MITRA MANDAL GLOBAL NEWS

TODAY'S TOP STORIES - April 3, 2017

Authentic news,No fake news.


By David Gibbs, AlterNet
Noam Chomsky discussed Trump, Russia, history and the future at the University of Arizona. READ MORE»


By Alfred W. McCoy, Tom Dispatch
Around the world, a new generation of nationalist leaders have suddenly emerged from the margins to win power. READ MORE»


By Erin Keane, Salon
Unpaid labor and a vague title never looked so glam! Here are 5 tips for blazing a White House trail of your own. READ MORE»


By Matt Gertz, Media Matters
The reason O’Reilly has been untouchable is simple: He makes Fox News a lot of money. READ MORE»


By Melissa Kravitz, AlterNet
The junk food giant said it would cut a fifth of the calories in their drinks by 2025. READ MORE»


By Bill Scheft, Salon
Got whiplash from the rapid news cycle? Find yourself asking "who?" Here's the deep dirt on this week's newsmaker! READ MORE»


By Arwa Mahdawi, The Guardian
Has capitalism turned feminism into a meaningless lifestyle choice we can all buy our way into? READ MORE»


By Anis Shivani, AlterNet
The pernicious legacy of Clinton's 1996 immigration reform—and how progressives can begin to fight back. READ MORE»


By David Ferguson, Raw Story
"A lot of people don’t want to talk about" impeaching Trump—but she does. READ MORE»


By Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!
Like Medicare, only it would have no copayments, no deductibles for covered services, no participation by the private health insurance industry. READ MORE»


By William Astore, Bracing Views
As America’s designs are frustrated in the Middle East, generals cast about for new countries to blame―and to attack. READ MORE»


By Thom Hartmann, AlterNet
If the media really wants to fight Trump, they can start by reporting on climate change and inequality.  READ MORE»


By Kate Raworth, Chelsea Green Publishing
As long as GDP growth is the primary economic goal, achieving prosperity for all within the means of what the Earth can provide simply isn't possible. READ MORE»


By Himanshu Goenka, International Business Times
Can you say "terpene synthase gene"? READ MORE»

South Korea completes environmental assessment for THAAD

Authentic news,No fake news.



Steps toward the deployment of THAAD, the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system, are being taken in South Korea. File Photo courtesy of Missile Defense Agency/UPI
April 3 (UPI) -- South Korea has completed an assessment of the environmental impact of a U.S. missile defense system.
Seoul's military and environmental authorities finished the inspection Friday in Seongju, North Gyeongsang Province, where THAAD would be deployed at a golf course that belongs to the conglomerate Lotte, News 1 reported.
The inspection was met with some resistance on Wednesday, when local residents blocked a road being used to transport a large truck carrying equipment for environmental testing.
The environmental ministry eventually carried out the evaluation, and the military intends to move forward with THAAD deployment per an agreement, signed after Feb. 28, with the U.S. military in Korea.
South Korea authorities now say the facility construction work for THAAD deployment could begin in early April, although a U.S. military official in Seoul told News 1 not all the equipment for THAAD has been deployed to the peninsula.
Authorities on both sides remain sensitive to key dates, including South Korea's election day on May 9, as they move forward with deployment.
THAAD has remained a thorny issue between China and South Korea and between China and the United States.
Beijing may have sanctioned South Korea business activities in China and blocked Chinese tourism to South Korea in response to the deployment.
A South Korean diplomatic official told Yonhap Seoul has delivered a message to Washington, stating its position on Chinese economic retaliation against Seoul.
The message is being delivered ahead of U.S. President Donald Trump's first summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping in the United States.
The official said Chinese retaliation unfairly targets South Korea, and that the United States is aware of measures Beijing has taken against the U.S. ally.
China continues to curb Chinese tourism to South Korea, according to Busan Port Authority.
Chinese cruise ships once headed for the South Korean port city have canceled more than 50 trips, according to Yonhap.

ENERGY NEWS

Authentic news,No fake news.


22 Spotify Tricks to Stream Like a Pro

Lifewire | Tech Today
22 Spotify Tricks to Stream Like a Pro
Nothing's better than 30 million songs at your fingertips.
READ NOW  
READ THESE NEXT
The 10 Best Places to Stream Music Online
Tired of Getting Pulled Over? Get a Radar Detector
How Smart People Are Streaming TV
Bloatware Is Slowing You Down: Dumb Apps You Can't Delete
Advertisement
Lifewire
Tech Untangled
You are receiving this newsletter because you subscribed to the Tech Today newsletter. If you wish to unsubscribe, please click here
AN ABOUT.COM BRAND 1500 Broadway, 6th Floor, New York, NY, 10036
© 2017 About.com - All rights reserved. Privacy Policy.
                                                           

Blast rocks St. Petersburg subway, at least 9 feared dead

Authentic news,No fake news.

© Peter Kovalev/TASS
MOSCOW, April 3. /TASS/. According to preliminary reports, ten people were killed by an explosion inside a metro train at the Sennaya Square station in St. Petersburg, emergency services told TASS. According to a source, an unidentified device exploded in a train car. 
"According to information available at this point ten people died. Others were injured," a source said adding that the number of casualties was still to be specified. TASS has no official confirmation at this point.
Rescue workers and law enforcement personnel are working at the scene. 

Security measures

Evacuation of people from St. Petersburg’s metro after an explosion is now over, Andrei Przhezdomsky, a spokesman for the National Anti-terrorist Committee (NAC), told the Rossiya-24 television channel.
"So far, we say it was an unidentified explosive device as investigators and the Federal Security Service’s bomb specialists are to establish the exact cause of this explosion… Evacuation is over, medical assistance is offered to those hurt," he said.
"All necessary measures are being taken to ensure people’s security. We will do our best to prevent more possible explosions and other criminal actions," he pledged.
Seven metro stations in the city have been closed following the blast:  
"Park Pobedy, Elektrosila, Moskovskiye Vorota, Frunzenskaya, Tekhnologichesky Institut, Sennaya Ploshchad and Gostiny Dvor metro stations have been closed," the metro's press service reports.
Security measures have been enhanced at St. Petersburg’s airport Pulkovo following an explosion at the city metro, the airport’s press service told TASS on Monday.
"The airport has tightened security measures, including security control at the airport’s entrances and preflight inspections." 
Law enforcement agencies are taking all necessary security measures following a St. Petersburg metro blast, the head of the Information Center of the National Anti-Terrorism Committee assured. 
"I think FSB specialists together with investigators will quickly investigate the circumstances," he said. "All necessary measures to ensure the safety of citizens are taken. We will do everything to avert other possible explosions or other deeds of crime," he added.
"At the moment we say this is an unidentified explosive device, as investigators and bomb specialists of the Federal Security Service (FSB) must clearly define the cause of the blast," Przhezdomsky said.
"We know that people were killed or wounded, their number is updated. Evacuation as such has ended, and aid is administered to the injured," he went on.
He said all necessary material and human resources were pulled in to the site.


More:
http://tass.com/world/938962

Mitra-mandal Privacy Policy

This privacy policy has been compiled to better serve those who are concerned with how their  'Personally Identifiable Inform...