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| Repeat champ leads pack as Alaska's Iditarod dog sled race enters home stretch | | By Steve Quinn JUNEAU, Alaska (Reuters) - One musher in Alaska's grueling sled-dog race appears to stand between Dallas Seavey's third consecutive Iditarod title and a painful second place finish - his father, Mitch. As competitors in the nearly 1,000-mile race through the U.S. state's frigid wilderness, father and son have been exchanging the lead while being pushed by upstart Brent Sass and perennial contender Aliy Zirkle. Based on last year's times, a winner could cross the finish line in Nome as early as 4 a.m. local time (1200 GMT) on Tuesday.
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| China calls for FBI cooperation in internet security, counter-terrorism | | China wants to have deeper internet security and anti-terrorism cooperation with the United States, China's public security minister told the visiting director of the FBI, state news agency Xinhua said. Meeting in Beijing, the minister, Guo Shengkun, told James B. Comey that China was willing to enhance strategic mutual trust and the respect of each others core interests, Xinhua said late on Monday.
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| Chinese man in Manila given millions from Bangladesh heist - lawmaker | | By Karen Lema MANILA (Reuters) - More than $30 million of the money hackers stole from the Bangladesh central bank's account at the New York Fed was handed over in cash to an ethnic Chinese man in Manila, a Philippines senator looking into the suspected laundering scheme said. The cash deliveries over several days from a foreign exchange broker were made up of 600 million pesos ($12.87 million) and around $18 million, which altogether would have meant a haul of at least 780,000 banknotes. "Obviously this is not one bang, it was done in instalments," Teofisto Guingona, head of the Philippine Senate's anti-corruption committee, told Reuters ahead of a panel hearing on the case that is due to open later on Tuesday.
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| China anti-graft campaign to tackle poverty relief funds misuse | | | China's anti-graft campaign will take on a new dimension by targeting officials who misuse or embezzle poverty relief funds, the country's top prosecutor told state media in an interview published on Tuesday. Cao Jianming told the official China Daily graft probes will become "more aggressive" by going after grassroots officials to stamp out abuse of finances for rural living allowances, education and medical insurance, as well as ecological protection. Officials overseeing traffic management in rural areas, hypdropower and electric power infrastructure, in addition to rural home renovations will also come under scrutiny, Cao said. |
| Analysis - Apple fight could escalate with demand for 'source code' | | By Joseph Menn SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The latest filing in the legal war between the planet's most powerful government and its most valuable company gave one indication of how the high-stakes confrontation could escalate even further. In what observers of the case called a carefully calibrated threat, the U.S. Justice Department last week suggested that it would be willing to demand that Apple turn over the "source code" that underlies its products as well as the so-called "signing key" that validates software as coming from Apple. Together, those two things would give the government the power to develop its own spying software and trick any iPhone into installing it.
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| Exclusive - Chinese hackers behind U.S. ransomware attacks: security firms | | Hackers using tactics and tools previously associated with Chinese government-supported computer network intrusions have joined the booming cyber crime industry of ransomware, four security firms that investigated attacks on U.S. companies said. Ransomware, which involves encrypting a target's computer files and then demanding payment to unlock them, has generally been considered the domain of run-of-the-mill cyber criminals. "It is obviously a group of skilled of operators that have some amount of experience conducting intrusions," said Phil Burdette, who heads an incident response team at Dell SecureWorks.
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| In secret meetings, Taliban rejected Pakistan pressure on peace process | | By Mehreen Zahra-Malik and Jibran Ahmed ISLAMABAD/PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) - Pakistani officials threatened to expel Afghanistan's Taliban from bases in Pakistan if they did not join peace talks this month, but the militants rebuffed their traditional patron, two officials said, casting doubt on how much influence Islamabad retains over them. After the secret meetings with Pakistani officials about two weeks ago, the Taliban's Supreme Council met at an undisclosed location and voted to reject the talks scheduled for early March with the Afghan government, according to a council member. Instead, the insurgents are now pouring back into Afghanistan for what they say will be a fierce spring offensive to be launched soon. Pakistan's influence over the insurgents is the lynchpin to the peace plan developed over last few months by Afghanistan, Pakistan, the United States and China to bring an end to the 15-year-old war in Afghanistan.
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| Harvard to scrap law school seal associated with slavery | | By Marcus E. Howard NEW YORK (Reuters) - Harvard University will replace the official shield of its prestigious law school which features the family crest of an 18th century slave holder, after students objected to its racist associations, the school said on Monday. The Harvard Corporation, the Massachusetts university's governing body, voted to approve a recommendation by a Harvard Law School committee to retire the shield. Harvard President Drew Faust told Martha Minow, dean of the law school, on Monday that the university backed the recommendation.
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| Trump will not be charged with 'inciting riot' in North Carolina | | By Colleen Jenkins WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (Reuters) - A North Carolina sheriff's office said on Monday it would not charge Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump or his campaign with "inciting a riot" at a rally in the state last week. North Carolina is one of five states holding Republican and Democratic primary elections on Tuesday in the race to select candidates for November's U.S. presidential election. The Cumberland County Sheriff's Office, based in Fayetteville, earlier had said it was reviewing whether Trump or his campaign incited a disturbance at a rally last Wednesday.
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| Al Qaeda gunmen drank in bar before unleashing Ivory Coast attack | | Monday, March 14, 2016 11:35 PM | |
| By Joe Bavier GRAND BASSAM, Ivory Coast (Reuters) - Gunmen from al Qaeda's North African branch drank beer at a beachside bar before launching a shooting rampage at an Ivory Coast resort town that left at least 18 people dead, the group's third major attack in West Africa in four months. Sunday's raid, details of which are beginning to emerge in witness and official accounts, was the furthest yet from al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb's (AQIM) traditional desert base, a worrying indication of the militants' growing reach. The attack raised questions about Ivory Coast's preparedness for such an attack, with some asking why such a sensitive target was left so vulnerable.
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