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| Bank parents or main units seen pleading guilty over FX - sources | | | By Karen Freifeld NEW YORK (Reuters) - The parent companies or main banking units of as many as five major banks, rather than their smaller subsidiaries, are expected to plead guilty to U.S. criminal charges over manipulation of foreign exchange rates, people familiar with the matter said. A handful of banks will likely resolve forex-rigging investigations by the U.S. Justice Department as soon as this week: JPMorgan Chase & Co Citigroup , British banks Royal Bank of Scotland and Barclays and Swiss bank UBS . It would be unprecedented for parent companies or main banking units, rather than smaller subsidiaries, of so many major banks, to plead guilty to criminal charges in a coordinated action, the people said. Peter Carr, a spokesman for the U.S. Justice Department, declined comment. |
| Boston bomber told nun 'no one' should suffer as his victims did | | By Scott Malone and Elizabeth Barber BOSTON (Reuters) - Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev told a Roman Catholic nun and prominent death-penalty opponent that "no one deserves to suffer" as the victims of the deadly 2013 attacks had, she testified Monday as the defense rested its case to spare his life. He said no one deserves to suffer like they did," said the 76-year-old nun, Sister Helen Prejean, whom the defense called to testify as it wrapped up its case to spare Tsarnaev's life. Prejean, who said she had met with Tsarnaev five times this year at the request of defense attorneys, inspired the 1993 book and 1995 film "Dead Man Walking." She is the public face of the New Orleans-based Ministry Against the Death Penalty and has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. Prosecutors, who are seeking the death penalty, contend that Tsarnaev, an ethnic Chechen, was an adherent of al Qaeda's militant Islamic ideology who mounted the attack "to punish America" for U.S. military campaigns in Muslim lands.
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| Border fire from Yemen kills Bangladeshis in Saudi Arabia | | | At least two Bangladesh nationals were killed last week in Saudi Arabia when Houthi rebels in Yemen fired mortar shells across the border into Saudi Arabia, Bangladesh's ministry of foreign affairs said on Monday. Mizan and Abdul Jalil were working at a farm in the Najran area, 650 kilometers (400 miles) from Jeddah and 50 km (30 miles) from the Yemen border. Saudi Arabia has been leading an Arab coalition in air strikes against Iranian-allied Houthi rebels who have seized large areas of Yemen. |
| Spanish court to decide on legality of strike | | | By Iain Rogers MADRID (Reuters) - A Spanish court could decide by Wednesday on the legality of a strike protesting against a new TV rights law called by the players' union (AFE) which is threatening the final two La Liga match days and King's Cup final. The AFE announced last week that players would go on strike indefinitely from May 16 and the professional league (LFP), which represents the 42 clubs in the top two divisions, filed a petition to have the action declared illegal. The Spanish soccer federation (RFEF) had earlier decided to halt all competition from the same date, a move the LFP is also seeking to block. The AFE and RFEF are unhappy with a new law mandating collective bargaining for domestic television rights and say their interests have not been sufficiently taken into account. |
| At least 8 Malian soldiers killed in ambush in north -source, radio | | | At least eight Malian soldiers were killed and 11 others injured in an ambush by rebel fighters near the northern town of Timbuktu on Monday, a military source and a local radio said. The military source said eight of the 11 soldiers were seriously injured and the toll might rise. Malian state radio's Timbuktu regional station reported the same number of dead and injured without giving details. Mali's army has confirmed an ambush took place but not given any further details. |
| Boko Haram kills two soldiers in Cameroon - sources | | | Gunmen from Nigeria's Boko Haram Islamist militant group killed two Cameroonian soldiers in fighting at the weekend that also left three militants dead, military officers said on Monday. The clash highlights how pockets of Boko Haram fighters remain active despite progress this year by troops from Nigeria and neighbouring Niger, Chad and Cameroon in breaking the militants' hold on vast swathes of territory. A Cameroonian officer said clashes erupted when soldiers were dispatched to check reports of Boko Haram militants moving towards the northern town of Zelevet, near the border with Nigeria. A second officer said three Boko Haram fighters were killed and a female militant captured. |
| Al Jazeera journalist sues employer for negligence - lawyer | | | An Al Jazeera television journalist on trial in Egypt has filed a lawsuit in a Canadian court accusing his employer of negligence and has demanded $100 million in compensation, his lawyer said on Monday. Mohamed Fahmy, who spent more than 400 days in a Cairo jail on charges of aiding a terrorist organisation, suggested Al Jazeera's actions landed him in jail. Al Jazeera had no immediate comment. Fahmy and another Al Jazeera journalist, Baher Mohamed, were originally sentenced to seven to 10 years in prison on charges that included spreading lies to help a "terrorist organization", a reference to the Muslim Brotherhood. |
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