minister Chang Chia-chu.

One witness told AFP news agency he saw “fire soaring up to possibly 20 storey high after a blast”.

Another told Taiwan’s Central News Agency that the “explosions were like thunder and the road in front of my shop ripped open”.

People had been ordered to stay home from school and work in Kaohsiung’s Cianjhen and Lingya districts on Friday, local media reported.

Kaohsiung mayor Chen Chu wrote on her Facebook page (in Chinese): “Rescue efforts are still underway.”

She urged everyone to “follow the instructions of rescue teams at the scene, and avoid standing around and watching”.

“The local government has already requested [gas suppliers] CPC and Hsin Kao Gas cut off the gas supply,” she added, urging residents to stay calm.

The local government has set up an emergency response centre.

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Why the US dollar is on the rise

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USD has been noticing a continued spike in the last week, especially so for the most traded pair EUR/USD. The rise of the USD has been a basis of conjecture for many analysts who have seen the currency being debased in the last five years and still continues to rise at an astronomical rate. In the last two years, U.S. Dollar index is up by 10% as compared to the other top currencies of the world. Read more on anyoption for details regarding the strengthening dollar and its impact on the Eurozone.

The strengthening of the US dollar in the last few days has been initiated by European Central Bank when they slashed the interest rates on June 5th. The president of ECB further informed that the interest rates will remain low for some time now. The governor of Britain, Mark Carney, also said that the British economy is too weak to fiddle with the benchmark rate of interest which was implied by the rise in long term bond yields. The other thing that supported the dollar was the 2.1% increase in the Consumer Price Index which did not hit the downward spiral despite the inflation. The increased cost of CPI has been attributed to 3.3% rise in the gasoline prices which has been the largest gain since last year.

What the experts explain is the main reason for the rise of US dollar is that it is the reserve currency of the world. The majority of nations use dollar as the currency to buy commodities such as oil which keeps propelling the US economy towards betterment. The monetary stimulus of the Federal Reserve can take the credit for keeping the dollar strong against other currencies. However, it has been speculated that when the stimulus weakens or ends, it can have strong impact on the currency.

With the dollar at an all time high, the vacations to US will be affected as it will be pricier than usual. The immediate spur of the rising dollar has been pointing towards the Federal Reserve’s purchases of the bonds that have been bought using the freshly minted currency. The quantitative easing has already augured well for the long term interest rates with yields rising to a 2.6% from the downward low of 1.6%. When the yields show an upward trend, it attracts more capital investments in America from other parts of the world which propels the dollar towards growth.

The deeper insight into the upward trend of the dollar can be seen in the overall health of the economy of America which is currently in a good shape. With housing market on recover mode, bad mortgage debts wiped out of the system and opportunistic job market with 195,000 employees added to the non-farming sector is a big boost to the economy. Despite the holistic growth, GDP has remained modest and will strengthen a bit in the coming days.  As per the IMF projections, the American Economy is expected to grow at a 2.7% rate next year. Even though this is not a classic improvement, but as compared to the other economies of Japan and Britain are not likely to do this well and with Euro zone still in the recessionary phase will keep America at the top.

The transatlantic gap in the interest rates of the both the markets are expected to rise as the monetary policies of America and Europe become clearer. With this trend, the dollar will rise further.

Meriam Ibrahim arrives in New Hampshire

Meriam Yahia Ibrahim Ishag, the Sudanese woman who fled to Italy after being spared a death sentence for renouncing Islam, has arrived in the US.

Meriam Yahia Ibrahim Ishag arrived in New Hampshire on Thursday evening with her American husband and her children.

Welcoming her on a brief stopover in Philadelphia, the city’s mayor, Michael Nutter, described her as a “world freedom fighter”.

There was global condemnation when Meriam Ibrahim was sentenced to hang for apostasy by a Sudanese court earlier this year.

Meriam Ibrahim’s father is Muslim so according to Sudan’s version of Islamic law she is also Muslim and cannot convert.

She maintains she was never Muslim having been raised by her Christian mother.

Meriam Yahia Ibrahim Ishag arrived in New Hampshire on Thursday evening with her American husband and her children
Meriam Yahia Ibrahim Ishag arrived in New Hampshire on Thursday evening with her American husband and her children

Meriam Ibrahim flew from Rome to Philadelphia with her husband and two children, en route to Manchester, New Hampshire, where her husband has relatives and the family hope to settle.

While in Philadelphia, Michael Nutter said people would remember her just like “others who stood up so we could be free”.

He compared her to Rosa Parks, who became a symbol of the civil rights movement in the US when she refused to give up her seat to a white man on a bus in Alabama.

Michael Nutter presented Meriam Ibrahim with a small replica of the Liberty Bell, a symbol of American independence.

Her next stop was Manchester, and there were about 40 relatives and supporters at the airport to greet her.

He said her husband said a few words, in which he thanked the US government for its strong stance, the New Hampshire senators who worked hard to arrange her asylum and the people of Sudan for their support.

Meriam Ibrahim’s husband, Daniel Wani, also a Christian, is from South Sudan and has US nationality.

Their daughter Maya was born in prison in May, shortly after Meriam Ibrahim was sentenced to hang for renouncing one’s faith.

Under intense international pressure, her conviction was quashed and she was freed in June although she was initially stopped from leaving the country and the family took refuge at the US embassy in Khartoum.

When in Rome, Meriam Ibrahim met Pope Francis, who “thanked her for her witness to faith”, according to a Vatican spokesman.

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Gaza: US in its strongest criticism yet of Israel’s offensive in Palestinian territory

The US – Israel’s closest ally – has said the shelling of a UN shelter in Gaza is “totally unacceptable and totally indefensible”.

In its strongest criticism yet of Israel’s offensive in the Palestinian territory, the US urged Israel to do more to protect civilian life.

A quarter of Gaza’s population has been displaced by the fighting, the UN says.

Israel says its operation in Gaza is designed to defend its population from attacks by Palestinian militants.

It blames the Hamas militant group for most of the civilian deaths in Gaza, saying its fighters deliberately operate from civilian areas.

The Israeli army has now “neutralized” 70-80% of Hamas’ offensive tunnel network into Israel.

In its strongest criticism yet of Israel's offensive in the Palestinian territory, the US urged Israel to do more to protect civilian life
In its strongest criticism yet of Israel’s offensive in the Palestinian territory, the US urged Israel to do more to protect civilian life

Israel says it will not stop its operation in Gaza until all the tunnels – which militants use to infiltrate Israeli territory – have been destroyed.

Since Israel began its offensive in Gaza on July 8, 1,422 Palestinians have been killed and 8,265 injured, most of them civilians, according to Gaza’s health ministry.

This means more Palestinians have now been killed than during Operation Cast Lead – the last time Israel launched a ground invasion in Gaza – in 2008-2009.

Fifty-eight Israelis have been killed in total – 56 soldiers and two civilians. A Thai worker in Israel has also died.

“There is a difference in approach between what Hamas is perpetrating on the Israeli people and what Israel is doing to defend their country,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters.

“But the shelling of a UN facility that is housing innocent civilians who are fleeing violence is totally unacceptable and totally indefensible, and it is clear that we need our allies in Israel to do more to live up to high standards that they have set for themselves.”

He was referring to an incident on Wednesday, when at least 16 people were killed when shellfire hit a UN-run school designated as a civilian shelter in the Jabaliya district of Gaza City.

Josh Earnest said there was little doubt that the shells were fired by the Israeli military.

The UN has also condemned the continuing violence.

“The reality of Gaza today is that no place is safe,” UN humanitarian chief Baroness Valerie Amos told the Security Council.

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Taiwan gas explosions kill at least 5 people in Kaohsiung

Multiple gas explosions in the southern Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung has killed at least five people and injured hundreds of others.

Reports say the blasts were caused by ruptured gas pipelines.

Several gas explosions have hit the Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung
Several gas explosions have hit the Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung

Images and footage from the scene show major fires and significant damage to roads and buildings.

“At least 212 people who were injured have been rushed to hospitals for treatment,” the National Fire Agency said.

Chinese news agency Xinhua reported that before the explosion, smoke with a “gas-like smell” came out of drains into the streets.

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Robert Halmi Sr. dies at his New York home aged 90

TV producer Robert Halmi Sr. has died at his New York home aged 90.

Robert Halmi Sr., whose work won dozens of Emmy Awards, began his career in the US as a photographer before turning his hand to TV.

His many productions included Gypsy starring Bette Midler, Gulliver’s Travels and Alice in Wonderland.

Robert Halmi Sr., who was born in Hungary, worked with his son Robert Halmi Jr., with the pair making a number of big budget productions in the 1990s.

In 1994, they produced an epic TV remake of Civil War classic Gone With The Wind, which Robert Halmi Sr. dubbed “an eight-hour study in American history”.

Robert Halmi Sr. began his career in the US as a photographer before turning his hand to TV
Robert Halmi Sr. began his career in the US as a photographer before turning his hand to TV (photo Getty Images)

Numerous projects were headed up by big stars and landed impressive ratings, including The Lion in Winter which starred Glenn Close and was screened in 2004.

Robert Halmi began his career in television in the early 1960s and continued to make programs well into his senior years, including Neverland, based on the story of Peter Pan in 2011, and a remake of Treasure Island a year later.

He was also executive producer on the 13-part Olympus mini-series, which has yet to be completed and is due to air next year on the Syfy channel.

In 1993, Robert Halmi said that TV production had turned into a business populated by “money people”, saying: “I’m somebody with pretty good taste who goes one step further.”

“With the creative process, everything has to be nurtured. I know on every project, every day, where it stands dollars-and-cents-wise, but I also know if someone has a cold,” he added.

Aside from numerous prizes for his productions, Robert Halmi Sr. was honored with a prestigious Peabody Award in 1999 for his personal contribution to the business.

He was hailed as “perhaps the last of the great network television impresarios”.

Before emigrating to the US, Robert Halmi Sr. was twice captured during the Second World War in his native Hungary, once by the Nazis and again by the Soviets while spying on behalf of the Americans.

5 Tips for Choosing the Right Hearing Aid

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 man-holding-a-hearing-aid-right-hand-wearing-a-suitHearing aids have entered the future. Sleek, technologically advanced and comfortable, today’s hearing aids have also become less visible and less difficult to use, and they assist in hearing better than at any time in history.

As technology’s prowess has moved into the land of audiology, today’s hearing aid market has become flush with styles and technologies that solve and improve your hearing woes in remarkably specific ways; however, you’ll also find the selection of hearing aid styles may well make your head swim. With so many good options on the market, how are you to choose which hearing aid is right for you?

One reason there are so many hearing aids available is the reality that not all hearing loss or hearing loss sufferers are alike. Some hearing loss is accompanied by tinnitus. Some is mild and relegated to only a small spectrum of frequencies, and the people suffering hearing loss vary a great deal, too. Vastly different budgets can determine the range of some people’s options, and your budget will likely come into play, too.

The cause of your hearing loss can also affect the type of hearing aid you might choose. Visit HearingLife if you’re about to embark on a quest for the perfect hearing aid, and keep in mind these five tips for choosing the one that is right for you.

The Severity of Hearing Loss

The severity of your hearing loss will determine some of your options. Some models, like in-the-ear models (ITE), can work well whether your hearing loss is mild or severe. While other styles, like in-the-canal (ITC) and completely-in-canal (CIC) hearing aids, work best if your hearing loss is only mild to moderate. Your audiologist is your best resource when considering what aid will best suit the degree of hearing loss you suffer, so be sure to ask plenty of questions.

The Type of Hearing Loss

Some hearing loss is only in one ear. Some hearing loss affects lower frequencies to a much greater degree than higher ones. Many people’s hearing loss is accompanied by tinnitus and may require a masking sound in order to give you the best results. The type of hearing loss you suffer will affect which options are right for you.

Some digital models offer more dexterity of programming regarding frequency amplification and sound direction, which may be of great use to some people. However, analog models without that capacity may work completely fine for someone whose hearing loss doesn’t require carefully controlling frequencies.

Lifestyle Concerns

elderly-woman-in-orange-checkin-hearing-aid-blonde-woman-short-hairYour lifestyle will also dictate a lot about the type of hearing aid that will suit you best. If you’re someone who is very active and tends to perspire a lot, you’ll need a hearing aid that is water resistant. While if you’re someone who rarely works up a sweat, you probably won’t need that kind of feature. People with pools or ocean-side houses, who spend a lot of time in the water, may need to get a hearing aid that’s waterproof.

Whatever your lifestyle concerns and needs are, share them with your audiologist so you can be sure to get a hearing aid that won’t slow you down.

Price

Hearing aids, like most things in life, can run the gamut when it comes to price, and because insurance doesn’t always cover the treatment, you need to consider the cost when you’re making a selection. Talk to your audiologist about your budget needs.

Oftentimes, you’ll find the company you’re working for can work out a payment plan with you to ensure you get the type of hearing aid you need.

Comfort Level

How a hearing aid feels is a very important consideration that shouldn’t be overlooked when trying to make the right choice, but comfort is much more than how a hearing aid sits in or behind the ear. For a hearing aid to be truly comfortable, it must work toward the wearer’s comfort in a variety of ways, including:

  • Is the wearer comfortable with how the visible hearing aid is?
  • Is the wearer comfortable with how the hearing aid feels in or against his ear?
  • Is the wearer comfortable with how the hearing aid performs in a variety of settings?
  • Is the wearer comfortable with the features and adjustability that do or don’t come with the hearing aid?

Choosing the right hearing aid isn’t rocket science, but it does take careful deliberation. By considering your needs along with the help of a skilled audiologist, you can get the hearing aid that suits you, your budget and your lifestyle perfectly.

Justin Bieber and Orlando Bloom feud in Ibiza

After Justin Bieber and Orlando Bloom nearly came to blows at Ibiza hotspot Cipriani on July 30, the singer took to his Instagram to taunt the actor with a very telling photo.

The photo was of Orlando Bloom, 37, appearing to cry at the opening night of Romeo & Juliet in September 2013.

Justin Bieber took to his Instagram to taunt Orlando Bloom after Ibiza incident
Justin Bieber took to his Instagram to taunt Orlando Bloom after Ibiza incident (photo Instagram)

Justin Bieber, 20, left it without a caption, but his message was pretty clear.

Earlier in the day, following the alleged altercation, Justin Bieber posted an image of Orlando Bloom’s ex, Miranda Kerr, in a bikini, only to delete it a short time later.

According to Us Weekly, the incident in Ibiza started when Justin Bieber made a comment about Miranda Kerr to Orlando Bloom.

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Commonwealth Games 2014: Kylie Minogue to perform at Glasgow closing ceremony

Kylie Minogue will perform at the closing ceremony of this year’s Glasgow Commonwealth Games.

The Hampden finale will begin at 21.00 on Sunday, less than 24 hours after the end of track and field events.

Kylie Minogue will perform alongside Lulu, Deacon Blue and Dougie MacLean.

Kylie Minogue will perform at the closing ceremony of this year's Glasgow Commonwealth Games
Kylie Minogue will perform at the closing ceremony of this year’s Glasgow Commonwealth Games (photo Getty Images)

More than 2,000 volunteer performers will also take part in the ceremony, organizers confirmed.

They promised to bring the curtain down on an “amazing games” with “a night out not to be missed”.

Hampden Stadium will be transformed with more than 160 tonnes of staging, 3,000 props and 454 flags.

About 40,000 people are expected to attend the ceremony.

Kylie Minogue’s performance will represent the Games’ transfer to her native Australia in 2018.

The opening ceremony – featuring Tartan-clad performers, oversized Tunnock’s tea cakes, a giant kilt and Scottie dogs – was widely praised for its energy and humor.

Sydney: Robin Gibb’s last song to be released in September

Robin Gibb’s final song is to be released in September.

Sydney, which was produced by the late Bee Gees star in May 2012, will be the final track on a new album compiled by his wife and son.

The album will be called 50 St Catherine’s Drive, the address where Robin Gibb was born on the Isle of Man.

Dwina Gibb said the poignant last composition made her weep when she first listened to it.

“He cried when he wrote it,” she added.

“This fragment of song is poignant, wistful, beautiful and unfinished.”

Dwina Gibb said her husband wrote the song late at night and used keyboards in their bedroom and some iPad software.

He had intended to produce the track fully in the studio with his brother Barry, but ill health prevented him from completing the task.

Robin Gibb’s final song is to be released in September
Robin Gibb’s final song is to be released in September (photo Getty Images)

“He missed his twin brother Maurice who had passed away, but when he closed his eyes, the three young brothers were back in Sydney, Australia, happy together with their dreams and hopes for the future. Their future creations of course affected the world,” said Dwina Gibb.

Dwina Gibb has put together the 17-track album including song-by-song notes, which is due for release on September 29.

Robin and Dwina Gibb’ son, RJ, co-wrote three of the tracks with Robin Gibb.

Several of the songs are autobiographical in nature and were mainly written between 2006 and 2008, but never released.

Robin Gibb died at the age of 62 following a series of health problems.

He cancelled a series of shows in Brazil in April 2011, after suffering from abdominal pains.

Later that year, he was found to have cancer of the colon after having surgery on his bowel for an unrelated condition.

Robin Gibb was later also diagnosed with cancer of the liver, and underwent chemotherapy and surgery.

Shortly before his death, Robin Gibb fell into a coma after contracting pneumonia.

Along with his brothers, Barry and Maurice, Robin Gibb was one third of the Bee Gees, who produced a series of worldwide hits including Tragedy, Jive Talkin’ and You Win Again.

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Meceo McEaddy: Fake Justin Bieber, Lady Gaga and Rihanna concert promoter sentenced to prison

Meceo McEaddy has been sentenced to between 5 and 10 years in prison for stealing millions of dollars from concert promoters and party planners by posing as a booking agent.

The 39-year-old New Yorker, who pretended to be in charge of Justin Bieber, Lady Gaga, Rihanna and several other celebrities, pleaded guilty to 21 counts of grand larceny and fraud, among other charges, according to Manhattan district attorney’s office.

Meceo McEaddy pretended to be in charge of Justin Bieber, Lady Gaga, Rihanna and several other celebrities
Meceo McEaddy pretended to be in charge of Justin Bieber, Lady Gaga, Rihanna and several other celebrities (photo Getty Images)

The scam involved Meceo McEaddy and 48-year-old Sylvester Vincent Carroll, of New Jersey, promising event producers a performance by a major recording artist, pocketing large deposits and not delivering a show after being paid.

Sylvester Vincent Carroll, who also pleaded guilty, was sentenced this month to three to nine years in prison.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. said the two stole around $3.7 million from party planners around the world.

The scheme started in 2010 when the duo took $825,000 from a Brazilian company that believed it had booked Rihanna for concerts in Rio de Janeiro.

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Argentina default 2014: US mediator accused of incompetency

Argentina is blaming the US for its debt default, calling the mediator in failed talks “incompetent”.

Cabinet Chief Jorge Capitanich said Argentina was considering opening proceedings at international tribunals in The Hague after it was declared to be in technical default.

The announcement came just hours after last-minute talks in New York with a group of bond-holders failed.

The bond-holders are demanding a full pay-out of $1.3 billion.

Argentina says the bond-holders are “vultures” using the South American country’s debt problems to make a big profit.

The investors are US hedge funds that bought debt cheaply after Argentina’s economic crisis in 2001-2002.

Argentina is blaming the US for its debt default
Argentina is blaming the US for its debt default

They are also known as “hold-outs” because they did not sign up to a restructuring of debt which the majority of bond-holders agreed to in 2005 and 2010.

Under that deal, investors agreed to settle for about one-third of what they were originally owed.

However, hedge funds NML and Aurelius Capital Management bought up a large chunk of the remaining distressed debt at low prices.

They demand to be paid the full face value of their holding.

Jorge Capitanich said Argentina would denounce the “vulture funds” before the International Court of Justice at The Hague and the UN General Assembly.

He said the US was to blame for its “shameful” handling of the funds’ case against Argentina.

“The responsibility lies with a state, that of the United States of America,” he said in a news conference at the presidential palace.

Jorge Capitanich accused the US of “not acting in an adequate manner”.

The Argentine government had expected the dispute to go all the way to the US Supreme Court, which would have bought the country more time.

In June, the Supreme Court declined to hear Argentina’s appeal against the decision of a lower court that made it liable for the money.

Under that court’s ruling, Argentina cannot use the US financial system to keep paying the restructured bondholders unless it also pays the “vulture funds”, placing it in technical default.

However, Jorge Capitanich denied the country was in default at all, arguing that it has the money to pay the interest that became due to the restructured bondholders on June 30 but that it was barred from doing so by the court’s ruling.

He suggested that holders of its performing debt demand their money from the US judge who blocked the June 30 interest payment.

Jorge Capitanich also suggested one way out of the impasse would be for a third party to buy out the hold-out investors.

He said that move would allow them to side-step a clause that was seen as a major stumbling block on the way to a deal.

The clause, known as RUFO (rights on future offers) states that Argentina cannot favor the hold-outs over those who accepted the restructuring deals.

Jorge Capitanich also said that in the meantime Argentina would maintain its policies to stimulate the economy.

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Malaysia Airlines crash: International forensic scientists reach plane crash site

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International forensic scientists have reached the crash site of Malaysia Airlines plane in east Ukraine after the government halted military operations.

Australian and Dutch police experts arrived in a convoy of Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) monitors.

Fighting between government and rebel forces had prevented them getting there for nearly a week.

Australia believes that around 80 bodies remain at the crash site.

Explosions were reportedly heard near the site after their arrival.

A journalist for AFP news agency heard several “powerful” blasts and saw a plume of smoke less than 6 miles from the crash site.

Russian aviation experts are also in Ukraine, hoping to visit the site.

The Malaysia Airlines plane crashed on 17 July in eastern Ukraine, with the deaths of all 298 people on board.

The rebels deny that they shot it down with a missile by mistake.

Officials in Russia, which has been accused by the US and others of supplying the rebels with advanced weaponry, suggest that Ukraine’s own armed forces downed the jet – a charge rejected by Kiev.

International forensic scientists have reached the crash site of Malaysia Airlines plane in east Ukraine after the government halted military operations
International forensic scientists have reached the crash site of Malaysia Airlines plane in east Ukraine after the government halted military operations

Russia has come under increased pressure to end its support for the rebels despite having continually denied claims that it is arming and training them.

OSCE monitors on the ground said in a tweet that they had reached the crash site with the Dutch and Australian investigators after using a new access route.

Getting out of their cars, they stopped for a minute’s silence in remembrance of those killed almost two weeks ago to the hour.

The Dutch justice ministry told AFP the Dutch-Australian team was so far only a “reconnaissance” mission but would hopefully pave the way for more experts to visit soon.

The Netherlands lost 193 of its citizens in the crash while Australia lost 27 and Malaysia 43.

Speaking on a visit to Kiev, Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said she had been told that 80 bodies could still be at the crash site.

“We are determined to access the site, so that we can collect the remains with some dignity and return them to the Netherlands where they can be identified,” she said.

“And then the grieving families across the world who lost 298 people can have some closure.”

Malaysian PM Najib Razak said on a visit to the Netherlands that a team of 68 Malaysian police officers had arrived in Kiev to help with the investigation.

Speaking at a news conference, Najib Razak and his Dutch counterpart, Mark Rutte, said they were united in mourning.

Mark Rutte outlined their three shared priorities: to repatriate the rest of the passengers’ remains from Ukraine, to establish the cause of the crash and to bring those responsible to justice.

The crash area appears to be still under the control of rebel fighters, an AP news agency journalist at the scene said.

A Russian delegation led by Oleg Storchevoy, deputy head of Russia’s federal air transport agency Rosaviatsia, arrived in Kiev earlier.

“Russian experts intend to meet the head of the investigative commission… and hand over all the materials that the chairman of the commission had previously asked for,” Rosaviatsia said in a statement.

“Today, the Russian representatives will also try to reach the crash area of the Boeing 777 and together with specialists from the international investigative commission examine the state of parts of the aircraft at the site.”

There was no comment on the Russians’ involvement from Ukrainian and Dutch officials approached by AP.

The press service for Ukraine’s “anti-terrorist operation” said troops would refrain from combat operations in the Donetsk region, except in self-defense, in order to allow investigators to do their work on Thursday.

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US imposes travel restrictions on Venezuela officials

The US government is imposing travel restrictions on a number of Venezuelan officials.

Officials did not specify how many people would be affected, but said those “who have been responsible for or complicit in human rights abuses” would not be “welcome” in the US.

The Venezuelan opposition has been lobbying for sanctions since thousands of protesters were detained during anti-government protests.

At least 43 people were killed in the protests.

The victims were from both sides of the political divide.

The US government is imposing travel restrictions on a number of Venezuelan officials
The US government is imposing travel restrictions on a number of Venezuelan officials

Relations between the US and Venezuela took a turn for the worse on Sunday when the former head of Venezuelan military intelligence, Gen Hugo Carvajal, was released from custody in the Caribbean and given a hero’s welcome in Caracas.

Gen. Hugo Carvajal had been detained on the Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba over US accusations of drug-trafficking activities.

The US Treasury said he had been protecting drug shipments by Colombian FARC rebels.

He was released after Venezuela claimed he had diplomatic immunity because he had been appointed as Venezuela’s consul in Aruba.

The US said his release was “deeply disappointing” and accused Venezuela of threatening Aruba and the Netherlands into freeing Gen Carvajal.

In a statement released on Wednesday, US state department spokeswoman Marie Harf said the travel restrictions were in response to “arbitrary detentions and excessive use of force” by Venezuelan officials as they tried to contain growing anti-government protest.

Hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans took to the streets in February and March in protest at skyrocketing inflation, high crime rates and shortages of some basic staples.

Key opposition figures behind the protests were arrested and have been charged with inciting violence.

Thousands of protesters were detained, many of them have since been released but there have been allegations they were intimidated, beaten and even tortured.

The Venezuelan government says it is investigating dozens of members of the security forces in connection with the allegations.

The demonstrations have since become smaller and less frequent but tensions in the deeply divided country remain high.

Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro has accused the opposition of trying to launch a coup against his government at the behest of “the imperialist US force”.

Ebola outbreak: Sierra Leone declares state of public emergency

Sierra Leone’s President Ernest Bai Koroma has declared a public health emergency to curb the deadly Ebola outbreak.

Sierra Leone's President Ernest Bai Koroma has declared a public health emergency to curb the deadly Ebola outbreak
Sierra Leone’s President Ernest Bai Koroma has declared a public health emergency to curb the deadly Ebola outbreak

Ernest Bai Koroma said the epicentres of the outbreak in the east would be quarantined and asked the security forces to enforce the measures.

More than 670 people in West Africa have died of Ebola since February – 224 of them in Sierra Leone, according to the most recent UN figures.

Dr. Sheik Umar Khan, who led Sierra Leone’s fight against Ebola, has died of the virus.

Dr. Sheik Umar Khan, described by government officials as a “national hero”, is to be buried on Thursday.

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Gaza Strip: Israel calls up 16,000 extra reservists

Israel has decided to call up 16,000 extra reservists to bolster its military as the conflict in Gaza continues.

The deployment brings the total called up by Israel to 86,000. Officials told Israeli media the call-up gave the military “room to breathe”.

The move comes as Israel pledged to investigate a strike on a UN-run school that killed at least 16 people.

In all, more than 100 people in Gaza were killed on Wednesday, Palestinian officials said.

The US and UN condemned the attack, with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon calling it “unjustifiable”.

On Wednesday, Israel’s security cabinet met to approve the continuation of strikes against Palestinian militant group Hamas, which controls Gaza.

Israel has decided to call up 16,000 extra reservists to bolster its military as the conflict in Gaza continues
Israel has decided to call up 16,000 extra reservists to bolster its military as the conflict in Gaza continues

Operations would continue against suspected militants, suspected rocket sites and a network of tunnels discovered leading into Israel, the military said.

At least 19 air strikes were carried out overnight, officials said.

Israel began Operation Protective Edge on July 8. Since then at least 1,360 Palestinians have been killed. Most have been civilians.

Some 58 Israelis have been killed, 56 soldiers and two civilians. A Thai worker in Israel has also died.

The attack on the school in the Jabaliya refugee camp, which was sheltering more than 3,000 civilians, took place on Wednesday morning.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said “all available evidence” suggested Israeli artillery was the cause.

The US state department also criticized the attack on the school. It also condemned those who hid weapons in UN facilities, a spokeswoman said.

Also on Wednesday, an attack on a market in Shejaiya killed 17 people, while an Israeli air strike killed seven people in Khan Younis, Palestinian officials said.

Those attacks came during a four-hour humanitarian ceasefire called by the Israelis after the school incident.

However, Israel said the truce was only partial. Hamas rejected it as meaningless.

Israel said Palestinian militants continued to fire rockets from Gaza, with more than 50 launched on Wednesday.

The current conflict, now in its 24th day, is the longest between Israel and militants from Gaza.

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India landslide death toll rises to 23 as rescue teams work to locate survivors

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Indian rescue teams are working to locate survivors of a landslide that has claimed at least 23 lives and buried up to 200 people near the city of Pune in Maharashtra state.

Ten people have been rescued from the wreckage in Malin village.

Teams worked through the night but rain was hampering efforts to search for scores of people presumed trapped under the mud and debris.

The landslide hit the village early on Wednesday while people were sleeping.

Landslides are common in some parts of India during the monsoon, which runs from June to September.

The landslide has claimed at least 23 lives and buried up to 200 people near the city of Pune in Maharashtra state
The landslide has claimed at least 23 lives and buried up to 200 people near the city of Pune in Maharashtra state

A large part of a nearby hill collapsed on Malin, and its population of 150 to 200 tribal people were covered with tonnes of loose earth, mud and rocks.

“Everything on the mountain came down,” said Suresh Jadhav, a district official, describing how a cascade of mud, rocks and uprooted trees swamped the area.

Rescue operations were disrupted on Thursday morning after “very heavy rainfall” in the area, Tripti Parule, a spokesperson for India’s National Disaster Response Force said.

Maharashtra Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan told the Press Trust of India news agency that more than 160 people were believed to be trapped in 44 houses buried under the rubble.

The Indian Express newspaper reported that a 25-year-old woman and her six-month-old baby were among the 10 people who had been rescued from the site.

“The woman and her baby were trapped in their house under the thatched roof… The mother was tightly holding the baby in her arms,” Baban Kokane, the driver of the rescue vehicle, told the newspaper.

“We found them while removing the mud with the earth mover. Their house was wrapped in a thick layer of mud.”

PM Narendra Modi described the loss of lives in the landslide as “saddening”. Home Minister Rajnath Singh is travelling to Pune on Thursday to assess the situation.

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Banco Espirito Santo reports $4.8 billion loss for first six months of 2014

Portuguese bank Banco Espirito Santo (BES) has reported a bigger-than-expected loss of 3.6 billion euros ($4.8 billion) for the first six months of 2014.

The troubled bank said “extraordinary events” had resulted in costs totaling 4.25 billion euros during the period.

The loss wipes out BES’s existing capital buffer of nearly 2.1 billion euros – cutting it to below the minimum level required by regulators.

The lender said it will begin a process to raise cash to meet capital rules.

“Over the course of the past few weeks, both shareholders and potential investors have shown interest in participating in a capitalization plan, some of them willing to take relevant stakes in the bank,” Chief Executive Vitor Bento said in a statement.

Banco Espirito Santo has reported a bigger-than-expected loss of $4.8 billion for the first six months of 2014
Banco Espirito Santo has reported a bigger-than-expected loss of $4.8 billion for the first six months of 2014

The larger-than-expected loss comes as BES – Portugal’s largest private bank – has been under increased scrutiny.

There have been concerns over the financial strength of the bank’s parent company and its ability to deal with its debt problems.

The fears were fanned after parent companies linked to the Espirito Santo family sought protection from creditors.

That has hurt the bank’s share price, which has slumped almost 40% in July.

The worries had also prompted the governor of Portugal’s central bank to issue a statement earlier this month aimed at reassuring depositors and investors about the health of BES.

The central bank had said at the time that investors had “no reason to doubt” the security of funds, and savers had “no need to be worried”.

The lender has also been trying to restructure its senior management.

Earlier this month, it accelerated the appointment of new executives, originally due to start at the end of July.

The Bank of Portugal ordered the changes to be fast-tracked after worries about the financial strength of the bank’s parent company hit global stock markets.

Speculation surrounding accounting regularities at the parent company of BES, Espirito Financial Group, led to three family members being replaced.

Espirito Santo Financial Group, which holds a 25% stake in BES, previously said economist Vitor Bento would be the new chief executive of the bank from the end of July and Joao Moreira Rato, who heads Portugal’s IGCP debt agency, would become the chief financial officer.

Meanwhile, Jose Honorio becomes deputy chief executive officer.

The three replace the Espirito Santo family members, including its patriarch Ricardo Espirito Santo Salgado, who announced his resignation as chief executive of BES last month.

Santo Salgado, who ran the bank for 23 years, was arrested last week in connection with a money laundering and tax evasion investigation.

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House approves lawsuit against President Barack Obama

The House of Representatives has passed a resolution to sue President Barack Obama for allegedly exceeding his constitutional powers.

The 225-201 vote along party lines means House lawyers will now draft legal documents to launch a lawsuit.

Its supporters say Barack Obama exceeded his powers when he delayed an insurance deadline in his healthcare law.

Barack Obama himself has dismissed it as a waste of time.

“Everyone sees this as a political stunt,” he said.

“If they’re not going to do anything, we’ll do what we can on our own,” the president added.

The House of Representatives has passed a resolution to sue President Barack Obama for allegedly exceeding his constitutional powers
The House of Representatives has passed a resolution to sue President Barack Obama for allegedly exceeding his constitutional powers

“And we’ve taken more than 40 actions aimed at helping hardworking families like yours. That’s when we act – when your Congress won’t.”

The action is reportedly the first time either the House or Senate has brought legal action against a president over the legality of his powers, although members of Congress have sued the president before.

Republicans in Congress have complained that Barack Obama has exceeded his constitutional authority on numerous occasions, in order to bypass Congress by issuing executive orders.

They object, for instance, to his order unilaterally easing deportations of some young illegal immigrants, and the prison exchange that won the release of Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl held captive for five years by the Taliban.

“This isn’t about Republicans or Democrats. It’s about defending the Constitution we swore an oath to,” Speaker John Boehner said during an impassioned debate in the House on Wednesday evening.

“Are you willing to let any president choose what laws to execute and what laws to change?”

At issue was Barack Obama’s decision to twice delay requirements in his 2010 healthcare overhaul that businesses over a certain size provide their workers with health insurance.

Barack Obama has been forthright about his intentions to circumvent the gridlocked Congress when possible, noting frequently that the Republican-controlled House of Representatives has declined even to hold votes on Senate-passed bills on topics from immigration reform to gay rights.

As far back as January, White House aides began referring to the president’s “pen and phone” strategy – using his telephone to convene meetings at the White House and his pen to sign executive orders and changes to federal regulations.

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Argentina defaults on its debt for second time in 13 years

Ratings agency S & P declared Argentina in default after the government missed a deadline for paying interest on $13 billion of restructured bonds.

Argentina has defaulted on its debt for the second time in 13 years after last-minute talks in New York with a group of bond-holders ended in failure.

So-called “vulture fund” investors were demanding a full pay-out of $1.3 billion on bonds they hold.

Argentina has said it cannot afford to do so, and has accused them of using its debt problems to make a big profit.

A US judge had set a deadline of 04:00 GMT on Thursday for a deal. The crisis stems from Argentina’s 2001 default.

Late on Wednesday evening, Argentina’s Economy Minister Axel Kicillof said the investors had rejected the government’s latest offer.

Argentina has defaulted on its debt for the second time in 13 years after last-minute talks in New York with a group of bond-holders ended in failure
Argentina has defaulted on its debt for the second time in 13 years after last-minute talks in New York with a group of bond-holders ended in failure

“Unfortunately, no agreement was reached and the Republic of Argentina will imminently be in default,” Daniel Pollack, the court-appointed mediator in the case, said in a statement on Wednesday evening.

The fresh default is not expected to affect Argentina’s economy in the same way it did in 2001, when dozens were killed in street protests and the authorities froze savers’ accounts to halt a run on the banks.

“The full consequences of default are not predictable, but they certainly are not positive,” Daniel Pollack said.

Speaking at a news conference in New York, Axel Kicillof said Argentina would not do anything illegal.

The investors, also known as “hold-outs”, are US hedge funds that bought debt cheaply after Argentina’s economic crisis.

They never agreed to the restructuring accepted by the majority of bond-holders.

President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has described as vultures the minority bond-holders – including Aurelius Capital Management and NML Capital.

She accuses them of taking advantage of Argentina’s debt problems to make large profits.

S&P noted that it could revise the rating if Argentina were to find some way to make the payments.

The hedge funds are demanding Argentina make interest payments on debt which it defaulted on in 2001, even though it was bought at less than face value.

The US courts have blocked payments to other bondholders who agreed a separate deal with Argentina, until agreement with the “hold-outs” is reached.

Axel Kicillof said he planned to return to Argentina after the news conference, saying the country would do what is needed to deal with what he called an unfair situation.

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Tor Project attack may have unmasked users for five months

An attack on Tor network may have unmasked users for five months, developers of software used to access the network say.

The Tor Project said that it believed the assault was designed to de-anonymize the net addresses of people operating or visiting hidden sites.

However, it said it was not sure exactly how users had been “affected”.

The project added that it believed it had halted the attack on July 4.

Tor allows people to visit webpages without being tracked and to publish sites whose contents does not show up in search engines.

The Tor Project said it believed that the infiltration had been carried out by two university researchers, who claimed at the start of July to have exploited “fundamental flaws” in Tor’s design that allowed them to unmask the so-called dark net’s users.

The two security experts, Alexander Volynkin and Michael McCord, had been due to give a talk at the Black Hat conference in Las Vegas next week. However, the presentation was cancelled at the insistence of lawyers working for their employer, Carnegie Mellon University.

“We spent several months trying to extract information from the researchers who were going to give the Black Hat talk, and eventually we did get some hints from them… which is how we started looking for the attacks in the wild,” wrote Roger Dingledine, one of the network’s co-creators, on the Tor Project’s blog.

Tor's users include the military, law enforcement officers and journalists, who use it as a way of communicating with whistle-blowers
Tor’s users include the military, law enforcement officers and journalists, who use it as a way of communicating with whistle-blowers

“They haven’t answered our emails lately, so we don’t know for sure, but it seems likely that the answer to [whether they were responsible] is yes.

“In fact, we hope they were the ones doing the attacks, since otherwise it means somebody else was.”

A spokesman from Carnegie Mellon University declined to comment.

Tor attempts to hide a person’s location and identity by sending data across the internet via a very circuitous route involving several “nodes” – which, in this context, means using volunteers’ PCs and computer servers as connection points.

Encryption applied at each hop along this route makes it very hard to connect a person to any particular activity.

To the website that ultimately receives the request, it appears as if the data traffic comes from the last computer in the chain – known as an “exit relay” – rather than the person responsible.

Tor’s users include the military, law enforcement officers and journalists – who use it as a way of communicating with whistle-blowers – as well as members of the public who wish to keep their browser activity secret.

But it has also been associated with illegal activity, allowing people to visit sites offering illegal drugs for sale and access to child abuse images, which do not show up in normal search engine results and would not be available to those who did not know where to look.

The Tor Project suggests the perpetrator compromised the network via a “traffic confirmation attack”.

This involves the attacker controlling both the first part of the circuit of nodes involved – known as the “entry relay” – as well as the exit relay.

By matching the volumes and timings of the data sent at one end of the circuit to those received at the other end, it becomes possible to reveal the Tor user’s identity because the computer used as an entry relay will have logged their internet protocol (IP) address.

The project believes the attacker used this to reveal hidden-site visitors by adding a signal to the data sent back from such sites that included the encoded name of the hidden service.

Because the sequence of nodes in a Tor network is random, the infiltrator would not be able to track every visit to a dark net site.

Tor also has a way of protecting itself against such a danger: rather than use a single entry relay, the software involved uses a few relays chosen at random – what are known as “entry guards”.

Even if someone has control of a single entry and exit relay, they should only see a fraction of the user’s traffic, making it hard to identify them.

However, the Tor Project believes the perpetrator countered this safeguard by using a second technique known as a “Sybil attack”.

This involved adding about 115 subverted computer servers to Tor and ensuring they became used as entry guards. As a result, the servers accounted for more than 6% of the network’s guard capacity.

This was still not enough to monitor every communication, but was potentially enough to link some users to specific hidden sites.

Several government agencies are interested in having a way to unmask Tor’s users.

House votes to sue Barack Obama

The House of Representatives is voting to pass a resolution authorizing it to sue President Barack Obama for what Republican leaders describe as his overreach of authority.

The resolution is expected to pass the Republican-controlled chamber in a party line vote onJuly 30.

Its sponsors say Barack Obama exceeded his powers when he delayed an insurance deadline in his healthcare law.

The president himself has dismissed the lawsuit as a waste of time.

“Everyone sees this as a political stunt,” Barack Obama said while in Kansas on Wednesday.

“But it’s worse than that because every vote they’re taking… means a vote they’re not taking to help people.”

The House of Representatives is voting to pass a resolution authorizing it to sue President Barack Obama
The House of Representatives is voting to pass a resolution authorizing it to sue President Barack Obama (photo Reuters)

Republicans in Congress have complained that Barack Obama has exceeded his constitutional authority on numerous occasions, in order to bypass Congress by issuing executive orders.

They object, for instance, to his order unilaterally easing deportations of some young illegal immigrants, and the prison exchange that won the release of Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl held captive for five years by the Taliban.

Specifically at issue in the resolution, which was sponsored by Congressman Pete Sessions of Texas with the full backing of House Speaker John Boehner, was Barack Obama’s decision to twice delay requirements in his 2010 healthcare overhaul that businesses over a certain size provide their workers with health insurance.

Barack Obama has been forthright about his intentions to circumvent the gridlocked Congress when possible, noting frequently that the Republican-controlled House of Representatives has declined even to hold votes on Senate-passed bills on topics from immigration reform to gay rights.

As far back as January, White House aides began referring to the president’s “pen and phone” strategy – using his telephone to convene meetings at the White House and his pen to sign executive orders and changes to federal regulations.

Every US president since George Washington has issued executive orders, and Barack Obama has not stood out in the modern era for the number he has signed.

In his six years in office Barack Obama has issued 183 executive orders, compared to 291 across George W. Bush’s eight years and 381 for Ronald Reagan, according to a study by the American Presidency Project at the University of California-Santa Barbara.

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Ebola outbreak: Liberia shuts all schools

Liberia is closing down all schools across the country to stop the spread of the deadly Ebola virus.

Some communities would be placed under quarantine as well, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf said.

Non-essential government workers will be sent home for 20 days and the army deployed to enforce the measures.

The number of people killed by the virus in West Africa has now reached 672, according to new UN figures.

Liberia is closing down all schools across the country to stop the spread of the deadly Ebola virus
Liberia is closing down all schools across the country to stop the spread of the deadly Ebola virus (photo AFP)

Treatment facilities have reportedly been overwhelmed in the Liberian capital Monrovia.

Some wards have already filled up, forcing health workers to treat some patients at their homes.

President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf said that Friday, August 1, would be a non-working day in Liberia to allow for the disinfection of all public facilities.

“All non-essential staff – to be determined by the heads of ministries and agencies – are to be placed on 30 days’ compulsory leave” she added.

The US humanitarian organization Peace Corps said it was withdrawing 340 volunteers from Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea because of the spread of the virus.

Ebola kills up to 90% of those infected, but patients have a better chance of survival if they receive early treatment.

The virus spreads through contact with an infected person’s bodily fluids.

The Ebola outbreak – the world’s deadliest to date – was first reported in Guinea in February. It then spread to Liberia and Sierra Leone.

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G7: Russia faces further economic sanctions over Ukraine crisis

Russia will face further economic sanctions if it continues to support rebels in Ukraine, G7 leaders say.

In a statement on Wednesday, the G7 group of economic powers said Russia had undermined “Ukraine’s sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence.”

The warning came after the EU added eight more Russians to its sanctions.

Earlier, Russia described new US and EU sanctions as “destructive and short-sighted”, and said they would lead to higher energy prices in Europe.

G7 leaders say Russia will face further economic sanctions if it continues to support rebels in Ukraine
G7 leaders say Russia will face further economic sanctions if it continues to support rebels in Ukraine

The G7 group includes the US, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Britain.

Its leaders said Russia could still “choose the path of de-escalation,” but warned President Vladimir Putin that he would face greater economic costs if he continued to back Ukrainian separatists.

They also called on all sides to establish a ceasefire at the crash site of the Malaysian Airlines jet that was shot down on July 17 in eastern Ukraine.

Russia has come under increased pressure to end its support for the rebels, who Western governments believe were behind the downing of MH17, killing all 298 people on board.

Vladimir Putin has also been accused by the US and EU of supplying heavy weapons to the rebels – a charge his government has denied.

On Tuesday, the US announced new economic sanctions against Russia, widening their scope to include three key sectors of the economy – energy, arms and finance.

The EU is also expanding its sanctions, targeting the oil sector, defense equipment and sensitive technologies.

Details of new EU sanctions are due to be published on Thursday.

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