Wednesday newspaper round-up: South Africa, North Korea, Retired households
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President Zuma was left humiliated and enfeebled last night by a major revolt within his own party after at least 30 stalwart MPs were believed to have turned against him in a vote of no confidence in his leadership. The South African leader survived the overall motion with 198 votes supporting him in parliament against 177 who wanted him to step down. Nine MPs abstained in the secret ballot. - The Guardian
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North Korea has said it is considering a missile strike on the US Pacific territory of Guam, just hours after Donald Trump warned the regime that any threat to the United States would be met with "fire and fury". The threat, carried by the state-run KCNA news agency, marked a dramatic rise in tensions and prompted warnings to Washington not to become embroiled in a bellicose slanging match with North Korea. Pyongyang said it was “carefully examining” a plan to strike Guam, located 3,400km (2,100 miles) away, and threatened to create an “enveloping fire” around the territory. - The Guardian
Retired households have tripled their incomes in the past 40 years, substantially narrowing the gap in earnings with working-age households. Back in 1977 the average pensioner household’s income was £10,500 (in 2016 prices, which account for inflation), just 52pc of the £20,200 earned by non-retired households. But by the financial year ending in 2016 those pensioners’ incomes had risen to £29,500, according to the Office for National Statistics. By contrast, non-retired households’ incomes had only doubled, rising to £41,900 on average. - The Daily Telegraph
Disney is to end a deal with Netflix and launch a standalone ESPN sports streaming service next year with a service for its films to follow in 2019. It will pay $1.6bn for majority ownership of Bamtech, a video technology group. Disney reported yesterday that net income was $2.4bn compared with $2.6bn previously. Bob Iger, chief executive, told CNBC: "The media landscape is increasingly defined by relationships between content creators and consumers. Control of Bamtech will give us the power to forge those connections." - The Times
Aluminium was pushed above $2,000 a tonne for the first time in three years yesterday after the Chinese authorities cut production as part of an environmental crackdown. Benchmark prices hit $2,007 at the London Metal Exchange, the highest since December 2014. It was the latest indication of real intent behind Beijing’s pledge to improve China’s air quality and will be a boon to smelters outside China, which is the world’s largest aluminium producer. - The Times