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| Armed jewel thieves leave 'shaken' Kardashian tied up in Paris bathroom |
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By Leigh Thomas PARIS (Reuters) - Masked men robbed Kim Kardashian at gunpoint in the early hours on Monday, leaving her tied up in the bathroom of her luxury residence in Paris and stealing millions of dollars' worth of jewellery, police and her publicist said. Five attackers, wearing ski masks and clothes with police marking, struck around 3 a.m. (0100 GMT) inside the exclusive apartment block where Kardashian was staying while attending Paris Fashion Week, a police source told Reuters. After she was discovered - "badly shaken but physically unharmed," according to her publicist - and news of her ordeal spread, the reality star's husband, rapper Kanye West, abruptly ended a performance in New York less than an hour into his set.
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| Sturgeon says British PM May does not care about Scotland over Brexit |
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Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon accused Theresa May of ignoring Scots over Britain's exit from the European Union after the British Prime Minister indicated that Scotland will not have a veto. Sturgeon, whose nationalist party is not ruling out a new Scottish independence vote, said on Twitter that May was "going out of her way to say Scotland's voice and interests don't matter". "Strange approach from someone who wants to keep (the) UK together," Sturgeon said.
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| Kim Kardashian robbed at gunpoint in Paris, millions in jewels taken - police |
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Five gunmen took millions of dollars of jewellery from U.S. reality TV star Kim Kardashian at a luxury residence in central Paris early on Monday, a police source said. The armed men robbed Kardashian at gunpoint at around 3 a.m. (0100 GMT), but no one was hurt, the source told Reuters. Kardashian has stayed there at least once before, in 2014, before her marriage to rapper Kanye West.
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| Colombia's Santos, FARC scramble to revive peace after shock vote |
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By Helen Murphy and Julia Symmes Cobb BOGOTA (Reuters) - Colombia's government and Marxist FARC guerrillas will scramble on Monday to revive a plan to end their 52-year war after voters rejected the hard-negotiated deal as too lenient on the rebels in a shock result that plunged the nation into uncertainty. Putting on a brave face after a major political defeat, President Juan Manuel Santos offered hope to those who backed his four-year peace negotiation with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) in Cuba. Latin America's longest conflict has killed 220,000 people.
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