Yahoo! News: World - China
Yahoo! News: World - China |
- Tulsi Gabbard apologizes, again, for past antigay views
- American anchor for Iranian TV is arrested on visit to US
- Bid to keep U.S. sanctions on Russia's Rusal fails in Senate
- Acting AG Whitaker to testify before Congress in a hearing likely centered on Russia probe
- Kenya attack: At least six killed in Nairobi hotel complex terror siege
- Charter school educators back striking Los Angeles teachers
- Venus-Jupiter conjunction: Set your alarm for this celestial meet-up on Tuesday morning
- Marriott is rolling out a brand new rewards program -- Here's everything you need to know
- Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez teaches fellow Democrats how to use Twitter
- Oxford University suspends funding from China's Huawei
- David Webb’s White Privilege
- Mike Pence amends claim that 'ISIS has been defeated' following deadly attack on U.S. troops
- Southwest Airlines flights canceled, delayed due to computer issue in Baltimore
- Apple boss Tim Cook attacks 'shadow economy' of data in call for new privacy law
- House Democrats vows to vote for a border barrier because that's what her constituents want
- White House denounces Rep. King's white supremacy remarks
- Mexican president took $100 mln drug bribe, trial hears
- In third year, U.S. women's marches turn to 2020 elections
- May Faces Tough Talks With Opponents to Get New Brexit Deal
- Pelosi tells Trump to postpone State of the Union over record-long government shutdown
- 7 dreamy Tuscan villas for rent
- Ford Is Making an Electric F-150, and That's Just the Beginning
- The 2020 Hyundai Ioniq Hybrid Gets More Angular Styling and a Big New Screen
- 10 of the Kia Telluride's Coolest Design Details, from the Designer Himself
- Falling tree kills man as storm lashes California
- U.S. eyes Taiwan risk as China's military capabilities grow
- A new migrant caravan heads for U.S. border
- Syria suicide bomb that killed four US citizens also reignites debate over US pulling troops
- Senate Cancels Recess Amid Shutdown, But Lets Members Stay Home
- Markets Right Now: Banks lead stock gains on Wall Street
- What to Know About the 2020 Toyota Supra
- 'Gingers unite!': Prince Harry bonds with 4-year-old redhead
- Venezuela's parliament tries to lure military into disavowing Maduro
- Turkish prosecutor seeks extradition of NBA's Kanter over Gulen links: Anadolu
- How to Avoid Common Car-Seat Installation Mistakes
- Paul Manafort: Trump's disgraced campaign chief said he was placing people in administration, court filing says
- Kenya Forces Battle to End Attack as Death Toll Climbs
- California storms bring mudslide fears, blizzard warning
- New Richard Branson-backed cruise line Virgin Voyages to have 'massive' suites
- Celebrity's 'Chefs for Feds' kitchen feeds unpaid U.S. government workers
- The 2020 Toyota Highlander Looks Redesigned beneath Some Weird Camouflage
- Russia and Japan 'far from partners': Lavrov
- This manicure just gave birth, and you have to see the baby
- Netflix Price Hike Points to the Changing Math of Cord Cutting
- Illinois parents get 25 years in death of boy, 6, who weighed 17 pounds when he died
- Kenyan president says Nairobi attack over as 'terrorists' killed
Tulsi Gabbard apologizes, again, for past antigay views Posted: 17 Jan 2019 11:53 AM PST |
American anchor for Iranian TV is arrested on visit to US Posted: 17 Jan 2019 12:34 AM PST |
Bid to keep U.S. sanctions on Russia's Rusal fails in Senate Posted: 16 Jan 2019 06:57 PM PST Senators voted 57-42 to end debate on the measure, as 11 of Trump's fellow Republicans broke from party leaders to join Democrats in favor of the resolution, amid questions about Trump's relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin. To keep the administration from lifting the sanctions, the measure must pass both the House and Senate and muster the two-thirds majority needed in both chambers to override an expected Trump veto. Many members of Congress have been questioning the U.S. Treasury Department's decision in December to ease sanctions imposed in April on the core businesses of Deripaska - Rusal, its parent, En+ , and power firm EuroSibEnergo - watering down the toughest penalties imposed on Russian entities since Moscow's 2014 annexation of Crimea from Ukraine. |
Acting AG Whitaker to testify before Congress in a hearing likely centered on Russia probe Posted: 15 Jan 2019 05:40 PM PST |
Kenya attack: At least six killed in Nairobi hotel complex terror siege Posted: 15 Jan 2019 08:29 PM PST Islamist terrorists detonated explosives and fired automatic weapons as they mounted a deadly attack on a hotel and business complex frequented by Westerners in Nairobi on Tuesday. Six people have been confirmed killed in the attack, while a Kenyan police officer told reporters 15 bodies had been taken to the mortuary. A mortuary worker added that identification papers indicated that 11 were Kenyan, one was American and one was British, while the other two did not have documents on them. Nationalities of the dead remain unconfirmed. Hundreds more remained trapped inside buildings 16 hours after the attack began. Local security forces freed scores of civilians as they fought their way into the grounds of 14 Riverside, a compound housing a hotel, restaurant, bars and office blocks in the city's Westlands district. But the reported six gunmen were still in control of parts of the five-star Dusit Hotel, part of a Thai-owned international chain that appeared to be the chief target of the attackers. The Somali militant group al-Shabaab, which has longstanding ties to al-Qaeda, claimed credit for the attack, revisiting the city in which they killed 67 people during an attack on the Westgate shopping mall in 2013. Cars are seen on fire at the scene of explosions and gunshots in Nairobi Credit: REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya Just as at Westgate, barely a mile way, this was a carefully chosen target designed to bring terror to one of the prosperous parts of an increasingly prosperous city and target Westerners and rich Kenyans alike. Several multinational firms, from America's Colgate Palmolive to the German chemical giant BASF housed their local headquarters at 14 Riverside. Several British firms were also based there, the consultancy groups Control Risks and Adam Smith International among them. From the outset it was clear that this was a highly sophisticated attack. A suicide bomber blew himself up close to the entrance as two vehicles carrying the attackers breached a security barrier, regarded as one of the most efficient in Nairobi, at the entrance to the complex. Some of the attackers, lobbing grenades and firing automatic rifles, reportedly killed several people at the Secret Garden restaurant, a spot popular for business meetings close to the restaurant, before continuing on to the Dusit hotel. "There was a big bang and then a lot of gunfire, up to 100 shots or more," said Philip Coulson, a lawyer working in a nearby office block. "Later, I saw people fleeing and others being carried out with looks of pain or anguish on their face." Terrified office workers in the complex's five blocks, said to house more than 1,000 employees, hid under desks and barricaded doors. Others, caught in the open, ran frantically for cover. "Run, run!" one man shouted from behind a low wall as colleagues stumbled on lawns and crawled along the ground in a desperate bid for safety as shots rang out. "Down! Down!" Extremists launched a deadly attack on a luxury hotel in Kenya's capital Credit: AP Photo/Brian Inganga Kenya's security forces earned an ignominious reputation during the Westgate attack, after army units were accused of opening fire on their police colleagues, killing the officer in charge and then embarking on a looting spree. But this time, the initial response appeared more professional and coordinated. Army and police units, assisted by emergency crews, were quick to seal off the perimeter and rescue people from the office blocks, at least some of which appeared to be ignored by the attackers. Many were rescued within hours, fleeing under armed guard with their hands in the air before streaming in their scores across a footbridge to the safety of a nearby university campus. Everywhere signs of extreme emotion were visible. Shaking and often weeping, some survivors — mostly Kenyan, but some Westerners too — embraced anxious relatives waiting outside the police cordon. Others sank to the ground and gave thanks to God. Security forces at the scene in Nairobi Credit: AP Photo/Ben Curtis "After the first blast, after we saw the restaurant had been blown up, we ran and hid under tables," said Elizabeth Maina, an employee at AC Nielsen, an American global research firm housed in the Belgravia building close to the entrance. "There was shooting everywhere. We called and sent messages to the police. After an hour, we saw men in uniforms and plain clothes enter the room. They shouted 'police, police' and led us out." Workers in office blocks, with plenty of hiding places and lockable doors, were always more likely to survive. Those in the hotel, whose foyer opens out onto a restaurant, bar and swimming pool, would have had much less of a chance — as their attackers surely knew. Just how high the death toll could be is unlikely to become clear until the attack is over, although witnesses said they saw at least five bodies and reported body parts strewn on the ground outside the hotel. "There was no time to count the dead but it is true that there are people who have died," said one police officer involved in the operation. A woman is reunited with her family after her evacuation from DusitD2 compound Credit: YASUYOSHI CHIBA/AFP/Getty Images Kenya has long been in al-Shabaab's sights, even before it sent troops across the border into Somalia in 2011 in an attempt to root out the militants behind the abductions of Western tourists on the Kenyan coast, Britons among them. In 1998, an al Qaeda attack, which involved a number of Somalis, on the American embassy in Nairobi killed more than 200 people. The number of attacks soared after 2011. Westgate aside, 147 students were killed in an attack on a university in the northern town in Garissa in 2015 while scores more had previously died when suspected al Shabaab militants struck at villages on the northern Kenyan coast. Improved intelligence, aided by tactical and training support from Britain, has seen a halt to large-scale attacks since 2015, although often deadly ambushes on Kenyan forces near the Somali border remain frequent. Despite mounting domestic opposition and al-Shabaab attacks on their bases, Kenyan forces remain in Somalia. The attack on 14 Riverside came on the third anniversary of an al-Shabaab attack on a Kenyan military base in the Somali town of El Adde. Kenya has refused to release details of the death toll, but analysts say they believe more than 140 Kenyan soldiers were killed. |
Charter school educators back striking Los Angeles teachers Posted: 15 Jan 2019 05:38 PM PST |
Venus-Jupiter conjunction: Set your alarm for this celestial meet-up on Tuesday morning Posted: 16 Jan 2019 10:15 AM PST |
Marriott is rolling out a brand new rewards program -- Here's everything you need to know Posted: 16 Jan 2019 01:05 PM PST |
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez teaches fellow Democrats how to use Twitter Posted: 17 Jan 2019 10:33 AM PST Such is the hope, at least, of Democrats on Capitol Hill, who have undergone a class in how to tweet more effectively, from Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the veritable Twitter superpower. "With @AOC, @RepDebDingell, @jahimes, @davidcicilline, @RepCartwright & @Twitter representatives at training session on Twitter for Democratic Members of Congress," tweeted California congressman Ted Lieu, after the lesson. Nobody in the Democratic party – Michelle and Barack Obama included – has as much Twitter power as the 29-year-old congresswoman of New York's 14th district. |
Oxford University suspends funding from China's Huawei Posted: 17 Jan 2019 10:37 AM PST The University of Oxford said on Thursday it has stopped accepting funding from China's Huawei Technologies [HWT.UL], the leading global supplier of telecoms network equipment, after scrutiny over the company's relationship with China's government. "Oxford University decided on January 8 this year that it will not pursue new funding opportunities with Huawei Technologies Co Ltd or its related group companies at present," the university said in a statement. "The decision has been taken in the light of public concerns raised in recent months surrounding UK partnerships with Huawei. |
Posted: 17 Jan 2019 03:30 AM PST Areva Martin, a CNN "analyst" — whatever in hell that means anno Domini 2019 — was in the middle of a spirited exchange with the conservative talk-radio host David Webb about racial preferences in hiring. Webb argued — as conservatives of many different races argue! — that race should not be a factor in such decisions, which should be based strictly on qualifications. "That's a whole 'nother long conversation about white privilege," she sniffed. |
Posted: 16 Jan 2019 12:53 PM PST |
Southwest Airlines flights canceled, delayed due to computer issue in Baltimore Posted: 16 Jan 2019 09:39 AM PST |
Apple boss Tim Cook attacks 'shadow economy' of data in call for new privacy law Posted: 17 Jan 2019 10:36 AM PST Apple's chief executive Tim Cook has called for the US to introduce a national privacy law, attacking a "shadow economy" in which people's personal data is bought and sold without their knowledge. Mr Cook said companies should have to collect as little data as possible and make it easy for people to delete the information that is held about them. It is the latest attempt from Apple to position itself as the steward of consumers' privacy, and to draw a line between itself and companies such as Facebook and Google. Mr Cook said that people need to "win back their right to privacy" and that companies that sell data should have to register with the Federal Trade Commission, the US consumer watchdog. "I and others are calling on the US Congress to pass comprehensive federal privacy legislation - a landmark package of reforms that protect and empower the consumer," Mr Cook wrote in Time Magazine. He singled out "data brokers", companies that purchase, bundle up and sell data on individuals, such as credit reference agencies, saying that most people were unaware of how companies transact in their data. "Right now, all of these secondary markets for your information exist in a shadow economy that's largely unchecked. Let's be clear: you never signed up for that," Mr Cook wrote. The US does not have a national equivalent to the UK's Data Protection Act or the European privacy legislation, GDPR. Facebook, Amazon and Google have all said they would support a law, but failed to put forward any concrete proposals. Mr Cook said companies should aim to minimise the amount of data they collect and make it easier for people to delete or correct it. Mr Cook has played up Apple's privacy credentials in recent months, as sales of its iPhones stumble and as Google and Facebook have been embroiled in repeated data controversies. Its privacy commitment has come under scrutiny, since Apple receives billions of dollars a year from Google to be the default search engine on the iPhone. Mr Cook has defended the deal, saying the company has built in controls to limit how much users can be tracked. |
House Democrats vows to vote for a border barrier because that's what her constituents want Posted: 16 Jan 2019 03:09 AM PST |
White House denounces Rep. King's white supremacy remarks Posted: 16 Jan 2019 04:04 PM PST |
Mexican president took $100 mln drug bribe, trial hears Posted: 16 Jan 2019 02:15 AM PST Former Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto accepted a $100 million bribe from drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, a former collaborator told the kingpin's trial. Alex Cifuentes, a Colombian who is now collaborating with US prosecutors in the Chapo trial, made the statement under examination from defense attorney Jeffrey Lichtman. "Mr. Guzman paid a bribe of $100 million to President Pena Nieto,?" the lawyer asked. |
In third year, U.S. women's marches turn to 2020 elections Posted: 17 Jan 2019 12:11 PM PST Millions of people took part in the women's marches in Washington and other cities in the United States and abroad on Jan. 21, 2017, the day after the Republican president was sworn in. Vanessa Wruble, a co-founder of the original Women's March on Washington who left to start March On, a separate grassroots coalition, said the movement has evolved from being a reaction to Trump's presidency. Women's March, a national nonprofit organization that evolved from the initial Washington march, is using its #WomensWave marches in Washington and elsewhere on Saturday to roll out a 10-part policy platform that includes raising the federal minimum wage and protecting reproductive rights. |
May Faces Tough Talks With Opponents to Get New Brexit Deal Posted: 17 Jan 2019 12:24 AM PST On Wednesday night, May survived an attempt to oust her government in a vote of no-confidence 24 hours after her agreement with the EU was emphatically rejected. "The government approaches these meetings in a constructive spirit and I urge others to do the same," May told the House of Commons after winning the confidence vote. Rival party leaders quickly began laying down their conditions for taking part in talks to rescue May's Brexit strategy. |
Pelosi tells Trump to postpone State of the Union over record-long government shutdown Posted: 16 Jan 2019 10:23 AM PST The speaker of the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, has asked Donald Trump to postpone his annual State of the Union address amid a government shutdown now into its 26th day. The move could deny the president the grandeur of the annual platform, which he is likely to use to criticise Ms Pelosi and Democrats over the shutdown. Democrats have said they will not sanction $5.7bn (£4.4bn) funding for Mr Trump's proposed border wall which the president has made a central demand for reopening the government. |
7 dreamy Tuscan villas for rent Posted: 17 Jan 2019 05:16 AM PST |
Ford Is Making an Electric F-150, and That's Just the Beginning Posted: 17 Jan 2019 07:38 AM PST |
The 2020 Hyundai Ioniq Hybrid Gets More Angular Styling and a Big New Screen Posted: 17 Jan 2019 08:32 AM PST |
10 of the Kia Telluride's Coolest Design Details, from the Designer Himself Posted: 17 Jan 2019 01:50 PM PST |
Falling tree kills man as storm lashes California Posted: 16 Jan 2019 08:43 PM PST |
U.S. eyes Taiwan risk as China's military capabilities grow Posted: 15 Jan 2019 09:26 PM PST The senior U.S. defense intelligence official, who spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity, did not predict that China's military, known as the People's Liberation Army (PLA), would take such a step but said such a possibility was the top worry as China expands and modernizes its military capabilities. "The biggest concern is that ... they are getting to a point where the PLA leadership may actually tell Xi Jinping that they are confident in their capabilities," the official said, referring to China's president. Pressed on whether the official was referring to Chinese confidence in its capabilities to be able to successfully win a battle with Taiwan, the official said, "Well, specifically that would be the most concerning to me." Taiwan is only one of a growing number of flashpoints in the U.S.-China relationship, including a trade war between the countries, U.S. sanctions on the Chinese military, and China's increasingly muscular military posture in the South China Sea. |
A new migrant caravan heads for U.S. border Posted: 16 Jan 2019 01:05 AM PST |
Syria suicide bomb that killed four US citizens also reignites debate over US pulling troops Posted: 17 Jan 2019 05:57 AM PST |
Senate Cancels Recess Amid Shutdown, But Lets Members Stay Home Posted: 17 Jan 2019 03:15 PM PST GOP leaders said Thursday there will be no Senate votes on Friday or next week, although the chamber will formally be in session during what had been a planned Martin Luther King recess. Senators are being told to be ready to return for votes if there's any agreement to reopen the government, said Senator John Thune of South Dakota, the second-ranking GOP leader. "We'll be in session, but votes will be contingent on whether there is something we can vote on," Thune said. |
Markets Right Now: Banks lead stock gains on Wall Street Posted: 16 Jan 2019 01:07 PM PST |
What to Know About the 2020 Toyota Supra Posted: 16 Jan 2019 05:05 AM PST |
'Gingers unite!': Prince Harry bonds with 4-year-old redhead Posted: 16 Jan 2019 07:45 AM PST |
Venezuela's parliament tries to lure military into disavowing Maduro Posted: 15 Jan 2019 06:11 PM PST Venezuela's opposition-controlled but powerless National Assembly stepped up its battle with President Nicolas Maduro on Tuesday by offering an amnesty to anyone from the military who joins it in disavowing the socialist leader. The "amnesty law" would extend also to civilian government officials who collaborate "in the restitution of constitutional order," parliament said. The row between the legislature and Maduro has intensified since the socialist leader was sworn in last week for a second term of office in the crisis-hit country, after he won snap elections in May that were boycotted by the opposition and dismissed by the United States, European Union and Organization of American States as a fraud. |
Turkish prosecutor seeks extradition of NBA's Kanter over Gulen links: Anadolu Posted: 16 Jan 2019 02:40 PM PST Turkish prosecutors are seeking the extradition of New York Knicks center Enes Kanter over his links to the U.S.-based cleric accused of orchestrating a failed coup in 2016, state-owned Anadolu news agency said. Kanter, a vocal critic of President Tayyip Erdogan, was indicted by a Turkish court last year over alleged membership of an "armed terrorist group" after being contacted repeatedly by people close to Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen. Anadolu said on Tuesday prosecutors had sought the issue of a "red notice" for Kanter, an Interpol request to locate and provisionally arrest an individual pending extradition. |
How to Avoid Common Car-Seat Installation Mistakes Posted: 16 Jan 2019 04:39 PM PST |
Posted: 16 Jan 2019 08:56 AM PST Paul Manafort, the convicted former chairman of Donald Trump's presidential campaign, told a business associate in January 2017 he was using middlemen to get people appointed to the Trump administration, according to a court filing on Tuesday. US Special Counsel Robert Mueller had been given until Monday by a federal court in Washington to provide evidence of his accusations that Mr Manafort had lied to prosecutors on five subjects, which would put him in breach of a plea agreement under which he was meant to be cooperating with Mr Mueller's probe. The heavily redacted 188-page filing included some new details about Mr Manafort's communications with Trump administration officials, which continued even after he left the campaign in August 2016 due to a scandal over cash payments related to his work for pro-Russia politicians in Ukraine. |
Kenya Forces Battle to End Attack as Death Toll Climbs Posted: 16 Jan 2019 01:02 AM PST |
California storms bring mudslide fears, blizzard warning Posted: 15 Jan 2019 07:55 PM PST |
New Richard Branson-backed cruise line Virgin Voyages to have 'massive' suites Posted: 16 Jan 2019 10:50 AM PST |
Celebrity's 'Chefs for Feds' kitchen feeds unpaid U.S. government workers Posted: 16 Jan 2019 01:49 PM PST Maurice Wilson joined dozens of fellow federal workers in Washington on Wednesday at the opening of celebrity chef Jose Andres' emergency kitchen, grateful for a free lunch of egg sandwiches, quinoa bowls and tomato soup as the partial government shutdown dragged on. "Within another two weeks, I'm going to have to figure out a way to survive," said Wilson, 59, who is working without pay at the Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency of the District of Columbia. The "Chefs for Feds" kitchen, launched by restaurateur Andres' non-profit World Central Kitchen, is the latest example of how food providers across the country are stepping up efforts to feed unpaid federal workers. |
The 2020 Toyota Highlander Looks Redesigned beneath Some Weird Camouflage Posted: 16 Jan 2019 09:48 AM PST |
Russia and Japan 'far from partners': Lavrov Posted: 16 Jan 2019 05:17 AM PST Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Wednesday that Moscow and Tokyo are still "far from being partners" despite renewed efforts to resolve a decades-old conflict over disputed islands. Russian President Vladimir Putin and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe are to meet in Moscow next Tuesday for talks on the strategic Kuril islands seized by the Soviet army in the final days of World War II. Lavrov, speaking during an annual conference, set a confrontational tone however. |
This manicure just gave birth, and you have to see the baby Posted: 17 Jan 2019 02:31 PM PST Umbilical cords are not usually part of the traditional manicure experience. Thankfully, there are exceptions to the rule. Russian nail artist Nail Sunny recently shared intricate nail art featuring a detailed chair (with stirrups) and a little woman in a pink hospital gown. The nail appears to be giving birth. > View this post on Instagram > > Baby birth -❤️ or ? Video by @edo_movs #nailsunnytutorial > > A post shared by Nail Sunny (@nail_sunny) on Jan 17, 2019 at 8:49am PST SEE ALSO: 'Nail Art History' Puts a Museum at Your Fingertips Once the chair and body (made of gel) are affixed neatly to the nail, "the baby" is born. A scalpel reaches into the frame and quite literally plucks a little acrylic baby from beneath the woman's gown. Next, the umbilical cord is cut with a pair of tweezers and the newborn gel baby is placed with its gel mother. It's all very surreal. Nail Sunny is no stranger to impractically eye-catching nails. Scroll through the page long enough and you'll find hookah nails (real smoke!), salt bae nails (real steak!), and Grinch nails (synthetic green fur!). > View this post on Instagram > > @world_record_egg challenge Let's set a world record together and get the most liked video post on Instagram PLEASE LIKE THIS VIDEO @nail_sunny #NAILSUNNYTUTORIAL p.s. Конечно же мы не могли не отреагировать на событие сегодняшнего дня , которое перевернуло жизнь @kyliejenner #guinnessworldrecord #wlrldrecordegg #worldrecord #worldrecordholder #worldrecords video by @edo_movs > > A post shared by Nail Sunny (@nail_sunny) on Jan 14, 2019 at 8:44am PST > View this post on Instagram > > Yes or no ? > > A post shared by Nail Sunny (@nail_sunny) on Jan 12, 2019 at 10:10am PST The account often documents the process it took to make the nails. Plus, the video clips are set to top 40 music, so don't worry about providing a playlist. Now we just want to see the recipient of the manicure open a can of soda. ## WATCH: 'Hair nails' are the latest trend we hope won't grow on you |
Netflix Price Hike Points to the Changing Math of Cord Cutting Posted: 16 Jan 2019 11:59 AM PST |
Illinois parents get 25 years in death of boy, 6, who weighed 17 pounds when he died Posted: 17 Jan 2019 11:17 AM PST |
Kenyan president says Nairobi attack over as 'terrorists' killed Posted: 16 Jan 2019 03:22 AM PST Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said Wednesday that gunmen who stormed an upmarket hotel complex, killing 14 people, had been "eliminated" after an almost 20-hour siege in which hundreds of civilians were rescued. The attack was claimed by the Al-Qaeda-linked Somali group Al-Shabaab, which has repeatedly targeted Kenya since it sent its army into Somalia in October 2011 to fight the jihadist group. At least one suicide bomber blew himself up and gunmen engaged security forces in numerous shootouts during the assault on the DusitD2 compound, which includes a 101-room hotel, spa, restaurant and office buildings. |
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