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Thursday, July 26, 2018

Massive Job Recruitment At Conceptual Integrated Consult 2018


Conceptual Integrated Consult is a leading business, management and Human resources consulting firm that provides high quality services to businesses across Africa.
We are recruiting for our client to fill the position below:

Position: Technical Trainee
Qualification: OND, HND, BSc
How To Apply: Send your resume/cv to ciconsultcareer@gmail.com
Deadline: Not Specified
Location
: Lagos
Age Range: 18 - 25 years
Job Function: To work with a firm that deals with sales and installation of security gadgets such as CCTV, Alarm systems etc

Position: Experienced Marketing Executives (10 slots)
Qualification: OND, HND, BSc
Remuneration: Salary + Commission
How To Apply: Send your resume/cv to ciconsultcareer@gmail.com
Deadline: Not Specified
Job Title: Marketing Executive
Location
: Lagos
Age Range: 18 - 25 years
Job Function: To work with a firm that deals with sales and installation of security gadgets such as CCTV, Alarm systems etc

Position: Business Development Executive (2 slots)
Qualification: HND, BSc
Remuneration: Salary + Commission
How To Apply: Send your resume/cv to ciconsultcareer@gmail.com
Deadline: Not Specified
Location: Lagos

Position: Experienced Technical Personnel
Qualification: HND, BSc
Remuneration: Very Attractive
How To Apply: Send your resume/cv to ciconsultcareer@gmail.com
Deadline: Not Specified

Job Title: Experienced Sales Marketing Executives
Location
: Lagos
Age Range: 18 - 25 years
Job Function: To work with a firm that deals with sales and installation of security gadgets such as CCTV, Alarm systems etc
Qualification: OND, HND/Bsc
Application Closing Date: Not Specified
Salary: Very attractive with other packages
Location: Lagos
Method of Application
Interested and qualified candidates should send their CV's
 to   ciconsultcareer@gmail.com with the "Job Title" as subject of the mail.

Please note that only shorlisted candidates will be contacted for interview

THE NEWS: Leaked tape piles pressure on Trump, with ex-lawyer to speak 'truth'

Leaked tape piles pressure on Trump, with ex-lawyer to speak 'truth'
source: AFP

 GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP / MARK WILSON, NICHOLAS KAMM US President Donald Trump and his longtime personal lawyer Michael Cohen are heard on an audio tape discussing whether to buy the rights to a Playboy model's story that she had an affair in 2006 with the New York billionaire

The dramatic leak of a taped conversation between Donald Trump and his longtime attorney signals an aggressive new strategy by Michael Cohen, raising questions about how much the US leader has to fear should the former fixer cooperate with prosecutors.

On the tape, which was broadcast Tuesday, Trump can be heard discussing with Cohen how to hush up allegations that he had an affair with a Playboy model in 2006, and buying the rights to her story.

The tape was reportedly made two months before the 2016 presidential election and weeks before the Trump campaign denied any knowledge about Karen McDougal's allegations of a 10-month fling with the tycoon.

Cohen's lawyer released the tape to television network CNN, an arch critic of the Trump administration, and in a flurry of interviews declared his client had "turned a corner" and would continue to speak "the truth."

Cohen, who once declared he was so loyal he would "take a bullet for the president," is under federal investigation in New York for his business dealings and reportedly whether hush payments violated campaign finance laws.

In addition to being involved in efforts to hush up McDougal's story, he famously paid $130,000 to porn star Stormy Daniels just weeks before the election to silence her own claims of an alleged one-night stand with Trump.

The leaking of the tape and reports that there are further recordings has fanned speculation about how much damage Cohen can inflict on the president and whether he is now mulling a cooperation deal with federal prosecutors.

In an ABC News interview released on July 2, Cohen said his family and the country commanded his "first loyalty," the first fuel to that speculation.

- 'Tell the truth' -

On Wednesday, his newly hired, high-powered attorney Lanny Davis compared the Cohen tape to the Watergate tapes that ultimately forced Republican president Richard Nixon to resign in 1974 to avoid impeachment.

"Listen to the tape in the way that (former White House counsel) John Dean had a tape that did in Richard Nixon," he told ABC television. "Ultimately Donald Trump is going to be done in by the truth."

Davis, who worked for the Bill Clinton White House, told ABC that Cohen had "more tapes." He told CNN that his client had "turned a corner in his life" and was "now dedicated to telling the truth."

On Wednesday, a seething Trump lashed out, tweeting: "What kind of a lawyer would tape a client? So sad! Is this a first, never heard of it before?"

"Why was the tape so abruptly terminated (cut) while I was presumably saying positive things?"

While Trump suggested over the weekend that Cohen may have acted illegally in secretly taping their discussion, jurists said it might not be so simple.

On the tape, Trump and Cohen talk about buying the rights to McDougal's story, which she had sold a month earlier to the National Enquirer for $150,000. The tabloid never published the story. The rights were never bought.

- 'Protecting himself' -

During the campaign, the Trump team denied any knowledge of the deal between McDougal and American Media, the magazine's parent company.

But on tape, the candidate expresses no surprise when the issue comes up and Cohen talks about essentially reimbursing the company for what it paid McDougal.

"It really does signal a more aggressive stance on the part of Michael Cohen," Jeanne Zaino, professor of political science at Iona College, told AFP when asked about the significance of the leak.

"It suggests he might be no longer on the president's side," agreed Julian Zelizer, professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University.

"Ultimately Michael Cohen seems to be a person who will be first and foremost concerned with protecting himself," Zelizer added.

On Wednesday, The Wall Street Journal reported on a deeper alliance forged between Cohen and American Media, which it said federal investigators were examining as part of the investigation into Cohen's business affairs.

"I think it's probably in his (Cohen's) interests to pursue some kind of deal. I can't imagine he wants to continue to pay high-priced lawyers," said Paul Beck, professor emeritus of political science at Ohio State University.

"The longer this is in the public eye the more damaging it is going to be for Republicans in the November (mid-term) elections," he told AFP.

THE NEWS: Turkey moves US pastor to house arrest from prison

Turkey moves US pastor to house arrest from prison
source: AFP

 Demiroren News Agency/AFP/File / STR American pastor Andrew Brunson will be put under house arrest after spending two years in a Turkish jail

Turkey on Wednesday moved from jail to house arrest an American pastor who has spent almost two years imprisoned on terror-related charges, in a controversial case that has ratcheted up tensions with the United States.

Andrew Brunson, who ran a protestant church in the Aegean city of Izmir, was first detained in October 2016 and had remained in prison in Turkey ever since.

Brunson's lawyer Cem Halavurt confirmed Turkish state media reports that his client was being put under house arrest, telling AFP he would be moved from prison later Wednesday.

Live pictures broadcast by the NTV channel in the late afternoon showed Brunson being put into a vehicle outside prison and then driven away guided by a police motorbike escort.

The house arrest ruling was issued by a criminal court in the Izmir region where Brunson was being held. He has also been banned from leaving the country.

Brunson's detention had become a symbol of the problematic relationship between NATO allies Turkey and the US, and news of his release into house arrest boosted the Turkish lira, which gained almost one percent in value against the dollar.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Wednesday welcomed the decision to move Brunson to house arrest, but said it was "not enough".

Pompeo said "no credible evidence" had been presented against the pastor and called on Ankara to resolve the case in a "fair" way.

- New anti terror law -

Brunson still faces up to 35 years in jail if convicted on charges of carrying out activities on behalf of two groups Turkey deems terror organisations -- one led by the US-based Muslim preacher Fethullah Gulen who Ankara says was behind a 2016 failed coup, the other the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

His next hearing is due to be on October 12.

The pastor denies the charges and his defence team argues the case is built on questionable witness statements that should never have been brought to court.

According to state news agency Anadolu, the ruling came after Brunson's lawyer challenged the decision to keep him in prison on "health grounds".

But Halavurt said that this was not true and that there is nothing official or paperwork to prove that Brunson has health problems.

Brunson is one of tens of thousands of people detained on similar charges during the state of emergency declared by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the wake of the 2016 failed coup bid.

The measure ended on July 18. But the Turkish parliament on Wednesday passed a new "anti-terror" law that strengthens the authorities' powers in detaining suspects and imposing public order.

The new law, strongly criticised by activists as essentially replacing the state of emergency, allows authorities to control who can enter and exit an area for 15 days for reasons of security.

Suspects can be held without charge for 48 hours or up to four days if there are multiple offences. This period can be extended on two occasions under special circumstances.

- 'Disgrace': Trump -

On July 18, a court had again ordered Brunson to remain in prison, defying growing pressure from the US authorities for his release and causing dismay among supporters.

It was the third time his release had been refused this year.

US President Donald Trump had described the latest ruling to keep him in jail a "disgrace", calling on his Erdogan to help free him.

Philip Kosnett, the US charge d'affaires in Ankara, who attended all three hearings, said last week he did not believe "there is any indication that pastor Brunson is guilty of any sort of criminal or terrorist activity".

Prominent US lawyer Jay Sekulow, who has worked with the Brunson defence, welcomed the move on Twitter as a "critical first step that we believe will result in the freedom" of Brunson.

Turkish-US relations are already strained over Washington's refusal to extradite Gulen as well as American backing for a Kurdish militia in Syria which Turkey says is linked to the PKK.

Two Turkish employees from American missions in Turkey are also behind bars -- a US Istanbul consulate staffer charged with espionage and an employee at the US consulate in Adana charged with supporting the PKK.

Turkish-American NASA scientist Serkan Golge was also jailed for seven-and-a-half years for being a member of Gulen's movement earlier this year.

Last September, Erdogan suggested that Turkey could free Brunson if Washington handed over Gulen, who lives in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania -- an offer brushed off by Washington.

A senior US official said last week that suggestions by "very senior" figures in Turkey to link the cases had added to the tensions in the relationship.

THE NEWS: Macron under fire over response to security aide scandal

Macron under fire over response to security aide scandal
source: AFP

AFP/File / Ludovic MARIN French President Emmanuel Macron with his disgraced former top security aide Alexandre Benalla

France's opposition lashed out at Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday over his response to revelations that his top security aide roughed up protesters, accusing the president of badly mishandling the worst scandal since he took office.

After days of silence, Macron finally spoke out late Tuesday over the debacle surrounding disgraced ex-bodyguard Alexandre Benalla, who faces criminal charges after he was filmed scuffling with May Day protesters in Paris while wearing a police helmet.

"What happened on May 1 is terrible, serious, and for me it was a disappointment and a betrayal," Macron told lawmakers from his Republic on the Move (LREM) party.

"The only person responsible for this affair is me," he said, in an angry intervention that appeared to take aim at parliament's grilling of his top aides as well as press coverage of the affair.

"If they're looking for someone to hold responsible, he's right in front of you. They can come and get me."

Many politicians blasted Macron's apparent criticism of parliamentary interrogation of his staff, with far-left MP Alexis Corbiere accusing him of "swaggering" and Gerard Larcher of the rightwing Republicans describing the response as one of "amateurism and panic".


 AFP / Thomas SAMSON Patrick Strzoda, Emmanuel Macron's office director, at a parliamentary hearing on Tuesday


Le Monde newspaper, which broke the story by publishing videos of Benalla hitting one protester and wrestling another, said Macron had spoken "before a loyal audience, where there was no possibility of contradicting him".

It deplored Macron's attack on media coverage which the president said was proof the press "no longer looks for the truth" -- comments more often heard from US President Donald Trump than the centrist French leader.

Macron resumed his offensive against the media Wednesday evening during a visit to Bagneres-de-Bigorre in the Pyrenees.

"You have in recent days said a lot of nonsense about salaries, privileges," in the Benalla case, he told journalists.

"It was all fake," Macron said.

But lawmakers say serious unanswered questions remain about "Benallagate", and are increasingly calling for Macron to address the nation.

Benalla, 26, was not sacked or charged until the scandal broke last week -- despite senior officials knowing about the May Day incident -- amid reports he enjoyed perks unusual for someone of his rank.

A police search of Benalla's office at the Elysee Palace lasted several hours on Wednesday with the suspect present, according to the presidency.

- The 'end of innocence'? -

Socialist leader Olivier Faure said the scandal marked a turning point for the Macron presidency.

"It's the end of innocence," he said. "We can no longer look at Emmanuel Macron and his majority as if they haven't lied, betrayed and hidden the truth."

Government spokesman Benjamin Griveaux, promising "deep changes", said the administration would deal with lessons from the scandal in September after the summer break, "once it has been clearly established what went wrong".

But he ruled out any appearance by the president before the parliamentary inquiries.


AFP / Sabrina BLANCHARD Alexandre Benalla

Benalla was given a two-week suspension days after the incident and removed from organising the president's security during his trips.

But the alleged assault was not reported to prosecutors, sparking allegations of a cover-up.

It has also emerged that he continued to draw a salary during his supposedly unpaid suspension, and will have to have his salary docked now that he has left.

Macron's office director Patrick Strzoda told lawmakers Tuesday that he decided there were not enough elements to justify turning Benalla over to prosecutors, not least because no criminal complaint had been filed against him.


AFP/File / Naguib-Michel SIDHOM A screen shot from a video showing Alexandre Benalla wearing a police helmet, manhandling a protester in Paris in May


Macron's chief of staff Alexis Kohler was to appear before the Senate committee on Thursday.

The scandal comes 14 months after Macron was elected vowing to restore integrity to French politics, and polls suggest the 40-year-old's ratings -- already low -- have taken a further hit.

An Ipsos poll published Tuesday found that a record 60 percent reported an unfavourable opinion of Macron.

Benalla has been charged with assault and impersonating a police officer, while also illegally receiving police surveillance footage in a bid to claim his actions were justified.

Vincent Crase, an associate and security agent employed by the LREM who was also at the scene, has also been charged, as have three police officers.

THE NEWS: China's Xi says 'no winner' in any trade war

China's Xi says 'no winner' in any trade war
source: AFP

 AFP / GIANLUIGI GUERCIA Nobody wins in a trade war, China warns

China's President Xi Jinping on Wednesday said that there would be "no winner" in any global trade war, in a direct warning to US President Donald Trump who has threatened to slap levies on all Chinese imports.

"A trade war should be rejected because there will be no winner," Xi said at the opening of a BRICS summit of emerging economies in Johannesburg.

"Unilateralism and protectionism are mounting, dealing a severe blow to multilateralism and the multilateral trading regime," he said, without mentioning the United States by name.

"We are facing a choice between cooperation and confrontation, between opening up and closed-door policy and between mutual benefit and a beggar-thy-neighbour approach.

"The international community has again reached a new crossroads."

Leaders of the BRICS emerging economies -- Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa -- are holding an annual three-day summit with attention focused on the threat of a US-led global trade war.

US President Donald Trump has said he is ready to impose tariffs on all $500 billion of Chinese imports, complaining that China's trade surplus with the US is due to unfair currency manipulation.

THE NEWS: Archaeologists lead Western Wall check-up after stone fall

Archaeologists lead Western Wall check-up after stone fall
source: AFP

AFP / AHMAD GHARABLI Orthodox Jewish men observe the gap left in the Western Wall on July 25, 2018, in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem

A huge stone that fell from Jerusalem's Western Wall, barely missing a worshipper, was removed Wednesday as experts took the incident as a sign from above to examine the ancient structure's stability.

Two millennia after thousands of labourers had set it in place, the fallen stone was hoisted up by an unassuming crane operator named Yossi.

Roughly a metre high and wide and weighing approximately 400 kilogrammes (880 pounds), the stone fell onto a prayer platform on Monday and just missed a woman.

On Wednesday, the crane gently laid the stone down on two planks of wood at a nearby zoned-off clearing. Three smaller rocks that had broken off from the stone when it dislodged were also moved.

Neither professionals from the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) nor rabbis from the Western Wall administration could remember such an occurrence.

It took place at a less-visited part of the wall, where men and women are permitted to pray together contrary to Orthodox Jewish practice at the holy site's nearby main plaza.

Believers were offering interpretations of what they considered to be a divine sign, with theories ranging from discontent over recent parliamentary legislation to hints of imminent redemption.

"Nobody can comprehend divine reasoning, but we are commanded to be roused," ultra-Orthodox Jewish activist Shimshon Elboim said at the site.

The wall, located in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, is the holiest place at which Jews are allowed to pray.


 AFP / AHMAD GHARABLI A member of the Israeli security forces and an Orthodox Jewish man examine a stone that fell from the Western Wall before its removal on July 25, 2018


They revere it as the remains of a supporting wall of their biblical second temple, destroyed by the Romans in 70 AD.

There are millions of visits per year.

Immediately above it is the flashpoint shrine known to Jews as the Temple Mount, the holiest in Judaism, revered as the spot where the two biblical Jewish temples once stood.

To Muslims it is the Haram al-Sharif compound, the third-holiest in Islam after Mecca and Medina, and home to the Al-Aqsa mosque and the Dome of the Rock.

- 'Wake-up call' -

To Amit Reem, the Jerusalem district archaeologist for the IAA, the rare incident was "a wake-up call" to inspect the many antiquities and archaeological sites in Jerusalem's Old City.

To evaluate the wall's condition, the IAA was set to build scaffolding across it, with teams of professionals using radar, ultra-sound and lasers to examine "each and every stone", Reem said.

Experts would then be able to understand why the stone -- actually a portion of one of the wall's massive stone blocks -- broke off and offer solutions to prevent future occurences.

"We think that the reason is a natural reason -- perhaps water that infiltrated the stone, maybe roots of plants that grew into the stone," the archaeologist said.

The fact that such occurences are so rare was testimony to Herod's "genius construction method" according to Reem.

The Roman-era ruler had the walls constructed to expand the surface of the mount on which he built the lavish Jewish second temple, he said.

He used limestone quarried from what is currently northern Jerusalem, with masons meticulously hewing each block "with millimetric precision" to fit in snug rows, before being rolled to the construction site.

The stone blocks, weighing up to hundreds of tonnes each and up to four metres in depth, were laid without bonding materials.


AFP / AHMAD GHARABLI Israeli Antiquities Authority workers remove a stone that fell from the Western Wall two days earlier in the Old City of Jerusalem, on July 25, 2018

Experts are unsure how they were lifted into place, though perhaps by cranes or dirt ramps.

Each row of blocks was set back slightly from the preceding one, creating a subtle pyramid structure barely visible from the front, but which afforded stability.

Yossi Algrabli, owner of a crane company who came with his most trusted employee to lift the stone, lauded Herod's workmanship.

"You see the holiness here," he said while holding the remote control of the massive crane.

"Whenever I come here, my heart melts."

THE NEWS: EU judges offer no 'break' to Kit Kat trademark war

EU judges offer no 'break' to Kit Kat trademark war
source: AFP

AFP / JOHN THYS The European Court of Justice ordered the EU's intellectual property office to consider its trademark recognition of Nestle's iconic Kit Kat chocolate bar

The European Union's top court on Wednesday ordered the EU's intellectual property office to "reconsider" Kit Kat's bloc-wide trademark, prolonging Nestle's decade-long battle to claim exclusive rights over the chocolate bar's distinctive shape.

Nestle has been locked in a blockbuster legal war with US rival Mondelez, maker of Cadbury chocolate, over the four-fingered wafer biscuit which was first sold in 1935.

In a closely watched case, the European Court of Justice said the EU's intellectual property office must go back to the drawing board and revisit its 2006 to decision to grant Kit Kat an EU trade mark based on its shape.

But in a break for Nestle, the Luxembourg-based ECJ did not cancel the trade mark outright, as suggested by the court's top advisor in April, with the EU intellectual property office now tasked to re-visit the basis for awarding the trademark.

"Today no one has won, no one has lost. Nestle has saved time because its brand remains registered for the time being," a court source told AFP.

"But Nestle did lose a battle as it would have preferred a full confirmation of the EU Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO) decision," the source added.

The EU's intellectual property office allowed Nestle in 2006 to trademark what the court calls the "three-dimensional shape of the 'Kit Kat 4 fingers' product".

This trademark has helped keep copycat candy-bars out of grocery stores, and punished the development of similar treats owned by Mondelez, including the Norwegian favourite Kvikk Lunsj, a Kit Kat doppelganger.

The EU's intellectual property office "must reconsider whether the three-dimensional shape of a '4 Finger KitKat' can be retained as an EU trade mark," a court statement said.

At issue is that the food giant specifically failed to provide evidence that the Kit Kat shape was well enough known in Belgium, Ireland, Greece and Portugal.

A lower EU court "was right to annul the EU's intellectual property office decision, in which it concluded that distinctive character had been acquired" without including those countries in the case, a statement said.

The trade mark criteria "must be shown throughout the EU," it said.

Nestle has already lost a legal bid in Britain -- currently an EU member state but set to leave next year -- to trademark the Kit Kat shape.

"Today’s judgment is not final," a Nestle spokesperson said in an email.

"We think the evidence proves that the familiar shape of our iconic four finger KitKat is distinctive enough to be registered as an EU Trademark," Nestle added.

THE NEWS: Greek fires a tragedy, but not a suprise


Greek fires a tragedy, but not a suprise
source: AFP

 AFP / ANGELOS TZORTZINIS Experts sayd it was a catastrophe waiting to happen

Homes built haphazardly among the pines, no evacuation plan, poorly organised emergency services hit hard by austerity: the deadly wildfires around Athens this week may have shocked Greece but few environment experts are surprised.

At least 79 people perished in the infernos that broke out on Monday evening, and questions are being asked of the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras over how it could let the tragedy occur.

For forestry expert Nikos Bokaris, the region of Mati on Greece's Attic coast where one of the blazes began had all the ingredients for a disaster of this scale.

He said the congested nature of buildings set among pine trees, along with poor access to some properties, made a devastating forest fire nearly inevitable.

"The pines were old, very tall and wide, all the necessary fuel for the flames to swell and spread. That creates a huge thermal mass," Bokaris told AFP.

Greece has been experiencing a hot summer, and wind gusts of up to 100 kilometres-per-hour helped the fire swarm through the bone-dry forest at devastating speed.

Tsipras said the weather conditions had worsened the blaze, something which geographer and natural disaster expert Kostis Kalambokidis tentatively agreed with.

"We know full well that climate change is creating more and more extreme weather conditions," he said.

But weather, it bears pointing out, can be forecast.

"We see the same thing in California," said Kalambokidis.

"Even in countries with huge means to fight against fires, the threat posed by creating urban areas in the middle of the forest is enormous."

While experts concede that natural disasters such as fires are exacerbated by climate change, the Greek premier's explanation doesn't deal with one glaring omission:


AFP / ANGELOS TZORTZINIS Huge pines and overgrown gardens helped the fire spread


"Prevention," according to environment researcher Christina Theohari. "We're tired of saying it, of repeating it and seeing nothing change."

She said basic planning such as a well-advertised evacuation plan would have minimised the carnage at Mati.

Several of those who perished were caught in traffic jams as terrified residents and holidaymakers tried to flee the flames.

- Fire service funding cut -

Other factors played a part: witnesses spoke of out-of-service fire hydrants, overgrown gardens and courtyards as well as untrimmed trees touching rooftops all helped the fire spread.

Bokaris said that austerity measures imposed after the 2010 Greek debt crisis, which nearly toppled the economy, led to the neglect of the country's emergency services.

"The fire didn't wait for the crisis to start burning, but certainly a drying up of public service funding didn't help," he said.

Official statistics bear this out: Greece's fire service had an annual budget of 354 million euros ($414 million) last year, compared with 452 million in 2009.

Poor public awareness of the fire risk and a lack of local training likely compounded the damage in Mati -- one survivor of the fire said he "never imagined" that the flames could reach the village.


AFP / ANGELOS TZORTZINIS Some say the authorities left it too late to evacuate

For Kostas Synolaki, a specialist in natural disasters, "the alert (to evacuate) should have been given from the moment the fire started" to allow firefighters to concentrate efforts.

This would have allowed residents to gain safe distance while freeing up the road network for firefighting teams.

Synolaki said technology could help, especially the study of computer models that monitor and predict how fires may spread.

After devastating blazes killed 77 people on the southern island of Evia in 2007, Greece embarked on updating its firefighting response, which was judged to be too reliant on aerial relief to the detriment of ground responders.

"Ultimately, I don't know who did or didn't do what, but judging by the result, it didn't work," said Bokaris.

THE NEWS: Australian media giants Fairfax and Nine to merge

Australian media giants Fairfax and Nine to merge
source: AFP

 AFP/File / GREG WOOD Fairfax Media and Nine Entertainment have announced plans to merge - the new media giant will be called Nine, with Fairfax ceasing to exist, drawing the curtain on a venerable brand that has been an Australian staple for more than 170 years

Publisher Fairfax Media and Nine Entertainment on Thursday announced plans to merge, creating an integrated Australian media giant across television, online video streaming, print, and digital.

Under the deal, Nine will effectively be the dominant partner, with its shareholders owning 51.1 percent of the combined entity and Fairfax shareholders owning the rest.

The new company will include Nine's free-to-air television network, Fairfax's radio interests and mastheads -- including The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age in Melbourne -- and a suite of digital assets.

It will be called Nine, with Fairfax ceasing to exist, drawing the curtain on a venerable brand that has been an Australian staple for more than 170 years.

It is the first deal under a controversial new media ownership law passed in Australia last September which removed restrictions -- in place to protect diversity -- that prevented companies from owning newspapers, radio and television stations in the same city.

Major players in the market had long pressed for change, arguing the rules were outdated and did not account for digital media platforms and new publishers like Google and Facebook and video streaming giants such as Netflix.


AFP/File / PETER PARKS Like its international peers, Australia's Fairfax Media has had its profits squeezed as advertising and circulation slump in the digital age


Like its international peers, Fairfax has had its profits squeezed as advertising and circulation slump in the digital age, and it has been slashing staff and costs in recent years.

Its board unanimously recommended the proposal, which is expected to deliver significant savings for both companies.

"The Fairfax board has carefully considered the proposed transaction and believes it represents compelling value for Fairfax shareholders," Fairfax chairman Nick Falloon said.

A merger "unlocks the potential for significant value creation by combining the content, brands, audience reach and data across the respective businesses", both companies said in a statement.

"Both Nine and Fairfax have played an important role in shaping the Australian media landscape over many years," said Nine chairman Peter Costello.

"The combination of our businesses and our people best positions us to deliver new opportunities and innovations for our shareholders, staff and all Australians in the years ahead."

- 'I want to cry' -

Michael McCarthy, chief strategist at CMC Markets, said it was more like a takeover than a merger.

"Although the parties are terming it a 'merger', the terms could be interpreted as a takeover given the premium Nine will pay for control of Fairfax," he said.

Under the proposal, Fairfax shareholders will receive 0.3627 Nine shares and 2.5 cents for each share they hold, representing a 21.9 percent premium to Fairfax's closing share price of 77 cents on Wednesday.

The deal is expected to be completed before the end of the year, subject to approvals, with current Nine chief Hugh Marks heading up the company with three Fairfax directors joining the board.

News of the deal came as a shock to Australian journalists, many of whom took to Twitter to express their concern.

"Didn't see this coming. Huge changes for the Australian media landscape," said senior Fairfax reporter Kate McClymont, while Australian Broadcasting Corporation presenter Virginia Trioli tweeted: "They gave away the name "Fairfax"? I want to cry."

Another recent media deal in Australia saw US broadcasting giant CBS become the new owner of the country's third-largest commercial television network, Ten, late last year.

That deal included Channel Ten, digital channel One, digital platform Tenplay, and digital channel Eleven -- of which CBS already owned a 33 percent stake.

CBS has said it also plans to launch its digital on-demand service CBS All Access in the Australian market.

THE NEWS: Liquid water lake discovered on Mars

Liquid water lake discovered on Mars
source: AFP

ESA/AFP / Handout A photograph obtained from the European Space Agency shows an artist's impression of Mars Express over a background based on an actual image of the Red Planet taken by the spacecraft

A massive underground lake has been detected for the first time on Mars, raising hopes that more water -- and maybe even life -- exists there, international astronomers said Wednesday.

Located under a layer of Martian ice, the lake is about 12 miles (20 kilometers) wide, said the report in the US journal Science.

It is the largest body of liquid water ever found on the Red Planet.

"Water is there. We have no more doubt," co-author Enrico Flamini, the Italian space agency's Mars Express mission manager, told a press conference.

Mars is now cold, barren and dry but it used to be warm and wet. It was home to plenty of liquid water and lakes at least 3.6 billion years ago.

Scientists are eager to find signs of contemporary water, because such discoveries are key to unlocking the mystery of whether life ever formed on Mars in its ancient past, and whether it might persist today.

"This is a stunning result that suggests water on Mars is not a temporary trickle like previous discoveries but a persistent body of water that provides the conditions for life for extended periods of time," said Alan Duffy, an associate professor at Swinburne University in Australia, who was not involved in the study.

Being able to access water sources could also help humans survive on a future crewed mission to Earth's neighboring planet, with NASA aiming to send explorers in the 2030s.

This particular lake, however, would be neither swimmable nor drinkable, and it lies almost a mile deep (1.6 kilometers) beneath the icy surface in a harsh and frigid environment.


 ESA/AFP / Handout An image released by the European Space Agency shows radar data collected by the Mars Express orbiter pointing to liquid water buried under layers of ice and dust in the south polar region of Mars


Whether microbial forms of life could lie within is a matter of debate.

Some experts are skeptical of the possibility since the lake is so cold and briny, mixed with a heavy dose of dissolved Martian salts and minerals.

The temperature is likely below the freezing point of pure water, but the lake can remain liquid due to the presence of magnesium, calcium and sodium.

"This is a discovery of extraordinary significance, and is bound to heighten speculation about the presence of living organisms on the Red Planet," said Fred Watson of the Australian Astronomical Observatory.

"Caution needs to be exercised, however, as the concentration of salts needed to keep the water liquid could be fatal for any microbial life similar to Earth's," added Watson, who was not involved in the research.

- Radar detection -


 NASA/AFP/File / Handout A photograph from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter of Gorgonum Basin within the Red Planet's Terra Sirenum region, which scientists think once had a large lake

The discovery was made using a radar instrument on board the European Space Agency's Mars Express orbiter, which launched in 2003.

The tool is called the Mars Advanced Radar for Subsurface and Ionosphere Sounding (MARSIS), and was designed to find subsurface water by sending radar pulses that penetrate the surface and ice caps.

MARSIS "then measures how the radio waves propagate and reflect back to the spacecraft," said the study.

These reflections "provide scientists with information about what lies beneath the surface."

A team of researchers led by Roberto Orosei of the National Institute for Astrophysics in Bologna, Italy, surveyed a region called Planum Australe, located in the southern ice cap of Mars, from May 2012 until December 2015.

A total of 29 sets of radar samplings showed a "very sharp change in its associated radar signal," allowing scientists to map the outlines of the lake.

"The radar profile of this area is similar to that of lakes of liquid water found beneath the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets on Earth, suggesting that there is a subglacial lake at this location on Mars," said the report.

Researchers said they are not sure how far down it goes, but that it may be around three feet (one meter) deep.

- Confirmation needed -


AFP / William ICKES A fact file about the huge liquid-water lake discovered under the surface of Mars


"This is the first body of water it has detected, so it is very exciting," David Stillman, a senior research scientist in the Department of Space Studies at Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, Texas, told AFP in an email.

However, Stillman, who was not involved in the research, said another spacecraft, or other instruments, need to be able to confirm the discovery.

He noted that a higher-frequency radar instrument made by the Italian space agency SHARAD, on board the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter launched in 2005, has been unable to detect subsurface water.

"It is strange that SHARAD cannot confirm this discovery. In fact, SHARAD cannot penetrate through the ice here and no one understands why it can't," Stillman said.

"This suggests that something strange is going on here. Thus, I'm skeptical about this discovery."

But researchers are excited about the potential for future finds, because if liquid water could be found at Mars's south pole, it might be elsewhere too.

"There's nothing special about this location other than the MARSIS radar on the Mars Express spacecraft is most sensitive to that region," said Duffy.

"There are likely similar water deposits below the ground all across Mars."

Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield said on Twitter that the discovery gets to one of the fundamental questions about existence.

"On Earth, where there's water, there's life. Could be we're not alone."

THE NEWS: Trump postpones Putin visit as Pompeo defends US stance on Russia


Trump postpones Putin visit as Pompeo defends US stance on Russia
source: AFP

AFP / Andrew CABALLERO-REYNOLDS US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said President Donald Trump has taken a firm stance against Russia

US President Donald Trump on Wednesday delayed a second summit with Russia's Vladimir Putin, while his top diplomat insisted there was no let up against Moscow following the two leaders' controversial meeting in Helsinki.

Facing mounting calls to release the details of Trump's closed-door talks with Putin, the US administration stepped up its damage control operation, with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo going before Congress to defend his boss.

The US president himself, under fire for plans to invite Putin to the White House in the fall, opted to delay until 2019 -- pushing the talks back until Robert Mueller has completed his probe into Moscow's election interference, according to National Security Advisor John Bolton.

And Pompeo went on the offensive to stress steps Trump has taken to show resolve against the Kremlin, stepping into a white-hot spotlight during a three-hour grilling by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

The top diplomat said he would back bipartisan efforts in Congress to slap new sanctions on Russia in response to their meddling in the 2016 US election, and as a deterrent against meddling this year or in 2020.

"I personally made clear to the Russians that there will be severe consequences for interference in our democratic processes," he said in his opening statement.

But Pompeo remained frustratingly vague about perhaps the biggest question of all: what transpired in the private meeting between Trump and Putin?

Pompeo reaffirmed as official policy that the United States "rejects Russia's attempted annexation of Crimea" -- an issue on which Trump had appeared to waver.

And with the US president accused -- including by members of his own Republican Party -- of casting doubt on the alliance's founding principle of mutual defense, Pompeo sought to smooth ruffled feathers.

"NATO will remain an indispensable pillar of American national security," he said. "We know weakness provokes our enemies, but strength and cohesion protect us."

On the North Korea front, Pompeo also struck a resolute tone, warning that Washington will not let nuclear negotiations drag on with no success, amid criticism that Trump's June Singapore summit with Kim Jong Un has so far yielded few results.

"We are engaged in patient diplomacy, but we will not let this drag out to no end," Pompeo said.

But while he insisted that North Koreans "understand precisely our definition of denuclearization and have agreed to denuclearize," Pompeo also confirmed in the hearing that Pyongyang continues to make nuclear fissile material.

And he said he believes North Korea remains the most urgent national security threat to the United States.

- 'Submissive and deferential' -

Lawmakers -- and America's allies around the world -- have been eager to learn the details of Trump's one-on-one July 16 meeting with Putin, including whether Trump made any secret promises to Putin or as-yet-undisclosed verbal agreements.

Republicans and Democrats alike have described Trump's performance as a betrayal of US interests and too conciliatory towards the Russian leader.


AFP/File / Yuri KADOBNOV US President Donald Trump (L) and Russia's President Vladimir Putin shake hands before a joint press conference after their summit in Helsinki


The hearing quickly turned testy as lawmakers sought details on what exactly transpired in the Finnish capital.

"I don't think that's unfair to know," Senator Robert Menendez, the panel's top Democrat, told Pompeo. "Did he tell Putin that he'll release or ultimately relax sanctions?"

"Senator, what you need to conduct your role, your appropriate role, I will provide you today," a steely Pompeo shot back, without answering the question.

While Pompeo gave no hints of any secret promises or deals between the presidents, the US State Department has said three "modest proposals" emerged from the summit: a high-level business leaders' working group; a council of US and Russian political experts, diplomats and military officials; and discussions between the two presidents' national security staffs.

As Democrats launched broadsides against Trump and Pompeo's performance, Pompeo responded in kind, accusing Menendez for example of making a "political soliloquy" at the administration's expense.

But even Republican ranks remained unconvinced by Pompeo's reassurances.

Republican Senator Bob Corker, the committee's chairman, delivered withering criticism, accusing Trump of appearing "submissive and deferential" standing next to Putin in Helsinki and saying "it's the president's actions that create tremendous distrust in our nation, among our allies."

Congress has been rattled by Trump's Helsinki showing, particularly when he appeared to accept Putin's denial that Russia interfered in the 2016 election -- dismissing US intelligence conclusions.

The intensity of the criticism prompted days of conflicting statements from the White House, and ultimately an extraordinary U-turn from Trump who said he misspoke and did, in fact, believe Russia meddled in the election.

THE NEWS: Japan executes last sarin attack cult members on death row

Japan executes last sarin attack cult members on death row
source: AFP

AFP/File / Toshifumi KITAMURA The Aum Shinrikyo cult carried out a deadly 1995 sarin attack on the Tokyo subway, killing 13 people

Japan on Thursday executed the last members of the cult sentenced to death for their role in the fatal 1995 sarin attack on the Tokyo subway, weeks after the group's leader was hanged.

The execution of the six Aum Shinrikyo members, years after they were put on death row, draws a line under the horrific attack which shocked the world and prompted national soul-searching over the group and its crimes.

"Today the state executed six people," Justice Minister Yoko Kamikawa said at a press conference.

"I ordered the executions after extremely careful consideration."


AFP / The 1995 Aum cult Tokyo gas attack


In all, 13 Aum members, including the cult's near-blind leader Shoko Asahara, were on death row for crimes including the 1995 sarin attack on Tokyo's subway.

Local media said authorities wanted the death sentences against the Aum members to be carried out before Japan's emperor abdicates next year, when a new imperial era will begin.

Since the Aum's crimes were committed during the Heisei era of the current emperor, authorities wanted the executions complete before the new era begins, local media reported.

Some of the Aum's victims said it would be hard to simply move on.

"With the 13 members executed, perhaps the case is closed from the point of view of criminal justice," Shizue Takahashi, whose husband was killed in the subway attack, told reporters.

"(But) the damage done to the victims continues even after the executions. I find it very hard."

The Aum gained international infamy with the 1995 sarin attack on the Tokyo subway during rush hour, which killed 13 people and injured thousands more.

Members of the group released the chemical in liquid form at five points throughout the subway network, and soon commuters began struggling to breathe, staggering from trains with their eyes watering.

Others keeled over, foaming at the mouth, with blood streaming from their noses.

The attack plunged the capital into chaos, and prompted a crackdown on the cult's headquarters in the foothills of Mount Fuji, where authorities discovered a plant capable of producing enough sarin to kill millions.

Aum members, including those executed this month, were also convicted of crimes including an additional sarin attack in the town of Matsumoto the year before the Tokyo attack, and the murder of an anti-cult lawyer and his family. Many of the group's members remain in prison.

- 'Heinous crimes' -

The 13 cult members spent years on death row as prosecutors investigated their crimes, and some activists opposed the executions, fearing the members would be elevated to the status of martyrs.

But victims of the group's attacks welcomed the execution of Asahara and six other Aum members earlier this month.

One man who was injured in the subway sarin attack told AFP he felt "the world had become slightly brighter".

Japan is one of the few developed nations to retain the death penalty, and public support for it remains high despite international criticism, including from rights group Amnesty International.

"The taking of a life in retribution is never the answer," the group's East Asia researcher Hiroka Shoji said in a statement Thursday.

But Kamikawa said it was "not appropriate under the current circumstances to abolish the death penalty."

"I think we can't avoid capital punishment for those who have committed extremely heinous crimes," she said.


AFP/File / Junji KUROKAWA Commuters were stricken when the Aum sect released sarin at five points through the subway network

Asahara developed his cult in the 1980s, and at one point the wild-haired "guru" had at least 10,000 followers, including the doctors and engineers who produced the group's chemical agents.

Despite the crackdown on the Aum, it was never formally banned.

It officially disowned Asahara in 2000 and renamed itself Aleph, but experts say the former guru retained a strong influence before his execution.

Asahara's execution set off a battle among his surviving family members for his remains, with his wife and several children who are in successor cults to the Aum seeking to obtain them.

He was cremated days after his execution, and his youngest daughter, who has broken with the Aum's successor cults, said she would receive his ashes, which will reportedly be scattered at sea to avoid creating a pilgrimage site for Asahara's followers.

THE NEWS: China launches nationwide vaccine sector inspection after scandal

China launches nationwide vaccine sector inspection after scandal
source: AFP

AFP / - A fraud case involving a vaccine manufacturer has ignited public outrage in China

China's drug regulator said it has launched a nationwide inspection of vaccine production as authorities step up the response to a fraud case that has re-ignited public fears over the safety of the country's medicines.

The State Drug Administration (SDA) said in an announcement issued late Wednesday that it had dispatched inspection teams "to thoroughly investigate the whole process and entire chain of vaccine production of all vaccine producers".

The move comes as authorities rush to bolster public confidence in the country's vaccines, which have been hit by repeated questions about safety and reliability over the years.

China's latest product-safety scare emerged more than a week ago with news that major pharmaceutical manufacturer Changchun Changsheng Biotechnology had fabricated records and was ordered to cease production of rabies vaccines.

The case leapt to the top of the national agenda last weekend as parents and other consumers vented their anger and frustration at manufacturers and the regulators tasked with supervising them.

The government said the problematic rabies vaccine did not leave Changsheng's factory and was not put up for sale.

But anger and fear over the failures were quickly exacerbated by additional revelations: the company's vaccine for diphtheria, pertussis and tetanus (DPT) had also failed to meet quality standards, with 250,000 doses sold to Shandong province last year.

Further damaging public confidence, authorities in the northern province of Hebei announced Monday that nearly 150,000 people had received sub-standard DPT vaccines made by another firm, Wuhan Institute of Biological Products.

- 'Vile' actions -

The problems have rekindled already deep fears over domestically made medicines and driven worried parents online to swap information on obtaining imported vaccines, with some vowing not to give their children Chinese-made drugs.

The depth of public outrage revealed on social media appeared to have caught authorities off-guard, and national leaders have scrambled in recent days to vow a thorough safety clean-up of the pharmaceutical sector.

Police in the northeastern city of Changchun announced on Tuesday that 15 people, including the company's chairwoman, had been arrested on "suspicion of criminal offences".

President Xi Jinping -- on a trip to Africa -- weighed in earlier this week by calling the vaccine company's actions "vile in nature and shocking", according to state media.

In a further demonstration of government concern, China's cabinet -- the State Council -- sent a team to Changsheng's home province of Jilin to investigate the case with a mandate "to resolutely guard the safety bottom line and maintain social security and stability", the official Xinhua news service said Thursday.

China is regularly hit by scandals involving sub-par or toxic food, drugs and other products, despite repeated promises by the ruling Communist Party to address the problem.

THE NEWS: Ledecky eases into US championships with 800m freestyle win

Ledecky eases into US championships with 800m freestyle win
source: AFP

GETTY/AFP / Harry How Katie Ledecky swims to a first place finish in the 800m freestyle final on day one of the US National Swimming Championships, at the Woollett Aquatics Center in Irvine, California, on July 25, 2018

World record-holder Katie Ledecky cruised to victory in the 800m freestyle at the US swimming championships on Wednesday to lock down a berth for the Pan Pacific Championships next month.

Ledecky, owner of the top 10 times ever posted in the event, was under world record pace through 350 meters, but settled for a comfortable victory in 8min 11.98 sec -- well outside the world record of 4:08.79 she set at the Rio Olympics in 2016.

"Usually it takes me a few races to get into these meets, so (I) knew that was going to be the case probably," said Ledecky, whose four victories in Rio took her tally of Olympic gold medals to five.

The 21-year-old American was confident she would find more speed before the Pan Pacs in Tokyo August 9-14.

"I felt pretty smooth throughout," she said. "I never really was able to change gears. I'll get back to work and find ways to be better in a couple of weeks."

While Ledecky was easing into the meet -- a qualifier not only for Pan Pacs but also for next year's world championships in South Korea -- Hali Flickinger capped a career day with a victory in the 200m butterfly.


GETTY/AFP / Harry How Justin Wright celebrates victory in the 200m butterfly final on day one of the US National Swimming Championships, at the Woollett Aquatics Center in Irvine, California, on July 25, 2018


Flickinger, 24, sliced almost a full second of her lifetime best in the heats with a time of 2:05.87.

She broke the US Open record of 2:05.96 set by Mary T. Meagher in 1981 in becoming the third-fastest US woman ever.

She couldn't quite reproduce that in the final, but she held on to win in 2:06.14, with Katie Drabot second in 2:07.18 and Regan Smith third in 2:07.42.

"I definitely think it is a step in the right direction," Flickinger said. "I definitely know there's more in the tank. That just showed me that it's going to come."

Blake Pieroni, 22, stormed home to beat 2012 Olympic champion Nathan Adrian in the 100m freestyle in 48.08sec.

Adrian, who also owns four Olympic relay golds, was philosophical.

"In a race like that you're just racing for places," said Adrian, who was second in 48.25sec and like Ledecky thought he'd find more speed heading into Tokyo.

"Usually I do get a little faster with that extra two weeks of rest," he said.

Townley Haas was third in 48.30 and Zachary Apple fourth in 48.34. Caeleb Dressel, who won the 100m free as part of his seven-gold haul at the world championships in Budapest last year, finished sixth in 48.50.

He was entered in seven more events this week, so still had plenty of chances to make the Pan Pacs, where he could yet secure a 100m free berth at the 2019 worlds.

- Not Dressel's best -

Adrian said Dressel, who inked his first sponsorship deal with Speedo last week, was adjusting to his departure from the US collegiate amateur ranks at the right time, with the 2020 Tokyo Olympics still two years away.

"It's certainly not the best that we've seen from Caeleb (but) he's going to be down to 47-low as early as next year," Adrian said.

World and Olympic champion Simone Manuel notched a dominant victory in the women's 100m free in 52.54, with Mallory Comerford’s second in 53.09 and Margo Geer third in 53.44.

Justin Wright surged from seventh place at the halfway stage -- fifth at the final turn -- to win the men's 200m fly in 1:54.63.

Zach Harting was second in 1:55.11 and 16-year-old Gianluca Urlando and Jack Conger tied for third in 1:55.21.

Jordan Wilimovsky, already headed to Pan Pacs in open water, won the men's 1,500m free in 14:48.89 - fifth fastest in the world this year.

THE NEWS: IS leaves Syria Druze reeling from heaviest losses of war

IS leaves Syria Druze reeling from heaviest losses of war

source: AFP

 SANA/AFP / Handout A member of the Syrian security forces walks past a truck damaged in a suicide attack claimed by the Islamic State group in the southern city of Sweida on July 25, 2018

The death toll in coordinated Islamic State group attacks in Syria's Sweida neared 250 on Thursday, the Druze-majority province's heaviest loss of life of the seven-year civil war.

Sweida, which is mainly government-held, had been largely insulated from the conflict raging in the rest of the country since 2011.

But Wednesday's onslaught shattered the relative calm and showed that IS retains the ability to mount deadly attacks against civilians, despite being ousted from their last remaining urban pockets in recent months.

Four suicide bombers struck the city of Sweida, while other IS fighters attacked villages to its north and east with guns and explosives.

The death toll reached 246 on Thursday, 135 of them civilians, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group.

The others killed were pro-government fighters or residents who had taken up arms to defend their villages.

"The toll keeps rising as civilians who were wounded are dying and people who were unaccounted for are found dead," Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.

State television broadcast footage of the funeral processions in Sweida, showing men in the traditional white caps of the Druze minority exchanging condolences.


 AFP / AFP Map of Syria locating Sweida


Men carried caskets draped in the two-star government flag and pictures of those killed against a backdrop of the rainbow colours that represent the Druze community.

At least 56 jihadists died carrying out the assault.

- IS regroups -

IS claimed responsibility in a series of statements on its propaganda channels on Wednesday.

It posted gruesome photographs showing jihadists beheading at least four men it said were government fighters it had captured in Sweida.

The assault came after the jihadists suffered a series of defeats that saw them ousted from the last urban pockets of the sprawling cross-border "caliphate" they proclaimed in Iraq and Syria in 2014.

In May, the last IS fighters in Yarmuk refugee camp in the southern outskirts of Damascus were bused out with their relatives to desert territory still held by the group.

News websites in Sweida alleged that some of the jihadists who took part in Wednesday's attack had been given safe passage out of Yarmuk.

They posted images that purported to show IS fighters killed in the assault with identification cards showing they were from Yarmuk.

Zeina, a resident of the tiny village of Al-Matuna, said her family woke up to the sound of gunfire and grenade blasts at around 5:30 am (0230 GMT) on Wednesday.

"My relative shot back at one of the fighters outside our home and we heard him scream: 'The infidels have killed me'," she told AFP.

Her cousin and his wife were both killed.

"The villages that were attacked were on edge last night, and all the men were on high alert," Zeina, 32, said on Thursday.


AFP / DELIL SOULEIMAN An Islamic State group flag is taken down in the Syrian town of Tabqa on April 30, 2017, one of a spate of urban defeats for the jihadists

State news agency SANA said dozens were killed in the assault but did not give a specific toll.

It said calm returned to Sweida late on Wednesday after government forces and armed villagers surrounded the IS fighters and killed them.

The assault drew condemnation from the United Nations as well as government allies Russia and Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah.

"We condemn this disgraceful crime, its perpetrators, and anyone who stands behind it and the takfiri (extremist Muslim) ideology that these terrorist groups adopt," Hezbollah said in a statement on Thursday.

UN humanitarian coordinator in Syria Ali al-Zaatari condemned the "terrorist bombing in Sweida city", saying all civilians should be protected.

Syria's Druze minority makes up around three percent of the population. They are regarded as heretics by the Sunni Muslim extremists of IS.

THE NEWS: Concerns linger in Europe after US-EU trade truce

Concerns linger in Europe after US-EU trade truce
source: AFP

AFP / SAUL LOEB Trump and Juncker announced a deal to defuse a US-EU trade row

European capitals on Thursday welcomed the trade truce announced by the EU and US but doubts lingered over its feasibility and the changing moods of President Donald Trump.

Trump and European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker on Wednesday announced a plan to defuse a lingering trade row, that in effect saw Washington back off a threat of auto tariffs against Europe, at least for now.

Germany unsurprisingly hailed the decision, given their world dominating auto industry was the first in line to be punished by Trump's protectionist offensive.

But France quickly spoke out in anger, with Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire demanding "clarifications" over the agreed measures.

Critics of the agreement were especially miffed that existing steel and aluminium tariffs will remain in place despite the White House meeting.

"A good business discussion can only be conducted on a clear basis and cannot be conducted under pressure," said Le Maire.

These comments contrasted greatly with comments out of Berlin, where the spokesman for Chancelor Angela Merkel welcomed the "constructive" meeting.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte also welcomed the "positive outcome of the conversation."

- Details still vague -

The details of the deal in Washington remained vague, with a statement mentioning that the transatlantic allies would "launch a new phase" in the relationship.

The would prioritise "to work together towards zero tariffs, zero non-tariff barriers, and zero subsidies on non-auto industrial goods," a statement said.

In addition, the EU has made a commitment to buy US soybeans and natural gas, though how the EU could deliver that pledge remained unclear.

"Did Juncker make a commitment to US on market access to the US on soybeans? That would be very worrisome, that would be rewarding Trump threats on tariffs," said Rem Korteweg, head of the Europe in the World unit at think-tank Clingendael.

France's Le Maire singled out this pledge as especially problematic, given deep concerns over the GMO's in US soybean production that falls foul of EU norms.

France will insist that agricultural goods "remain outside the scope of the discussions" ensuring that "Europe will not compromise with its standards," he said.

"These possible negotiations will not concern agricultural goods, there may be some reference to soybeans," an EU official said on condition of anonymity, adding that the increased imports were already reflected on the market.

- WTO reform pledge -

The condition for the deal was that Trump hold off on slapping tariffs on auto imports.

Trump had previously ordered the Department of Commerce to look into charging border taxes of up to 25 percent on vehicles from the EU and it was yet unknown if the US would close the process.

Trump also won a commitment to work together to reform the World Trade Organization to address some of his complaints about China on theft of US technology, the behaviour of state-owned enterprises, and overcapacity in steel.

He has long complained that the WTO has been unfair to the United States, despite the fact the US has won most of the disputes against China and others.

The US and EU account for about $1 trillion in transatlantic trade, and tensions spiked leading up to Wednesday's high-stakes talks.

EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom, who accompanied Juncker, hailed the agreement and said on Twitter that she "will be working hard to take this work forward the coming months."

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