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| Hundreds protest in Cairo over police shooting | | Friday, February 19, 2016 2:54 AM | |
| Hundreds of protesters gathered in front of the Cairo security directorate on Thursday night after a policeman shot dead a man in the street, in the latest outburst of anger over alleged police brutality in Egypt. A statement from the Cairo security directorate said the policeman had shot dead a driver after an argument and was forced to flee a mob of local people who attempted to catch and kill him. Footage posted on social media showed hundreds of people massing outside the security directorate to protest the death.
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| Biden says Obama won't be able to pick the 'most liberal jurist' | | Friday, February 19, 2016 2:35 AM | |
| By Ayesha Rascoe WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama cannot select the most liberal possible candidate for the U.S. Supreme Court and should seek a "consensus" pick who could attract Republican support, Vice President Joe Biden said on Thursday. A fierce political fight is brewing as the Democratic president prepares to name a successor to conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, who died on Saturday. Obama's nominee could change the court's balance of power.
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| This is not a pipe - the surrealist Brexit summit | | Friday, February 19, 2016 1:06 AM | |
| As Europe's leaders bargained through the night on a deal to help Prime Minister David Cameron keep Britain in the EU, a "war room" of lawyers wrangled over how to reconcile diametrically opposite meanings of the same three words - "ever closer union". It reminded one official of Belgian surrealist Rene Magritte's painting of a pipe, "Ceci n'est pas une pipe" (This is Not a Pipe), when is a thing real and when merely an image? Does the treaty vow commit governments to build a United States of Europe, as the Union's federalist host Belgium hopes and eurosceptic Britons fear?
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| U.S. Vice President Biden says 'no desire' to be on Supreme Court - MSNBC | | Friday, February 19, 2016 1:02 AM | |
| U.S. Vice President Joe Biden said on Thursday that he will be "deeply involved" in advising President Barack Obama on picking a candidate for the Supreme Court but said he had "no desire" himself to be named to the nation's highest court. Obama is preparing to name a successor to conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, who died on Saturday. Biden, who was a long-time chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said in an interview that Obama has asked for his advice on who to choose, and believes the president will choose a "consensus candidate." "I haven't even had a chance to sit down with him yet to talk about the potential candidates," Biden told MSNBC's Rachel Maddow.
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| Colombia stops visits by FARC leaders aimed at briefing fighters on peace talks | | Friday, February 19, 2016 12:51 AM | |
| | Colombia's government on Thursday suspended further visits to the country by Marxist FARC negotiators, saying they violated the terms under which they were allowed to return from Havana to explain agreements reached at peace talks to their fighters. Three members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia's, or FARC, negotiating team had been given permission to travel from Cuba, where talks have been held since late 2012, to a rural area in northern La Guajira province to provide details of accords. Chief government negotiator Humberto de la Calle said President Juan Manuel Santos had suspended any further visits and asked the International Committee of the Red Cross to help the FARC representatives return to Cuba immediately. |
| Key U.S. lawmaker suggests openness to encryption legislation after Apple order | | By Dustin Volz WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A senior U.S. lawmaker expressed a new willingness to support legislation establishing ground rules for when technology firms should grant authorities access to their products, after Apple Inc said it would fight a court order to unlock an iPhone linked to the San Bernardino shooting rampage. Apple said it would fight the court order, which it said would set a dangerous precedent that could ultimately undermine the security of its iPhones.
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| SGS, Weatherford trade blame over Iraq's missing nuclear material | | By Michael Shields and Stephen Kalin ZURICH/BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Swiss inspections group SGS and U.S. group Weatherford International Plc traded recriminations on Thursday, both denying responsibility for the disappearance last year of radioactive material used to test pipes at an oil field in southern Iraq. Reuters reported on Wednesday that Iraq was searching for a "highly dangerous" radioactive source whose theft in November had raised fears among Iraqi officials that it could be used as a weapon if acquired by Islamic State. SGS said in a statement that the equipment and material, when not in use, had been stored in a "secured bunker" provided by Weatherford, which it said was the "main contractor" and had hired its Turkish unit to perform the tests.
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| Pope says Trump 'not Christian' in a sign of global concern | | By Emily Flitter NEWBERRY, S.C. (Reuters) - Pope Francis forcefully injected himself into the U.S. presidential campaign on Thursday, assailing Republican candidate Donald Trump's views on U.S. immigration as "not Christian" in a sign of growing international concern at the billionaire businessman's election prospects. Trump struck back. Francis told reporters during a free-wheeling conversation on his flight home from a visit to Mexico, "A person who thinks only about building walls, wherever they may be, and not building bridges, is not Christian." Trump has accused Mexico of sending rapists and drug runners across the United States' southern border and has vowed if elected president to build a wall to keep out immigrants who enter illegally.
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| U.S. prosecutors to turn over records on 9/11 conspiracy suspects | | By Lacey Johnson FORT MEADE, Md. (Reuters) - U.S. prosecutors said on Thursday they would turn over more than 1,000 pages of CIA documents to attorneys for five men charged with plotting the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington. Defence lawyers for the men, held at a U.S. military base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, have fought for years to gain access to records about how their clients were treated by the Central Intelligence Agency. All five contend they were tortured in secret CIA prisons before arriving at Guantanamo in 2006.
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| New guilty plea, charges in global press release hacking scheme | | | A third trader has entered a guilty plea over what U.S. authorities have called a more than $100 million international scheme to hack into newswires that distribute corporate press releases, and use stolen information to conduct insider trading. Arkadiy Dubovoy, 51, pleaded guilty on Thursday to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, according to U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman in New Jersey. Dubovoy, of Alpharetta, Georgia, entered his plea before U.S. District Judge Madeline Cox Arleo in Newark, New Jersey. |
| Ivory Coast soldiers get life sentences for killing ex-president | | | A military tribunal in Ivory Coast on Thursday sentenced three senior military officials to life in prison for the 2002 murder of former junta leader turned president Robert Guei, and handed out lesser terms to others. The sentencing ends a three-week trial in the Ivory Coast, the economic powerhouse of francophone West Africa, which has been going through a reconciliation process after more than a decade of political turmoil. Guei was named head of state after a coup d'etat in 1999 but lost an election to Laurent Gbagbo a year later. |
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