New developments around the world this weekend will play out in the days to come.  From growing destabilization in Egypt, to new threats of war with North Korea, to people who just need to wash their hands, there’s a wealth of news out there:

Angry mobs burned buildings in Egypt, displeased with prison sentences handed down to 24 defendants in last year’s deadly soccer riots.  The court reaffirmed death sentences for 21 other defendants.  This is feeding dissatisfaction with the Muslim Brotherhood government, which is now widely seen as being unable to maintain order.

Uhuru Kenyatta is the winner in the presidential elections in Kenya.  A weeklong count found he got 50.7 percent of the vote.  That’s creating a difficult situation in Europe and Africa because Kenyatta is charged with Crimes Against Humanity in the International Criminal Court from (ICC) 1,200 deaths during the last time Kenya tried to have an election.  Kenyatta denies responsibility for the violence and critics say the ICC’s charges are based on allegations from Kenyatta’s political opponents.

Former South African president Nelson Mandela is back in hospital for tests.  Doctors say it’s all part of caring for a 94 year old.

Bulgaria’s parliament approved a statement of regret for failing to save 11,343 Jews deported to Nazi concentration camps during World War II.  Only a few hundred of that group survived.  The statement stopped short of praising the Bulgarians who blocked another 48,000 Jews from being sent north.

A suicide bomber killed nine people in an attack on the Afghan Defense Ministry in Kabul.  The Taliban took responsibility, saying it was timed to coincide with U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel’s visit to the country.  He was in another part of Kabul at the time and was not injured.

North Korea is telling its troops to “prepare for war”, after the United Nations Security Council approved new economic sanctions that punish the Hermit Kingdom’s rulers by taking away their toys.  The new rules make it tougher to sell yachts and racecars to Pyongyang.  China helped write the sanctions and is calling for all sides to calm down.

Malaysian Security Forces arrested 27 people off the Sabah coast of Borneo, where they have been hunting gunmen from an obscure Philippine sect whose self-declared Islamic Sultan claims to rule that area.   That brings the total to at least 107 suspects arrested.  At least 53 gunmen are dead in a week of clashes, as well as 8 Malaysian troops.

More than 3,000 Muslims believing that had been blasphemed stormed a Christian neighborhood in Lahore, Pakistan and burned more than a hundred homes.  Christian leaders say the trouble actually began with a drunken brawl between a Christian and a Muslim.

Syrian Rebels have released 21 United Nations Peacekeepers who were detained while performing their duties in the Golan Heights between Israel and Syria.

The Vatican has a new chimney.  It was installed for the selection of a new Pope.  A stream of white smoke from the chimney will signal that a new pontiff has been chosen to replace Benedict XVI.

Dozens of people were made sick after eating at the “World’s Best Restaurant”.  Denmark’s Noma has won fans around the world with its innovative approach to Nordic Cuisine, and won the “World’s Best” title from Restaurant magazine.  However, customers who are there in mid-February contracted a Norovirus.  And inspectors soon found that the kitchen, with all of its ultra-modern tools and gadgets, didn’t have hot running water for employees to wash their hands.