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| Britain to ship record amount of nuclear waste to U.S. - UK government source | | | Britain will ship 700 kilograms of nuclear waste to the United States under a deal to be announced by Prime Minister David Cameron at a nuclear security summit in Washington on Thursday, a British government source said. In return for the shipment, the largest ever movement of highly enriched uranium, the United States will send Europe a different type of nuclear waste that can be used to produce medical isotopes for the treatment of some cancers. "The prime minister will be announcing a landmark deal that we have agreed with the US and with (European Atomic Energy Community) Euratom," the British government source said, on condition of anonymity. |
| Amnesty says workers at Qatar World Cup stadium suffer abuse | | By Tom Finn DOHA (Reuters) - Workers in Qatar renovating a 2022 World Cup stadium have suffered human rights abuses two years after the tournament's organisers drafted worker welfare standards in the wake of criticism, Amnesty International said. Dozens of construction workers from Nepal and India were charged recruitment fees by agents in their home countries, housed in squalid accommodation and barred from leaving the country by employers in Qatar who confiscated their passports, Amnesty said in a report released on Thursday. The head of Qatar's Supreme Committee for Delivery & Legacy, which is responsible for the delivery of all tournament-related infrastructure, said Amnesty had identified challenges in worker conditions and Doha was working to reduce these kinds of abuses which he said occur on construction sites all over the world.
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| Trump sounds off on abortion; criticism comes from all sides | | | By Doina Chiacu and Emily Stephenson WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump said on Wednesday that women who end pregnancies should face punishment if the United States bans abortion, triggering a torrent of criticism from both sides of the abortion debate, including from his White House rivals. After MSNBC broadcast a clip of an interview with Trump, the billionaire rowed back his remarks, first saying that the abortion issue should be handled by states and later saying that doctors who performed abortions should be the person held responsible. "The doctor or any other person performing this illegal act upon a woman would be held legally responsible, not the woman," Trump said in his last statement. |
| U.S. transgender community fights against 'bathroom bills' | | By Colleen Jenkins WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (Reuters) - After scoring wins for same-sex marriage rights and anti-discrimination protections, U.S. equality advocacy groups now find themselves in a battle over bathrooms. North Carolina last week became the first state to enact a law requiring transgender people to choose restrooms that match the gender on their birth certificate rather than the one with which they identify. At least 13 other states also have considered so-called bathroom bills targeting the transgender community this year, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
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| Serbian firebrand Seselj faces verdict in U.N. war crimes trial | | The verdict may prove as difficult for the U.N. Criminal Triibunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) to manage as the decade-long trial, which suffered multiple delays as Seselj represented himself and challenged the court at every turn. Serb paramilitaries drove tens of thousands of Muslims and Croats from their homes.
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| Suspected suicide bomber not one of Nigeria's missing Chibok girls | | A suspected suicide bomber intercepted in northern Cameroon last week before she could blow herself up is not one of 219 schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram in the Nigerian town of Chibok in 2014, an African public advocacy group said on Wednesday. The Murtala Muhammed Foundation (MMF), a non-government organisation, partnered with Nigeria's government to help parents from Chibok verify the girl's identity after she claimed to be among the missing students. Nigeria's government had said it was keen to ascertain the girl's identity so that she could possibly assist the government in investigations regarding the fate and whereabouts of the missing Chibok girls.
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| U.S. anti-drug plane for Afghanistan still flightless after $86 million - report | | | By Julia Harte WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government spent $86 million over seven years developing a counter-narcotics surveillance aircraft for Afghanistan, but the plane has never carried out a mission and is sitting idle in Delaware, a watchdog said on Wednesday. After years of war in Afghanistan, a global hub of opium and hashish production, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration had until now largely avoided criticism for questionable spending of the sort levelled widely against the U.S. military. The project was an "ineffective and wasteful use of government resources," Horowitz's audit report said. |
| California judge delays Cosby's deposition in sex abuse lawsuit | | By Alex Dobuzinskis SANTA MONICA, Calif. (Reuters) - A California judge on Wednesday agreed to postpone a sworn deposition of comedian Bill Cosby in a civil lawsuit accusing the entertainer of sexual assault in order to avoid interfering with a criminal case against him in Pennsylvania. Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Craig Kaplan said the delay was designed to permit Cosby to present testimony in his own defence in the civil case without fear of revealing anything that could be used against him in the criminal proceedings in Pennsylvania. Kaplan also put on hold any further deposition of Judy Huth, who brought the civil lawsuit alleging that Cosby molested her in 1974 at the Playboy Mansion in Los Angeles when she was 15 after plying her with alcohol.
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| Brazil's president scrambles to hold coalition together | | By Anthony Boadle BRASILIA (Reuters) - Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff scrambled on Wednesday to hold together her crumbling ruling coalition by negotiating key government posts with remaining allies, aides said, as key partners discussed abandoning her amid impeachment proceedings. A day after Rousseff's biggest coalition partner broke away and ordered its six ministers in her Cabinet to resign, another coalition ally - the Progressive Party (PP) - convened a meeting for April 11-12 to decide whether to leave as well. A presidential aide said the government was reaching out to individual members of allied parties to offer positions that have opened up after the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB) bolted on Tuesday.
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| Obama gives second chance to 61 convicted drug offenders | | By Alana Wise WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama commuted prison sentences for 61 non-violent drug offenders on Wednesday and the White House said he hopes to issue more pardons and commutations during his remaining months in office. Obama has pushed to reform the U.S. criminal justice system to reduce the number of people serving long sentences for non-violent drug crimes, a rare area where the Democratic president has garnered support from Republican lawmakers. "It does not make sense for a non-violent drug offender to be getting 20 years, 30 years, in some cases life in prison.
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| Two Turks among six killed in gun attack in Somalia's capital | | | Six people, including two Turkish nationals, were killed when unidentified gunmen attacked a minibus carrying workers to a Turkish-run hospital in the Somali capital Mogadishu on Wednesday, police said. The gunmen, who were in a car, opened fire at the minibus as it passed in Mogadishu's Hodan district. "Gunmen opened fire on minibus. |
| Ireland's Green party pulls out of government talks | | Ireland's Green party on Wednesday pulled out of two sets of talks being led by the country's two major parties who are separately trying to form a minority government following an inconclusive parliamentary election last month. The Greens' two members of parliament, together with 15 independent lawmakers, have been in talks with the two rival parties who each want to get closest to a majority before seeking the other's consent to allow it to govern. "We have decided to withdraw from discussions on the drafting of a partnership agreement for a minority government.
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| Peru's jailed ex-leader, Fujimori, hospitalized after dizzy spells | | Peru's former president, Alberto Fujimori, was transferred from his prison cell to a hospital on Wednesday to undergo neurological tests after feeling dizzy and briefly losing the strength in his legs, his doctor said. Fujimori, 77, serving a 25-year sentence for human rights abuse and corruption during his 1990-2000 presidency, will likely spend the night in the hospital, said Dr. Alejandro Aguinaga, who was once Fujimori's health minister. "It appears to be manageable ... we're doing a (MRI) scan now," Aguinaga said by phone.
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| France investigates man on suspicion of planning 'imminent' attack | | | A French judge on Wednesday put under formal investigation a Frenchman arrested last week on suspicion of planning an imminent act of "extreme violence", Paris' prosecutor said. Francois Molins said the "unprecedented" amount of weapons, including five assault rifles and handguns as well as chemicals and explosives that could be used for a bomb, had been found at Reda Kriket's apartment. "Everything suggests that the discovery of this cache avoided an act of extreme violence by a terrorist network," Molins told a news conference. |
| EU-India summit fails to defuse row over Italian marines | | By Thomas Escritt and Francesco Guarascio THE HAGUE/BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union and India failed on Wednesday to defuse a long-running row over two Italian marines accused of murder and the case moved to an international tribunal after four years of diplomatic squabbles. At a joint summit in Brussels, held after delays imposed by Italy, the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and EU leaders maintained their positions over the case. In 2012, India arrested two Italian marines who were escorting an oil tanker on suspicion of shooting dead two fishermen they mistook for pirates.
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| Republican Trump says women should be punished for illegal abortions | | U.S. Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump said on Wednesday that women should face punishment if they receive abortions if the procedure is made illegal. "There has to be some form of punishment," Trump told MSNBC in a pretaped town hall. Asked what form of punishment he would advocate, Trump said, "That I don't know.
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| Pakistan's Sharif cancels visit to Washington in wake of attack | | Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has cancelled plans to visit the United States after a bombing on Sunday killed 70 people in Lahore, the White House said on Wednesday after Sharif and President Barack Obama spoke by phone. "President Obama expressed his understanding of Prime Minister Sharif's decision to cancel his visit to the United States and remain in Pakistan following this terrorist attack," the White House said in a statement.
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| Turkey, Greece scramble to start EU deal as migrant arrivals rise | | By Tulay Karadeniz and Dasha Afanasieva ANKARA (Reuters) - Five days before Turkey is due to begin taking back illegal migrants from Greece under a deal with the European Union, neither side is fully ready, with officials scrambling to be able to make at least a symbolic start as new arrivals rise. Turkey agreed with the EU this month to take back all migrants and refugees who cross illegally to Greece in exchange for financial aid, faster visa-free travel for Turks and slightly accelerated EU membership talks. A series of steps needs to be taken by Monday for the deal to get underway, according to people familiar with an internal European Commission report.
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| Second Peruvian bishop weighs in on elections, knocks frontrunner | | A second Roman Catholic leader in Peru weighed in on the country's presidential elections, saying on Wednesday that he would never vote for frontrunner Keiko Fujimori and praising a candidate condemned by an archbishop at Easter mass. Bishop Emeritus Luis Bambaren met left-leaning presidential hopeful Alfredo Barnechea three days after an archbishop said that voting for him would be "a sin" because of his position on gay rights and abortion. Barnechea has said he supports civil unions to give gay couples the legal benefits of marriage and was not against abortion in the case of rape.
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