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Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has said Saudi Arabia cannot hide its “crime” of executing Shi’ite cleric Nimr al-Nimr by cutting ties with Tehran. The Iranian authorities have also disowned the attack on the Saudi embassy in Iran.
North Korea appears to have carried out a test of a submarine-launched ballistic missile last month, South Korean media reports have said, but the South Korean military has told Reuters it cannot confirm the test.
Twitter is building new feature that will allow users to
post tweets as long as 10,000 characters, technology news
website Re/code reports.
Venezuela’s opposition took control of Congress for first time in 16 years, in a rowdy session, setting up a power struggle with President Nicolas Maduro amid the worsening economic crisis.
British Prime Minister David Cameron has bowed to pressure to allow government ministers to campaign to leave the European Union in the upcoming referendum, heading off prospects of multiple resignations from his top team.
FIFA’s ethics watchdog has recommended a nine-year ban for secretary-general Jerome Valcke over alleged corruption involving the sale of World Cup tickets, among dozens of scandals rocking soccer’s crisis-plagued governing body.
US Democratic presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders has warned that financial-sector greed could be “destroying the fabric of our nation” and said the starting point of any Wall Street reform effort is breaking up “too big to fail” banks.
Asian stocks are subdued as floundering crude oil prices continue to dampen risk sentiment, while the dollar and yen draw support from anxiety over global growth and geopolitical risk stemming from Iran-Saudi tensions.
The leader of self-styled militiamen, who seized a remote US wildlife refuge in Oregon, has said they want to help residents regain their rights from the federal government, after which they would go home.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)