Yahoo! News: Iraq
Yahoo! News: Iraq |
- Strzok, Benczkowski, SCOTUS to Make Headlines next Week
- Trump Defends Jim Jordan Over Ohio State Abuse Allegations
- Outrage after white man calls police on black woman at North Carolina pool
- Here's What School Is Really Like For Some Migrant Children Separated From Their Parents
- Mike Pompeo visits North Korea seeking details on denuclearization
- Thai officials aim to rescue kids from cave before rain hits
- Deadly torrential rains and flooding batter southwestern Japan
- Man punches restaurant worker, video shows
- Tyler Honeycutt, Former NBA Player, Found Dead After Standoff With Police: Report
- Effort to Rescue Thai Soccer Teammates and Coach Trapped in Cave Continues
- Mike Pence: 'We will never abolish ICE'
- Trump Administration May Be Preparing A New Obamacare Sabotage Effort
- Three Canadian YouTube travel bloggers killed after falling over a waterfall in British Columbia
- Buddhist meditation may calm team trapped in Thai cave
- The Mars Opportunity Rover Has Defied All Odds for 15 Years. But Now, It Could Be in Danger
- Three contract workers injured at Shell Convent, La. refinery: company
- Scott Pruitt's Resignation Is Just The Start
- Divers work tirelessly to rescue soccer team trapped in Thailand cave
- North Korea hits out at Pompeo over ‘regrettable and gangster-like' US demands in nuclear talks
- Trump Lashes Out at Sen. Elizabeth Warren, George H.W. Bush
- Widespread riots in Haiti over fuel prices
- The Funniest Tweets From Parents This Week, June 30 To July 6
- Fires menace US West, tornado touches Colorado wildfire site
- Mother Teresa charity shocked after India babies 'sold'
- 21 people treated for rabies exposure after woman rescues abandoned baby raccoon
- Michael Cohen Hires Former Clinton White House Attorney Lanny Davis
- The Latest: Ruling delayed on family reunification deadline
- Dueling tariffs raise fears of long U.S.-China trade battle
- We Finally Know Why Ant-Man Wasn’t in Avengers: Infinity War
- U.S. using DNA testing in effort to reunite families it separated
- Mother of girl declared dead twice slams doctors at funeral
- Man killed when tire mysteriously crashes into his car on New York highway
- The Latest: Evacuations reduced at Southern California fire
- Insider attack kills US soldier in Afghanistan
- At least 24 killed in Mexico fireworks explosion
- Activists block major freeway to protest gun violence in Chicago
- Trump 'Apologizes' For Pocahontas Slur, Uses It Again 2 Seconds Later
- Woman finds nearly 50 brown recluse spiders in bedroom
- Family of Ohio State doctor says it's cooperating in probe
- Macron gathers world's top sovereign funds to send climate signal
- Pigs, paws and pistachios: US goods face tariffs in China
- Body found in California wildfire's path marks season's first fatality
- With US out, others reaffirm commitment to Iran nuclear deal
- Divers to check sunken Thai boat for Chinese tourists: governor
- As Trade War Begins, Feds Eye $30 Billion Bailout Fund For Farmers Facing Losses
- 8 Great Stocks to Buy for the Third Quarter
- Maisie Williams Is The 'Last Woman Standing' As 'Game Of Thrones' Winds Down
Strzok, Benczkowski, SCOTUS to Make Headlines next Week Posted: 06 Jul 2018 02:33 PM PDT |
Trump Defends Jim Jordan Over Ohio State Abuse Allegations Posted: 06 Jul 2018 08:28 AM PDT |
Outrage after white man calls police on black woman at North Carolina pool Posted: 06 Jul 2018 09:24 AM PDT |
Here's What School Is Really Like For Some Migrant Children Separated From Their Parents Posted: 06 Jul 2018 05:36 AM PDT |
Mike Pompeo visits North Korea seeking details on denuclearization Posted: 06 Jul 2018 09:08 AM PDT |
Thai officials aim to rescue kids from cave before rain hits Posted: 07 Jul 2018 12:52 PM PDT |
Deadly torrential rains and flooding batter southwestern Japan Posted: 07 Jul 2018 12:48 PM PDT Torrents of rainfall and flooding battered a widespread area in southwestern Japan on Saturday, with local media casualty reports climbing quickly. Public broadcaster NHK said 38 people were dead, four were injured seriously and 47 were missing. Television footage showed a residential area in Okayama prefecture seeped in brown water spreading like a huge lake. |
Man punches restaurant worker, video shows Posted: 06 Jul 2018 05:23 PM PDT |
Tyler Honeycutt, Former NBA Player, Found Dead After Standoff With Police: Report Posted: 07 Jul 2018 09:04 AM PDT |
Effort to Rescue Thai Soccer Teammates and Coach Trapped in Cave Continues Posted: 05 Jul 2018 09:00 PM PDT |
Mike Pence: 'We will never abolish ICE' Posted: 06 Jul 2018 12:26 PM PDT |
Trump Administration May Be Preparing A New Obamacare Sabotage Effort Posted: 07 Jul 2018 02:41 PM PDT |
Three Canadian YouTube travel bloggers killed after falling over a waterfall in British Columbia Posted: 06 Jul 2018 11:02 AM PDT Three Canadian YouTube travel bloggers have been killed after falling over a waterfall in British Columbia. Ryker Gamble, Alexey Lyakh and Megan Scraper were part of High On Life, a video blog group which posts videos of their travel adventures on social media. The trio were swimming at the top of Shannon Falls in Squamish, British Columbia on Tuesday when they slipped and fell into a pool 98ft below, local police siad. The High On Life group, which has more than one million Instagram followers and more than 500,000 YouTube subscribers, named the trio in a post online. In a video tribute the group praised them as "three of the warmest, kindest and most driven and outgoing people you could ever meet". Their Facebook page says: "High On Life is the attitude to embrace all of life's opportunities with a positive outlook and energy." "There are truly no words that can be said to ease the pain and the devastation we are all going through right now," they said. The video bloggers, who were all in their late 20s and early 30s, had hiked up Shannon Falls on Tuesday and were swimming in a pool system at the top of the falls. The adventurers were "then walking along the ledge shortly thereafter" before falling nearly 100ft, said Corporal Sascha Banks, from Canada's Federal Police. Megan Scraper and Alexey Lyakh had recently celebrated five years together The tragedy occurred when Ms Scraper slipped and fell, with Mr Gamble and Mr Lyakh also getting swept away as they tried to save her , according to the Vancouver Sun. The difficult terrain meant it took the Squamish Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) force two days to find and recover the adventurers. "I can't say enough about the incredible skilled work done by the RCMP teams along with Squamish Search and Rescue," Cpl Banks said in a statement. Ms Banks added that heavy water flow and a a steep mountainside area posed a significant challenge for the crew involved in the efforts. Their Facebook page says: "High On Life is the attitude to embrace all of life's opportunities with a positive outlook and energy." Mr Gamble and Mr Lyakh founded the High On Life group, which is based in Vancouver, with another high school friend after they travelled the world in 2012. The adventurers turned their passion for travel into full-time jobs, posting pictures and videos of their experiences online in partnership with various brands. The group made headlines in 2016 after Mr Gamble, Mr Lykah and another member were handed five-year bans from US federal lands after an out-of-bounds excursion on a sensitive hot spring in Yellowstone National Park. In one of his most recent Instagram posts, 30-year-old Mr Gamble wrote: "Life isn't about responsibilities, tough decisions and hard work, it's about feeling bliss and living in the moment." High On Life has created a GoFundMe memorial fund in support of the three travellers families. |
Buddhist meditation may calm team trapped in Thai cave Posted: 05 Jul 2018 07:28 PM PDT |
The Mars Opportunity Rover Has Defied All Odds for 15 Years. But Now, It Could Be in Danger Posted: 06 Jul 2018 01:39 PM PDT |
Three contract workers injured at Shell Convent, La. refinery: company Posted: 05 Jul 2018 08:09 PM PDT Three contract workers were injured on Wednesday while working on a hydrogen line on a sulfur unit at Royal Dutch Shell Plc's Convent, Louisiana, refinery, a company spokesman said on Thursday. The sulfur unit is shut as part of a planned overhaul of units at the 209,787 barrel-per-day (bpd) Convent refinery that includes the gasoline-producing fluidic catalytic cracking unit, the sources said. "Shell initiated its emergency response plan, which included immediately deploying personnel to respond to the incident," Shell spokesman Ray Fisher said on Thursday. |
Scott Pruitt's Resignation Is Just The Start Posted: 06 Jul 2018 08:49 AM PDT |
Divers work tirelessly to rescue soccer team trapped in Thailand cave Posted: 06 Jul 2018 09:12 AM PDT |
North Korea hits out at Pompeo over ‘regrettable and gangster-like' US demands in nuclear talks Posted: 07 Jul 2018 02:14 AM PDT North Korea has attacked US secretary of state Mike Pompeo, saying it was "regrettable" the US was making unilateral denuclearisation demands on Pyongyang during high-level talks. America's top diplomat left North Korea on Saturday after two days of negotiations, saying much remained to be done but insisting the two sides had discussed the idea of Pyongyang making a full declaration of its weapons of mass destruction stockpiles and setting a timeline for giving them up. "These are complicated issues but we made progress on almost all of the central issues,'' Mr Pompeo told reporters on the airport tarmac before leaving Pyongyang, following his third visit to North Korea. |
Trump Lashes Out at Sen. Elizabeth Warren, George H.W. Bush Posted: 05 Jul 2018 09:00 PM PDT |
Widespread riots in Haiti over fuel prices Posted: 07 Jul 2018 03:20 PM PDT |
The Funniest Tweets From Parents This Week, June 30 To July 6 Posted: 06 Jul 2018 06:01 AM PDT |
Fires menace US West, tornado touches Colorado wildfire site Posted: 05 Jul 2018 10:23 PM PDT |
Mother Teresa charity shocked after India babies 'sold' Posted: 06 Jul 2018 07:46 AM PDT An Indian charity founded by Mother Teresa expressed outrage and regret Friday after a nun and an employee were arrested for allegedly selling infants for adoption for potentially thousands of dollars. It should have never happened," said the Missionaries of Charity organisation, set up by the Catholic missionary nun in 1950. After the arrests, 13 girls living in the home were shifted to another shelter, the Press Trust of India reported, adding that 22 children from a nearby shelter that was run by the same charity were also moved to a new accommodation on Friday. |
21 people treated for rabies exposure after woman rescues abandoned baby raccoon Posted: 06 Jul 2018 11:57 AM PDT A woman who lives in the southern part of Weld County, Colorado found a baby racoon on her property and took the animal into her home after she believed the animal had been abandoned by its mother, a Weld County Department of Health and Environment press release stated. According to Colorado's Greeley Tribune, the woman then apparently had 20 visitors to her home, all who reportedly expressed interest in seeing the baby raccoon. "This was a baby wild animal, so I think there was some heightened interest to seeing a baby animal in the home," Rachel Freeman, the health department's supervisor, told the newspaper. |
Michael Cohen Hires Former Clinton White House Attorney Lanny Davis Posted: 06 Jul 2018 11:58 AM PDT |
The Latest: Ruling delayed on family reunification deadline Posted: 07 Jul 2018 03:34 AM PDT |
Dueling tariffs raise fears of long U.S.-China trade battle Posted: 06 Jul 2018 01:22 PM PDT By Michael Martina and David Lawder BEIJING/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S.-China trade fight resulting in duties on $34 billion worth of each other's imports was seen dragging on for a potentially prolonged period, as Washington and Beijing flexed their muscles with no sign of negotiations to ease tensions. Friday marked the start of the U.S. duties that were promptly met with retribution by China, as Beijing accused the United States of triggering the "largest-scale trade war." The escalating fight between the world's two biggest economies meant that it could "take economic and political pain to get these two parties to the (negotiating) table," said Scott Kennedy, head of China studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. |
We Finally Know Why Ant-Man Wasn’t in Avengers: Infinity War Posted: 06 Jul 2018 01:13 PM PDT |
U.S. using DNA testing in effort to reunite families it separated Posted: 07 Jul 2018 04:04 AM PDT The U.S. government, under court order to quickly reunify parents and children who were separated after crossing illegally into the United States from Mexico, has expanded its use of DNA tests to establish paternity in immigration matters. The government says DNA testing is a faster means of confirming parentage than relying on assembling documents such as birth certificates. Under President Barack Obama, DNA testing of unauthorized border-crossers was rare, former administration officials said, but one said it was sometimes used as a last resort to verify family connections when placing unaccompanied minors with sponsors in the United States. |
Mother of girl declared dead twice slams doctors at funeral Posted: 06 Jul 2018 02:54 PM PDT |
Man killed when tire mysteriously crashes into his car on New York highway Posted: 06 Jul 2018 05:32 PM PDT |
The Latest: Evacuations reduced at Southern California fire Posted: 07 Jul 2018 04:47 PM PDT |
Insider attack kills US soldier in Afghanistan Posted: 07 Jul 2018 12:41 PM PDT A US soldier was killed and two others wounded in an "apparent insider attack" in southern Afghanistan on Saturday, NATO said, the first such killing in nearly a year. "The wounded service members, who are in stable condition, are currently being treated," NATO's Resolute Support mission in Afghanistan said in a statement. NATO did not release the identity of the American soldier killed or provide further details about where the incident took place. |
At least 24 killed in Mexico fireworks explosion Posted: 05 Jul 2018 10:30 PM PDT At least 24 people were killed in a series of explosions on Thursday at fireworks warehouses in the town of Tultepec in central Mexico, including rescue workers who died saving others' lives, officials said. The initial explosion occurred at about 9:30am, then spread to other warehouses just as police and firefighters began attending to the first victims. Tultepec, a town of 65,000 people just north of Mexico City, is known for its artisanal fireworks - and a history of deadly accidents. "We deeply regret the deaths of those who were killed this morning in... Tultepec, including our firefighter and police colleagues who lost their lives saving those of many others," read a tweet from the Red Cross in the state of Mexico, where Tultepec is located. At least 24 people were killed - including a minor - and 49 wounded, officials said. Damaged buildings and cars litter the site Credit: Moises Castillo/AP The victims included four firefighters and five police. Hundreds of soldiers, police and firefighters deployed to the neighborhood of Xahuento, on the outskirts of the town, cordoned off a wide area around the smoldering workshops where the explosions ocurred. An anguished teenager was asking rescue workers for news about his father, a fireworks maker who worked in the area. "I left school to look for him as soon as we heard about the explosion. But they won't let me through and nobody is giving me any information," said Allan Osvaldo, 14. Fireworks explosions at a warehouse in #Mexico`s city of #Tultepec kill 19, injure 40. Casualties are said to include firefighters and rescuers who had arrived to help initial blast victims pic.twitter.com/kxhMukTBWT— Benjamin Alvarez (@BenjAlvarez1) July 5, 2018 Hours later, his father reappeared, badly shaken but safe. "I was in my workshop when I heard the explosion. I ran out and was immediately enveloped in the cloud of smoke," said the father, 43-year-old Osvaldo Urban, his voice trembling. "I'm so grateful to be OK." An overpowering smell of gunpowder hung in the air, and occasional detonations could still be heard hours after the original accident. Charred furniture and bricks hurled by the explosions could be seen lying in the grass, even outside the ample security perimeter. A forensic technician walks by a wall reading "Danger" while inspecting the site Credit: Daniel Becerril/Reuters "I was having breakfast when there was a terrible blast. We left the house running and I saw a huge white cloud in the sky, as if it were going to rain - except today it rained fire," said Alondra Perez, 62, who lives across the road. Two badly damaged firetrucks were visible beside one totaled workshop, and a police officer told AFP an ambulance had been completely charred in one blast. "People here insist on continuing to make fireworks. It's their tradition. But they don't gauge the consequences of these tragedies. It's infuriating, because our firefighter colleagues... end up dead saving these people," he said, speaking on condition of anonymity. This was the scene on December 20, 2016, when explosions ripped through the San Pablito fireworks' market in Tultepec Credit: Jose Luis Tolentino/AP Tultepec is known for making the fireworks for holidays and saints' days. It has been hit by devastating explosions in the past. On June 6, seven people were killed in a similar blast. And on December 20, 2016, 42 people were killed and 70 injured in a series of spectacular explosions at Tultepec's San Pablito market, the largest fireworks market in the country. |
Activists block major freeway to protest gun violence in Chicago Posted: 07 Jul 2018 02:14 PM PDT |
Trump 'Apologizes' For Pocahontas Slur, Uses It Again 2 Seconds Later Posted: 05 Jul 2018 07:30 PM PDT |
Woman finds nearly 50 brown recluse spiders in bedroom Posted: 06 Jul 2018 12:00 PM PDT |
Family of Ohio State doctor says it's cooperating in probe Posted: 07 Jul 2018 03:17 PM PDT |
Macron gathers world's top sovereign funds to send climate signal Posted: 05 Jul 2018 10:02 PM PDT By Michel Rose PARIS (Reuters) - Sovereign wealth funds managing more than $2 trillion are to lay out a strategy on Friday in Paris to pressure companies to be more climate-friendly, French officials said. President Emmanuel Macron, who has cast himself as the guardian of the Paris agreement on climate change since Washington announced it would pull out, is championing the initiative, which will bring together the heads of six sovereign funds to thrash out a pro-environment investment framework. The guidelines, which funds will ask the companies they invest in to meet, are expected to influence other big asset managers, French presidential advisers said. |
Pigs, paws and pistachios: US goods face tariffs in China Posted: 06 Jul 2018 04:06 AM PDT From pig heads to pistachios to whiskey, China's proposed list of targeted US products for higher border taxes could take a bite out of bilateral trade between the world's top two economies. After Washington imposed new tariffs on billions of Chinese imports just past the stroke of midnight Friday, Beijing hit back immediately dollar for dollar. China has not officially updated its list of items targeted but last month gave a detailed run-down that was not expected to change. |
Body found in California wildfire's path marks season's first fatality Posted: 06 Jul 2018 02:27 PM PDT By Dan Whitcomb LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Crews fighting a fast-moving Northern California wildfire on Friday discovered the charred remains of a person apparently caught in the flames, sheriff's officials said, marking the first such fatality in a particularly intense fire season across the state. Investigators were trying to identify the man or woman found in the debris of a home burned to the ground by the Klamathon fire, which broke out Thursday near the Oregon border during a blistering California heat wave and quickly blackened more than 8,000 acres (3,237 hectares). "We don't know who it is, we're trying to do best we can to identify the person," said Lieutenant Jeremiah LaRue if the Siskiyou County Sheriff's Office. |
With US out, others reaffirm commitment to Iran nuclear deal Posted: 06 Jul 2018 07:03 AM PDT |
Divers to check sunken Thai boat for Chinese tourists: governor Posted: 05 Jul 2018 06:05 PM PDT The search for dozens of missing Chinese tourists whose boat capsized off the Thai holiday island of Phuket resumed early Friday, with divers poised to scour the sunken hull, the local governor told reporters. The boat, which had left the popular snorkelling spot of Koh Racha to return to Phuket, was carrying 105 passengers, the majority Chinese tourists. Helicopters, police and fishing boats were deployed early Friday as the rescue mission restarted. |
As Trade War Begins, Feds Eye $30 Billion Bailout Fund For Farmers Facing Losses Posted: 05 Jul 2018 09:56 PM PDT |
8 Great Stocks to Buy for the Third Quarter Posted: 06 Jul 2018 08:44 AM PDT |
Maisie Williams Is The 'Last Woman Standing' As 'Game Of Thrones' Winds Down Posted: 07 Jul 2018 10:23 AM PDT |
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