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France to set up centre for returning young jihadists by year-end | | France will open a centre late this year to help reintegrate young French citizens who return from conflict zones such as Syria but are not subject to prosecution, Prime Minister Manuel Valls said on Wednesday. France is a top Western source country for jihadi volunteers and more than 100 have returned home after fighting in Syria and Iraq, which can land them in prison. |
France investigates allegation of child abuse by its troops in Central Africa | | By Chine Labbe and Marine Pennetier PARIS (Reuters) - France is investigating allegations of child abuse in Central African Republic by soldiers that it sent there to stem an outbreak of sectarian killing, officials said on Wednesday. The alleged abuse took place between December 2013 and June 2014 at a centre for displaced people at M'Poko airport in the capital Bangui, and concerned about 10 children, France's Defence Ministry said. "A preliminary investigation by the Paris prosecutor has been open since July 31, 2014," a Justice Ministry spokesman said. "The investigation is ongoing." A Defence Ministry source said no suspects had yet been identified. |
Texas trooper files suit over punishment for Snoop Dogg picture | | By Jon Herskovitz AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - A Texas state trooper who says he was reprimanded after posing for a photograph with rapper Snoop Dogg filed a civil suit on Wednesday over the punishment he felt was unjust. The Department of Public Safety (DPS) told Trooper Billy Spears, who was off duty but working in uniform as security at a music festival, that he posed "with a public figure who has a well-known criminal background including numerous drug charges" and it reflected poorly on the agency, according to the suit. Snoop Dogg posted the picture with a caption that read "Me n my deputy dogg." After the photo went out, DPS dispatched an agent to Spears to serve him with a copy of his counselling record, which the lawsuit said was meant to show the department's anger.
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Boston bomber wanted life, brother wanted death, jurors hear | | By Elizabeth Barber BOSTON (Reuters) - Lawyers seeking to spare convicted Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev the death penalty on Wednesday presented different stories of how he and his older brother Tamerlan behaved when medics treated their wounds after being captured. Tamerlan, a radical Islamist was determined to become a martyr. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, a 21-year old ethnic Chechen, was found guilty earlier this month of killing three people and injuring 264 in the April 15, 2013 attack on the world-famous race, the worst on U.S. soil since Sept. 2001. His lawyers contend he should be spared capital punishment because he was a pawn in a scheme led by Tamerlan, 26, who was killed days later in a shootout with police.
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Baltimore awaits answers in black man's death, remains on edge | | By Scott Malone, Ian Simpson and Warren Strobel BALTIMORE (Reuters) - Police and National Guard troops patrolled Baltimore's streets, giving the city a semblance of calm on Wednesday after the worst civil unrest in decades as residents await an official account of the death of a 25-year-old black man. After a curfew helped police thwart the kind of violence that saw buildings burned and stores looted on Monday night, schools reopened and business resumed in the city where the man, Freddie Gray, died April 19 of spinal injuries suffered while in police custody. The city of 620,000 became the latest flashpoint in a national movement against law enforcement's use of lethal force, which protesters say is disproportionately exercised against minorities. Baltimore's Major League Baseball team, the Orioles, prepared to play the Chicago White Sox on Wednesday, but without any spectators at the stadium, in a sign of the tenuous security situation.
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Mugabe says neighbours should stop flow of migrants to South Africa | | By MacDonald Dzirutwe HARARE (Reuters) - Other African nations should stop their citizens from migrating to South Africa to prevent violence against foreigners, Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe on Wednesday A wave of anti-immigrant violence in South Africa has claimed seven lives in Durban and Johannesburg over the past four weeks. The South African government has deployed troops to stop the fighting. After a summit of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) called to discuss industrialisation in southern Africa, Mugabe told reporters that South African President Jacob Zuma had briefed regional leaders on the violence. "I was suggesting that we, the neighbours, must do what we can to prevent more people going into South Africa.
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Charlie Hebdo cartoonist says he will no longer draw Prophet | | The French cartoonist Luz, who drew Charlie Hebdo's cover picture of the Prophet Mohammad after the Islamist killings at the satirical weekly in January, has said he will no longer draw the Prophet. "He no longer interests me," he told Les Inrockuptibles in an interview published on its website on Wednesday. For Muslims, any depiction of the Prophet is blasphemous, but Charlie Hebdo's next edition carried on its cover Luz's cartoon of a tearful Mohammad holding a "Je suis Charlie" ("I am Charlie") sign under the words "All is forgiven".
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U.N. chief Ban voices 'deep regret' at Indonesian executions | | UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon voiced "deep regret" at Indonesia's decision to execute on Wednesday eight drug traffickers, including seven foreigners, despite desperate pleas from their governments to spare their lives. "(Ban) expresses deep regret at the executions carried out in Indonesia on April 29 despite numerous calls in the country and internationally for a reprieve," U.N. spokesman Farhan Haq told reporters. "He again urges the government to exercise its authority and commute all death sentences. ...
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Clinton dives into debate on police tactics, urges justice reform | | Diving into the debate over police use of force, Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton on Wednesday urged police departments throughout the country to use body cameras and urged an end to excessive prison sentences that burden black communities. In a speech at New York's Columbia University, Clinton called on America "to come to terms with some hard truths about race and justice" in the aftermath of this week's Baltimore riots. "There is something wrong when a third of all black men face the prospect of prison during their lifetimes," said Clinton, the front-running Democrat in the 2016 race for the White House.
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Italy's Renzi wins first confidence vote on electoral law | | By Roberto Landucci ROME (Reuters) - Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi won the first of three confidence votes on a fiercely contested new electoral law on Wednesday, brushing aside opposition from rebels on his own side who walked out of parliament in protest. The motion passed with 352 votes in favour and 207 against, with 38 members of his own centre-left Democratic Party (PD), including some of the most senior members of the party old guard, refusing to cast a ballot. "I'm satisfied, we're in line with other confidence votes," Institutional Reform Minister Maria Elena Boschi told reporters, noting that the vote was the second highest secured by the Renzi government since it came to power last year.
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Heavy fighting in Yemen, Saudi Arabia trains tribal fighters | | By Mohammed Mukhashaf and Amena Bakr ADEN/DOHA (Reuters) - Saudi-led air strikes hit five Yemeni provinces as fighting raged in the southern city of Aden on Wednesday, and sources in the region said the kingdom was training armed tribesmen to fight the Iran-allied Houthi group. Houthi rebels' tanks and snipers killed at least 12 civilians overnight in Yemen's Aden as they advanced toward the centre of the city, residents said, and a Saudi-led coalition airdropped arms to anti-Houthi fighters in the city of Taiz. The Houthis took the capital Sanaa in September, demanding a more inclusive government, and swept south, rattling top world oil exporter Saudi Arabia and its allies, who fear what they see as expanding Iranian influence in the region. Arab coalition air strikes have, over the last month, backed local fighters in Aden and nationwide battling Shi'ite Houthis.
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