Mass rally in Moscow raises pressure on Putin

Tens of thousands of flag-waving and chanting protesters called on Saturday for a disputed parliamentary election to be rerun, increasing pressure on Vladimir Putin as he seeks a new term as Russian president. The protesters chanted “Russia without Putin” and “New elections, New elections” as speakers called for an end to Putin’s 12-year domination of the country at the second big opposition rally in two weeks... [more]

Mel Gibson, wife finalize divorce

A judge on Friday approved a divorce settlement between actor Mel Gibson and his estranged wife Robyn, ending their 31 years of marriage. Robyn Gibson will return to using her maiden name, Robyn Denise Moore, but other details of the divorce were kept confidential. The settlement becomes effective on January 9. Gibson, 55, and his wife married in Australia in 1980 and have seven children together. The couple separated in 2006 after Gibson... [more]

UK Refuses To Give To IMF’s EU Bailout Fund

Chancellor George Osborne has refused to contribute to the IMF’s bailout fund for the EU, Sky News has learned. Mr Osborne told his EU colleagues he will not provide any cash to boost the 200bn euro fund, which is specifically aimed at the troubled eurozone. The conference call with 26 other EU finance ministers lasted three hours but ended without Britain’s agreement to put in up to 50bn euros. Mr Osborne insisted that while... [more]

Kim Jong-un: ‘The Great Successor’ Emerges

As North Korea comes to terms with the loss of its “Dear Leader”, the shadowy figure of “the Great Successor” – his son – has begun to emerge. Kim Jong-un only appeared with his father on live television for the first time last October, clapping and saluting thousands of goose-stepping soldiers at a military parade. The third son of Kim Jong-il, Jong-un is believed to be around 27-years-old and was... [more]

Commission identifies 800 priests, monks who abused children

At least 800 Roman Catholic priests and monks were involved in abusing children in their care between 1945 and 1985, according to a comprehensive report into the church sexual abuse scandal published on Friday. In addition, church officials, bishops and lay people were aware of what was going on but failed to take action to protect children, the commission, lead by former Christian Democratic party chairman Wim Deetman, said. The commission... [more]

Holland’s 20 biggest employers are cutting 37,000 jobs

The 20 biggest employers in the Netherlands have plans to cut their combined workforce by around 8% or 37,000 jobs in the coming months, the Volkskrant reported at the weekend. The paper bases its claims on an analysis of the top 100 Dutch employers – with a combined workforce of some 830,000. Top of the list is the ministry of defence with 48,000 workers and police with 37,000. The armed forces are slashing employment numbers in... [more]

Spanish king forced son-in-law to quit job in 2006

King Juan Carlos told his son-in-law in 2006 to cut ties with a company now mired in corruption allegations, an official at Spain’s royal palace said Sunday. Authorities are probing the activities of a non-profit company run by Inaki Urdangarin between 2004 and 2006. “(The king) ordered him to stand down from his activities and he sold his shares,” said the official, who works at the royal palace’s press office, confirming... [more]

Eurozone to pursue crisis action, Fitch doubts outcome

The euro zone will tackle its debt crisis this week by offering more cash to the IMF and long-term liquidity to banks, while moving toward tighter fiscal rules, after ratings agency Fitch cast doubt on its capacity to respond decisively. “We all know that Europe has not been able to convince markets that its governance set-up and its measures against the crisis were enough,” Italian Deputy Economy Minister Vittorio Grilli said... [more]

S.Korea urges ‘courage’ from Japan on sex slaves

South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak urged Japan to have the “courage” to compensate ageing wartime sex slaves before it is too late and let the two nations’ relationship progress. Lee on Sunday told Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda in Japan’s ancient capital of Kyoto that the issue had prevented their countries from becoming “true partners” in the years since World War II. Japan, which insists the issue... [more]

The high price of saving the euro

Has Germany saved the euro or doomed the European Union? ZEIT ONLINE’s Matthias Krupa looks at the high political price of the crisis summit in Brussels. So was that the night the euro was saved? Or will those ten hours on last week go down in history as the moment the European Union began to disintegrate? The leaders of the 27 EU nations certainly couldn’t have made their crisis summit any more dramatic. Even before it began on the... [more]

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