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Hollande’s cabinet meets and takes 30% pay cut
Today
France ’s new left-wing cabinet have convened for the first time and have all agreed to take a 30 percent pay cut. Newly elected President Francois Hollande will be no exception, meaning his new salary stands at under 15,000 euros a month. The gross pay of cabinet members will drop to 9,940 euros a month, in a move which seems to have been taken primarily to show the Socialists won’t renege on promises to help solve the Eurozone’s debt crisis .
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Candidates label Israel the “enemy” in presidential race
Today
With less than a week to go until the start of Egypt’s presidential elections , it looks to be a two-horse race. Polls indicate that Islamist candidate Abdel Moneim Abol Fotouh and the more liberal-minded former Arab League chief Amr Moussa , are neck-in-neck.
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President says he wants to attend Olympics 2012
Today
In Iran President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has expressed a wish to attend London’s Olympic Games but complained that the British authorities were reluctant to admit him into the country.
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New assembly includes 21 Golden Dawn members
Today
Greece 's new parliament has been sworn in, including 21 lawmakers from the extremist right-wing Golden Dawn party which is widely believed to be the most extreme nationalist party to have taken seats in a European parliament since World War II.
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Negotiator seeks “cooperation” from world powers
Today
Iran’s top nuclear negotiator has said the Islamic Republic is seeking cooperation from world powers ahead of talks in Baghdad next week.
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Romney hints at possible Israel visit before election
Today
Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney has indicated that he is considering a second visit to Israel in less than two years.
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Euro falls to 1.27 against dollar amid Greek exit fears
Yesterday
The shockwaves from Greece’s failure to form a coalition government have continued to reverberate around world markets, with the euro hitting a near four-month low against the dollar .
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Election monitors have complained of restrictions
Yesterday
As worries increase over whether Egypt’s upcoming presidential vote will be free and fair, reports have emerged suggesting that in Cairo, foreign election monitors are having their movements restricted by the authorities.
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Jihad manual
Yesterday
After the death of al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden last year, many thought the radical Islamic movement would lose its cohesion and become fractured.
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Judges call for Judicial reform with red-band protest
Yesterday
Judges, lawyers and court workers in Morocco are campaigning to free the county’s judiciary from external influence.
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Cuban authorities ready to talk about deal for Alan Gross
16 may 2012
Authorities in Cuba have said that they are ready to negotiate the status of jailed American Alan Gross .
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People in Iran are at odds with fundamentalist leaders
16 may 2012
A hardline cleric whipping a crowd of fanatics into a frenzy using anti-Western rhetoric – a stereotypical picture from Iran, and as a result, you might be forgiven for thinking that Iran is a deeply conservative society.
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Vienna talks on Iranian weapons to continue next week
16 may 2012
Senior U.N. nuclear watchdog officials have been in continuing talks with an Iranian diplomatic mission in Vienna regarding the Islamic state's disputed atomic activities .
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South Sudanese refugees prepare to make journey home
15 may 2012
As the ongoing dispute over borders and oil continues to dominate the headlines in Sudan and new neighbour South Sudan , a flood of refugees bears witness to the humanitarian trials still facing these uneasy African neighbours.
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Parisians leave messages for new President Hollande
15 may 2012
In the French capital Paris , people gathered to leave messages to new President Francois Hollande on the eve of his taking office.
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Iran sentences four men to death for sodomy
15 may 2012
Iran has sentenced four men to death by hanging for sodomy. The four men are due to be executed shortly, after their verdict was approved recently by high court judges.




Equal rights: Israel’s High Court rules that the onus is on employers to explain why they pay women lower salaries than men