2017年9月19日星期二

Yahoo! News: World - China

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: World - China


Trump Threatens To ‘Totally Destroy’ North Korea In ‘America First’ Speech At United Nations

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 07:59 AM PDT

Trump Threatens To 'Totally Destroy' North Korea In 'America First' Speech At United NationsPresident Donald Trump forcefully defended the United States and condemned North Korea and Iran in his first speech before the United Nations General Assembly, while trying to strike a cordial tone on the international alliances he had previously criticized.


More Than 140 People Arrested in St. Louis Protests

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 08:40 AM PDT

More Than 140 People Arrested in St. Louis ProtestsProtests became violent in St. Louis after a white police officer was acquitted in the 2011 shooting death of a black man, but residents say the city they know is a place where people help, not hurt each other.


Grandfather hands stranger's toddler $20 bill in Target for most tragic reason

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 12:30 PM PDT

Grandfather hands stranger's toddler $20 bill in Target for most tragic reasonA mother shopping with her young son in Target was caught off guard when an elderly man gave the toddler a $20 bill -- but when he explained himself, she was reduced to tears.


Immigration Activists Protest Pelosi Over Trump Deal: 'We Are Not Your Bargaining Chip'

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 12:37 PM PDT

Immigration Activists Protest Pelosi Over Trump Deal: 'We Are Not Your Bargaining Chip'A group of young undocumented immigrants interrupted an event hosted by House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.)


'Fixer Upper' stars Chip and Joanna Gaines spark backlash over new Target line

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 07:09 AM PDT

'Fixer Upper' stars Chip and Joanna Gaines spark backlash over new Target lineChip and Joanna Gaines have found themselves embroiled in scandal over their new Target line.


First Images of London Bomb Suspect Emerge

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 02:10 AM PDT

First Images of London Bomb Suspect EmergePolice arrested the suspect, the second to be probed under counter-terror laws over Friday's bomb, in west London on Saturday.


German First World War submarine wreck discovered with 23 crewmen still onboard

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 08:28 AM PDT

German First World War submarine wreck discovered with 23 crewmen still onboardA German First World War U-boat has been found off the Belgian coast almost totally intact and with the bodies of all 23 sailors onboard. The U-Boat II was found lying on its starboard side at the bottom of the North Sea at a depth of 27 metres, close to the coastal resort of Ostend. At this stage, it is unclear whether the submarine was sunk by a mine, a British ship or a British plane. The find is the best preserved of its kind in the North Sea. Its exact location is being kept secret to discourage trophy hunters. Although a part of the submarine's bow is missing, the torpedoes remain in place. The submarine hatches are closed, which indicates that the vessel has never been discovered before and that the crew of 22 sailors and one commander have remained onboard for about 100 years. Belgian authorities have informed the German ambassador and processes to identify the men and to protect the discovery have begun. The find, which came after underwater scans suggested there could be a wreck in Belgian waters, was confirmed today by the governor of West Flanders. The well-preserved wreck of a World War One German submarine.   Credit: Yves Herman /Reuters During the First World War, the German fleet in Flanders numbered 19 submarines. 15 of them sank, 11 of them in the North Sea.  Between 1915 and 1916 30 similar models to the wreck were made. Images of the wreck are not clear enough to give the number of the U-Boot. The Het Laatste Niews newspaper reported it could be U-Boot 27, 29 or 32. All three were sank in 1916 and 1917 by British ships and by a British plane. The most promising theory is that the submarine hit a mine tethered to the bottom of the sea by a cable. The wreck is 27 metres long and six metres wide. The U-Boot II model was a bigger, improved version of the type I U-Boot. The 270-ton submarine could dive to a maximum of 50 metres and disappear under the waves in 30 to 45 seconds. Compared to the earlier model, it had more electrical power and batteries that allowed it to stay submerged for longer. Bodies of soldiers from the First World War are still being discovered in Belgium on the battlefields of Flanders.  In 2013 archaelogists examined a German U-Boot II submarine, which had washed up on the Kent coast.  


Three dead, 16 hurt after buses collide in New York City

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 11:53 AM PDT

Three dead, 16 hurt after buses collide in New York CityThree people were killed and at least 16 injured when a New York City transit bus and a tour bus collided early on Monday in the city's borough of Queens, spinning around before slamming into a building, fire officials said. Firefighters pulled passengers from the wreckage after the city bus collided with a Dahlia tour bus in the Flushing neighborhood shortly after 6 a.m. EDT (1000 GMT), according to the New York City Fire Department. The tour bus was traveling east on Northern Boulevard when the city bus, which was carrying 15 passengers, tried to make a right turn on the same street, police said.


Trump Tells United Nations: ‘I Will Always Put America First’

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 12:12 AM PDT

Trump Tells United Nations: 'I Will Always Put America First'President Trump tells member states at the United Nations they should put their countries first as well, but says the United States "can no longer be taken advantage of" with international deals.


Attack On North Korea Could Spare Allies, Secretary Mattis Says. Analysts Aren't So Sure.

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 07:18 PM PDT

Attack On North Korea Could Spare Allies, Secretary Mattis Says. Analysts Aren't So Sure.Days after President Donald Trump referred to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un as "rocket man" and members of his administration made it clear military options against Pyongyang remained on the table, Defense Secretary James Mattis sought to calm growing fears of American intervention on the Korean Peninsula by arguing that the United States had military options at its disposal that wouldn't necessarily spell disaster for allies in the region.


Family Wants Answers After Georgia Tech Police Kill LGBTQ Campus Leader

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 10:34 AM PDT

Family Wants Answers After Georgia Tech Police Kill LGBTQ Campus LeaderFamily members of Georgia Tech student Scout Schultz say they plan to file a civil rights lawsuit after the 21-year-old was fatally shot by campus police on Saturday night.


French police evacuate 557 migrants from makeshift camp

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 11:12 AM PDT

French police evacuate 557 migrants from makeshift campPARIS (AP) — French police encircled a makeshift migrant camp in a wooded area near Dunkirk on Tuesday, evacuating 557 people, the prefecture of the Nord region said.


That Climate 'Scandal' Rep. Lamar Smith Promoted Was, Indeed, Fake News

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 01:41 PM PDT

That Climate 'Scandal' Rep. Lamar Smith Promoted Was, Indeed, Fake NewsWASHINGTON — Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas), an early and loyal supporter of President Donald Trump, likes to make noise about the liberal media's coverage of climate change, often dismissing it as "fake news."


'Shocking' disregard for safety in U.S. meningitis case -prosecutor

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 12:53 PM PDT

'Shocking' disregard for safety in U.S. meningitis case -prosecutorBy Nate Raymond BOSTON (Reuters) - A federal prosecutor on Tuesday accused a Massachusetts pharmacist charged with murder for his role in a deadly 2012 U.S. meningitis outbreak of showing a "shocking" disregard for patients' lives, while his lawyer argued the man was no killer. Glenn Chin, a former supervisory pharmacist at New England Compounding Center, oversaw the production in filthy conditions of tainted steroids, Assistant U.S. Attorney George Varghese said at the start of the man's trial in Boston federal court. Varghese told jurors that Chin, 49, recklessly failed to ensure the compounding pharmacy's drugs were produced in sanitary conditions in order to keep up with demand from hospitals nationally for its products.


Clinton: Trump's bathroom quip showed he's a 'very emotionally strange man'

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 01:16 PM PDT

Clinton: Trump's bathroom quip showed he's a 'very emotionally strange man'Clinton offered a scathing analysis of Trump's psyche during a Monday interview with NPR's Terry Gross, calling him "a very emotionally strange man."


2 Best Marinades for Pork

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 11:34 AM PDT

2 Best Marinades for PorkSpice up pork chop night with these two exciting marinades: Vietnamese style and Spanish style.


28 Must-Make Green Bean Recipes

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 11:23 PM PDT

28 Must-Make Green Bean Recipes


Brutal and inhumane laws North Koreans are forced to live under

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 04:59 AM PDT

Brutal and inhumane laws North Koreans are forced to live underNorth Korea's recent strides towards building nuclear weapons has brought the hermit nation into sharp international focus. The state's young dictator, Kim Jong-un, was photographed earlier this month relishing his nation's progress developing a hydrogen bomb at a lavish celebration, even as the continued tests brought new United Nations sanctions and an increasing threat of war. The reclusive state is seen as one of the last Stalinist regimes and is ideologically committed to cutting itself off from the international community in pursuit of its doctrine of national self reliance. North Korea leader Kim Jong-un celebrating the country's successful hydrogen bomb test earlier this month  Credit: Reuters It has been ruled by the Kim dynasty since 1948 after the Soviet Union took control of the north of the Korean peninsula from Japan after the Second World War, and then installed Un's grandfather, Kim Il-sung, in power. The intervening decades have seen North Korea morph into an isolated and paranoid nation that tightly controls what the outside world sees. As such, reports on life inside the secretive nation are difficult to independently verify. Yet behind the displays of military pomp lies an impoverished state, which thousands of desperate refugees attempt to flee every year. The image North Korea wants to project: A huge military parade in Pyongyang in 2013 Credit: Reuters Those defectors describe a nation where most people struggle for basics such as food and medicine and face brutal reprisals for breaking the regime's draconian laws. Three generations rule One of the country's most brutal laws is the 'three generations of punishment' rule. If one person is convicted of a serious crime and sent to a prison camp their immediate family can also be sent with them. Then the next two generations born in the camps can also remain there. The edict was introduced in 1972 by Kim Il-sung and said up to three generations had to be punished to wipe out the 'seed' of class enemies. Kim Il-sung (left) with his son and successor Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang in 1992 Credit: AFP Crimes for which North Koreans can find themselves sent to a prison camp can allegedly include failure to wipe dust off portraits of Kim Il-sung and having contact with South Koreans. Conditions in the country's prison and labour camps are notoriously harsh. Survivors have described prisoners becoming stunted and deformed from carrying out hard labour for 12 hours a day, seven days a week. Clothing and food are said to be so scarce inmates are forced to survive on any animals they can capture such as rats.  Access to non-state-controlled media Although North Korea's constitution theoretically guarantees freedom of speech, all domestic media outlets are owned by the one-party state and no reporting is allowed that isn't sanctioned by the government. The regime goes to great lengths to stop any outside media reaching its population. The NGO, Freedom House, reports that listening to unauthorized foreign broadcasts, watching foreign TV shows and possessing dissident publications are considered "crimes against the state". Those caught face execution or being sent to labour camps. North Korea does have a state-run version of the internet that is open to all citizens. However government permission is needed to own a computer, which cost as much as three months average salary. External websites are occasionally made available on request, although these are censored and hosted locally after being downloaded. Freedom of movement It is a criminal offence for North Koreans to leave the country without government permission. That doesn't stop thousands making highly treacherous journeys in attempts to escape every year. Most try to cross the Yalu and Tumen Rivers on North Korea's border with China and some even attempt to make it across the heavily-mined demiliterised zone (DMZ) into South Korea. Those who are caught face time in labour camps or execution. Even those who successfully make it out of the North can still be pursued by government agents and there are reports of defector's families being punished in their absence. A North Korean soldier keeps watch on the banks of the Yalu River in Sinuiju, North Korea Credit: Reuters According to Human Rights Watch, Kim Jong-un has significantly beefed up border controls since ascending to power in 2011. South Korea's Ministry of Unification this week reported the number of successful defections from the North fell in the first eight months of 2017. Practising Christianity Although the North Korean constitution officially allows freedom of religion, the practice is very different. The state has a hostile approach to religions, particularly to those it sees as western faiths such as Christianity. The nation's official ideology is Juche, a fusion of Marxism and Korean nationalism created by Kim Il-sung, and the regime views any practices outside this doctrine with deep suspicion. Those discovered practising Christianity face arrest and being sent to a labour camp. As such Christians are forced to worship in secret and some don't initiate their children into their religion due to the risks. Historically Korea had a large Christian population. Missionaries were active throughout the Korean peninsula when it was a Japanese colony prior to the Second World War and around a fifth of its population was believed to be Christian. As many as 500,000 of North Korea's current 2.5 million population are estimated to still be Christian today. North Korea – pictures show life behind the headlines Interracial relationships The North Korean regime takes a dim view of interracial relationships due to its Juche ideology, which preaches Korean exceptionalism, and recent reports have exposed the inhumane lengths authorities are willing to take its policies. In a letter to Parliament the charity, Christian Solidarity Worldwide, cited reported incidents of repatriated female defectors being  forced to have abortions after becoming pregnant in China. The report said many of these women had been captured by Chinese men posing as helpers when they crossed the border. It also relayed the account of one witness who described seeing a repatriated prisoner giving birth to a baby, which was then smothered by nurses. Economic rights Private enterprise of any kind is officially banned in North Korea. Those caught face arbitrary punishment even though the black market remains one of the only ways for people to get the food, medicine and other necessities the government often fails to provide.  In reality officials will often turn a blind eye in return for bribes. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un inspecting a state-run farm Credit: Reuters In recent years Kim Jong-un has reportedly allowed an increasing amount of unofficial private enterprise in areas such as mining, but any operations are still the property of the state. This unofficial economic liberalisation has helped North Korea's GDP grow - although it remains only around two per cent that of the South Korea's. At a glance | North Korea's human rights record  


Conservative Analyst Scottie Nell Hughes Sues Fox News Over Handling Of Rape Allegation

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 03:26 PM PDT

Conservative Analyst Scottie Nell Hughes Sues Fox News Over Handling Of Rape AllegationConservative analyst Scottie Nell Hughes is suing Fox News for allegedly retaliating against her after she came forward this past summer with allegations that she'd been raped by network anchor Charles Payne.


For a new Key West resident, Irma was her welcome-to-town

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 12:47 PM PDT

For a new Key West resident, Irma was her welcome-to-townKEY LARGO, Fla. (AP) — Prudence Duchene will never forget the day she moved to Key West.


Issa Rae's Unapologetic Support Of Black Stars At The Emmys Is A Mood

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 07:24 AM PDT

Issa Rae's Unapologetic Support Of Black Stars At The Emmys Is A MoodIssa Rae was unabashed about who she was supporting at the 2017 Emmys.


Five men in court over Hong Kong explosives plot

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 05:04 PM PDT

Five men in court over Hong Kong explosives plotFive men accused of making explosives before a contentious vote on political reform in 2015 appeared in a Hong Kong court Tuesday in a case that triggered concern about the radicalisation of protesters. The men were arrested at a time of heightened political tensions in Hong Kong, following the failure of mass "Umbrella Movement" rallies to win democratic reform for the semi-autonomous city in protests that were an unprecedented rebuke to China. Local media have previously reported that the group advocated independence for Hong Kong.


US Navy Fires Two Commanders After Deadly Sea Collision

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 08:58 AM PDT

US Navy Fires Two Commanders After Deadly Sea CollisionCollisions involving U.S. navy vessels are historically rare, but there have been four incidents over the past year or so.  


How To Make The Best Chocolate Chip Cookies, According To 5 Expert Bakers

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 03:00 AM PDT

How To Make The Best Chocolate Chip Cookies, According To 5 Expert BakersThere's no cookie more universally loved than the chocolate chip cookie, so we all owe it to ourselves to bake the best darn chocolate chip cookies we can possibly make ― for us, for our friends and family, and for the dignity of the chocolate chip cookie itself.


Syrian troops battling IS cross river toward US-backed force

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 03:13 PM PDT

Syrian troops battling IS cross river toward US-backed forceBEIRUT (AP) — Syrian troops battling the Islamic State militant group crossed to the eastern bank of the Euphrates River in Deir el-Zour on Monday, threatening a potential faceoff with the U.S.-backed forces operating there.


Woman sprayed at with acid in Marseille forgives attacker in Facebook post

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 03:32 AM PDT

Woman sprayed at with acid in Marseille forgives attacker in Facebook postA woman who, along with three friends, was sprayed at with acid while on holiday in Marseille, has posted a message of forgiveness on Facebook for her attacker. Courtney Siverling was targeted by "psychologically disturbed" attacker in Marseille's main railway station yesterday in an attack which left two of her friends with facial burns. Although she was uninjured, she was treated for shock. The young woman wrote on Facebook: "Thank you so much to everyone who has reached out to see if I'm ok and/or has been praying for us. I did not receive any injuries from the attack in Marseille this morning and we are all safe. The French police and the U.S. Consulate have been wonderful and we are so thankful for that. "I pray that the attacker would be healed from her mental illness in the name of Jesus and receive the forgiveness and salvation that can only come from Him. "'This I declare about the Lord: He alone is my refuge, my place of safety; he is my God, and I trust him.' Psalm 91:2". Michelle Krug, who was also targeted in the attack, asked for her Facebook friends to pray for the attacker. She wrote: "I want you all to know that my friends and I are doing okay. To fill in those who have not heard, three of my friends and I were attacked this morning at a Marseille train station by a woman suffering from a mental illness. She threw a weak solution of hydrochloric acid at us from a water bottle, which got in one of my eyes and one of my friend's eyes. We were all treated at a local hospital and are anticipating a quick recovery. "I ask that if you send thoughts and prayers our way, please consider thinking about/praying for our attacker so that she may receive the help she needs and deserves. Mental illness is not a choice and should not be villainized. "I'd like to thank the US Consulate, French police, and all of the wonderful people who helped us today and made us feel safe. "Looking forward to continuing this incredible opportunity to live and study in France!" What to do in an acid attack 01:20 The four women were Boston College juniors in their early 20s taking part in study abroad programmes, with three in the French capital and a fourth based in Copenhagen, Denmark. They were named by their university as Courtney Siverling, Charlotte Kaufman, Michelle Krug and Kelsey Kosten.    The director of the Boston College's Office of International Programs, Nick Gozik, said the women have been released from the hospital and "it appears that the students are fine, considering the circumstances". Police arrested a 41-year-old woman immediately after the attack at about 9am local time, judicial sources said. She was said to have a history of mental illness and a police record for theft. The victims, in their early 20s, were rushed to hospital and discharged later in the day. One suffered a partial loss of vision in one eye.  The assailant, who reportedly used a canister of cleaning fluid containing hydrochloric acid, told detectives that she herself had been attacked with acid when she was younger. She stayed in the station after the attack and showed photographs of herself with burns, La Provence newspaper reported.    


28 Hilarious Parenting Hacks From Crafty Moms And Dads

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 06:00 AM PDT

28 Hilarious Parenting Hacks From Crafty Moms And DadsParenthood has a way of bringing out people's crafty sides.


After Irma, special oxygen masks helped Florida pets breathe easier

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 12:32 PM PDT

After Irma, special oxygen masks helped Florida pets breathe easierSoon after millions of Floridians lost power in the wake of Hurricane Irma last week, firefighters in the city of Titusville responded to an emergency call at a home where a gasoline-powered generator had been running in an attached garage. Like thousands of other fire departments and rescue squads across the country, Titusville first-responders carry special masks as standard equipment to deliver oxygen to dogs, cats and other pets in the city, about 40 miles east of Orlando. "A pet mask would be specific to the pet's anatomy," said Battalion Chief Greg Sutton at the Titusville Fire Department.


Israel sees benefits in independent Kurdistan: experts

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 08:46 AM PDT

Israel sees benefits in independent Kurdistan: expertsIsrael has become the only country to openly support an independent Kurdish state, a result of good ties between Kurds and Jews and expectations it would be a front against Iran and extremism, experts say. Iraq's Kurdish region plans to hold a non-binding referendum on statehood on September 25 despite the objections of Baghdad and neighbouring Iran and Turkey, as well as the United States. On Monday, Iraq's supreme court ordered the suspension of the referendum as legal and political pressure mounted on the Kurds to call off the vote.


Convicted church killer wants to fire Jewish, Indian lawyers

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 06:01 PM PDT

Convicted church killer wants to fire Jewish, Indian lawyersCOLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — A white supremacist who was sentenced to death in the 2015 massacre of nine black worshippers has told a federal appeals court he wants to fire his appellate attorneys because one of them is Jewish and the other is Indian-American.


North Korea: UN head tells Trump and Kim Jong-un 'We must not sleepwalk our way into nuclear war'

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 06:14 AM PDT

North Korea: UN head tells Trump and Kim Jong-un 'We must not sleepwalk our way into nuclear war'In the opening address to the 2017 UN General Assembly, Secretary General Antonio Guterres said that fiery talk could lead to "fatal misunderstandings". Speaking as tension between North Korea and the West continues to grow following Pyongyang's sharp escalation of its testing of intercontinental missiles and nuclear payloads and sabre-rattling from the US, Mr Guterres said "when tensions rise so does chance of miscalculation". Mr Guterres spoke shortly before Mr Trump was to give his inaugural address to the body he frequently disparaged while on the election campaign trail.


17 Tricked-Out Caramel Apple Recipes You Must Make

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 09:01 AM PDT

17 Tricked-Out Caramel Apple Recipes You Must Make


Riz Ahmed Says One Award Won't Change 'Systemic Problem Of Inclusion' On TV

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 07:26 AM PDT

Riz Ahmed Says One Award Won't Change 'Systemic Problem Of Inclusion' On TV#TheNightOf star Riz Ahmed: "I don't think any one award changes the systemic problem of inclusion" #Emmys pic.twitter.com/OKzli6t14O—


Russia's War Game Spills Into NATO Skies, Causing Spat

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 04:29 AM PDT

Russia's War Game Spills Into NATO Skies, Causing SpatThe Baltic NATO ally summoned Russia's envoy to demand an explanation, but Moscow claims the incursion was an emergency call which is being "politicized."


Building 'Breaks' Into Your Diet Could Help You Lose More Weight

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 11:02 AM PDT

Building 'Breaks' Into Your Diet Could Help You Lose More WeightBuilding frequent "breaks" into your diet could help you lose more weight and keep it off for longer than attempting to cut calories, uninterrupted, for months on end, according to new weight-loss research from the University of Tasmania in Australia.


Bride's Wedding Party Holds Rescue Puppies Instead Of Bouquets

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 03:13 PM PDT

Bride's Wedding Party Holds Rescue Puppies Instead Of BouquetsWeddings are a great place to meet a potential partner ― but one Iowa wedding was also a wonderful place to find a pet.


Climate change not as threatening to planet as previously thought, new research suggests

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 11:15 AM PDT

Climate change not as threatening to planet as previously thought, new research suggestsClimate change poses less of an immediate threat to the planet than previously thought because scientists got their modelling wrong, a new study has found. New research by British scientists reveals the world is being polluted and warming up less quickly than 10-year-old forecasts predicted, giving countries more time to get a grip on their carbon output. An unexpected "revolution" in affordable renewable energy has also contributed to the more positive outlook. Experts now say there is a two-in-three chance of keeping global temperatures within 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels, the ultimate goal of the 2015 Paris Agreement. Paris climate change deal: Moment agreement announced 00:55 They also condemned the "overreaction" to the US's withdrawal from the Paris Climate Accord, announced by Donald Trump in June, saying it is unlikely to make a significant difference. According to the models used to draw up the agreement, the world ought now to be 1.3 degrees above the mid-19th-Century average, whereas the most recent observations suggest it is actually between 0.9 to 1 degree above. We're in the midst of an energy revolution and it's happening faster than we thoughtProfessor Michael Grubb, University College London The discrepancy means nations could continue emitting carbon dioxide at the current rate for another 20 years before the target was breached, instead of the three to five predicted by the previous model. "When you are talking about a budget of 1.5 degrees, then a 0.3 degree difference is a big deal", said Professor Myles Allen, of Oxford University and one of the authors of the new study. Published in the journal Nature Geoscience, it suggests that if polluting peaks and then declines to below current levels before 2030 and then continue to drop more sharply, there is a 66 per cent chance of global average temperatures staying below 1.5 degrees. The goal was yesterday described as "very ambitious" but "physically possible". Another reason the climate outlook is less bleak than previously thought is stabilising emissions, particularly in China. A revolution in renewable energy has improved the picture Credit: PA Renewable energy has also enjoyed more use than was predicted. China has now acquired more than 100 gigawatts of solar cells, 25 per cent of which in the last six months, and in the UK, offshore wind has turned out to cost far less than expected. Professor Michael Grubb, from University College London, had previously described the goals agreed at Paris in 2015 as "incompatible with democracy". Outrage at Trump's withdrawal from Paris climate agreement 01:54 But yesterday he said: "We're in the midst of an energy revolution and it's happening faster than we thought, which makes it much more credible for governments to tighten the offer they put on the table at Paris." He added that President Trump's withdrawal from the agreement would not be significant because "The White House's position doesn't have much impact on US emissions". "The smaller constituencies - cities, businesses, states - are just saying they're getting on with it, partly for carbon reduction, but partly because there's this energy revolution and they don't want to be left behind." At a glance | Paris climate accord The new research was published as the Met Office announced that a "slowdown" in the rate of global temperature rises reported over roughly the first decade of this century was now over. The organisation said the slowdown in rising air temperatures between 1999 and 2014 happened as a result of a natural cycle in the Pacific, which led to the ocean circulation speeding up, causing it to pull heat down in the deeper ocean away from the atmosphere. However, that cycle has now ended. Claire Perry, the climate change and industry minister, claimed Britain had already demonstrated that tackling climate change and running a strong economy could go "hand in hand". "How is the time to build on our strengths and cement our position as a global hub for investment in clean growth," she said.


Palestinian activist to be deported to Jordan from Chicago

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 10:07 AM PDT

Palestinian activist to be deported to Jordan from ChicagoCHICAGO (AP) — A Chicago Palestinian activist with a decades-old record of bombings in Jerusalem will be deported to Jordan on Tuesday, her spokesman said.


Trump's UN Speech Photos Are Like A Bottomless Pot Of Gold

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 12:21 PM PDT

Trump's UN Speech Photos Are Like A Bottomless Pot Of GoldOn Tuesday, President Trump spoke to the United Nations general assembly for the first time while in office.


Iraq set to expel 500 wives of IS jihadists

Posted: 18 Sep 2017 07:05 AM PDT

Iraq set to expel 500 wives of IS jihadistsIraq moved 500 wives of Islamic State group jihadists to a detention centre in preparation to deport them after they were captured along with 800 children, a councillor said Monday. The women and children were detained in Iraq's second city Mosul, capital of Nineveh province and IS's main stronghold in the country until Iraqi forces retook it in July. "They are in a holding centre in Tal Kayf under the control of Iraqi security forces, so their cases can be examined before they are eventually expelled from the country," the Nineveh province councillor told AFP.


Senate Republican tax chief wants dividend deduction in tax reform

Posted: 19 Sep 2017 10:59 AM PDT

Senate Republican tax chief wants dividend deduction in tax reformThe U.S. Senate's top Republican on tax policy said on Tuesday that allowing U.S. corporations to deduct dividend payments to shareholders from federal income tax could overcome problems facing Republican efforts to overhaul the U.S. tax code. In a statement at the outset of a tax reform hearing, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch said he sees the proposal known as "corporate integration" as a way to end the perceived double taxation of U.S. companies through tax legislation that would also reduce the statutory U.S. corporate income tax rate, which now stands at 35 percent.


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