US reality TV star Kylie Jenner gives birth to baby girl

Kylie Jenner attends a gala at Metropolitan Museum of Art on 1 May 2017 in New York City.Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionOn Sunday, Kylie Jenner announced that she had given birth to a daughter
The US reality TV star Kylie Jenner confirmed on Sunday that she has given birth to a baby girl.
The 20-year-old was rumoured to be expecting a child, but had remained quiet about her pregnancy.
Jenner announced on Instagram on Sunday that she had given birth on 1 February. She apologised for keeping her followers and fans in the dark.
The new-born is Jenner and rapper Travis Scott’s first child and they have not decided on a name yet
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Kylie Jenner, the youngest of the Kardashian-Jenner siblings, rose to prominence through the MTV series Keeping Up with the Kardashians, along with her sister Kendall and half-sisters Kourtney, Kim, and Khloé Kardashian.
She is the daughter of the Olympics decathlon winner Caitlyn Jenner and TV personality Kris Jenner.

Kim Cattrall announces brother’s death after earlier plea for information

Kim Cattrall
Sex and the City actor Kim Cattrall has announced the death of her brother, after earlier issuing a public appeal for information on his whereabouts.
Christopher Cattrall, 55, had been missing from his home in Alberta, Canada, since Tuesday.
Kim Cattrall had appealed to her social media followers for help finding him.
His keys, cell phone, and wallet were left on the table, the front door was unlocked, and his seven “beloved” dogs were left unattended, she said.
“This is not like Chris… Help us bring him home safe,” she had asked fans.
Later on Sunday, the Liverpool-born actor posted a message on Twitter saying: “It is with great sadness that myself and my family announce the unexpected passing of our son and brother, Chris Cattrall.”
The message thanks those who offered support and asks for privacy.
No further details were given.
A spokesperson for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said there was no reason to believe there was anything suspicious in the death.
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Chris lived in the town of Lacombe in Alberta.
The cast of Sex in the City - Sarah Jessica Parker, Cynthia Nixon, Kristin Davis and Kim CattrallImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionKim Cattrall, right, is best known for playing Samantha Jones in the US romantic comedy show Sex and the City

North Korea to send ceremonial head Kim Yong-nam South

North Korean ceremonial head of state Kim Yong-nam (file image)Image copyrightAFP
Image captionIt is unclear whether Kim Yong-nam, who heads the parliament in Pyongyang, will attend the opening ceremony along with US Vice President Mike Pence
North Korea is to send its highest ranking official for years to the South amid an easing of tensions during the Winter Olympics.
Kim Yong-nam, the ceremonial head of state, will lead a 22-member delegation to the South beginning on Friday, said the South’s Unification Ministry.
The two Koreas’ athletes will march under one flag at the opening ceremony.
The North’s participation in the Games is widely seen as a diplomatic manoeuvre by Pyongyang.
It faces growing international pressure and sanctions over its nuclear and missile programmes.
The united Korean women’s ice hockey team played its first match on Sunday, but lost the friendly against Sweden 1-3.=
The athletes of Team Korea in action during the Women's Ice Hockey friendly match against SwedenImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionThe newly formed joint Korean ice hockey team did not prevail in the friendly against Sweden
They will get a chance to even the score when they face Sweden again during the Games.
Sunday’s outing was the first and only practice match for the newly minted Korean squad.
Kim Yong-nam is the head of the parliament in the North and will be the highest-level official to visit South Korea in four years.
An unnamed official from the South’s presidential Blue House told the OP that they believe this reflected a willingness on the part of North Korea to improve inter-Korean relations, and demonstrated the North’s sincerity.
Mr Kim will lead a delegation of three other officials and 18 support staff, the Unification Ministry said.
It did not say whether he would attend the opening ceremony of the Games in Pyeongchang, a county in the mountainous east of South Korea.
South Korean soldiers stand guard at border village of Panmunjom between South and North Korea at the Demilitarised Zone (DMZ) on April 23, 2013Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionThe two Koreas, still technically at war, are separated by a Demilitarised Zone (DMZ)
If so, it would put him in the company of US Vice President Mike Pence at a point of high tension with Washington over the North’s nuclear ambitions.
The North has conducted a series of missile tests designed to demonstrate its nuclear capability.
North Korea’s participation in the Olympics, which run from 9 to 25 February, was a sudden turn towards reconciliation.
It came after the hereditary leader Kim Jong-un extended an olive branch to the South in a New Year message, saying he was open to dialogue and could send a team to the Games.
As well as the ice hockey players, North Korean athletes will compete in skiing and figure skating events. It is also sending hundreds of delegates, cheerleaders and performers.

Media captionNorth Korea’s women’s ice hockey team arrived in the South last week
However, there have already been some bumps in the road to reconciliation.
Earlier this week it emerged that the North had scheduled a large-scale military parade for 8 February, the day before the Winter Olympics commences.
Amid negative headlines, North Korea said no-one had the right to take issue with its plans and promptly cancelled a cultural event it was to hold jointly with the South.
Meanwhile, although Seoul and Washington have agreed to delay the annual big joint military exercises which always enrage the North, they will still go ahead at the end of the Paralympics.

Senedd opposition entering ‘new phase’ says Plaid Cymru AM Adam Price

Media captionAdam Price said there should be a vote in the assembly on the M4 relief road at the conclusion of the public inquiry
Opposition parties in the assembly are entering a “new phase” of co-operation in scrutinising Welsh Government, Plaid Cymru AM Adam Price said.
Mr Price said the opposition will soon establish a “common front” on a range of issues.
The Labour-led government has a working majority in the assembly but recently lost three opposition-day votes.
The leader of the Welsh Tories last month said he wanted to work with other parties.
The UKIP Wales leader Neil Hamilton said that he was prepared to co-operate even if it meant he would “vote through things in which fundamentally I don’t believe, but which are better than the other alternatives”.
Plaid ended its “compact” co-operation agreement with the government last October, just days after the two parties agreed a deal to ensure Labour’s budgets for 2018-19 and 2019-20 would be passed by the assembly.
“I think that we are now entering a new phase,” Mr Price told the BBC’s Sunday Politics Wales programme.
He said: “Where there is legitimate reason to challenge the Welsh Government, not opposition for opposition’s sake, but where we would be failing to do our job if we weren’t to do it, then I think we will see increasingly… a common front on a whole range of issues.”
Opposition parties worked together when the Conservatives and UKIP backed Plaid leader Leanne Wood in a deadlocked Senedd vote to choose a first minister following the 2016 assembly election.
Carwyn Jones
Image captionThe opposition had prevented Carwyn Jones from becoming first minister after the Senedd election – although a deal with Plaid allowed him to take the post
Plaid agreed to back Labour’s Carwyn Jones in a fresh vote the following week.
Mr Hamilton said he had hoped the deadlocked vote “would begin a process whereby collectively the opposition parties… could exercise and overwhelming influence on the Welsh Labour Government”.
“Having bottled out at the last minute, Carwyn Jones was let off the hook by Plaid,” he said.
Despite a so-far muted response from Plaid Cymru and UKIP to his original offer to co-operate made last month, Welsh Tory leader Andrew RT Davies says his door is still open to any party who wants to work with the Conservatives.
“I don’t have any ideological reasons why I cannot work with other parties in this institution, because to me the ideological reason why Wales sadly hasn’t delivered in the first 20 years of devolution is the Labour Party,” Mr Davies said.
M4 black route videoImage copyrightWELSH GOVERNMENT
Image captionThe M4 relief road has split opinion in the assembly
Adam Price hopes that Plaid and the Welsh Conservatives could work together over the issue of the proposed M4 relief road.
His theory could be put to the test on Wednesday during a Plaid-sponsored debate on the M4 relief road, calling for an assembly vote on the financing of the project once the public inquiry concludes.
Mr Price said that while his party has a different policy to the Tories, the parties “possibly” both agree that the assembly should have a vote following the end of the inquiry.
He added that the two parties “may find common cause with some rebel members of the government backbench as well”.
Some Labour backbenchers are known to oppose the M4 relief road project.
Labour won 29 seats at the last assembly election – leaving it short of a majority.
Despite adopting two other non-Labour AMs into the government, absences on the government side meant it lost opposition votes in January.

Man injured in attack outside pub in Ballyhackamore

The man was attacked the Upper Newtownards Road, near Holland DriveImage copyrightGOOGLE
Image captionThe man was attacked the Upper Newtownards Road, near Holland Drive
A man has been injured in an overnight assault outside a pub in Ballyhackamore, east Belfast.
It happened on the Upper Newtownards Road, near the junction with Holland Drive, at about 01:30 GMT on Sunday.
Police cordoned off the scene of the attack later on Sunday morning.
The victim was taken to hospital for treatment to his injuries, which a PSNI spokeswoman said are not believed to be life threatening.

Children left shocked as men break into house in north Belfast

attack
Image captionThe gang damaged a door in the house and threatened one of the men inside
Four children have been badly shaken after a gang of men broke into their north Belfast home on Saturday.
Three men forced their way into the house at Arbour Street at 14:05 GMT.
Police said two men and a woman were in the house with the children. It has been reported they had knives and a crowbar and threatened one of the men.
attack
Image captionMarks on the door where the gang tried to force their way in
Although no-one was hurt, they were all left “extremely shocked,” according to the PSNI. The door and walls were hacked and damaged as the men broke in.
Police have appealed for information.

Arrests after man and woman injured in Rutherglen

Two people have been arrested after a man and woman were found seriously injured in Rutherglen in South Lanarkshire.
Police said armed officers responded to an incident in Greenhill Road at about 17:40 on Saturday.
A 46-year-old woman and a 27-year-old man were taken to Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow.
A man, aged 24, and a 41-year-old woman were arrested and charged. They are expected to appear in court on Monday.
The injured man and woman were said to be in a stable condition.

Weather: UK braced for one of winter’s ‘coldest weeks’

A view of snow-covered peaks in the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park behind Kincardine in Mentieth church and schoolhouse in Stirlingshire,Image copyrightPA
Image captionSnow-covered peaks in the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park in Stirlingshire
Yellow weather warnings for snow and ice are in place for large parts of the country for Sunday evening and the rest of the week, the Met Office said.
Commuters are being warned of possible disruption, with many set to wake up to freezing conditions on Monday morning.
It is expected to be “one of the coldest weeks of this winter so far”, Met Office forecaster Craig Snell said.
Temperatures could plummet to -7 C in parts of Scotland, Wales and the Midlands.
That would make it colder than Stockholm and Toronto.
Ice is likely to form overnight on Sunday along the east coast, the Met Office said, bringing potentially difficult driving conditions on Monday morning.
Up to 3cm of snow could fall inland, mainly over hills above 100 metres, while many will start the working week to freezing temperatures between 0 C and -2 C.
“It’s going to be a cold week, plenty of dry weather around, but many places will probably see some snow at some point during the week, but for a lot of us not really amounting to much at all,” Mr Snell said.
Snowdrops at Rococo Garden in Painswick, GloucestershireImage copyrightPA
Image captionSnowdrops at Rococo Garden in Painswick, Gloucestershire
The Local Government Association said 1.5 million tonnes of salt was stockpiled ready.
“Gritters will be out treating thousands of miles of roads as the big chill bites and councils will be keeping people up-to-date about weather forecasts, road conditions and gritting activity,” said transport spokesman councillor Martin Tett.
Mr Tett encouraged people to be “on the look-out” for vulnerable and elderly neighbours, who may need assistance in the cold weather.
On Monday evening through to 15:00 GMT on Tuesday, there is a chance of snow and ice for the north of England, northern Ireland, north Wales and Scotland.
“Quite a lot of the UK will see some snow as we head through Tuesday but as it ventures into the Midlands, south-west England and eventually later in the day across south-east England, it’s just going to be a few flakes,” Mr Snell said.
“Don’t expect to build a snowman.”
The cold snap is expected to last until next weekend, with milder weather on the way the following week.

What a US-China trade war would look like

What a US-China trade war would look like

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Employees process solar panel components at a solar power plant in Hefei, Anhui province, China on July 26, 2012 [File photo: Reuters]
Employees process solar panel components at a solar power plant in Hefei, Anhui province, China on July 26, 2012 [File photo: Reuters]
In recent years, Asian trading partners, such as China, have seen a massive increase in their trade surplus with the US, which has been grappling with widespread deindustrialisation and manufacturing layoffs. 
US President Donald Trump has taken up the issue and has promised to “bring jobs back to the US”. In the first year of his presidency, he effectively commenced a trade war by imposing hefty tariffs on imports of foreign-made solar panels and washing machines, where China and South Korea have been world leaders.  
Over the coming months, Washington is expected to up the ante by targeting rivals in hi-tech industries, with a particular focus on China’s alleged intellectual property rights’ theft. 
But the risk is an unwanted escalation of hostility that could burn bridges among nations. In its wish to “protect American jobs”, the Trump administration could unleash a dangerous tit-for-tat dynamic among leading industrial nations. What is at stake isn’t only an unprecedented era of economic globalisation, but also peace among major powers. 

‘Massive intellectual property theft’

In his highly anticipated speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Trump openly warnedthat his country “will no longer turn a blind eye to unfair economic practices” of other nations. Decades from now, Trump’s speech could be remembered as the de facto declaration of the 21st-century global trade war.
In particular, he focused on alleged “massive intellectual property theft, industrial subsidies and pervasive state-led economic planning” by rival nations. Though he fell short of naming names, it was more than obvious that he had state capitalist nations such as China in mind.

What’s clear is that almost overnight the US has transformed from a pre-eminent advocate of free trade into a protectionist villain in the eyes of both friends and foes.

Robert Lighthizer, Trump’s hardline trade official, defended the imposition of 30 percent tariffs on selected foreign products as a clear indication that the new administration “will always defend American workers, farmers, ranchers, and businesses in this regard.”
The US International Trade Commission has determined that imports of solar panels and washing machines, for instance, have unfairly hurt domestic manufacturers.
China, the world’s leading trading nation, immediately shot back. The Chinese commerce ministry expressed “strong dissatisfaction” with Trump’s latest trade measure for it “aggravates the global trade environment”.
The Asian powerhouse prodded the US to “exercise restraint in using trade restrictions”, warning that it will not shirk from “resolutely defend[ing] its legitimate interests” if push comes to shove.
Key US allies were also livid . South Korean Trade Minister Kim Hyun-chong characterised the measures as “excessive and a clear violation” of World Trade Organization rules.
Leading Korean companies, namely Samsung and LG, were the prime targets of the latest American tariffs. Mexico, another major trading partner, warned that it “will utilise all legal resources available” against the US. 
All these came against the backdrop of the Trump administration’s decision to unilaterally renegotiate existing free trade agreements with both South Korea and Mexico, embittering historically cordial relations with long-time allies.

A leap into the abyss

The 1930 Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, under which the US imposed tariffs on over 20,000 imported goods, added fuel to the Great Depression of the early 20th century.
As the world’s leading economy back then, the US’ aggressive protectionism ensured the virtual collapse of global trade, as each nation adopted corresponding measures to defend their local industries.
The upshot was a mutually assured financial destruction, which precipitated the most destructive war in human history. In recent decades, the US has flirted with virtual trade wars with often-disastrous results. 
When former US President Barack Obama decided to imposea 35 percent tariff on Chinese tires in 2009, the Asian powerhouse responded by imposing restrictions on US food imports.
China builds largest floating solar farm in the world
Were the Trump administration to impose new trade sanctions, China would likely respond by squeezing US companies already operating on its soil, while permanently shutting out others form the world’s largest consumer market.
China could start ditching multibillion-dollar purchases of US Boing aircrafts in favour of European Airbus, tighten regulation on manufacturing and sales of Apple products, reduce imports of US soybeans and food products, and even draw down its purchase of US treasury bills, which have kept the US economy afloat.
The Trump administration, however, is obstinately standing its ground, as it panders to its nationalist base. Specifically, it’s moving to employ a triumvirate of unilateral trade weapons, which could precipitate wide-scope sanctions against China and other major trading partners. 
These include provisions in US trade law to launch investigations. In early January, the Department of Commerce submitted a report on steel importsbased on Section 232 of the 1962 Trade Expansion Act, which allows restrictions on trade to be imposed to protect national security. In the next few months, the Trump administration will have to decide whether to impose tariffs on steel imports, which would affect China – the world’s biggest exporter of steel. 
A probe has also been initiated into aluminium imports and another one into violation of US intellectual property rights under Section 301 of the 1974 Trade Act. 
Trump has already warned of a “very big intellectual property potential fine”, which, he claims, “is going to come out soon”. If the threats push through, China and other major trading partners are widely expected to, at the very least, take the US to court for alleged violation of multilateral trading regimes. 
This frightening scenario would immediately have a ripple effect across the whole global economy, which depends heavily on stable trade relations among leading powers. 
What’s clear is that almost overnight the US has transformed from a pre-eminent advocate of free trade into a protectionist villain in the eyes of both friends and foes. The bigger threat, however, is trade war turning into hot war, as the nationalist fervour extinguishes the fruits of globalisation. 

Official: 13 Pakistanis on boat capsized off Libyan coast

A Pakistani official says thirteen Pakistanis have been identified among some ninety illegal migrants on a boat that capsized off Libya’s coast.

Pakistan’s foreign ministry spokesman, Mohammad Faisal, said Sunday that the bodies of 13 Pakistanis have been identified through documents and by a survivor, rescued by Libyan fishermen
According to Faisal, eight of the deceased dead were from Gujrat district, four from Mandi Bahauddin and one from Rawalpindi, all in Punjab province. He added that the bodies would be repatriated to Pakistan within a week.
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