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The pen is mightier than the sword - A picture is worth a thousand words
Speaking
at a surprise press conference on Tuesday, the prime minister says we
have only heard “complacency and nonchalance” from Vote Leave. Cameron
goes on to tell the group of journalists of the six “complete untruths”
the campaign to leave the European Union has recently told. Cameron will
appear on ITV tonight with Nigel Farage and will take questions from a
studio audience
11 hours ago - An analysis by Sky News found £65bn left the UK or was converted into ... worrying that the pound is due for a sharp fall should Brexit to occur.
Hillary
Clinton calls for unity during a speech in Brooklyn, New York, where
she acknowledged that she will likely become the first female
presidential nominee from a major U.S. political party.
In
2014, Islamic State militants swept into Western Iraq's Anbar Province,
overrunning Iraqi security forces, enslaving minorities, and causing
thousands to flee for their lives.
The jihadist group captured
Iraq’s largest city, Mosul, and the cities of Ramadi and Fallujah, where
hundreds of US troops died fighting the Islamic State’s predecessor.
Now,
two years later, the Iraqi security forces, with help from
Iranian-supported Shiite militias and US military advisors and
warplanes, are fighting to take back towns and cities in Anbar, one
battle at a time.
But it’s a difficult task: Anbar has been the
crucible of Iraq’s insurgency, and is the country’s Sunni heartland —
long marginalized by and hostile to the Shiite-led government in
Baghdad.
VICE News embedded with Iraq’s Golden Division Special
Forces unit as they fought their way into the villages surrounding the
city of Hit, where they encountered ambushes, sniper fire, and tried to
sort suspected Islamic State operatives and sympathizers from innocent
Iraqi civilians.
Watch "What It's Really Like to Fight for the Islamic State” - http://bit.ly/1UhTYU1
Read "Iraq Halts Assault Against Islamic State-Held Fallujah to 'Protect Civilians' Trapped Inside” - http://bit.ly/1TQvKq7
Shares
of Zillow traded higher in Tuesday's session after the online
real-estate database announced it had reached a settlement with rival
Move. The settlement deal averts a trial which would've taken place
later this month. Move and the National Association of Realtors were
seeking up to $2 billion in damages over allegations that Zillow
executives brought trade secrets with them when they left Move in 2014.
Zillow settled the suit for just $130 million dollars. On word of the
settlement, Barclays upgraded Zillow's shares to EQUAL WEIGHT from
UNDERWEIGHT. The firm also raised the stock's price target to $32 from
$20. This year, Zillow shares are up 37 percent.
BATM
Advanced Communications (LON:BVC) chief executive Zvi Marom tells
Proactive Investors that the company turned a corner in 2015 and has
enough finance to continue to do everything in their programme in the
year ahead.
“The contract we just signed took three years of
testing to convince that we have is the best of breed. Obviously we will
have more contracts in the coming years – this is very obvious” he
says.
Marom says BATM is billing in markets they have not seen
before is trying to bundle cyber together with networking in European
markets in particular. “ All the units we are supplying are cyber-ready –
I don’t see any other suppliers doing this” he says.
• While it may not be backed by robust volume (conviction), risk appetite inches higher with an 11-month SPX high
• Pound volatility remains extreme as EUR/GBP swings lower and GBP/USD temporarily surges intraday
• The RBA bolstered the Australian Dollar, what will the RBNZ decision do to the New Zealand currency?
Dilma
Rousseff, the former leftist guerrilla who became the first woman
president of Latin America's largest country, is now fighting for her
political survival.
Brazil's immensely popular former president
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, chose his chief of staff to carry on with his
legacy of economic growth with social justice.
But it didn't last. By the time Rousseff began her second term in 2015, Brazil was in turmoil.
Now
Rousseff has been suspended to face an impeachment trial - abandoned by
her allies and millions of Brazilians who accuse her of driving the
nation's once healthy economy into the ground and of turning a blind eye
to corruption within her own left-wing party.
It's the material
political soap operas are made of: almost daily corruption scandals are
splattering every political party, most recently, that of interim
President Michel Temer.
This week, more leaked phone
conversations revealed that two of his top ministers, including the man
in charge of combatting corruption, were apparently trying to derail
ongoing investigations into a multi-billion dollar bribery scheme.
Temer, who was until last month the vice president, turned against Dilma Rousseff, so she could face impeachment.
Rousseff is charged with having tampered with fiscal accounts to hide a massive budget deficit in order to get re-elected.
Yet, unlike a great many of those seeking her impeachment, she is not being accused of stealing money for herself.
In
fact at least 60 percent of Brazilian lawmakers are under investigation
or indictment for crimes ranging from attempted murder to massive
corruption, including the president of the senate who will be overseeing
the impeachment trial.
Rousseff claims her enemies are punishing
her for refusing to block corruption investigations, but will the
latest scandals involving the interim government be enough to save her?
Al
Jazeera's Lucia Newman speaks to President Dilma Rouseff in Brasilia as
the suspended leader faces a controversial impeachment trial which
could remove her permanently from the presidency.
Rouseff
discusses why she'll fight to be reinstated, the political fragmentation
in the country, and what she plans to do to earn back the trust of the
Brazilian people if she wins the Senate vote.
More from Talk To Al Jazeera on: