2015年4月4日星期六

Yahoo! News: Terrorism

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: Terrorism


Zarif stresses benefits to Iran of framework nuclear deal

Posted: 04 Apr 2015 03:07 PM PDT

Iran's Foreign Minister Javad Zarif gestures as he speaks during a news conference in LausanneAll sanctions to Iran's nuclear program will be lifted if a final deal is agreed.


Rains hit South, Midwest; woman killed in flood

Posted: 04 Apr 2015 02:40 PM PDT

Simone Wester talks with family on the phone from the front door of her apartment building at the Guardian Court Apartments in Louisville, Ky., Friday, April 3, 2015. More than a foot of water flooded the apartment complex. Authorities in Louisville, Kentucky, made more than 100 water rescues early Friday as area storms flooded roads and prompted at least one evacuation. (AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley)LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Kentucky was swamped by wave after wave of heavy rain, unleashing flash flooding that killed a woman, stranded a school bus and forced more than 160 rescues in Louisville.


Exclusive: Jason Collins on Indiana's RFRA

Posted: 04 Apr 2015 04:56 PM PDT

Exclusive: Jason Collins on Indiana's RFRAThe former basketball player - in Indianapolis to cover the Final Four for Yahoo Sports - gives his thoughts on the state's controversial act and its recent amendment.


High political stakes for Clinton on Iran nuclear agreement

Posted: 04 Apr 2015 09:44 AM PDT

In this photo taken March 23, 2015, former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton listens during an event hosted by the Center for American Progress (CAP) and the America Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), in Washington. A final nuclear deal with Iran would enable Clinton to claim a piece of the victory. But if negotiations fall apart or produce an agreement that lets Iran pursue a bomb, Clinton would own a piece of the failure. The likely Democratic presidential candidate and former secretary of state seems well aware of the implications. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)WASHINGTON (AP) — Hillary Rodham Clinton can claim a piece of the victory if the U.S. and other world powers ultimately complete a final nuclear deal with Iran.


5 years after coal mine blast, explosion risks persist

Posted: 04 Apr 2015 02:03 AM PDT

FILE - In this April 6, 2010, file photo, a coal train passes under a belt at Massey Energy's Upper Big Branch Coal Mine, in Montcoal, W.Va. Five years after the blast that killed 29 West Virginia coal miners, authorities stepped up enforcement efforts and pledged to seek out dangerous mines. But federal officials continue to find explosion risks at some underground mines, including many in states like Kentucky and West Virginia with long histories tied to coal. (AP Photo/Jeff Gentner, File)CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — The nation's worst coal mine disaster in decades exposed lax safety measures at some Appalachian mines, issues that persist five years later despite the crackdown that followed, according to an Associated Press review of federal inspection records.


Somali militants vow to turn Kenyan cities 'red with blood'

Posted: 04 Apr 2015 11:07 AM PDT

Kenya Administration policemen arrive in a truck in Garissa University College in GarissaBy 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

FILE - In this April 2, 2015 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. The framework nuclear deal sealed by world powers and Iran leaves major questions: Could Iran cheat? Possibly. Would the U.S or anyone else be able to respond in time? In theory, yes. Are they prepared to use military force? Questionable. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)Could Iran cheat? Possibly. Would the U.S or anyone else be able to respond in time? In theory, yes.


Many Iranian expats in California have doubts about nuclear deal

Posted: 04 Apr 2015 02:54 PM PDT

U.S. Secretary of State Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Zarif arrive to deliver statements after nuclear talks in LausanneBy 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

In this photo made Friday, April 3, 2015, Reginald Rounds, a volunteer with the Organization for Black Struggle, walks door-to-door while canvassing a neighborhood in Ferguson, Mo. The city is preparing for an election on Tuesday when three of six city council seats will be decided. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)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

Sarah Brady, wife of James Brady, the White House press secretary who was seriously injured in the 1981 assassination attempt against President Ronald Reagan, is joined by gun violence prevention advocates to mark the 20th anniversary of the implementation of the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act, at the Capitol in Washington, Friday, Feb. 28, 2014. The law, enacted by President Bill Clinton, called for a five-day waiting period for the purchase of a handgun and a background check of any individual purchasing a firearm from a federally licensed dealer. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)Sarah Kemp Brady, who became an activist for gun control after her husband was shot in the head in the assassination attempt on President Ronald Reagan, died Friday.


Mother, child missing in flood as storms hit South, Midwest

Posted: 03 Apr 2015 07:29 PM PDT

Simone Wester talks with family on the phone from the front door of her apartment building at the Guardian Court Apartments in Louisville, Ky., Friday, April 3, 2015. More than a foot of water flooded the apartment complex. Authorities in Louisville, Kentucky, made more than 100 water rescues early Friday as area storms flooded roads and prompted at least one evacuation. (AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley)Rescue crews lose sight of a vehicle carrying a woman and a child in eastern Kentucky.


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