Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index hits all-time high
7 ethnic Rakhine killed as Myanmar police open fire at riot: official
Hong Kong democracy activist Joshua Wong jailed for protest
US allies back tougher maritime controls on N. Korea
Pope meets priest sex abuse victims in Chile: Vatican
Ford projects lower-than-expected 2017 profits
Trump 'healthy,' no cognitive issues: doctor
US withholds $65 mn from UN agency for Palestinians
Mexico's Volaris orders 80 Airbus planes for $9.3bn: government
At least seven dead in Colombia military helicopter crash
Nestle says sells US candy business to Ferrero for $2.9 bn
Venezuela says rebel pilot killed in police operation
Trump, Xi express 'hope' for change in N.Korea attitude: W.House
Trump tells Xi US trade deficit with China 'not sustainable': W.House
Tycoon-led Czech cabinet loses confidence vote
Turkish President Erdogan to visit pope on February 5
Citigroup reports steep Q4 losses tied to US tax reform
GM takes $7 bn charge on tax reform, seens solid 2018
GE takes one-off hit of $6.2 bn linked to insurance activities
France will never allow another 'Jungle' migrant camp in Calais: Macron
Pope in Chile calls for respect of 'rights' of indigenous people
Danish inventor Peter Madsen charged with Kim Wall murder: prosecutors
EU to remove Panama, seven others from tax haven blacklist: source
EU's 'hearts are still open' to Brexit reversal: Tusk
Prominent Kosovo Serb politician Ivanovic shot dead
UAE to file international complaint over Qatar flight 'interception'
Two bodies found at site of suspected gas blast in Antwerp: Belgian media
Hong Kong stocks post record close
Rohingya deal aims to return refugees 'within two years'
Torture probe launched after 13 siblings held captive in US home
Pope Francis arrives in Chile at start of Latin American trip
Palestinian leaders urge PLO to suspend recognition of Israel
Romania's left-wing PM quits after losing party backing
Several dead in operation to arrest Venezuela pilot: official
The Cranberries singer Dolores O'Riordan dies aged 46
Seven migrants die trying to reach Canary Islands: police
Palestinian shot dead by Israeli army in West Bank clashes: officials
Spain expected to replace US as second top tourism destination: UNWTO
Erdogan threatens to 'nip in the bud' new US-backed Syria force
Number of global tourists leapt 7% in 2017: UNWTO
Madrid to keep control of Catalonia if Puigdemont tries to govern remotely
Tripoli airport clashes kill nine: Libya ministry
Ritz-Carlton to re-open after holding royals in Saudi purge
Case dismissed against French troops accused of child rape in Central Africa
Qatar denies intercepting UAE passenger plane
Abducted Chibok girls say 'we won't return': Boko Haram video
UAE says Qatari fighter jets 'intercept' passenger plane
Airbus will have to scrap A380 programme if no new orders: sales chief
75 injured in floor collapse at Jakarta exchange building: police
Airbus says booked 1,109 aircraft orders, 718 deliveries in 2017
UK construction firm Carillion liquidates business
Twenty-six killed in Baghdad twin suicide attack: health official
Balcony of Indonesia's stock exchange collapses: reports
Deneuve says she meant no offence to sex assault victims
Palestinian president calls Trump peace offer 'slap of the century'
Palestinian president says Israel 'ended' Oslo accords
Two dead in Peru after 7.3 magnitude quake: official
Car bomb wounds Hamas official in Lebanon: military source
Iranian oil tanker ablaze off China coast has sunk: state media
'No hope of survivors' in Iranian tanker fire: official
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index hits all-time high
7 ethnic Rakhine killed as Myanmar police open fire at riot: official
Hong Kong democracy activist Joshua Wong jailed for protest
US allies back tougher maritime controls on N. Korea
Pope meets priest sex abuse victims in Chile: Vatican
Ford projects lower-than-expected 2017 profits
Trump 'healthy,' no cognitive issues: doctor
US withholds $65 mn from UN agency for Palestinians
Mexico's Volaris orders 80 Airbus planes for $9.3bn: government
At least seven dead in Colombia military helicopter crash
Nestle says sells US candy business to Ferrero for $2.9 bn
Venezuela says rebel pilot killed in police operation
Trump, Xi express 'hope' for change in N.Korea attitude: W.House
Trump tells Xi US trade deficit with China 'not sustainable': W.House
Tycoon-led Czech cabinet loses confidence vote
Turkish President Erdogan to visit pope on February 5
Citigroup reports steep Q4 losses tied to US tax reform
GM takes $7 bn charge on tax reform, seens solid 2018
GE takes one-off hit of $6.2 bn linked to insurance activities
France will never allow another 'Jungle' migrant camp in Calais: Macron
Pope in Chile calls for respect of 'rights' of indigenous people
Danish inventor Peter Madsen charged with Kim Wall murder: prosecutors
EU to remove Panama, seven others from tax haven blacklist: source
EU's 'hearts are still open' to Brexit reversal: Tusk
Prominent Kosovo Serb politician Ivanovic shot dead
UAE to file international complaint over Qatar flight 'interception'
Two bodies found at site of suspected gas blast in Antwerp: Belgian media
Hong Kong stocks post record close
Rohingya deal aims to return refugees 'within two years'
Torture probe launched after 13 siblings held captive in US home
Pope Francis arrives in Chile at start of Latin American trip
Palestinian leaders urge PLO to suspend recognition of Israel
Romania's left-wing PM quits after losing party backing
Several dead in operation to arrest Venezuela pilot: official
The Cranberries singer Dolores O'Riordan dies aged 46
Seven migrants die trying to reach Canary Islands: police
Palestinian shot dead by Israeli army in West Bank clashes: officials
Spain expected to replace US as second top tourism destination: UNWTO
Erdogan threatens to 'nip in the bud' new US-backed Syria force
Number of global tourists leapt 7% in 2017: UNWTO
Madrid to keep control of Catalonia if Puigdemont tries to govern remotely
Tripoli airport clashes kill nine: Libya ministry
Ritz-Carlton to re-open after holding royals in Saudi purge
Case dismissed against French troops accused of child rape in Central Africa
Qatar denies intercepting UAE passenger plane
Abducted Chibok girls say 'we won't return': Boko Haram video
UAE says Qatari fighter jets 'intercept' passenger plane
Airbus will have to scrap A380 programme if no new orders: sales chief
75 injured in floor collapse at Jakarta exchange building: police
Airbus says booked 1,109 aircraft orders, 718 deliveries in 2017
UK construction firm Carillion liquidates business
Twenty-six killed in Baghdad twin suicide attack: health official
Balcony of Indonesia's stock exchange collapses: reports
Deneuve says she meant no offence to sex assault victims
Palestinian president calls Trump peace offer 'slap of the century'
Palestinian president says Israel 'ended' Oslo accords
Two dead in Peru after 7.3 magnitude quake: official
Car bomb wounds Hamas official in Lebanon: military source
Iranian oil tanker ablaze off China coast has sunk: state media
'No hope of survivors' in Iranian tanker fire: official
British MPs will vote Wednesday on a key Brexit bill whose turbulent passage through parliament has dealt damaging defeats to Prime Minister Theresa May, and which still faces stiff opposition in the upper house.
The House of Commons is expected to pass the bill, which will incorporate thousands of pieces of EU legislation into the British statute books and repeal the legislation enshrining Britain's EU membership.
Eleven members of May's Conservative party joined with opposition lawmakers last month to approve an amendment making sure that parliament will have a "meaningful vote" on the final Brexit deal.
Fearful of another loss, the government also compromised on an amendment setting the date and time for Brexit as March 29, 2019, at 2300 GMT.
May agreed to give MPs the "power to amend the definition of 'exit day' to a later date" if it appeared that negotiations would overrun.
The flagship EU (Withdrawal) Bill, if approved, will pass to the upper House of Lords, where it will undergo further scrutiny from the largely pro-EU chamber before being put to another vote.
Veteran Tory MP Kenneth Clarke, a strident europhile, said on Tuesday that the House of Lords could make alterations to the bill.
"The idea that the bill... is going to have an untroubled passage through the House of Lords is an illusion," he said.
"I hope that the other place (Lords) will make an enormous number of changes".
- 'Hearts still open' -
During the first of two days of Commons debate on Tuesday, Conservative MP and leader of the rebellion, Dominic Grieve, raised concerns over plans not to bring the EU charter of fundamental rights into British law post-Brexit.
"It does seem to me that in simply batting this issue away and saying 'don't worry, it's all going to be perfectly all right'... we're sending out a really very strange message about our attitude," he said.
Meanwhile, Scotland's devolved government has repeatedly called for May to accept amendments tabled to prevent devolved powers being removed from its parliament.
After her government again rejected on Tuesday evening proposed changes to the bill, Michael Russell, minister for UK negotiations on Scotland's place in Europe, vowed to press ahead with legislation at Holyrood "if that's what it takes to defend devolution".
Britain and the European Union reached preliminary agreement before Christmas on Britain's financial settlement after Brexit, EU expatriate rights and the future of the Irish border, opening the door to the second phase of talks.
However, May faces a potentially volatile task in establishing what Britain's future relationship with the EU should look like, with some members of her cabinet wanting to stay as close as possible to the single market while others favour a clean break.
European Union leaders on Tuesday even held the door open for Britain to change its mind about ending its four-decade membership.
The comments by EU President Donald Tusk, European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker and others weighed into a debate in Britain about holding a second Brexit referendum.
Leading Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage surprisingly pushed the issue back onto the agenda last week when he said he was increasingly open to the idea of a new vote.
Tusk said: "We on the Continent haven't had a change of heart. Our hearts are still open to you."
British MPs will vote Wednesday on a key Brexit bill whose turbulent passage through parliament has dealt damaging defeats to Prime Minister Theresa May, and which still faces stiff opposition in the upper house.
The House of Commons is expected to pass the bill, which will incorporate thousands of pieces of EU legislation into the British statute books and repeal the legislation enshrining Britain's EU membership.
Eleven members of May's Conservative party joined with opposition lawmakers last month to approve an amendment making sure that parliament will have a "meaningful vote" on the final Brexit deal.
Fearful of another loss, the government also compromised on an amendment setting the date and time for Brexit as March 29, 2019, at 2300 GMT.
May agreed to give MPs the "power to amend the definition of 'exit day' to a later date" if it appeared that negotiations would overrun.
The flagship EU (Withdrawal) Bill, if approved, will pass to the upper House of Lords, where it will undergo further scrutiny from the largely pro-EU chamber before being put to another vote.
Veteran Tory MP Kenneth Clarke, a strident europhile, said on Tuesday that the House of Lords could make alterations to the bill.
"The idea that the bill... is going to have an untroubled passage through the House of Lords is an illusion," he said.
"I hope that the other place (Lords) will make an enormous number of changes".
- 'Hearts still open' -
During the first of two days of Commons debate on Tuesday, Conservative MP and leader of the rebellion, Dominic Grieve, raised concerns over plans not to bring the EU charter of fundamental rights into British law post-Brexit.
"It does seem to me that in simply batting this issue away and saying 'don't worry, it's all going to be perfectly all right'... we're sending out a really very strange message about our attitude," he said.
Meanwhile, Scotland's devolved government has repeatedly called for May to accept amendments tabled to prevent devolved powers being removed from its parliament.
After her government again rejected on Tuesday evening proposed changes to the bill, Michael Russell, minister for UK negotiations on Scotland's place in Europe, vowed to press ahead with legislation at Holyrood "if that's what it takes to defend devolution".
Britain and the European Union reached preliminary agreement before Christmas on Britain's financial settlement after Brexit, EU expatriate rights and the future of the Irish border, opening the door to the second phase of talks.
However, May faces a potentially volatile task in establishing what Britain's future relationship with the EU should look like, with some members of her cabinet wanting to stay as close as possible to the single market while others favour a clean break.
European Union leaders on Tuesday even held the door open for Britain to change its mind about ending its four-decade membership.
The comments by EU President Donald Tusk, European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker and others weighed into a debate in Britain about holding a second Brexit referendum.
Leading Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage surprisingly pushed the issue back onto the agenda last week when he said he was increasingly open to the idea of a new vote.
Tusk said: "We on the Continent haven't had a change of heart. Our hearts are still open to you."
British MPs will vote Wednesday on a key Brexit bill whose turbulent passage through parliament has dealt damaging defeats to Prime Minister Theresa May, and which still faces stiff opposition in the upper house.
The House of Commons is expected to pass the bill, which will incorporate thousands of pieces of EU legislation into the British statute books and repeal the legislation enshrining Britain's EU membership.
17 Jan 2018Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index hits all-time high
7 ethnic Rakhine killed as Myanmar police open fire at riot: official
Hong Kong democracy activist Joshua Wong jailed for protest
US allies back tougher maritime controls on N. Korea
Pope meets priest sex abuse victims in Chile: Vatican
Ford projects lower-than-expected 2017 profits
Trump 'healthy,' no cognitive issues: doctor
US withholds $65 mn from UN agency for Palestinians
Mexico's Volaris orders 80 Airbus planes for $9.3bn: government
At least seven dead in Colombia military helicopter crash
Nestle says sells US candy business to Ferrero for $2.9 bn
Venezuela says rebel pilot killed in police operation
Trump, Xi express 'hope' for change in N.Korea attitude: W.House
Trump tells Xi US trade deficit with China 'not sustainable': W.House
Tycoon-led Czech cabinet loses confidence vote
Turkish President Erdogan to visit pope on February 5
Citigroup reports steep Q4 losses tied to US tax reform
GM takes $7 bn charge on tax reform, seens solid 2018
GE takes one-off hit of $6.2 bn linked to insurance activities
France will never allow another 'Jungle' migrant camp in Calais: Macron
Pope in Chile calls for respect of 'rights' of indigenous people
Danish inventor Peter Madsen charged with Kim Wall murder: prosecutors
EU to remove Panama, seven others from tax haven blacklist: source
EU's 'hearts are still open' to Brexit reversal: Tusk
Prominent Kosovo Serb politician Ivanovic shot dead
UAE to file international complaint over Qatar flight 'interception'
Two bodies found at site of suspected gas blast in Antwerp: Belgian media
Hong Kong stocks post record close
Rohingya deal aims to return refugees 'within two years'
Torture probe launched after 13 siblings held captive in US home
Pope Francis arrives in Chile at start of Latin American trip
Palestinian leaders urge PLO to suspend recognition of Israel
Romania's left-wing PM quits after losing party backing
Several dead in operation to arrest Venezuela pilot: official
The Cranberries singer Dolores O'Riordan dies aged 46
Seven migrants die trying to reach Canary Islands: police
Palestinian shot dead by Israeli army in West Bank clashes: officials
Spain expected to replace US as second top tourism destination: UNWTO
Erdogan threatens to 'nip in the bud' new US-backed Syria force
Number of global tourists leapt 7% in 2017: UNWTO
Madrid to keep control of Catalonia if Puigdemont tries to govern remotely
Tripoli airport clashes kill nine: Libya ministry
Ritz-Carlton to re-open after holding royals in Saudi purge
Case dismissed against French troops accused of child rape in Central Africa
Qatar denies intercepting UAE passenger plane
Abducted Chibok girls say 'we won't return': Boko Haram video
UAE says Qatari fighter jets 'intercept' passenger plane
Airbus will have to scrap A380 programme if no new orders: sales chief
75 injured in floor collapse at Jakarta exchange building: police
Airbus says booked 1,109 aircraft orders, 718 deliveries in 2017
UK construction firm Carillion liquidates business
Twenty-six killed in Baghdad twin suicide attack: health official
Balcony of Indonesia's stock exchange collapses: reports
Deneuve says she meant no offence to sex assault victims
Palestinian president calls Trump peace offer 'slap of the century'
Palestinian president says Israel 'ended' Oslo accords
Two dead in Peru after 7.3 magnitude quake: official
Car bomb wounds Hamas official in Lebanon: military source
Iranian oil tanker ablaze off China coast has sunk: state media
'No hope of survivors' in Iranian tanker fire: official
British MPs will vote Wednesday on a key Brexit bill whose turbulent passage through parliament has dealt damaging defeats to Prime Minister Theresa May, and which still faces stiff opposition in the upper house.
The House of Commons is expected to pass the bill, which will incorporate thousands of pieces of EU legislation into the British statute books and repeal the legislation enshrining Britain's EU membership.
Eleven members of May's Conservative party joined with opposition lawmakers last month to approve an amendment making sure that parliament will have a "meaningful vote" on the final Brexit deal.
Fearful of another loss, the government also compromised on an amendment setting the date and time for Brexit as March 29, 2019, at 2300 GMT.
May agreed to give MPs the "power to amend the definition of 'exit day' to a later date" if it appeared that negotiations would overrun.
The flagship EU (Withdrawal) Bill, if approved, will pass to the upper House of Lords, where it will undergo further scrutiny from the largely pro-EU chamber before being put to another vote.
Veteran Tory MP Kenneth Clarke, a strident europhile, said on Tuesday that the House of Lords could make alterations to the bill.
"The idea that the bill... is going to have an untroubled passage through the House of Lords is an illusion," he said.
"I hope that the other place (Lords) will make an enormous number of changes".
- 'Hearts still open' -
During the first of two days of Commons debate on Tuesday, Conservative MP and leader of the rebellion, Dominic Grieve, raised concerns over plans not to bring the EU charter of fundamental rights into British law post-Brexit.
"It does seem to me that in simply batting this issue away and saying 'don't worry, it's all going to be perfectly all right'... we're sending out a really very strange message about our attitude," he said.
Meanwhile, Scotland's devolved government has repeatedly called for May to accept amendments tabled to prevent devolved powers being removed from its parliament.
After her government again rejected on Tuesday evening proposed changes to the bill, Michael Russell, minister for UK negotiations on Scotland's place in Europe, vowed to press ahead with legislation at Holyrood "if that's what it takes to defend devolution".
Britain and the European Union reached preliminary agreement before Christmas on Britain's financial settlement after Brexit, EU expatriate rights and the future of the Irish border, opening the door to the second phase of talks.
However, May faces a potentially volatile task in establishing what Britain's future relationship with the EU should look like, with some members of her cabinet wanting to stay as close as possible to the single market while others favour a clean break.
European Union leaders on Tuesday even held the door open for Britain to change its mind about ending its four-decade membership.
The comments by EU President Donald Tusk, European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker and others weighed into a debate in Britain about holding a second Brexit referendum.
Leading Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage surprisingly pushed the issue back onto the agenda last week when he said he was increasingly open to the idea of a new vote.
Tusk said: "We on the Continent haven't had a change of heart. Our hearts are still open to you."
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