Morning Brief, Thursday, June 29
Breaking: The Supreme Court blocks war-crimes trials at Guantanamo. Israel/Palestine Israel continues its push into Gaza, where some electricity, food, and fuel supplies have been cut. Israel also arrested more than 60 Hamas officials in West Bank raids, and an Israeli settler abducted by Palestinian militants is found dead. The search for the Israeli soldier ...
Breaking: The Supreme Court blocks war-crimes trials at Guantanamo.
Breaking: The Supreme Court blocks war-crimes trials at Guantanamo.
Israel/Palestine
Israel continues its push into Gaza, where some electricity, food, and fuel supplies have been cut. Israel also arrested more than 60 Hamas officials in West Bank raids, and an Israeli settler abducted by Palestinian militants is found dead. The search for the Israeli soldier seized Sunday continues.
Despite the hardships, it appears that the Hamas position – and their demand for the release of prisoners in Israeli jails – enjoys at least some popular support, largely because it helps highlight the everyday grievances of many Palestinians:
"There is support for this because I am not safe when I walk on the street," said Mustafa Raghib, the director of Gaza's largest flour mill, forced to shut for several hours after the electricity was cut. "Give me a good life and I will not support actions like this."
Elections
Kuwaitis go to the polls today to elect a new parliament. It's the first time women there have been allowed to vote or run for office.
Mexican candidates for president wrap up their campaigning ahead of Sunday's vote. Lopez Obrador leads by a narrow margin.
Pakistan's foreign ministry releases a statement after Condi's departure that the country doesn't need outside advice on free and fair elections.
Iran
G8 foreign ministers press Iran to respond to the incentives package by July 5, ahead of the G8 meeting in St. Petersburg beginning July 15. Iran dispatches its "butcher of the press," a notorious prosecutor well-known for his human rights violations, to the opening session of the new United Nations Human Rights Council.
Elsewhere
Bush is shocked to hear that the peace deal in south Sudan isn't working. Another high-profile Chinese official is sacked for graft. Spain agrees to talks with ETA. The US accuses Nepalese Maoists of continuing to wage violence. The Fed is expected to raise US interest rates today.
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