Ten Things You Need to Know Today: Tuesday 27 Jan 2015
- 1. POLL: LABOUR TO SCRAPE NARROW WIN
- 2. NEW YORK SHUTS DOWN FOR BLIZZARD
- 3. FBI CHARGES RUSSIAN ‘SPY RING’ IN NEW YORK
- 4. GREECE: REPAYING DEBTS ‘UNREALISTIC’
- 5. ISLAMIC STATE BEATEN IN KOBANE
- 6. ARGENTINA WINDS UP INTELLIGENCE SERVICE
- 7. TEN DEAD IN SPAIN AS F-16 JET CRASHES
- 8. CUMBERBATCH SORRY FOR RACIAL EPITHET
- 9. MURRAY THROUGH AT AUSTRALIAN OPEN
- 10. BRIEFING: 70 YEARS AFTER AUSCHWITZ
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1. POLL: LABOUR TO SCRAPE NARROW WIN
A ‘poll of polls’ collated by Sky News suggests that Labour will be the main party in a hung parliament after this year’s general election. Sky forecasts that Labour will fall short of an absolute majority by around 40 seats - which could give Scotland’s SNP a decisive role in forming the next government.
Will it be the Sun wot wins it for the Tories again?
2. NEW YORK SHUTS DOWN FOR BLIZZARD
All non-emergency vehicles have been banned from the streets of New York City and Boston as the north-eastern US braces for a storm bringing “crippling” amounts of snow which could affect 60m people. Winter Storm Juno is expected to dump as much as 30 inches of snow in some places in the area.
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New York 'Snowmageddon' prompts driving ban across city
3. FBI CHARGES RUSSIAN ‘SPY RING’ IN NEW YORK
The FBI has charged three Russian men with forming a spy ring, trying to gain intelligence about US sanctions against Russia - and on alternative energy plans. Evgeny Buryako, 39, who appeared in court last night, worked at a Russian bank in Manhattan. The other two men are no longer in the US.
4. GREECE: REPAYING DEBTS ‘UNREALISTIC’
It is “unrealistic” to expect Greece to repay its national debt in full, says the newly-elected radical left-wing party Syriza. Economics spokesman Euclid Tsakalotos told the BBC. However, he insisted he wanted to negotiate a “just, mutually beneficial and viable solution” with leaders from the rest of the eurozone.
The Business: UK betting income rockets as terminals grow
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5. ISLAMIC STATE BEATEN IN KOBANE
Kurdish forces have expelled Islamic State militants from the Syrian border town of Kobane after a four-month siege. US Central Command said the YPG now controlled 90 per cent of the town and congratulated the Kurdish fighters on the victory, but said there was still a long way to go before the jihadists were defeated.
Islamic State: Kurds expel militants from key town of Kobane
6. ARGENTINA WINDS UP INTELLIGENCE SERVICE
Argentine president Christina Fernandez de Kirchner is to disband her country’s intelligence agency after the mysterious death of a state prosecutor. Alberto Nisman was found dead after alleging Fernandez and others covered up the alleged role of Iran in the bombing of a Jewish centre in 1994.
7. TEN DEAD IN SPAIN AS F-16 JET CRASHES
Ten people have died after a Nato F-16 fighter jet crashed on take-off at a military base in Spain. Thirteen others were injured, seven of them very seriously. Most of the victims were said to be French or Greek. The plane was on a training exercise as part of Nato’s Tactical Leadership Programme (TLP).
8. CUMBERBATCH SORRY FOR RACIAL EPITHET
Sherlock actor Benedict Cumberbatch has said he was an “idiot” and apologised for using the term “coloured” to refer to black actors in an interview. The Hobbit star said he was “devastated” to have caused offence. He was telling a US TV how it was harder for black actors to find work in the UK than the US.
9. MURRAY THROUGH AT AUSTRALIAN OPEN
Andy Murray has reached the semi-finals of the Australian Open, beating Nick Kyrgios 6-3, 7-6 (7-5), 6-3. He will face Tomas Berdych, who earlier bundled out Rafa Nadal in another major upset in Melbourne. The Spaniard was thrashed 6-2 6-0 7-6 (7-5) by Berdych, who had lost all 17 of their previous meetings. Roger Federer was knocked out last week.
10. BRIEFING: 70 YEARS AFTER AUSCHWITZ
Today marks the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, where more than one million people, most of them Jewish, were killed during World War Two. Winston Churchill described it as "the most horrible crime ever committed in the whole history of the world", but press attention was, at first, relatively sparse.
Auschwitz liberation 75 years on: how the world reacted