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Chitchat World Affairs Around the world Updates

cuckoldoolittle

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World Affairs Around the world Updates

Fri Dec 16, 2016

Quote of the day:

"I think there is no doubt that when any foreign government tries to impact the integrity of our elections ...
we need to take action. And we will — at a time and place of our own choosing. Some of it may be explicit
and publicized; some of it may not be." – President Barack Obama in an NPR interview.


China's military carried out its first-ever live-fire drills using an aircraft carrier and fighters in the northeastern Bohai Sea close to Korea, state media said. No other country has claims in China's busy waterway. But the drills come amid China's growing military presence in the South China Sea and U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's unwillingness to adhere to past policy of acknowledging the nation’s sovereignty over Taiwan.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Russian President Vladimir Putin wrapped up two days of talks, with numerous economic deals but no big breakthrough on a territorial dispute that has overshadowed ties since World War Two. Abe and Putin agreed to start talks on joint economic activities on disputed islands as a step toward concluding a peace treaty formally ending the world war. But Putin heads home with promises of economic cooperation from Japan at a time when Russia faces Western condemnation over the destruction of eastern Aleppo in Syria.

The Philippines want humanitarian aid from the United States without any conditions. The Millennium Challenge Corporation, a U.S. poverty reduction agency, "deferred a vote on the re-selection of the Philippines for compact development, subject to further review of concerns around rule of law and civil liberties." President Rodrigo Duterte told U.S. President Barack Obama to "go to hell" in October and has alluded to severing ties after being infuriated by U.S. criticism of his war on drugs, which has claimed 2,000 lives since he took office on July 1.

Officials in 24 states have urged Trump to kill the Clean Power Plan, the centerpiece of President Barack Obama's strategy to combat climate change and shut down coal-fired power plants. The law was designed to lower carbon emissions, mainly from coal-fired plants, to 32 percent below 2005 levels by 2030.

A tiny school district in central Colorado has voted to allow teachers and other employees at its two schools to carry concealed handguns on the job if they volunteer to serve double duty as security officers in case of an emergency.

The FBI kept tabs on the late boxer Muhammad Ali in 1966, including his divorce and his speech at a Miami mosque, in its investigation of the religious group Nation of Islam, according to documents released by the agency. New York Times broke the story.

Iraq is selling more crude oil to its biggest customer, China's Unipec, digging a deeper foothold in the global supply market just before production cuts agreed with OPEC and other producers are scheduled to kick in.

How much would you pay to ensure your milk was fresh and safe? A Chinese businessman who bought Australia's largest dairy is betting his countrymen will pay up to 15 times what Australians pay for a liter of the dairy product.

Verizon wants a price cut on its $4.8 billion acquisition of Yahoo, after the internet company disclosed the largest known data breach in history.








 

cuckoldoolittle

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7.9 earthquake strikes off Papua New Guinea; tsunami alert issued


Tsunami-apocalypse-810x569.jpg



By Jason Hanna, CNN
Updated 1155 GMT (1955 HKT) December 17, 2016

Dangerous waves could be headed to some South Pacific coasts after an 7.9-magnitude earthquake struck
in the sea off Papua New Guinea on Saturday night, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said in a preliminary alert.

The quake struck in the ocean about 45 kilometers east of Papua New Guinea's New Ireland island, also known as Latangai,
at about 8:51 p.m. (5:51 a.m. ET), the US Geological Survey said.


Hazardous tsunamis are possible though about midnight local time along some coasts of that country, as well as the Solomon Islands,
Pohnpei, Chuuk, Indonesia, Nauru, Kosrae and Vanuatu, the PTWC said.

Papua New Guinea is along the "Ring of Fire," a zone of seismic activity and volcanoes around the edges of the Pacific Ocean.
It's a vast area where about 90% of the world's earthquakes occur, according to the USGS.

The ring, which actually is shaped more like a horseshoe, includes more than 400 underwater volcanoes and stretches 25,000 miles
from New Zealand, past Japan, across the Bering Strait and down to the tip of South America.


The tsunami waves are forecast to reach one to three meters above the tide level along some coasts of the
archipelago in the South West Pacific region.

The quake initially struck about 157 kilometers east of the port of Rabaul, Papua New Guinea,
on Saturday and was measured at magnitude 8.0, according to the USGS. It was then re-scaled to magnitude 7.9.


Rabaul is a township on the island of New Britain, which has a population of some 3,885 people.

According to PTWC, a tsunami threat to Hawaii is still being evaluated.
While New Zealand's Civil Defense has issued an official tsunami warning, but no evacuations are necessary at this stage.
The agency warned residents via its Twitter account to stay out of the water and off the beaches.



"At this stage we are advising New Zealanders to stay off the beaches, stay out of the water, not to go sightseeing and to listen to the radio and TV," a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Civil Defence & Emergency Management also said.

"The warning's been issued from the whole of NZ," she added.


Mainland New Zealand is some 4,500 kilometers or 2400 nautical miles away from Papua New Guinea.

According to @NewEarthquake, which monitors global earthquake and tsunami warnings, the initial quake
has already been followed by at least three aftershocks, with magnitude 5.5-6.0.


Papua New Guinea lies on the so-called Pacific ‘Ring of Fire,’ a volcanically active region where earthquakes,
tsunamis and volcanic eruptions are common.


 
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