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- Armed conflicts and attacks
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- International relations
- The Iranian ambassador in Baghdad says the recent release of two Iranians from Iraqi custody is not an indication of any impeding deal to free three Americans held in Tehran on spying charges since their capture in July 2009 while hiking in northern Iraq's mountainous Kurdish region. (USA Today)
- The United States insists any Afghan peace deal must ensure women's rights as Afghanistan prepares to open a peace conference aimed at persuading Taliban leaders to put down their weapons. (USA Today)
- Aftermath of the Gaza flotilla raid
- Survivors of the Israeli assault on the Gaza-bound international aid flotilla return to Greece and Turkey, providing the first eyewitness accounts of the attack. (The Guardian) (BBC)
- Israel announces it has imprisoned an official figure of 487 of the people it captured in its commando raid on the Gaza-bound international aid flotilla, while 48 others will be officially expelled after being brought into Israel by Israeli authorities yesterday. (The Sydney Morning Herald) (AFP)
- Israel's ambassador to Denmark, Arthur Avnon, announces that the Israeli military had received rumours of a report which asserted a link between the flotilla and Al-Qaida. (FOX News) (News24)
- Hundreds of Israelis gather outside the Turkish embassy in Tel Aviv in protest against Turkey's involvement in the Gaza flotilla. (Ynetnews)
- Turks protest for a second day, marching in front of Istanbul's Israeli consulate, and several are arrested in Ankara after encountering police in front of the Israeli Embassy there. (ABC News)
- Coalition parties in the Northern Ireland Assembly clash over the Israeli commando attack on the aid convoy. (The Belfast Telegraph)
- Reports are released regarding the nationalities of those captured after the flotilla raid. (Asia One News) (The Age)
- Reports are also released expressing concern for captured international journalists, including those from Aljazeera and Astro Awani, while media organisations are asked to act for the release of all journalists in Israeli custody and to request their freedom to practice their profession without pressure and harassment. (ArabNews) (NDTV)
- Egypt announces that it will temporarily open its border with Gaza for aid. (AP via Fox News)
- Turkey calls for sanctions against Israel. The United States, a permanent member of the UN Security Council, acts to mitigate the language of the Security Council's draft statement which condemned Israel's action "in the strongest terms", opting instead for one that requests an "impartial" investigation of the deaths and condemns the "acts" that led to it. (The Times)
- Twenty Israeli trucks deliver cargo from the captured ships to the Gaza Strip via Kerem Shalom crossing. (YnetNews) (YouTube)
- Law and crime
- Politics and elections
- Science and technology
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Armed conflicts and attacks
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Disasters
International relations
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Politics and elections
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Sports
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General News
Armed conflicts and attacks
Art, culture and entertainment
Business and economy
Disasters
International relations
Law and crime
Politics and elections
Science
- The MARS-500 project begins, with six men - three Russians, two Europeans and a Chinese man - entering the sealed facility in Moscow where they will spend 18 months in isolation from the outside world. (BBC) (RIA Novosti)
- The earliest surviving complete census of Ireland is made available online for the first time and reveals details on the early life of James Joyce as well as other famous writers and politicians. (The Irish Times) (RTÉ)
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Armed conflicts and attacks
Business and economy
Disasters
Law and crime
Politics and elections
Science
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Disasters
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Armed conflicts and attacks
Disasters
Ecology
International relations
Law and crime
Religion
Science
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Armed conflicts and attacks
Art, culture and entertainment
Business and economy
Disasters
International relations
Law and crime
- 13 executed in Iran's Qezel Hessar Prison. (fcnn)
- The main suspect in the murder of Stephany Flores Ramírez, Joran van der Sloot, confesses to her murder in Peru. (CNN)
- The Magistrate court in Bhopal, India convicts eight people, one posthumously, for their role in the Bhopal disaster industrial castastrophe 25 years ago in 1984. (Times of India) (AFP) (BBC) (Aljazeera)
- A Chubb Security security guard is shot dead in a gunfight after being ambushed by gunmen whilst delivering cash to a Bank in the Sydney CBD, Australia. (Daily Telegraph) (Sydney Morning Herald)
- 22-year-old U.S. Army intelligence analyst, SPC Bradley Manning, is named as the alleged source of the leak of the Collateral murder video, along with the Granai massacre video and other documents, said to be in the possession of Wikileaks. (Wired) (BBC)
Politics and elections
Science
- The genetically modified variety of maize known as NK603, outlawed across the European Union, is sown and contaminates fields in seven German states. (Deutsche Welle) (BBC)
- A nearly 25-year study published today in Paediatrics concludes that children raised in lesbian households are "psychologically well-adjusted" and have "fewer behavioral problems than their peers". (CNN)
Sports
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Armed conflicts and attacks
- At least 11 people die and injuries are caused in various fatal incidents across Iraq, including several civilians, a Sunni Imam and a Christian. (BBC)
Art, culture and entertainment
Disasters
International relations
- The EU proposes that Romani issues should be integrated into housing, education and culture polices at EU and national level. (europa.eu)
- 21 nations, including the Presidents of Afghanistan, Russia and Syria, attending the Conference on Interaction and Confidence-Building Measures in Asia summit in Istanbul condemn Israel's deadly raid on the Gaza-bound aid flotilla, while Israel, the 22nd participant with a lower-level diplomat, disagrees. (Aljazeera) (Voice of America) (Xinhua)
- The United States threatens Iran with its toughest nuclear sanctions yet, despite the nuclear fuel-swap arrangement Iran made with Brazil and Turkey in May. (BBC)
- Libya orders the United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, to leave the country for unknown reasons. (Al Jazeera) (Reuters Africa) (BBC)
- The Red Crescent Society, for the first time since December 2008 and in a joint venture between Iran and Turkey, prepares to send two aid boats of donations and relief workers to Gaza. (The Times)
- China lodges a formal protest to North Korea after a North Korean soldier fatally shot three Chinese citizens at their mutual border. (AP) (Global Times) (Chosun Ilbo) (Radio Television Hong Kong)
- Uganda undoes remarks suggesting President of Sudan Omar al-Bashir would not be welcome at July's African Union conference in Kampala. (Aljazeera) (BBC)
Law and crime
Politics and elections
Religion
Science
- Scientists find evidence that large seas once existed on Mars. (BBC)
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Armed conflicts and attacks
Art, culture and entertainment
International relations
Law and crime
- The U.S. state of Georgia executes its 24th death row inmate Melbert Ford by lethal injection. (11Alive Atlanta Georgia)
- Three men are arrested, two protesters are kicked and pushed downstairs and eggs are thrown during demonstrations as Iran's Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki hides under an umbrella while leaving the Institute of International and European Affairs in Dublin. (RTÉ) (The Washington Post) (FCNN)
- Kikaya Bin Karubi, the Congolese ambassador to the UK, says Les Resistants Combattants have said Saturday's arson attack on his London home, which destroyed several vehicles and damaged his house, was an act of retaliation for last week's death of leading human rights activist Floribert Chebeya. (BBC)
- The UK government brings forward new rules which make it compulsory for immigrants from outside the European Union, particularly South Asia, to understand the English language. (BBC)
- The wife of Ratko Mladić is arrested in Belgrade. (Aljazeera)
- An Oxfam aid worker is kidnapped in Abéché, Chad. (BBC)
- The same-sex couple, who recently came to international attention when they were convicted of homosexuality under a British colonial law, tell Malawi's The Nation that they have separated and that one of them now lives with a woman. (BBC)
Politics and elections
Science
Sports
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Armed conflicts and attacks
Art, culture and entertainment
Disasters
International relations
- A group of German Jews prepare to send a ship with humanitarian aid to the blockaded Gaza Strip. (AFP)
- Russia announces plans to sell Iran S-300 ground-to-air missiles, stating that the new United Nations sanctions do not cover stationary air defense weaponry. (Ynetnews)
Law and crime
Politics and elections
Science
Sports
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- RPET5's 20th Birthday!
- Shanghai International Film Festival:
- 2010 Kyrgyzstan crisis:
- Mexico – United States relations:
- Politics of Japan:
- François Bazaramba is sentenced to life imprisonment for his part in the 1994 Rwandan Genocide in Porvoo, Finland's first genocide trial. (Aljazeera) (BBC) (news24.com) (Reuters)
- Israeli police fatally shoot a Palestinian driver who was attempting to run them down; the two policeman and three civilians are injured in the incident. (Jerusalem Post) (The New York Times)
- 40 people are killed and at least four others are wounded in an attack by at least 30 gunmen in Chihuahua, Mexico. (Xinhua) (The AP) (BBC) (Aljazeera) (Toronto Sun)
- At least 20 people die during flash floods of the Little Missouri River through a campground in the Ouachita Mountains near Caddo Gap, Arkansas, west of Little Rock, Arkansas in the United States. (China Daily) (Reuters)
- At least 11 civilians and two US soldiers are killed in southern Afghanistan: 9 of the civilian deaths are in a roadside bomb on a minibus in Kandahar. (Aljazeera)
- Pope Benedict XVI begs for forgiveness from God and from those who have been abused as children by priests. (The Daily Telegraph) (The New York Times) (RTÉ) (Aljazeera)
- A small plane crashes into Round Valley High School in Eagar, Arizona with at least two casualties. (Fox TV Phoenix)
- Researchers use X-ray techniques to discover that Rose of Viterbo died from thrombus in her heart, not tuberculosis as originally thought. (BBC) (The Star) (Fox News)
- New Zealand has a parliamentary expenses scandal, with one MP claiming for pornography. (BBC) (The Scotsman)
- Two motorcyclists, from Austria and New Zealand, are killed in the same Isle of Man TT race. (BBC)
- King George Tupou V proposes the use of nuclear energy in Tonga. (Canadian Business)
- An Israeli parliamentary lobby group submits a bill, supported by 25 politicians, proposing that boycotts of Israel be outlawed. (The Independent)
- Taipei pulls its films from the Shanghai International Film Festival over fears that China would claim them. (AP) (Asiaone)
- Jane Fonda is awarded the Great Medal of Paris by mayor Bertrand Delanoë for her contribution to the city's art and culture during the Paris Cinema Festival. (BBC) (AFP) (NPR) (The Canadian Press)
- 2010 FIFA World Cup:
- NCAA (U.S. college) conference realignment:
- Astronomers at the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile track the motion of gas giant Beta Pictoris b, the first time an extra-solar planet is tracked in orbit around a young star. (BBC)
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- Egyptian security forces beat protesters at a demonstration against human rights abuses in Egypt and an incident of police brutality that resulted in the death of a young man a week ago. (AP) (Los Angeles Times)
- 10 police were killed in an attack on Sunday on an outpost in Dai Kundi province in central Afghanistan. (TVNZ)
- An investigation by The Sunday Times alleges that Japan has bribed smaller nations in exchange for their vote to resume whaling at the International Whaling Commission. (The Sunday Times)
- A plane carrying 16 Al Jazeera Sports broadcast staff to the 2010 FIFA World Cup game between Algeria and Slovenia in Polokwane made an emergency landing at Lanseria International Airport following the jamming of the aircraft's landing gear. Lanseria International Airport is shut down. (Reuters Africa) (AFP) (Herald Sun) (IOL)
- 2010 Kyrgyzstan crisis:
- 5 people have died and dozens been injured in a stampede at a rally in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. (BBC) (aajmedia)
- At least two people are killed and 20 injured in a stampede at a peace concert in Côte d'Ivoire. (BBC) (Philippine Inquirer)
- South African police shoot a lachrymatory agent at hundreds of 2010 FIFA World Cup stewards at pay cut protests in Durban. (BBC)
- Hezbollah warns Israel on gas fields being claimed by both Israel and Lebanon. (presstv.ir)(Ynet)(VJ)
- Israeli–Palestinian conflict:
- Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico is appointed by President Ivan Gašparovič to form a new government. (Xinhua)
- Belgian general election, 2010:
- Venezuelan authorities issue an arrest warrant for the head of Globovisión, the country's only remaining independent television station which criticises President of Venezuela Hugo Chávez. (Aljazeera)
- An explosion injures 24 people at a rally opposed to a new draft constitution in the Kenyan capital Nairobi. (BBC) (Capital FM)
- Fighting between government troops and police in Somalia leaves at least 13 people dead and 14 injured in the capital Mogadishu. (Al Jazeera) (Reuters Africa)
- Two people are killed and six others are wounded during four explosions close to the entrance of the Iraqi central bank building in downtown Baghdad. (Xinhua)
- A 7.5-magnitude earthquake west of India's Nicobar Islands causes tremors felt along India's eastern seaboard and triggers a tsunami watch, which is later cancelled. (AFP) (NDTV)
- FIFA says it will assist Al Jazeera Sports in its investigation of the 2010 FIFA World Cup signal sabotage. (Business Week) (Hindustan Times) (The Zimbabwean)
- Wen Jiabao, the Premier of the People's Republic of China and Prime Minister of Japan Naoto Kan agree to establish a Prime Ministerial hotline between the two heads of government. (Xinhua)
- Joran Van der Sloot said he'll reveal the location of U.S teen Natalee Holloway's body to the investigators if authorities transfer him to an Aruban jail from his current jail in Peru. (Fox News)
- A London School of Economics report finds that Pakistan's largest intelligence agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence, is secretly funding and training the Afghan Taliban. (BBC)
- South Korea's chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Lee Sang-eui offers to retire over the recent warship sinking. (Xinhua)
- Britain's most senior military officer, Sir Jock Stirrup, agrees to leave before the end of his term in April 2011, according to the country's Defence Secretary Liam Fox. (BBC) (The Irish Times) (Xinhua)
- Freed Swiss businessman Max Göldi is due to leave Libya. (Xinhua)
- The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Hayabusa spacecraft returns to earth near Woomera in northwest South Australia. (ABC Australia)
- Official documents say the United Kingdom's government considered denying the Korea DPR national football team visas to attend the 1966 FIFA World Cup in England for fear of "diplomatic shockwaves" brought on by Communism. (BBC) (AFP) (The Belfast Telegraph) (RTHK)
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- The Mo Ibrahim Prize for Achievement in African Leadership is awarded to no one for a second consecutive year. (Aljazeera)
- Fighting between Somali government troops and local police has killed at least 13 people in Mogadishu and gunmen killed a judiciary official of the semi-autonomous Puntland region in the Hamarjajab district. (Arab News)
- At least 28 prisoners are killed in a clash between rival gangs in Sinaloa, Mexico. (Asiaone) (BBC) (newser)
- The Federal Supreme Court of Switzerland rules that Romanian footballer Adrian Mutu has lost his final appeal in a five-year legal battle meaning he has to pay a record €17 million in damages for breaching his contract. (The Guardian) (BBC) (AsiaOne) (The Hindu) (CNN)
- Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Owen Paterson receives a copy of the Saville Inquiry, the longest and most expensive public inquiry in British history, ahead of its official launch by David Cameron tomorrow. (The Irish Times) (RTÉ)
- Amidst growing labour unrest in China, Premier Wen Jiabao visits migrant workers at a Beijing construction site and calls for better treatment for the country's migrant workers. (Strait Times) (Xinhua)
- Egypt and Al Jazeera Sports clash over claims of interference in the transmission of 2010 FIFA World Cup soccer matches. (Reuters Africa)
- A California judge refuses to suspend the medical licence of Conrad Murray, the doctor charged in connection with Michael Jackson's death. (AP via LA.com) (newser)
- At least 35 people are feared drowned and 50 people disappear after a boat capsizes on the Ganges River in northern India. (AP via CT Now) (Xinhua)
- At least 14 people are killed and at least 30 are injured when a tourist bus disappears over the edge of a ravine in the Philippines. (Xinhua)
- 10 police are killed and several others are wounded in an ambush by drug hitmen in Zitácuaro Michoacán. (The Star) (AP) (The Australian) (Los Angeles Times)
- Colombian security forces rescue two senior police officers and a soldier held hostage since 1 November 1998, among the longest-held captives; a fourth hostage is later rescued. (BBC) (France24) (Los Angeles Times) (The Sydney Morning Herald) (Aljazeera) (BBC)
- Ireland's Fine Gael Deputy Leader and Finance Spokesperson Richard Bruton, brother of former Taoiseach John Bruton, is sacked after publicly declaring his lack of confidence in Fine Gael's leader Enda Kenny. (BBC) (RTÉ) (The Irish Times) (Press Association)
- Churches in Kenya accuse the government of being behind a grenade attack at a rally opposed to a draft constitution which killed six people. (BBC) (AP) (Daily Nation)
- A team of American geologists and Pentagon officials say they have discovered vast mineral wealth, including iron, gold and lithium, estimated to be worth nearly US$1 trillion, in Afghanistan, though other senior officials say this has been known since at least the 1970s. (CBS News) (Politico) (The Guardian) (AP)
- The arrest of several army officers in Guinea is not linked to elections, according to the country's army chief. (BBC)
- The Iraqi Council of Representatives convenes in Baghdad three months after inconclusive elections. (AFP via Google News)
- Polish authorities arrest a suspected Israeli agent in connection with the murder of a Hamas operative in Dubai in January. (BBC)
- Lanseria International Airport reopens after the removal of the wreckage of yesterday's emergency landing involving mainly Al Jazeera Sports broadcast staff on their way to cover the 2010 FIFA World Cup game between Algeria and Slovenia in Polokwane. (IOL)
- New files on American politician Ted Kennedy, which were previously secret, are released. (BBC)
- 2010 Kyrgyzstan crisis and 2010 South Kyrgyzstan riots:
- Israeli–Palestinian conflict:
- US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announces the 10th Annual Trafficking in Persons Report. (US Department of State)
- NCAA (U.S. college) conference realignment:
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- Human rights in Iran:
- A US marine convicted in the Hamdania incident, one of the worst war crimes from the Iraq War, and sentenced to eleven years in prison in 2006 is released from prison after a military appeals court in Washington decides he did not receive a fair trial. The Navy is appealing that court's decision.(PA) (AP) (Aljazeera) (Gulf News) (The Washington Post)
- Militants kill 12 police officers in a string of attacks and six civilians die in bombings in Afghanistan, and a U.S. soldier is killed in a gun battle in eastern Afghanistan in the latest fighting in the war in Afghanistan. (USA Today)
- Heavy rain triggers landslides that leave at least 24 people dead in Sichuan province's Kangding county. In one incident, part of a mountain fell on a construction site in Sichuan province, crushing workers who were sleeping in tents. (news.com.pk) (China Dialy)
- The trial begins of 33 alleged members of Ergenekon over alleged plans to topple the Turkish government, while groups hold small protests outside the courthouse in their favour. (Aljazeera) (BBC) (euronews)
- Two trains collide in the northern Mexican state of Sinaloa resulting in the death of at least 13 people. (AP via USA Today)
- Saville Inquiry:
- North Korea threatens a military response if the United Nations Security Council questions or condemns it for the ROKS Cheonan sinking. North Korean UN Permanent Representative Sin Son Ho demands that a North Korean investigation team be allowed to travel to the site of the sinking. (Yahoo! News)
- Islamist gunmen in Somalia shoot two people dead and detain 10 others who were watching a televised FIFA World Cup match; a member of one group later said watching the World Cup is anti-Islamic. (CNN)
- The leaders of Ireland's two main political parties, Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael, come under fire. Irish Taoiseach Brian Cowen faces a motion of no confidence in Dáil Éireann, his second in just over a year. Leader of the Opposition, Enda Kenny, who sacked his deputy leader yesterday to prevent a potential coup, faces further revolt from his party as nine more members of his frontbench call on him to resign. (Reuters Africa) (RTÉ)
- An American claiming to be hunting Osama bin Laden is arrested with a sword, a pistol and night-vision goggles in northwestern Pakistan.(Wall St. Journal) (Aljazeera)
- 2010 Kyrgyzstan crisis and 2010 South Kyrgyzstan riots:
- Israeli-Palestinian conflict:
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- The Jamaican Government orders civilians to keep off the streets for two days in several slums in Kingston because authorities are still hunting for Christopher Coke, alleged by the United States to be a drug lord. (AP)
- American police in Seattle say they will "review training procedured" following the surfacing of a video which attrated international attention. The video shows a white officer from the Seattle department punching a black teenaged girl in the face when she tried intervene while the officer was confronting another girl about crossing the road at a legally forbidden area. Seattle police deny any wrongdoing. (CNN) (BBC) (IOL) (Sky News)
- The United Nations Human Rights Council says Britain is arranging its third enforced removal of Iraqi asylum applicants to Baghdad despite appeals for it to stop amid safety fears for the individuals concerned. (Aljazeera) (The Guardian) (BBC)
- Iranian nuclear program sanctions:
- Gulf of Mexico oil disaster:
- Middle East:
- At least 49 people are killed during landslides in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, with many swept to their deaths as they slept. (Aljazeera)
- At least 25 people die during flooding in the Var department of Côte d'Azur, Southern France. (Le Monde) (France24) (BBC) (Sky News) (The Daily Telegraph)
- A shootout in the Mexican tourist town of Taxco leaves 15 dead. (CNN)
- Two separate blasts in eastern Baghdad kill 1 person and wound another 8. (asharq-e)
- 4 Russian policemen are killed in the North Caucasus. (Xinhua)
- A shallow strong quake with magnitude of 7.1 jolts Papua province in easternmost Indonesia, killing 3 people and causing damage in Serui and Biak, in Yapen district. (Xinhua) (SINA) (ABC) (CNN)
- Two Sudanese, Abdallah Banda Abakaer Nourain and Saleh Mohammed Jerbo Jamus, surrender to the International Criminal Court in The Hague to be charged on Thursday with "murder", "intentionally directing attacks against peacekeeping personnel" and "stealing property" in relation to a 2007 attack on African Union peacekeepers in Darfur, which killed 12. (BBC) (IOL) (CNN) (Reuters)
- More than £200 million in health funding to the Zambian government is suspended by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, though some aid is given to non-government groups and the fund's director of communications says life-saving treatments remain unaffected. (BBC)
- George Osborne scraps Britain's financial regulator and grants new powers to the Bank of England. (Sky News)
- The National Army of Colombia says an unknown number of informants who aided the rescue of three police officers and a soldier from FARC on Sunday will receive a $1.2 million reward between them. (BBC)
- Shanghai International Film Festival:
- Two Dutch women appear in a South African court over an alleged "ambush marketing" stunt after more than 30 people were ejected from the Johannesburg stadium on Monday during the match between Denmark and the Netherlands in the 2010 FIFA World Cup. (BBC) (Sky News) (The Sydney Morning Herald)
- The annual Dragon Boat Festival starts in Lhasa. (tibet.cn)
- A six-storey statue of Jesus Christ is struck by lightning and razed to the ground in a city in the US state of Ohio. (The Guardian) (The Money Times) (ITN) (TVNZ)
- Researchers from four Italian universities identify human remains discovered in a church in Tuscany as "almost certainly" being those of Renaissance artist Caravaggio. (BBC)
- NCAA (U.S. college) conference realignment:
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- The United States issues a travel warning for Toronto due to an upcoming G20 summit. (The Star)
- Heavy rains claim 46 lives in Maharashtra, India. (Hindustan Times)
- At least 46 people are killed, 50 others disappear and millions are affected following heavy five-day rains in China's southern regions. (The Hindu)
- 46 people die when heavy rains trigger landslides in western Myanmar, in Rakhine state in an area bordering Bangladesh. (CNN)
- Dutch novelist Gerbrand Bakker wins the 2010 International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award for his novel The Twin. (The Guardian) (Irish Independent) (The Irish Times)
- 16 people are killed and around 70 others are trapped after a blast at the San Fernando mine in Amagá, Antioquia, in Colombia. (BBC) (Reuters) (France24) (China Dialy)
- 3 people died after supports collapsed on them at a coal mine in east China's Anhui Province, a spokesman with the Anhui Huainan Mining Group in Bagongshan District of Huainan City. (People Dialy)
- As many as 1,800 homes are estimated to have been destroyed on Biak Island, West Papua, Indonesia, as a result of the 7.0 magnitude 2010 Papua earthquake. (RNZI) (AsiaNews.it)
- Gulf of Mexico oil spill disaster:
- 2010 Kyrgyzstan crisis and 2010 South Kyrgyzstan riots:
- Israeli–Palestinian conflict:
- FIFA World Cup:
- The Los Angeles Lakers win the 2010 NBA Finals defeating the Boston Celtics 83-79 in Game 7. (CBS News)
- Turkish warplanes carry out a series of airstrikes against suspected Kurdish targets in Iraq and Turkish soldiers withdraw from Iraqi territory after sending troops in pursuit of Kurdish rebels in the latest fighting between Turkey and Kurdish rebels. (CNN)
- The Times Square bombing attempt suspect is indicted on 10 terrorism and weapons charges in New York City. (AP via Dayton Daily News)
- A four-year Canadian inquiry concludes that a "cascading series of errors" led to the bombing of Air India Flight 182 which crashed into the Atlantic Ocean south of Ireland on 23 June 1985, killing all 329 people on board. (BBC) (Aljazeera)
- 3 additional U.S. soldiers based in Washington state are facing murder charges in the deaths of 3 Afghan civilians. (CNN)
- About 110,000 Haredi Jews protest in Jerusalem and Bnei Brak against an Israeli Supreme Court ruling to jail Slonimer parents in Immanuel, who follow their rebbe's order not to send their girls to school with girls of non-Ashkenazi descent. (JTA) (Haaretz) (YnetNews) (Aljazeera)(The Jerusalem Post)
- African leaders meet in Chad to discuss the Great Green Wall tree belt from Senegal to Djibouti in the battle against the Sahara. (BBC)
- European Union leaders approve sanctions in Brussels, including bans on investments and oil/gas technology transfers, against Iran, harsher than recent sanctions imposed by the United Nations. Russia calls these and sanctions by the United States "unacceptable". (BBC) (Reuters) (Aljazeera) (The News International)
- Powerful Austrian publisher and household name Hans Dichand, who greatly influenced Austrian politics, dies aged 89. (The Hindu) (Business Week) (Austrian Independent)
- Kenyan Assistant Roads Minister Wilfred Machage is suspended by President Mwai Kibaki after being charged, alongside two other MPs, with inciting hatred yesterday. (BBC) (Reuters Africa)
- Rwanda releases from custody an American lawyer for health reasons. The lawyer is charged with genocide denial and threatening state security, the first outsider tried under the country's 2003 anti-genocide legislation. (Reuters Africa)
- Hundreds of surveillance cameras, alleged to be part of a counter-terrorism operation in highly Muslim areas, are put into temporary disuse in parts of Birmingham, England, after protest by the local population. (The Guardian) (BBC)
- European researchers conclude that the male menopause exists in 2% of middle-aged men who experience poor morning erection, low levels of sexual desire and erectile dysfunction. (BBC)
- The historical chronology of ancient Egypt is verified using radiocarbon dating. (BBC)
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- Burmese Democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi turns 65, as international and domestic pressure for her release from house arrest intensify. Guards surrounding her home allow her to receive a birthday cake and a bouquet of flowers from political supporters. (Yahoo! News)
- A gunman shoots 4 people then turns the gun on himself in San Bernardino, California. (AP via Atlanta Journal Constitution)
- A former Rwandan army chief in exile, Faustin Nyamwasa, is shot in South Africa. (BBC) (News24) (Al Jazeera)
- At least 48 people are killed in rival clashes between nomadic groups in the Darfur region of Sudan. (BBC) (AFP)
- Gunfire at a combat post in Afghanistan killed a French soldier and wounded an Afghan translator. (CNN)
- A drone attack on a militant hideout in North Waziristan in Pakistan, killed at least 13 people and injured six others. (CNN)
- 5 policemen are killed and 14 others injured in four separate attacks against the police forces in Pakistan. (Xinhua)
- Four suspected al-Qaida gunmen blast their way into the intelligence headquarters. The attack on the heavily protected security complex kills 18 in the southern port city of Aden, Yemen. (China Daily) (Washington Post)
- Sweden's Crown Princess Victoria marries Daniel Westling; Westling becomes Duke of Västergötland. (BusinessWeek)
- 10 Turkish soldiers are killed during clashes with Kurdish rebels on the border of Turkey and Iraq, in Şemdinli township of Hakkâri province and in the Gediktepe-Tekeli region. (TRT) (CNN)
- Roadside bomb blast kills 4, wounds 12 in bus carrying soldiers in Istanbul. (AA)
- 8 Turkish troops are killed in an attack by Kurdish rebels in southeastern Turkey. In response, Kurdish positions are targeted by Turkish airstrikes in Northern Iraq. Twelve Kurdish rebels are killed. (BBC) (IOL)
- Nauruan parliamentary election:
- Flooding in South China kills at least 88 people, and forces nearly 750,000 people to leave their homes. (BBC News) (Le Monde) (nzherald) (ABC)
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- At least 40 people were shot over the weekend across Chicago, with seven of them slain, Chicago Tribune reported. (CNTV)
- Graeme McDowell of Northern Ireland wins the 2010 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach Golf Links in California. (Reuters via UK Yahoo) (RTÉ) (The Guardian)
- Israeli–Palestinian conflict:
- In Poland, presidential elections take place after the death of President Lech Kaczyński on April 10, 2010 in a plane crash. (AP) The two main candidates are Acting President Bronisław Komorowski (Civic Platform) and former Prime Minister Jarosław Kaczyński (Law and Justice) receive 45.7% and 33.2% of the votes respectively, requiring a runoff between them. (AP)
- Colombian presidential election, 2010:
- Jundallah's leader Abdolmalek Rigi is executed in Tehran. (BBC) (South China Morning Post') (The Sysney Morning Herald) (Bangkok Post) (Reuters)
- Archbishop of Naples Crescenzio Sepe and former Italy transport minister Pietro Lunardi face allegations of corruption over a property deal. (BBC) (RTÉ)
- At least one person is killed and tens of others are wounded during clashes between Indian paramilitary authorities and demonstrators in Kashmir. The demonstrators were protesting against a 25-year-old who is said to have been beaten to death by soldiers during a 12 June demonstration. (Aljazeera)
- At least 26 people are killed and 53 other are injured during two car bombings in central Baghdad, Iraq. (BBC)
- A Bell 412 Mexican military helicopter crashes in Durango state in northern Mexico Saturday, killing all 11 people on board. (People)
- A plane carrying several Australian mining executives including Ken Talbot disappears in either Cameroon or the Republic of the Congo. (Philippine Daily Inquirer) (BBC) (Reuters), (Sydney Morning Herald)
- Celia becomes the first hurricane of the 2010 Pacific hurricane season. (AP via Breitbart)
- 2010 FIFA World Cup
- South Sudan's 7ft 7in basketball legend and humanitarian, Manute Bol, dies. (BBC) (The New York Times) (The Independent) (The Washington Post)
- Michael Jackson's memorial plaque will be unveiled at a West End theatre in London on June 24. In mid-February Los Angeles coroners have released a report of his autopsy, which said his death was a homicide. (rian.ru) (mjjboard) (BBC) (SKY)
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- Mara gang members in El Salvador attack a bus on the outskirts of San Salvador, shooting at it before dousing it with gasoline and lighting it on fire, killing 14 and injuring 16. Gang members open fire on another bus shortly afterward, killing another 2 people. (Yahoo! News) (Aljazeera)
- Iraq's electricity minister Karim Waheed offers his resignation on live television as "Iraqis are not capable of being patient in their suffering". Two people are shot dead by armed forces while protesting over lack of electricity generation blamed by Waheed on lack of funding. (BBC)
- The death toll in Colombia's mine blast reaches 70, as 4 more charred corpses are retrieved. (The Sydney Morning Herald)
- At least 46 people are killed and dozens more trapped after a mine blast in Henan, central China. (BBC) (Al Jazeera) (China Daily)
- Major aid agencies Oxfam and Save the Children both launch $10 million (£6.7 million) appeals for Niger where drought is common at the moment and half the country has no food. (BBC) (The Sydney Morning Herald)
- Gazprom, Russia's state-controlled gas monopoly, cuts 15% of Belarus' gas supplies over alleged debt, and threatens to gradually cut up to 85% of Belarus' gas supplies if the debt remains unpaid. (Aljazeera) (BBC)
- Juan Manuel Santos wins convincingly in the final round of the Colombian presidential election. (BBC)
- Bronisław Komorowski and Jarosław Kaczyński face each other on 4 July after Sunday's inconclusive vote in Polish presidential election, 2010. (Aljazeera)
- An American man pleads guilty to charges of attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction in the 2010 Times Square car bombing attempt. (AP via Google News)
- Search teams find the wreckage of a CASA C-212 Aviocar private plane carrying senior Australian mining executives including Ken Talbot in the jungle of the Republic of the Congo. (Reuters via News Daily)
- Iran bans two International Atomic Energy Agency weapons inspectors from entering the country claiming they had leaked false information about Iran's nuclear program. (Sky News)
- Chinese Vice-President Xi Jinping meets with Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd on an official trip to Canberra. The two countries sign agreements valued at over A$10 billion. (The Australian)
- 8 people die and 10 people are wounded in a suicide attack in the northern city of Shirqat of Iraq. (TRT)
- The Washington Post reports that Gizab villagers in Afghanistan overturned their local Taliban movement during April, with some members putting down their weapons and being welcomed back into their local community. The United States did not hear of this before now as it happened in a remote part of the country ignored by the military. (The Washington Post)
- Three Australian soldiers and a United States army soldier are killed in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan with nine NATO casualties overall. (The Australian) (AFP via Google News)
- The northernmost radiation detection station of the South Korean Institute of Nuclear Safety claims to have detected an eightfold increase in the radioactive substance xenon. (AP) (Chosun Ilbo)
- Israeli–Palestinian conflict:
- The Fund for Peace and Foreign Policy Magazine releases its 2010 index of so-called "failed states", ranking 177 countries by what it sees as those most at risk of failure; Foreign Policy claims state failure "is a chronic condition". (Aljazeera)
- Six people are arrested in South Africa over the shooting of Rwandan dissident Lt Gen Nyamwasa. (BBC)
- Bangladesh authorities indefinitely shut down Dhaka's University of Engineering and Technology due to a student rampage which injures four people because of 2010 FIFA World Cup fever. (BBC)
- The World Health Organisation creates a data base on the use of child medicines. (AP via The Guardian)
- The Communications Commission of Kenya embarks on a compulsory mobile phone registration initiative as part of the country's crime reduction policy; numbers remaining unregistered by the end of July are to be disconnected. (Kenya Broadcasting Corporation) (Daily Nation) (BBC) (TMC Net)
- A carved brick sculpture intended as a Bloody Sunday (1972) memorial is vandalised prior to completion in Derry's Bogside area. (BBC) (RTÉ) (The Belfast Telegraph)
- A tour of North America by Simon & Garfunkel is "postponed indefinitely" as Art Garfunkel develops vocal cord paresis; he is expected to recover. (BBC)
- Hyksos capital Avaris is believed to have been located via radar imaging by a group of Austrian archaeologists in Tel al-Dabaa. (BBC) (IOL) (News24.com)
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- At least 60 people are killed and hundreds disappear after a derailed train plunges into a ravine in the Republic of the Congo. The accident happened after the train left the coastal town of Pointe-Noire on the Chemin de Fer Congo Ocean (CFCO) line to the capital Brazzaville. (TVNZ) (DNA) (Dawn) (Sky News)
- The death toll from floods and mudslides reaches at least 31 people in Alagoas and Pernambuco in northeastern Brazil. (CBS)
- Red Sea oil spill disaster:
- The death toll from unrest in southern Kyrgyzstan riots reaches 251. (itar-tass)
- War crimes charges are formally requested against 12 Belgian government officials and military officers in connection with the assassination of Congo's first democratically elected prime minister, Patrice Lumumba, as historians agree on a high-level Belgian conspiracy, with Western-backed dictator Mobutu Sese Seko succeeding Lumumba until he was overthrown in 1997. (AP) (AFP) (Reuters) (Taiwan News)
- The United States investigates itself to see if it is accidentally financing the Taliban in Afghanistan with $4 million per week in U.S. taxpayers' money. (Aljazeera) (BBC) (CNN)
- Israel asks the United Nations to suspend attempts to organise an international inquiry into the Gaza flotilla raid, with Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak saying "some organisation, probably backed by a terror organisation, (is) once again trying to send a vessel into Gaza." (BBC)
- General Stanley A. McChrystal, the top United States commander in Afghanistan, apologises for an article in Rolling Stone magazine in which he criticised senior members of the Obama administration. McChrystal is later summoned to Washington, D.C. for talks with Obama. (The Los Angeles Times) (BBC)
- Christopher Coke walks into a police station on the outskirts of Kingston, Jamaica and is detained, following search efforts which killed more than 70 people last month. The United States accuses him of being the Shower Posse leader, which it alleges operates an international drugs and guns network. (BBC)
- An expert panel is appointed by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to investigate whether war crimes were committed during the final stages of the Sri Lankan Civil War. (Reuters) (CNN) (BBC)
- During a two-day visit to Ghana, President of Angola José Eduardo dos Santos visits Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Park in Accra among other engagements. (Ghana Broadcasting Corporation) (Angola Press)
- Five people are killed and 12 injured in a bus bomb in Istanbul, Turkey. Kurdish rebels later claim responsibility for the attack. (Anatolia News Agency) (Reuters) (Xinhua)
- Two rival Nigerian lawmakers in the National Assembly are injured, with one sustaining a broken arm. (BBC)
- The American Samoa Constitutional Convention, the first to be held since 1986, opens in Pago Pago. (Radio New Zealand International)
- United States federal judge Martin Leach-Cross Feldman issues a preliminary injunction blocking a six month moratorium on deep water offshore drilling. (AFP via Yahoo! News)
- In the United Kingdom, Chancellor George Osborne presents the coalition government's emergency budget statement to the House of Commons. (BBC)
- Nikki Haley wins the Republican Party primary to be the Republican candidate in the South Carolina gubernatorial election in the United States. (Washington Post)
- One person is killed and 10 injured after a former worker at a Mazda factory in Japan drives his car at colleagues. (Kyodo) (BBC) (AFP)
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- The death toll in yesterday's train crash in the Republic of the Congo rises to 76. (TVNZ) (Aljazeera)
- Anthrax kills 30 hippopotamuses in Uganda. (The Straits Times)
- 9 Iraqis are killed in bombings, including two leaders of U.S. government-backed Sunni militants. (TIME)
- An Indian colonel dies in Kashmir for the first time in three years. (The Times of India) (The News International) (BBC) (Press TV)
- 25th anniversary of Air India Flight 182:
- Southeast European Cooperation Process summit:
- General Stanley A. McChrystal magazine remarks controversy:
- Israeli–Palestinian conflict:
- Kenya permits prisoners to vote in a referendum on a new constitution in a landmark court ruling. (BBC) (Daily Nation) (KBC)
- Strikes in China which began on 21st of June have shut down Toyota and Honda plants there. "The BBC's China editor Shirong Chen says the government has tolerated strikes at foreign-owned plants, which are obliged to respect workers' rights, but maintains strict control at Chinese-owned factories for fear of widespread social unrest." (BBC)
- 27 people are questioned about a bomb attack which killed five people in Istanbul. (The Straits Times) (Reuters)
- 1 person is killed when a crane crashes at Chennai International Airport, Chennai, India. (India Times)
- The International Whaling Commission does not reach agreement on curbing whaling by Japan, Norway and Iceland in a meeting in Agadir, Morocco. (AP via San Jose Mercury News)
- The Palace of Monaco announces the engagement of Albert II, Prince of Monaco to South African native and Olympian swimmer Charlene Wittstock. (AP)
- BP chief executive Tony Hayward hands over responsibility for cleaning up the Gulf of Mexico oil spill to senior executive Bob Dudley "effective immediately". (AFP via the Sydney Morning Herald)
- 2 American service members die following bomb attacks in southern Afghanistan. (CBS)
- 2 Australians are injured after shooting each other in the buttocks and legs. (The Straits Times)
- A Toronto man is charged with possessing explosives alleged to be part of a plot to bomb the 2010 G-20 Toronto summit in Canada. (AFP via Google News)
- An earthquake occurs 56 kilometres north-northeast of Ottawa, registering a 5.0 on the Richter scale. Slight damage was reported near the epicenter, and the tremor was felt in Sudbury, Windsor, Ann Arbor, Detroit, Toronto, Milwaukee, Northern Pennsylvania, Ohio and New York State. (CBC) (Ottawa Sun) (Ottawa Citizen)
- Hours after the earthquake struck Central Canada, severe thunderstorms rolled through Central Ontario, Canada, which has spawned at least 2 tornadoes in cottage country, including one confirmed F-2 tornado touch down in Midland, Ontario, north of Toronto, The most significant damage was reported at Smith's Camp, a trailer park at the south end of the town, where several mobile homes were completely destroyed. (CTV)
- Golfer Graeme McDowell returns home to celebrations after becoming the first European to win the U.S. Open since 1970. (The Irish Times) (The Belfast Telegraph) (BBC)
- Isner–Mahut match at the 2010 Wimbledon Championships becomes the longest match in Association of Tennis Professionals history, and is adjourned after 9 hours. (The Guardian)
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- One person dies and another two are injured when a shell left over from the Vietnam War explodes in the central province of Quang Ngai. (Thanhnien News)
- The death toll in Brazilian storms rises to 46 in Brazil's Alagoas and Pernambuco states. (Xinhua)
- A parcel bomb delivered to the public order ministry in Athens, addressed to counter-terrorism minister Michalis Chrysohoidis, is opened by an aide, instantly killing him; Chrysohoidis is unhurt. Prime Minister George Papandreou labels it a terrorist attack. (BBC) (Aljazeera) (The Daily Telegraph) (The Guardian)
- Belgian authorities raid their country's Catholic Church HQ during an investigation into child sexual abuse as rumours circulate about a cover-up. (BBC) (The Guardian) (Aljazeera) (The New York Times) (RTÉ) (The Age)
- Rescue workers continue the search for hundreds of people who have disappeared during floods in Brazil. (Aljazeera)
- At least twelve people are killed, and 17 more people are injured, in a train accident in Castelldefels, near Barcelona. (El País) (BBC News)
- A Knesset parliamentary delegation to the Council of Europe, led by Yohanan Plesner, seeks to block a key vote intent on establishing an international probe into the Gaza flotilla raid. (The Jerusalem Post)
- Prime Minister of Australia Kevin Rudd steps down after his leadership is contested following considerable drops in popularity in polls in recent months. Julia Gillard becomes Australia's first female Prime Minister. (SMH)
- Several people are killed during suicide attacks and bombings across Iraq. (Aljazeera)
- Public sector workers strike in their millions across France. (The Age) (Aljazeera) (BBC) (The Independent) (RTÉ)
- President Hu Jintao of China arrives in Ottawa on a three-day state visit to Canada. The two countries sign a tourism agreement. (Global Times)
- Five American men are jailed for 10 years in Pakistan after being arrested in possession of maps of sensitive locations. The men deny they have links to militants and say they are charity workers. The verdict is announced inside a prison in the presence of American diplomats. (BBC) (Xinhua) (Aljazeera) (The Guardian)
- Organisers of a fresh aid flotilla to Gaza cancel the event due to what they describe as "Israeli threats", while the United States Department of State issues a statement calling aid flotillas to Gaza "irresponsible". (Haaretz) (Ynetnews)
- U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon states as "illegal and unhelpful" the plan to demolish Palestinian homes in East Jerusalem to make way for a tourist park. (BBC)
- United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East commissioner-general Filippo Grandi questions the fine print of Israel's promise to ease its blockade on Gaza, citing parts which are unclear and saying it is "urgent, because the conditions are very bad on the ground". (Daily Times)
- Hooded gunmen kill 4 commuters in Philippines. (CBS)
- Burundi's defence minister Germain Niyoyankana says he hopes opposition leader Agathon Rwasa has not gone into hiding as this is banned. Rwasa, an ex-rebel chief, signed a peace deal in 2009. A spokesman says he has only gone on holiday for 15 days. (BBC)
- During a meeting with Benjamin Netanyahu, Austria's Chancellor Werner Faymann calls on him to lift the Gaza Strip embargo. (Austrian Independent)
- Somaliland is set to go to the polls with its president facing a challenge to be reelected. (Aljazeera)
- Russia's natural gas export monopoly Gazprom announces that it will restart gas supply to Belarus in full following payment of the debt. (Reuters)
- Bridgeport, Connecticut in the United States is put under a state of emergency when hurricane-force winds from a strong storm went through, causing injuries and severe damage including the collapse of a multi-story building. (CNN)(CTPost)
- Sri Lanka announces that a United Nations panel investigating human rights abuses will not be allowed to enter the country. (BBC) (Times of India)
- China announces it has broken up what it describes as a terrorist ring in Xinjiang in the west of the country. (China Daily) (AP) (Al Jazeera)
- Slovakia defeat defending champion Italy by a 3-2 score; following France's elimination on Tuesday, this marks the first time in World Cup history that both previous finalists fail to progress beyond the first round of play. (BBC News)
- American John Isner defeats Frenchman Nicolas Mahut, 4-6, 6-3, 7-6 (7), 6-7 (3), 70-68, in the longest match in tennis history, finally advancing from the first round of the 2010 Wimbledon Gentlemen's Singles tournament. The match took over 11 hours, spanning three days. (ESPN)
- Writer Neil Gaiman wins the Cilip Carnegie Medal for The Graveyard Book. (BBC)
- Four specimens of Anogramma ascensionis, a plant native to Ascension Island and presumed extinct for 60 years, are discovered alive and well in Kew. (BBC)
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- At least 24 people are killed and 50 people injured after an overcrowded bus crashes into a truck in the Patna district of Bihar state in India. (AFP via Sydney Morning Herald)
- 13 people have died of dengue fever in Honduras in 2010 as 10,200 others were hit by the disease, the Honduran Health Ministry said. (Xinhua)
- Millions of protesters take to the streets in Rome, Naples, Milan and other Italian cities to protest their government's austerity measures which cut funds and affects public sector salaries and to test Silvio Berlusconi. (Aljazeera)
- Christopher Coke:
- Christopher Coke, sent to United States territory by Jamaica, pleads not guilty to United States charges of drug smuggling at a federal court in New York and, in his first public comments since August, says he took the decision to be extradited "in the best interest of my family, the community of western Kingston and in particular the people of Tivoli Gardens and above all Jamaica". (Aljazeera)
- Evangelical preacher Merrick "Al" Miller is charged with "harbouring a fugitive" and "perverting the course of justice", though he says Coke was on the verge of turning himself into authorities. (Jamaica Gleaner)
- The Constitutional Court of Romania rules that government budget plans are "unconstitutional"; this decision cannot be appealed. Dozens of people trying to request an audience with President Traian Băsescu at his palace are beaten back by riot police. (France24) (BBC) (Deutsche Welle) (Reuters)
- Commemorations are held in South Korea to mark the 60th anniversary of the outbreak of the Korean War. (Yonhap) (BBC) (The Guardian)
- Rwandan journalist Jean Leonard Rugambage, acting editor of Umuvugizi, is shot dead by two men in front of his house in Kigali. Rugambage's death shocks journalists in the country; the paper's exiled chief editor says the government is responsible. (BBC) (The Guardian) (The Independent) (Reuters Africa)
- The Vatican expresses its "astonishment" and "indignation" at the "violation of the graves of the Cardinals Jozef-Ernest Van Roey and Leon-Joseph Suenens" by Belgian police making holes in the crypt at Mechelen Cathedral during a child sex abuse search. (Aljazeera) (BBC) (The Sydney Morning Herald)
- Captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit:
- Security forces in Yemen clash with suspected Al-Qaeda members in Aden during investigations into a bombing of a government compound last week. (Al Jazeera)
- Iris Robinson is interviewed in London as part of a police investigation. (BBC) (The Daily Telegraph)
- In response to the mortars fired into Israel that hit a government building, Israeli warplanes bomb smuggling tunnels between Egypt and the Gaza Strip, with one person being wounded in an air attack in Rafah. (CNN) (AFP via Google) (Press TV)
- President of Russia Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister of Britain David Cameron meet and agree to work to renew ties stained by the refusal of both men to hand over men the other man wants. (The Sydney Morning Herald)
- Five people are killed and one is seriously wounded after an attack at a wedding party in Ghrab hamlet in Algeria's Tébessa Province. (Hindustan Times) (IOL) (Reuters Africa)
- Three Indonesian celebrities - pop star Nazril "Ariel" Irham, TV presenter Luna Maya and soapstar Cut Tari - are allegedly involved in a celebrity sex tape; Nazril "Ariel" Irham is charged, prompting anger and calls for punishment from some conservative groups in the country. (BBC)
- China jails Tibetan environmentalist Karma Samdrup on charges of stealing from tombs. (BBC) (Reuters Africa) (The Guardian)
- Statues of 4 Chinese leaders, Mao Zedong, Deng Xiaoping, Jiang Zemin, Hu Jintao, are unveiled in Sichuan. (Global Times)
- A statue of Joseph Stalin is discreetly removed overnight from the central square of his hometown of Gori in Georgia. (Xinhua) (BBC) (The Guardian)
- The 36th G8 summit opens in Huntsville, Ontario and the 4th G20 summit is held in Toronto, Canada.
- British–Irish Council:
- Germany's TanDEM-X satellite, whose aim it is to create the most precise 3D map of Earth's surface, obtains its first images. (BBC)
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- Shreya Ghoshal was honored from the U.S. state of Ohio, wherein governor Ted Strickland declared June 26 as "Shreya Ghoshal Day". (IMDb News)
- Gunmen raided a jewelry shop Saturday morning in western Iraq, killing four people before fleeing with a large amount of gold in Fallujah, 40 miles (65 kilometers) west of Baghdad. (Arab News)
- The Death toll in unrest in southern Kyrgyzstan rises to 275. (Central Asian News)
- 17 people are killed and 25 others injured when an overcrowded bus collided head-on with a speeding truck near Chenaki More, abount 30 km from Patna, India. (Thaindian)
- 2010 G-20 Toronto summit
- President of Zambia Rupiah Banda says his country did not ask for health and road aid which has now been frozen by The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and the European Union before an upcoming election and says "We must not allow donors to feel they can interfere in the internal affairs of this country because it is a sovereign and independent state". (Reuters Africa)
- Voters in Somaliland take part in a presidential election. (Arab News) (AP) (The New York Times) (Al Jazeera)
- Israel allegedly confiscates seven oxygen machines en route to hospitals in the West Bank and Gaza as they "came under the category of possible use for non-medical purposes". The Palestinian Ministry of Health asks for the Norwegian Development Agency that donated them to assist in calling for their return. (Haaretz)
- Israel's pledge to ease its blockade on Gaza has little effect on factories. (The Independent)
- Iranian lawmakers protesting at Israel's blockade of Gaza say they will travel to the area on an aid ship from Lebanon. (Reuters Africa)
- The Vatican's Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone criticizes Belgian police participating in raids against child sex abuse. (BBC)
- Tens of thousands of people demonstrate in Taiwan against a trade agreement with China to be signed on Tuesday. (BBC) (Focus Taiwan News Channel) (Radio Television Hong Kong)
- Several thousand Egyptians, joined by opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei, protest systematic use of torture by authorities in the largest demonstration yet resulting from the alleged fatal beating to death of Khaled Said by police. (Arab News)
- Two Palestinians are killed in an Israeli strike on two underground tunnels from the Gaza Strip to Israel. The IDF claims the attack was a response to Thursday's firing of a dozen mortar rounds towards Israel. (Arab News) (The Washington Post)
- Thousands of Iranians in Paris ask the UN to tighten its sanctions on Iran. (YnetNews) (Euronews)
- Four people are killed and five wounded in violence in Indian-administered Kashmir's Sopore area. (CNN)
- Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva cancels his trip to Canada due to the widespread floods. (The Sydney Morning Herald)
- The ruling Workers' Party of Korea in North Korea announces that it will convene a meeting in September to elect new leaders. (Arirang News) (Al Jazeera) (AFP via Sydney Morning Herald)
- Alleged Agrigento mafia boss Giuseppe Falsone is arrested in Marseille in the south of France after spending 10 years on the run. (BBC)
- Four American service personnel are killed in Afghanistan. (CNN)
- Former Vice President of the United States Dick Cheney, who has a long history of heart problems, is hospitalized. (The Sydney Morning Herald)
- Fedor Emelianenko records only the second loss of his career as he is tapped out by Fabrício Werdum at the Strikeforce: Fedor vs. Werdum mixed martial arts match in San Jose, California, US. (Sherdog)
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- The first President of an independent Lithuania, Algirdas Brazauskas, dies in Vilnius. (Tehran Times)
- Guinea holds the first democratic election in the nation's history. (Aljazeera) (The Sydney Morning Herald)
- A constitutional referendum in Kyrgyzstan is criticized for fears the country would destabilize. (Aljazeera) (The Sydney Morning Herald)
- A road accident in Bolivia kills at least 25, injures 44, between Cochabama and Potosí. (China Daily)
- At least 11 people die while watching a 2010 FIFA World Cup match in Matam, Senegal. (BBC)
- Italy awaits the outcome of a trial which could imprison Prime Minister of Italy Silvio Berlusconi's senior adviser, Marcello Dell'Utri, for 11 years. (The Independent)
- A coal mine explosion kills 5 in China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. (China Dialy)
- Two Canadian medics are killed in Afghanistan, 20 kilometres west of Kandahar City in Panjwaii District. (Vancouver Sun)
- Fighter jets pounded Taliban hideouts in the upper Orakzai Agency of Pakistan on Saturday, killing 14 Taliban, and injuring eight others. (Dialy Times PK)
- Six NATO-led service members are killed Saturday in bombing attacks in Afghanistan, NATO's International Security Assistance Force said. (CNN)
- In the Netherlands a helicopter carrying 5 people crashes and 4 people are dead.French language article
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- Captured Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit:
- Five Muslim American students sentenced to serve 10 years in a Pakistani prison for conspiracy to commit attacks and raising funds for terrorism, appeal their conviction. (Reuters) (CNN) (Voice of America)
- The European Union and United States sign a five-year agreement on sharing financial data in anti-terrorist investigations for accounts suspected of being used for terrorist financing, after agreeing on limits to protect customer privacy. (NPR) (Star Tribune)
- Gulf of Mexico oil disaster:
- Assassination of Rodolfo Torre Cantu:
- Death of oldest, longest serving United States Senator, Robert Byrd:
- Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad postpones nuclear talks so as to “punish the West” for United Nations Security Council Resolution 1929 aimed at curbing the alleged development of Iranian nuclear weapons. (Aljazeera) (Voice of America) (AFP)
- World leaders at the G20 summit agree to cut their budget deficits in half by 2013, while US President Obama urges continued spending to support economic growth. (Voice of America) (The Washington Post) (Forbes)
- Toronto police arrest over 600 people outside the G20 summit, with police using rubber bullets and tear gas on protestors. (Democracy Now!)
- Rwandan authorities arrest two people in connection with the killing of a journalist critical of Rwandan President Paul Kagame, and deny complicity in the murder. (AFP) (Sky News) (AP)
- Sri Lanka's President Mahinda Rajapakse and other prominent Sri Lankans protest international calls and the appointment of a United Nations panel to investigate war crimes allegedly committed during the country's civil war with the Tamil Tiger separatists. (AFP) (Canadian Press) (Colombo Page)
- At least 100 people are feared trapped or buried in a landslide in Guizhou Province in south-west China following continued heavy rain. (BBC) (Al Jazeera)
- Former Panamaian leader Manuel Noriega goes on trial in Paris. (Arab News) (Aljazeera) (The Guardian)
- Kyrgyzstan approves a new constitution with 90.6 percent of voters backing a constitution that would pave the way for a parliamentary election in October, following the violence of the recent uprising and riots. (The New York Times)
- Philip Gordon, the Obama administration's top diplomat on European affairs warns Turkey that it must demonstrate its commitment to NATO, Europe and the United States after its opposition to sanctions against Iran’s nuclear program and rhetoric against Israel after the Gaza flotilla raid. (The Jerusalem Post)
- A presidential election takes place in Burundi with incumbent President Pierre Nkurunziza as the only candidate. A series of grenade attacks also take place. (Al Jazeera) (The Guardian)
- A member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine is killed and two others are wounded by Israeli forces east of Gaza City while firing rockets into Israel (JTA) (Ynet) (AFP) (Press TV)
- Thousands of Sudanese Lou Nuer are forced from their homes in Upper Nile towards Jonglei, an area where food is short. (BBC)
- Singer Sergio "El Shaka" Vega is shot dead while on tour in Sinaloa, hours after denying his own murder. (BBC) (The Daily Telegraph) (UPI)
- The military government in Fiji issues new media restrictions targeting foreign ownership of media organisations in the country. (Hindustan Times) (BBC) (The Australian)
- The Red Crescent delays an aid shipment bound for Gaza after being told that Egypt would prevent it from using the internationally neutral Suez Canal. (BBC)
- A group of armed men vandalises a United Nations summer camp in the Gaza Strip, in a second attack since May. Hamas and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine condemn the attack. (Aljazeera)
- Turkey closes its airspace to some Israeli military flights in apparent retaliation for Israeli raid on the Gaza-flotilla; civilian commercial flights are not affected. (The Jerusalem Post) (BBC) (Christian Science Monitor)
- Somali pirates hijack a Singaporean chemical tanker in the Gulf of Aden, carrying a cargo of ethylene glycol. (Yahoo! News)
- A second statue of Joseph Stalin is removed by authorities in Georgia. (The Independent) (Straits Times)
- Britain's Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt incorrectly links hooliganism to the 1989 Hillsborough Disaster, and is called "an absolute disgrace" by families of those who were killed. (BBC) (The Guardian) (Reuters)
- The United States Department of Justice announces that ten people have been arrested for allegedly spying for Russia. (Aljazeera) (BBC) (The Guardian) (USA Today)
- In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court of the United States rules that Chicago's handgun ban is unconstitutional. (BBC News)
- America's Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) remains unaware of Australia's new prime minister. (The Sydney Morning Herald)
- Le Monde is sold to Xavier Niel, Matthieu Pigasse and Pierre Bergé. (The Guardian) (BBC)
- One person is killed and eleven are injured in a derailment at Ústí nad Labem, Czech Republic. České Noviny Idnes
- Turkish soldiers mistakenly kill two villagers in Hatay. (Hurriyet Daily)
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