Yahoo! News: World - China
Yahoo! News: World - China |
- Jeff Flake Slams Trump’s Attacks On Press As Stalinist
- MTP Panel: Decades of 'Dog-Whistles' from Trump 'Disturbing'
- For 38 Minutes, Hawaii Panicked: 'This Could Be The End'
- Doctors say new Medicaid rules 'like asking people to work with an anchor on their back'
- Leader of Britain's UKIP faces calls to quit over girlfriend's remarks
- A Man Is Holding a 10-Year-Old Boy Hostage and Firing at Officers, Police Say
- Most of mudslide-stricken California town told to empty out
- Saudi Binladin Group denies govt takeover after chief detained
- China Appears to Have Secretly Sold Pakistan a Large Combat Drone, Says Report
- Rand Paul Says Calling Trump 'A Racist' Hurts Immigration Talks
- 2019 Ford Mustang Bullitt
- Native Americans Who Can't Afford Heat Take Desperate Measures To Stay Warm
- Hawaii told to fix emergency notification system after false ballistic missile warning
- Violent protests resume in Tunisia after two days of calm
- Iran oil tanker explodes off coast of China with no survivors
- The Latest: Vegas shooter's girlfriend said she handled ammo
- Japan's Abe seeks Baltic support against North Korea
- Protesters Try To Arrest London's Mayor For Disrespecting Donald Trump
- Qatar exile says he's held by UAE; Abu Dhabi denies claim
- Cornell student says Fox News interview led to harassment
- Tavelers shatter tourism records around the world in 2017
- Illinois nursing homes sue state over low Medicaid rates
- Iran Releases Hundreds of Anti-Government Protesters From Detention, Officials Say
- Texas Man Charged With Capital Murder In Adopted Daughter's Death
- Whistleblower Manning seeks US Senate seat
- On earthquake anniversary, Haitians trying to rebuild
- After 8-year hiatus, Ford Ranger returns to US in 2019
- David Harbour Hijacks Student's Senior Photos After Twitter Joke Goes Viral
- Detroit auto show begins amid talk of NAFTA, tax cuts
- South Korea and North Korea to hold working-level talks on January 15
- A New American Leader Rises in ISIS
- Hong Kong police arrest South Korean suspected of murdering wife, son at Ritz-Carlton
- By 2020, China Could Have Hypersonic Missiles to Sink U.S. Aircraft Carriers
- Angola's Lourenco keeps pressure on Dos Santos cronies
- Donald Trump walks back on 's---hole countries' comment as 54 African states demand apology
- Earthquake in Peru destroys dozens of homes, kills 1 man
- A Car Somehow Crashed Into the Second Story of a California Building
- Ranking The Best New Shows On Netflix You Can Stream Right Now
- Bitcoin fever hits US real estate market
- Fear and doubt should not determine response to immigrants, Pope says
- Man accused of fatally shooting mother after argument over video game
- Israel says it destroys Hamas tunnel under key Gaza crossing
- Tesla's New Roadster Is the Fastest Production Vehicle of All Time
- Trump Must Follow through with His UN Threats
- Man convicted of 3 killing civil rights workers dies in jail
- Warning over alarming 'Tide Pod Challenge' detergent eating YouTube trend
- A Photo Of Reese Witherspoon With Emilia Clarke Is Blowing Fans' Minds
- Turkey and the EU: time for plan B?
Jeff Flake Slams Trump’s Attacks On Press As Stalinist Posted: 14 Jan 2018 09:53 AM PST |
MTP Panel: Decades of 'Dog-Whistles' from Trump 'Disturbing' Posted: 13 Jan 2018 11:38 PM PST |
For 38 Minutes, Hawaii Panicked: 'This Could Be The End' Posted: 13 Jan 2018 04:09 PM PST |
Doctors say new Medicaid rules 'like asking people to work with an anchor on their back' Posted: 13 Jan 2018 09:09 AM PST As many as 6.3 million people could lose Medicaid benefits as a result of the new change. Dr Gary Leroy's patients are "salt of the earth": inner-city people working in Dayton, Ohio as dishwashers, car mechanics and patient care assistants. Although the vast majority have jobs, most qualify for Medicaid, a public health insurance program which serves 74 million poor and disabled Americans. |
Leader of Britain's UKIP faces calls to quit over girlfriend's remarks Posted: 14 Jan 2018 05:50 AM PST The leader of Britain's eurosceptic UK Independence Party faced calls on Sunday to stand down after a newspaper published racist messages sent by his girlfriend about Prince Harry's fiancee Meghan Markle. Last year, Henry Bolton was the fourth leader in a year to be appointed to the helm of UKIP, a party which helped bring about a Brexit vote. The Mail on Sunday published a series of messages sent by Jo Marney to a friend in which she made offensive comments about Markle and black people. |
A Man Is Holding a 10-Year-Old Boy Hostage and Firing at Officers, Police Say Posted: 13 Jan 2018 12:58 PM PST |
Most of mudslide-stricken California town told to empty out Posted: 12 Jan 2018 07:34 PM PST |
Saudi Binladin Group denies govt takeover after chief detained Posted: 13 Jan 2018 05:04 AM PST Saudi construction giant Binladin Group denied Saturday any state takeover after its chairman was detained, but said some shares may have been transferred to the government. The firm, which has been forced to lay off tens of thousands of workers due to financial problems, said it remained a private shareholding company and was undergoing restructuring. International media this week reported Saudi Arabia's government had taken over the firm after chairman Bakr bin Laden was detained. |
China Appears to Have Secretly Sold Pakistan a Large Combat Drone, Says Report Posted: 13 Jan 2018 04:43 AM PST |
Rand Paul Says Calling Trump 'A Racist' Hurts Immigration Talks Posted: 14 Jan 2018 10:12 AM PST |
Posted: 14 Jan 2018 05:10 PM PST |
Native Americans Who Can't Afford Heat Take Desperate Measures To Stay Warm Posted: 13 Jan 2018 07:40 AM PST |
Hawaii told to fix emergency notification system after false ballistic missile warning Posted: 14 Jan 2018 01:35 PM PST Federal Communication Commission Chairman Ajit Pai told the state that it didn't have proper safeguards in place to ensure that a notice like that wouldn't be sent out, engulfing residents in panic. This was "absolutely unacceptable," Mr Pai remarked. Residents and visitors of the island state were shocked Saturday morning when they received the notification — sent to mobile phones in the area — indicating that a ballistic missile was on-course to hit the state. |
Violent protests resume in Tunisia after two days of calm Posted: 14 Jan 2018 02:45 PM PST By Tarek Amara TUNIS (Reuters) - Violent protests erupted again on Sunday in two areas of the capital Tunis and another town after a relatively calm two days, the latest protests in the country against austerity measures. After nearly a week of at times violent protests, police used tear gas against dozens of young protesters in the Ettadamen district of Tunis in renewed demonstrations over a tax hike. A Reuters witness saw youths around 20 years old throwing stones at police cars and setting fire to tires before security forces drove them back with tear gas. |
Iran oil tanker explodes off coast of China with no survivors Posted: 14 Jan 2018 10:22 AM PST A burning Iranian oil tanker exploded and sank Sunday after more than a week listing off the coast of China, as an Iranian official acknowledged there was "no hope" of missing sailors surviving the disaster. The collision and disaster of the Sanchi, which carried 30 Iranians and two Bangladeshis, had transfixed an Iran still reeling from days of protests and unrest that swept the country at the start of the year. Families of the sailors wept and screamed at the headquarters of the National Iranian Tanker Co. in Tehran, the private company that owns the Sanchi. |
The Latest: Vegas shooter's girlfriend said she handled ammo Posted: 12 Jan 2018 06:15 PM PST |
Japan's Abe seeks Baltic support against North Korea Posted: 13 Jan 2018 05:38 PM PST Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Saturday urged Baltic NATO states to support pressure on North Korea, as he hammered home his hawkish message that Pyongyang's nuclear and missile programmes pose a global threat. Despite a recent cooling of tensions in the run-up to the Winter Olympics in South Korea, Shinzo Abe has insisted on "maximising pressure" on the North. "We should work closely together to maintain and strengthen a rule of law-based international order on North Korea, which is now a threat to the global community", Abe told reporters in Lithuania's capital Vilnius. |
Protesters Try To Arrest London's Mayor For Disrespecting Donald Trump Posted: 13 Jan 2018 10:43 PM PST |
Qatar exile says he's held by UAE; Abu Dhabi denies claim Posted: 14 Jan 2018 10:27 AM PST |
Cornell student says Fox News interview led to harassment Posted: 14 Jan 2018 04:42 AM PST |
Tavelers shatter tourism records around the world in 2017 Posted: 13 Jan 2018 04:46 AM PST |
Illinois nursing homes sue state over low Medicaid rates Posted: 12 Jan 2018 06:54 PM PST By Tracy Rucinski CHICAGO (Reuters) - A handful of Illinois-based nursing homes sued the state's Department of Healthcare and Family Services on Friday, saying low Medicaid rates are jeopardizing their ability to provide adequate quality of care. In a lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, five groups that jointly operate more than 100 skilled nursing facilities across the state said Illinois' reimbursement rates and methodologies violated certain requirements under the Medicaid Act. The Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services and the governor's office did not immediately return requests for comment. |
Iran Releases Hundreds of Anti-Government Protesters From Detention, Officials Say Posted: 14 Jan 2018 06:41 AM PST |
Texas Man Charged With Capital Murder In Adopted Daughter's Death Posted: 14 Jan 2018 08:46 AM PST |
Whistleblower Manning seeks US Senate seat Posted: 13 Jan 2018 02:37 PM PST Whistleblower Chelsea Manning, jailed for leaking classified information, is seeking election in the US state of Maryland, a document seen on Saturday says. The Federal Election Commission document, filed Thursday, lists Chelsea Elizabeth Manning of North Bethesda, Maryland, as a Democratic candidate for the United States senate. Manning, now 30, was an army intelligence analyst sentenced to 35 years in prison in 2013 for leaking more than 700,000 classified documents related to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. |
On earthquake anniversary, Haitians trying to rebuild Posted: 12 Jan 2018 09:02 PM PST |
After 8-year hiatus, Ford Ranger returns to US in 2019 Posted: 13 Jan 2018 09:03 PM PST |
David Harbour Hijacks Student's Senior Photos After Twitter Joke Goes Viral Posted: 13 Jan 2018 05:51 AM PST |
Detroit auto show begins amid talk of NAFTA, tax cuts Posted: 14 Jan 2018 03:28 PM PST The Detroit Auto Show got rolling Sunday with international trade and tax cuts dominating the conversation, even as carmakers raced to meet Americans' seemingly insatiable appetite for trucks and SUVs. In a keynote address, US Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao touted just-enacted US tax cuts, which reduced the US corporate tax rate from 35 to 21 percent, saying the move will attract more US investment. Industry insiders were taking a wait-and-see attitude toward talks to revamp the North American Free Trade Agreement, which has generated fears of huge tariffs on Mexican-made imports to the US. |
South Korea and North Korea to hold working-level talks on January 15 Posted: 13 Jan 2018 05:07 AM PST North Korea and South Korea have agreed to hold working-level talks at the Tongil Pavilion on the North Korean side of the truce village of Panmunjom on Jan. 15, South Korea's unification ministry said in a statement on Saturday. The delegation led by the unification minister Cho Myung-kyun, will be sent to hold talks on the prospects of North Korea sending its performance art group to the Winter Olympics in South Korea, the ministry said in a statement. Inter-Korean talks are held alternately at the Peace House, which is on the South Korean side of Panmunjom in the demilitarized zone, and Tongil Pavilion in the North. |
A New American Leader Rises in ISIS Posted: 13 Jan 2018 01:07 PM PST |
Hong Kong police arrest South Korean suspected of murdering wife, son at Ritz-Carlton Posted: 13 Jan 2018 09:33 PM PST Hong Kong police arrested a South Korean man on suspicion of murder on Sunday after his wife and seven-year-old son were found dead in a room at the five star Ritz-Carlton hotel. Ritz Carlton did not immediately respond to requests for comments by phone and by email, and the South Korean consulate could not be reached as it was outside office hours. The Ritz-Carlton is located on the top 15 floors of Hong Kong's tallest building, the International Commerce Centre, and overlooks the Victoria Harbour. |
By 2020, China Could Have Hypersonic Missiles to Sink U.S. Aircraft Carriers Posted: 13 Jan 2018 04:37 AM PST In November, China tested what may become the world's first operational hypersonic weapon. While Chinese progress in this area surprises no one, the first operational deployment of the weapon will add another weapon to China's growing antiaccess toolkit, posing a dilemma for U.S. military planners in the Pacific. Over the past decade China has conducted several tests of potential hypersonic weapons. |
Angola's Lourenco keeps pressure on Dos Santos cronies Posted: 13 Jan 2018 08:27 PM PST The first major scalp claimed by Angola's new president Joao Lourenco in his war on corruption and nepotism was that of his predecessor's daughter, who was sacked as head of the state oil company. The next big name linked to former president Jose Eduardo dos Santos was that of his son, Jose Filomeno, who was removed from his post at the top of the African nation's $5 billion sovereign wealth fund. Lourenco's manoeuvering against the nepotistical vestiges of Angola's last president began in earnest in November with the toppling of Isabel dos Santos -- said by Forbes to be Africa's richest woman. |
Posted: 12 Jan 2018 05:53 PM PST President Donald Trump was accused of using "hate-filled, vile and racist" language in the Oval Office after he reportedly attacked immigrants coming to the United States from "s---hole countries". Mr Trump denied making the comments about immigrants from Africa, Haiti and El Salvador, saying he had been "tough, but this was not the language used". A group of 54 "extremely appalled" African countries demanded he retract and apologise for his reported comments. After an emergency session to weigh Mr Trump's remarks, the group of African ambassadors to the United Nations said it was "concerned at the continuing and growing trend from the US administration toward Africa and people of African descent to denigrate the continent and people of colour." The group is "extremely appalled at, and strongly condemns the outrageous, racist and xenophobic remarks by the president of the United States of America as widely reported by the media," a statement added, demanding a "retraction and an apology." President Donald Trump, pictured in a meeting on prison reform on Thursday. Later that afternoon he was reported to have made the slurs against immigrants It came after the United Nations human rights office decried the remarks - which were reported by the Washington Post - as "racist". In an extraordinary rebuke, UN human rights spokesman Rupert Colville told a Geneva news briefing on Friday morning that the US president's alleged comments "encouraged racism and xenophobia". "These are shocking and shameful comments from the President of the United States. There is no other word one can use but 'racist'," Mr Colville said. "You cannot dismiss entire countries and continents as 's---holes', whose entire populations, who are not white, are therefore not welcome," he added. The issue was more than "vulgar language", Mr Colville said. "It's about opening the door to humanity's worst side, about validating and encouraging racism and xenophobia that will potentially disrupt and destroy lives of many people." Lindsey Graham was inside the Oval Office when Mr Trump reportedly made his controversial remarks Mr Trump had also failed to clearly condemn the "anti-Semitic and racist actions of white supremacists in Charlottesville" at a rally in Virginia last August, Mr Colville said Mr Trump had convened a meeting at the White House on Thursday to discuss reforming immigration policy, and one of the politicians inside the Oval Office suggested that a deal could be reached if Mr Trump agreed to restore protection for immigrants from Haiti, El Salvador and African countries. "Why are we having all these people from s---hole countries come here?" the president responded, according to two people who spoke to The Washington Post. The paper said he was referring to African countries, Haiti and El Salvador. "This is ignorance ... to speak in such vile racist terms." Rep. @LuisGutierrez reacts to Trump's 'sh**hole countries' remark, says "the paint has been stripped away from Donald Trump." pic.twitter.com/US4Amyx4U5— MSNBC (@MSNBC) January 12, 2018 He then reportedly suggested that the United States should instead bring more people from countries like Norway, whose prime minister he met on Wednesday. His remarks reportedly left the assembled politicians "taken aback", the paper said, with Lindsey Graham, the Republican senator for South Carolina, and Dick Durbin, Democratic senator for Illinois, among those in the room. Here is my statement on the President's comments today: pic.twitter.com/EdtsFjc2zL— Rep. Mia Love (@RepMiaLove) January 11, 2018 Mr Durbin said Mr Trump had used the reported words. The senator said: "In the course of his comments he said things that were hate-filled, vile and racist. I use those words advisedly, I understand how powerful they are. "I cannot believe that, in the history of the White House and that Oval Office, any president has ever spoken the words that I personally heard our president speak yesterday." Mr Graham said: "Following comments by the president I said my piece directly to him yesterday. The president and all those attending the meeting know what I said and how I feel." Hillary Clinton, on Twitter, accused Mr Trump of having "ignorant, racist views of anyone who doesn't look like him". Congressman Luis Gutierrez said: "We always knew that President Trump doesn't like people from certain countries or people or certain colours. "We can now we say with 100 per cent confidence that the president is a racist who does not share the values enshrined in our Constitution." Asked about the remarks, White House spokesman Raj Shah said: "Certain Washington politicians choose to fight for foreign countries, but President Trump will always fight for the American people," he said. Republican Rep. Mia Love of Utah, the daughter of Haitian immigrants, said Mr Trump's comments were "unkind, divisive, elitist and fly in the face of our nation's values." Haiti's ambassador to the United States, Paul G. Altidor, said that "the president was either misinformed or miseducated about Haiti and its people." Leading academics also condemned Mr Trump. "The notion that all immigrants from certain nations are a drag on the US economy is unsupported. The notion that all students from a certain nation think and behave in the same way is equally unacceptable," said British born John Quelch, the dean of Miami Business school. Mr Trump has called himself the "least racist person that you've ever met." On Friday he signed a proclamation honouring Martin Luther King Day. In a speech at the event Mr Trump said: "No matter what the colour of our skin, or the place of our birth, we are all created equal." As he left the room the president was asked several times by journalists "Are you a racist?" but refused to answer. Earlier, Mr Trump spoke to The Wall Street Journal, and claimed that he has developed a positive relationship with North Korea's leader. President Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un have repeatedly traded insults "I probably have a very good relationship with Kim Jong-un, "said Mr Trump, despite there being no formal contact between US and North Korean officials in decades. "I have relationships with people. I think you people are surprised." Asked if he has spoken with Mr Kim, Mr Trump replied: "I don't want to comment on it. I'm not saying I have or haven't. I just don't want to comment." The president has called the nation's leader a "maniac," a "bad dude," mocked him as "short and fat," and referred to him repeatedly as "rocket man." Mr Kim in response has warned he would "tame the mentally deranged US dotard with fire". Mr Trump told the paper, however, that his Twitter insults were simply part of his game plan. "You'll see that a lot with me," he said about combative tweets. "And then all of the sudden somebody's my best friend. I could give you 20 examples. You could give me 30. I'm a very flexible person." The president said he approved of North Korea's participation in next month's Olympic Games, and acknowledged that Pyongyang may be trying to separate Washington and Seoul. "If I were them, I would try," he said. "The difference is I'm president, other people aren't. And I know more about wedges than any human being that's lived." Donald Trump approval rating tracker Mr Trump also announced for the first time that Mexico could pay for the border wall through negotiations to revise the North American Free Trade Agreement. "They can pay for it indirectly through Nafta," he said. "We make a good deal on Nafta, and, say, I'm going to take a small percentage of that money and it's going toward the wall. Guess what? Mexico's paying." |
Earthquake in Peru destroys dozens of homes, kills 1 man Posted: 14 Jan 2018 04:39 PM PST |
A Car Somehow Crashed Into the Second Story of a California Building Posted: 14 Jan 2018 01:25 PM PST |
Ranking The Best New Shows On Netflix You Can Stream Right Now Posted: 13 Jan 2018 05:58 AM PST |
Bitcoin fever hits US real estate market Posted: 13 Jan 2018 08:00 PM PST Bitcoin fever has hit the US real estate market, especially that of Florida, offering foreign investors a way to dodge currency controls at home and US economic sanctions. As of the end of last year, the digital currency was listed as a way to pay for some 75 properties for sale, especially in south Florida and California, according to the real estate firm Redfin. "Bitcoin accepted" is a message now seen in the description of homes for sale in the Miami area. |
Fear and doubt should not determine response to immigrants, Pope says Posted: 14 Jan 2018 04:53 AM PST Mutual fears between immigrants and their new communities are understandable, but must not prevent new arrivals from being welcomed and integrated, Pope Francis said on Sunday in a special Mass to mark the World Day of Migrants and Refugees. Francis, a keen defender of the rights of migrants, was addressing a congregation including migrants and refugees from some 50 countries, whose flags festooned the area around the altar in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican. "Local communities are sometimes afraid that the newly arrived will disturb the established order, will "steal" something they have long laboured to build up," he said, while "the newly arrived ... are afraid of confrontation, judgement, discrimination, failure." "Having doubts and fears is not a sin. |
Man accused of fatally shooting mother after argument over video game Posted: 13 Jan 2018 03:12 PM PST |
Israel says it destroys Hamas tunnel under key Gaza crossing Posted: 13 Jan 2018 11:05 PM PST |
Tesla's New Roadster Is the Fastest Production Vehicle of All Time Posted: 12 Jan 2018 05:56 PM PST |
Trump Must Follow through with His UN Threats Posted: 14 Jan 2018 04:26 PM PST If the Trump administration wants to succeed in brokering a peace deal, then the pattern of funding the Palestinians regardless of their intransigence and provocations must be broken. Donald Trump's formal recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel complied with a 1995 act of Congress and fulfilled a promise made by each of the last four U.S. presidential candidates. The Palestinians condemned the decision, saying it destroyed "any possibility of a two-state [solution)." They proceeded to rally opposition in the UN. |
Man convicted of 3 killing civil rights workers dies in jail Posted: 12 Jan 2018 07:37 PM PST |
Warning over alarming 'Tide Pod Challenge' detergent eating YouTube trend Posted: 13 Jan 2018 08:23 AM PST An alarming new trend involving teenagers eating detergent capsules and posting the videos on YouTube could "put them in danger", health officials have warned. The concerning 'Tide Pod Challenge' phenomenon has spread across social media since the turn of the year. Teenagers have filmed themselves biting into Tide laundry detergent capsules, with some of the videos racking up more than 100,000 hits before being removed by YouTube. The first mention of the 'Tide Pod Challenge' on YouTube dates back to June 2014, while parody website The Onion followed this up with a satirical op-ed about the pods in 2015. A video by CollegeHumor titled 'Don't Eat the Laundry Pods' posted in March 2017 has been viewed more than three million times and towards the end of last year it spread into a popular meme. Tide Pod Challenge: The Viral Challenge Encouraging Teens To Eat Laundry Detergent. @StahlCBS3 reports:https://t.co/igDt2P8n7ypic.twitter.com/aB1XiRtZDT— CBS Philly (@CBSPhilly) January 12, 2018 There has been a spike in the number of cases of detergent pod ingestion in the first two weeks of 2018 reported to the American Association of Poison Control Centers (AAPCC). Health officials have warned the capsules contain "highly concentrated toxic contents" which can cause vomiting, diarrhea and in worst case scenarios, breathing difficulties. "Teens trying to be funny are now putting themselves in danger by ingesting this poisonous substance," Ann Marie Buerkle, from the US Consumer Product Safety Commission, told Good Morning America. Some YouTube creators say their videos about the Tide Pod Challenge have been removed for violating the platform's rules. "Why did my video on kids doing the 'Tide Pod Challenge' get taken down and striked when there are millions of compilations of kids eating them?" questioned user Niksfinity. A spokesperson for Procter & Gamble, Tide's parent company, said: "Our laundry pacs are a highly concentrated detergent meant to clean clothes, and they're used safely in millions of households every day. "They should be only used to clean clothes and kept up, closed and away from children. "They should not be played with, whatever the circumstance is, even if it is meant as a joke." Eight deaths as a result of eating detergent pods were reported from 2012 to early 2017 in the US, involving six adults suffering from dementia and two children. In 2013, a seven-month-old boy from Florida died after biting into a laundry pod. Members of the public seeking specific information on poisons should contact the NHS 111 service or call 999 if a person is showing signs of being seriously ill. The extreme lengths YouTubers go to for viral fame |
A Photo Of Reese Witherspoon With Emilia Clarke Is Blowing Fans' Minds Posted: 13 Jan 2018 01:59 AM PST |
Turkey and the EU: time for plan B? Posted: 13 Jan 2018 07:52 PM PST After an over half century accession bid, Turkey and the European Union are moving into a new period of relations where tighter cooperation in specific areas will be prioritised over Ankara's drive for full membership, analysts say. Ties between Turkey and the EU reached a low point in 2017 with the membership process grinding to a halt and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accusing some key members, including Germany, of behaviour reminiscent of the Nazis. |
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