Yahoo! News: World - China
Yahoo! News: World - China |
- Mitch McConnell Warns 2 Possible Trump Court Picks Risk Big Senate Fights: NYT
- Blunt on North Korea 'Actions here will speak louder than words'
- Bookstore Owner Calls Police On Woman Accosting Steve Bannon
- U.S. Citizens Warned to 'Shelter in Place' as Looting Follows Violent Protests in Haiti
- The Latest: Largest California wildfire over half contained
- Iranian teen detained over dancing Instagram post
- Turkey train disaster leaves 24 dead, hundreds hurt
- Mexico's next president aims to end foreign fuel imports in three years
- Miss Massachusetts Hopeful Resigns From Competition In Protest Of 'Me Too' Joke
- Soccer team lost for 10 days in cave in Thailand has been located
- Giuliani: Trump ‘has to sit down with Vladimir Putin’
- Man's Skull Fractured With Metal Pipe During Attack on NYC Subway
- Women in Iran Are Dancing to Protest the Arrest of a Teenage Instagrammer
- Landslide warnings as Japan digs through rain devastation
- The Latest: Slain staffer remembered as 'beautiful soul'
- Giuliani 'Close To Determining' That Trump Won't Sit Down With Mueller
- U.S. to reunite only half of young migrant children by Tuesday deadline
- New allegation that Rep. Jim Jordan knew of sexual abuse by Ohio State team doctor
- Thailand cave rescue: What happens when the players are out of the cave
- Secretary of State Pompeo Urges North Korea to Follow Vietnam's Example in Overcoming Hostilities With U.S.
- Japan floods: Scores dead and dozens missing as two million are told to evacuate amid record rains
- Nissan admits falsifying emissions data on cars made in Japan
- Officials Pose Alongside Enormous 13-Foot Alligator Captured in Florida
- Police open murder probe as 1 of 2 nerve agent victims dies
- Trump's Former Personal Driver Sues Claiming Years Of Unpaid Overtime
- 1-Year-Old Baby Appears In Immigration Court, Cries Hysterically
- Tesla dominated electric-car sales in Canada in June
- Haiti president tells protesters 'go home' after fuel hike suspended
- Pilot may have saved lives in Chicago helicopter crash
- Insurers warn of rising premiums after Trump axes Obamacare payments again
- 'Abolish ICE' protesters confront Mitch McConnell outside restaurant over Trump immigration policies
- The F-35 Almost Never Happened: The Story of Boeing's X-32 Stealth Fighter
- Dozens killed in Turkey train derailment
- Two-year-old dies from self-inflicted gunshot wound
- Harley Celebrates 115th Anniversary in Prague
- 'Ant-Man' Creators Hint Quantum Realm Could Be 'Avengers: Infinity War' Reset Button
- Syria says Israeli strikes target air base
- Nicaragua's Ortega nixes early election as crisis solution
- EU calls on Myanmar to release Reuters reporters
- After talks, NKorea accuses US of 'gangster-like' demands
- Porsche Taycan Spied Being Pushed Hard At The Nurburgring
Mitch McConnell Warns 2 Possible Trump Court Picks Risk Big Senate Fights: NYT Posted: 08 Jul 2018 07:31 AM PDT |
Blunt on North Korea 'Actions here will speak louder than words' Posted: 07 Jul 2018 11:49 PM PDT |
Bookstore Owner Calls Police On Woman Accosting Steve Bannon Posted: 09 Jul 2018 02:00 AM PDT |
U.S. Citizens Warned to 'Shelter in Place' as Looting Follows Violent Protests in Haiti Posted: 09 Jul 2018 12:32 AM PDT |
The Latest: Largest California wildfire over half contained Posted: 07 Jul 2018 09:00 PM PDT |
Iranian teen detained over dancing Instagram post Posted: 08 Jul 2018 10:30 AM PDT Iran has detained a teenage girl who posted dance videos on Instagram and attracted tens of thousands of followers. State TV broadcast a video on Friday in which Maedeh Hojabri, 18-year-old gymnast, acknowledged breaking moral norms while insisting that was not her intention, and that she was only trying to gain more followers. It was unclear whether her statement was made under duress. Shabooneh, a local news website, said Hojabri and three other individuals were detained on similar charges in recent weeks before being released on bail. She had posted around 300 videos on her account, many of which showed her dancing in both Iranian and Western styles. She also appeared in videos without wearing the obligatory Islamic headscarf. Her performances had thousands of followers on various accounts with her name on them, ranging from 12,000 to 66,000 followers. None of the accounts were verified. چیو باید اعتراف کرد؟ بابت لرزوندن سینه از کی خط گرفتی؟؟ چگونه قر کمر رو وارد کشور میکردین؟؟ هم دستات تو سبک باباکرم کیا بودن؟؟؟ A post shared by MahiMaedeh (@maedeh_hozhabri) on Jul 8, 2018 at 7:14am PDT Iranian police have said they plan to shut down similar accounts on Instagram, and the judiciary is considering blocking access to the site. Iran has already blocked access to many social media sites, including Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and the Telegram messaging app. Millions of Iranians continue to use the sites through proxies and VPNs. Iran's judiciary and security forces are dominated by hard-liners who launch periodic crackdowns on behavior deemed un-Islamic. The latest arrests came amid a series of protests against the government's handling of the economy. In 2014 authorities sentenced six young men and women to suspended prison terms after they appeared in a video dancing to Pharrell Williams' song "Happy." |
Turkey train disaster leaves 24 dead, hundreds hurt Posted: 08 Jul 2018 10:15 PM PDT Twenty-four people were killed and hundreds injured when a train packed with weekend passengers derailed in northwest Turkey due to ground erosion afer heavy rains, officials said Monday. The train, with over 360 people on board, was travelling from the Edirne region on the Greek and Bulgarian borders to Istanbul's Halkali station on Sunday when six carriages derailed in the Tekirdag region. Deputy Prime Minister Recep Akdag said 24 people died, in a sharp rise from the previous toll of 10. |
Mexico's next president aims to end foreign fuel imports in three years Posted: 07 Jul 2018 07:45 PM PDT By David Alire Garcia and Miguel Angel Gutierrez MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexican President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will seek to end the country's massive fuel imports, nearly all from the United States, during the first three years of his term while also boosting refining at home. The landslide winner of last Sunday's election told reporters on Saturday morning before attending private meetings with members of his future cabinet that he will also prioritize growing crude oil production domestically, which has fallen sharply for years. "The objective is that we stop buying foreign gasoline by the half way point of my six-year term," said Lopez Obrador, repeating a position he and his senior energy advisor staked out during the campaign. |
Miss Massachusetts Hopeful Resigns From Competition In Protest Of 'Me Too' Joke Posted: 09 Jul 2018 10:36 AM PDT |
Soccer team lost for 10 days in cave in Thailand has been located Posted: 09 Jul 2018 05:30 AM PDT |
Giuliani: Trump ‘has to sit down with Vladimir Putin’ Posted: 07 Jul 2018 10:53 PM PDT |
Man's Skull Fractured With Metal Pipe During Attack on NYC Subway Posted: 09 Jul 2018 06:33 AM PDT |
Women in Iran Are Dancing to Protest the Arrest of a Teenage Instagrammer Posted: 08 Jul 2018 09:35 PM PDT |
Landslide warnings as Japan digs through rain devastation Posted: 09 Jul 2018 03:19 AM PDT Desperate relatives braced for bad news Monday as rescuers dug through landslides in the wake of severe floods that have killed more than 100 people and left swathes of central and western Japan under water. With the toll mounting, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe cancelled a four-country foreign trip, the government's top spokesman said. "I can't reach her phone," he told AFP, sitting across from a house that had been ripped apart and tossed on its side by a huge landslide. |
The Latest: Slain staffer remembered as 'beautiful soul' Posted: 08 Jul 2018 06:36 PM PDT |
Giuliani 'Close To Determining' That Trump Won't Sit Down With Mueller Posted: 08 Jul 2018 11:06 AM PDT |
U.S. to reunite only half of young migrant children by Tuesday deadline Posted: 09 Jul 2018 02:29 PM PDT By Marty Graham and Tom Hals SAN DIEGO/WILMINGTON, Del. (Reuters) - The U.S. government is struggling to reunite immigrant families it separated at the border with Mexico and only about half the children under age 5 will be back with their parents by a court-ordered deadline of Tuesday, a government attorney told a judge on Monday. U.S. Judge Dana Sabraw in San Diego last month ordered the government to reunite the approximately 100 children under the age of 5 by Tuesday, and the estimated 2,000 older children by July 26. Sarah Fabian, an attorney with the U.S. Department of Justice, said 54 children younger than 5 would be reunited with parents by the end of Tuesday, and the number could increase depending on background checks. |
New allegation that Rep. Jim Jordan knew of sexual abuse by Ohio State team doctor Posted: 08 Jul 2018 09:12 AM PDT |
Thailand cave rescue: What happens when the players are out of the cave Posted: 09 Jul 2018 07:29 AM PDT |
Posted: 08 Jul 2018 06:22 AM PDT |
Japan floods: Scores dead and dozens missing as two million are told to evacuate amid record rains Posted: 07 Jul 2018 07:57 PM PDT Shinzo Abe, Japan's Prime Minister, has warned of a "race against time" to rescue flood victims as authorities issued new alerts over record rains that have killed at least 48 people and left dozens missing. The torrential downpours have caused flash flooding and landslides across central and western parts of the country, prompting evacuation orders for more than two million people. "Rescues, saving lives and evacuations are a race against time," Mr Abe said as he met with a government crisis cell set up to respond to the disaster. "There are still many people whose safety has yet to be confirmed," he added. Top government spokesman Yoshihide Suga said the death toll in days of record rains now stood at 48, but the toll was expected to rise further. National broadcaster NHK said at least 62 people were dead and 44 missing. The Japan Meteorological Agency said three hours of rainfall in one area in Kochi prefecture reached an accumulated 26.3 centimeters (10.4 inches), the highest since such records started in 1976. Local residents sit in a boat as they are rescued from a flooded area at a hospital in Kurashiki Credit: Reuters "We've never experienced this kind of rain before," an official at the Japanese Meteorological Agency told a news conference. "This is a situation of extreme danger." The unprecedented downpours have wreaked havoc primarily in the west of the country. Isolated residents are being rescued from their homes Credit: The Asahi Shimbun via Getty Images The rain has completely blanketed some villages, forcing desperate residents to take shelter on their rooftops with flood water swirling below as they wait for rescue. Over two million people have been told to evacuate, but the orders are not mandatory and many remained at home, becoming trapped by rapidly rising water or sudden landslides. The meteorological agency issued its highest level alert for two new regions on Sunday, while lifting the alerts for other areas where rains were subsiding. An aerial view shows a local resident being rescued from a submerged house by rescue workers using helicopter at a flooded area in Kurashiki Credit: Reuters In the town of Mihara, in the south of the Hiroshima region, a temporary let-up in rain laid bare the devastation wrought by the downpours. Roads were transformed into muddy flowing rivers, with dirt piled up on either side and stranded cars barely withstanding the current flowing around their wheels. Cars are damaged by floodwater as heavy rain continues in Hiroshima, Japan Credit: Getty "The area became an ocean," said 82-year-old Nobue Kakumoto, a long-time resident. "I'm worried because I have no idea how long it will stay like this." Work crews could be seen elsewhere trying to clear multiple small landslides that coated roads in mud, rendering them virtually impassable. "We are carrying out rescue operations around the clock," Yoshihide Fujitani, a disaster management official in Hiroshima prefecture, told AFP. "We are also looking after evacuees and restoring lifeline infrastructure like water and gas," he added. "We are doing our best." In this aerial image, JR Nose Station is submerged in Hiroshima Credit: Getty In western Okayama prefecture, around 200 people including children and elderly people were trapped in a hospital after a river burst its banks and flooded the surrounding area. "The electricity and water has been cut off. We are suffering water and food shortages," a nurse told public broadcaster NHK. Over 50,000 rescue workers, police and military personnel have been mobilised to respond to the disaster, which has left entire villages submerged by flooding, with just the top of traffic lights visible above the rising waters. "My house was simply washed away and completely destroyed," Toshihide Takigawa, a 35-year-old employee at a gas station in Hiroshima, told the Nikkei daily on Saturday. "I was in a car and massive floods of water gushed towards me from the front and back and then engulfed the road. I was just able to escape, but I was terrified," 62-year-old Yuzo Hori told the Mainichi Shimbun daily in Hiroshima. Rescue workers dig to search missing people in Hiroshima Credit: Getty Though the typhoon began last week, the worst of the rain hit from Thursday, when a construction worker was swept away by floodwaters in western Japan. The toll has risen steadily since then, and the conditions have made rescue operations difficult, with some desperate citizens taking to Twitter to call for help. "Water came to the middle of the second floor," a woman in Kurashiki, Okayama wrote, posting a picture of her room half swamped by flooding. "The kids could not climb up to the rooftop," she said. "My body temperature has lowered. Rescue us quickly. Help us." In some place rescuers were using boats, or helicopters to airlift those affected to safety. Several major manufacturers, including carmakers Daihatsu and Mitsubishi, said they had suspended operations at plants in the affected areas. The disaster is the deadliest rain-related crisis in Japan since 2014, when at least 74 people were killed in landslides caused by torrential downpours in the Hiroshima region. |
Nissan admits falsifying emissions data on cars made in Japan Posted: 09 Jul 2018 02:01 AM PDT Nissan admitted Monday that data on exhaust emissions and fuel economy had been deliberately "altered", dealing a blow to the Japanese car giant's efforts to recover trust after an inspection scandal last year. The company did not say how many cars were affected by the falsifications, which were uncovered during voluntary tests of all parts of Nissan's operations conducted in the wake of last year's scandal. It said tests on exhaust emissions and fuel economy had "deviated from the prescribed testing environment". |
Officials Pose Alongside Enormous 13-Foot Alligator Captured in Florida Posted: 09 Jul 2018 08:00 AM PDT |
Police open murder probe as 1 of 2 nerve agent victims dies Posted: 08 Jul 2018 03:06 PM PDT |
Trump's Former Personal Driver Sues Claiming Years Of Unpaid Overtime Posted: 09 Jul 2018 11:12 AM PDT |
1-Year-Old Baby Appears In Immigration Court, Cries Hysterically Posted: 08 Jul 2018 06:01 PM PDT |
Tesla dominated electric-car sales in Canada in June Posted: 09 Jul 2018 09:01 AM PDT |
Haiti president tells protesters 'go home' after fuel hike suspended Posted: 07 Jul 2018 10:37 PM PDT Port-au-Prince (AFP) - Haiti's President Jovenel Moise called on protesters late Saturday to "go home" after the suspension of a fuel price hike that triggered violent protests and left at least two dead in the Caribbean nation. In an address broadcast on state television, Moise said he had "corrected what had to be corrected" following an about-face on the price increases earlier that day. Because you started sending me this message last night, I received it and corrected what had to be corrected," Moise said. |
Pilot may have saved lives in Chicago helicopter crash Posted: 08 Jul 2018 11:11 AM PDT |
Insurers warn of rising premiums after Trump axes Obamacare payments again Posted: 08 Jul 2018 02:46 PM PDT By Amanda Becker and Carl O'Donnell WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Health insurers warned that a move by the Trump administration on Saturday to temporarily suspend a program that was set to pay out $10.4 billion to insurers for covering high-risk individuals last year could drive up premium costs and create marketplace uncertainty. The Affordable Care Act's (ACA) "risk adjustment" program is intended to incentivize health insurers to cover individuals with pre-existing and chronic conditions by collecting money from insurers with relatively healthy enrollees to offset the costs of other insurers with sicker ones. President Donald Trump's administration has used its regulatory powers to undermine the ACA on multiple fronts after the Republican-controlled Congress last year failed to repeal and replace the law propelled by Democratic President Barack Obama. |
Posted: 09 Jul 2018 09:23 AM PDT Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has become the latest Republican to face public protest over the Trump administration's immigration policies, as demonstrators chanting "Vote you out!" and "Abolish ICE!" pursued him across a restaurant parking lot in his hometown. More than half a dozen protesters from the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) and other groups confronted Mr McConnell as he left the Bristol Bar & Grille in Louisville, Kentucky this weekend, according to the Louisville DSA. One of the protesters, DSA member Andrew Massie, told The Independent that he and several others were attending an immigration rally nearby when they learned of Mr McConnell's location via social media. |
The F-35 Almost Never Happened: The Story of Boeing's X-32 Stealth Fighter Posted: 09 Jul 2018 07:30 AM PDT |
Dozens killed in Turkey train derailment Posted: 09 Jul 2018 06:01 AM PDT |
Two-year-old dies from self-inflicted gunshot wound Posted: 07 Jul 2018 11:49 PM PDT |
Harley Celebrates 115th Anniversary in Prague Posted: 09 Jul 2018 06:05 AM PDT |
Posted: 09 Jul 2018 11:43 AM PDT |
Syria says Israeli strikes target air base Posted: 08 Jul 2018 02:13 PM PDT Syria on Sunday accused Israel of targeting an air base in the central Homs province, saying its defences hit a jet involved in the attack. "Our air defences are responding to an Israeli aggression and intercepting a number of missiles targeting the airport, hitting one of the attacking planes and forcing the rest to leave the airspace," the official SANA news agency quoted a military source as saying. Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, told AFP that a missile bombardment targeted "Iranian fighters" at the T-4 base. |
Nicaragua's Ortega nixes early election as crisis solution Posted: 08 Jul 2018 04:35 PM PDT |
EU calls on Myanmar to release Reuters reporters Posted: 09 Jul 2018 03:03 AM PDT The European Union on Monday called on Myanmar to drop charges against two Reuters reporters after a court charged them with obtaining secret state documents. Wa Lone, 32, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, have been detained in Myanmar since December 2017. At the time of their arrest, they had been working on an investigation into the killing of 10 Rohingya Muslim men and boys in a village in Rakhine state. |
After talks, NKorea accuses US of 'gangster-like' demands Posted: 07 Jul 2018 06:39 PM PDT |
Porsche Taycan Spied Being Pushed Hard At The Nurburgring Posted: 09 Jul 2018 12:49 AM PDT |
You are subscribed to email updates from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
0 条评论:
发表评论
订阅 博文评论 [Atom]
<< 主页