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Bomb blast in Chile injures eight; government blames 'terrorists' | | By Felipe Iturrieta SANTIAGO (Reuters) - A bomb blast at a fast-food restaurant next to an underground train station in the Chilean capital of Santiago injured eight people on Monday. "At 1400 (1700 GMT) an explosive device was detonated in the center (mini-mall) by the metro station, and at the moment investigations are being carried out to determine the origin," said Mario Rozas, head of police communications. The blast occurred at lunchtime in a small shopping and eating area next to the Escuela Militar metro station in the affluent residential and shopping neighborhood of Las Condes. "This is an act that has all the hallmarks of a terrorist deed," said Alvaro Elizalde, a cabinet minister and government spokesman. |
Iraqi parliament sessions begins, expected to vote on next Iraqi government | | The Iraqi parliament began meeting on Monday night with the intention of voting on the government line-up presented by Prime Minister designate Haider al-Abadi. After the session began, the Kurdish bloc walked in and registered their names in a sign they were likely to approve the government. The Kurdish political bloc had debated for hours on Monday whether or not to participate in the government as the session began, and no Kurds had initially been present at the meeting aside from President Fuad Masum. |
Obama administration to meet with all members of Congress on Islamic State - sources | | Obama administration officials will hold briefings this week for all members of the U.S. Congress as the president makes his case for an offensive against Islamic State militants, congressional aides said on Monday. Administration officials will hold a briefing for all 435 members of the U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday, a House aide said. |
Three Italian nuns murdered in Burundi - officials | | By Patrick Nduwimana BUJUMBURA (Reuters) - Three Italian nuns were found killed, two of them raped and decapitated, over the weekend in the north of Burundi's capital, officials and a priest in the African state said on Monday. Father Mario Pulicini, who is responsible for the parish in a northern suburb of Bujumbura, named two of the nuns as Lucia Pulici, who was 75 and due to celebrate her birthday on Monday, and Olga Raschietti, 82. The third nun, 79-year-old Bernadetta Boggian, was found dead early on Monday morning, he told Reuters. Evidence showed that two of the nuns had been raped before they were killed, police spokesman Hermenegilde Harimenshi said. |
London's Luton Airport to re-open after suspicious item destroyed | | British police said Luton Airport would re-open after they carried out a controlled explosion of a suspicious item which forced the airport to be evacuated on Monday. All flights to the airport 35 miles north of London, the country's sixth biggest, were suspended and roads leading to the airport were closed, after concerns were raised about the item when it went through the a security search. Bomb disposal experts were called in and a controlled explosion was carried out. "It was confirmed that the item destroyed, although deemed suspicious, did not present a wider danger," Bedfordshire Police said on its website. |
Justin Bieber assault charge dropped in Canada | | An assault charge against pop star Justin Bieber was withdrawn in a Toronto court on Monday after the prosecutor said there was no reasonable prospect of conviction, clearing up one Canadian legal battle for the superstar just as another begins. Bieber had been charged in January with the assault of a limousine driver in Toronto in December. The driver told police that he had picked up six people, including Bieber, outside a nightclub and that the singer had struck him on the back of the head several times during an altercation on the way to a hotel. Accordingly, the charge against Mr. Bieber was withdrawn," Brendan Crawley, a spokesman for the Ontario Attorney General's office, said in an email.
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India will not block sick Italian marine's treatment | | The Indian government will not prevent an ailing Italian marine facing murder charges from returning home for medical treatment, Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj said on Monday. Massimiliano Lattore is one of two Italian marines being held over the 2012 shooting of two fishermen mistakenly believed to be pirates, in a case that has soured relations between New Delhi and Rome. India's Supreme Court has instructed the government to respond to his plea for bail so that he can seek treatment. "If the marine wants to go home and if the court allows, he can." Under international pressure, India had dropped a plan to prosecute the marines under a tough new anti-piracy law. |
Insider traders in U.S. face longer prison terms, Reuters analysis shows | | The rise is at least partly driven by the bigger profits being earned through the illegal schemes, defense lawyers said. The trend is likely to continue on Monday when former SAC Capital Advisors manager Mathew Martoma is sentenced for what prosecutors have called the most lucrative insider trading case ever brought. In the five-year period ending December 2013, insider trading defendants received an average sentence of 17.3 months, up from 13.1 months during the previous five years, or a 31.8 percent increase, the analysis of 207 insider trading sentences shows. Cases that were reversed on appeal were excluded from the study. The number of cases has increased, with 57 percent of the sentences imposed in the past five years.
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