World News Thread & Breaking News!!

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Miragedriver

Brigadier
I believe this Ebola outbreak is potentially very serious.

I posted the news about the American who died for one reason.

He was coming back to America and had changed planes from one African location to another when he collapsed.

Ebola is highly contagious. It is 90% fatal with no cure. Everyone on that plane he was near is a potential carrier now. They went on their way to who knows where...and everyone they were near became a potential carrier.

I pray that they contain this, but I fear the cat may already be out of the bag.

I heard yesterday that one of the lead Doctors there in Africa trying to contain and treat it, himself died yesterday of the disease.

Keep an eye on this.


Very serious outbreak, especially with the more virulent Zaire Virus.

The deadliest Ebola outbreak in history

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Daily Telegraph -- Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone are in the grip of the worst outbreak of Ebola virus in history. According to the latest figures from the Centre for Disease Prevention, 672 people have died so far from 1201 cases. That number is likely to have already risen.

To put that in context, the biggest previous outbreak of the disease saw 224 deaths from 425 cases, and there have only been 2,300 deaths from all previous outbreaks of the virus. This outbreak, which has been growing since January, concerns the deadliest form of the Ebola virus, Zaire ebolavirus.

Named after the country which saw the first outbreak of the disease in 1976, the Zaire strain kills on average 78 per cent of those who contract it. It is mainly found in tropical Central and West Africa and can have up to a 90 per cent mortality rate.

“This is the largest outbreak of this disease to date, and it's clear it is not under control, ” said Dr Brian McCloskey, director of global health at Public Health England.
The health body has issued an urgent warning to doctors in England to watch for signs of the lethal disease. Phillip Hammond, the foreign secretary, will chair an emergency Cobra meeting on Wednesday to discuss the outbreak.
The Ebola virus first appeared in 1976 in two simultaneous outbreaks - in Nzara, Sudan; and in Yambuku, in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The outbreak in DRC was in a village near the Ebola River, from which the disease takes its name.

It is introduced into the human population through close contact with the sweat, blood, secretions, organs or other bodily fluids of infected animals such as chimpanzees, gorillas, fruit bats, monkeys, forest antelope and porcupines.
Early symptoms are similar to those of flu but are followed by severe vomiting and diarrhoea, and eventually internal and external bleeding.

I will now get back to bottling my Malbec (in a sealed room)
 

ABC78

Junior Member
Asia’s biggest comic fair kicks off in HK. (To bad most will not notice since it opened at the same time as San Diego Comic Con.)

[video=youtube;pDjGrjJeSec]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pDjGrjJeSec[/video]
 

Miragedriver

Brigadier
Imam of China's largest mosque killed

The imam of China's largest mosque is stabbed to death after prayers on Wednesday in the far western city of Kashgar

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I will now get back to bottling my Malbec
 

Miragedriver

Brigadier
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Argentina's economy minister leads a last-gasp effort Wednesday to strike a deal with U.S. creditors that would prevent Argentina from entering default.



Argentina slides into default as debt talks fail

Argentina enters default for second time in 13 years after talks with US creditors break down


NEW YORK (AP) -- The collapse of talks with U.S. creditors sent Argentina into its second debt default in 13 years and raised questions about what comes next for financial markets and the South American nation's staggering economy.
A midnight Wednesday deadline to reach a deal with holdout bondholders came and went with Argentine Economy Minister Axel Kicillof holding firm to his government's position that it could not accept a deal with U.S. hedge fund creditors it dismisses as "vultures." Kicillof said the funds refused a compromise offer in talks that ended several hours earlier, although he gave no details of that proposal.

"We're not going to sign an agreement that jeopardizes the future of all Argentines," Kicillof said after he emerged from the meeting with creditors and a mediator in New York City. "Argentines can remain calm because tomorrow will just be another day and the world will keep on spinning."

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But court-appointed mediator Daniel Pollack said a default could hurt bondholders who were not part of the dispute as well as the Argentine economy, which is suffering through a recession, a shortage of dollars and one of the world's highest inflation rates.

"The full consequences of default are not predictable, but they are certainly not positive," Pollack said.
An earlier U.S. court ruling had blocked Argentina from making $539 million in interest payments due by midnight Wednesday to other bondholders who separately agreed to restructuring plans with the country in 2005 and 2010.

The holdouts, led by NML Capital Ltd., blamed Argentina for the failure to reach an agreement. In a statement, the hedge fund run by New York billionaire Paul Singer said the mediator had proposed "numerous creative solutions," to resolve the standoff.
"Argentina refused to seriously consider any of them, and instead chose to default," it said.

The hedge funds refused to participate in the debt restructurings and won a U.S. court judgment that they be paid the full value of their bonds plus interest — now estimated at roughly $1.5 billion.

Kicillof dismissed a decision by ratings agency Standard & Poor's to downgrade Argentina's foreign currency credit rating to "selective default" because of the missed interest payments.

"Who believes in the ratings agencies? Who thinks they are impartial referees of the financial system?" he said.
Argentine President Cristina Fernandez long had refused to negotiate with the hedge fund creditors, often calling them "vultures" (Buitres) for picking on the carcass of the country's record $100 billion default in 2001.
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The holdouts spent more than a decade litigating for payment in full rather than agreeing to provide Argentina with debt relief. They also sent lawyers around the globe trying to force Argentina to pay its defaulted debts and were able to get a court in Ghana to temporarily seize an Argentine naval training ship. The threat of seizures forced Fernandez to stop using her presidential plane and instead fly on private jets.

Restoring Argentina's sense of pride and sovereignty after the 2001-2002 economic collapse has been a central goal of Fernandez and her predecessor and late husband, Nestor Kirchner.

Argentina has made efforts to return to global credit markets that have shunned it since the default. The government paid its debt to the International Monetary Fund and agreed in May with the Paris Club of creditor nations on a plan to begin repaying $9.7 billion in debts unpaid since 2001. It also agreed to a $5 billion settlement with Grupo Repsol after seizing the Spanish company's controlling stake in Argentina's YPF oil company.

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Analysts say a new default undermines all of these efforts.

"This is unexpected; an agreement seemed imminent," said Ramiro Castineira of Buenos Aires-based consultancy Econometrica.

"Argentina would have benefited more from complying with the court order in order to get financing for Vaca Muerta," he added, referring to an Argentine region that has one of the world's largest deposits of shale oil and gas.
Only a few international companies have made commitments to help develop the fields as many fear the government's interventionist energy policies. The government also has struggled to get investors because it can't borrow on the global credit market.

Prices for Argentine bonds had surged to their highest level in more than three years on the possibility that Argentina would reach a deal with the holdout creditors. Argentina's Merval stock index also climbed more than 6.5 percent in midday trade on a likely deal.

Optimism had been buoyed by reports Wednesday that representatives of Argentina's private banks association, ADEBA, were set to offer to buy out the debt owed to the hedge funds. In return, the reports said, the U.S. court would let Argentina make the interest payments due before midnight Wednesday and avoid default.
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The deal failed to materialize.
"It is an unfortunate situation which is pushing the country into another default. As defaults go, we all know when we get into one but it is very unclear when and how to get out of it," said Alberto Ramos, Latin America analyst at Goldman Sachs.
"We just added another layer of risk and uncertainty to a macro economy that was already struggling," Ramos said.


I am so ashamed.........................:( and so angry :mad:


I will now get back to bottling my Malbec
 
Imam of China's largest mosque killed

The imam of China's largest mosque is stabbed to death after prayers on Wednesday in the far western city of Kashgar

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I will now get back to bottling my Malbec

Not good. I reposted this over at the 2014 Xinjiang terror attack thread as it may be related right on the heels of that incident.
 

no_name

Colonel
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Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung hit by massive gas explosion

At least 15 people have been killed and more than 230 injured by explosions in a southern Taiwanese city thought to have been caused by a gas leak in the sewerage system.

Witnesses said that gas leaks began at about 9pm local time in Kaohsiung. The leaking gas formed a white fog, which then ignited and sparked massive explosions on several streets, China's Central News Agency reported.

One witness said: "I saw fire spurting, ripping off some covers of ditches. It was terrifying."


The force of the multiple blasts left craters in streets, overturned cars and resulted in numerous fires in the port city of 2.7 million residents.

An emergency services spokesman said the number killed and injured was expected to rise. Survivors were taken to schools across the city for shelter.

In April, four people died and 18 were injured in the capital, Taipei, after a string of explosives were detonated at a factory, causing a huge fireball. The factory was illegal and made fake paper money used in religious festivals.

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Someone caught a vid as it was starting to happen:
[video=youtube;5Oqk3KEtMHw]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Oqk3KEtMHw[/video]
 
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Blackstone

Brigadier
How about some cheers to brighten all the gloomy news? A Ugandan girl goes from searching for food in slums to chess champion. What a great story!

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Phiona had to walk miles in search of food. She found a game that lifted her far beyond the quest for food, and instead made her feel like a queen and reach beyond the hopelessness of her world.

queen-of-katwe-phiona-5.jpg
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
rWSNbBT.jpg

Argentina's economy minister leads a last-gasp effort Wednesday to strike a deal with U.S. creditors that would prevent Argentina from entering default.






I am so ashamed.........................:( and so angry :mad:


I will now get back to bottling my Malbec

So what happen now? Does this mean Argentina can't get anymore loans or what?:confused:
 

Blackstone

Brigadier
So what happen now? Does this mean Argentina can't get anymore loans or what?:confused:

In the short-term, Argentina can't get international loans, but given this is the third sovereign default in 15 years, my guess the useful idiots of the global financial world will loan them money in a few years.
 
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