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Tuesday, 09 June 2015 01:00

5,184 single parents were on some form of social benefits as of last April, social solidarity minister Michael Farrugia revealed. Responding to a parliamentary question by opposition MP Clyde Puli, Farrugia revealed that the government spent €6,312,863 on benefits for single parents, €2,237,818 on social assistance, €1,281,482 on the ‘Social Assistance for Single Parents’ scheme, €1,396,045 on unemployment assistance and €1,397,518 on medical assistance. This made up 10.58% of the government’s total expenditure on social benefits. The government also spent €6,008,248 on the most recent children’s allowance payment. There are 371 fewer single parents on social benefits compared with the previous  year and 418 single parents have benefited from the benefit tapering scheme - a gradual phasing out of social benefits for unemployed people who find a job - since its introduction at the start of 2014.

Tuesday, 09 June 2015 01:00

Macedonia’s ethnic composition dominates its political and social existence, where segregation is more prevalent than harmony. The large (and growing) Albanian minority feel more connected with their own kind in Albania and Kosovo than with the other ethnicities of Macedonia. Greece, Bulgaria and Serbia also have agendas for Macedonia. Economic difficulties cause significant emigration and urban pull; many of the 2,000 villages are dwindling or disappearing altogether. Media and literature are important ministries in Macedonia, and the Bible Society oversees the distribution of two new Macedonian translations of the Bible. The Gideons are the largest distributors of Scripture, giving out many New Testaments. A Christian cultural centre in Skopje includes a Christian bookstore, but so far only a few books have been translated into Macedonian. The JESUS film has been widely viewed on television and film. It is available in Albanian, Macedonian, Romani and Turkish.

Tuesday, 09 June 2015 01:00

Luxembourg International Christian Centre is an independent, English-speaking Full Gospel church that was founded on 14 October 1991. It was born from a group of nine adult Christians of four nationalities, who had been meeting for Bible study and fellowship for the two previous years. In August 1991 an Australian pastor, John Brown, and his family arrived in Luxembourg, believing the Lord had called him to start an English-speaking church.  By the Lord’s leading the two groups met.  At this time, the church consisted of 10 members from five nationalities, and nine young people under 16 years of age.  John stayed a little over ten months, then left for Scotland. Graham Kettle, who had pastored two previous churches, then took up the pastorate. The church has continued to grow and take shape over the years, becoming the International Christian Centre. The Lord has answered their needs in growth, and their prayer is for more space to grow.

Tuesday, 09 June 2015 01:00

A Lithuanian recording studio has already published three music albums of Lithuanian Christian contemporary music, and now have some experience in this field. They pray heartily and seek for support for the release of new albums. They are finding that still many of the current Christian musicians in Lithuania do not know the laws that are in force and do lots of incorrect steps. Their hope is that albums of Christian music will be published according to all the laws and requirements of the governing agencies. They have trodden a breakthrough path to sound recording studios, producing centres, publishing and advertising companies, and are preparing presentations of published music albums. They distribute music albums in all possible ways - in shops, concerts, online and through mail.

Tuesday, 09 June 2015 01:00

Councillor Aurelia Frick went to Luxembourg on Monday 8 June for a working visit. Her discussions centred with Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn about the Luxembourg EU Presidency which will be in the second half of 2015. Aurelia Frick also met Minister of Culture Maggy Nagel and Lydia Mutsch, Minister for Equal Opportunities. Liechtenstein and Luxembourg maintain both bilaterally and in international organisations a close collaboration that is underlined and strengthened by regular visits at ministerial level. The conversations between the two foreign ministers centred mainly on European issues. While Jean Asselborn presented the priorities of the Luxembourg EU Presidency, Foreign Minister Aurelia Frick campaigned for understanding among concerns around the Liechtenstein financial contributions under the EEA Financial Mechanism and the difficulties in the adoption of EU legislation in the EEA. Aurelia Frick and Jean Asselborn also mentioned the current challenges posed by refugee flows to Europe.

Tuesday, 09 June 2015 01:00

The Baltic-region based Saber Strike military exercises have been an annual part of NATO’s Allied Shield training exercises since 2010.  This year they began in Latvia at 10 am at the Adazi military base in Latvia on 8 June.  Present at the ceremony were recently elected Latvian President (currently Defence Minister), Raimonds Vejonis, of the Greens and Farmers Union, and National Armed Forces Commander Raimonds Graube. The exercises will take place in all three Baltic States and Poland. The joint exercises will host more than 6,000 troops from the United States, Great Britain, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Poland, Norway, Denmark and Slovenia. According to Allied Command Operations, this military exercise will see the involvement of approximately 11,000 troops from nineteen different Allies and three partner nations. These training events are part of Nato's assurance measures in response to challenges on its southern and eastern periphery.See also

Tuesday, 09 June 2015 01:00

Five European Union member states that have not recognised the 2008 unilateral declaration of Kosovo’s independence are under pressure to change their position. Slovakia, Greece, Cyprus, Romania and Spain were ‘targeted by great powers,” Vecernje novosti newspaper claims. The Belgrade daily adds that some Latin American and Caribbean countries are also under pressure. Pristina recently claimed that Nigeria could soon recognise Kosovo. On the other hand, Serbia will intensify its diplomatic efforts in order to prevent new recognitions. The issue will be discussed by the Serbian government; more than 100 countries have recognised Kosovo as a state while Pristina strives to reach the majority in UN General Assembly.

Tuesday, 09 June 2015 01:00

On Monday Royal Navy warship HMS Bulwark arrived in an Italian port, carrying 1,200 migrants rescued from the Mediterranean Sea. The ship docked at Catania, in Sicily, where the migrants will be handed over to the Italian authorities. Bulwark has been on a search and rescue mission in the area for the past month. Captain Nick Cooke-Priest said the people traffickers were committing acts ‘tantamount to murder’. BBC defence correspondent Jonathan Beale, who was on board Bulwark during the rescue, said a small, wooden vessel had been packed with about 400 people. There had also been two rubber dinghies, each carrying about 100 people. The fact that many didn't even have life jackets was another reminder that the gangs who trafficked them had little regard for their lives. Five of the men rescued are going to be questioned by Italian police about possible links to the smuggling gangs.

Tuesday, 09 June 2015 01:00

Whichever view we took on the referendum proposition, the result gives all of us in the Church pause for thought. I know that in this, throughout our Church of Ireland in this Republic, there were people who were on either side of this debate.  People who journey in faith, and who, each day, do their utmost to put the same Jesus Christ, the living Word of God, and the written word, at the heart of their lives,came to different conclusions and voted in different ways. As we move forward in the churches we can be assured that there are and will continue to be issues on which, in faith, we will be united or divided: abortion, gender issues, other aspects of sexuality, economic policy, political engagement, conflict and military engagement, peace-keeping, the plight of ancient Christian communities in the Middle East,environmental issues, climate change. We have much to learn from listening to one another, learning from one another.

Tuesday, 09 June 2015 01:00

Icelanders will soon be able to publicly worship at a shrine to Thor, Odin and Frigg with construction already started in February on the island's first major temple to the Norse gods since the Viking age. Worship of the gods in Scandinavia gave way to Christianity around 1,000 years ago but a modern version of Norse paganism has been gaining popularity in Iceland. ‘I don't think anyone believes in a one-eyed man who is riding about on a horse with eight feet,’ said Hilmar Orn Hilmarsson, the high priest of 'Asatruarfelagid', an association that promotes faith in the Norse gods. ‘We see the stories as poetic metaphors and a manifestation of the forces of nature and human psychology’. There are approximately 2,400 members, out of a total population of 330,000. The temple will be circular and 13 feet down into a hill overlooking the Icelandic capital Reykjavik.