Islamic State militants claim to have captured the Jahar gas fields in the
Syrian province of
Homs, the second gas field they have captured in a week.
(Reuters)
New Zealand authorities charge Australian
AC/DC drummer
Phil Rudd with attempting to procure two murders, making death threats, and possessing drugs.
(Reuters)
Parents of
Mexico's missing students say authorities found 6 bags containing unidentified corpses; investigations are underway to determine if they are of the missing students. Three people confess their involvement in the massacre.
(Fox News)
Prosecutors in
Lithuania charge an employee at the state air navigation company for spying for
Belarus over civilian and military air operations.
(Reuters)
The
Bank of England fires Martin Mallett, once its chief foreign exchange dealer, due to evidence that he was in some degree complicit in market manipulation.
(Telegraph)
Eleven women have died and at least twenty are in a critical condition after undergoing
sterilization surgery in
Bilaspur,
Chhattisgarh, as part of
India's state-run mass sterilization campaign.
(BBC)
In
South Korea, fifteen members of the crew of the
MV Sewol are sentenced for criminal negligence in the ferry disaster with the captain sentenced to 36 years and the chief engineer sentenced to 30 years.
(Fox News)
Following a court injunction authorising the clearance of protest sites, pro-democracy protesters in
Hong Kong are warned they could face arrest if they do not leave the sites.
(Reuters)
Russian Defence Minister
Sergey Shoigu says that the country will resume long-distance military flights for the first time since the
Cold War to the western Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea.
(BBC)
Gunmen attack an
Egyptian Navy ship on the
Mediterranean Sea with eight sailors missing and four injured after the attack. Thirty-two of the gunmen have been captured with four reported as dead.
(Voice of America)
A doctor is arrested, believed responsible for the deaths of 13 women in a state-run sterilization clinic in
Chhattisgarh,
India.
(BBC)
A spokeswoman for the public prosecutor in
Switzerland confirms existence of open criminal investigations regarding several people who may have taken part in manipulation of the currency exchange markets; such investigations are also underway in the United States and Britain.
(Reuters)
The
Philae landing craft is now "stable" after bouncing hundreds of metres from its initial touchdown, and is sending pictures from the surface of the comet
67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko.
(BBC)
Sweden releases a sonar image it says is proof that a foreign submarine entered its waters in October. The grainy image shows underwater tracks allegedly left by the vessel.
(BBC)
Authorities in the Netherlands ban the sale of
poultry and
eggs following the discovery of the bird flu virus at a chicken farm. Authorities in the United Kingdom have also confirmed that the virus has been discovered at a
Yorkshire duck farm with the birds being culled.
(AP)
Four rabbis (three American and one British) are killed, and eight other people wounded in a
terrorist attack on a
Jerusalemsynagogue by two men armed with meat cleavers and guns. The two attackers were killed by police who arrived at the scene. One of the policemen died from his wounds.
(BBC)
Maria Jose Alvarado, a 19-year-old
Miss World competitor, is found fatally shot and buried along with her 23-year-old sister Sofia Trinidad in
Santa Barbara,
Honduras. The boyfriend of Sofia Trinidad, Plutarco Ruiz and an accomplice are arrested.
(Sky News)
Thousands of protestors gather in
Mexico City for a national rally in memory of the
43 missing students. Demonstrators have also called for a nationwide strike.
(BBC News)
Philippine authorities sentence the security officers of the
Ozone disco who were responsible for the safety of the disco when a fire occurred in 1996.
(BBC News)
A heavy storm in the
eastern United States causes poor road conditions, and delays and cancellations of airline flights ahead of the
Thanksgiving holidays with up to 30 million people affected.
(CNN)
Law and crime
Vietnamese lawmakers approve a law allowing broad foreign ownership of property, as the government seeks to boost an ailing real-estate market and accelerate growth.
(Financial Review)[permanent dead link]
At least 133 people were killed and 100 wounded, in the aftermath of clashes between Awlad Omran and Al-Ziyoud groups of the
Mesiria tribe. The clashes occurred in the Kwak area of the
West Kurdufan state,
Sudan.
(Euronews)
Greek labor unions begin a
general strike to protest ongoing government austerity measures shuting down public medical, educational, and transportational services.
(AP via Business Standard)
The
Hong Kong Police Force arrests eleven more people in a second night of violence after removal of a camp in
Mong Kok and seven police officers are arrested for alleged assault of a protester on October 15.
(AP)
Frantic trading in energy company stocks, especially the suppliers of oil-services, shaves billions off the
market capitalization of publically traded businesses within this sector.
(Reuters)
The death toll from a mass overdose in a
Venezuelan prison after prisoners storm a prison infirmary during a prison uprising rises to 35. A hundred other prisoners are receiving treatment.
(AP via Houston Chronicle)
Tuğçe Albayrak, an advocate for harassed women, succumbs to her injury from a November 15 attack. German police have already arrested a suspected man.
(The Independent)
Politics and elections
The
Parliament of Finland votes to allow
same-sex marriage, marking the first time that a citizens' initiative has received lawmakers' blessing to be written into the legislation.
(YLE)
Three army officers and two protesters are killed and more than one hundred protesters are arrested during anti-government protests across
Egypt.
(ABC News)
An independent arbitrator between the NFL and the NFL Players Association overturns the indefinite suspension levied upon free-agent
running backRay Rice by the
NFL for assaulting his fiancee.
(Bloomberg)
Voters in
Uruguay go to the polls for the second round of voting in the presidential election with former
PresidentTabaré Vázquez of the ruling
Broad Front winning another term in government.
(BBC),
(CNN)