Yahoo! News: Iraq
Yahoo! News: Iraq |
- Rep. Duncan Hunter Blames Wife For Campaign Spending Under Inquiry
- Trump tweets at A.G. 'Jeff': Now go after my political foes
- Photos of the week: 8/17 - 8/24
- Tarboro child punished for calling teacher 'ma'am'
- Majority-Black Georgia County Rejects Plan To Close Nearly All Its Polling Places
- Irish sex abuse victim urges pope to remove 'every rotten apple'
- Tunnel from Mexico to abandoned KFC restaurant in Arizona discovered by US Homeland Security
- Omarosa Manigault Newman says she's ready to testify at Trump's impeachment trial
- Woman Says She Was Mom-Shamed for Letting 8-Year-Old Daughter Walk Dog Alone
- Facebook and Top Tech Companies Are Trying Not to Mess Up Another Election
- Franco family accepts dictator's body will be exhumed after feud
- Pope to pay tribute to Ireland's 'holy drinker' who may become saint
- Mother held after girl's body found in duffel bag in Vegas
- Smith & Wesson's M&P 2.0 Compact Handgun: Better Than Glock?
- Fox News' Neil Cavuto Shreds Donald Trump: 'The Problem Is You'
- Scott 'Stop the boats' Morrison: Australia's latest PM
- 'My 600-lb Life' Star Lisa Fleming Dies at 50
- Woman Fights Off Alligator While Swimming in Florida Lake
- El Salvador switches allegiance from Taiwan to China, drawing ire from the US
- Taliban launch attacks on approaches to Afghan city of Ghazni
- Matilda Goad's New Collaboration with Liberty of London and Other Great New Products
- Doctor accused of killing family with gas-filled yoga ball
- Irish abuse survivor demands accountability even at Vatican
- Senate Democrats To Mike Pompeo: Give Us Interpreter's Notes From Trump-Putin Meeting
- Airbnb sues New York over 'government overreach'
- Soviet IZh 2125 ‘Kombi’ making comeback as Kalashnikov electric car
- Nicki Minaj Gave a Shout Out to Margaret Thatcher and People Are Really Confused
- Italy's far-right interior minister faces probe over stranded migrants
- Christopher Watts TV Interview Was 'Investigative Gold,' Former Officer Says
- Tesla CEO Musk drops pursuit of $72 billion take-private deal
- Vegas Shooting Survivor Is Inspired to Become Police Officer: 'I Want to Be That Person for Someone Else'
- WATCH LIVE: Hurricane Lane brings catastrophic flooding to Hawaii
- The Latest: Iowa student killed by 'sharp force injuries'
- Zimbabwe opposition leader insists he won elections
- EC OnlyOne P8 is a one-off supercar built on Ferrari bones
- Canada concerned over reported Saudi death sentences for activists
- 2019 Acura RDX A-Spec Delivers B-Spec Performance
- Former Harley-Davidson CEO Vaughn Beals Dies at 90
- U.S. health agency's ex-director charged with groping woman
- Monterey: Auctions results for day one are in!
- Trump Tells Jeff Sessions: Go After My Enemies
- 11 Punch Recipes Perfect For A Kids Party
- Meyer tweets apology to former assistant's ex-wife
Rep. Duncan Hunter Blames Wife For Campaign Spending Under Inquiry Posted: 24 Aug 2018 05:24 AM PDT |
Trump tweets at A.G. 'Jeff': Now go after my political foes Posted: 24 Aug 2018 05:16 AM PDT |
Photos of the week: 8/17 - 8/24 Posted: 24 Aug 2018 01:20 PM PDT |
Tarboro child punished for calling teacher 'ma'am' Posted: 25 Aug 2018 07:08 AM PDT |
Majority-Black Georgia County Rejects Plan To Close Nearly All Its Polling Places Posted: 24 Aug 2018 05:18 AM PDT |
Irish sex abuse victim urges pope to remove 'every rotten apple' Posted: 24 Aug 2018 08:15 PM PDT Pope Francis should rid the Catholic Church of "every rotten apple" and announce concrete measures against sexual abuse by the clergy during his visit to Ireland, a prominent Irish victim told AFP. Marie Collins, who resigned from a Vatican commission on child protection last year over its failure to take action, said in an interview that the pontiff had to tackle the issue "head on". "Every rotten apple should be got rid of and it should happen now," Collins said on the sidelines of the World Meeting of Families in Dublin, ahead of the pope's visit to Ireland which starts Saturday. |
Tunnel from Mexico to abandoned KFC restaurant in Arizona discovered by US Homeland Security Posted: 24 Aug 2018 01:38 AM PDT US federal authorities have discovered a drug smuggling tunnel between a home in Mexico and a former KFC restaurant in Arizona. Department of Homeland Security officials received information one end of the tunnel was inside the abandoned fast food joint in San Luis – 200 yards north of the US-Mexico border. Police began trailing the owner of the building, Ivan Lopez, and arrested him this month after finding several packages of methamphetamine, cocaine, heroin and fentanyl in the back of his truck. |
Omarosa Manigault Newman says she's ready to testify at Trump's impeachment trial Posted: 24 Aug 2018 02:00 AM PDT |
Woman Says She Was Mom-Shamed for Letting 8-Year-Old Daughter Walk Dog Alone Posted: 24 Aug 2018 11:49 AM PDT |
Facebook and Top Tech Companies Are Trying Not to Mess Up Another Election Posted: 24 Aug 2018 10:30 AM PDT |
Franco family accepts dictator's body will be exhumed after feud Posted: 25 Aug 2018 10:14 AM PDT The grandson of former Spanish dictator Francisco Franco has said the family will accept the dictator's remains if Spain's government carries out its plan to remove his body from a controversial mausoleum after a battle over his resting place. "Of course we will take care of my grandfather's remains. We won't leave it in the hands of the government," Francis Franco told the newspaper La Razón in an interview on Saturday. It came as Spain's socialist administration published a decree outlining its plan to exhume the dictator, who died in 1975. The new law states that the Valley of the Fallen basilica can only hold "the mortal remains of persons who died in the Spanish Civil War", making Franco the odd one out at the mausoleum he had built and which contains the bodies of more than 33,000 war dead from both sides of the conflict. The decree, which will be voted on by Congress next month, gives the Franco family until September 15 to respond and state whether they are prepared to receive the dictator's body. Generalissimo Francisco Franco ruled Spain. An estimated 500,000 people died in the civil war Credit: AP Photo/file The family opposes the decision to exhume Franco, but the dictator's grandson said he now believed the government would carry out its plan "legally or otherwise". Mr Franco said challenging the government in court would be pointless, although he held out the possibility that the Benedictine monks who run the Valley of the Fallen could refuse to allow the exhumation. "The inviolability of the basilica is beyond question. We have written a letter to [the monks] saying that we do not authorize the exhumation." The government believes it will win majority support for its plan in parliament and has also received assurances that Spanish Church authorities will not oppose the removal of the body from its place behind the main altar in the basilica. Assuming the exhumation does finally take place, possibly in late October or November, Mr Franco said the family had yet to decide where his grandfather would be reburied. He ruled out the family tomb near Madrid, which holds the remains of Franco's wife, Carmen Polo, because of a lack of security, suggesting the family will try to bury the dictator in a more private place. |
Pope to pay tribute to Ireland's 'holy drinker' who may become saint Posted: 24 Aug 2018 02:59 PM PDT |
Mother held after girl's body found in duffel bag in Vegas Posted: 24 Aug 2018 04:16 PM PDT |
Smith & Wesson's M&P 2.0 Compact Handgun: Better Than Glock? Posted: 25 Aug 2018 06:00 AM PDT |
Fox News' Neil Cavuto Shreds Donald Trump: 'The Problem Is You' Posted: 23 Aug 2018 06:56 PM PDT |
Scott 'Stop the boats' Morrison: Australia's latest PM Posted: 24 Aug 2018 01:03 AM PDT Evangelical Christian Scott Morrison, who emerged as prime minister Friday after a ruling party bun fight, is a key architect of Australia's controversial "stop the boats" policy to halt the arrival of seaborne asylum-seekers. Morrison, an ambitious man who has always dreamed of the top job, snatched the leadership from the hands of hardline conservatives who had engineered the ouster of incumbent moderate Malcolm Turnbull. Morrison, who was immigration minister before becoming treasurer, was reportedly quietly canvassing support among his colleagues as Turnbull feuded with his rivals during the week. |
'My 600-lb Life' Star Lisa Fleming Dies at 50 Posted: 25 Aug 2018 04:59 AM PDT |
Woman Fights Off Alligator While Swimming in Florida Lake Posted: 24 Aug 2018 08:07 AM PDT |
El Salvador switches allegiance from Taiwan to China, drawing ire from the US Posted: 23 Aug 2018 08:43 PM PDT On the face of it, this week's break in diplomatic relations between tiny Taiwan, population 23.5 million, and even tinier El Salvador, population 6.3m, did not herald a dramatic shift in global politics. But the Central American nation's sudden switch in allegiance to China has clearly rattled its US neighbour. Accusing China of destabilising cross-Strait relations, the White House said: "This is a decision that affects not just El Salvador, but also the economic health and security of the entire Americas region." It reiterated that the US would reevaluate its ties with the Central American country as a result. Reacting to the news earlier, high profile US Senators Marco Rubio and Cory Gardner, representing Florida and Colorado respectively, immediately hit out with threats via their Twitter accounts. "El Salvador has made the wrong decision regarding Taiwan, and it will negatively influence US relations with El Salvador. The US government must stand up to China's campaign to bully Taiwan with every tool we have," said Mr Gardner. Mr Rubio told his 3.6 million followers on Twitter: "I have joined @SenCoryGardner in an amendment to end foreign aid to #ElSalvador after their leftist government decided to abandon #Taiwan in favor of #China. I also spoke to @realdonaldtrump about cutting off their aid just a few minutes ago. " They faced immediate charges of hypocrisy. El Salvador's defection has left Taiwan, an island democracy which Beijing claims as its own territory, with only 17 formal diplomatic allies in the world, and the US is not one of them. I have joined @SenCoryGardner in an amendment to end foreign aid to #ElSalvador after their leftist government decided to abandon #Taiwan in favor of #China. I also spoke to @realdonaldtrump about cutting off their aid just a few minutes ago.— Marco Rubio (@marcorubio) August 21, 2018 Washington has not officially recognised Taiwan since 1979, when it shifted its recognition to China's communist government to suit its own strategic and economic interests. But the senators' comments join a narrative of growing concern within the US administration that China is acting in a predatory manner on Washington's doorstep. President Trump's National Security Strategy has described Beijing as seeking "to pull [Latin America] into its orbit through state-led investments and loans," while Rex Tillerson, the former secretary of state, once denounced China as a "new imperial power" in Latin America. Taiwan's foreign ministry offered some candid insights into its own rift with El Salvador late on Tuesday night, revealing that it had faced repeated demands for funds to develop the La Union commercial port which would have held "tremendous debt risks" for both countries. Only last month, Jean Manes, the US ambassador to El Salvador, warned that China had intentions to turn the Pacific-facing port into a "military base," reported the South China Morning Post. "It's a strategic matter, and we all need to keep our eyes open to what is happening," she said. China has previously sparked suspicions about the motivations behind its port investments after opening its first overseas military base in Djibouti, in the Horn of Africa, last year, and over the possible development of a second in Gwadar Port in Pakistan. Members of the Taiwanese community in Paraguay greet President Tsai during a visit last week Credit: Jorge Adorno/Reuters However, analysts including Bonnie Glaser, senior director for Asia at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in DC, are more sceptical of the view that China is eyeing La Union for its strategic military interests, arguing that Beijing's motives in Latin America are more commercially driven. "I don't think China is looking to turn every port in the world into a Chinese base. It would be strategically stupid in my mind to be building a base in what America has always considered to be its backyard," Ms Glaser told The Telegraph. "The notion that China would like the countries in Latin America to have a good relationship with China and be less dependent on the United States, that could certainly be one of China's objectives," she said. "That's what China has done around the world, certainly closer to home in Southeast Asia. China has used its economic clout to try and pull some countries away from the United States, at least positioning them in a way that they're more neutral, so that's certainly possible." Top 10 | Things you didn't know about Taiwan Speculation is rising as to which of Taiwan's diplomatic allies Beijing may successfully pick off next in its quest to isolate the island nation on the global stage. But aside from the psychological impact on its population, Taiwan has tangibly little to worry about by losing its formal allies, several of whom have demanded funds in exchange for their loyalty, while offering little in return. Taipei already enjoys strong informal relations with more powerful friends including the US and Japan. As China seeks to undermine the legitimacy and global influence of Taiwan, a democratic ally of the West located in a regional flashpoint, it is perhaps Taipei's western friends who should be more concerned. A Pacific island may be next to switch its allegiance from Taiwan to China, which has grand strategic ambitions in the Pacific region. "People talk about the Solomon Islands," said Ms Glaser. "That would be seen as very significant not only by the US but also by Australia and New Zealand, who are very worried about China's growing influence in the region." |
Taliban launch attacks on approaches to Afghan city of Ghazni Posted: 24 Aug 2018 06:00 AM PDT The Taliban raided three villages on the outskirts of Ghazni late on Thursday, destroying some newly built checkpoints and cutting off power to some parts of the city. Provincial police chief Farid Mashal said government forces counter-attacked to block the insurgents from approaching the city. "We were swift to push the Taliban out of the villages, but many civilians fled to neighboring villages fearing the fighters could kill them," said Mashal. |
Matilda Goad's New Collaboration with Liberty of London and Other Great New Products Posted: 24 Aug 2018 05:00 AM PDT |
Doctor accused of killing family with gas-filled yoga ball Posted: 24 Aug 2018 03:01 AM PDT |
Irish abuse survivor demands accountability even at Vatican Posted: 24 Aug 2018 04:04 AM PDT |
Senate Democrats To Mike Pompeo: Give Us Interpreter's Notes From Trump-Putin Meeting Posted: 24 Aug 2018 09:38 AM PDT |
Airbnb sues New York over 'government overreach' Posted: 24 Aug 2018 05:10 PM PDT Airbnb sued the city of New York on Friday, denouncing as "an extraordinary act of government overreach" a new law forcing home-sharing platforms to disclose data about hosts. It was a dramatic escalation in the battle between the $30 billion company and authorities in America's most populous city, amid a global backlash against "sharing economy" startups disrupting traditional industries. The law, which comes into effect on February 2, 2019, requires home-sharing platforms such as Airbnb to disclose information about hosts and imposes hefty fines for non-compliance. |
Soviet IZh 2125 ‘Kombi’ making comeback as Kalashnikov electric car Posted: 24 Aug 2018 08:03 AM PDT |
Nicki Minaj Gave a Shout Out to Margaret Thatcher and People Are Really Confused Posted: 24 Aug 2018 08:15 AM PDT |
Italy's far-right interior minister faces probe over stranded migrants Posted: 25 Aug 2018 02:06 PM PDT Prosecutors in Sicily on Saturday opened an inquiry into Italy's far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini for "illegal confinement, illegal arrest and abuse of power", reports said, over his refusal to allow over 100 rescued migrants off a coastguard ship. Authorities earlier allowed a dozen migrants to leave the Diciotti where they have been stranded for days, as it also hailed Albania for offering to accept some of those on board. Rome has blocked most of the migrants from stepping off the boat which docked at the port of Catania in Sicily on Monday night, leaving them trapped as Italy pushes other EU nations to take them in. |
Christopher Watts TV Interview Was 'Investigative Gold,' Former Officer Says Posted: 24 Aug 2018 05:29 AM PDT |
Tesla CEO Musk drops pursuit of $72 billion take-private deal Posted: 25 Aug 2018 11:24 AM PDT The decision to leave Tesla as a publicly listed company raises new questions about its future. Tesla shares have been trading well below their Aug. 7 levels, when Musk announced on Twitter that he was considering taking Tesla private for $420 per share, as investors wondered what this meant for Musk's ability to steer the company to profitability. |
Posted: 25 Aug 2018 07:45 AM PDT |
WATCH LIVE: Hurricane Lane brings catastrophic flooding to Hawaii Posted: 24 Aug 2018 11:11 AM PDT |
The Latest: Iowa student killed by 'sharp force injuries' Posted: 23 Aug 2018 05:47 PM PDT |
Zimbabwe opposition leader insists he won elections Posted: 25 Aug 2018 06:18 AM PDT Zimbabwe's main opposition leader Nelson Chamisa on Saturday refused to accept a Constitutional Court ruling that upheld Emmerson Mnangagwa's win in presidential elections last month. In his first comments since the country's top court overturned the opposition's legal challenge to have the results annulled, Chamisa vowed to lead "peaceful protests". "I have a legitimate claim that I am supposed to lead the people of Zimbabwe," the leader of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party said Saturday. |
EC OnlyOne P8 is a one-off supercar built on Ferrari bones Posted: 24 Aug 2018 05:00 AM PDT |
Canada concerned over reported Saudi death sentences for activists Posted: 23 Aug 2018 10:57 PM PDT Prime Minister Justin Trudeau expressed concern Thursday over reports that human rights activists in Saudi Arabia face the death penalty. The two countries are locked in a diplomatic dispute triggered by Canadian criticism of the kingdom's human rights record, but Trudeau said Canada continues to "engage diplomatically" with Saudi Arabia. Human rights groups say Saudi prosecutors are seeking the death penalty for five human rights activists, including, for the first time, a woman. |
2019 Acura RDX A-Spec Delivers B-Spec Performance Posted: 24 Aug 2018 09:52 AM PDT |
Former Harley-Davidson CEO Vaughn Beals Dies at 90 Posted: 24 Aug 2018 10:02 AM PDT |
U.S. health agency's ex-director charged with groping woman Posted: 24 Aug 2018 02:47 PM PDT A 55-year-old woman filed a complaint in July against Thomas Frieden, who once served as the city's health commissioner, accusing him of grabbing her buttocks without permission last October at his Brooklyn apartment, said New York City Police Department spokeswoman Arlene Muniz. Frieden, 57, turned himself in to a Brooklyn police station, Muniz said, and he was arrested on misdemeanor charges of sexual abuse, forcible touching and harassment. A number of prominent men in business, entertainment, and the media in the United States have been accused of sexual misconduct in the past year in what has become known as the #MeToo movement. |
Monterey: Auctions results for day one are in! Posted: 25 Aug 2018 02:05 PM PDT |
Trump Tells Jeff Sessions: Go After My Enemies Posted: 24 Aug 2018 03:46 AM PDT |
11 Punch Recipes Perfect For A Kids Party Posted: 24 Aug 2018 02:45 PM PDT |
Meyer tweets apology to former assistant's ex-wife Posted: 24 Aug 2018 10:29 PM PDT |
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