Yahoo! News: World - China
Yahoo! News: World - China |
- Venezuela troops fire teargas on Colombia border protesters
- Clumsy Kamala
- Suspected Bangladesh plane hijacker shot dead: army
- Feinstein Unveils Green Deal Alternative After Kid Confrontation
- UK PM May considers plan to delay Brexit by two months: The Telegraph
- Cargo jet with three on board crashes near Houston airport
- Turkish President Erdogan lashes out at Sisi over Egypt executions
- Tensions as Venezuelans clash with National Guard
- India police arrest Kashmir activists amid rising tensions
- Cardinal admits Church files on paedophile priests 'destroyed'
- Labour Eyes New Referendum as May Heads to Egypt: Brexit Update
- Storm dumps record-breaking snow in Arizona on way to Texas
- South Africa's Ramaphosa appoints graft tribunal
- Harry and Meghan meet Moroccan girls during official tour
- Venezuela aid boat reaches Curacao after reported standoff
- Rising anti-US sentiment on Okinawa ahead of military base referendum
- U.S.-backed SDF hands over 280 Iraqi, foreign detainees to Iraq
- Judge Dismisses Charges Against Water Park Owner Over Boy`s Death on Slide
- How did police catch 'Empire' actor Jussie Smollett? Lots and lots of cameras
- Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez delivers impassioned response to critics: 'I'm the boss. How about that?'
- The Latest: Vatican City to get a child protection policy
- Vietnam readying for Kim train arrival next week: sources
- Warren Buffett's Message to Washington: Bipartisanship Works
- Pompeo Says ‘More Sanctions to Be Had’ to Pressure Venezuela
- NASA greenlights SpaceX crew capsule test to ISS
- Tunnels, civilians slow capture of Islamic State's last Syria pocket
- Iran launches cruise missile from submarine during drill
- Journalist, 12, faces off with police officer who threatened to arrest her
- 'Vaccines Cause Adults': Pediatric staff's response to anti-vaxxers after measles outbreak
- Women vent their anger at Vatican child abuse conference
- Huawei shrugs off threat of US ban
- Nigerian Rivals Claim Successes as They Await Vote Outcome
- Bill Maher says the reason red state voters are so upset is because they want to be the blue states
- Exodus from last IS enclave overwhelms Syria force
- North Korea warns U.S. skeptics as Kim heads for summit with Trump
- Robert Kraft 'categorically' denies soliciting sex at spa after police said he was filmed twice in the act
- AP source: Bears release embattled kicker Cody Parkey
- In a shift, Buffett says focus on Berkshire's stock price
- Alaska senator says she's likely to back Trump disapproval
- Will Google, Amazon and Facebook fix the affordable housing crisis?
- Saudi Arabia names first woman envoy to Washington at critical time
- Indian police detain hundreds in Kashmir sweeps
- Novartis gene therapy would be cost effective up to $900,000: U.S. group
- R Kelly's met minor he allegedly had sex with 'during porn trial' court hears as judge sets $1 million bond
Venezuela troops fire teargas on Colombia border protesters Posted: 23 Feb 2019 05:25 AM PST Venezuelan forces on Saturday hurled tear gas and fired rubber to break up a crowd demanding to cross the Urena border bridge to Colombia. "We want to work!" people chanted as they faced Venezuelan National Guard riot police blocking the crossing, one of several ordered closed by President Nicolas Maduro late Friday. Supporters of opposition leader Juan Guaido in Colombia are planning to cross the border carrying emergency supplies into Venezuela. While the need for basic food and medicines is real, the effort is also meant to embarrass military officers who continue to support Maduro's increasingly isolated government. Juan Guaido, recognized by most Western nations as the country's legitimate head of state, defied court orders not to leave Venezuela by arriving on Friday in the Colombian border city of Cucuta, where aid from the U.S. and Colombian governments is stockpiled in warehouses. Self-declared acting president Juan Guaido has vowed humanitarian aid would enter Venezuela despite a blockade Credit: AFP Guaido, 35, head of the opposition-run Congress, has provided few details on the transport plan. Trucks are expected to be driven by Venezuelan volunteers and some opposition figures have suggested forming human chains. "Today the obstacles that the dictatorship created will tomorrow be rivers of unity, of peace," Guaido said in a news conference on Friday in Cucuta, where he was received by Colombian President Ivan Duque. Venezuelan soldiers may bar the way. Vice President Delcy Rodriguez said in a tweet late on Friday that Venezuela's government shut the Tachira border that connects it with Cucuta temporarily "due to a series of illegal threats" by Colombia. Venezuelan demonstrators clash with security forces in Urena, Venezuela, Credit: Reuters A group of frustrated Venezuelans who were seeking to cross into Colombia on Saturday to work morning threw rocks and bottles at National Guard troops, who responded with tear gas. "We were all going to work, we want to work, the people attempted to force through," said Viviana Meza, 29, who works in a Cucuta restaurant. At least four National Guard officers on Saturday at the border disavowed Maduro's government and requested assistance from the Colombian government, Colombia's migration agency said on Saturday. Videos on social media showed crowds first jeering and then cheering the men as they were escorted away by Colombian police. Venezuelans clash with national guards in the border town of Urena after Maduro´s government ordered to temporary close down the border with Colombia Credit: AFP Maduro blames the country's dire situation on U.S. sanctions that have blocked the country from obtaining financing and have hobbled the OPEC nation's oil industry. Rodriguez says the aid is poisoned. Concerns about the potential for violence flared on Friday when the Venezuelan army opened fire in an village near the Brazilian border after indigenous leaders attempted to prevent them from advancing, killing a woman and her husband. "I don't plan to leave my house over the weekend, especially after what happened near Brazil," said Paulina Sanchez, a 68-year-old grandmother who lives just 300 meters (yards) from the Francisco de Paula Santander bridge, one of the crossings through which aid may pass. "This could turn into a powder keg." Nearly 200,000 people attended a benefit concert in Cucuta on Friday featuring Latin pop stars, including Luis Fonsi of "Despacito" fame, many of whom called on Maduro to step down. A rival concert held by the ruling Socialist Party on the Venezuelan side was sparsely attended. Guaido in January invoked articles of the constitution to assume interim presidency and denounced Maduro as a usurper, arguing his 2018 re-election was illegitimate. |
Posted: 23 Feb 2019 01:30 AM PST No Democrat running for president has had a better 2019 than Kamala Harris. The numbers tell the tale. The California senator was in the low single digits in polls conducted before her official launch on January 28. She is now in the low double digits, running third behind Joe Biden, who enjoys cosmic name recognition, and Bernie Sanders, whose devoted supporters brought him a second-place finish last time. But polls do not tell the whole story.Harris raised $1.5 million in the day after declaring her candidacy. That number, impressive for a senator not even a third of the way through her first term, has been bested only by Sanders, a socialist who has a venture capitalist's talent for raising money. He brought in $5.9 million in the first 24 hours of his campaign. Harris, however, has something Sanders does not.She is a fresh face of middle age (54 years) and of diverse background (her father is Jamaican, her mother Indian) whose chief rivals at the moment are two geriatric white men. As Democrats search for someone new to lead them against President Trump, Harris has distinguished herself from the field. Her CNN town hall drew record ratings, while Amy Klobuchar's flopped. And Harris leads the 2020 Democrats in social-media interactions, according to an Axios/Newswhip study. She's had a good launch. But there's a caveat.David Axelrod has described presidential campaigns as MRIs for the soul. He means that a candidate is subjected to pressures strong enough to reveal his or her true character. What voters get at the end of the process is a fuller picture of the men and women they choose to inhabit the White House. In these early weeks of what is certain to be a seemingly endless and certainly vitriolic campaign, Harris has demonstrated both strengths and weaknesses. Her strength is that she seems a perfect fit for the current shape of the Democratic party. Her weakness is a blithe and insouciant manner that is sure to cause her trouble. In fact it already has. Consider three recent slipups.The first took place during that CNN special. An audience member asked Senator Harris for her "solution to ensure that people have access to quality health care at an affordable price," and "does that solution involve cutting insurance companies as we know them out of the equation?" You bet it does, was Harris's answer. "We need to have Medicare-for-all. That's just the bottom line." Following up, Jake Tapper mentioned that Harris has co-sponsored a bill that would end employer-based insurance, which covers some 180 million Americans. "So," Tapper asked, "for people out there who like their insurance, they don't get to keep it?"Harris seemed not to understand the magnitude of the change she supports. She mentioned the "process of going through an insurance company," how "going through all of that paperwork" has caused delays and headaches for many. "Let's eliminate all of that," she said. "Let's move on."Actually, let's stay still for now, and ask the following questions. Harris promises to end the health coverage of millions without providing a satisfactory rationale for, or explanation of, her position. Does she really believe there won't be paperwork in government-run health care? Paperwork is government's specialty. And if the Obamacare mandate was unpopular, how will voters greet President Harris's mandate to "eliminate" the status quo that covers the vast majority? The substance of her answer was obvious catnip for Republicans always eager to "pounce," and the style was no less harmful. Harris did not give the impression that she took either the question or the implications of her answer all too seriously. This is something that happens often.Moment two: On January 29, after Jussie Smollett claimed he had been attacked in a hate crime by two white Trump fans in the middle of a wintry Chicago night, Harris tweeted her support for the actor. "This was an attempted modern day lynching," she said. "No one should have to fear for their life because of their sexuality or color of their skin. We must confront this hate." What Harris did not mention were the curious details of the story — details that the Chicago Police Department investigated and finally debunked. It turns out Smollett was attacked not by white supremacists but by two Nigerian immigrants whom he had put up to the job. The "modern day lynching" was a bogus, disgusting, and exploitative affront to the real victims of hatred. A prepared candidate would have expressed regret at her tweet and familiarity with the case. Harris was not prepared.During a visit to New Hampshire last weekend, a reporter asked Harris if she would like to revisit her words about Smollett. Harris clearly had no idea what the reporter was talking about. "Which tweet? What tweet?" she said. The reporter read the tweet back to Harris. Who stood there, agog, looking to her aides for help. And who finally answered, "I think that the facts are still unfolding, and, um, I'm very, um concerned about obviously, the initial, um, allegation that he made about what might have happened." Except it didn't happen. Nor is it clear if Harris actually wrote the tweet in support of Smollett. She might hold positions, including on health care, the details of which she is unaware. Which is a problem.Anecdote three is a family matter. On February 11, Harris appeared on the Breakfast Club podcast. One of the hosts wanted to know if she was against legalizing marijuana. "That's not true," she said. "Look, I joke about it, I have joked about it. Half my family is from Jamaica, are you kidding me?" She's smoked weed herself. "I have. And I inhaled. I did inhale. It was a long time ago, but yes. I just broke news." She went on to explain that she smoked a joint, not a blunt. And that marijuana "gives people joy." Her father felt no joy, however, at Harris's answer.In a statement released to the website Jamaica Global Online, Donald Harris, an economist, wrote: "My dear departed grandmothers (whose extraordinary legacy I described in a recent essay on this website), as well as my deceased parents, must be turning in their grave right now to their family's name, reputation, and proud Jamaican identity being connected, in any way, jokingly or not with the fraudulent stereotype of a pot-smoking joy seeker and in the pursuit of identity politics. Speaking for myself and my immediate Jamaican family, we wish to categorically dissociate ourselves from this controversy." Father's Day should be interesting.What trips up Kamala Harris is an evident desire to please her audience. She wants no enemies to her left, no identity politics left untouched. She can't run as a prosecutor — crime fighting is so 1990s — but she can run as brash, bold, and woke. Her verbal miscues are possible evidence that this latest political fashion doesn't quite fit. She has made a habit of making unforced errors, and the game is only in its first month. Harris's Democratic opponents may be too blinkered or bashful to exploit this weakness. That will not be a problem for her Republican opponent.This article was originally published in the Washington Free Beacon. |
Suspected Bangladesh plane hijacker shot dead: army Posted: 24 Feb 2019 09:03 AM PST Bangladesh commandos stormed a passenger jet in the country's southeast Sunday and shot dead an armed man who allegedly tried to hijack the Dubai-bound flight, an army official said. The suspect, described by officials as a Bangladeshi man in his mid 20s, was shot as special forces rushed the Boeing 737-800 plane after it landed safely in Chittagong. The 134 passengers and 14 crew aboard the Bangladesh Biman flight BG147 were all rescued unharmed, officials said. |
Feinstein Unveils Green Deal Alternative After Kid Confrontation Posted: 22 Feb 2019 07:30 PM PST Feinstein's proposed draft plan seeks to eliminate greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 - 20 years later than the Green New Deal - and also explicitly calls for achieving those reductions through a price on carbon, among other ways. During a meeting with youth activists from the progressive Sunrise Movement, some of whom the group said were as young as age 7, the California Democrat suggested the ambitious climate plan was not achievable. "You didn't vote for me," Feinstein told one 16-year-old after learning she was under the legal voting age. |
UK PM May considers plan to delay Brexit by two months: The Telegraph Posted: 24 Feb 2019 02:22 PM PST British Prime Minister Theresa May is considering a plan under which Britain's exit from the European Union would be delayed for up to two months, the Telegraph reported https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/02/24/exclusive-brexit-will-delayed-two-months-plans-considered-theresa on Sunday. UK government officials have drawn up a series of options, which were circulated at the weekend, in a bid to avoid resignations by ministers determined to support a backbench bid to take a "no deal" Brexit off the table this week, according to the Telegraph. |
Cargo jet with three on board crashes near Houston airport Posted: 23 Feb 2019 02:07 PM PST A Boeing 767 cargo jetliner heading to Houston with three people aboard disintegrated after crashing Saturday into a bay east of the city, according to a Texas sheriff. Witnesses told emergency personnel that the twin-engine plane "went in nose first," leaving a debris field three-quarters of a mile long in Trinity Bay, Chambers County Sheriff Brian Hawthorne said. "It's probably a crash that nobody would survive," he said, referring to the scene as "total devastation." Witnesses said they heard the plane's engines surging and that the craft turned sharply before falling into a nosedive, Hawthorne said. Aerial footage shows emergency personnel walking along a spit of marshland flecked by debris that extends into the water. The remnants of the jet The sheriff said recovering pieces of the plane, its black box containing flight data records and any remains of the people on board will be difficult in muddy marshland that extends to about 5 feet deep in the area. Air boats are needed to access the area. The plane had departed from Miami and was likely only minutes away from landing at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston. The Federal Aviation Administration issued an alert after officials lost radar and radio contact with Atlas Air Flight 3591 when it was about 30 miles (48 kilometers) southeast of the airport, FAA spokesman Lynn Lunsford said. The Coast Guard dispatched boats and at least one helicopter to assist in the search for survivors. A dive team with the Texas Department of Public Safety will be tasked with finding the black box, Hawthorne said. Trinity Bay is just north of Galveston Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. FAA investigators are traveling to the scene as are authorities with the National Transportation Safety Board, which will lead the investigation. |
Turkish President Erdogan lashes out at Sisi over Egypt executions Posted: 23 Feb 2019 09:19 PM PST Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan sharply criticised his Egyptian counterpart Abdel Fattah al-Sisi after the recent execution of nine people in Egypt, saying he refused to talk to "someone like him". This is not something we can accept," Erdogan said Saturday in an interview with Turkish TV channels CNN-Turk and Kanal D, referring to the execution Wednesday of nine men sentenced for the murder of the Egyptian prosecutor general in 2015. There is an authoritarian system, even totalitarian," Erdogan added. |
Tensions as Venezuelans clash with National Guard Posted: 23 Feb 2019 09:27 AM PST |
India police arrest Kashmir activists amid rising tensions Posted: 23 Feb 2019 09:26 AM PST |
Cardinal admits Church files on paedophile priests 'destroyed' Posted: 23 Feb 2019 10:56 AM PST A top Catholic cardinal admitted Saturday that Church files on priests accused of sexually abusing children were destroyed or never even drawn up in a move which allowed paedophiles to prey on others. German Cardinal Reinhard Marx was speaking on the third day of an unprecedented summit of the world's top bishops convened by Pope Francis in a bid to tackle the crisis over paedophilia within the clergy. "Files that could have documented the terrible deeds and named those responsible were destroyed, or not even created," Marx told the landmark Vatican summit on a problem that has dogged the Roman Catholic Church for decades. |
Labour Eyes New Referendum as May Heads to Egypt: Brexit Update Posted: 24 Feb 2019 03:57 AM PST |
Storm dumps record-breaking snow in Arizona on way to Texas Posted: 22 Feb 2019 08:05 PM PST |
South Africa's Ramaphosa appoints graft tribunal Posted: 24 Feb 2019 03:57 AM PST South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has appointed a tribunal to fast-track legal proceedings from graft investigations by the country's Special Investigating Unit (SIU), the presidency said on Sunday. The tribunal will adjudicate over any civil proceedings brought before it by the SIU, which investigates malpractice in state institutions, state assets and public money, the presidency said in a statement. |
Harry and Meghan meet Moroccan girls during official tour Posted: 24 Feb 2019 11:47 AM PST The British royals' trip, their last official foreign tour before becoming parents, was set to focus on initiatives promoting girls' education, women's empowerment and the inclusion of people with disabilities. A heavily pregnant Meghan, with henna on one hand, accepted flowers from one of the girls in Asni while she and Harry chatted outside to a group from the programme Education For All Morocco. The organisation runs free boarding houses to give girls aged 12 to 18 from the High Atlas region access to education, working with 185 teenagers in 2017. |
Venezuela aid boat reaches Curacao after reported standoff Posted: 24 Feb 2019 11:46 AM PST Willemstad, Curaçao (Netherlands Antilles) (AFP) - A boat carrying aid from the United States docked at the island of Curacao on Sunday after officials said the Venezuelan military had stopped it reaching the crisis-hit country. The shipment was part of a broader drive to take food and medicine into Venezuela in defiance of its President Nicolas Maduro. The Midnight Stone supply ship, loaded with nine cargo containers, entered the harbor on the Caribbean island 40 miles (65 kilometers) from Venezuela's coast, AFP reporters saw. |
Rising anti-US sentiment on Okinawa ahead of military base referendum Posted: 23 Feb 2019 10:05 AM PST When Chiemi Yonashiro was told an object from a United States military helicopter appeared to have fallen onto the nursery where she had dropped off her three-year-old daughter Mimaru just hours earlier, she burst into tears. Her daughter – and around 70 other children playing at the nursery at the time – were unhurt, but for Mrs Yonashiro, 46, the incident confirmed her conviction that her family was not safe living in southern Japan's Okinawa region for one uncomfortable reason: the heavy presence of US military. "Every day we fear that our lives are at risk," the mother-of-two told the Sunday Telegraph. "I do not want to let my daughter or other children to experiences such strong fears. I don't want anyone to suffer this way anymore." Mrs Chiemi is one of tens of thousands of Okinawa residents who will on Sunday be offered the opportunity to express their views on the longstanding presence of US military in the region in a historic referendum. Voters will be asked whether they agree with a deeply controversial plan to relocate a US military base from the crowded residential Futenma region to a more remote part of the island – with early polls indicating that as many as 70 per cent will vote no. Chiemi Yonashiro and children in Okinawa Credit: Danielle Demetriou The result of the referendum is legally non-binding and unlikely to stop the government from pushing ahead with relocating, with reclamation work already underway. However, a "no" result is likely to be viewed as a powerful symbol of local opposition to US military. Okinawa, a subtropical archipelago closer to Taipei than Tokyo, has long been of enormous strategic importance to the US, with the main island hosting more than half of the 47,000 American military personnel based in Japan, despite accounting for less than one per cent of the country's total land area. Tensions between the US military and locals have soared in recent years, with a steady stream of complaints over noise, accidents by military aircraft and crimes committed by military personnel and civilian employees. Momentum to local resistance to US military presence has escalated since last September when Denny Tamaki came to power as Okinawa Governor after campaigning heavily against the relocation plans. Photo taken from a drone shows the relocation site for US Marine Corps Air Station Futenma in the Henoko coastal district of Nago, Okinawa Credit: Splash News Critics of the relocation say it will damage the island's delicate marine eco-system and potentially increase aircraft accidents, with many calling for the base to be closed down completely or moved to another part of Japan. The fact the referendum is taking place at all is likely to cause a major headache for Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister, who is intent on keeping relations smooth with his key ally US president Donald Trump. The timing of the referendum is also sensitive, in the light of preparations underway for the US-North Korea summit in Vietnam next week and discussions over plans for Mr Trump to visit Japan in May and June. The controversial relocation plan has been a potential thorn in Washington-Tokyo relations since it was first proposed more than two decades ago, with one former Japanese PM resigning over the issue. For Mrs Yonashiro, the falling aircraft part at Midorigaoka Nursery in December 2017 was one of a string of incidents that crystalised her deep-rooted opposition to the presence of US military in the region. During the same month, a large object resembling a window frame also reportedly fell from another US military helicopter into the grounds of a nearby elementary school, causing a stone to lightly injure a child. Children playing at Midorigaoka Nursery where the December 2017 incident took place Credit: Danielle Demetriou "Parents here have felt a sense of crisis since these objects fell into schools, one after another," says Futenma-born Mrs Yonashiro, who also has an eight-year-old son Tamaru. "Children in Okinawa have a right to live a peaceful life but they are living with danger. As long as US military aircraft are flying over Okinawa, the danger will not go away. I strongly feel this is the time to change Okinawa. It's not just a matter of military bases, it's about children's lives." Takehiro Kamiya, the head of Midorigaoka Nursery, was no less outspoken in his opposition to US military forces in Okinawa in the run-up to the referendum, highlighting how military aircraft fly over the building on a daily basis. "We do not need the military bases anymore," he told the Sunday Telegraph. "There have been accidents of military aircraft crashing, falling objects and crash-landings, as well as murder, rape, theft, traffic accident, drunk driving. The US military still fly over our communities as if nothing has happened. Would such a thing be allowed in Tokyo or in the UK?" He added: "We demand that military bases not be relocated, but closed or demolished." |
U.S.-backed SDF hands over 280 Iraqi, foreign detainees to Iraq Posted: 24 Feb 2019 03:34 PM PST An Iraqi military colonel confirmed to Reuters that 130 people were transferred on Sunday, adding to the 150 transferred on Thursday. There are meant to be more such handovers under an agreement to transfer a group of some 500 detainees held by the SDF in Syria, Iraqi military sources said. Among the 280 were as many as 14 French citizens and six Arabs of unspecific nationality, according to one military source close to the handover process who commands troops near the Syrian border. |
Judge Dismisses Charges Against Water Park Owner Over Boy`s Death on Slide Posted: 22 Feb 2019 08:05 PM PST |
How did police catch 'Empire' actor Jussie Smollett? Lots and lots of cameras Posted: 23 Feb 2019 08:44 PM PST |
Posted: 24 Feb 2019 07:57 AM PST Democratic congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has accused critics of "not trying" to tackle climate change following opposition to her ambitious Green New Deal programme. Ms Ocasio-Cortez addressed criticism she has faced from both Republicans and Democrats in Congress at a New York Hall of Science event. "I just introduced the Green New Deal two weeks ago and it's creating all of this conversation, why? |
The Latest: Vatican City to get a child protection policy Posted: 24 Feb 2019 05:00 AM PST |
Vietnam readying for Kim train arrival next week: sources Posted: 22 Feb 2019 06:40 PM PST Vietnamese authorities are preparing for North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to arrive by train next week ahead of his summit with US president Donald Trump, several sources told AFP Friday. The leaders are slated to meet in Hanoi on February 27-28 to follow up on their first meeting last June in Singapore that ended with vaguely worded commitments on dismantling Pyongyang's nuclear programme. In the northeastern Chinese city of Dandong, which borders on North Korea, there were signs that Kim's train could be crossing over into China imminently en route to Vietnam. |
Warren Buffett's Message to Washington: Bipartisanship Works Posted: 23 Feb 2019 06:39 AM PST "Our country's almost unbelievable prosperity has been gained in a bipartisan manner," he wrote in his annual letter to shareholders as he traced the growth of U.S. economy over the last 230 years. The billionaire investor's annual letter, which ran 13 pages this year and quoted Abraham Lincoln and Christopher Wren, typically goes beyond Berkshire Hathaway Inc.'s results to discuss investing principles and his and business partner Charlie Munger's thoughts on a wide range of topics. Buffett has taken a careful approach to the political conversation since the 2016 election. |
Pompeo Says ‘More Sanctions to Be Had’ to Pressure Venezuela Posted: 24 Feb 2019 12:42 PM PST The steps outlined by Pence may include forms of economic or diplomatic pressure by the U.S., a second official said. Secretary of State Michael Pompeo also said earlier on CNN's "State of the Union" that more sanctions are possible on Venezuela without offering details on what measures the U.S. may be planning, as regional leaders prepare to meet in Colombia. Pence's announcement will come more than a month after the U.S. recognized Juan Guaido as Venezuela's interim president. |
NASA greenlights SpaceX crew capsule test to ISS Posted: 22 Feb 2019 10:56 PM PST NASA on Friday gave SpaceX the green light to test a new crew capsule by first sending an unmanned craft with a life-sized mannequin to the International Space Station. "We're go for launch, we're go for docking," said William Gerstenmaier, the associate administrator with NASA Human Exploration and Operations. A Falcon 9 rocket from the private US-based SpaceX is scheduled to lift off, weather permitting, on March 2 to take the Crew Dragon test capsule to the ISS. |
Tunnels, civilians slow capture of Islamic State's last Syria pocket Posted: 24 Feb 2019 05:51 AM PST The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) militia has surrounded the militants at the village of Baghouz near the Iraqi border and is trying to complete an evacuation of civilians from the tiny area before storming it or forcing a surrender. Throughout its steady advance across the Syrian stretch of Islamic State's self-declared caliphate, the SDF has been slowed by the group's extensive use of tunnels and human shields - tactics it says are still being deployed in Baghouz. "It is expected that there are still undiscovered tunnels, even rooms underground," said Mustafa Bali, an SDF spokesman. |
Iran launches cruise missile from submarine during drill Posted: 24 Feb 2019 08:01 AM PST |
Journalist, 12, faces off with police officer who threatened to arrest her Posted: 23 Feb 2019 11:00 PM PST |
Posted: 24 Feb 2019 04:01 PM PST |
Women vent their anger at Vatican child abuse conference Posted: 23 Feb 2019 08:57 AM PST Some 200 senior Church officials, all but ten of them men, listened at times in stunned silence in a Vatican audience hall as the women read their frank and at times angry speeches on the penultimate day of the conference convened by the pope to confront a worldwide scandal. Sister Veronica Openibo, a Nigerian who has worked in Africa, Europe and the United States, spoke with a soft voice but delivered a strong message, telling the prelates sitting before her: "This storm will not pass". |
Huawei shrugs off threat of US ban Posted: 24 Feb 2019 05:51 AM PST Huawei's chairman on Sunday shrugged of the risk that President Donald Trump could issue an executive order banning the Chinese telecom giant, saying the company could succeed without the US market. Guo Ping said such an order "is not necessary and should not be released" but if issued would have little impact on Huawei, which has become the leading supplier of the backbone equipment for wireless mobile networks worldwide. "In 2018 Huawei had revenues of over 100 billion dollars. |
Nigerian Rivals Claim Successes as They Await Vote Outcome Posted: 24 Feb 2019 10:31 AM PST As many as 73 million people were eligible to vote Saturday in a tight race between Buhari, 76, an ex-general who campaigned on an anti-graft platform, and Abubakar, a 72-year-old businessman and former vice president. The National Independent Electoral Commission will start announcing results Monday from 11 a.m., its chairman, Mahmood Yakubu, said at the opening of the national collation center in the capital, Abuja. |
Bill Maher says the reason red state voters are so upset is because they want to be the blue states Posted: 23 Feb 2019 08:41 AM PST |
Exodus from last IS enclave overwhelms Syria force Posted: 24 Feb 2019 10:51 AM PST US-backed Syrian forces warned Sunday they were struggling to cope with an outpouring of foreigners from the Islamic State group's imploding "caliphate", urging governments to take responsibility for their citizens. The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces have evacuated nearly 5,000 men, women and children from the jihadist redoubt since Wednesday, moving closer to retaking the last sliver of territory under IS control. "The numbers of foreign fighters and their relatives that we are holding is increasing drastically," Kurdish foreign affairs official Abdel Karim Omar told AFP. |
North Korea warns U.S. skeptics as Kim heads for summit with Trump Posted: 24 Feb 2019 10:34 AM PST The two leaders will meet in Hanoi on Wednesday and Thursday, eight months after their historic summit in Singapore, the first between a sitting U.S. president and a North Korean leader, where they pledged to work toward the complete denuclearization of the Korean peninsula. The North's KCNA state news agency said such opposition was aimed at derailing the talks. "If the present U.S. administration reads others' faces, lending an ear to others, it may face the shattered dream of the improvement of the relations with the DPRK and world peace and miss the rare historic opportunity," the news agency said in a commentary, referring to North Korea by the initials of its official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. |
Posted: 23 Feb 2019 09:57 AM PST New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft has "categorically" denied soliciting sex at a spa in Florida after police said he was filmed doing so twice. Mr Kraft, 77, faces two counts of soliciting sex from a prostitute. The billionaire is one of two dozen men who were arrested for allegedly paying $59 (£45) for a half-hour and $79 (£60) for an hour of sex at Orchids of Asia Day Spa in Jupiter, Florida. |
AP source: Bears release embattled kicker Cody Parkey Posted: 22 Feb 2019 06:28 PM PST |
In a shift, Buffett says focus on Berkshire's stock price Posted: 23 Feb 2019 10:10 AM PST The shift is something of a retreat from the 88-year-old Buffett's decades of preaching patience and long-term thinking for investors and Berkshire shareholders, the antithesis of what stock prices often represent. Buffett's business acumen has helped make him the world's third-richest person, worth $82.9 billion according to Forbes magazine, and transformed Berkshire from a failing textile company into a $496 billion behemoth. |
Alaska senator says she's likely to back Trump disapproval Posted: 22 Feb 2019 07:29 PM PST |
Will Google, Amazon and Facebook fix the affordable housing crisis? Posted: 24 Feb 2019 04:46 AM PST |
Saudi Arabia names first woman envoy to Washington at critical time Posted: 23 Feb 2019 05:21 PM PST Saudi Arabia on Saturday named a princess as its first woman ambassador to the United States, a key appointment as the fallout over journalist Jamal Khashoggi's murder tests relations between the allies. Princess Rima bint Bandar replaced Prince Khalid bin Salman, the younger brother of the powerful crown prince who was appointed vice defence minister in a flurry of late-night royal decrees announced on state media. The reshuffle comes as Saudi Arabia seeks to quell an international outcry over Khashoggi's murder last October in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, which strained relations with its key ally Washington. |
Indian police detain hundreds in Kashmir sweeps Posted: 24 Feb 2019 06:19 AM PST Indian authorities have detained hundreds of separatist leaders and Muslim activists in an escalating crackdown in disputed Kashmir with the region remaining on high alert following a suicide bomb attack. Police said about 400 arrests had been made over the weekend in late-night raids aimed at weakening support for groups resisting Indian rule in the Himalayan territory also claimed in full by Pakistan. The sweeps follow the February 14 attack on an Indian convoy in Pulwama district which killed 40 soldiers and was claimed by Pakistan-based Islamist group Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM). |
Novartis gene therapy would be cost effective up to $900,000: U.S. group Posted: 22 Feb 2019 06:12 PM PST The Boston-based Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) made the determination using a commonly cited cost-effectiveness threshold that values each "quality-adjusted life year" (QALY) gained at $100,000 to $150,000. If each QALY gained were assessed at $500,000, ICER found the gene therapy, Zolgensma, would be cost effective at just over $5 million. Novartis has said the price will be determined in negotiations with health plans, but it believes the gene therapy would be cost effective at $4 million to $5 million as a one-time treatment. |
Posted: 23 Feb 2019 11:20 AM PST R&B; singer R. Kelly met one of the underage girls he is accused of sexually abusing during his 2008 child pornography trial, prosecutors disclosed on Saturday. The singer has been in custody since Friday night after being charged with ten counts of aggravated sexual abuse involving at least three underage girls. The charges relate to four alleged victims, at least three of whom were girls aged between 13 and 16 years old whom he allegedly abused between 1998 and 2010, a bond hearing in Cook County was told. It come after years of allegations directed at the musician, accusing the now 52-year-old of sexual misconduct involving women and underage girls. Through his lawyers, he has consistently denied them. It emerged in court on Saturday that Kelly met one of the alleged victims while on trial for child pornography charges stemming from a video prosecutors alleged showed him having sex with a girl as young as 13. He was later acquitted by a jury. The prosecutor revealed during a bond hearing for the singer yesterday that the two met when he gave her an autograph, and that she was underage at the time. He met another of the accusers when she was celebrating her 16th birthday party at a restaurant. Kim Foxx, the Cook County State's Attorney, said the singer's DNA was found in semen on shirts worn by two of the four accusers and prosecutors have a video of another accuser that shows Kelly having sex with her when she was 14. A fourth accuser, who was 24 at the time, told prosecutors that she thought she was going to braid Kelly's hair, but that he instead tried to force her to give him oral sex. The singer, whose legal name is Robert Kelly, is one of the top-selling recording artists of all time. He has won multiple Grammys, including for his hit-song, "I Believe I Can Fly". He stood with his hands behind his back and said to Cook County Judge John Fitzgerald Lyke Jr, "How are you?" as he made his first court appearance yesterday. His lawyer, Steve Greenberg, said his client is not a flight risk telling Judge Lyke, "Contrary to the song, Mr Kelly doesn't like to fly." Judge Lyke called the allegations "disturbing." The singer-songwriter looked down at the floor as judge spoke. The judge has set Kelly's bail at $1m (£766,500). The bond equals $250,000 for each of the four people Kelly is charged with abusing. Kelly must post $100,000 to be released. After the hearing, Mr Greenberg told reporters that he thinks all four of the accusers are lying. "He did not force anyone to have sex. He's a rock star. He doesn't have to have non-consensual sex," he said. |
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