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| Panama raids Mossack Fonseca property, seizes shredded papers | | Saturday, April 23, 2016 12:03 AM | |
| Panamanian investigators on Friday raided a property used by Mossack Fonseca, the law firm at the centre of a massive leak of offshore financial data, removing bags full of shredded documents as evidence, a local prosecutor said. "We have secured a large amount of evidence found in the location," said organised crime investigator Javier Caraballo. In a statement, Mossack Fonseca said it had digitised all its documents and that the shredded papers taken from its premises were bound for recycling.
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| Brazil's Rousseff may appeal to Mercosur if impeached illegally | | By Luciana Lopez and Louis Charbonneau NEW YORK (Reuters) - Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff denounced her impeachment as a "coup" to an international audience on Friday, and said she would appeal to the Mercosur bloc of South American nations for Brazil to be suspended if democratic process is broken. "I would appeal to the democracy clause if there were, from now on, a rupture of what I consider democratic process," she told reporters in New York. The impeachment process has "all the characteristics of a coup" as it has no legal basis, she said, in an attempt to rally international support for her political narrative.
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| JFK subject of Texas opera, with singing Jack and Jackie | | | By Marice Richter FORT WORTH, Texas (Reuters) - Before that fateful day in Dallas in 1963, President John F. Kennedy spent one pleasant night in neighbouring Fort Worth, which is the subject of an opera due to open in the Texas city this weekend. The opera called "JFK," with music by composer David T. Little, looks at the little-remembered time that Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline spent in Fort Worth. |
| Rousseff says may ask Mercosur bloc to suspend Brazil | | NEW YORK (Reuters) - Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff said on Friday she would ask the South American bloc of nations Mercosur to suspend Brazil if the democratic process is broken, after denouncing impeachment proceedings against her as a "coup". The trade bloc has a democratic clause that can be triggered when an elected government in any of its members is overthrown, as previously happened in Paraguay. (Reporting by Luciana Lopez; Writing by Anthony Boadle and Caroline Stauffer; Editing by Mary Milliken)
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| U.S. judge allows CIA interrogation lawsuit to proceed | | By Eric M. Johnson SEATTLE (Reuters) - A U.S. judge on Friday refused to dismiss a lawsuit against the former military psychologists who developed the CIA's interrogation programme during George W. Bush's presidency, handing a major victory to a group of men who said they were tortured in secret prisons abroad. U.S. District Court Judge Justin Quackenbush's decision to allow the case to proceed was a step forward in the campaign to hold individuals accountable for a programme that the American Civil Liberties Union said resulted in the torture of at least 119 men from 2002 until it was ended in 2008. The ACLU filed the lawsuit last October on behalf of Suleiman Abdullah Salim, a Tanzanian abducted by the CIA and Kenyan security forces in Somalia in 2003, Mohamed Ahmed Ben Soud, a Libyan captured in a U.S.-Pakistani raid the same year, and Gul Rahman, an Afghan national who died in 2002 in CIA custody from hypothermia caused by dehydration and exposure.
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| At least eight dead in 'execution style' killings in Ohio | | | At least eight people believed to be members of the same family were found shot to death execution-style in four homes in Pike County, Ohio, and a suspect or suspects may still be at large, officials said on Friday. All were shot in the head, the Pike County Sheriff and the Ohio attorney general told a news conference. "We have many horrific crime scenes," Pike County Sheriff Charles Reader said. |
| China, U.S. pledge to ratify Paris climate deal this year | | By Michelle Nichols and Valerie Volcovici UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - China and the United States, the world's top producers of greenhouse gas emissions, pledged on Friday to formally adopt by the end of the year a Paris deal to slow global warming, raising the prospects of it being enforced much faster than anticipated. The United Nations said 175 states took the first step of signing the deal on Friday, the biggest day one endorsement of a global agreement. Of those, 15 states also formally notified the United Nations that they had ratified the deal.
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| Three denied entry to Canada over inert grenade -border official | | | Three people detained on Thursday at the U.S.-Canadian border over an inert grenade have been denied entry into Canada and have gone back to the United States, authorities said on Friday. Canadian authorities briefly shut down the border crossing over the incident on Thursday at the Abbotsford, British Columbia-Sumas, Washington border, some 78 kms (48 miles) southeast of Vancouver. The Canada Border Services Agency said in a statement the three people, who were trying to get to Alaska, were released without charges on Thursday. |
| China to ratify Paris climate change deal by September: envoy | | China, one of the world's top emitters of greenhouse gases, pledged on Friday to ratify the Paris deal to slow climate change by September, China's Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli said on Friday. "We will make early accession to the Paris agreement. China will finalize domestic legal procedures on its accession before the G20 Hangzhou summit in September this year," Zhang told a signing ceremony for the Paris deal at the United Nations.
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