【5分钟环球新闻掠影1209】印度的“嘀嘀打车”被禁,因为司机强奸

【5分钟环球新闻掠影1209】印度的“嘀嘀打车”被禁,因为司机强奸

2014-12-09    04'45''

主播: 罗叔英语

109 10

介绍:
Our top stories include: Israeli politicians have voted in favour of dissolving the country's parliament. "The decision is the prime minister's decision as a result of his fear from the ministers. But this is the opportunity, in this election, to replace the prime minister and create a different government." Uber has been banned from operating in Delhi. "We have taken action against this particular taxi and the driver. Apart from that, we have banned uber.com in Delhi and blacklisted it." A senior military commander of al-Qaeda in Yemen has denounced beheadings carried out by Islamic State. "There is no doubt that our brothers have been affected by pictures of the beheadings. We don't agree with it, we extremely denounce it.” Major indicies of Chinese mainland markets continue to rise. “There seems to be a frenzy into retail and people moving their money out of wealth management products, real estate and into the retail sector that is driving this surge." Those stories and more over the hour and towards the end of the show we'll be looking at comments online about a well-known translator's controversial remarks about housework. Now our global survey of headlines. First up, in Asia In Japan, Finance Minister Taro Aso, infamous for comment about "people who don't give birth," has told the country's elderly they should "hurry up and die". In the Philippines, Typhoon Hagupit has weakened to a tropical storm as it reached close to Manila, after killing 27 people on the eastern Samar island. In Oceania, In Australia, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has said that nations with the biggest greenhouse gas emissions should be doing the most to fight climate change. Staying the country, a new report warns that the country's worst state for bushfires, Victoria, needs to prepare for another dangerous season. Moving on to Africa, In Sierra Leone, another doctor has died from Ebola, the 10th to succumb to the disease. In South Africa, British businessman Shrien Dewani has been cleared of murdering his wife during their South Africa honeymoon. And in the Middle East, In Egypt, Canada and Britain closed their Cairo embassies "due to unsettled security conditions" and concerns over the security of the staff. In Iraq, a top US commander says US allies will send about 1500 forces to Iraq to help train Iraqi and Kurdish soldiers battling the Islamic State. Looking to Latin America, In Cuba, Caribbean leaders urged the US to lift its 54-year-old embargo against Cuba as they gather in Havana for a regional summit. In Uruguay, one of the six detainees released from US Guantanamo Bay and under resettlement in the country thanked Uruguay for helping free him from "that black hole". And in Europe, In Russia, Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov described Moscow's ties with Washington as being their "deepest chill". In Germany, Bavaria's governing conservatives are urging that immigrants should speak German not only in public but also in the home, provoking a torrent of criticism. In the UK, Prime Minister David Cameron will travel to Turkey to meet Turkey President Tayyip Erdogan to discuss how to stop Britons to join up with IS fighters. And finally in North America, In the United States, New York State's top prosecutor is seeking the power to probe all police killings of unarmed civilians in his state. Staying in the country, representative Joe Barton will introduce a bill to lift a 40-year ban on the export of crude oil.