Yahoo! News: Iraq
Yahoo! News: Iraq |
- In response to 'army of fanatics', Hollande vows 'more songs'
- Russia didn't give downed jet's flight plan to U.S.: U.S. officials
- The Latest: French court keeps 2 suspects under house arrest
- Drowned Syrian boy's aunt says family will settle in Canada
- EU turns to Turkey to help manage its migration woes
- Voice of Paris attacks; Did he have bigger role?
- Tunisia, targeted anew, faces intelligence challenge
- UK photographer McCullin says wars now harder to cover
- Suicide bomber hits Shi'ite procession in Nigeria's Kano state
- Refugee crisis tests Sweden's lofty aim of 'equality for all'
- Strikes on IS city, focus of international campaign, kill 8
- France can only work with Syrian army as part of a power transition: Fabius
- U.S. targets Islamic State with 18 air strikes in Iraq: U.S. military
- Widows: Railroad knew of defect before veterans killed
- Tunisia bus bomber arrested, freed before attack
- Tunisia puts suspected returning jihadists under house arrest
- Three Wounded Syrian War Veterans Flee to Europe
- Britain's Labour in disarray over Syria air strikes vote
- China calls for calm amid tensions over Russian jet downing
- Niger says Boko Haram gunmen kill 18 in village bordering Nigeria
- Global landmine casualties increase, Afghanistan largely to blame: study
- Sirens ring out as air strikes hit IS Syria stronghold
- The Latest: Putin: Russia to cooperate with US-led coalition
In response to 'army of fanatics', Hollande vows 'more songs' Posted: 27 Nov 2015 03:51 PM PST President Francois Hollande vowed Friday to destroy the "army of fanatics" behind the Paris attacks but also said France would respond with more songs, concerts and shows, as the nation paused to honour the 130 killed. "On November 13, a day we will never forget, France was hit at its very heart," Hollande told a sombre commemoration in the Invalides, the 17th-century complex housing Napoleon's tomb. "To all of you, I solemnly promise that France will do everything to destroy the army of fanatics that committed these crimes," he said. |
Russia didn't give downed jet's flight plan to U.S.: U.S. officials Posted: 27 Nov 2015 03:02 PM PST By Phil Stewart WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Russia did not inform the U.S. military of its jet's flight plan before Turkey shot it down on Tuesday, despite assertions to the contrary by Russian President Vladimir Putin, two U.S. officials told Reuters on Friday, speaking on condition of anonymity. Putin has suggested some degree of U.S. culpability in the aftermath of the incident, even hinting that the United States might have given detailed Russian operational plans to Turkey ahead of time. Addressing reporters in Moscow on Thursday, Putin said "we informed our American partners" about when and where Russian aircraft would be operating. |
The Latest: French court keeps 2 suspects under house arrest Posted: 27 Nov 2015 01:02 PM PST |
Drowned Syrian boy's aunt says family will settle in Canada Posted: 27 Nov 2015 12:10 PM PST TORONTO (AP) — The aunt of a Syrian boy whose lifeless body was photographed on a Turkish beach, sparking worldwide outrage at the refugee crisis, said Friday that she hopes her family members will be in Canada by Christmas. |
EU turns to Turkey to help manage its migration woes Posted: 27 Nov 2015 12:03 PM PST |
Voice of Paris attacks; Did he have bigger role? Posted: 27 Nov 2015 11:54 AM PST By Chine Labbé and Marie-Louise Gumuchian PARIS/ALENCON, France (Reuters) - The voice that claimed Islamic State was responsible for the deadly Paris attacks is known to many in the small French provincial town of Alencon. To family, Fabien Clain was a "big teddy bear", to neighbors he was polite and at the local mosque he was a fellow worshipper who came to pray. To the French authorities, he was a veteran jihadi jailed once in the past for recruiting militant fighters and believed by them to have fled to Syria this year. |
Tunisia, targeted anew, faces intelligence challenge Posted: 27 Nov 2015 10:47 AM PST TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) — An attack by Islamic State militants on Tunisia's presidential guard has left this North African country, its economy and its democracy even more vulnerable just days before four Tunisians head to collect the Nobel Peace Prize. |
UK photographer McCullin says wars now harder to cover Posted: 27 Nov 2015 09:51 AM PST Award-winning British war photographer Don McCullin, who will be celebrated at next year's Photo London festival with a special exhibition, spoke Friday about the growing difficulties in covering conflicts. The 80-year-old photographer, who has covered many of the biggest conflicts of the 20th century, took some of his most famous photos during the Vietnam conflict and is still at it -- travelling to Iraq just a month ago. It's difficult," McCullin told AFP at a press preview of the international fair, which runs May 16-22 next year. |
Suicide bomber hits Shi'ite procession in Nigeria's Kano state Posted: 27 Nov 2015 09:14 AM PST A male suicide bomber hit a procession of Shi'ite Muslims in Nigeria's Kano state as they walked to the city of Zaria to pay homage to their founder in the country, security sources and a Shi'ite leader said. Muhammad Turi said that 21 people had been killed and more wounded. The blast went off at around 2 p.m. local time (1300 GMT) near the village of Dakozoye outside the town of Garum Mallam, south of Nigeria's second city Kano. |
Refugee crisis tests Sweden's lofty aim of 'equality for all' Posted: 27 Nov 2015 08:35 AM PST Malmö (Sweden) (AFP) - Aneta Moura, who emigrated to Sweden from Greece 43 years ago, says the last ethnic Swede has moved off her street in Malmo's Rosengard neighbourhood and youths with nothing to do hang out on the streets at all hours. Growing segregation between ethnic Swedes and immigrants is emerging as a major concern in Sweden, a country that has for decades prided itself on its egalitarian ideals and where most low-skilled jobs have been eliminated in a bid to do away with much of the "class society" that went with them. The country's inability to integrate immigrants is pre-occupying the Swedish public and policymakers now that Sweden is taking in record numbers of refugees who will eventually need to find work to become fully-fledged active members of society. |
Strikes on IS city, focus of international campaign, kill 8 Posted: 27 Nov 2015 08:31 AM PST |
France can only work with Syrian army as part of a power transition: Fabius Posted: 27 Nov 2015 08:22 AM PST Working with Syrian government forces to combat Islamic State can only happen within the framework of a credible political transition for Syria, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on Friday. Earlier Fabius had appeared to suggest President Bashar al Assad's forces could be used to battle the Islamic State militants, which would mark a departure in the Western position that the Syrian leader must step down. Syria's Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem cautiously welcomed Fabius' earlier comments. |
U.S. targets Islamic State with 18 air strikes in Iraq: U.S. military Posted: 27 Nov 2015 07:42 AM PST The United States and its allies staged 18 air strikes against Islamic State in Iraq on Thursday, according to the U.S.-led coalition leading the military operations. The strikes near five cities included seven near Ramadi that hit two of the militant group's tactical units and destroyed four of its buildings, among other targets, the Combined Joint Task Force said in a statement released on Friday. Near Sinjar, five strikes hit three Islamic State tactical units and destroyed one of the group's vehicles and fighting positions, the task force said. |
Widows: Railroad knew of defect before veterans killed Posted: 27 Nov 2015 07:38 AM PST |
Tunisia bus bomber arrested, freed before attack Posted: 27 Nov 2015 07:33 AM PST By Tarek Amara and Mohamed Argoubi TUNIS (Reuters) - The suicide bomber in Tunisia who blew himself up in a bus packed with presidential guards on Tuesday had been arrested by police before on suspicion of jihadist ties but was released for lack of evidence, a security official said. Tunisia, one of the Arab world's most secular nations, is struggling to counter Islamist militancy since becoming a beacon of democratic change in the region after its 2011 uprising that ousted autocrat Zine Abidine Ben Ali. Houssem Abdelli, a street vendor from an impoverished neighbourhood of Tunis, detonated his explosives as presidential guards boarded a bus on Tuesday afternoon on one of the capital's main boulevards, killing 12 people. |
Tunisia puts suspected returning jihadists under house arrest Posted: 27 Nov 2015 06:51 AM PST Tunisian authorities arrested dozens of people raids and put scores more under house arrest on suspicion that they were militants returning from Syria and Iraq, the Interior Ministry said on Friday, three days after a bus attack which killed 12 presidential guards. The ministry said 40 people were arrested in the raids, and another 92 placed under house arrest. Islamic State has claimed the bombing, the third major militant attack in Tunisia this year following assaults on a beach resort at Sousse and the Bardo museum in the capital, both of which targeted foreign visitors. |
Three Wounded Syrian War Veterans Flee to Europe Posted: 27 Nov 2015 06:24 AM PST The night they finally left for Europe, on October 4, Asem Hasna, Ahmad Orabi, and Deeb Al-Khateeb took a taxi from Izmir, Turkey, to a patch of forest overlooking the Aegean shore. The three men had each left $1000 in escrow with a middleman back in town, who'd told them to go to the woods after midnight. This broker, who like the three travelers was Syrian, was in contact with Turkish human traffickers who were coming to meet them at midnight. The traffickers, who knew the local coastline, would show the way to a cove where a boat would be waiting. |
Britain's Labour in disarray over Syria air strikes vote Posted: 27 Nov 2015 03:13 AM PST Top figures in Britain's main opposition Labour Party heaped criticism on their leader Jeremy Corbyn on Friday after he ruled out voting for the Royal Air Force to join air strikes in Syria. "This is very complex, it is very difficult and each individual in the end will reach their own decision about what they think the right thing to do is," Benn told BBC Radio 4's Today programme. Prime Minister David Cameron made his case for air strikes to parliament on Thursday ahead of a vote expected next week in which dozens of Labour MPs are expected to defy Corbyn and vote with the government. |
China calls for calm amid tensions over Russian jet downing Posted: 27 Nov 2015 01:02 AM PST China's Foreign Ministry called for calm on Friday over growing tensions about Turkey's shooting down of a Russian warplane, urging the international community to coordinate in the fight against terror to avoid such incidents. In an escalating war of words, President Tayyip Erdogan responded to Russian accusations that Turkey has been buying oil and gas from Islamic State in Syria by accusing Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and his backers, which include Moscow, of being the real source of the group's financial and military power. The shooting down of the jet by the Turkish air force on Tuesday was one of the most serious clashes between a NATO member and Russia, and further complicated international efforts to battle Islamic State militants. |
Niger says Boko Haram gunmen kill 18 in village bordering Nigeria Posted: 27 Nov 2015 12:50 AM PST Niger's government said on Thursday that Boko Haram militants killed 18 people, including a local religious leader, in an attack on a village in Niger's southern border area of Diffa on the Nigerian border. The Islamist militants rarely claim attacks but they are based in the north of Nigeria and often launch cross border attacks in Niger, Chad and Cameroon. The gunmen arrived in the village of Gogone near the shores of Lake Chad on foot and fired indiscriminately on residents and attacked their homes, security sources said. |
Global landmine casualties increase, Afghanistan largely to blame: study Posted: 26 Nov 2015 05:04 PM PST By Joseph D'Urso LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Long-term progress in reducing the number of landmine casualties was reversed last year, and rebel groups used the mines in 10 countries, the largest number since 2006, researchers said on Thursday. Non-state groups were still using the deadly devices in the 12 months to October 2015 in Colombia, Libya, Myanmar, Pakistan, Syria and Yemen, and in Afghanistan, where there was a sharp increase in casualties from improvised explosive devices (IEDs). Landmines were also used by rebels in three countries - Iraq, Tunisia and Ukraine - where they were not used last year, and by three states: Myanmar, Syria and North Korea. |
Sirens ring out as air strikes hit IS Syria stronghold Posted: 26 Nov 2015 04:45 PM PST In the Islamic State group's Syrian stronghold of Raqa, sirens ring out whenever a warplane approaches as jihadists flee their posts and vehicles to hide, activists say. A US-led coalition and Russia have stepped up air strikes on the jihadists' de facto Syrian capital since IS claimed to have downed a Russian passenger plane over Egypt's Sinai in October and the deadly jihadist attacks in Paris two weeks later. "The sirens are on the roofs of high buildings, in the squares and in the streets," Taym Ramadan, a city resident and anti-IS activist, told AFP. |
The Latest: Putin: Russia to cooperate with US-led coalition Posted: 26 Nov 2015 04:12 PM PST |
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