Yahoo! News: Terrorism
Yahoo! News: Terrorism |
- Zarif stresses benefits to Iran of framework nuclear deal
- Rains hit South, Midwest; woman killed in flood
- Exclusive: Jason Collins on Indiana's RFRA
- High political stakes for Clinton on Iran nuclear agreement
- 5 years after coal mine blast, explosion risks persist
- Somali militants vow to turn Kenyan cities 'red with blood'
- Holes, questions remain for Iran's nuclear deal
- Many Iranian expats in California have doubts about nuclear deal
- Ferguson, Missouri, releases racist emails from former officials
- Rolling Stone awaits review of debunked Virginia gang rape story
- Gun-control activist and widow of James Brady dies at 73
- Mother, child missing in flood as storms hit South, Midwest
Zarif stresses benefits to Iran of framework nuclear deal Posted: 04 Apr 2015 03:07 PM PDT |
Rains hit South, Midwest; woman killed in flood Posted: 04 Apr 2015 02:40 PM PDT |
Exclusive: Jason Collins on Indiana's RFRA Posted: 04 Apr 2015 04:56 PM PDT |
High political stakes for Clinton on Iran nuclear agreement Posted: 04 Apr 2015 09:44 AM PDT |
5 years after coal mine blast, explosion risks persist Posted: 04 Apr 2015 02:03 AM PDT |
Somali militants vow to turn Kenyan cities 'red with blood' Posted: 04 Apr 2015 11:07 AM PDT By Edith Honan GARISSA, Kenya (Reuters) - Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta said on Saturday that those behind an attack in which al Shabaab Islamist militants killed 148 people at a university were "deeply embedded" in Kenya, and called on Kenyan Muslims to help prevent radicalization. His televised speech in response to Thursday's 15-hour siege at the Garissa university campus came after the Interior Ministry said five suspects in the assault had been detained, some while trying to flee to Somalia. The suspected mastermind, Mohamed Mohamud, a former teacher at a Garissa madrasa, is still on the run. Kenya has offered a 20 million shillings ($215,000) reward for his arrest. |
Holes, questions remain for Iran's nuclear deal Posted: 04 Apr 2015 05:34 AM PDT |
Many Iranian expats in California have doubts about nuclear deal Posted: 04 Apr 2015 02:54 PM PDT By Daina Beth Solomon LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Many members of the Los Angeles-area Iranian community, the largest in the United States, are skeptical about a preliminary nuclear deal between Tehran and world powers, even though a pact could end decades of international isolation for their homeland. The prevailing sentiment in part reflects the history of the Southern California's Iranian community, made up of those in the earliest wave of migration after Iran's 1979 revolution. Many are still distrustful of the Iranian government. A rollback of U.S. sanctions, which have contributed to Iran's skyrocketing inflation and inability to obtain Western medical supplies, will do little to improve the lives of ordinary people, many expatriates say. |
Ferguson, Missouri, releases racist emails from former officials Posted: 04 Apr 2015 07:28 AM PDT Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, have released the full content of racially charged and religiously insensitive emails, including about President Barack Obama, sent between the city's former court clerk and two ex-police supervisors. The emails, although dating back years before the shooting, were among evidence presented by the Justice Department in a report in March that concluded that racism pervaded the Ferguson Police Department. They were sent and received by Mary Ann Twitty, who was Ferguson's court clerk, as well as former Ferguson police Captain Rick Henke and former police Sergeant William Mudd. All three were removed from their jobs after the Department of Justice discovered the emails, which prompted an investigation by city officials. |
Rolling Stone awaits review of debunked Virginia gang rape story Posted: 04 Apr 2015 01:41 PM PDT By Ian Simpson WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Columbia University review of a now-discredited Rolling Stone story about an alleged gang rape at a University of Virginia fraternity is due out on Sunday, addressing the questions of journalistic ethics raised by the provocative article. Rolling Stone commissioned the review after backtracking on the story, "A Rape on Campus," which caused an uproar over the issue of campus sexual assault when it was published in November. The story's autopsy could lead to a shakeup at Rolling Stone, founded in 1967 by editor Jann Wenner. If the report is highly critical, it "will have an enormous impact on Rolling Stone. |
Gun-control activist and widow of James Brady dies at 73 Posted: 03 Apr 2015 09:40 PM PDT |
Mother, child missing in flood as storms hit South, Midwest Posted: 03 Apr 2015 07:29 PM PDT |
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