JERUSALEM -- Israel faces an "international campaign to
blacken its name" aimed at delegitimizing its very existence regardless
to its policies, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday. The
international community disproportionally singles out the Jewish state
for condemnation while remaining silent on major conflicts and human
rights abuses in other countries, he said.
Netanyahu
made the comments Sunday at a meeting of his new Cabinet just two days
after a Palestinian proposal to suspend Israel from world football was
dropped at the last moment. Netanyahu warned that such efforts to
boycott Israel continue. Palestinians accelerated their campaign to
boycott Israel and Israeli-made products after peace talks collapsed
last year.
"We are in the midst of a great
struggle being waged against the state of Israel, an international
campaign to blacken its name. It is not connected to our actions; it is
connected to our very existence. It does not matter what we do; it
matters what we symbolize and what we are," Netanyahu said."I think that
it is important to understand that these things do not stem from the
fact that if only we were nicer or a little more generous - we are very
generous, we have made many offers, we have made many concessions - that
anything would change because this campaign to delegitimize Israel
entails something much deeper that is being directed at us and seeks to
deny our very right to live here," he said.
The Israeli prime minister said the Palestinian boycott is reminiscent of similar attacks the Jewish people faced in the past.
"Now,
this is a phenomenon that we have known in the history of our people.
What hasn't been said about the Jewish people? They said that we are the
focus of all evil in the world. All of these things are being said
about us today as well. It was not true then and it is not true today.
This does not have a shred of truth," he said.
Netanyahu
said that he was pleased the Palestinian attempt to have Israel
suspended from FIFA, world soccer's governing body, was rebuffed in the
end, but warned that Israel will face similar boycott efforts in the
future.
Palestinians had pushed to get Israel
banned because they said Israeli security restrictions limited the
movement of Palestinian players, visiting teams and soccer equipment.
Israel
accused the Palestinians of politicizing sports and insisted its
security concerns are valid, especially regarding movement in and out of
the Gaza Strip - which is ruled by the Islamic militant group Hamas.
"We
are not a perfect country; we do not pretend to be such, but they are
setting standards for us that are both twisted and higher than those for
any other country, any other democracy," he said.
SINGAPORE - An
Asia-Pacific security summit was briefly put on lockdown Sunday after
police shot dead a local motorist who tried to flee a checkpoint in a
car later found to contain drugs, officials said.
The three-day
Shangri-La Dialogue attended by US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter and
counterparts from around the world along with top military officials
ended at midday Sunday.
But before dawn, police opened fire at a
car with three Singaporean men after they tried to crash through a
barricade outside the annual summit's venue, the Shangri-La Hotel.
The 34-year-old driver was killed and one passenger was wounded and hospitalised. Both passengers are now under arrest.
"Substances
believed to be controlled drugs and an item believed to be a
drug-taking utensil were found on the men arrested," the police said in a
statement.
"The driver and one of the passengers are wanted by
authorities for various offences," the statement said, adding that no
weapons or explosives were found in the vehicle.
Shootings are
extremely rare in Singapore, which boasts one of the world's lowest
crime rates, but the city-state considers itself a potential terrorist
target.
The city-state's drug laws are among the toughest in the
world, with courts allowed to impose the death penalty for people
convicted of trafficking large amounts of certain drugs like heroin.
"Preliminary
investigations indicate that this is an isolated incident. Police
investigations are ongoing," the statement added.
After the
shooting, police officers initially told people attending the summit
that the hotel was on complete lockdown, with no entry allowed. Roads
and pathways leading up to the hotel, located in Singapore's leafy
diplomatic quarter, were shut off with barricade tape.
But access
to the venue was gradually eased on Sunday morning. The conference
resumed at 9:00 am (0100 GMT) with no signs of alarm in the main lobby.
An AFP photographer said a bullet hole could be seen on the front windscreen of the vehicle as it was towed away at noon.
A resident at a nearby condominium told the Straits Times newspaper that she heard two gunshots just after 4:00 am local time.
Security had been heightened for the summit with roadblocks and checkpoints set up in the vicinity of the venue.
Some were manned by members of the Gurkha Contingent -- elite Nepalese fighters who are part of the local police force.
Human Rights Watch on Sunday published new
evidence alleging a Saudi-led coalition is using internationally banned
cluster bombs in Yemen, urging it to stop such attacks that were harming
civilians.
The New York-based watchdog said it documented the use
of three types of cluster munitions in Yemen, where Saudi-led warplanes
have pounded positions of Shiite rebels and allies loyal to former
president Ali Abdullah Saleh since March 26.
"The Saudi-led
coalition and other warring parties in Yemen need to recognise that
using banned cluster munitions is very likely to harm civilians," said
HRW's senior emergencies researcher Ole Solvang.
"These weapons
can't distinguish military targets from civilians, and their unexploded
submunitions threaten civilians, especially children, even long after
the fighting," she added in a statement.
The organisation said the
banned munitions had wounded civilians including a child in attacks on
northern stronghold of the Huthi rebels, pointing out that a HRW team
had visited Saada province this month.
Two of three people wounded
in one attack from the air were likely to have been civilians, while
the source of ground-fired cluster bombs that wounded four other
civilians, including a child, was not determined, HRW said.
Both cases took place in an area under attack by the coalition, it added.
Saudi
Arabia and the nine Arab members of the coalition are not signatories
of the 2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions that prohibits their use.
Cluster bombs can be fired by rockets, mortars, and artillery or dropped by aircraft.
Typically
they break up in the air into many bomblets, but they can become de
facto landmines on the ground if they fail to explode.
According
to the World Health Organisation, the Yemen conflict has since March
killed almost 2,000 people and wounded 8,000, with hundreds of women and
children among the casualties.
Islamic
State group jihadists demolished a notorious government prison in the
historic Syrian city of Palmyra on Saturday, as barrel bombs dropped by
regime helicopters killed more than 70 civilians in Aleppo.
In neighbouring Iraq, government forces retook an area west of the city of Ramadi, which IS overran earlier in May.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said IS planted explosives that "largely destroyed" the Palmyra jail, which was for decades a symbol of abuses meted out on regime opponents.
Opponents
of President Bashar al-Assad welcomed on social media the destruction
of the long-feared prison at Palmyra, which IS seized 10 days ago after
government forces pulled out.
In rebel-held areas of Aleppo
province including the city itself, "at least 71 civilians were killed,
and dozens wounded when regime helicopters dropped barrel bombs," the
Observatory said.
In the worst carnage, 59 civilians, all male,
were killed at a market in the jihadist-controlled town of Al-Bab, the
Britain-based monitoring group's director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.
"People
often gather on Saturday mornings at the Al-Hail market in Al-Bab,
which is why the number of dead was so high," explained Abdel Rahman.
He
said 12 people were also killed in barrel bomb attacks on Aleppo's
rebel-held Al-Shaar neighbourhood, including eight members of a single
family.
Victims' bodies were laid out on the streets of the
neighbourhood, the limp blood-covered hand of one of them protruding
from under a blanket, said an AFP correspondent at the scene. Rapid retreat Barrel bombs -- crude weapons made of containers packed with explosives -- have often struck schools, hospitals, and markets in Syria.
But Saturday's death toll was among the highest.
"This
is one of the biggest massacres that regime planes have committed since
the beginning of 2015," said the Syrian Revolution General Commission
activist group.
The Observatory said regime forces also dropped
barrel bombs Friday in Idlib province, now under the de facto control of
rebels after regime forces withdrew, leaving Al-Qaeda and its allies to
capture the city of Ariha and surrounding villages.
The tactic of
carrying out air attacks on built-up areas after battleground losses
has become common practise for Syria's regime, which ceded swathes of
territory in May.
Following defeats in Idlib's provincial capital
and at a massive military base nearby, government forces also lost the
ancient city of Palmyra to IS jihadists on May 21.
In northeast Syria on Saturday, IS launched an assault on Hasakeh city, which has a large Kurdish population.
The Observatory said at least 10 pro-government forces and 10 jihadists were killed.
In
a provincial town to the north, Kurdish militia executed at least 20
civilians Friday, including two children, after accusing them of being
IS supporters, the Observatory reported. Curbs on fleeing Anbar
In
Iraq on Saturday, government troops and allied paramilitary forces
retook an area west of Ramadi, captured by IS two weeks ago.
"The
Iraqi army and the Hashed al-Shaabi liberated the Anbar traffic police
building in the 5K area west of Ramadi after a fierce fight," an army
officer said.
Hashed al-Shaabi is an umbrella term for mostly
Shiite militia and volunteers, and it has played a key role in Iraq's
anti-IS fight.
But Human Rights Watch accused Iraqi authorities of
blocking thousands of families from escaping violence in the mainly
Sunni province of Anbar.
"Since April 2015, the government has
imposed restrictions on entry into Baghdad and Babylon provinces
affecting just under 200,000 people fleeing fighting" in Ramadi, the
group said.
It said the restrictions effectively discriminated against Sunni Arabs.
"Prime
Minister (Haider al-)Abadi should immediately order these restrictions
lifted so that all Iraqis can seek refuge in Baghdad, regardless of
origin or religious affiliation," said HRW.
And in Turkey, Prime
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu described as an election ploy the release of
images allegedly showing Turkish intelligence trucks delivering weapons
into Syria last year.
"The release (of the video footage) right now is an effort aimed at affecting the (June 7) elections," he told AFP.
In
January 2014, security forces searched trucks near the Turkish-Syrian
border on suspicion of smuggling arms into Syria and found Turkish
national intelligence personnel on board.
Oklahoma City, Okla. -- An Oklahoma state trooper fatally shot a
man who was involved in a fight with two troopers who were trying to
rescue him and another man from floodwaters, the Oklahoma Highway Patrol
said Saturday.
The troopers responded to a
report of a stranded vehicle in Okmulgee County, about 20 miles south of
Tulsa, about 9:30 p.m. Friday. They found two men trying to remove a
vehicle from a roadway over which water was rising and moving quickly,
according to Capt. Paul Timmons.
"They were
trying to get them to come out of the water. They were worried about
them getting swept away," Timmons said. "(The men), for whatever reason,
were just really upset about having to leave the vehicle there."
At
least one man attacked a trooper after reaching dry land and was shot
and killed. It wasn't immediately known how many shots were fired or
whether one or both troopers shot.
"It's not real clear how it all transpired," according to Timmons.
Timmons
said a weapon was recovered from one of the suspects, but it wasn't
immediately known which man had the weapon or whether shots were fired
at the troopers.
The second man was arrested for assault and public intoxication, Timmons said. No names have been released.
Neither trooper was injured. And neither had been placed on leave as of Saturday afternoon.
"That's
been the practice of the agency when something like that occurs. I can
say it's probably a matter of time," before the troopers are placed on
leave, Timmons said.
The lawyers for two men charged with
the murder of a pair of British tourists in Thailand have expressed
concern that key forensic evidence will not be re-examined before trial.
Two young migrant workers from Myanmar have been accused of the murders of Hannah Witheridge and David Miller.
But the investigation into their deaths has been marred by confusion and allegations of police incompetence.
The backpackers were killed on Koh Tao island in September last year.
Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo have both repeatedly stated their innocence.
'Deeply concerned'
Their defence lawyers have asked for the forensic evidence gathered by Thai police to be sent to independent experts.
But the judge in the case has said that he will not rule on the matter until the first day of the trial.
"I am now deeply concerned at this developing situation," said lead lawyer Nakhon Chomphuchat in a statement.
"Without re-examination of this evidence by the Ministry of Justice's
Central Institute of Forensic Science, the ability of the two defendants
to defend themselves against the serious crimes they are charged of
will be seriously impeded."
With no witnesses to the murders, forensic analysis is likely to be
central in deciding the outcome of the case, says the BBC's Jonathan
Head in Bangkok.
Thai police have described their investigation
as "perfect", despite failing to control the crime scene and the flurry
of conflicting police statements issued in the first weeks of the
investigation, our correspondent says.
In October, both defendants said that they had been beaten by local police into confessing to the murders.
The
bodies of Miss Witheridge and Mr Miller were found on a beach in the
popular tourist destination on 15 September. Mr Miller died from
drowning and a blow to the head, while Miss Witheridge died from head
wounds.
The victims' families have said they are keen to see the "right people" convicted.
A suicide bomber has killed at least
16 people at a mosque in the Nigerian city of Maiduguri, police say.
Dozens more were wounded in the attack.
It follows an overnight
assault on the north-eastern city by Boko Haram, in which at least 13
people were killed before troops were able to push back the militants'
advance.
The attacks came hours after Muhammadu Buhari was sworn in as new president.
He has vowed decisive action against Boko Haram.
In
recent years, the militants have killed thousands of people - mostly in
north-eastern Nigeria - in its attempt to set up an Islamic state.
So far, no group has said it carried out Saturday's suicide bombing.
'Bright flashes'
Late
on Friday, Boko Haram fighters fired rocket-propelled grenades into the
southern suburbs of Maiduguri for around three hours.
The Nigerian army deployed armoured vehicles and fired back, forcing the militants to retreat.
The
BBC's Will Ross in Abuja says that the attack seems to be Boko Haram's
way of showing that they remain a significant threat despite a recent
military offensive against them.
In his first speech as president
on Friday, Mr Buhari reiterated his commitment to tackle the group,
which he described as a "godless group, who are as far away from Islam
as one can think".
Mr Buhari, a former military ruler, has taken over from Goodluck Jonathan, who had been in office since 2010.
Nigeria's
new president has also promised that the government will do everything
it can to rescue more than 200 Chibok girls who were captured last year
by Boko Haram.
He is the first opposition figure to win a presidential election in Nigeria since independence in 1960.
Muhammadu Buhari in focus:
Muslim from northern Nigeria, aged 72
Military ruler of Nigeria from 1984 to 1985, deposed in a coup
Seen as incorruptible
Poor human rights record
Survived apparent Boko Haram assassination attempt
The European Union has responded angrily to Russia's entry ban against 89 European politicians, officials and military leaders.
Those
banned are believed to include general secretary of the EU council Uwe
Corsepius, Bernard-Henri Levy, and former British deputy prime minister Nick Clegg.
Russia shared the list after several requests by diplomats, the EU said.
The EU called the ban "totally arbitrary and unjustified" and said no explanation had been provided.
Many of those on the list are outspoken critics of the Kremlin, and some have been turned away from Russia in recent months.
The EU said that it had asked repeatedly for the list of those banned, but nothing had been provided until now.
"The
list with 89 names has now been shared by the Russian authorities. We
don't have any other information on legal basis, criteria and process of
this decision," an EU spokesman said on Saturday.
"We consider this measure as totally arbitrary and unjustified,
especially in the absence of any further clarification and
transparency," he added.
A Russian foreign ministry official said that the ban was a result of EU sanctions against Russia.
"Why
it was precisely these people who entered into the list... is simple -
it was done in answer to the sanctions campaign which has been waged in
relation to Russia by several states of the European Union," the
official, who was not named, told Russian news agency Tass.
EU
sanctions were imposed after Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimea region in
March 2014, and they have been extended amid ongoing fighting between
government troops and pro-Russia separatists in eastern Ukraine.
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte told journalists on Friday that the
list had been shared with EU diplomats and that three Dutch politicians
were on it. He said that the Netherlands would not abide by the ban as
it was "not based on international law".
British intelligence chiefs appear to have been targeted, with a leaked version of the list (in German)naming MI5 director general Andrew Parker and the former MI6 chief Sir John Sawers.
Former
British foreign secretary Sir Malcolm Rifkind told the AFP news agency
that he had "read the reports in the media [of his ban] but not a word
from the Russians".
Britain's foreign office said: "The Russian authorities have not provided any legal basis for the list or for the names on it.
"If Russia thinks this action will cause the EU to change its position on sanctions, it is wrong."
Also
on the list are the French philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy, former
Belgian prime minister Guy Verhofstadt and the EU's former enlargement
chief Stefan Fule. 'A decent club'
Sweden's foreign minister, Margot Wallstrom said that her country has asked for an explanation from Russia.
Eight Swedes are on the list, including Swedish MEP Anna Maria Corazza Bildt.
"I'm more proud than scared and this gives me more determination to
continue... If the Kremlin takes me and my colleagues seriously it means
we're doing a good job," she told AFP.
The former Czech foreign minister, Karel Schwarzenberg, also said he was pleased to have made the list.
"When
I saw the other names (on the list), I found out I was in a very decent
club. I consider this a reward," he was quoted as saying by the CTK
news agency.
Other countries with names on the list reportedly
include Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Denmark, Finland, Sweden,
Czech Republic, Romania, Bulgaria and Spain.
The US has called for an "immediate and lasting halt" to land reclamation in disputed areas of the South China Sea.
US Defence Secretary Ashton Carter told the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore that China's actions in the area were "out of step" with international rules.
China claims almost the whole of the South China Sea, resulting in overlapping claims with its neighbours.
Chinese officials have described US remarks on the South China Sea as "groundless and not constructive".
Other
countries have accused China of illegally taking land to create
artificial islands with facilities that could potentially be for
military use.
At the conference on Saturday, which was attended by defence
ministers from across the Asia-Pacific region, Mr Carter said he wanted
the "peaceful resolution of all disputes".
"To that end, there should be an immediate and lasting halt to land reclamation by all claimants," he said.
He
acknowledged that other claimants such as Vietnam, the Philippines,
Malaysia and Taiwan had reclaimed pockets of land or built outposts in
the area, but said "one country has gone much farther and much faster
than any other".
"China has reclaimed over 2,000 acres, more than
all other claimants combined and more than in the entire history of the
region. And China did so in only the last 18 months," he said.
"It
is unclear how much farther China will go. That is why this stretch of
water has become the source of tension in the region and front-page news
around the world."
The US defence secretary also said the US
would maintain a substantial presence in the region, adding: "The United
States will fly, sail, and operate wherever international law allows."
Analysis: BBC defence correspondent Jonathan Marcus
Ash Carter's comments were some of the toughest on China's island-building strategy that have come from a senior US official.
The key question is what the US can actually do about it beyond words.
Recent
over-flights by US maritime patrol aircraft of some of the new islands
have been met by terse radio traffic with the Chinese demanding they
leave the area. The fear is that this kind of activity might lead to
some kind of incident in the air or at sea that may only further inflame
tensions between Washington and Beijing.
China takes the view that it is doing nothing wrong - and certainly nothing that other countries are not also doing.
However, it is clearly the pace and scale of what China is doing that worries many.
And
with the precedent of China's self-declared air defence identification
zone in the East China Sea, there are fears that such an approach to
monitoring or potentially even ultimately limiting freedom of movement
could be extended into the South China Sea as well. Tensions over China's 'Great Wall of Sand' China's island factory What is South China Sea dispute?
Senior
Colonel Zhao Xiaozhuo, a member of China's delegation at the
conference, said that China's actions were "reasonable and justified",
and that "it is wrong to criticise China for affecting peace and
stability through construction activities".
Mr Carter's comments follow reports from US defence officials that
China had put two artillery vehicles on one of the artificial sands it
is creating in the disputed Spratley Islands area of the South China Sea
earlier this month.
Asked about the US claims, China's foreign
ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said she was "not aware of the
situation" described, and urged the US to "stop making any provocative
remarks".
China has previously said its work in the area is legal and needed to safeguard its sovereignty.
PHOENIX - Anti-Islam
protesters -- some of them heavily armed -- faced off against religious
rights demonstrators outside a US mosque, in a tense but peaceful
standoff.
About 200 demonstrators from each group stood outside
the mosque in Phoenix, Arizona, where a biker crew had said they would
hold a Mohammed cartoon contest.
Dozens of officers lined up
between the two sets of protesters, using yellow police tape to separate
them near the gates of the Islamic Community Center mosque in north
Phoenix.
"Stop Islam" was among the slogans on placards held by
bearded bikers, one of whom wore a T-shirt reading "Support Your Local
White Boy" and had a shouting match with rival demonstrators across the
police lines.
Several anti-Islam protesters were heavily armed --
some with AR-15 assault rifles -- and wore military fatigues. Arizona
has some of the laxest gun laws in the United States.
But after several hours of tension, the standoff eased -- though officers kept the two groups apart.
Organizers
of the anti-Islam protests said on their Facebook page that it was in
response to a recent failed attack in Texas where two gunmen were shot
dead before they could storm an event including a Mohammed cartoon
drawing competition.
"Everyone is encouraged to bring American
flags and any message that you would like to send to the known
acquaintances of the 2 gunman," who frequented the Phoenix mosque, the
Facebook page said.
The anti-Islam protest's organizer, former
Marine Jon Ritzheimer, told CNN before the Friday night demonstration:
"I think the whole thing, the cartoon contest especially, I think it's
stupid and ridiculous.
"But it's what needs to take place in order to expose the true colors of Islam," he added.
BUJUMBURA (BURUNDI) - The
vice president of Burundi's election commission has fled the country,
sources told AFP on Saturday, in a new blow to government plans to push
ahead with next week's first stage of controversial elections.
Spes
Caritas Ndironkeye left the central African nation on a flight for
neighbouring Rwanda on Friday evening, associates said, adding that she
had left behind a letter of resignation.
An electoral commission
source said she "left without saying goodbye, without saying where she
was going." A second member of the five-person commission, Illuminata
Ndabahagamye, is also thought to have fled, sources said.
"What has happened is a catastrophe, but it was inevitable," another commission source said.
"Technically,
the Election Commission can continue to work with four out of five
members. But if two have left, no decision can be taken and it will be
impossible to replace them before June 5," the source said.
Burundi's
crisis surrounds President Pierre Nkurunziza's controversial bid for a
third term in office, with opposition and rights groups saying the move
violates the constitution as well as the terms of a peace deal that
ended a 13-year civil war in 2006.
The capital Bujumbura has been
hit by weeks of civil unrest which has left at least 30 dead in a major
security crackdown, and the crisis intensified earlier this month when a
top general staged a failed coup attempt -- increasing fears that the
impoverished, landlocked country could be plunged back into widespread
violence.
The opposition has also said the holding of free and
fair elections is impossible, with independent media silenced and
allegations of threats and intimidation by Nkurunziza's supporters.
Parliamentary elections are due to be held on June 5, with a presidential poll scheduled for June 26.
Nigeria's
military on Saturday repelled a Boko Haram attack on the key northeast
city of Maiduguri that saw rocket-propelled grenades fired into homes,
witnesses and security sources said.
The Islamists' assault on
the Borno state capital came a day after President Muhammadu Buhari's
inauguration, with the new leader vowing to re-enforce Maiduguri with a
new command and control centre to better coordinate the
counter-insurgency effort.
Shortly after midnight (2300 GMT
Friday), residents in the Dala suburb south of the city woke to the
sound of RPGs being fired in succession, said resident Modu Karumi, in
an account supported by several others.
Witnesses said hundreds
of Islamist gunmen were trying to advance on the city, which is now home
to hundreds of thousands of people displaced by unrest in other parts
of Borno state.
An AFP reporter who lives in the area said he
heard what sounded like armoured personnel carriers deploying to the
southern edge of Maiduguri to face the rebel advance.
Dala
resident Alhaji Bukar said he saw at least one RPG fall into a private
home, but details on casualties were not immediately clear.
Locals reported other residential homes being hit.
Three senior security sources in Maiduguri who were not authorised to speak publicly said the attack had been repelled.
"All is under control. There is no cause for alarm," one of those sources told Reuters.
The sound of RPGs and gunfire has also eased, residents and a France24 reporter said.
Experts
doubt that Boko Haram currently has the capacity to seize Maiduguri,
but a major attack inside the city would likely be disastrous for
civilians.
The Islamist rebels have been flushed out of several
Borno state towns they controlled in an offensive launched in February
by Nigeria with backing from neighbouring Cameroon, Chad and Niger.
But there are signs of the militants regrouping, particularly in the remote parts of eastern Borno near the Cameroon border.
Buhari
in his inaugural address on Friday vowed to intensify the fight against
Boko Haram, notably by shifting operational command from the capital
Abuja to Maiduguri.
His predecessor Goodluck Jonathan's
performance against the militants was heavily criticised, with the
conflict killing more than 15,000 people since 2009 and forcing another
1.5 million from their homes.
Buhari, a former army general,
insists the uprising can be defeated and has placed the Boko Haram
effort at the top of his administration's agenda.
Many European football nations have reacted with concern to Sepp Blatter's re-election as Fifa president.
Denmark's
Football Association chief called it "a defeat for transparency" while
England's FA Chairman said he might support a World Cup boycott.
However, the tournament's next host, Russia, said it was pleased with Mr Blatter's re-appointment.
Mr Blatter, 79, was re-elected on Friday, in a vote overshadowed by arrests and corruption allegations.
The
Fifa election has taken place against the backdrop of the US's
indictment of several Fifa officials and the launch of a separate Swiss
criminal investigation.
On Saturday, US tax official Richard Weber told the New York Times he was "fairly confident that we will have another round of indictments".
'European muscle'
Mr Blatter's rival, Prince Ali bin al-Hussein of Jordan, had forced a second round of voting but then withdrew.
The European football body, Uefa, had backed Prince Ali, with
president Michel Platini describing it as "a movement for change at
Fifa".
European FAs will meet at next week's Champions League final in Berlin to discuss their next move.
"We have to see how best we can use the European muscle," Irish FA president John Delaney told RTE News.
Europe's
seat at the next meeting of Fifa's powerful Executive Committee is
expected to be empty, as newly-appointed representative David Gill had
said before Friday's vote that he would resign if Mr Blatter was
re-elected.
England's FA chairman Greg Dyke said that he would consider a boycott of the World Cup if joined by other European nations.
"This
is not over by any means. To quote the [US] Attorney General this is
the beginning of the process not the end," Mr Dyke told Sky News.
Meanwhile,
Jesper Moller of Denmark's FA told reporters: "Blatter is too involved
in all the allegations of corruption that have taken up much of his time
as president. But we must, of course, respect the democratic vote."
'Let's go Fifa!'
In
the first round of the vote in Zurich, Mr Blatter won 133 to Prince
Ali's 73, just short of the 140 votes needed for an outright win.
However, Prince Ali then withdrew from the vote.
In his victory speech, Mr Blatter said: "I am not perfect, nobody is perfect, but we will do a good job together I am sure.
"I take the responsibility to bring back Fifa where it should be... Let's go Fifa! Let's go Fifa!"
He also hinted that this term in office, his fifth, could be his
last, saying: "At the end of my term I will give up Fifa in a strong
position."
Mr Blatter's re-election was welcomed by the hosts of the next World Cup, Russia.
"In
general, of course we are pleased with the result. Russia was backing
Blatter. We also believe... much needs to be done to change football,"
Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko told state broadcaster Rossiya24.
Seven top Fifa officials were arrested in Switzerland on Wednesday as part of a US prosecution that indicted 14 people.
Those
indicted in the US inquiry are accused of bribery, racketeering and
money-laundering involving tens of millions of dollars since 1991.
The
aim of the bribes was to influence the outcome of bids to stage
football tournaments such as the 2010 World Cup in South Africa and the
2016 Copa America in the US, prosecutors say.
The seven arrested
in Zurich - Jeffrey Webb, Eugenio Figueredo (both Fifa vice-presidents),
Eduardo Li, Rafael Esquivel, Jose Maria Marin, Costas Takkas and Julio
Rocha - remain in Swiss detention pending US extradition proceedings.
They can appeal against their detention by 8 June, but Swiss justice officials told the Associated Press bail was unlikely.
The
first of the 14 to be arraigned in a US court, sports executive Aaron
Davidson, pleaded not guilty through his lawyer on Friday.
Swiss
prosecutors have launched a separate investigation into the bidding
process for the World Cup tournaments in 2018 in Russia and 2022 in
Qatar.
The US Department of Justice has
charged 15 Chinese nationals with developing a scheme to have imposters
take university entrance exams.
Prosecutors said suspects used
fake passports to trick administrators into allowing people other than
legitimate test takers to sit the exams.
The scheme took place between 2011 and 2015 mostly in western Pennsylvania, authorities said.
Those charged could face up to 20 years in prison if convicted.
The
defendants, both male and female, range in age from 19 to 26, and are
currently living in several cities - including Blacksburg, Virginia, and
Boston, Massachusetts - where major universities are located, the
Reuters news agency reported.
The counterfeit test takers sat for
the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) - a major university entrance exam in
the US - as well as the Test of English as a Foreign Language (Toefl)
and the Graduate Record Examination (GRE), the Justice Department said.
The scheme's beneficiaries
"fraudulently obtained admissions to American institutions of higher
education," said US Attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania
David Hickton.
The prosecutor said that the students also cheated student visa requirements by using counterfeit Chinese passports.
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported
that 24-year-old Siyuan Zhao, who resides in Massachusetts, has been
detained. Han Tong, 24, of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, who is considered
the primary defendant, and 10 others will receive an order to appear in
court.
The newspaper reports that three others are currently in China, and their names have been redacted from court documents.
Special
Agent in Charge John Kelleghan for Homeland Security Investigations of
Philadelphia said: "These students were not only cheating their way into
the university, they were also cheating their way through our nation's
immigration system".
The defendants could face up to 20 years in
prison, a fine of $250,000 (£163,000) or both for each of the wire and
mail fraud counts they face. Additionally, they face five years on top
that for the conspiracy charges.
Tajikistan's special forces chief has appeared in a video claiming to have joined Islamic State forces in Syria.
Gulmurod Khalimov is seen in the footage dressed in black and holding a gun. He went missing in early May.
He says he joined IS in protest at Tajikistan's policy towards religion, which he says is anti-Islamic.
Hundreds
of Central Asians are thought have left for Syria, but this is the
first known case of such a high profile officer joining the militants.
The
authorities in Tajikistan have refused to comment on his whereabouts
since his disappearance, reports the BBC's Abdujalil Abdurasulov in
Almaty.
'Slaughter'
Khalimov used to fight extremists at home and was one of the best trained officers in the country, our correspondent says.
In
the video, which is believed to have been recorded in a Syrian camp, he
says he plans to return to Tajikistan and "bring slaughter".
He
voices his disillusionment with the Tajik police and talks about the
hardship of thousands of Tajik working migrants in Russia.
Analysis: Khayrullo Fayz, BBC Central Asian Service
The news of a high profile Tajik commander joining IS is bound to
have shocked Tajikistan's authoritarian government. YouTube - where
Gulmurod Khalimov's video could be seen - was blocked almost
immediately. So far no officials have been available for comment.
It's an unprecedented case for Tajikistan.
Khalimov
did not belong to the thousands of Muslims in the country routinely
targeted by a government intent on fighting what it sees as extremism,
but was part of the very security establishment meant to counter such
threats.
Many in Tajikistan are puzzled by the speed of his
departure; after all he was still working in the country in April. With
Central Asian militants now battling Afghan security forces just across
the border in Afghanistan, the authorities in Dushanbe will be extremely
concerned about the wider implications.
Khalimov's position and profile are significant enough to potentially influence other members of the security forces.
There
are no official figures for the number of Tajik citizens fighting
alongside Islamic State, but in January sources in the security services
were quoted saying they range from 200 to 500.
Central Asian
fighters have also formed their own groups such as Sabri Jamaat and Imam
Bukhari Jamaat, the BBC's Abdujalil Abdurasulov says.
Many of these militants have reportedly been seen in major battles in
Syrian cities, including Aleppo, Kobane and lately in Palmyra.
Blue-collar men in rich countries are in trouble. They must learn to adapt
AT FIRST glance the patriarchy appears to be thriving. More
than 90% of presidents and prime ministers are male, as are nearly all
big corporate bosses. Men dominate finance, technology, films, sports,
music and even stand-up comedy. In much of the world they still enjoy
social and legal privileges simply because they have a Y chromosome. So
it might seem odd to worry about the plight of men.
Yet there is plenty of cause for concern. Men cluster at the
bottom as well as the top. They are far more likely than women to be
jailed, estranged from their children, or to kill themselves. They earn
fewer university degrees than women. Boys in the developed world are 50%
more likely to flunk basic maths, reading and science entirely.
One group in particular is suffering (see article).
Poorly educated men in rich countries have had difficulty coping with
the enormous changes in the labour market and the home over the past
half-century. As technology and trade have devalued brawn, less-educated
men have struggled to find a role in the workplace. Women, on the other
hand, are surging into expanding sectors such as health care and
education, helped by their superior skills. As education has become more
important, boys have also fallen behind girls in school (except at the
very top). Men who lose jobs in manufacturing often never work again.
And men without work find it hard to attract a permanent mate. The
result, for low-skilled men, is a poisonous combination of no job, no
family and no prospects.
From nuclear families to fissile ones
Those on the political left tend to focus on economics.
Shrinking job opportunities for men, they say, are entrenching poverty
and destroying families. In America pay for men with only a high-school
certificate fell by 21% in real terms between 1979 and 2013; for women
with similar qualifications it rose by 3%. Around a fifth of working-age
American men with only a high-school diploma have no job.
Those on the right worry about the collapse of the family.
The vast majority of women would prefer to have a partner who does his
bit both financially and domestically. But they would rather do without
one than team up with a layabout, which may be all that is on offer:
American men without jobs spend only half as much time on housework and
caring for others as do women in the same situation, and much more time
watching television.
Hence the unravelling of working-class families. The
two-parent family, still the norm among the elite, is vanishing among
the poor. In rich countries the proportion of births outside marriage
has trebled since 1980, to 33%. In some areas where traditional
manufacturing has collapsed, it has reached 70% or more. Children raised
in broken homes learn less at school, are more likely to drop out and
earn less later on than children from intact ones. They are also not
very good at forming stable families of their own.
These two sides often talk past each other. But their
explanations are not contradictory: both economics and social change are
to blame, and the two causes reinforce each other. Moreover, these
problems are likely to get worse. Technology will disrupt more
industries, creating benefits for society but rendering workers who fail
to update their skills redundant. The OECD, a think-tank, predicts that
the absolute number of single-parent households will continue to rise
in nearly all rich countries. Boys who grow up without fathers are more
likely to have trouble forming lasting relationships, creating a cycle
of male dysfunction.
Tinker, tailor, soldier, hairdresser
What can be done? Part of the solution lies in a change in
cultural attitudes. Over the past generation, middle-class men have
learned that they need to help with child care, and have changed their
behaviour. Working-class men need to catch up. Women have learned that
they can be surgeons and physicists without losing their femininity. Men
need to understand that traditional manual jobs are not coming back,
and that they can be nurses or hairdressers without losing their
masculinity.
Policymakers also need to lend a hand, because foolish laws
are making the problem worse. America reduces the supply of marriageable
men by locking up millions of young males for non-violent offences and
then making it hard for them to find work when they get out (in Georgia,
for example, felons are barred from feeding pigs, fighting fires or
working in funeral homes). A number of rich countries discourage poor
people from marrying or cohabiting by cutting their benefits if they do.
Even more important than scrapping foolish policies is
retooling the educational system, which was designed in an age when most
men worked with their muscles. Politicians need to recognise that boys’
underachievement is a serious problem, and set about fixing it. Some
sensible policies that are good for everybody are particularly good for
boys. Early-childhood education provides boys with more structure and a
better chance of developing verbal and social skills. Countries with
successful vocational systems such as Germany have done a better job
than Anglo-Saxon countries of motivating non-academic boys and guiding
them into jobs, but policymakers need to reinvent vocational education
for an age when trainees are more likely to get jobs in hospitals than
factories.
More generally, schools need to become more boy-friendly.
They should recognise that boys like to rush around more than girls do:
it’s better to give them lots of organised sports and energy-eating
games than to dose them with Ritalin or tell them off for fidgeting.
They need to provide more male role models: employing more male teachers
in primary schools will both supply boys with a male to whom they can
relate and demonstrate that men can be teachers as well as firefighters.
The growing equality of the sexes is one of the biggest
achievements of the post-war era: people have greater opportunities than
ever before to achieve their ambitions regardless of their gender. But
some men have failed to cope with this new world. It is time to give
them a hand.
David Cameron has told his fellow European leaders they need to be "flexible and imaginative" as he demands reforms to the EU.
The PM was speaking alongside French President Francois Hollande during a tour of his European counterparts.
Mr Cameron wants to renegotiate the UK's relationship with Brussels ahead of an in/out referendum by 2017.
Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said the PM would warn that the UK could exit the EU unless reforms were agreed.
During talks with Mr Hollande, Mr Cameron said "the status quo is not good enough".
"I believe there are changes we can make that will not just benefit Britain, but the rest of Europe too," he added.
The PM will hold talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Polish Prime Minister Ewa Kopacz on Friday.
'Clear requirements'
He
has not set out in full detail the reforms he is pushing for, but they
will include tougher rules to prevent migrants claiming benefits.
He also wants safeguards to protect the City of London in the event of
closer eurozone integration and an exemption for Britain from the EU
drive for "ever closer union".
Earlier, arriving in The Hague for talks with Dutch Prime Minister
Mark Rutte, Mr Cameron said they would focus on growth, jobs and a
"pro-enterprise agenda" as well as "my plans for European reform".
Speaking
on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Mr Hammond played down talk of the
referendum being held before 2017, the date by which it has been
promised.
He also said the UK government had received legal advice
saying changes to EU treaties would be needed to secure Mr Cameron's
reforms - something that has so far been resisted by other EU leaders.
The
foreign secretary said: "We have a clear set of requirements. The prime
minister is very clear in dealing with European Union counterparts -
that if we are not able to deliver on those big areas of concern that
the British people have we will not win the referendum.
"And we expect our European Union partners to engage with us in
delivering a package that will enable the British people to decide that
they think Britain's future is best delivered inside the European
Union."
Asked if that meant the government would still recommend
Britain stay in the EU even if it was not able to secure major reforms,
Mr Hammond said: "If our partners do not agree with us - do not work
with us to deliver that package - then we rule nothing out."
Mr
Hammond said the talks process had just begun but the UK expected to
secure a "substantive package of reforms" over the summer and into the
winter months.
Referendum question
He
said he wanted to negotiate reforms as quickly as possible but the
timeline would depend on the "mechanism" set up for the negotiations.
He
said "I don't think we've ruled out" having a referendum on a new deal
next year but "what matters is getting it right rather than doing it
quickly," adding that the government is "in the hands of our
counterparts in the European Union".
French MP Christophe Premat, a
member of President Hollande's Socialist Party, said the UK's
referendum could not be used "as a threat".
He told BBC Radio 4's
The World At One: "We respect that a referendum will be held in Great
Britain, that's the destiny of the people in the UK. That's correct.
"But, at the same time, we can't use the referendum as a threat in
order to have more space in the renegotiation. The method should be
approached in another way."
The EU referendum bill, which has been
published and was earlier presented to the Commons, contains details of
the question and the commitment to staging the vote by the end of 2017.
Downing Street wants voters to be asked the question: "Should the United Kingdom remain a member of the European Union?"
The
Electoral Commission suggested this form of words - which would make
those campaigning to stay in the EU the Yes campaign and vice versa - in
2013.
A spokesman said: "We will consider the contents of the
Bill when it is published and will make our views known as it progresses
through Parliament to ensure voters' interests are put first."
EU referendum in focus
David Cameron is starting renegotiation of the terms of Britain's EU
membership ahead of a referendum. Here is some further reading on what
it all means: The UK and the EU: Better off in or out? What Britain wants from Europe Q&A: The UK's planned EU referendum Timeline: EU referendum debate Why Germany is David Cameron's new best friend
Responding to the Queen's Speech, Labour's acting leader Harriet Harman said her party would back the referendum bill.
Outgoing
Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg warned against complacency and called for Mr
Cameron to lead the bid for Britain to stay in the EU with conviction.
UKIP leader Nigel Farage said the wording of the referendum question was "simple, straightforward" and "unambiguous".
He
added: "However, that Cameron is opting to give the pro-EU side the
positive 'Yes' suggests strongly that his negotiations are so much
fudge.
"He has already decided which way he wants the answer to be given, without a single power repatriated."