Yahoo! News: World - China
Yahoo! News: World - China |
- Donald Trump Apparently Thinks Meeting Mass Shooting Victims Is 'Wonderful'
- The 'Monopoly Man' Just Owned The Senate's Equifax Hearing
- Florida set to execute man for 2 decades-old murders
- Saudi king's visit to Russia heralds shift in global power structures
- Johnson & Johnson unit exits insulin pump business amid rising competition
- North Korean workers prepare seafood going to US stores
- Woman miraculously survives Las Vegas shooting after iPhone stops bullet
- Virginia Republican Goes Full Willie Horton In New Ad About MS-13 ‘Sex Slaves’
- Interior Whistleblower Quits, Lambastes Ryan Zinke's 'Resume Of Failure'
- Ford Reveals Its Electrification Plans
- Thai mourners pay last-minute respects to late king
- Ivanka Trump Gets Schooled After Trying To Make A Point About Education
- US votes against UN motion to condemn gay sex death penalty ‘over fears executions could be banned in the States’
- 5-Year-Old Reunites With Family After Vegas Shooting Thanks To Help From Kind Strangers
- Amnesty condemns 'forced' returns of Afghan asylum seekers
- Trump Administration Asks Court To Dismiss Lawsuit Against Transgender Military Ban
- Former prison guard admits sexually assaulting inmates
- Gun Stores Selling Out Of Bump Stocks After Shooter Used Them In Las Vegas Massacre
- 60 Years Ago, Russia Launched Sputnik (And It Can Teach Us A lot about North Korea)
- Chip Gaines's Mom Sheds Light On Why 'Fixer Upper' Is Ending
- Islamic State driven out of last stronghold in northern Iraq
- Puerto Rico mayors play outsized role in hurricane recovery
- Illinois investigator attacked while trying to rescue child
- Luann de Lesseps Finalizes Divorce from Tom D'Agostino: 'Even Though We Decided That, It's Sad'
- Unarmed Hotel Security Guard Who Found Las Vegas Shooter Hailed As Hero
- US Rejects UN Resolution Condemning Death Penalty For LGBTQ People, Other Groups
- Julianne Hough's secret to her amazing body is right on her wrist
- New delay in Mississippi law on objection to gay marriage
- Some Poor Sap Just Got Totally Owned On Twitter... By Hamburger Helper
- How many nukes are in the world and what could they destroy?
- US 'deeply disturbed' by arrest of Istanbul consulate staffer
- Bain hoping to settle with Western Digital on Toshiba deal
- Las Vegas gunman pictured dead on hotel room floor alongside weapons, camera and final note
- Colin Kaepernick's Jersey Hangs In The Same Museum As 'Starry Night'
- Range Rover launches its first ever hybrid
- Mohammed Dahlan speaks about Palestinian unity and his back-room role
- Russia says its airstrikes wounded al-Qaida leader in Syria
Donald Trump Apparently Thinks Meeting Mass Shooting Victims Is 'Wonderful' Posted: 05 Oct 2017 04:42 AM PDT |
The 'Monopoly Man' Just Owned The Senate's Equifax Hearing Posted: 04 Oct 2017 10:08 AM PDT |
Florida set to execute man for 2 decades-old murders Posted: 05 Oct 2017 01:27 AM PDT |
Saudi king's visit to Russia heralds shift in global power structures Posted: 04 Oct 2017 10:00 PM PDT The Russian deputy prime minister, Dmitry Rogozin, greets King Salman on his arrival at Moscow. Russia will host its first visit by a Saudi monarch on Thursday, in an attempt to seal an alliance that would confirm Moscow as a major independent force in the Middle East capable of shaping worldwide oil prices and the outcome of regional conflicts such as those in Syria and Libya. |
Johnson & Johnson unit exits insulin pump business amid rising competition Posted: 05 Oct 2017 07:54 AM PDT (Reuters) - Johnson & Johnson's diabetes care unit, which makes insulin pumps, said on Thursday it would shut its business in United States and Canada amid increased competition and after failing to find a buyer. Animas Corp has selected rival Medtronic Plc as its partner for the device and nearly 90,000 patients using its pumps will be offered the option to transfer to pumps made by Medtronic. J&J has been reviewing strategic options, including a potential sale of its diabetes care division, which includes LifeScan Inc, Animas Corp and Calibra Medical Inc. The division reported sales of $421 million in the second quarter, down 10.6 percent from a year earlier. |
North Korean workers prepare seafood going to US stores Posted: 04 Oct 2017 05:45 PM PDT |
Woman miraculously survives Las Vegas shooting after iPhone stops bullet Posted: 04 Oct 2017 07:54 AM PDT A woman who attended the Route 91 Harvest country music festival is lucky to be alive after her iPhone stopped a bullet from harming her during Sunday night's mass shooting, according to KLAS. A Las Vegas taxi driver allegedly took a photo of the iPhone in question after he picked up the unnamed woman at the scene of the massacre. |
Virginia Republican Goes Full Willie Horton In New Ad About MS-13 ‘Sex Slaves’ Posted: 04 Oct 2017 03:11 PM PDT |
Interior Whistleblower Quits, Lambastes Ryan Zinke's 'Resume Of Failure' Posted: 04 Oct 2017 02:50 PM PDT |
Ford Reveals Its Electrification Plans Posted: 03 Oct 2017 07:09 PM PDT |
Thai mourners pay last-minute respects to late king Posted: 05 Oct 2017 03:19 AM PDT |
Ivanka Trump Gets Schooled After Trying To Make A Point About Education Posted: 05 Oct 2017 12:44 AM PDT |
Posted: 04 Oct 2017 01:31 AM PDT The US failed to back a United Nations resolution to condemn death penalty sentences against gay people for having sex, because it feared it could lead to executions being banned in America. The Donald Trump administration failed to support the motion along with countries where the practice is legal, including in Saudi Arabia. Extremists in Isis-held territory in Iraq and Syria also hand down the death penalty for same-sex relations. |
5-Year-Old Reunites With Family After Vegas Shooting Thanks To Help From Kind Strangers Posted: 04 Oct 2017 06:02 PM PDT |
Amnesty condemns 'forced' returns of Afghan asylum seekers Posted: 04 Oct 2017 05:16 PM PDT A surge of failed Afghan asylum seekers "forcibly" returned from Europe are at risk of torture, kidnapping and death in war-torn Afghanistan, Amnesty International said Thursday. Almost 9,500 Afghans went back to their homeland in 2016 after their applications for asylum in Europe were rejected, compared with nearly 3,300 a year earlier, the human rights group said. The figure covers asylum seekers who were detained and then deported from European countries, and those who "ostensibly voluntarily" returned with financial assistance, Amnesty said. |
Trump Administration Asks Court To Dismiss Lawsuit Against Transgender Military Ban Posted: 05 Oct 2017 07:11 AM PDT |
Former prison guard admits sexually assaulting inmates Posted: 04 Oct 2017 02:16 PM PDT |
Gun Stores Selling Out Of Bump Stocks After Shooter Used Them In Las Vegas Massacre Posted: 05 Oct 2017 08:39 AM PDT |
60 Years Ago, Russia Launched Sputnik (And It Can Teach Us A lot about North Korea) Posted: 04 Oct 2017 07:04 AM PDT While Sputnik itself was a rudimentary satellite that was by no means a weapon, it represented an uncomfortable truth—that the Soviet Union could reach out and potentially threaten the American homeland. While the situations are not identical, the current standoff between the United States and North Korea bears some resemblance to the early days of the Cold War. Indeed, the current crisis—which was sparked by North Korea test launching an ICBM—bears some resemblance to the developments of the late 1950s and early 1960s. |
Chip Gaines's Mom Sheds Light On Why 'Fixer Upper' Is Ending Posted: 04 Oct 2017 01:01 PM PDT |
Islamic State driven out of last stronghold in northern Iraq Posted: 05 Oct 2017 06:55 AM PDT By Maher Chmaytelli BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraqi forces announced on Thursday they had captured Islamic State's last stronghold in northern Iraq, leaving the militant group holed up near the Syrian border as its self-proclaimed "caliphate" shrinks further. The town of Hawija and the surrounding areas fell in an offensive by U.S.-backed Iraqi government troops and Iranian-trained and armed Shi'ite paramilitary groups known as Popular Mobilisation. Some fighting took place to the north and east of the town where the militants were surrounded. |
Puerto Rico mayors play outsized role in hurricane recovery Posted: 04 Oct 2017 01:33 PM PDT Standing in the yard of her home in Guaynabo on Sunday, Rosymar Diaz greeted an unexpected visitor on the other side of her chain-link fence: the city's mayor, Angel Perez. Diaz's neighborhood of modest concrete homes in a San Juan suburb of 100,000 people had been badly damaged in Hurricane Maria. Perez had come to check on residents and ask how he could help. |
Illinois investigator attacked while trying to rescue child Posted: 04 Oct 2017 03:55 PM PDT |
Posted: 04 Oct 2017 10:32 AM PDT |
Unarmed Hotel Security Guard Who Found Las Vegas Shooter Hailed As Hero Posted: 05 Oct 2017 05:38 AM PDT |
US Rejects UN Resolution Condemning Death Penalty For LGBTQ People, Other Groups Posted: 03 Oct 2017 05:43 PM PDT |
Julianne Hough's secret to her amazing body is right on her wrist Posted: 04 Oct 2017 09:21 AM PDT |
New delay in Mississippi law on objection to gay marriage Posted: 04 Oct 2017 02:22 PM PDT |
Some Poor Sap Just Got Totally Owned On Twitter... By Hamburger Helper Posted: 05 Oct 2017 02:28 AM PDT |
How many nukes are in the world and what could they destroy? Posted: 05 Oct 2017 03:28 AM PDT Tensions over nuclear weapons have been raised further after North Korea claimed to have successfully tested a hydrogen bomb. This latest move comes amid increasing concern over North Korea's military capabilities, with the new US administration upping its rhetoric in response. While the Pyongyang regime increases the frequency with which it is conducting missile tests, Donald Trump's defence secretary Jim 'Mad Dog' Mattis has previously warned North Korea of an "effective and overwhelming" response if Pyongyang used nuclear weapons. North Korea has conducted a major Nuclear Test. Their words and actions continue to be very hostile and dangerous to the United States.....— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 3, 2017 Elsewhere, rhetoric hints at a return of the expansion of nuclear arsenals across the world. In December, Russian President Vladimir Putin told a meeting of defence chiefs that strengthening nuclear capability should be a key objective for 2017. Donald Trump then took to Twitter to respond, vowing to do the same. Such rhetoric has led to concerns about the world's nuclear capacity and the unpredictability of those in charge of the warheads. It seems the world is a long way from "coming to its senses" - with millions of kilotons already in military service around the world. Between them, the world's nuclear-armed states have around 15,000 warheads - the majority of which belong to the US and Russia. It is estimated that just under 10,000 of these are in military service, with the rest awaiting dismantlement, according to the Arms Control Association. Putin says Russia should strengthen its nuclear arsenal 00:51 Which countries have nuclear weapons? There are five nuclear-weapon states in the world: China, France, Russia, United Kingdom and the United States. These are officially recognised as possessing such weapons by the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. This treaty acknowledges and legitimises their arsenals, but they are not supposed to build or maintain them forever. Indeed, they have committed to eliminate them. There are also four other countries that have nuclear weapons: Pakistan, India, Israel and North Korea. These countries didn't sign the Treaty, and together possess an estimated 340 nuclear weapons. But it's Russia and the US that have by far the most in the world - dominating all other countries by collectively sharing 88 per cent of the world's arsenal of stockpiled nukes. This figure increases to 93 per cent when we consider retired nukes. How the world's 15,000 nukes are divided How deadly could these nuclear weapons be? The world's current collection of 14,900 nuclear weapons possesses enough power to kill millions of people and flatten dozens of cities. According to Telegraph research, it is estimated that the US and Russian arsenals combined have power equating to 6,600 megatons. This is a tenth of the total solar energy received by Earth every minute. According to the NukeMap website, the dropping of the B-83, the largest bomb in the current US arsenal, would kill 1.4m people in the first 24 hours. A further 3.7m people would be injured, as the thermal radiation radius reached 13.km. Likewise, the "Tsar Bomba" is the largest USSR bomb tested. If this bomb was dropped on New York, it is estimated that it could kill 7.6m people and injure 4.2m more. The nuclear fallout could reach an approximate area of 7,880km on a 15mph wind, impacting millions more people. Both America and Russia's arsenals are regulated by several treaties that place limits on the numbers and kinds of warheads and delivery systems they have. If either country were to expand their nuclear capacity even further, as Trump and Putin have hinted at, it could shatter these agreements and plunge the world into a new Cold War. North Korean missile ranges Our figures on nuclear weapons, based on statistics from the Arms Control Association, are mainly estimates because of the secretive nature with which most governments treat information about their arsenals. |
US 'deeply disturbed' by arrest of Istanbul consulate staffer Posted: 05 Oct 2017 08:20 AM PDT The United States on Thursday said it was "deeply disturbed" over the arrest by Turkish authorities of a local staffer working at its consulate in Istanbul, saying the charges against him were baseless. The employee was remanded in custody by an Istanbul court late Wednesday on accusations of links to the group of US-based preacher Fethullah Gulen, blamed by Ankara for last year's failed coup against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, state-run Anadolu news agency said. The man has been formally charged with espionage and seeking to overthrow the Turkish government, it added. |
Bain hoping to settle with Western Digital on Toshiba deal Posted: 05 Oct 2017 01:31 AM PDT |
Las Vegas gunman pictured dead on hotel room floor alongside weapons, camera and final note Posted: 03 Oct 2017 10:20 PM PDT High-powered guns, shell casings and two tripod-mounted weapons litter the room that Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock used as a sniper's nest. Inside room 32135 at the Mandalay Bay Hotel, and near Paddock's lifeless body, officers also found a paper and a pen on a table, suggesting he may have left a note. The first pictures from the scene also reveal that Paddock, 64, had mounted a camera inside the room, possibly to film the slaughter, and at least one outside it on an abandoned room service trolley. Another camera was in the peep hole of the door. Sheriff Joe Lombardo said: "I anticipate he was looking for anyone coming to arrest him." The pictures showed the door battered in with seven bullet holes near the base, where he had fired and hit an officer in the leg. Weapons on the ground inside the hotel room where the Las Vegas shooter Stephen Paddock stayed Credit: @MikeTokes/Twitter Paddock was already dead when armed police blasted their way into his 32nd floor suite at the hotel at 10.24pm on Sunday night, ending a nine to 11-minute killing spree that left 59 dead and more than 500 injured. Police said he had shot himself. One photograph from the scene shows Paddock lying in a pool of blood from a head wound among dozens of spent cartridge casings. A revolver lies near the body. Fresh details about the massacre and the arsenal Paddock amassed emerged on Tuesday. A photo from inside the Mandalay Bay hotel room shows one of Paddock's guns Credit: @Boston25/Twitter A total of 47 firearms were recovered from three locations searched by investigators - Paddock's hotel suite, his home in Mesquite, and another property associated with him in Reno, Nevada, according to Jill Snyder, special agent for the US Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms (ATF). Ms Snyder said 12 of the guns found in the hotel room were fitted with so-called bump-stock devices that allow the guns to be fired virtually as automatic weapons. The devices are legal under US law, even though fully automatic weapons are for the most part banned. Haunting video from 2016 shows the exact same room used by the Las Vegas shooter 01:10 The rifles, shotguns and pistols were purchased in four states - Nevada, Utah, California and Texas - Snyder told reporters at an evening news conference. Investigators sweeping the room found no fewer than 23 guns, including a Kalashnikov and AR-15 assault rifles, and a vast stockpile of of military grade .223 calibre ammunition. Graphic: How 'Bump-stock' devices work At least two of the weapons had been set up on tripods at windows overlooking the concert site. Police said they believed he had used 10 suitcases to smuggle the weapons up to the room, which he had checked into using an ID belonging to his girlfriend, Marliou Dandy, four days earlier. Officers also found Ms Danley's slot machine card, which he had apparently been using to gamble with. Marilou Danley, who has returned to the US Credit: REUTERS "Danley arrived in the Philippines last month, and then there was a wire transfer to her account for $100,000 from Stephen," Nick Suarez, spokesman for the Philippines' National Bureau of Investigation (NBI), said. Relatives said Paddock, a former accountant, was worth at least $2million and obsessively gambled tens of thousands of dollars. The gunman's brother, Eric Paddock, said he recently received a text message showing his brother had won $40,000. "He'd grouse when he'd lost. But he never said he'd lost $4million or something. I think he would have told me," he said. Las Vegas gunman's brother: 'It's like an asteroid fell out of the sky' 01:03 But Paddock appears to have been gambling particularly heavily in the weeks ahead of the massacre, with records kept by Las Vegas casinos showing he engaged in 16 transactions of more than $10,000 in recent weeks. It was not clear if they represented wins or losses. Police were still trying to find a motive to explain why Paddock fired hundreds of bullets into crowds who gathered for an open-air concert on Sunday night. Unlike other mass shooters in recent history, Paddock appears to have left no manifesto to justify his actions. Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock Credit: REUTERS FBI profiler Clint Van Zandt said usually after a mass shooting "people two or three days later say 'Ah, now I understand, I know what was going on in this guy's life'." But with Paddock "we don't know," he said. "He knew what he wanted to do. He knew how he was going to do it, and it doesn't seem like he had any kind of escape plan at all." Early on Monday, police found another arms cache including 19 weapons, several pounds of a commercially available explosive, and thousands of rounds of ammunition at his home in Mesquite, 80 miles northeast of Las Vegas. They found traces of ammonium nitrate fertilizer, which can be used to make homemade bombs, in his car. Paddock's arsenal of high-powered weapons appears to have been assembled over several days in preparation for the massacre. Inside a Mandalay Bay Hotel suite similar to the one used by Paddock Paddock began his killing spree at 10.08pm on Sunday night, opening fire from his hotel room windows on concert goers at the the Route 91 country music festival below. Craig Herman, 57, a contractor, told the Telegraph: "I was right in front of the stage. I heard 'pop, pop, pop' over and over again. When he was reloading I ran. I stepped over a guy with blood pouring out of his head. He was dead. Gone. I saw maybe 15 others like that before I got out. "There were people screaming, lying on the ground. I've never seen so much blood. I kept thinking what type of person would do this, who would be that kind of stupid? Was it the Taliban? Mexican cartels? Gang related? But it was someone a bit like me." Videos filmed by concert goers show that Paddock's first volley lasted only about ten seconds - a time scale consistent with emptying the magazine on an automatic assault rifle. He fired several similar volleys over a period of about ten minutes. Mandalay Bay hotel shooting As casualties mounted, dozens of bystanders, including off duty soldiers, policemen, and nurses, but also ordinary civilians scrambled to attend to the wounded. They included Ross Woodward, a trooper with 1st Queens Dragoon Guards who had just completed a training deployment in the Nevada desert. Recognising the sound of automatic fire, Woodward and two other off duty soldiers from the Welsh regiment ran towards the scene to tend to the wounded and shepherd people to safely. "He just said that he helped the injured and to get people to safety and that was it really," Curtis Dyer, his brother, told the Press Association. "I'm dead proud of what he's done, that he was able to do it." A woman leaves flowers at a makeshift memorial on the Las Vegas Strip Credit: Reuters Julian Ness, 31, one of the first paramedics on the scene, told the Telegraph: "I started treating someone who'd been shot in the leg. Then someone ran up telling me about someone shot in the head, then there was someone shot three times in the chest. "There was blood everywhere. I never imagined seeing anything like this. We wanted to help everyone but we just had to make difficult decisions based the ones we could save. It breaks your heart." Taylor Winston, a 29 year old former US marine who was attending the concert with his friend, Jenn Lewis, also used skills learnt on the battlefield to save lives. "Jenn and I luckily found a truck with keys in it and started transporting priority victims to the hospital and made a couple trips and tried to help out the best we could until more ambulances could arrive," the Iraq war veteran, from San Diego, told the Daily Beast. 50 dead in Las Vegas shooting, in pictures He and an off duty trauma nurse then set up a makeshift triage point, prioritizing casualties and telling victims to apply pressure to their wounds to stop the bleeding. Officers had identified the source of the shooting and arrived outside room 32135 by 10.24pm, 16 minutes after the massacre began. Paddock shot through the door as they approached, wounding a hotel security guard in the leg. Sonny Morgan, who was on the 32nd floor at the time of the shooting, said: "I could smell the gun powder. It just kept going and going. I honestly thought it was like a terrorist attack, that someone was trying to blow up the hotel." In brief | Worst US mass shootings |
Colin Kaepernick's Jersey Hangs In The Same Museum As 'Starry Night' Posted: 04 Oct 2017 05:50 AM PDT |
Range Rover launches its first ever hybrid Posted: 04 Oct 2017 03:05 AM PDT True to its word, Land Rover has started electrifying its range with the launch of the heavily updated and overhauled Range Rover Sport. The first ever Range Rover to come with a hybrid powertrain, it uses a four-cylinder 300hp engine and a 104hp eclectic motor. While that figure may be off the pace compared with the hybrid setups that litter the current Porsche Cayenne range, the Range Rover Sport serves up a huge 640Nm of toque, crucial for real off-road prowess. |
Mohammed Dahlan speaks about Palestinian unity and his back-room role Posted: 04 Oct 2017 07:38 AM PDT By Nidal al-Mughrabi GAZA (Reuters) - Mohammad Dahlan, who played a key backroom role in a major new effort for Palestinian unity, has said a two-state peace agreement with Israel was impossible and healing wounds from a civil war that split Palestine was now a priority. Once of the fiercest foes of Hamas, the Islamist group that seized the Gaza Strip in a civil war in 2007, Dahlan, a member of the rival mainstream Fatah party, spoke to Reuters after a unity cabinet held its first meeting in the enclave in three years. "The internal Palestinian situation is more sacred, is more important and is more useful now than the so-called negotiation," the veteran politician said of talks with Israel that collapsed in 2014 over issues such as Israeli settlement-building in occupied territory and Fatah-Hamas reconciliation. |
Russia says its airstrikes wounded al-Qaida leader in Syria Posted: 04 Oct 2017 12:29 PM PDT |
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