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Platini has more explaining to do, German league chief | | UEFA chief Michel Platini must provide more details over a payment of more than $2 million from soccer's ruling body FIFA and its troubled president Sepp Blatter, German football league (DFL) president Reinhard Rauball said on Thursday. Platini, president of European soccer's governing body and until recently the favourite to succeed Blatter, has been in the spotlight since Swiss police placed FIFA's leader under criminal investigation and accused him of making a "disloyal payment" of two million Swiss francs ($2.05 million) to the Frenchman in 2011.
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EU court rules migrants who defy expulsion can be jailed | | European Union countries can imprison migrants who re-enter their territory after being expelled, the EU's top court ruled on Thursday in a judgment likely to be closely watched across the continent as it struggles to cope with a migration crisis. The European Court of Justice was considering the case of an Albanian national who was deported from Italy in 2012 but returned to the country, in breach of a three-year entry ban. More than half a million migrants have entered the European Union this year.
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Assault on Thai government websites 'symbolic', minister says | | By Aukkarapon Niyomyat and Panarat Thepgumpanat BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thailand on Thursday played down a coordinated attack on several government websites, with the technology minister pledging that a controversial plan for a single internet gateway would not disrupt social media and business communications. Thailand's military government has shown a zero-tolerance approach to dissent and has banned protests since a coup in May last year. At least seven websites connected to the government were forced offline late on Wednesday in a protest organised on social media website Facebook against the plan to channel internet content through one gateway, from about 10 now. |
Prominent Turkish journalist attacked in latest sign of pressure on media | | A prominent Turkish journalist has been beaten up outside his home, his newspaper said on Thursday, in what the country's main opposition party called a sign of growing social tension under President Tayyip Erdogan. Ahmet Hakan, a columnist for Turkey's leading secular Hurriyet newspaper and a host on broadcaster CNN Turk, was followed home from the television station by four men in a black car late on Wednesday, before being assaulted near his residence, according to Hurriyet Editor-in-Chief Sedat Ergin. Ergin did not say who he thought might be behind the attack, which cames just weeks after prosecutors launched an investigation into the newspaper's owner, Dogan Media Group, on accusations of "terrorism propaganda". |
Newsweek magazine says hacking disrupts its Pakistan website | | WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Newsweek Pakistan said on Thursday that its website had been disrupted by computer hackers. "Our website is offline due to a hacking incident. We are working on resolving this at the earliest. We apologize for the inconvenience," the news magazine said in a post on Twitter. The primary site for Newsweek, which is owned by privately-held IBT Media Inc, remained operational. (Reporting by Lisa Lambert; Editing by Susan Heavey) |
Germany took in more than 200,000 migrants last month | | Germany took in more than 200,000 migrants in September, politicians said on Thursday, a new record which is likely to fuel the debate about how many newcomers Europe's most populous country can absorb. Germany's mainstream parties initially backed Chancellor Angela Merkel's warm welcome for refugees but the mood has turned more critical, with practical worries about how to feed and house so many people setting the tone. "In September alone, we registered more refugees than for the whole of last year," Stephan Mayer, a lawmaker from the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU) party, told parliament, putting the figure at over 200,000.
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India's offshore tax amnesty recovers just $575 mln - government | | By Manoj Kumar NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India recovered a meagre $575 million of unreported funds under a tax amnesty scheme that offered a chance to citizens to disclose overseas assets by paying tax and a penalty, raising doubts over a campaign against tax offenders. Only 638 people declared assets under the tax amnesty that closed on Tuesday. Tax authorities had expected many more disclosures. |
U.N. calls on Sri Lanka to pursue war crimes with credible process | | The United Nations Human Rights Council on Thursday called on Sri Lanka to establish a credible justice process, including foreign judges and prosecutors, to investigate alleged war crimes committed during the long conflict that ended in 2009. The 47 member state Geneva forum adopted a resolution, without a vote, that was led by the United States and Britain, and backed by Sri Lanka itself. Government forces and Tamil Tiger rebels "most likely" committed war crimes including mass killings of civilians during their 26-year war that should be prosecuted by a special court with international judges, the U.N. said in a landmark report issued last month that formed the basis of the resolution.
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Kyrgyzstan set to cling to Russia in face of security threats | | By Olga Dzyubenko BISHKEK (Reuters) - Pro-Russian parties look set to retain their dominance when Kyrgyzstan elects a new parliament on Sunday, but the apparent stability masks ethnic tensions and rising Islamist radicalism in the former Soviet republic. The mostly Muslim country of six million people has swung closer to Moscow and further away from the West: under a deadline set by its parliament, the United States last year shut down an airbase in Kyrgzystan that had served U.S. operations in Afghanistan since 2001. Russia retains a military airbase in the Central Asian state, fearing an advance of militant Islam in the region.
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Volkswagen seeks to boost finances to meet emission scandal costs | | By Andreas Cremer BERLIN (Reuters) - Volkswagen is looking at ways to cut costs and boost cash flow and could sell more shares if the price of clearing up a scandal over its rigging of diesel emissions tests puts its credit rating at risk. One source said raising money by selling more shares would become likely if the cash costs of the scandal exceeded a "critical level", without elaborating. Volkswagen declined to comment.
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