By Mohammed Mukhashaf ADEN (Reuters) - A suicide car bombing claimed by Islamic State killed at least 40 Yemeni army recruits and wounded 60 in the southern city of Aden on Monday, medics said, in one of the deadliest attacks yet on government interests. The attack occurred as the recruits lined up to enlist outside the home of a senior general near a military camp in Aden's Khor Maksar district, officials said. The port city serves as the temporary capital of Yemen's Saudi-backed administration while it seeks to seize back Sanaa from the Iran-allied armed Houthi group that took it in 2014, plunging Yemen into civil war.
понедельник, 23 мая 2016 г.
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Almost 150 people have been killed in seven near-simultaneous explosions claimed by Islamic State in northwestern Syria. The blasts targeted bus stations, hospitals and other civilian sites in two seaside cities within President Bashar al-Assad's coastal heartland. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 100 people were killed in Jableh and another 48 in Tartus, including children.
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A U.S. appeals court on Monday revived private antitrust litigation accusing major banks of conspiring to manipulate the Libor benchmark interest rate, in a big setback for their defence against investors' claims of market-rigging. The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan reversed a lower court judge's dismissal of investors' antitrust claims against 16 banks, including Deutsche Bank AG (DBKGn.DE), UBS AG (UBSG.S), Bank of America Corp (BAC.N) and JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) because she found no showing of anticompetitive harm.
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Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA is preparing to issue $2.5 billion (£1.7 billion) in promissory notes to settle unpaid bills to services companies, according to industry sources and documents seen by Reuters. PDVSA has already issued at least $310 million in debt securities as part of a broader effort to prevent crucial oil services providers from downing their tools for lack of payment, Reuters reported this month. The company has hired little-known, Miami-based financial services firm CP Capital to structure 3-year notes with a one-year grace period that will have the same status as PDVSA's global bonds, according to documents obtained by Reuters.