KUNMING, CHINA – China is looking to revive the ancient “Southern Silk Road” linking its Southwestern regions with Southeast and South Asia, as it aims to boost cooperation with countries along the once-booming trade route.
UK - Britain's wheat harvest this year could be almost 30% smaller than it was last year due to extreme weather, the National Farmers' Union has warned. It said the reduction, calculated after a "snapshot" poll, came after arable crops had been battered by severe snow, rain and flooding since the autumn. Figures in April had already revealed the area planted with winter wheat was down by a quarter on the previous year. The NFU also said members were losing confidence about their prospects.
UK - The Government has challenged new European Union powers to regulate financial markets as "unlawful" and an "institutional revolution" by the back door, during a legal challenge in Europe's Luxembourg court.
VATICAN CITY - Pope Francis has confirmed there is a "gay lobby" inside the Vatican, a Catholic website reported. Reports of such a group in the Curia have circulated for months and may have been a consideration in Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI's retirement, CNN reported. The Curia is the Vatican's bureaucracy.
VATICAN - The President of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, Cardinal Kurt Koch, gave a lecture at the Ukrainian Catholic University in Lviv, Ukraine, on June 10 on “Prospects of the Ecumenical Dialogue Between the Catholic and Orthodox Churches."
USA/SPAIN - Like Al Capone’s merry band of bootleggers before their fateful brush with the legendary lawman Elliot Ness, today’s banking executives believe they can flout pretty much every law without the slightest fear of sanction. And judging by the number of convictions meted out to senior financial fraudsters in the wake of the global crisis they themselves caused, their sense of hubris and impunity is entirely justified. Put simply, they are untouchable.
UK - There's a problem "within Islam" that the Government needs to address, says Tony Blair. Perhaps I'm being unfair, but it's as if Neville Chamberlain had revealed in 1940 that there was a problem with some of these German nationalists and what was Mr Churchill going to do about it?
USA - "They could pay off the Triads," says Edward Snowden, the NSA whistleblower interviewed by the Guardian in his Hong Kong hideout. Meaning: the CIA could use a proxy to kill him for revealing that Barack Obama has presided over an unimaginable – to the ordinary citizen – expansion of the Federal government's powers of surveillance over anyone.
GERMANY - How much monitoring is too much and at what point does freedom become compromised? With its Prism spy program, the US has crossed the line.
USA - Despite the 6.5% stock market rally over the last three months, a handful of billionaires are quietly dumping their American stocks... and fast. Warren Buffett, who has been a cheerleader for US stocks for quite some time, is dumping shares at an alarming rate. He recently complained of “disappointing performance” in dyed-in-the-wool American companies like Johnson & Johnson, Procter & Gamble, and Kraft Foods.
USA - A new and annoying species of ant is terrorizing the US and chemicals that kill off other types of the insect are proving ineffective against it. The 'crazy' ant, named for the erratic trail it leaves as it makes its way across the country, originated in Argentina and Brazil.
USA - It harks back to the Dust Bowl years in the 1930s when farms were devastated and businesses crippled by vicious storms. Now towns such as Lamar, in southeastern Colorado, are again being hit by wild dust storms. The worst struck just before the Memorial Day weekend - one of seven which have engulfed the area in thick brown dust since November. In 1932, 14 dust storms were recorded on the Plains, according to Living History Farm, and 38 the next year. By 1934, about 100 million acres of farmland had lost all or most of the topsoil to the winds. State climatologist Nolan Doesken said the recent vicious dust storms are the result of three seasons of extreme drought.
GERMANY - Germany's highest court is currently reviewing the European Central Bank's controversial bond-buying program to shore up euro-zone crisis countries. A decision in Karlsruhe could determine the common currency's fate.
USA - The 179,000 jobs created in May and boasted about by the Obama administration are no more than “the usual lowly paid non-exportable domestic service jobs — the jobs of a third world country,” former Assistant Treasury Secretary Paul Craig Roberts writes.
JORDAN - Jordan, US say drills are not related to Syria; US considering leaving missiles, jets in Jordan; Russia says Western weapons are fueling Syrian conflict.