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U.S. says 'disappointed' Sudan's Bashir allowed to leave South Africa | | WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States is disappointed South Africa did not take action to prevent Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, who faces genocide charges, from leaving an African Union conference in Johannesburg on Monday, a State Department spokesman said. State Department spokesman Jeff Rathke, in a news briefing, declined to say South Africa should have arrested Bashir but said "clearly, some action should have been taken." (Writing by Bill Trott; Editing by Susan Heavey) |
Sex, lies and debt potentially exposed by U.S. data hack | | By Arshad Mohammed and Joseph Menn WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When a retired 51-year-old military man disclosed in a U.S. security clearance application that he had a 20-year affair with his former college roommate's wife, it was supposed to remain a secret between him and the government. The disclosure last week that hackers had penetrated a database containing such intimate and possibly damaging facts about millions of government and private employees has shaken Washington.
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Vatican orders former archbishop to stand trial for sex abuse | | By Philip Pullella VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Jozef Wesolowski, a former archbishop and papal ambassador to the Dominican Republic, will stand trial on criminal charges of paying for sex with minors and possessing child pornography, the Vatican said on Monday. Vatican sources said the decision by the president of the Vatican's tribunal to indict Wesolowski could not have been taken without a green light from Pope Francis. Wesolowski's trial will be the highest profile judicial event in the Vatican since Paolo Gabriele, a former papal butler, was convicted in 2012 of stealing and leaking private papers of former Pope Benedict XVI. |
As Bashir leaves, South African court calls for his arrest | | By Dinky Mkhize PRETORIA (Reuters) - Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir flew out of South Africa on Monday in defiance of a Pretoria court that later said he should have been arrested to face genocide charges at the International Criminal Court. Despite a legal order for him to stay in the country ahead of the ruling on his detention, the government let Bashir leave unhindered, with South Africa's ruling party accusing the ICC of being biased against Africans and "no longer useful". Bashir has been indicted by the ICC over war crimes and crimes against humanity but South Africa gave him immunity along with all delegates attending an African Union summit in Johannesburg this week.
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Sepp Blatter could still perform a U-turn and stand again | | By Brian Homewood ZURICH (Reuters) - Sepp Blatter could still perform a U-turn on his promise to stand down as FIFA president, a former adviser said on Monday, while FIFA did not directly deny the possibility. Klaus Stoehlker, who advised Blatter during the recent election campaign, told Sky News that Blatter could remain head of world soccer's governing body if a "convincing candidate" to replace him did not emerge. FIFA said in a statement that Stoehlker, who was in a meeting when contacted by Reuters and unable to comment, was no longer working with Blatter.
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In Bashir fiasco, Pretoria makes clear Africa comes first | | By Ed Cropley JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - From the moment Omar al-Bashir touched down in South Africa, Pretoria had a choice: arrest the Sudanese president for alleged war crimes and face fury from the rest of the continent, or grant him safe passage home and take flak from the West. The decision, confirmed by the departure of Bashir's plane into the skies above the capital on Monday, spoke volumes about South Africa's priorities - Africa comes first, and legal niceties such as the authority of domestic courts or international statutes a distant second. It was a dramatic volte face from 2009 when, shortly after Bashir's indictment by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur, his South African counterpart Jacob Zuma made clear he was not welcome.
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S.African court issues arrest warrant for Bashir - TV | | PRETORIA (Reuters) - South African High court judges on Monday ordered that Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir be arrested, saying they were concerned that a order of the court to have Bashir kept in the country was not complied with, a local TV station reported. "The respondents are forthwith compelled to take all reasonable steps to arrest President Bashir ... and detain him pending a formal request for his surrender from the International Criminal Court," Judge Dunstan Mlambo said. (Reporting by Dinky Mkhize; Writing by Mfuneko Toyana; Editing by James Macharia)
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Calls grow for inquiry into alleged Australian people-smuggler payments | | By Matt Siegel SYDNEY/JAKARTA (Reuters) - Calls grew on Monday for an inquiry into reports that Australian officials paid people-smugglers bound for Australia thousands of dollars to turn their boat back to Indonesia, with Jakarta and the United Nations also expressing serious concern. Australia has vowed to stop asylum-seekers reaching its shores, turning boats back to Indonesia when it can and sending asylum-seekers for long-term detention in camps in impoverished South Pacific nations Papua New Guinea and Nauru. A boat captain and two crew members arrested on suspicion of human trafficking told Indonesian police Australian authorities had paid each of them A$5,000 ($3,860) to turn back their vessel with 65 migrants on board. |
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