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Pipe bomb explodes on overpass near Istanbul metro, five hurt - local mayor | | By Asli Kandemir and Can Sezer ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Five people were injured when a pipe bomb exploded on an overpass near an Istanbul metro station on Tuesday, the district mayor said, halting some train operations and heightening security fears in Europe's biggest city. Turkey has been on high alert since more than 100 people were killed by two suicide bombers in the capital Ankara in October, three months after a similar attack at a town near the Syrian border in July left 33 dead. Tuesday's blast near the Bayrampasa metro station came at the height of the evening rush hour, district Mayor Atilla Aydiner told A Haber television.
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Bulgarian police end check at Sofia airport, explosive not found | | Bulgarian authorities have found no explosive devices after checking bags found in a Belgian-registered van parked just outside the capital's international airport, the interior ministry said on Tuesday. Bulgarian police evacuated part of Sofia's international airport around midday as a police bomb disposal squad, counter-terrorism officers, border guards, fire fighters and medical teams moved in around the vehicle. "No explosive device has been found inside the van," the ministry said in a statement.
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U.N. helicopters launch strikes against Congo rebels after deadly raid | | By Aaron Ross KINSHASA (Reuters) - U.N. helicopters launched strikes against Ugandan rebels near the northeastern border of Democratic Republic of Congo in response to attacks this weekend that killed dozens of people, the force's top general said Tuesday. Seven civilians were hacked to death in a hospital and more than 20 other people were killed in clashes on Sunday when Islamist fighters from the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF)attacked military bases around the town of Eringeti. Helicopter gunships fired missiles and rockets at ADF positions several miles southeast of Eringeti from about 8 a.m. (0600 GMT), Jean Baillaud, interim force commander for the U.N. mission in Congo, known as MONUSCO, told Reuters. |
German court opens way for trial of Auschwitz paramedic | | A German court on Tuesday permitted the trial of a 95-year-old German man accused of being an accessory to the murder of at least 3,681 people at the Nazi death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau. The higher court of Rostock in northern Germany deemed Hubert Z. fit for trial, overruling a previous decision by a lower court that considered him too fragile for a legal process. Z., whose last name is confidential due to German privacy laws, was a sergeant in the Nazi SS at Auschwitz from October 1943 to January 1944 and acted as one of the death camp's paramedics from Aug. 15 to Sept. 14, 1944, the indictment said. |
Danes to vote in EU referendum amid confusion, trust issues | | By Sabina Zawadzki and Alexander Tange COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Danes will decide on Thursday whether to give parliament the power to "opt-in" to certain European Union police and justice policies in a referendum that the "No" campaign has turned into a vote against the 28-member bloc. Danes rejected joining the euro against the advice of all mainstream parties in a 2000 referendum. This is the first time since then that one of the four so-called "opt-outs" from EU integration that Denmark won in 1993 is being put to a vote. |
Turkish police say cause of blast near Istanbul metro still unknown | | The cause of a blast near an Istanbul metro station on Tuesday was still unknown and police investigations were underway, a police official told Reuters. Broadcaster NTV reported the blast at an overpass near the Bayrampasa metro station on the European side of the city may have been caused by a bomb, while Haberturk TV said it was believed to have been triggered by a transformer. |
Explosion on overpass near Istanbul metro may have been bomb - Turkey's NTV | | ISTANBUL (Reuters) - An explosion that rocked an area near an Istanbul metro station on Tuesday may have been caused by a bomb on an overpass, Turkish broadcaster NTV said. Haberturk TV earlier reported that one person had been killed in the explosion near the Bayrampasa station on the European side of Istanbul. (Reporting by Asli Kandemir; Writing by David Dolan; Editing by Nick Tattersall) |
One dead in blast thought caused by transformer in Istanbul subway - Haberturk TV | | One person was killed after an explosion at an Istanbul metro station that was apparently triggered by a power transformer on Tuesday, Turkey's Haberturk TV said. A municipal official told Reuters that train operations had been suspended at the Bayrampasa metro station after a loud noise was heard. State-run Anadolu Agency said the explosion happened at an overpass near the metro station. |
Singapore police re-arrest alleged match-fixer Tan - report | | Singaporean police have again arrested alleged match-fixer Dan Tan, almost a week after a court in the city state freed him from more than two years of detention, the state-owned Channel NewsAsia (CNA) reported on Tuesday. CNA cited a police statement as saying that Tan was arrested for suspected involvement in criminal activities and investigations are ongoing. Singapore's Court of Appeal had freed Dan Tan, named by the Interpol as "the leader of the world's most notorious match-fixing syndicate", last Wednesday saying his detention without trial was unlawful. |
U.N. condemns air strike that cut water supplies to Syria's Aleppo | | An air strike on a water treatment plant in Syria last Thursday cut water supplies for 3.5 million people and while pumping has been partly restored, 1.4 million still have reduced supply, the United Nations said on Tuesday. "In Syria, the rules of war, including those meant to protect vital civilian infrastructure, continue to be broken on a daily basis," UNICEF's representative in Syria, Hanaa Singer, said in a statement. "The air-strike which reportedly hit al-Khafseh water treatment plant in the northern city of Aleppo last Thursday is a particularly alarming example." Singer did not say who was responsible for the air strike. |
Al Qaeda's Syria wing frees Lebanese captives in return for jailed Islamists | | By Tom Perry and Laila Bassam BEIRUT (Reuters) - Al Qaeda's Syrian wing freed 16 Lebanese soldiers and policemen on Tuesday in exchange for the release of jailed Islamists including the ex-wife of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. The Nusra Front seized the Lebanese 16 months ago during an attack on the Lebanese border town of Arsal, mounted together with the Islamic State jihadist group which is still believed to be holding nine soldiers captured in the incursion. The exchange was brokered by Qatar and cast new light on the Gulf state's channels to the Nusra Front, a powerful player in the Syrian war that has been designated a terrorist group by the United Nations and United States.
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Using ancient Greek play, Spike Lee tackles gun crime in "Chi-Raq" | | Director Spike Lee hopes his latest film "Chi-Raq", an adaption of ancient Greek play "Lysistrata" looking at Chicago's gun violence, will help make a difference in tackling the problem. The film is named after street slang comparing Chicago, the United States' third largest city, to conflict zones in the Middle East. Its trailer begins with a statement saying "Homicides in Chicago, Illinois, have surpassed the death toll of American special forces in Iraq".
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Merkel cabinet backs German role in military campaign against IS | | By Madeline Chambers BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany will join the military campaign against Islamic State (IS) insurgents in Syria under plans approved on Tuesday by Chancellor Angela Merkel's cabinet -- a big step for a major European power that long resisted a direct role in the conflict. Provided the Bundestag (lower house of parliament) approves the plans, two Tornados could be sent to the Incirlik air base in Turkey next week, though flights can only start in January for technical reasons, a defence ministry spokesman said. Germany, which is already arming Iraqi Kurds fighting Islamic State, will not join France, the United States and Russia in conducting air strikes in Syria.
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Georgia arrests four men with suspected Islamic State links | | Police in ex-Soviet Georgia arrested four people on suspicion of having links with the Islamic State group, the Georgian State Security Service deputy head said on Tuesday. Levan Izoria told reporters the arrests were made on Sunday after a counter-terrorist unit carried out a search of 11 houses. "Information has been obtained identifying several individuals who support Islamic State ideology," Izoria said without specifying where the arrests were made or where the houses were searched. |
Cameron says government unanimous on Syria strikes, unlike opposition | | By Elizabeth Piper and William James LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister David Cameron said on Tuesday his government had unanimously agreed a motion on air strikes against militants in Syria, portraying the ruling party as united on an issue that has split the Labour opposition. Cameron wants to launch the strikes as soon as possible against Islamic State in Syria, convinced Britain can no longer "sub-contract" its security to other countries after the group said it was behind last month's Paris attacks. New Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn accused Cameron of rushing to war, and appealed to those Labour lawmakers who favour the motion to "think again ... and please cast your vote against supporting this government's military endeavours in Syria".
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Human Rights Watch demands U.S. criminal probe of CIA torture | | Human Rights Watch called on the Obama administration on Tuesday to investigate 21 former U.S. officials, including former President George W. Bush, for potential criminal misconduct for their roles in the CIA's torture of terrorism suspects in detention. The other officials include former Vice President Dick Cheney, former CIA Director George Tenet, former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft and National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice.
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Pistorius could return to jail with appeal ruling this week | | South Africa's Oscar Pistorius will find out if he will return to jail when the Supreme Court of Appeal announces on Thursday if it will scale up the track star's conviction for killing his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp from manslaughter to murder. The Paralympic gold medallist was released on parole in October after serving a fifth of his five-year prison term for the "culpable homicide" of Steenkamp, whom he killed by firing four shots through a locked toilet door on Valentine's Day 2013. Prosecutors said Pistorius, 29, should be convicted of murder and sent back to jail because he knew the person behind the door could be killed when he fired.
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Obama says carbon price tag would drive innovation | | President Barack Obama said on Tuesday the best way to drive innovation and reduce carbon emissions is "to put a price on it" but he does not expect that from the current Republican-dominated U.S. Congress. As people come to realize the costs of climate change, Obama said they will start to put a price tag on the damage it is doing.
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Obama: climate change an economic, security imperative | | U.S. President Barack Obama said on Tuesday the world needs an enduring framework for addressing climate change and that he would seek an agreement that would boost economies as well as help the planet's environment. A strong climate pact would send a signal to researchers and investors that change is necessary and will spur energy innovation, Obama said at a news conference at the U.N. global climate summit in Paris. Obama said he expected the United States could uphold its climate commitments to help other countries meet their energy goals.
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Brazil's recession deepens, worst annual drop on record | | By Silvio Cascione and Brad Haynes BRASILIA/SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Brazil's economy shrank 1.7 percent in the third quarter, deepening its worst recession in 25 years and starving President Dilma Rousseff's government of taxes as she struggles with a growing fiscal deficit and a vast corruption scandal. On an annual basis, Brazil's gross domestic product dropped 4.5 percent in the third quarter, the steepest decline since the beginning of the current data series in 1996. "There is still no light at the end of the tunnel," said Luciano Rostagno, chief strategist at Banco Mizuho in Sao Paulo.
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Boko Haram militants kill four, wound two in Niger attack | | Militants from the Islamist group Boko Haram killed eight people in an attack on a village in the southeast of Niger, a private local radio station, ANFANI, said on Tuesday. The group is seeking to carve out an emirate based on a severe interpretation of Islamic law in northeastern Nigeria and has also carried out numerous cross-border attacks into neighbouring countries, including Niger. Further details of the latest Boko Haram attack in the Diffa region late on Monday were not immediately available. |
Two Pakistani soldiers killed in rare targeted Karachi attack | | By Syed Raza Hassan KARACHI, Pakistan (Reuters) - Gunmen killed two Pakistani soldiers in the southern city of Karachi on Tuesday, the military said, a rare attack on the powerful army that could indicate the beginning of a push-back against a tightening crackdown on violence. The two were shot on a busy road in the centre of Karachi, Pakistan's largest city and financial hub. No soldier had been killed in Karachi before that since March, underlining their protected status in a city where murders of policemen, politicians and prominent businessmen are common. |
Part of Sofia airport closed due to security concerns | | SOFIA (Reuters) - Bulgarian police evacuated part of Sofia international airport on Tuesday while suspicious items of luggage were checked, the interior ministry's spokeswoman said. A section of Terminal 1 was closed to travellers after the bags were seen in a van parked just outside the airport. (Reporting by Angel Krasimirov; Editing by Catherine Evans) |
Turkish newspaper says faces tax inspection after journalists arrested | | Turkish newspaper Cumhuriyet, whose top two journalists were arrested last week on charges of espionage and terrorist propaganda, is facing an investigation into its tax accounts, its chief executive said. A court last Thursday ordered the arrest of Can Dundar, the paper's editor-in-chief, and senior editor Erdem Gul over the publication of footage purporting to show the state intelligence agency helping to send weapons to Syria. The case against the journalists has revived long-standing criticism of Turkey's record on press freedom under President Tayyip Erdogan with the United States saying it was "very concerned" about the arrests.
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French priest admits pocketing 700,000 euros | | A Catholic priest will be sent to court after admitting he stole more than 700,000 euros ($741,000) collected from churchgoers and buyers of holy candles over a quarter of a century, the French public prosecutor's office said on Tuesday. Public prosecutor Karline Bouisset said the authorities had frozen holdings of 656,000 euros on his bank account. |
Seven Kurdish militants killed in clashes with Turkish forces - governor | | Seven Kurdish militants and one Turkish soldier were killed during several days of clashes in the southeast, the provincial governor's office said on Tuesday. Fighting erupted in the town of Derik in Mardin province, north of the Syrian border, after security forces launched an operation against Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) members, according to a statement on the governor's website. Authorities imposed a round-the-clock curfew on the town last week - an action that often precedes operations against militants. |
U.S. Marine jailed in Philippines for killing transgender woman | | By Manuel Mogato OLONGAPO CITY, Philippines (Reuters) - A Philippine court found a U.S. Marine guilty of killing a transgender woman on Tuesday, jailing him for six to 12 years in a case that has reignited debate over the American military presence in its former colony. The Olongapo City regional trial court also ordered Lance Corporal Joseph Scott Pemberton to pay more than 4.5 million pesos ($95,350) to the family of Jennifer Laude, who was found dead last year in a hotel outside the former U.S. navy base northwest of Manila. "This is not quite a victory," Laude's sister, Malou, told Reuters.
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