Yahoo! News: Terrorism
Yahoo! News: Terrorism |
- Tired of troops on the streets, Washington, D.C., names 'Black Lives Matter Plaza' outside the White House
- Cops Are Finally Being Disciplined—but Is Anybody Buying It?
- Watch Lightning Strike the Washington Monument, Then Watch It Again
- Bolsonaro threatens WHO exit as COVID-19 kills 'a Brazilian per minute'
- Denver police fire pepper balls at man yelling that his pregnant fiancée is in car
- FBI: National Guardsman expressed white supremacist ideology
- US Marines order Confederate flag to be removed from public display
- Trump praises success against coronavirus in states that are seeing cases spike
- Fact check: Huntington Beach photos comparing coronavirus protest, BLM protest are real
- The 20 Best Podcasts About All Things Tech
- Two Buffalo policemen charged for shoving 75-year-old protester
- Former Palestinian Islamic Jihad leader dies after battle with illness
- Cristobal enters the Gulf of Mexico
- Elephant dies in India after eating explosive-stuffed fruit
- Trump says the economy will cure the 'very sad problem' of police killing blacks
- 'Are you serious? I'm working!': Cops arrest essential workers alongside protestors as calls grow to end NYC curfew
- NYC official and ex-cop says police profession has been "hijacked"
- New arms race taking shape amid a pandemic and economic crisis
- Tom Cotton’s Foes Are Embracing Authoritarianism
- U.S. envoy to U.N. pushes back against criticism over protests
- Iran FM throws ball back in Trump's court on nuclear deal
- Governor Gavin Newsom and California state representatives call for a ban of controversial neck hold used by police
- Soldiers Pull BLM Signs, Confederate Flag from Vehicles After Viral Confrontation
- Cyclist Who Allegedly Assaulted a Group of Teens Posting Protest Flyers in a Viral Video Has Been Arrested
- Bollywood actors called out for protesting racism while promoting skin whitening creams
- China urges citizens to shun Australia as dispute simmers
- The SR-71's Successor Could Be America's First Hypersonic Bomber
- White bystanders armed with rifles watch Floyd protesters march in Indiana
- Czech Republic expels two Russian diplomats over 'made-up information' about attacks
- Protests against police violence sweep across small-town America
- 'Rahul is a f---ing champ': The DC man who gave refuge to more than 70 protesters fleeing police and pepper spray is being heralded as a legend
- California: Vallejo police kill unarmed 22-year-old, who was on his knees with his hands up
- One of Apple's suppliers just dropped a big hint that the iPhone 12 will probably be delayed
- Trump nixes golf club visit over potential for 'bad optics' amid nationwide protests
- Judge sides with tribe in lawsuit over reservation status
- Why China Looked To Israel's Lavi Jet For Its J-10 'Vigorous Dragon'
- US launches first Taliban air strikes since Afghan ceasefire end
- Floyd Protesters Met With Armed Bystanders During Indiana March
- Combat drone to compete against piloted plane
- Graphic: What U.S. police are shooting at protesters
- Study: Blood pressure drug could lower virus deaths
Posted: 05 Jun 2020 10:27 AM PDT |
Cops Are Finally Being Disciplined—but Is Anybody Buying It? Posted: 05 Jun 2020 07:24 PM PDT Nearly two weeks into protests against the killing of an unarmed black man in Minneapolis police custody, a slew of different cities across the country have been forced to confront the brutal methods used by their own police officers as videos emerged of harrowing incident after harrowing incident. And on Friday, it seemed a reckoning of sorts was in the air: Police officers in multiple cities were suspended, hit with charges, or stripped of their powers after they were caught on camera treating peaceful protesters like combatants. In New York City, where earlier this week authorities had praised the police department's "restraint" amid protests despite video evidence to the contrary, NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea announced that two officers involved in violent encounters with protesters—including one woman who was violently pushed to the ground and a man who was pepper sprayed after his mask was pulled down—have been suspended without pay.New York Cops Beat Protesters for Crime of Being ThereIn Philadelphia, the District Attorney's office filed aggravated assault charges against police inspector Joseph Bologna after a video showed him hitting a demonstrator with a metal baton. The demonstrator, a Temple University student who was also arrested and detained for 24 hours, needed ten staples and sutures in his head following Monday's incident in Center City. Several states away, two Chicago police officers caught on video pulling a woman from a car by her hair before placing a knee on her neck have been stripped of their police powers pending an investigation, authorities said in a Friday statement. But before the night was even halfway over, the illusion of change began to unravel. NYPD officers rushed dozens of demonstrators in Manhattan that were out past the 8 p.m. curfew, arresting people in droves and hitting several with batons. At least 10 protesters were arrested after the peaceful protest—several of whom chanted "black lives matter" while they were awaiting transport, according to City & State NY."This is outrageous. We were engaged in a non-violent protest. Stop arresting New Yorkers for no reason," NYC Council Member Ben Kallos tweeted.Across the river in Brooklyn, one protester told The Daily Beast he was pushed over by authorities—prompting other residents to shout and swear at officers pushing them to go home past curfew. After a tense stand-off in which cops yelled at reporters and pushed people who had been peacefully protesting onto the sidewalks, at least a dozen were arrested and directed into NYPD vans. And in Buffalo, while there was a sense of accountability after the officers who shoved down 75-year-old Martin Gugino on Thursday night were suspended without pay, there was another sign of the rift between peaceful protesters and police officers as 57 fellow members of the Buffalo Police Department Emergency Response Team resigned in solidarity with the suspended officers.In Minneapolis, where protesters continued to express outrage over the death of Floyd on Friday, demonstrators were skeptical of police being held accountable. Zeque Davies, a 29-year-old whose parents emigrated to Minneapolis from Liberia, said the cities that have disciplined officers in recent days are "trying to prove a point through the media." "I don't think they're actually holding cops accountable," Davies told The Daily Beast. "A slap on the wrist and a paid vacation is not holding a cop accountable. Trying him, arresting him and giving him a charge, that's holding a cop accountable."Demonstrators in other cities weren't convinced that a simple suspension would solve any problems. "I'm sure there are professional police officers. But what we're seeing is that unlike other departments or other services, when a police officer goes rogue, they kill people," Tara Smith, 30, told The Daily Beast at a vigil held at Union Square in Manhattan. "A city clerk is not going to do the same kind of damage, so you can't tell me that they should not be held to a higher standard than other industries and other departments and services." Others pointed out that all the recent acts of brutality by police were happening even while people were filming them—raising the question of what happens when the cameras stop rolling. Carolina Martinez, a bartender in Buffalo taking part in a peaceful protest on Friday, said it only took four hours for video of police officers shoving down a peaceful protester to garner worldwide attention a day earlier. "The only thing we can do now is just continue to just broadcast it," she said. Residents still came out in droves on Friday to protest. In Washington, D.C., the mayor's office commissioned "Black Lives Matter" to be painted across a street leading to the White House.Cops Reclaim New York in Massive Show of Force In New York, thousands of residents across the five boroughs took to the streets despite the rain. Upstate, in Buffalo, protesters gathered in Niagara Square demanding police reform one day after an elderly activist was shoved to the ground by officers.The nation-wide demonstrations on Friday also focused on Breonna Taylor, the Kentucky EMT worker fatally shot in her home during a botched March police raid. On Friday, Taylor would have been 27-years-old. From New York to Portland to Miami, thousands of protesters sang Happy Birthday in Taylor's honor. In Kentucky, dozens of demonstrators gathered in Jefferson Square Park in Kentucky to honor her memory, many writing birthday cards that will be sent to Taylor's family.In Miami, hundreds of residents took to the streets in a Black Lives Matter protest, forcing officials to shut down several highways and the mayor to change the city-wide curfew. The Miami Police Department closed Interstate 95 in both directions to allow space for the continued protesters chanting "say their names" near Wynwood. "I think the protests are finally getting politicians and police departments to finally listen. Everyday it's a step forward," Ashlynn Lee, 20, told The Daily Beast. Her friend, Tanisha Brown, 20, added: "They are definitely listening to what these protests are about. We are taking not only over the streets in the 50 states and different countries, but also social media. All you see when you scroll down is black lives matter. People are starting to shout it is definitely happening. Everybody is fighting for black lives."About an hour later, Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Giminez moved the curfew to 10 p.m., after it was pushed back to midnight earlier this week. Alan, one protester who attended the Miami protests, called the mayor's decision to bump up the curfew due to "unrest" a "bullshit move.""If it wasn't about Black Lives Matter and police reform, the protestors would be treated differently. There was no unrest," Alan said. In Minneapolis, the intersection where Floyd was killed has turned into a constant block party—complete with a stage that hosts speakers, spoken word artists, and rappers. Robin Jackson, 27-year-who lives down the street, told The Daily Beast things are peaceful in the downtown Minneapolis neighborhood, for now. He added that while some Americans are reeling from Floyd's tragic death, the black community is simply witnessing what they have known for years."I feel like this is just the acknowledgment among people other than Black people, where they can say, "Ok, maybe they have a point," Jackson said. "They're at least acknowledging that something is happening."The ongoing protests have already sparked police reform in two states. City officials in Minneapolis have agreed to ban police chokeholds while detaining suspects and require officers to intervene when they see unauthorized force used by a colleague. Every Buffalo Cop in Elite Unit Quits to Back Officers Who Shoved Elderly Man to GroundIn California, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday ordered the "carotid hold," a neck restraint move that blocks blood flow to the brain, be removed from police training. Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan on Friday announced a ban on the police use of tear gas for 30 days as protests are expected to continue in the city. The ban came just hours after three civilian police watchdog groups urged Seattle leaders to ban the violent tactic that public health officials believe may potentially increase the COVID-19 spread. A federal judge in Denver Friday also ruled that police must limit their use of "chemical weapons or projectiles" and a number of other measures of force against protesters, calling the past actions of law enforcement nation-wide "disgusting."As demonstrators have continued to take to the streets, one medical worker in New York acknowledged that the health care community is concerned about how the protests will ultimately impact the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. "Obviously it worries us because we're afraid of a spike in coronavirus cases. We all work at a hospital and we know what that means when that happens," Sushmitha Echt, an attending physician at Northwell Health, told The Daily Beast. "At the same time, we're wearing our masks... there are certain things we just have to take a stand for. This is one of those things."Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Watch Lightning Strike the Washington Monument, Then Watch It Again Posted: 05 Jun 2020 09:10 AM PDT |
Bolsonaro threatens WHO exit as COVID-19 kills 'a Brazilian per minute' Posted: 05 Jun 2020 06:05 AM PDT President Jair Bolsonaro threatened on Friday to pull Brazil out of the World Health Organization after the U.N. agency warned Latin American governments about the risk of lifting lockdowns before slowing the spread of the novel coronavirus throughout the region. A new Brazilian record for daily COVID-19 fatalities pushed the county's death toll past that of Italy late on Thursday, but Bolsonaro continues to argue for quickly lifting state isolation orders, arguing that the economic costs outweigh public health risks. Latin America's most populous nations, Brazil and Mexico, are seeing the highest rates of new infections, though the pandemic is also gathering pace in countries such as Peru, Colombia, Chile and Bolivia. |
Denver police fire pepper balls at man yelling that his pregnant fiancée is in car Posted: 05 Jun 2020 03:18 PM PDT |
FBI: National Guardsman expressed white supremacist ideology Posted: 05 Jun 2020 01:57 PM PDT An Ohio National Guardsman was removed from policing protests in Washington D.C. after the FBI found he expressed white supremacist ideology online, Gov. Mike DeWine announced in a briefing Friday. The state had sent 100 National Guard soldiers to the nation's capital Tuesday at the request of Secretary of Defense Mark Esper to assist in quelling violence over the death of George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis. |
US Marines order Confederate flag to be removed from public display Posted: 06 Jun 2020 07:44 AM PDT The US Marine Corps has officially ordered the removal of the Confederate battle flag from public display on its bases and offices, citing the flag's use by racist groups as a "threat to our core values".In a statement on 5 June, the service branch said: "The Confederate battle flag has all too often been co-opted by violent extremist and racist groups whose divisive beliefs have no place in our Corps." |
Trump praises success against coronavirus in states that are seeing cases spike Posted: 05 Jun 2020 11:02 AM PDT |
Fact check: Huntington Beach photos comparing coronavirus protest, BLM protest are real Posted: 05 Jun 2020 06:57 PM PDT |
The 20 Best Podcasts About All Things Tech Posted: 06 Jun 2020 06:00 AM PDT |
Two Buffalo policemen charged for shoving 75-year-old protester Posted: 06 Jun 2020 03:27 PM PDT |
Former Palestinian Islamic Jihad leader dies after battle with illness Posted: 06 Jun 2020 01:51 PM PDT |
Cristobal enters the Gulf of Mexico Posted: 05 Jun 2020 04:53 PM PDT |
Elephant dies in India after eating explosive-stuffed fruit Posted: 05 Jun 2020 03:33 AM PDT Indian police on Friday arrested a man accused of causing the death of a pregnant elephant that died after biting a pineapple stuffed with firecrackers that exploded in its mouth. The 15-year-old elephant was unable to eat after the injury and died in a river in Pallakad in southern Kerala state on May 27, state forest officer Surendra Kumar said. The state forest department announced the arrest and said it is investigating whether he was a poacher or a farmer who wanted to kill the elephant to prevent it from damaging crops. |
Trump says the economy will cure the 'very sad problem' of police killing blacks Posted: 05 Jun 2020 11:07 AM PDT |
Posted: 05 Jun 2020 09:02 AM PDT Calls have grown in recent days for New York City officials to end a curfew amid protests against police brutality and the death of George Floyd, as reports show police arresting essential workers alongside demonstrators.The 8pm curfew has caused confusion and further disruption in the city, despite Mayor Bill de Blasio designating on-demand food delivery workers essential — as some workers and industries have been labelled throughout the coronavirus pandemic. |
NYC official and ex-cop says police profession has been "hijacked" Posted: 06 Jun 2020 10:22 AM PDT |
New arms race taking shape amid a pandemic and economic crisis Posted: 06 Jun 2020 08:01 AM PDT |
Tom Cotton’s Foes Are Embracing Authoritarianism Posted: 05 Jun 2020 08:21 AM PDT |
U.S. envoy to U.N. pushes back against criticism over protests Posted: 05 Jun 2020 11:01 AM PDT U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Kelly Craft on Friday pushed back against criticism from China and Iran over the protests across the United States about racial inequality and excessive police force, challenging them to compare records. China and Iran, described respectively in the past as authoritarian and a mafia-like state by U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, both urged the United States in recent days to tackle racism and protect minorities' rights. |
Iran FM throws ball back in Trump's court on nuclear deal Posted: 05 Jun 2020 01:15 PM PDT Iran's foreign minister Friday threw the ball back into the US president's court on reaching a new nuclear agreement, after the two countries carried out a prisoner swap. President Donald Trump had voiced hope for progress with Iran a day earlier, after the Islamic republic released a US Navy veteran and the United States freed two Iranians. "Thank you to Iran, it shows a deal is possible!" Trump had tweeted. |
Posted: 06 Jun 2020 08:44 AM PDT |
Soldiers Pull BLM Signs, Confederate Flag from Vehicles After Viral Confrontation Posted: 05 Jun 2020 06:49 AM PDT |
Posted: 06 Jun 2020 09:19 AM PDT |
Bollywood actors called out for protesting racism while promoting skin whitening creams Posted: 06 Jun 2020 03:44 PM PDT |
China urges citizens to shun Australia as dispute simmers Posted: 05 Jun 2020 07:26 PM PDT China is advising its citizens not to visit Australia, citing racial discrimination and violence against Asians, in what appears to be Beijing's latest attempt to punish the country for advocating an investigation into the coronavirus pandemic. A notice issued by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism late Friday said there has "been an increase in words and deeds of racial discrimination and acts of violence against Chinese and Asians in Australia, due to the impact of COVID-19 pandemic." "The ministry advises Chinese tourists to raise their safety awareness and avoid travelling to Australia," the notice said. |
The SR-71's Successor Could Be America's First Hypersonic Bomber Posted: 06 Jun 2020 02:00 AM PDT |
White bystanders armed with rifles watch Floyd protesters march in Indiana Posted: 05 Jun 2020 08:03 AM PDT |
Czech Republic expels two Russian diplomats over 'made-up information' about attacks Posted: 05 Jun 2020 12:39 PM PDT The Czech Republic on Friday accused a Russian embassy employee of spreading false information about a planned poison attack and expelled two Russian diplomats, prompting an angry reaction from Moscow. The Russian foreign ministry slammed the expulsion in a statement as a "hostile measure" and said it would deal a "serious blow to Russian-Czech relations." In April, Respekt newspaper cited security sources as saying that a Russian national using a diplomatic passport had arrived in Prague carrying ricin, a toxic poison that can be used as a biological weapon. Around the same time, three Prague politicians who had each made political gestures that angered Russia were placed under police protection. "One embassy employee sent deliberately made-up information about a planned attack on Czech politicians to BIS," Prime Minister Andrej Babis said, referring to the Czech intelligence service. "We have adopted appropriate and adequate measures and declared two embassy staff personae non gratae." The case further soured already tricky relations between Prague and the Kremlin. Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova dismissed the Respekt report as "sick fantasies" in April. On Friday, the foreign ministry said: "Prague's measures will not only receive an adequate response, but they will also be considered in Russia's policy-making towards the Czech Republic. "We will seek a response to such provocations," it said. One of the three politicians named in the hoax, Ondrej Kolar, had spearheaded the April removal of a Cold War-era statue dedicated to Soviet general Ivan Konev - a hero to many Russians but a symbol of Soviet-era oppression to many Czechs. Another of those targeted, Prague mayor Zdenek Hrib, supported renaming the Prague square where the Russian embassy is based after Boris Nemtsov, a Russian opposition leader murdered in 2015. The embassy has since started using a different door without moving to have a different address. And the district run by Pavel Novotny, the third politician mentioned in the hoax, installed a memorial to the so-called Vlasov Army - Red Army defectors who helped to liberate Prague in May 1945. Mikhail Bryukhanov, head of the Russian foreign ministry's international cooperation agency Rossotrudnichestvo, said both of the expelled diplomats were its employees. Speaking to the RIA Novosti news agency, Bryukhanov said one was Andrei Konchakov, the interim head of Rossotrudnichestvo's Czech branch, while Czech media identified the other diplomat as Konchakov's deputy Igor Rybakov. Czech media have previously reported that Konchakov arrived in Prague in March, suggesting he was the supposed man with ricin in his suitcase. "The Czech Republic has invented this 'ricin scandal', a mean story out of a cheap thriller. "The decision is absolutely unjustified and it obviously won't help relations between the two countries," Bryukhanov said. Babis cited intelligence as showing the hoax was the result of infighting at the Russian embassy. "Besides burdening our security forces, (the employee) caused further complications in Czech-Russian relations and harmed the good reputation of the Russian Federation in the Czech Republic," said the billionaire populist prime minister. Foreign Minister Tomas Petricek said Russia's approach to the problem had left his country with no option other than to expel the diplomats "even though we're aware of the expected reciprocal steps". |
Protests against police violence sweep across small-town America Posted: 05 Jun 2020 08:36 AM PDT ANNA, Ill./NEW YORK (Reuters) - Before sundown on Thursday around 150 protesters marched down the main street in Anna, Illinois, past Bob's Tavern, Oasis of Grace Church, Douglas Skating Rink and Casey's General Store holding homemade signs and chanting "black lives matter." Nearly a century ago this southern Illinois town of 4,200 residents expelled most of its African-American residents, according to historians. The rally was held in solidarity with others protesting the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis with a white policeman's knee on his neck. |
Posted: 06 Jun 2020 06:02 AM PDT |
California: Vallejo police kill unarmed 22-year-old, who was on his knees with his hands up Posted: 04 Jun 2020 09:48 PM PDT An officer mistakenly believed Sean Monterrosa had a gun, but it was a hammer in his pocketPolice in northern California fatally shot an unarmed 22-year-old who was on his knees with his hands up outside a Walgreens store while responding to a call of alleged looting, officials said.An officer in the city of Vallejo was inside his car when he shot Sean Monterrosa on Monday night amid local and national protests against police brutality. Police said an officer mistakenly believed Monterrosa had a gun, but later determined he had a hammer in his pocket.The killing of Monterrosa, who was a San Francisco resident, has sparked intense outrage in the Bay Area, particularly in the city of Vallejo, a city with a long history of police violence and high-profile killings and excessive force complaints. "When confronted by the police, he dropped to his knees and surrendered, and they fired at him," said Melissa Nold, a Vallejo civil rights attorney representing Monterrosa's family. "He wasn't doing anything to warrant it. They shot him from inside their car. What opportunity did they give him to survive that situation? … It's egregiously bad." The exact circumstances that led to the killing are unclear, and police have not yet released footage. In a news conference on Wednesday, two days after the killing, police chief Shawny Williams said officers were responding to a call of possible looting at the pharmacy shortly after midnight when an officer in a cruiser drove up and saw a dozen people in the parking lot getting into a car. A second officer in an unmarked car drove up and found Monterrosa, who was still on the scene, who then kneeled down and started to raise his hands. At this point, the police chief said, this officer "perceived a threat" and fired five shots through his window at Monterosso. The chief declined to identify the officer who killed Monterrosa, saying only that the officer was an 18-year veteran of the force. The chief also dodged questions about whether he considered the shooting to be excessive force and ignored questions from angry community members who showed up to a press conference. When asked about the merits of shooting through a window, the chief said some officers are trained to shoot through their windshields and said this was allowed under policy. Monterrosa died at the hospital, the chief said. The last person killed by Vallejo police was Willie McCoy, a 20-year-old who had been sleeping in his car in February 2019 when six officers fired 55 bullets in 3.5 seconds. One of the six officers who killed McCoy, a rising rapper in the Bay Area, had previously killed an unarmed man who was fleeing on his bike. Another Vallejo officer killed three men in a five-month period and was subsequently promoted. Vallejo, a city 30 miles north-east of San Francisco with 121,000 residents, has over the years had a significantly higher rate of killings by police than the national average and other Bay Area cities. Despite promises of reform in the wake of widespread scrutiny, the killing of Monterrosa and police leaders' actions in the aftermath suggest that nothing has changed, said Nold, who has long advocated for policy shifts. A day after the shooting, police and other Vallejo leaders held a news conference about the ongoing protests and the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, but refused to provide any details about Monterrosa's killing, saying only that there had been an "officer-involved shooting" and declining to specify whether it was fatal."It's just unfathomable," said Nold, adding that the news was devastating to many families of people killed by Vallejo police, who were trying to be optimistic about change in the city, since police had not killed anyone for more than a year. Even though the chief likely knew the circumstances of the killing by the time he held his first news conference, he refused to discuss it, while citizens were continuing to march for Floyd, Nold noted. "We're protesting for a guy who lived thousands of miles away. And the day we're marching, our own police are gunning down an unarmed man on his knees." While Nold has not yet seen body-camera footage, which police are eventually required to release, and has not yet viewed Monterrosa's body, she noted that "even their own version of the story is horrific". The department, she said, has a track record of initially misrepresenting the circumstances of killings, which the public later learns when video is released. Even if police believed Monterrosa was involved in looting, the officers had no evidence of that when they arrived and immediately shot him, she added. Nold said she was anxious to learn the identity of the officer, given that the force is relatively small and she knows of more than a dozen officers in recent years who have killed more than one citizen. Monterrosa grew up in San Francisco, where he attended an arts high school and had previously worked at the local Boys and Girls Club, a not-for-profit."He was a true native son of San Francisco and Bernal Heights," said Jake Grumbach, a family friend, who posted a video of Monterrosa speaking at a youth program in the city, where loved ones and local residents gathered on Thursday for a vigil. "He was loved and respected by so many … There is just so much community support and solidarity."Vallejo police representatives did not respond to questions. Adante Pointer, another civil rights lawyer who has long represented Vallejo families, said it was especially alarming that officers would kill a resident at this moment: "The eyes of the world are on policing and yet your officers still feel comfortable enough to shoot someone under what are the most questionable circumstances? If they could do this during the light of the George Floyd protests and world scrutiny, you can only imagine what they do in the dark of the night when no one is looking." |
One of Apple's suppliers just dropped a big hint that the iPhone 12 will probably be delayed Posted: 05 Jun 2020 06:44 AM PDT |
Trump nixes golf club visit over potential for 'bad optics' amid nationwide protests Posted: 06 Jun 2020 02:19 PM PDT |
Judge sides with tribe in lawsuit over reservation status Posted: 06 Jun 2020 10:44 AM PDT |
Why China Looked To Israel's Lavi Jet For Its J-10 'Vigorous Dragon' Posted: 06 Jun 2020 08:00 AM PDT |
US launches first Taliban air strikes since Afghan ceasefire end Posted: 05 Jun 2020 01:28 PM PDT The US launched its first air strikes against the Taliban since a rare ceasefire between the insurgents and Afghan forces ended more than a week ago, the US military said Friday. The two assaults took place on Thursday and Friday in separate provinces in Afghanistan, US forces spokesman Sonny Leggett said on Twitter. "These were the 1st US airstrikes against (the Taliban) since the start of the Eid ceasefire," he wrote. |
Floyd Protesters Met With Armed Bystanders During Indiana March Posted: 04 Jun 2020 08:12 PM PDT |
Combat drone to compete against piloted plane Posted: 06 Jun 2020 12:40 AM PDT |
Graphic: What U.S. police are shooting at protesters Posted: 06 Jun 2020 03:15 AM PDT George Floyd died as a white Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for more than eight minutes, and his death has triggered a wave of protests across the country and around the world. Police have used a range of weapons against peaceful protesters as well as members of the press during the demonstrations. Chemical irritants include tear gas and pepper spray, which cause sensations of burning, pain and inflammation of the airways. |
Study: Blood pressure drug could lower virus deaths Posted: 05 Jun 2020 07:03 AM PDT |
You are subscribed to email updates from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |