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| German police give all-clear over package at Merkel's office | | BERLIN (Reuters) - German police gave the all-clear after investigating a package at Chancellor Angela Merkel's office in central Berlin on Wednesday. "The experts found nothing suspicious," a spokesman for Germany's Federal Police said. Earlier, ministers had carried on with their regular meeting after police cordoned off an area around the Chancellery. (Reporting by Hans-Edzard Busemann; Writing by Paul Carrel; Editing by Caroline Copley)
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| Islamic State video turns British attention to banned group | | By Michael Holden LONDON (Reuters) - If London-born convert Abu Rumaysah is confirmed as the front man in the latest Islamic State video, then he will be just the latest in a long line of militants to emerge from a banned group the authorities say breeds easy prey for jihadist recruiters. The video, purportedly filmed in Syria, shows a masked man taunting British Prime Minister David Cameron in London-accented English, before five prisoners are killed. The group was founded by Syrian-born Islamist cleric Omar Bakri in the late 1990s and called for Sharia law in Britain.
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| Vatican newspaper denounces "woeful" Charlie Hebdo cover | | The Vatican newspaper has criticised French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo for depicting God as a Kalashnikov-carrying killer, saying it was "woeful" and disrespectful to true believers of all faiths. The cover was an anniversary edition, commemorating the attacks a year ago when Islamist militants killed 12 during an assault on the Charlie Hebdo newsroom in Paris. The Vatican daily newspaper L'Osservatore Romano accused Charlie Hebdo of looking to "manipulate" faith.
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| FIFA ethics committee extends Valcke suspension | | FIFA's ethics watchdog has extended Secretary General Jerome Valcke's suspension from world soccer as it prepares a ruling over accusations of corruption involving the sale of World Cup tickets. Investigators for the ethics committee recommended on Tuesday that Valcke be banned for nine years and fined 100,000 Swiss francs ($98,990.30). The committee said in a statement on Wednesday that it's chief judge Hans-Joachim Eckert had suspended Valcke for another 45 days pending a final judgement, after a previous 90-day ban expired.
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| Bangladesh court upholds death sentence for Islamist leader | | Bangladesh's Supreme Court upheld the death penalty for a top Islamist party leader on Wednesday for atrocities committed during the country's war of independence from Pakistan more than four decades ago, a government lawyer said. Four opposition politicians, including three leaders of the Islamist party, the Jamaat-e-Islami, have been convicted by a war crimes tribunal and executed since late 2013. The executions have come amidst a rise in Islamist militant violence in Muslim-majority Bangladesh, with militant groups claiming the murder of two foreigners and four secular writers and a publisher last year.
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| Philippine "comfort women" fear China sea dispute blocks justice from Japan | | A group of Philippine "comfort women", forced to work in Japanese military brothels in World War Two, accused their government on Wednesday of not doing enough to help them secure an apology and compensation from Japan. South Korea and Japan last month reached an agreement to resolve the issue as Tokyo made an apology and promised about one billion yen ($8.43 million) for a fund to help survivors, though many South Koreans were angry a deal had been made. In a statement, the Philippine comfort women said they feared the South China Sea dispute with China had distracted Manila from seeking justice from Japan, which occupied the Philippines from 1942-45.
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| Merkel's office sealed off as police check package | | Police sealed off German Chancellor Angela Merkel's office to check a suspicious package as ministers gathered for a cabinet meeting in the building early on Wednesday. "We are investigating a suspicious package," a spokesman for Germany's Federal Police told Reuters. In 2010, police intercepted a packaged containing explosives sent from Greece to Merkel's office in Berlin.
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| A year after "Je suis Charlie", a divided France struggles | | By Ingrid Melander PARIS (Reuters) - One year on, an anxious, fragmented France is paying tribute to the victims of the killings at Charlie Hebdo magazine, with old divisions made worse by what President Francois Hollande has called "a terrible year". The slogan "Je suis Charlie," a defiant cry of solidarity that appeared everywhere immediately after the killings, is little seen a year on. There are several Frances and they are clashing," he said, describing a France of big cities turned towards the future, a rustbelt France that feels crushed by globalisation, and a France of housing estates that feels forgotten.
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| California prison reforms have reduced inmate numbers, not costs | | By Robin Respaut SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - In 2012, under court order to reduce prison overcrowding, California announced an ambitious criminal justice reform plan that promised not only to meet the court mandate but also to improve criminal sentencing and "save billions of dollars." Now, three years after implementing the changes, California has reduced its prison population by some 30,000 inmates, and the state is in the vanguard of a prison reform movement spreading across the country, with support from both the right and the left. The price tag for housing, feeding and caring for a prisoner in California has climbed to almost $64,000 annually, up from $49,000 five years ago. This fiscal year, despite the recent decline in inmate numbers, California's corrections budget is one of the largest ever at $10.1 billion.
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