Yahoo! News: World News
Yahoo! News: World News |
- Obama decides not to release bin Laden photos (Reuters)
- Photos show three dead men at bin Laden raid house (Reuters)
- Several deaths, injuries in Amsterdam shooting (Reuters)
- Britain says still seeking U.N. condemnation of Syria (Reuters)
- Indicting Gaddafi for War Crimes: Will It Help or Hurt? (Time.com)
- Israeli PM takes Hamas fight to Europe (AFP)
- Palestinian deal ends rift, hurts peace prospects (AP)
- France to recover body from crash site off Brazil (AP)
- Hundreds of Mubarak loyalists, foes clash in Cairo (AFP)
- Pacquiao wants Mosley seeing yellow stars (AFP)
- Australian kills daughter after Facebook threat (AFP)
- After bin Laden: Why the US wants military access to Afghanistan beyond 2014 (The Christian Science Monitor)
- Radical Indonesian Muslim Group to Hold Mass Prayer for bin Laden (Time.com)
- Arrests at UK's Sellafield nuclear plant raise concerns about security (The Christian Science Monitor)
- Bin Laden Killing Largely Unmourned in Pakistan (OneWorld.net)
Obama decides not to release bin Laden photos (Reuters) Posted: 04 May 2011 04:13 PM PDT |
Photos show three dead men at bin Laden raid house (Reuters) Posted: 04 May 2011 04:49 PM PDT |
Several deaths, injuries in Amsterdam shooting (Reuters) Posted: 04 May 2011 03:08 PM PDT Reuters - A number of people were killed and injured in a shooting at a car dealership in Amsterdam and five people were arrested, Dutch police said Wednesday. |
Britain says still seeking U.N. condemnation of Syria (Reuters) Posted: 04 May 2011 04:36 PM PDT Reuters - Britain said on Wednesday it was still seeking condemnation at the United Nations of Syria's crackdown on protests despite being rebuffed in an attempt last week. |
Indicting Gaddafi for War Crimes: Will It Help or Hurt? (Time.com) Posted: 04 May 2011 01:45 PM PDT Time.com - The International Criminal Court may look to indict to Libyan leader and his henchmen for war crimes. Could it induce his sons to break from him? |
Israeli PM takes Hamas fight to Europe (AFP) Posted: 04 May 2011 04:37 PM PDT |
Palestinian deal ends rift, hurts peace prospects (AP) Posted: 04 May 2011 05:09 PM PDT AP - Rival Palestinian factions Fatah and Hamas signed a landmark reconciliation pact on Wednesday, ending a four-year rift that had divided the territory envisioned for a future Palestinian state. The deal plunged Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking deeper into uncertainty as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called it a "mortal blow to peace." |
France to recover body from crash site off Brazil (AP) Posted: 04 May 2011 02:27 PM PDT AP - A French recovery team is reportedly pulling up the remains of one of the victims of an Air France jet that crashed two years ago off Brazil's northeastern coast. |
Hundreds of Mubarak loyalists, foes clash in Cairo (AFP) Posted: 04 May 2011 03:24 PM PDT |
Pacquiao wants Mosley seeing yellow stars (AFP) Posted: 04 May 2011 04:59 PM PDT |
Australian kills daughter after Facebook threat (AFP) Posted: 04 May 2011 01:04 AM PDT |
Posted: 04 May 2011 12:17 PM PDT The Christian Science Monitor - Without an airbase on Afghan soil, the secret US air raid that killed Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad, Pakistan would have been significantly more risky, perhaps prohibitively so. The operation highlights one of the reasons the US would want military access to Afghanistan beyond the 2014 date for withdrawal. |
Radical Indonesian Muslim Group to Hold Mass Prayer for bin Laden (Time.com) Posted: 04 May 2011 01:45 PM PDT Time.com - The Islamic Defenders Front, a radical Indonesian Muslim group in Jakarta, announced plans to hold a mass prayer for Bin Laden |
Posted: 04 May 2011 11:41 AM PDT The Christian Science Monitor - The arrest of five men whose actions aroused suspicion outside Britainâs Sellafield nuclear plant on Monday has increased fears of terrorist reprisals in the wake of the death of Osama bin Laden. |
Bin Laden Killing Largely Unmourned in Pakistan (OneWorld.net) Posted: 04 May 2011 07:30 AM PDT OneWorld.net - ABBOTTABAD, May 4 (IPS) - Three days since the death of Al-Qaeda chief and U.S. public enemy No. 1 Osama bin Laden, there are no public demonstrations to protest his killing, nor are there any other displays of anger or grief in this country of 170 million where he once enjoyed tremendous support. |
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