Yahoo! News: World - China
Yahoo! News: World - China |
- Nancy Pelosi delays Trump Senate impeachment trial to her credit — and her peril
- New wife, 26, charged with exploiting husband, 77, for money
- 2 passengers say they were sexually assaulted during their flights. They're suing the airline for allegedly ignoring their reports.
- Australia braces for second heatwave as wildfires continue to rage
- Watch the Tesla Cybertruck's closest rival execute full 360-degree turns from a standstill
- North Korea falls short on 'Christmas gift' to US
- Iran Can Really Build Submarines?
- Serbs protest in Montenegro ahead of vote on religious law
- Sen. Murkowski ‘disturbed’ by McConnell’s approach on impeachment
- Texas migrant helper released from Mexico after detention
- An Illinois woman got stuck on the face of a cliff for 9 hours on Christmas Eve and was rescued after screaming for help
- Nigeria frees former top official accused of graft
- Trump Pushes Out Tweet Naming Alleged Whistleblower
- Mexican Nationals Now Comprise Majority of Asylum Seekers on Southern Border
- Before-and-after photos from space reveal some of the biggest moments that changed our world in the last decade
- This Is How Nazi Germany Built Hitler's Private Army
- Merkel plans Turkey trip to preserve migrant pact: Sueddeutsche
- ‘We’ve never seen spending like this’: Bloomberg, Steyer saturate airwaves
- The Most Powerful Space Moments of the 2010s
- 20 Dead After Christmas Storm Batters Central Philippines
- Red wolves court battle reignites as governor urges action
- Why did Trump ditch his church in Palm Beach on Christmas Eve for evangelical service?
- Mexico vows to take Bolivia to court over embassy spat
- Baltimore On Pace to Break Homicide Rate Record in 2019
- Game-Changer? Russia's Su-57 Stealth Fighter Is Packing Hypersonic Missiles
- Huawei freaked out at The Wall Street Journal over a report that it secured its global tech dominance on the back of $75 billion in state support from China
- There have been more mass shootings than days in 2019
- $10,000 in a Coffee Cup: 8 Politicians Swept Up in N.J. Corruption Cases
- Reports: UK family drowned in Spain didn't know how to swim
- America's public lands of tug of war: It's time to join the fight for conservation
- Iraqi president threatens to quit in defiance of Iran's allies in parliament
- Japan hangs a Chinese man convicted of the murder of a family
- China slams US defence act over trade restrictions
- The U.S. Soldiers Who Liberated Nazi Concentration Camps Could Never Forget What They Saw
- U.S. Buckles in South Korea Troop-Funding Talks, Chosun Says
- Congolese woman, 41, dies after entering US border custody
- Gaza rocket sends Netanyahu to shelter during campaign rally: TV
- Woman ‘thrown in jail’ while delivering Christmas gifts to children in Mexico border migrant camps
- Russia raids offices of Kremlin critic Navalny
- What Made The Nazi War Machine So Hard To Defeat?
- U.S. Preparing to Respond to 2020 Russian Election Interference by Releasing Kremlin Officials’ Personal Info
- Winter storm moves across California, bringing rain, snow, wind
- A Sacramento couple spent $1,000 at Ikea to turn a Ram van into a DIY tiny home called 'Flippie'
- El Salvador upholds sentence of ex-President Tony Saca
- Woman, 2 young kids found on sidewalk near Boston parking garage die
Nancy Pelosi delays Trump Senate impeachment trial to her credit — and her peril Posted: 26 Dec 2019 11:36 AM PST |
New wife, 26, charged with exploiting husband, 77, for money Posted: 25 Dec 2019 12:08 PM PST Lin Helena Halfon was arrested earlier this month at Tampa International Airport. The Tampa Bay Times reported that when her husband, Tampa businessman Richard Rappaport, was notified by investigators about what his wife was doing, he said wanted to give his wife the benefit of the doubt, according to a warrant affidavit. |
Posted: 26 Dec 2019 08:16 AM PST |
Australia braces for second heatwave as wildfires continue to rage Posted: 26 Dec 2019 11:24 AM PST A second heatwave is set to sweep through Australia in coming days, threatening to worsen an already dire wild fire crisis. This fire season more than four million hectares have been burnt in Australia, almost one third the size of England, destroyed nearly 1,000 houses, and has killed at least nine people, with one more missing. Over the past week South Australia endured four days of extreme heatwave conditions, pushing into the high 40s. 84 homes were destroyed since last Thursday and at least 2,700 animals killed as fires wiped out parts of the Adelaide Hills region. In New South Wales, approximately 100 homes were lost to bush fires over the weekend, but weather eased on Monday through to Wednesday, allowing firefighters time to establish desperately needed containment lines. More than 70 fires are still burning in New South Wales alone, with 30 uncontained. The last heatwave saw the record for the hottest average maximum temperature in Australia broken twice in two days, with 40.9 and 41.9 recorded back to back. In addition, record high individual site temperature set twice last Thursday, Eucla in Western Australia with 49.8C, and the South Australian Nullarbor weather station with 49.9C a few hours later. Professor David Karoly, a leading climate scientist at the CSIRO, the Australian government's scientific research agency, said the record spikes were way beyond what had been seen previously, and the cause is climate change. The fires have destroyed an area almost a third the size of England Credit: Australian Broadcasting Corporation "We're smashing the extremes by effectively a degree relative to the other cases because that's by how much the Australian temperatures have warmed," he said. South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales are all expecting severe heat in coming days. Bureau of Meteorology forecaster Richard Russell told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation that the fire danger in Victoria would be very high across the entire state this weekend and was likely to be upgraded to severe on Monday when the heatwave peaked. "On Monday, temperatures are expected to reach 40 degrees across the majority of the state, and 44C in the north-west including Mildura and Swan Hill... Very little rainfall is expected and unfortunately, yet again, we are facing that dry lightning risk and are looking at potential gusty winds," he said. Victorian officials are concerned that three large fires will worsen in the deteriorating conditions. In New South Wales, Bureau of Meteorology forecaster Rose Barr told SBS that a severe heatwave will start building over the next three days. "Between Thursday and Saturday we are starting to see severe heatwave conditions in the southern parts of the state, extending over a more significant area of New South Wales into the weekend and next week... Some areas are forecast to reach extreme heatwave conditions," she said. "With the increasing heat and winds, the fire danger will worsen into the new week, with Monday and Tuesday most likely to be the most significant fire weather days." |
Watch the Tesla Cybertruck's closest rival execute full 360-degree turns from a standstill Posted: 26 Dec 2019 11:51 AM PST |
North Korea falls short on 'Christmas gift' to US Posted: 26 Dec 2019 05:26 AM PST |
Iran Can Really Build Submarines? Posted: 25 Dec 2019 07:00 PM PST |
Serbs protest in Montenegro ahead of vote on religious law Posted: 26 Dec 2019 07:01 AM PST Hundreds of backers of Montenegro's pro-Serb opposition took to the streets of the capital Podgorica on Thursday, rallying against a law they say would strip the Serbian Orthodox Church there of its property. Ahead of a vote on the draft Law on Religious Freedoms, expected later on Thursday or on Friday, Serbian Orthodox clergy and believers held a service on a packed bridge near parliament, watched by police who had sealed off city center roads and approaches to the government building. The law envisages that religious communities in the tiny Adriatic state would need to prove property ownership from before 1918, when predominantly Orthodox Christian Montenegro joined the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, the predecessor of the now-defunct Yugoslavia. |
Sen. Murkowski ‘disturbed’ by McConnell’s approach on impeachment Posted: 25 Dec 2019 10:30 AM PST |
Texas migrant helper released from Mexico after detention Posted: 25 Dec 2019 08:04 AM PST A Texas woman who drove to Mexico to deliver Christmas gifts to a sprawling refugee camp housing people waiting for U.S. court dates said Wednesday she was detained by authorities there for two days. Anamichelle Castellano said she and another volunteer for her nonprofit group were stopped Monday at a bridge crossing from Brownsville, Texas, to Matamoros, Mexico. Mexico has strict laws against entering the country with guns or ammunition. |
Posted: 26 Dec 2019 12:21 PM PST |
Nigeria frees former top official accused of graft Posted: 25 Dec 2019 01:58 AM PST Nigeria's former national defence advisor, who was arrested in 2015 for allegedly stealing $2 billion, has been freed from jail after several court rulings ordering his release, a security official said Wednesday. Sambo Dasuki spent four years in prison despite multiple court orders to Nigeria's Department of State Services (DSS) domestic intelligence agency for his release on bail. Dasuki is accused of siphoning money earmarked for the fight against Islamic militant group Boko Haram and allegedly using it to help bankroll former president Goodluck Jonathan's failed re-election campaign in 2015. |
Trump Pushes Out Tweet Naming Alleged Whistleblower Posted: 26 Dec 2019 04:58 PM PST On Thursday evening, Donald Trump pushed out on Twitter the name of the alleged whistleblower whose complaint led to the president's impeachment.Trump's personal Twitter account, @realDonaldTrump, retweeted a post by the re-election campaign's official "war room" account that was aimed at the whistleblower's attorney Mark Zaid. "It's pretty simple. The CIA 'whistleblower' is not a real whistleblower!" reads the tweet, which links to a Washington Examiner item. That piece, published Dec. 3, includes the alleged whistleblower's name in the headline. The Daily Beast is declining to publish the name and has not independently verified the identity of the whistleblower.As The Daily Beast reported last month, Trump had gossiped for weeks about this alleged whistleblower with various friends, media figures, and senior administration officials, and had asked some people if they thought it was a good idea for him to publicly announce or tweet the name. Several people close to the president, such as Ivanka Trump and White House Counsel Pat Cipollone, had privately cautioned him against saying or posting the name in public, arguing it would be counterproductive and unnecessary.Even Fox News host Sean Hannity, who had also gossiped in recent months with Trump about the alleged whistleblower, hadn't pushed the president hard on this.Multiple sources close to Trump had told The Daily Beast last month that they were genuinely shocked the president hadn't already rage-tweeted the name or blurted it out to the cameras, given his massive fury at the individual. On Thursday night, President Trump's restraint appeared to slip.Zaid — who has worked with The Daily Beast on Freedom of Information Act requests — and the White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment on this story.Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Mexican Nationals Now Comprise Majority of Asylum Seekers on Southern Border Posted: 26 Dec 2019 12:52 PM PST The number of Mexican nationals seeking asylum in the U.S. has risen dramatically over the last year as the number of Central American asylum seekers has fallen as a result of Trump administration policies designed to stem the flow of migrants.A study released last month by researchers at the University of Texas and UC San Diego found that over half of all asylum seekers on the southern border are now Mexicans, predominantly coming from the states of Guerrero, Chiapas, Oaxaca, Michoacán, Zacatecas, and Veracruz.Speaking with the Los Angeles Times, many pointed to cartel violence as the primary reason to seek asylum. Others referenced the Central American caravans that made headlines for passing through Mexico on the way to the U.S. border.Since Mexicans are exempt from the "Remain in Mexico" policy that constrains the number of central American asylum seekers, U.S. authorities have adopted a policy known as "metering" which admits only a relatively small number of of Mexican asylum seekers each day. Last week, Ken Cuccinelli, acting deputy secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, announced that Mexican nationals seeking asylum in the United States could be moved to Guatemala rather than being allowed to wait in the United States for their asylum claims to be adjudicated.The White House has been locked in a ongoing court battle over policies to limit the amount of asylum seekers, including requiring that migrants first apply for refugee status in Mexico, or whatever country they enter after leaving home, before seeking asylum in the U.S. The remain in Mexico policy has also been met with legal challenges. The Ninth Circuit is currently hearing arguments regarding the constitutionality of the orders, after the Supreme Court ruled in September that the remain in Mexico policy can remain in effect as legal challenges progress.More than 300,000 Central Americans entered Mexico illegally last year, 80 percent of whom were headed for the U.S. border, according to Mexico's interior minister, Olga Sánchez Cordero. The southern border has been overwhelmed this year with asylum applicants though numbers have waned in recent months following highs in the spring.Former acting DHS secretary Kevin McAleenan said in August that border crossings declined over the summer, with apprehensions dropping 43 percent since May, when arrests between ports of entry at the southern border increased for the fourth straight month to 132,887. |
Posted: 26 Dec 2019 12:24 PM PST |
This Is How Nazi Germany Built Hitler's Private Army Posted: 25 Dec 2019 05:45 PM PST |
Merkel plans Turkey trip to preserve migrant pact: Sueddeutsche Posted: 26 Dec 2019 09:14 AM PST German Chancellor Angela Merkel will visit Turkey next month to urge President Tayyip Erdogan to uphold the migration pact he agreed with the European Union, Sueddeutsche Zeitung reported, responding to fears that conflict in Syria could unleash a new refugee wave. Erdogan warned on Sunday that Turkey, which already hosts about 3.7 million Syrian refugees, would not be able to handle a new wave of migrants if Syrian-Russian attempts to retake rebel-held Idlib province sent more people fleeing. |
‘We’ve never seen spending like this’: Bloomberg, Steyer saturate airwaves Posted: 25 Dec 2019 04:04 AM PST |
The Most Powerful Space Moments of the 2010s Posted: 26 Dec 2019 01:39 PM PST |
20 Dead After Christmas Storm Batters Central Philippines Posted: 26 Dec 2019 12:29 AM PST |
Red wolves court battle reignites as governor urges action Posted: 26 Dec 2019 06:29 AM PST The fight over the critically endangered red wolf has returned to court as North Carolina's governor sought immediate help for the dozen or so remaining in the wild and federal biologists planned to transfer wolves into the recovery area for the first time in years. In late November, Gov. Roy Cooper sent the secretary of the interior a sharply worded letter warning that, with no more than 14 known wolves in the wild, "the American red wolf is on the brink of extinction." He noted that in 2019, no litters of red wolf pups were born in the wild for the first time in the history of the reintroduction program. Red wolves once occupied much of the Eastern U.S. but were driven to near extinction by trapping, hunting and habitat loss before they were reintroduced to North Carolina in 1987. |
Why did Trump ditch his church in Palm Beach on Christmas Eve for evangelical service? Posted: 26 Dec 2019 07:06 AM PST |
Mexico vows to take Bolivia to court over embassy spat Posted: 26 Dec 2019 03:01 PM PST Mexico threatened Thursday to take Bolivia to the International Court of Justice over what it calls harassment of its diplomatic mission in La Paz, after its embassy sheltered some 20 officials from the former government. The two countries have been in a spiraling spat since Mexico granted asylum to Bolivian ex-president Evo Morales, who resigned on November 10 in the face of mass protests, and granted refuge to top officials from his leftist government at its embassy. Mexico accuses Bolivia's new interim government of responding with a campaign of "harassment and intimidation" by deploying a large contingent of police and intelligence officers outside the embassy. |
Baltimore On Pace to Break Homicide Rate Record in 2019 Posted: 26 Dec 2019 10:42 AM PST Baltimore may see the highest homicide rate ever recorded in the city by the end of 2019, the Associated Press reported on Wednesday.Police had recorded 338 homicides as of Tuesday, four shy of the 342 seen in 2017 and 2015. The city saw 353 homicides in 1993, the most of any year on record.However, because the city had a larger population in the early 1990's, the homicide rate per 100,000 residents in 2019 is nearing the rate from 1993, despite the lower total. If Baltimore sees 342 or more homicides by the end of 2019, the homicide rate will reach 57 per 100,000, surpassing the 1993 rate."It's a major concern for me, not just as a hopeful man but as a citizen of Baltimore who grew up in inner city Baltimore," Carmichael "Stokey" Cannady, a reformed drug dealer who became a community activist, told the AP. "I remember when a person had a conflict and would have a fight at best, now these young kids, at the age of 13, 14 years old, are finding handguns in their possession and they use them as toys."The homicide rate was declining before 2015. On April 12 of that year, 25-year-old Freddie Gray died while restrained in the back of a police van after officers arrested him on suspicion of illegally carrying a switchblade. The death sparked riots in the city after officers were accused of racism in the case. Gray was African-American.The state attorney for Baltimore, Marilyn Mosby, charged the officers involved with murder, and said she would attempt to give voice to rioters' chants of "no justice, no peace." The six officers charged were eventually acquitted, and in 2016 prosecutors dropped all remaining charges.The homicide rate in Baltimore has remained high since Gray's death. In 2019 the city appointed current Police Commissioner Michael Harrison to revamp the department."People can expect [the homicide rate] to go down, we are building capacity, but we need to have some type of effect on the poverty, the housing, the education, the addiction, the skills, the jobs and the lack thereof, together at the same time," Harrison told the AP. "All of that has to be addressed while prosecuting people who commit crimes and preventing other people from committing those crimes. Otherwise, it continues and then you ask the question, 'When does it stop?' without fixing the reason it starts."President Trump in July described the district in which the Freddie Gray incident took place as a "disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess." Trump blasted the district's longtime representative Elijah Cummings, who died in October, for what the President said was Cummings's failure to address problems of crime in the district.Maryland's Republican governor Larry Hogan denounced Trump's remarks as "outrageous and inappropriate." |
Game-Changer? Russia's Su-57 Stealth Fighter Is Packing Hypersonic Missiles Posted: 25 Dec 2019 05:00 AM PST |
Posted: 26 Dec 2019 10:01 AM PST |
There have been more mass shootings than days in 2019 Posted: 25 Dec 2019 09:06 PM PST |
$10,000 in a Coffee Cup: 8 Politicians Swept Up in N.J. Corruption Cases Posted: 25 Dec 2019 11:55 AM PST One aspiring politician is accused of getting her bribe in a coffee cup chock-full of $100 bills. Another, a mayoral hopeful, of receiving his at his campaign headquarters in a bag stuffed with $10,000.There was also a councilman who accepted a cash-stuffed envelope from a man who explicitly asked for a "quid pro quo," according to a court document, and an official who funneled thousands of dollars into a charity he ran, then diverted the money for personal use.These were among the allegations made in the eight political corruption cases announced by New Jersey prosecutors over five days this month. Taken together, the accusations offered a striking picture of entrenched small-time corruption at a time when questions of impropriety consume the national political debate."To say we have a long and sordid history of corruption in this state would be understating it," said New Jersey's attorney general, Gurbir S. Grewal.All but one of those charged were current or former elected officials or political candidates, and the accused included both Republicans and Democrats. They included a small-town mayor, a school board president and a man trying to hold on to his position as county freeholder.'I just wanna be your tax guy.' 'Done.'In some ways, they were charged with crimes that were remarkably old-school. Between May and July of 2019, Jersey City's school board president, Sudhan Thomas, was given $35,000 in cash in envelopes, according to a criminal complaint. One envelope filled with $25,000 was handed off in a restaurant parking lot.In return for funds for his reelection campaign, Thomas offered to make the briber, who became a cooperating witness, the school board's real estate counsel, the complaint said."Real estate … that's perfect," the witness said at one meeting, according to the complaint."Yeah, nobody questions anything," Thomas said, the complaint said.Thomas was one of five politicians linked to a monthslong bribery investigation that involved the same unnamed witness and several sting operations. Even at a time when the attorney general has made fighting misconduct and restoring public trust a focus of his office, Grewal said that some of the accusations made last week stood out for their boldness."I'm no longer shocked by what I see from this chair," Grewal said. "But I'm still occasionally surprised that somebody would so brazenly say, 'I'll give you this position if you make this donation,' and nobody questions that stuff."All five politicians caught in the stings were charged with second-degree bribery and face up to 10 years in prison. Three, who were holding public office at the time, faced an additional charge of taking of an unlawful benefit by a public servant for official behavior.In a statement, Thomas, a Democrat in New Jersey's second-largest city, denied the allegations and accused Grewal's office of unfairly targeting him for suing the state for $2.1 billion he said the Jersey City school district was owed.In another sting operation in neighboring Bayonne, Jason O'Donnell, a former state assemblyman who was running for mayor, requested $10,000 in "street money" from the witness during a dinner in New York City, according to a criminal complaint.The witness eventually passed the money to O'Donnell in a white paper bag at a meeting in O'Donnell's campaign headquarters in May 2018, the complaint said.The complaint said that the witness reiterated, "I just wanna be your tax guy," to which O'Donnell replied, "Done."That same month, John Windish accepted a $7,000 cash bribe during a bid to be reelected to the borough council of Mount Arlington, a community of 5,000 in the New York City suburbs, prosecutors said.After handing over a money-stuffed envelope, the witness said he needed Windish to "commit that I'm your borough attorney" and give him more work, according to a criminal complaint."You got it," Windish replied, according to the complaint.O'Donnell denied the allegations and his lawyer said he would plead not guilty. Windish could not be reached for comment.A coffee cup full of cashNot every politician caught in the stings was happy to be handed stacks of cash. Some of them, prosecutors said, preferred checks.In May 2018, John Cesaro was a freeholder in Morris County, a wealthy suburban locale about 30 miles west of New York City. Mary Dougherty wanted to be one. (A board of freeholders in New Jersey is akin to a group of county supervisors elsewhere.)According to a criminal complaint, her $10,000 payoff from the witness at first came in a takeout coffee cup packed with $100 bills.In return, the witness wanted Dougherty's support for him keeping his position as a counsel to Morris County if she won, the complaint said, to which she agreed.But Dougherty later returned the cash, saying she wanted checks instead, the complaint said. To avoid violating campaign financing limits, Dougherty is accused of discussing with the witness that the money should be given through straw donors -- individuals who contribute to a candidate but are later reimbursed by someone else for their contribution. Such donations are illegal in New Jersey.It was the same for Cesaro, who is also accused of accepting $10,000 in cash and then later asking for checks, at one point saying that he did not know how to "pass" the cash around.In one meeting, he appeared to make his understanding that the checks would come from straw donors clear, the complaint said."It's not like they're going to have to use their money," he told the witness of potential donors, according to the complaint. "You know what I'm saying?Dougherty and Cesaro both denied the allegations.The mayor who money launderedBefore he was elected mayor in 2015, Ronald J. DiMura worked for years as the treasurer for the local Democratic Party and on local campaigns in the borough of Middlesex, a small community 30 miles southwest of Manhattan.Those financial positions enabled DiMura, 63, to steal $190,000 from campaigns, then use a charity he operated to launder the money, according to an indictment.Between January 2013 and June 2019, DiMura made "purported donations" from the campaigns to the charity, prosecutors said.But the nonprofit only spent a "small fraction" of that money on charitable deeds, with the rest diverted into DiMura's bank account or a business account that he controlled, the indictment said.DiMura, who is also accused of soliciting a $10,000 donation from a developer when he was mayor, was charged with nine counts, including theft by deception, money laundering and official misconduct and tampering with public records.The most serious charges have a sentence of up to 10 years in prison, and he could be fined up to $500,000 on the money-laundering charge.DiMura was set to leave office at the end of the year after being voted out. But he resigned on Thursday, ahead of schedule, according to a statement from Middlesex's borough council.DiMura's lawyer did not respond to requests for comment.He took money meant to clean up his townCarl Washington Jr., a councilman in Penns Grove in southern New Jersey, worked as a local coordinator for a statewide anti-littering initiative, managing funds intended to help ensure that parks and other public areas stayed pristine.But prosecutors accused Washington, 46, of stealing more than $8,000 from the program, saying he doctored paperwork in order to obtain fraudulent checks.The checks were made out to organizations that were run by Washington and several associates, including his nephew, Lavar H. Ledbetter, prosecutors said. Those associates cashed the checks, then returned some of the money to Washington and Ledbetter, 31, prosecutors said.Both men were charged with official misconduct, conspiracy, theft by unlawful taking, and misapplication of entrusted property.Washington did not respond to requests for comment but told NJ.com that he and Ledbetter were innocent, claiming the allegations were levied against him by a political rival.This article originally appeared in The New York Times.(C) 2019 The New York Times Company |
Reports: UK family drowned in Spain didn't know how to swim Posted: 26 Dec 2019 08:29 AM PST Spanish news reports said Thursday that a member of the British family whose father and two children died in a swimming pool on Christmas Eve has told police that none of the three knew how to swim. Spanish private news agency Europa Press and other media outlets said the family member testified before Civil Guard police. No one was immediately available at the Civil Guard to comment on the report. |
America's public lands of tug of war: It's time to join the fight for conservation Posted: 26 Dec 2019 03:00 AM PST |
Iraqi president threatens to quit in defiance of Iran's allies in parliament Posted: 26 Dec 2019 04:45 AM PST Iraqi President Barham Salih refused on Thursday to designate the nominee of an Iran-backed parliamentary bloc for prime minister, saying he would rather resign than appoint someone to the position who would be rejected by protesters. The Bina bloc, led by Iran-backed militia leader Hadi al-Amiri, had nominated Basra Governor Asaad al-Edani to be the next prime minister following weeks of political deadlock. "Out of my desire to stop blood and maintain peace, and with due respect to Asaad al-Edani, I refuse to nominate him," Salih said. |
Japan hangs a Chinese man convicted of the murder of a family Posted: 26 Dec 2019 06:53 AM PST |
China slams US defence act over trade restrictions Posted: 26 Dec 2019 03:48 AM PST Beijing on Thursday said it "firmly opposes" trade restrictions included in a new US defence act, having already admonished the bill for interfering in China's internal affairs. The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) -- signed into law last week -- bars the use of federal funds to buy railcars and buses from China, and slows the lifting of sanctions on tech giant Huawei. It comes as Beijing and Washington have agreed to a temporary truce in their bruising nearly two-year trade war, with a "phase-one" deal that has rolled back tariffs on billions of dollars worth of goods. |
The U.S. Soldiers Who Liberated Nazi Concentration Camps Could Never Forget What They Saw Posted: 25 Dec 2019 11:15 PM PST |
U.S. Buckles in South Korea Troop-Funding Talks, Chosun Says Posted: 25 Dec 2019 06:09 PM PST (Bloomberg) -- Days before a troop-funding deal was set to expire, the U.S. has dropped its demand that South Korea pay five times more to host its military personnel after receiving assurances Seoul would purchase more American weapons, a newspaper report said.The Trump administration also likely eased up after South Korea indicated it would step up its presence in the Strait of Hormuz, helping U.S. efforts to protect oil flows in the region, South Korea's Chosun Ilbo newspaper reported Thursday, citing an unidentified diplomatic source. The increase now may be about 10-20% above the current level of nearly $1 billion, it said.South Korea's foreign ministry declined to comment on the report.Last month, U.S. negotiators walked out of a meeting on troop funding in Seoul after South Korea balked at the five-fold increase seen as exorbitant by many in the country. The breakdown at that time raised questions about one of the U.S.'s closest military alliances and a key piece of the Pentagon's strategy for countering North Korea and a rising China. The two sides resumed talks in December.U.S. Walks Out of Military Cost-Sharing Talks With South KoreaEven though the deal known as the Special Measures Agreement technically expires at the end of this year, both sides are likely to agree to some sort of temporary extension as they negotiate, allowing for the continued operations of the about 28,500 U.S. military personnel positioned on the peninsula.The talks with South Korea could affect other countries that host U.S. troops, as the Trump administration is seeking funding increases from other American allies.Trump Price Tag for Troops in South Korea Clouds Esper TripTrump, arguing that South Korea is rich and should pay more for U.S. protection, has demanded Seoul contribute about $5 billion for hosting U.S. troops. The price tag originated with the White House, according to people familiar with the matter, and administration officials justify it by saying it reflects the costs South Korea would incur if it takes operational control of combined U.S.-South Korean forces in the case of a conflict.The request for more money hasn't sat well in South Korea, where many in President Moon Jae-in's progressive camp and opposition conservatives have come out against the demands. Moon, facing a sagging support rate, may not want to make any major concessions that further dent his popularity ahead of an election for parliament next year.To contact the reporter on this story: Jihye Lee in Seoul at jlee2352@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Scott at bscott66@bloomberg.net, Jon Herskovitz, Gearoid ReidyFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Congolese woman, 41, dies after entering US border custody Posted: 26 Dec 2019 04:14 PM PST A 41-year-old Congolese woman died Wednesday in U.S. government custody shortly after she entered a border station in South Texas, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said Thursday. CBP says the woman, who the agency did not identify, had arrived at an official port of entry in Laredo, Texas, early Tuesday afternoon. The woman came with paperwork that documented a "previous medical condition," CBP said. |
Gaza rocket sends Netanyahu to shelter during campaign rally: TV Posted: 25 Dec 2019 11:53 AM PST A rocket launched from the Gaza Strip at a southern Israeli city on Wednesday as it hosted a campaign rally by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu prompted him to take shelter briefly before resuming the event, Israeli TV stations reported. The Israeli military confirmed the launch against Ashkelon, which is 12 km (7.5 miles) from the coastal Palestinian enclave, and said the rocket was shot down by an Iron Dome air defense interceptor. There was no immediate claim of responsibility in Gaza, which is under the control of Hamas Islamists and where a smaller armed faction, Islamic Jihad, exchanged fire with Israel during a two-day surge of violence last month. |
Woman ‘thrown in jail’ while delivering Christmas gifts to children in Mexico border migrant camps Posted: 26 Dec 2019 01:41 PM PST A woman was detained while delivering Christmas gifts to migrant children in camps near the US-Mexico border, after officials suspected her of trying to smuggle ammunition.Anamichelle Castellano was travelling across the southern border from Texas into Mexico on Monday with another volunteer and over 300 gifts, when she was stopped by Mexican authorities at the Gateway Bridge. |
Russia raids offices of Kremlin critic Navalny Posted: 26 Dec 2019 10:30 AM PST Russian security officials searched the offices of leading Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny's anti-corruption foundation on Thursday, with his team calling the raid a new bid to disrupt their work. Navalny linked the searches to his refusal to take down a 2017 video report that accused Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev of massive corruption and has racked up nearly 33 million views on YouTube. "What's happening is part of the coordinated campaign against the anti-corruption foundation," Navalny, 43, told reporters, but vowed that his organisation would not be intimidated. |
What Made The Nazi War Machine So Hard To Defeat? Posted: 25 Dec 2019 09:45 PM PST |
Posted: 26 Dec 2019 10:21 AM PST U.S. Cyber Command is readying options to wage information warfare against Russian officials if the country tries to interfere in the 2020 U.S. elections, the Washington Post reported Wednesday.The officials would include senior members of Russia's government as well as Russian oligarchs, stopping short of targeting Vladimir Putin himself. The operation is designed to halt election interference by threatening Kremlin officials with the release of their personal information."When the Russians put implants into an electric grid, it means they're making a credible showing that they have the ability to hurt you if things escalate," Bobby Chesney, a professor of law at the University of Texas at Austin, told the Post. "What may be contemplated here is an individualized version of that, not unlike individually targeted economic sanctions. It's sending credible signals to key decision-makers that they are vulnerable if they take certain adversarial actions."The U.S. has used information warfare in the past, including in the Gulf War when the military dropped leaflets over Iraq attempting to persuade Iraqi troops to surrender. The advent of internet technology and social media has expanded the reach of such tactics across the world.U.S. government agencies have pushed repeatedly over the past year to loosen restrictions on offensive cyber capabilities. Traditional information warfare techniques have also been absorbed by the 10-year-old cyber command."It's a really big deal because we have not done a good job in the past of integrating traditional information warfare with cyber-operations," Chesney commented. "But as Russia has demonstrated, these two are increasingly inseparable in practice."Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has spoken out against possible Russian interference in U.S. elections."Interference in American elections is unacceptable and if the Russians were engaged in that in 2020 it would put our relationship in an even worse place than it has been," Pompeo told Russian Foreign Minsiter Sergey Lavrov in May of this year."We've said this not only about the Russians but about other countries as well," Pompeo said. "Our elections are important and sacred and they must be kept free and fair and with no outside country interfering."Russia has denied meddling in U.S. elections despite overwhelming evidence collected by the U.S. intelligence community. |
Winter storm moves across California, bringing rain, snow, wind Posted: 26 Dec 2019 06:54 AM PST |
Posted: 26 Dec 2019 02:42 PM PST |
El Salvador upholds sentence of ex-President Tony Saca Posted: 26 Dec 2019 12:46 PM PST El Salvador's Supreme Court upheld a 10-year prison sentence against ex-President Tony Saca for corruption on Thursday and confirmed that he must return some $260 million to the state. Saca was convicted in September 2018 after pleading guilty in connection with the diversion of more than $300 million from government coffers to benefit of his businesses and third parties, becoming the first Salvadoran ex-president found guilty of corruption. |
Woman, 2 young kids found on sidewalk near Boston parking garage die Posted: 26 Dec 2019 03:18 AM PST |
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