Democratic Party supporters in Pennsylvania are choosing who they want to run for the White House in the latest stage of the increasingly bitter campaign between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. Senator Clinton needs a clear win in Pennsylvania to sustain her hopes of winning the party’s nomination. In the national contest, she’s still trailing behind Mr. Barack Obama. Here is Jeremy, correspondent in //
Whatever the result here in Pennsylvania, the Illinois Senator will still have more delegates and more primaries in caucuses under his belt than the former First Lady, and almost certainly a lead in the popular vote. A convincing victory for Senator Clinton though will reinforce her message that she is best placed to beat the Republican candidate John McCain in states that he is likely to matter in November’s general election, and her opponent’s promises of hope and change only resonates so far.
An 85-year-old American citizen has appeared in court in New York, accused of spying for Israeli government and passing on military secrets including information about the US nuclear weapons. Jenny Brown reports.
Ben-Ami Kadish was arrested in March some 25 years after he allegedly gave Israel up to a hundred classified documents. They were taken from an army facility in New Jersey where he was working as an engineer during the 1980s. It’s claimed that the material was photographed to his home by a man known only as CC1, but whom a US authority said was employed by the Israeli consulate. Some of the documents included the information about nuclear weapons, fighter jets sold to another country and America’ key patriot missile defense system.
United Nations’ head of humanitarian affairs John Holmes says he believes the number of people who have died as a result of conflict in Darfur could be as high as 300,000, 50% more than the UN’s previous estimate. Mr. Holmes told the Security Council that his revised figure was not based on a new study but was a conservative assessment based on /rising death rates.
Church leaders in Zimbabwe have warned that the country could face violence of genocidal proportions and asked international forces intervene to solve the election crisis. In a joint statement, the leaders of Zimbabwe’s main church said people would have been abducted, tortured and murdered, in a campaign of political retribution following last month’s poll which the opposition says it has won. A senior Roman Catholic priest of Zimbabwe // told the BBC it was important that the world knew what is going on in Zimbabwe.
“At the moment, what we are with Zimbabwe to found is to organize violence, // against individual, families and communities who are accused of campaigning or voting for the wrong political party. People are being abducted, tortured humiliated in different ways. Because//, so that some people have been murdered. Into what we see, the situation is deteriorating on a daily bases, everything is going to the wrong direction. “
World News from the BBC.
Western military sources say American and British special forces along with the Iraqi army have been carrying out an operation against Shiite militia men in the Iraqi city of Basra. They said the aim was to detain senior figures in the Mehdi Army and other Shia militias, and members of a local tribe.
A former Colombian senator Mario Uribe who is the cousin of the President Alvaro Uribe is seeking political asylum at the Costa Rican embassy in Bogota after a chief prosecutor ordered his arrest. He is accused of criminal conspiracy as part of investigation into alleged links between politicians and right-wing paramilitary groups. Jeremy McDermott reports from Colombia.
The scandal known as the power politics has claimed political lives of more than 30 serving or former congressmen. Yet, despite the fact of almost all those indicted supporters of President Alvaro Uribe, the Colombian leader, a close ally of Washington has managed to remain a / from the scandal. That may be about to change as his cousin Mario Uribe has now wanted to face judges that he worked with paramilitaries of the demobilized United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, not just the political lens but take over some choice tracks of land.
The managing editor of the American Business Newspaper, the Wall Street Journal has resigned. Marcus Brauchli is stepping down four months after the media tycoon Rupert Murdoch bought the Paper. In a resignation letter, Mr. Brauchli said he wanted the Journal’s new owners to be able to choose their top editor.
An investigation by archeologist has suggested that the world’s first oil paintings were made in Afghanistan, and not the previously thought in Europe. The evidence comes from the samples of cave paintings in Bamiya, the sight of two giant Buddhas statues blown up by the Taliban seven years ago. Scientists say the cave paintings contain oils which could have come from poppy or walnut, and they date from the 7th century that is abut 600 years before oil was first used by European painters.