WORLD NEWS SCHEDULE AT 0200 GMT/10 PM ET
Editor: Kim Coghill + 65 6870 3840
Picture Desk: Singapore + 65 6870 3775
Graphics queries: + 65 6870 3595
(All times GMT/ET)
TOP STORIES
Uzbekistan's president dies after quarter century in power
ALMATY - Islam Karimov, authoritarian president of ex-Soviet Uzbekistan for more than 25 years, dies, and whoever succeeds him will need to perform a careful balancing act between the West, Russia and China, which all vie for influence in resource-rich Central Asia and worry over growing Islamist unrest. (UZBEKISTAN-PRESIDENT/ (UPDATE 7, TV, PIX), moved, by Olzhas Auyezov, 581 words)
Trump catches up to Clinton, latest Reuters/Ipsos poll finds
WASHINGTON - Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump pulls into effective tie with Democratic rival Hillary Clinton, erasing substantial deficit as he consolidates support among his party's likely voters in recent weeks, according to latest Reuters/Ipsos national tracking poll. (USA-ELECTION/POLL, moved, by Maurice Tamman and Chris Kahn, 764 words)
+ See also:
- USA-ELECTION/TRUMP-STAFF (PIX, TV, GRAPHIC), moved, by Michelle Conlin and Grant Smith, 704 words
- USA-ELECTION/CLINTON-DRUGS (UPDATE 4, PIX, TV, GRAPHIC), moved, by Amanda Becker and Ransdell Pierson, 864 words
Hermine pounds Florida, raising new Zika fears, then heads north
TAMPA, Florida - Hurricane Hermine wreaks havoc across Florida, causing widespread power outages and flooding before diminishing into a tropical storm and plowing up the Atlantic Coast into the Carolinas with a still-potent mix of high winds and heavy rains. (STORM-HERMINE/ (UPDATE 10, PIX, TV), moved, by Letitia Stein, 700 words)
+ See also:
- STORM-HERMINE/DOCK (FEATURE, PIX), moved, by Letitia Stein, 304 words
Samsung recalls Galaxy Note 7 phones after battery fires
SEOUL - Samsung recalls all Galaxy Note 7 smartphones equipped with batteries it finds to be fire-prone and halts their sales in 10 markets, denting revival of firm's mobile business. (SAMSUNG ELEC-SMARTPHONES/ (UPDATE 8, PIX, TV, GRAPHICS), moved, by Se Young Lee, 873 words)
UNITED STATES
Clinton tells FBI she could not recall all briefings on preserving documents
WASHINGTON - Hillary Clinton, under questioning by federal investigators over whether she was briefed on how to preserve government records as she was about to leave State Department, said she had suffered concussion, was working part-time and could not recall every briefing she received. (USA-ELECTION/CLINTON-EMAILS (UPDATE 5, TV), moved, by Julia Edwards and Jonathan Allen, 915 words)
Slower U.S. payrolls growth dims September Fed rate hike prospects
WASHINGTON - U.S. employment growth slows more than expected after two straight months of robust gains and wages are tepid, which could effectively rule out interest rate increase from Federal Reserve this month. (USA-ECONOMY/ (WRAPUP 6, PIX, TV, GRAPHICS), moved, by Lucia Mutikani, 948 words)
ASIA
President Duterte declares 'state of lawlessness' after blast kills 14 Filipinos
MANILA - Philippines' President Rodrigo Duterte declares what he calls a "state of lawlessness" after an explosion tears through a market and kills 14 people while he was on a regular weekend visit to his southern home city of Davao. (PHILIPPINES-BLAST/ (PIX, TV), moving shortly, by Karen Lema and Enrico Dela Cruz, 554 words)
EXCLUSIVE-Chinese state enterprise workers in Hong Kong given voting guidance ahead of poll
HONG KONG - At least two large Chinese state-owned enterprises in Hong Kong are instructing staff how to vote in Sunday's legislative election, as Beijing seeks to thwart chances of local democratic candidates, according to documents seen by Reuters. (HONGKONG-ELECTION/COMPANIES (EXCLUSIVE), moved, by Clare Jim and Venus Wu, 644 words)
EXCLUSIVE-Ahead of Suu Kyi visit, Obama weighs Myanmar sanctions relief - sources
WASHINGTON/YANGON - The United States is considering further easing or lifting sanctions against Myanmar around the time of a White House visit this month by the country's new leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, U.S. officials tell Reuters. (MYANMAR-USA/ (EXCLUSIVE, URGENT), moved, by Patricia Zengerle, Matt Spetalnick, David Brunnstrom and Antoni Slodkowski, 650 words)
India shelves plan to expand French submarine order after data breach
NEW DELHI - India is unlikely to give French naval contractor DCNS proposed order for three new submarines, in addition to six it is already building in country, following leak of secret data about its capabilities, Indian defense officials say. (INDIA-FRANCE/SUBMARINES (PIX), moved, by Sanjeev Miglani, 785 words)
EUROPE
Ireland to join Apple in fight against EU tax ruling
DUBLIN - Ireland's cabinet agrees to join Apple in appealing against multi-billion-euro back tax demand that European Commission imposes on iPhone maker, despite misgivings among independents who back fragile coalition. (EU-APPLE/TAXAVOIDANCE-IRELAND (UPDATE 3, TV), moved, by Padraic Halpin and Conor Humphries, 875 words)
AMERICAS
After huge Venezuela protest march, government says foils coup
CARACAS - Venezuela's socialist government says it thwarts coup plot this week as opponents plan to build on their biggest protest in more than decade with further street action demanding referendum to remove president. (VENEZUELA-POLITICS/ (PIX, TV), moved, by Andrew Cawthorne, 426 words)
In Cuba the tax man cometh, slowly
HAVANA - Some 1.5 million more Cuban state workers contribute to social security next month, with some paying income tax for first time since 1959 revolution as law passed as part of efforts to modernize economy gradually goes into effect. (CUBA-REFORM/TAXES), moved, by Marc Frank, 333 words)
AFRICA
South Africa says minister, not cabinet, asked for Gupta accounts inquiry
JOHANNESBURG - South Africa's presidency says minister not cabinet team asked for judicial inquiry into why banks cut ties with company belonging to the Gupta family, conflicting messages from government which appears increasingly divided. (SAFRICA-ZUMA/GUPTAS (UPDATE 4, PIX), moved, by James Macharia, 644 words)
Gabon's Ping declares himself president after post-poll riots
LIBREVILLE - Gabonese opposition candidate Jean Ping declared himself president on Friday, after a disputed election that triggered two days of post-election riots against President Ali Bongo. (GABON-ELECTION/ (UPDATE 3, PIX, TV), moved, by Gerauds Wilfried Obangome, 679 words)
© Copyright Reuters Ltd. All rights reserved. The information contained in this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of Reuters Ltd.




