As
the United States marked 16 years since 9/11 this morning Eastern
Time, Hurricane Irma rages in Western Florida even as Brexit
deportees by numbers climb five times since 2010. William Lapoda and Timothy Wahome compile tonight's Evening Paper report.
In
Africa's evening paper….
In
Tanzania, the city of Dar-es-Salaam is set to develop a $600m sewage
system that will curb the disease impasse and poor drainage that
affect about 70 percent of the population in the biggest city in the
East African country. The scheme comes courtesy of the World Bank and
the government, reports, Reuters.
According
to The
Standard, the Hajj in Saudi Arabia this year has claimed the
lives of at least 78 Egyptian pilgrims by Monday of the week with the
Health Ministry of Egypt stipulating the deaths of the deceased aged
between 60 to 80 years were due to heart and breathing problems.
In
Europe and the UK this evening…
The
Independent
reveals that there has been a tide of deportations of European Union
citizens from the UK since Brexit. The paper has it that the numbers
of deportees, beginning 2010, are now fivefold.
In
North America this evening….
The
Guardian
writes that the US has simmered down demands for strong sanctions
following North Korea's sixth nuclear test in order to win the
unconditional support of two sideline members of the Security
Council, Russia and China. Having dropped the asset freeze demand,
the United States now proposed a little-by-little oil export no show.
Even
as the US marks 9/11 sixteen years later, Irma still dominates the
news. With strong winds and rains through Sunday, West Florida has
to hold out as evacuees in homes and evacuation centers dialed again
and again for news of the storm along their coastlines for what
might inevitably just happen, the New
York Times reports.
Asia
Pacific and Australasia papers this evening say…
Speaking
Monday of the week in Beijing at the start of the International
Association of Prosecutors, China's President Xi Jinping says that
his Oriental country attaches a lot of expectation to judicial
co-opting between world countries. This is according to Xinhua.
In
the Philippines,
Deseret News reports that the Church of Jesus Christ, after its
five and a half-decade stint in the Far-east country since
establishment, has reached a major milestone-the building of the
100th stake, the Mandaluyong Philippines Stake, a fete only equaled
in other christian countries of Mexico, Brazil and the US.
South
American papers this evening…
Haaretz
reports on the initial
ever trip by Israeli premier Benjamin Netanyahu, who is embarking on
a ten-day trip to Paraguay, Argentina, Colombia and Mexico, before
heading to the UN General Assembly.
End
of review for tonight's Evening Paper.
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