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Saturday, October 17, 2020

Today Top Stories | Teacher Beheaded In A Classroom | Jacinda Ardern's Historic Victory | Biggest Corruption Case | Missile Attack In Azerbaijan | Old Dispute With Qatar Finally Over | Israel Broke Its Promise

Teacher beheaded for showing blasphemous sketches in class

In France, a teacher who showed blasphemous sketches was beheaded in a classroom. The incident took place outside a school in the northwest of the French capital, Paris, at 5pm on Friday, where a young man with a knife beheaded a 'history' teacher.

According to reports, the slain teacher had shown blasphemous sketches in the classroom and also had a discussion on it. Police had shot the gun and knife carrier location near the young that it has arrested several people in connection Terrorism French prosecutor said. On the other hand, judicial sources were quoted as saying that the 18-year-old youth carrying the knife belonged to Chechnya.

Jacinda Ardern's historic victory in New Zealand's parliamentary elections

The  ruling Labor Party has won a landslide victory in New Zealand's parliamentary elections, paving the way for Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern to become prime minister for a second term. Incumbent Prime Minister Jacinda Arden's Labor Party has won a landslide victory in New Zealand's parliamentary elections, according to the World News Agency. Jacinda Arden called the victory historic.

In the parliamentary elections, Jacinda Arden's Labor Party won 50 percent of the seats and her rival Judith Collins' Labor Party won 27 percent of the seats, while other parties received 8 percent of the vote. Thus, for the first time in the country's history, the Left Alliance has gained a clear majority in Parliament.

In New Zealand, a 61-seat parliament is required to form a government, otherwise a coalition government would have to be formed with other parties if a majority is not forthcoming, and preliminary results suggest that Jacinda Arden will easily become prime minister a second time. ۔

Saudi Arabia's biggest corruption case caught

The Anti-Corruption Authority in Saudi Arabia has arrested 22 people in the country's biggest corruption case. According to the Arab News Agency, the Anti-Corruption Authority has seized more than 600 million Saudi riyals in corruption and arrested 22 people in the case, which is being called the biggest corruption case in Saudi Arabia.

According to Arab media, 13 government employees belonging to the Riyadh municipality have been arrested in this case, while four businessmen and five employees of a contracting company have also been arrested on serious charges of forgery. During a search of the suspects' homes, authorities found more than 193 million Saudi riyals in cash, which was hidden inside the roofs, the mosque's service room, water tank and underground.

Missile attack kills 12 in Azerbaijan

A missile strike in the Azerbaijani city of Ganja destroyed several houses, killing 12 people and injuring more than 40. The bomber struck shortly after noon in front of a police recruiting center in the northern city of Mangiswer, according to AFP.

The attack came just hours after Azerbaijani forces shelled the Armenian separatist capital, Stephenkart.

The attacks appear to have undermined international efforts to reduce tensions between Christian-majority Armenia and Muslim-majority Azerbaijan since regional powers Russia and Turkey joined the fight.

The decades-long Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has resumed and so far about 700 people, including 80 civilians, have been killed. It should be noted that Negrono-Karabakh is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, but since the end of the war between the two countries in 1994, it has been governed by locals of Armenian descent.


Saudi Foreign Minister hints at end to dispute with Qatar

Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan has indicated that progress is being made towards ending the three-year-old dispute with Qatar. Al Jazeera reported that the progress to resolve the dispute with Qatar and other countries, according to Faisal Bin Farhan said in a statement after meeting in Washington with US counterpart Mike Pompey.

Saudi Arabia, as well as the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt, cut ties in 2017, accusing Qatar of collaborating with terrorists.

Israel reneged on its promise after establishing relations with the United Arab Emirates

Establishing relations with the United Arab Emirates, Israel broke its promise a month later. The Zionist state has announced plans to build about 5,000 new buildings in the West Bank, while Israel has promised to stop illegal construction in an agreement with the United Arab Emirates.

The foreign ministers of five major European countries, France, Germany, Britain, Italy and Spain, have issued a joint statement expressing strong reservations about Israeli construction.

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