Yahoo! News: World - China
Yahoo! News: World - China |
- What Happens When North Korea Talks Fail?
- Big hairy eyeball of an IG report to be released Thursday
- Antarctic Ice Sheet Is Melting Way Faster Than Expected, Scientists Warn
- Indonesian students fast, and study, during Ramadan
- Trump turns his back on Michael Cohen at crucial point in case
- Woman Says Neil Armstrong Gave Her A Vial Of Moon Dust, Sues NASA To Keep It
- Mom killed in front of her 3 young children during carjacking: 'I'm sorry. I think I'm about to die'
- In primaries, Republican candidates can't love Donald Trump enough
- High-Climbing Raccoon Finally Reaches Top Of St. Paul Skyscraper And America Exhales
- Bode Miller's Daughter Wandered Off and Fell Into Swimming Pool in Matter of Moments, Authorities Say
- Rights group: Israeli lethal force in Gaza may be war crime
- A look inside Trump immigration facility: 'effectively, these kids are incarcerated'
- EPA workforce 'disgusted' by Scott Pruitt's scandals and priorities, official says
- Target Apologizes For Father's Day 'Baby Daddy' Cards
- YouTube Stars Shamed by Internet Trolls Over Size of Engagement Ring
- Iran arrests human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh after she criticised judiciary
- NASA rover knocked out as gigantic dust storm envelops Mars
- New Jersey's Tough Gun Laws Just Got Even Stronger
- Woman Gets Head Stuck In Exhaust Pipe
- Hillary Clinton masterfully mocks James Comey over his misuse of private email
- 'Like Dominoes.' Brushfire Destroys Homes in Utah Tourist Town as Wildfires Menace U.S. West
- 'Melting Away' — Climate change and Greenland's Inuits
- As North Korea danger recedes ever so slightly, renewed Russian threat looms
- The FBI Agent Accused of Accidental Shooting During a Backflip Has Been Arrested
- Jada Pinkett Smith Talks Mental Health After Anthony Bourdain, Kate Spade Suicides
- Yemen forces launch assault on Hodeida port city: field commanders
- Former Rolls-Royce engineer 'arrested under Official Secrets Act' amid fears China tried to obtain F-35 fighter jet details
- People Are Selling Elon Musk's Flamethrowers On eBay for Thousands
- Virginia GOP worries Senate nominee Corey Stewart could drag down House members
- Soviet Cars Were Weird: Celebrating The 2018 World Cup In Russia
- Bodycam Footage From Harrowing First Moments of Police Response to Las Vegas Shooting Is Released
- South Sudan rebel leader to attend talks with president in Addis Ababa
- Jamie Foxx 'Emphatically Denies' Sexual Misconduct Allegation
- Bleak New Figures Show Just How Unaffordable Rent Is In Every U.S. State
- Better late than never: Mexico turtle declared new species
- American detained in Vietnam after joining protests
- Ford F-150, Expedition, and Lincoln Navigators Recalled for Potential Fuel
- Trump heaps praise on 'tough guy' Kim Jong Un
- Roommates Charged With Murder in Death of Nebraska Woman Who Vanished After Tinder Date
What Happens When North Korea Talks Fail? Posted: 13 Jun 2018 07:02 AM PDT |
Big hairy eyeball of an IG report to be released Thursday Posted: 13 Jun 2018 03:19 PM PDT |
Antarctic Ice Sheet Is Melting Way Faster Than Expected, Scientists Warn Posted: 14 Jun 2018 05:23 AM PDT |
Indonesian students fast, and study, during Ramadan Posted: 14 Jun 2018 10:55 AM PDT |
Trump turns his back on Michael Cohen at crucial point in case Posted: 13 Jun 2018 01:44 PM PDT |
Woman Says Neil Armstrong Gave Her A Vial Of Moon Dust, Sues NASA To Keep It Posted: 13 Jun 2018 01:23 PM PDT |
Posted: 14 Jun 2018 07:57 AM PDT |
In primaries, Republican candidates can't love Donald Trump enough Posted: 13 Jun 2018 10:08 AM PDT |
High-Climbing Raccoon Finally Reaches Top Of St. Paul Skyscraper And America Exhales Posted: 13 Jun 2018 01:19 AM PDT |
Posted: 14 Jun 2018 08:20 AM PDT |
Rights group: Israeli lethal force in Gaza may be war crime Posted: 13 Jun 2018 04:01 AM PDT |
A look inside Trump immigration facility: 'effectively, these kids are incarcerated' Posted: 13 Jun 2018 01:08 PM PDT |
EPA workforce 'disgusted' by Scott Pruitt's scandals and priorities, official says Posted: 13 Jun 2018 05:39 PM PDT A demoralized workforce watching as its agency is dismantled by the very people charged to lead it: That is the grim state of affairs depicted by John J. O'Grady, a longtime employee in the Chicago field office of the Environmental Protection Agency, which is tasked with protecting the nation's air and water, while preventing the exposure of citizens to harmful chemicals. The agency is doing none of that, in O'Grady's telling, with career officials watching in dismay as EPA administrator Scott Pruitt seemingly lurches from one scandal to another while doing the bidding of oil barons and the chemical lobby. "Morale is not good," O'Grady said of the agency's 14,000 employees. |
Target Apologizes For Father's Day 'Baby Daddy' Cards Posted: 14 Jun 2018 08:17 AM PDT |
YouTube Stars Shamed by Internet Trolls Over Size of Engagement Ring Posted: 14 Jun 2018 10:20 AM PDT |
Iran arrests human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh after she criticised judiciary Posted: 13 Jun 2018 07:08 AM PDT One of Iran's most prominent human rights lawyers has been arrested after criticising the country's judiciary, according to her family. Nasrin Sotoudeh, 55, has been a well-known defender of Iranian dissidents, including some of the young women arrested recently for refusing to wear the hijab. Her husband, Reza Khandan, said in Facebook post on Wednesday that police arrested her at home and took her to Tehran's Evin prison. "Of all the functions that governments of the world are expected to do, the Iranian one is only good in arresting and imprisoning innocent people," he wrote. No official charges were announced but the arrest came shortly after Ms Sotoudeh spoke out against efforts by Iran's judiciary to force its own candidates onto the board of Iranian Bar Association. Ms Sotoudeh said the move would make it even more difficult for Iranian lawyers to defend dissidents. Vida Mohaved was arrested in Tehran in December "This action will erode the half-baked defence rights of those who have been accused of political and security offences and means a final farewell to the profession of independent attorney in Iran," she said in an interview with the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran. Ms Sotoudeh was previously arrested in 2010 and accused of spreading propaganda and endangering national security. Western governments protested her detention and she went on several hunger strikes in prison. She was eventually released in 2013, shortly before Hassan Rouhani, Iran's president, was due to speak at the UN. Ms Sotoudeh came to prominence representing defendants sentenced to die for crimes committed when they were children, opposition politicians, and the Nobel Prize winning-Iranian dissident Shirin Ebadi. She recently represented Vida Mohaved, a 31-year-old mother of one who was arrested in Tehran as she stood on top of a telecoms box hoisting a white hijab on a stick in protest at Iran's compulsory veiling laws. Ms Mohaved's protest helped inspire dozens of other women and some men to mount similar protests. |
NASA rover knocked out as gigantic dust storm envelops Mars Posted: 13 Jun 2018 03:12 PM PDT |
New Jersey's Tough Gun Laws Just Got Even Stronger Posted: 13 Jun 2018 11:52 AM PDT |
Woman Gets Head Stuck In Exhaust Pipe Posted: 13 Jun 2018 04:01 PM PDT |
Hillary Clinton masterfully mocks James Comey over his misuse of private email Posted: 14 Jun 2018 04:00 PM PDT "But her emails." It's become a meme at this point. The Republican party — and Trump campaign — made such a huge stinkin' deal about Clinton's use of a private email server while she was secretary of state, that any time a more serious scandal enveloped the right, people would mock the time and effort spent trying to "lock her up." The phrase has also been used jokingly to insult Trump supporters for latching onto the email scandal for so long, while there's plenty of better things to be concerned about. a man in a MAGA hat stumbles out of his basement, choking on dust and radioactive fallout"but her emails!" he whispers, before dying — tom (@toms_spaghetti) May 15, 2017 So, when it was revealed on Thursday that former FBI director James Comey used a personal email account for official government business by the Justice Department's internal watchdog, many saw the irony. You know, considering it was Comey who issued a statement in October 2016 — just 11 days before the election — saying the FBI was reopening its investigation into Clinton's email use. "But my emails," Clinton tweeted on Thursday in response to a tweet from a Politico reporter highlighting Comey's own email missteps. But my emails. https://t.co/G7TIWDEG0p — Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) June 14, 2018 The watchdog report also concluded that Comey's handling of Clinton's email investigation was "extraordinary and insubordinate" but was not motivated by political boas. Well, if anything, Clinton has proved once again that she is truly a killer of memes. First the "delete your account" meme, and now "but her emails." Thanks, Hillary. WATCH: These trees have lived for 2,500 years. Now they're suddenly dying |
'Like Dominoes.' Brushfire Destroys Homes in Utah Tourist Town as Wildfires Menace U.S. West Posted: 13 Jun 2018 07:11 PM PDT |
'Melting Away' — Climate change and Greenland's Inuits Posted: 14 Jun 2018 09:59 AM PDT Over the past five years, photographer Ciril Jazbec has documented the changing lives of the Inuit people in Greenland, the world's largest island, which is covered by the world's largest and fastest-melting ice sheet. This fact, together with the darkening of its surface, mean the changes in Greenland will affect the entire planet and its species, the majority of the scientists have come to agree. Jazbec's long-term project, Melting Away, is about a people at the forefront of climate change, who have an ancient knowledge of hunting and are in search of ways to survive a collapsing ecosystem. Qaanaaq and Siorapaluk, the world's northernmost settlements of roughly 700 Inuits, continues its traditional ways despite several alarming climate, environmental and cultural threats. |
As North Korea danger recedes ever so slightly, renewed Russian threat looms Posted: 12 Jun 2018 05:44 PM PDT |
The FBI Agent Accused of Accidental Shooting During a Backflip Has Been Arrested Posted: 12 Jun 2018 10:14 PM PDT |
Jada Pinkett Smith Talks Mental Health After Anthony Bourdain, Kate Spade Suicides Posted: 13 Jun 2018 08:57 AM PDT |
Yemen forces launch assault on Hodeida port city: field commanders Posted: 13 Jun 2018 04:22 AM PDT Yemen pro-government forces launched an offensive on Wednesday to seize the key port city of Hodeida from Huthi rebels, field commanders told AFP. Loyalist troops have begun pressing towards Hodeida airport, south of the strategic Red Sea city, the commanders said on condition of anonymity. The assault began at around 1:15 pm (1015 GMT) after Yemeni pro-government forces received a "green light" from the Saudi-led coalition, they said. |
Posted: 13 Jun 2018 11:30 PM PDT A man in his 70s has been arrested as part of a probe under the Official Secrets Act, police said on Thursday, amid reports he was a former Rolls-Royce engineer suspected of divulging secrets about Britain's new stealth fighter to China. Scotland Yard said the man was arrested on Tuesday afternoon and taken to a police station in Derbyshire before being released under investigation. A search at an address in Derbyshire was ongoing while a search warrant was also executed at an office address in the West Midlands. The man was named by the Sun as Bryn Jones, a former chief combustion technologist, who it said had been detained in connection with efforts by China to obtain classified information about Britain's new £100million RAF stealth fighter jet. The 73-year-old former Rolls-Royce employee was reportedly held after MI5 received information that classified details were passed to Beijing. Factfile | F-35 Lightning II fighter He was detained in an "ultra-discreet" swoop by officers from Scotland Yard's SO15 counter-terrorism command at his home on Tuesday, it was reported. Mr Jones, who describes himself as a "visiting professor" in "gas turbine combustion" at the Aeronautical University of Xian, central China, denies any wrongdoing, the newspaper reported. The investigation reportedly centres on information about the F-35 Lightning II jet, which arrived in Britain last week. Britain has committed to buying 138 F-35 fighter aircraft and has so far bought 48 at a cost of £9.1 billion. The F-35 programme is the world's largest defence development, worth over $1.3trillion. UK industry provides 15 per cent of each of the 3,000 aircraft currently on the order books and at peak production 25,000 British jobs will be supported throughout the supply chain. |
People Are Selling Elon Musk's Flamethrowers On eBay for Thousands Posted: 14 Jun 2018 11:25 AM PDT |
Virginia GOP worries Senate nominee Corey Stewart could drag down House members Posted: 13 Jun 2018 11:05 AM PDT |
Soviet Cars Were Weird: Celebrating The 2018 World Cup In Russia Posted: 14 Jun 2018 03:35 AM PDT |
Bodycam Footage From Harrowing First Moments of Police Response to Las Vegas Shooting Is Released Posted: 14 Jun 2018 07:15 AM PDT |
South Sudan rebel leader to attend talks with president in Addis Ababa Posted: 13 Jun 2018 06:39 AM PDT South Sudanese rebel leader Riek Machar has accepted an invitation from the Ethiopian Prime Minister to talks with South Sudanese president Salva Kiir in Addis Ababa next week, a spokesman for Machar said on Wednesday. "The Movement welcomes this invitation ... it will go a long way in building confidence in the peace process," the spokesman said in an emailed statement. The statement said Machar, who is under house arrest in South Africa, had been invited by Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed to attend the talks on June 20. |
Jamie Foxx 'Emphatically Denies' Sexual Misconduct Allegation Posted: 13 Jun 2018 04:43 PM PDT |
Bleak New Figures Show Just How Unaffordable Rent Is In Every U.S. State Posted: 13 Jun 2018 07:01 AM PDT |
Better late than never: Mexico turtle declared new species Posted: 13 Jun 2018 01:15 AM PDT Slow and steady wins the race, the saying goes -- and it seems to have worked for a small type of turtle native to western Mexico that has been declared a new species. For 20 years, residents of the area around Puerto Vallarta, a Pacific coast resort town, had been telling scientists about the little turtles native to their area. "They are found only here, in the streams and rivers around Puerto Vallarta," said Fabio German Cupul, a researcher at the University of Guadalajara. |
American detained in Vietnam after joining protests Posted: 14 Jun 2018 04:59 AM PDT |
Ford F-150, Expedition, and Lincoln Navigators Recalled for Potential Fuel Posted: 13 Jun 2018 11:49 AM PDT |
Trump heaps praise on 'tough guy' Kim Jong Un Posted: 13 Jun 2018 04:47 PM PDT |
Roommates Charged With Murder in Death of Nebraska Woman Who Vanished After Tinder Date Posted: 13 Jun 2018 08:31 AM PDT |
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