Buddhist extremists destroy mosque in Myanmar

A man walks inside the destroyed mosque at the village of Thuye Tha Mein in Myanmar’s Bago Province on June 24, 2016, one day after a mob of around 200 Buddhists rampaged through the Muslim prayer site. ©AFP

Here is a round-up of global news developments:

  • The 12-hour hostage drama at a cafe in Bangladesh's capital Dhaka has come to an end. Army officials say 20 civilians were killed in the attack claimed by the Daesh terrorist group. Security forces say they managed to rescue over a dozen hostages and killed six of the attackers.
     
  • Tens of thousands of people have taken to the streets of the British capital to oppose the country’s vote to break away from the European Union. Protesters argued the move would harm the UK's economy and the job market. The Brexit vote has sent seismic shockwaves through the financial market.
     
  • The Obama administration is facing criticism from right groups for undercounting civilian casualties from the US drone campaign. Washington says up to 116 civilians were killed in drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia and Libya between 2009 and 2015. Whereas watchdog groups put the civilian toll at about eleven hundred.
     
  • In Libya, forces allied with the unity government are pushing to liberate the northern city of Sirte from Daesh terrorists. According to military commanders, terrorists are now being surrounded by troops. The city fell into the hands of Daesh amid fighting between rival Libyan factions last year.
     
  • Medical aid group Doctors Without Borders has reported a dire humanitarian situation in a Jordanian refugee camp which houses as many as 70,000 Syrians. It says the refugees haven't had access to food or medicine for weeks now. Jordan blocked all emergency supplies after last month's attack by Daesh.
     
  • Buddhist extremists in Myanmar's Kachin state have destroyed yet another mosque amid renewed anti-Muslim violence there. Just over a week ago, an armed mob attacked a mosque in the city of Yangon. Meanwhile, the UN has once again called on the Myanmar's government to end institutionalized discrimination against Muslims.
     
  • Venezuela’s President Nicholas Maduro has announced the lifting of electricity rationing. Maduro says the four-hour daily outages will come to an end as of Monday. The government initiated electric rationing in May to deal with drought and low water levels at a major dam.
     
  • Exit polls in Australia's general elections show the race is still too close to call, with Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Labor challenger Bill Shorten running neck and neck. Turnbull dissolved both houses of parliament in May to oust the independents who had blocked his agenda, including company tax cuts.

 


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