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| India defers land, tax reforms, spooks investors | | In a setback for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's reform programme, the opposition Congress party on Tuesday succeeded in delaying the measures in parliament, prompting a more than 2 percent fall in shares. The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has the biggest majority in Lok Sabha in 30 years but it is dependent on Congress and other parties to pass bills in Rajya Sabha. "We're more concerned about the fate of the land acquisition bill." Opposition parties are resisting a bill that seeks to exempt land purchases for certain industrial, housing and infrastructure projects from requiring the consent of 80 percent of landowners, calling it 'anti-farmer'.
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| U.S. withdraws nominee for first Somalia envoy in over two decades | | | The nominee to be U.S. ambassador to Somalia has withdrawn, slowing down the appointment of the first envoy since the United States pulled out a military mission in the early 1990s as the country plunged into civil war and chaos. The withdrawal of the military mission, which had been supporting an aid effort, was prompted by the "Black Hawk Down" incident in which 18 U.S. soldiers were killed when their helicopters were shot down by Somali militias in Mogadishu. A White House official said that Katherine Dhanani, who had been named in February, withdrew for personal reasons, without giving more details. Washington had touted the nomination of the career diplomat Dhanani as signalling the deepening relationship between the two countries. |
| Asia's drifting boatpeople a looming humanitarian crisis - U.N. | | By Kanupriya Kapoor and Aubrey Belford LHOKSUKON, Indonesia/LANGKAWI, Malaysia (Reuters) - Several thousand migrants, many of them hungry and sick, are adrift in boats in Southeast Asian seas and governments of the region must rescue them quickly to avert a "massive humanitarian crisis", the United Nations said on Tuesday. It appealed to authorities in Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia not to push back boats that are packed with refugees who have been abandoned by smugglers following a Thai government crackdown on traffickers. There has been a surge in migrants from impoverished Bangladesh and Myanmar to Malaysia and Indonesia following the clampdown in Thailand, usually the first destination in the region's people-smuggling network.
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| Killings by suspected Ugandan rebels draw protest in eastern Congo | | | Hundreds of people protested in the east of Democratic Republic of Congo on Tuesday after a machete attack by suspected Ugandan rebels in which a local activist said at least six people were killed. Activist Teddy Kataliko told Reuters that seven other people were wounded and two missing after men with machetes and hatchets attacked a village on Monday evening. An army spokesman, Major Victor Masandi, said he know of three deaths. Millions died in eastern Congo in a 1998-2003 war that sucked in more than a half dozen neighbouring countries, and the region remains ravaged by dozens of armed groups who contest its vast reserves of gold, diamonds and tin. |
| New York's 'cannibal cop' back in spotlight at appeals court | | By Joseph Ax NEW YORK (Reuters) - The police officer, in lurid online conversations that would earn him the tabloid nickname "cannibal cop," said he had selected his kidnapping victim: Andria, a former college friend who lived in Ohio. On Tuesday, a federal appeals court in New York will consider whether that gruesome imagery was part of an actual criminal plot or simply the dark but harmless fantasies of an extreme fetishist. A jury convicted New York City Police Officer Gilberto Valle in March 2013 of planning to kidnap, cook and eat several women. The office of Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara will ask the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday to reinstate Valle's conviction.
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