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Lebanon's Hariri upbeat about end to presidential crisis | | Leading Lebanese politician Saad al-Hariri said on Thursday there was "great hope" for ending the country's 18-month presidential vacuum after he proposed a power-sharing deal that would give the post to a political rival. The proposal, widely discussed by politicians in Lebanon but yet to be announced formally, would make Maronite Christian politician Suleiman Franjieh president and Hariri, a Sunni Muslim, prime minister. Speaking in France after a meeting with President Francois Hollande, Hariri said there was "great hope" for ending the paralysis that arose from the failure of rival politicians to agree on who should fill the presidency.
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Two Americas soccer bosses arrested as FIFA corruption scandal deepens | | By Joshua Franklin and David Ingram ZURICH/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Swiss police arrested the two top soccer bosses in the Americas on Thursday on suspicion of taking millions of dollars in bribes linked to television rights, widening a graft probe into world soccer's governing body. Switzerland's Federal Office of Justice (FOJ) named the men as Alfredo Hawit of Honduras, acting president of the CONCACAF federation and a FIFA vice president, and Juan Angel Napout of Paraguay, head of the South American soccer federation CONMEBOL. CONCACAF administers soccer in North and Central America and the Caribbean.
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Couple's motive in California rampage a mystery for police, family | | By Tim Reid SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (Reuters) - Authorities on Thursday were working to determine why a man and a woman opened fire at a holiday party of his co-workers in Southern California, killing 14 people and wounding 17 in an attack that appeared to have been planned. Syed Rizwan Farook, 28, and Tashfeen Malik, 27, who had a 6-month-old daughter together, were killed in a shootout with police after Wednesday's bloodshed at the Inland Regional Center in the city of San Bernardino, a social services agency where Farook worked as an inspector. San Bernardino Police Chief Jarrod Burguan said the motive remained unclear in the most recent U.S. mass shooting.
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Factbox: The latest soccer officials charged in FIFA probe | | Swiss police on Thursday arrested two more FIFA officials on suspicion of taking millions of dollars in bribes linked to television rights, widening a graft probe into world soccer's governing body. The two men, arrested at the behest of U.S. authorities, join 14 other officials and sports marketing executives already charged by the U.S. Department of Justice with paying and taking bribes. * Alfredo Hawit is the acting president of CONCACAF, the regional body that oversees soccer in North and Central America and the Caribbean.
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Britain joins Syria air war; Putin vows more sanctions on Turkey | | By Guy Faulconbridge and Andrew Osborn LONDON/MOSCOW (Reuters) - Britain joined air strikes on Syria on Thursday in a show of European solidarity against Islamic State, but Vladimir Putin issued bitter new denunciations of Turkey for shooting down a Russian plane, demonstrating the world's lack of unity. British Tornado jets took off from the Royal Air Force base at Akrotiri in Cyprus before dawn on Thursday, hours after the British parliament voted 397-223 to support Prime Minister David Cameron's plan to extend air strikes from Iraq to Syria.
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Belgium holds two on suspicion of links to Paris attacks | | Belgium is holding two suspects on suspicion of participating in terrorist activities, prosecutors said on Thursday, bringing the number of people it has charged over links to the Paris attacks to eight. The federal prosecutor's office said in a statement that French national Samir Z., born in 1995, had been detained at Brussels airport on Sunday as he was boarding a plane bound for Morocco. Prosecutors said he is suspected of having attempted to go to Syria at least twice in 2015 and is considered to be part of the entourage of Bilal Hadfi, one of the Paris suicide bombers who had been living in Belgium.
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FIFA says executive board unanimously approves reforms | | ZURICH (Reuters) - FIFA said on Thursday its executive committee had unanimously approved reforms to improve the global soccer body's governance structure. Among the proposals are term limits for senior officials including the president and a separation of political and management functions. The crisis surrounding scandal-plagued FIFA deepened on Thursday when Swiss police arrested on U.S. warrants two more FIFA officials suspected of taking bribes. (Reporting by Joshua Franklin; Editing by Michael Shields)
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Three jailed for murdering young woman in case that shocked Turkey | | The murder of 20-year-old Ozgecan Aslan last February shocked Turkey, drawing public protests and prompting President Tayyip Erdogan to describe violence against women as the nation's "bleeding wound". A lawyer for Aslan's family, Efkan Bolac, said the ruling should serve as a precedent in a country where courts are often accused by rights groups of being too soft on men who kill women. Media reports say more than 300 women have been killed in Turkey this year alone, usually by their husbands, boyfriends, or other family members.
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Air strikes alone won't defeat Islamic State, Kerry warns | | By Arshad Mohammed BELGRADE (Reuters) - Syrian and Arab ground forces must be found to take on Islamic State, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Thursday, warning the militant group would not be defeated by air strikes alone. Kerry was speaking hours after Britain launched bombing raids against Islamic State targets in Syria, joining forces with France and the United States nearly three weeks after the jihadist group killed 130 people in attacks across Paris. British Prime Minister David Cameron says there are as many as 70,000 moderate opposition fighters in Syria ready to take on Islamic State with the help of foreign air strikes, an assertion opponents of the bombing campaign have questioned.
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Swiss name CONCACAF's Hawit, CONMEBOL's Napout as arrested FIFA officials | | Switzerland's Federal Office of Justice (FOJ) named Alfredo Hawit of Honduras, acting president of CONCACAF, and Juan Angel Napout of Paraguay, the head of CONMEBOL, as the two FIFA officials arrested in Zurich on Thursday. "The two FIFA officials arrested in Zurich on the instructions of the Federal Office of Justice were today also given hearings by the Zurich cantonal police on the U.S. arrest requests," the FOJ said in a statement.
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Catalonia to pursue split from Spain despite court block, Mas says | | Catalonia's government will continue its drive for independence, its acting head said on Thursday, a day after Spain's Constitutional Court annulled a Catalan assembly resolution calling for a republic to be established within 18 months. The court was ruling on an appeal by the Spanish government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who has said Catalonian independence is "nonsense" and will never happen. "But politically, it is not, because the will of the parliament cannot be annulled and the will of the parliament reflects the will and the ideas of a significant part of the Catalonian population." The Constitutional Court ruled that the resolution was unconstitutional and said the Catalan assembly could not establish itself as an independent legal and political power above the constitution.
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UK says seeks release of British-Iranian citizen jailed in Iran | | Britain's foreign ministry has said it is seeking the release of a British-Iranian citizen from jail in Iran, where he has been held for four years on espionage charges. Kamal Foroughi, 76, was arrested in 2011 while working in Tehran as a business consultant, his son Kamran said. The revelation came amid a renewed crackdown on dissent in Iran, which analysts said has intensified since Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned in September of Western "infiltration" in the Islamic Republic. |
'Blade Runner' Pistorius found guilty of murder on appeal | | By Zandi Shabalala BLOEMFONTEIN (Reuters) - South Africa's "Blade Runner" Oscar Pistorius was found guilty on Thursday of murdering his girlfriend, in an appeal court ruling that could see him sent back to prison for up to 15 years. The Supreme Court upgraded the 29-year-old Paralympian's sentence on appeal to murder from "culpable homicide", for which he had received a five-year sentence. Pistorius was released on parole on Oct. 19, having spent one day less than a year in prison for shooting dead model Reeva Steenkamp on Valentine's Day 2013.
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Israel says suspects arrested over fatal torching of Palestinian home | | Members of a "Jewish terror group" have been arrested over a July arson attack on a Palestinian home in the Israeli-occupied West Bank that killed a toddler and his parents, Israeli police said on Thursday. A police statement did not say how many suspects were in custody. Eighteen-month-old Ali Dawabsheh was killed in the July 31 blaze in Duma, a village outside Nablus. |
Steenkamp's father "relieved" after Pistorius found guilty of murder | | JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - The father of slain model Reeva Steenkamp said on Thursday he felt a sense of "relief" after South Africa's appeal court found that Oscar Pistorius was guilty of murdering Reeva, overturning the original lesser conviction of culpable homicide. "It's a big relief. I feel it's a fair decision that the judge gave," Barry Steenkamp said in a brief interview on local television station ANN7, before breaking down in tears. (Reporting by Tiisetso Motsoeneng; Editing by James Macharia)
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Malaysia anti-graft agency meets PM Najib's office over 1MDB scandal | | Malaysia's anti-graft agency said on Thursday it met with officials at Prime Minister Najib Razak's office over investigations into 2.6 billion ringgit ($611.48 million) in funds that were transferred into his bank accounts. Najib is facing calls to step down over a graft scandal surrounding state fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) that erupted in July when the Wall Street Journal reported that investigators had found that funds had been transferred into Najib's bank accounts. The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) said in a statement it met the Prime Minister's office to fix an appointment to record Najib's statement in connection with its investigation into graft allegations at 1MDB and its subsidiary, SRC International.
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Without labour deal, Southeast Asia risks subsidising human smugglers - IOM | | Southeast Asia needs legal channels of migration to help curb human smuggling, the International Organization of Migration said on Thursday, days after it urged efforts to avoid a repeat of this year's disaster when hundreds of refugees were lost at sea or died in jungle camps. The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations established an economic community last month to free up capital and trade, but made limited provision for labour movement even though the region has millions of migrant workers. "There needs to be more legal channels of migration, so that we don't end up unintentionally subsidizing the smugglers," IOM Director General William Lacy Swing told reporters.
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Chechen leader: we'll avenge man beheaded in Islamic State video | | The president of Russia's Chechnya region, Ramzan Kadyrov, said on Thursday that whoever was responsible for the beheading of a Russian man from Chechnya, purportedly shown on an Islamic State video, will be killed. "Yes, he was Russian-Chechen, he was beheaded .. there are proven facts," Kadyrov told journalists. "Whoever killed that man ... won't live for long." On Wednesday the SITE monitoring group reported there was a video released online by Islamic State that showed the beheading of a man the group said was a Russian spy.
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FIFA ethics panel opens proceedings against Brazil's Del Nero | | ZURICH (Reuters) - FIFA's ethics committee has opened formal proceedings against Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) President Marco Polo del Nero, a spokesman said on Thursday. The spokesman for the ethics panel said that proceedings were opened on Nov. 23. Del Nero quit his position on FIFA's executive committee on Nov. 26. (Reporting by Brian Homewood, Editing by Michael Shields)
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Pistorius family to be guided by lawyers on next steps - spokeswoman | | The family of South Africa's "Blade Runner" Oscar Pistorius said it would wait for guidance from lawyers after the appeals court ruled on Thursday that he was guilty of murder for killing his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp on Valentine's Day 2013. Last year a judge convicted Pistorius of "cuplable homicide" for the killing of Steenkamp and gave the Paralympic gold medallist a five-year jail sentence, but prosecutors appealed the verdict, saying he should be convicted of murder.
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Leaving behind baby and bombs, couple sows panic in California | | By Tim Reid and Dan Whitcomb SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (Reuters) - On Wednesday morning, Syed Rizwan Farook, 28, and Tashfeen Malik, 27, dropped off their six-month-old baby with Farook's mother, saying they were going to a doctor's appointment. By noon, according to police, the couple had donned assault clothing, armed themselves with rifles and stormed a holiday party attended by San Bernardino County employees, killing 14 people and wounding 17 others. Syed Farook, born in the United States, worked as an environmental health specialist for San Bernardino County, inspecting restaurants for health violations, according to authorities and a website that tracks public employees.
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The trial of "Blade Runner" Oscar Pistorius | | (Reuters) - South Africa's Supreme Court found on Thursday that track star Oscar Pistorius was guilty of murdering his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp who he shot dead on Valentine's Day 2013, overturning the original lesser conviction of culpable homicide. Judge Thokozile Masipa, who originally found Pistorius guilty of South Africa's equivalent of manslaughter, will re-sentence the Paralympic champion at a later date. In South Africa, a murder conviction usually carries a minimum sentence of 15 years, although Pistorius' lawyers are likely to argue that his physical disability and mental stress should be considered as mitigating circumstances.
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