World news: G20 leaders split over Syria, Obama struggles to bui...

 
 
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Friday September 06 2013
 
 
World News
 
G20 leaders split over Syria
 
The crisis, not on the official agenda, is now set to dominate discussion in St Petersburg and raise the already fraught diplomatic stakes
 
 
 
Obama struggles to build case for action
 
 
France's Hollande takes a risk on Syria
 
 
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Family sues over Pinochet era murder
 
 
'Looming sea level crisis' faces US
 
 
Mas eyes delay to Catalan referendum
 
 
West bids to resolve eastern Congo crisis
 
 
Bomb targets Egyptian minister's convoy
 
 
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The World
 
Smart Reads September 5, 2013
 

By Catherine Contiguglia
♦ Though support for a vote in favour of military intervention in Syria appears to be strengthening in the US, the sceptics still have strong arguments and Obama still has a number of battles to win such as gaining partisan and public support.
♦ A back and forth between the Washington Post's Max Fisher and writer Teju Cole provides an entertaining and thought provoking exchange on the tone in western coverage of the conflict in Syria, use of chemical weapons and potential western military intervention.
♦ The opening up of the debate on European issues to the wider population afforded by pre-election debates between Merkel and her opponent Peer Steinbrück is a necessary part of moving forward on deepening of the European Union and the healing of the eurozone, says the FT in an editorial.
♦When the Muslim Brotherhood moved to take over the ministry of culture under Mohamed Morsi, Egyptian intellectuals were gripped by a fear "sometimes well-founded, sometimes bordering on hysteria" about the threat of the brotherhood to Egypt's identity, which helped drive them "back into the reassuring embrace of the military."
♦ The UK Labour party’s rejection of David Cameron's proposal for action in Syria is not based on its position, argues David Aaronovitch, but is rather a strategy of following behind the leader to "wait for slip-up and exploit his or her mistakes."

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