2013年11月7日星期四

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Yahoo! News: World News


Kerry to join Iran nuclear talks in bid to reach deal

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 04:30 PM PST

EU foreign policy chief Ashton poses with Iranian Foreign Minister Zarif and US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Sherman during a photo opportunity at start of nuclear talks in GenevaBy Louis Charbonneau, Fredrik Dahl and Justyna Pawlak GENEVA (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry will join nuclear talks between major powers and Iran in Geneva on Friday in an attempt to nail down a long-elusive accord to start resolving a decade-old standoff over Tehran's atomic aims. Kerry, on a Middle East tour, will fly to the Swiss city at the invitation of European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton in "an effort to help narrow differences" in the negotiations, a senior U.S. State Department official said. Ashton is coordinating talks with Iran on behalf of the five permanent U.N. Security Council members plus Germany. Iran rejects Western accusations that it is seeking the capability to make nuclear weapons.


Evidence supports Arafat poisoning theory, wider probe needed: experts

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 03:02 PM PST

Director of Lausanne University Hospital's forenics centre Magnin and Director of its Institute of Radiation Physics Bochud speak during a news conference in LausanneBy Stephanie Nebehay LAUSANNE, Switzerland (Reuters) - The remains of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat showed test results consistent with polonium poisoning and should lead to a judicial investigation even if they were not absolute proof that he died that way, Swiss experts said on Thursday. The two forensic experts were part of an international team that opened Arafat's grave in the West Bank city of Ramallah last November and took samples from his body to see if there was evidence he was poisoned with the radioactive element.


Video emerges of 'extremely inebriated' Toronto mayor

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 03:02 PM PST

Toronto Mayor Ford reacts to a video released of him by local media at City Hall in Toronto(Note: Strong language in the fifth paragraph) By Allison Martell TORONTO (Reuters) - Just days after Toronto Mayor Rob Ford apologized for smoking crack cocaine, he admitted on Thursday he was "extremely, extremely inebriated" in a short expletive-laden video posted online. Toronto city council does not have the power to remove Ford itself. The blurry, 80-second clip, posted on the Toronto Star newspaper's website and shown on Canadian television, shows a clearly agitated Ford ranting, making threats and pounding his hands together, while at least one other person seems to be goading him on. The Star said it had paid for the video, and said the context of the clip was not clear.


Super typhoon Haiyan slams central Philippines, millions seek shelter

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 04:36 PM PST

Super Typhoon Haiyan is seen approaching the Philippines in this Japan Meteorological Agency handout imageTyphoon Haiyan, the strongest storm on earth this year, slammed into the Philippines' central islands on Friday forcing millions of people to move to safer ground and storm shelters, cutting power and phone lines, and grounding air and sea transport. The maximum category-five super typhoon, with destructive winds gusting of up to 275 kph (170 mph), whipped up giant waves as high as 4-5 meters (12-15 feet) that lashed the islands of Leyte and Samar, and was on track to hit holiday destinations. "We are fearful because there is talk that the sea will rise," an elementary school teacher in Southern Leyte province who only gave her name as Feliza told a local radio station. Trees in coastal areas have already fallen." About a million people are in shelter areas in more than 20 provinces, after Philippine President Benigno Aquino on Thursday appealed to people in Haiyan's path to evacuate danger areas, like river banks, coastal villages and mountain slopes.


Suicide bombers kill at least 16 soldiers at Iraqi base

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 01:51 PM PST

Two suicide bombers blew themselves up minutes apart at an Iraqi army base late on Thursday, killing at least 16 soldiers, police and medics said. Security forces are a prime target for Sunni Islamist militants linked to al Qaeda who have been regaining momentum in an insurgency against Iraq's Shi'ite-led government this year. The first suicide bomber detonated his charge at the main gate of the military base in Tarmiya, north of Baghdad, and the second struck a group of soldiers who had gathered to evacuate the wounded. Violence in Iraq, which had eased since a peak in 2006-07, is rising again, with more than 7,000 civilians killed this year, according to monitoring group Iraq Body Count.

United Nations needs to deal with excessive spying: Germany, Brazil

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 01:35 PM PST

The flag on the U.S. embassy is pictured next to the Reichstag building, seat of the German lower house of parliament Bundestag, in BerlinBy Michelle Nichols UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Revelations of U.S. global spying have raised digital privacy protection questions the United Nations needs to address, Germany and Brazil said on Thursday as they introduced a resolution calling for an end to excessive electronic surveillance. The draft resolution expressed deep concern "at human rights violations and abuses that may result from the conduct of any surveillance of communications, including extraterritorial surveillance of communications." It does not name specific countries, but comes after former U.S. contractor Edward Snowden released details of global spying by the U.S. National Security Agency.


Kerry heading to Geneva for Iran nuclear talks

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 04:57 PM PST

US Secretary of State John Kerry speaks during a press conference with the Jordanian Foreign Minister in the capital Amman on November 7, 2013In a landmark move, US Secretary of State John Kerry will travel to Geneva Friday to join nuclear talks with US arch-foe Iran, fuelling hopes a historic deal may be in sight. Upending an 11-day tour mostly of the Middle East, Kerry was due to arrive in Switzerland later Friday for the talks which had dragged for years until new Iranian President Hassan Rouhani came to power in August. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and six world powers, known as the P5+1, are in the Swiss city aiming to broker a deal that could see Tehran freeze its disputed nuclear programme in exchange for relief from crippling sanctions. Kerry, who is in Amman, will first fly to Tel Aviv to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyhau and his surprise decision to go to Geneva is sure to infuriate key US ally Israel.


One of most intense typhoons ever recorded hits Philippines

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 04:55 PM PST

This NOAA image shows Super Typhoon Haiyan taken by the Japan Meteorological Agency's MTSAT at 0630Z on November 7, 2013One of the most intense typhoons ever recorded tore into the Philippines on Friday, triggering flash floods and ripping down buildings as millions of people huddled indoors. Super Typhoon Haiyan smashed into the central island of Samar, about 600 kilometres southeast of Manila, at 4:40am (2040 GMT Thursday) and was travelling quickly northwest, state meteorologist Romeo Cajulis told AFP. President Benigno Aquino had on Thursday warned his countrymen to make all possible preparations for Haiyan, which was packing monster wind gusts of nearly 380 kilometres (235 miles) an hour as it approached the Philippines. Let us do all we can while (Haiyan) has not yet hit land," Aquino said in a nationally televised address.


Kerry heading to Geneva in sign of Iran progress

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 04:46 PM PST

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif waits for the start of two days of closed-door nuclear talks at the United Nations offices in Geneva Switzerland, Thursday, Nov. 7, 2013. Six world powers are dangling the prospect of easing some sanctions against Iran if Tehran agrees to curb work that could be used to make nuclear weapons. Talks resume Thursday between Iran and the six _ The United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany. (AP Photo/Keystone, Martial Trezzini)GENEVA (AP) — Iran's chief nuclear negotiator signaled progress at talks with six world powers Thursday on a deal to cap some of his country's atomic programs in exchange for limited relief from sanctions stifling Iran's economy, saying the six had accepted Tehran's proposals on how to proceed.


Arafat's mysterious death becomes a whodunit

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 04:23 PM PST

Palestinians walk past a mural depicting late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat at Shati Refugee Camp, in Gaza City, Thursday, Nov. 7, 2013. Swiss scientists have found evidence suggesting Yasser Arafat may have been poisoned with a radioactive substance, a TV station reported on Wednesday, prompting new allegations by his widow that the Palestinian leader was the victim of a "shocking" crime. Arabic reads, "the leader Abu Ammar, you are in our hearts, your sun will not go down." (AP Photo/Adel Hana)RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) — Yasser Arafat's mysterious 2004 death turned into a whodunit Thursday after Swiss scientists who examined his remains said the Palestinian leader was probably poisoned with radioactive polonium.


Polio in Syria poses risk for Europe

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 04:17 PM PST

Rebel fighters gather ahead clashes with pro-regime forces in the northern city of Aleppo on November 6, 2013An outbreak of polio in Syria poses a threat to Europe, where the crippling and potentially fatal disease was declared eradicated in 2002, doctors warned on Friday. Europe is exposed because some countries have low rates of innoculation, which lowers "herd immunity", or protection through community-wide vaccination, a pair of German epidemiologists warned in The Lancet. In addition, most countries use a type called inactivated polio vaccine (IPV), which is less effective against the virus than an oral vaccine which is now largely discontinued because it causes rare cases of paralysis, they warned. At least 10 cases of polio have been confirmed by the World Health Organisation (WHO) in Syria, where vaccination has been disrupted by the war.


New video emerges of ranting Toronto mayor

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 03:59 PM PST

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford makes a statement to the media outside his office at Toronto's city hall after the release of a video on Thursday Nov. 7, 2013. A new video surfaced showing Ford in a rage, using threatening words including "kill" and "murder." Ford said he was TORONTO (AP) — A new video that surfaced Thursday showed Toronto Mayor Rob Ford threatening to "murder" someone and "poke his eyes out" in a rambling rage, deepening the conviction among both critics and allies that he is no longer fit to lead North America's fourth largest city.


Obama: Iran could get 'very modest' sanctions relief - NBC

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 03:58 PM PST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama said on Thursday the international community could slightly ease sanctions against Iran in the early stages of negotiating a deal on Tehran's nuclear program. "There is the possibility of a phased agreement in which the first phase would be us, you know, halting any advances on their nuclear program ... and putting in place a way where we can provide them some very modest relief, but keeping the sanctions architecture in place," he said in an interview with NBC News. ...

Kerry will head to Geneva to help clinch Iran nuclear deal: U.S.

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 03:57 PM PST

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry will travel to Geneva on Friday in an effort to help secure a nuclear deal between Iran and six world powers, a senior U.S. State Department official said. "Secretary Kerry will travel to Geneva, Switzerland on Friday at the invitation of EU High Representative (Catherine) Ashton in an effort to help narrow differences in negotiations," the official said. Diplomats in Geneva said work on a possible deal aimed at ending a decade-long nuclear standoff between Iran and the West was continuing.

Heavy fighting rocks Libyan capital as rival militia battle

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 03:45 PM PST

By Ghaith Shennib and Feras Bosalum TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Rival militiamen battled each other for hours with anti-aircraft guns and grenades across Tripoli on Thursday, killing at least one person and wounding 12 in the worst fighting for months in the Libyan capital, medical sources said. The second outbreak of street fighting within days shows how the government is struggling to contain militias which helped overthrow Muammar Gaddafi two years ago but kept their guns after the NATO-backed uprising. A security source told Reuters that a heavily-armed group from the central city of Misrata had entered the capital in the evening to take revenge for the killing of one of its fighters in a smaller shootout in Tripoli on Tuesday. Toyota trucks mounted with anti-aircraft guns arrived in several parts of Tripoli, opening fire as they tried to storm the eastern Suq al-Juma district, witnesses said.

Albania confirms US demand on Syria chemical weapon destruction

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 03:42 PM PST

People join Albanian environmental activists in a protest in front of Albania's government headquarters in Tirana on November 7, 2013, against the prospect of using Albania as a site for destroying Syria's chemical weapons stockpileAlbania confirmed Thursday it was asked by the US to destroy Syria's chemical arsenal on its soil, as protesters gathered outside the parliament in Tirana to demonstrate against any such plans. "We were contacted by the United States, but no decision has been made yet," parliamentary speaker Ilir Meta said late Thursday in an interview to Top Channel television. "I do not think that Albania has the capacity, even other much bigger and more developed countries do not accept to do it," he added. Earlier in the day the activists pleaded with the Albanian government to resist any requests from foreign governments to help eliminate Syrian weapons in Albania, chanting "No to chemical arms."


Iran: nuclear plan 'backed' by 6 world powers

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 03:36 PM PST

GENEVA (AP) — Iran's chief nuclear negotiator signaled progress at talks with six powers Thursday on a deal to cap some of his country's atomic programs in exchange for limited relief from sanctions stifling Iran's economy, saying the six had accepted Tehran's proposals on how to proceed.

Strongest typhoon of the year slams Philippines

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 03:35 PM PST

This Thursday, Nov. 7, 2013 satellite image provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration shows Typhoon Haiyan over the Philippines, at 22:30 UTC (5:30 p.m. EST). Haiyan, the world's strongest typhoon of the year, slammed into the Philippines early Friday. It had been poised to be the strongest tropical cyclone ever recorded at landfall, a weather expert said. (AP Photo/NOAA)MANILA, Philippines (AP) — One of the most powerful typhoons ever recorded slammed into the Philippines early Friday, and one weather expert warned, "There will be catastrophic damage."


Kerry ready to come to Geneva on Friday if Iran deal reached: sources

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 03:28 PM PST

GENEVA (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is ready to travel to Geneva on Friday if a nuclear deal between Iran and six world powers is reached in the coming hours, diplomatic sources said. The sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said work on a possible deal aimed at ending a decade-long nuclear standoff between Iran and the West was continuing. Iranian officials said on Thursday that they were cautiously optimistic about prospects for an agreement but noted that nothing had been finalized. (Reporting by Louis Charbonneau)

Record-setter Defoe fires Spurs into knockout phase

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 02:34 PM PST

Tottenham Hotspur's English striker Jermain Defoe scores from the penalty spot at White Hart Lane in London, on November 7, 2013Jermain Defoe broke Tottenham's European goal-scoring record on Thursday as he steered his side into the knockout phase of the Europa League with a tough 2-1 victory over Moldova's Sheriff Tiraspol. Spurs join Valencia, Salzburg, Esbjerg, Fiorentina and Dninpro in the last-32 who all booked their places with two matches still remaining in the group phase. Defoe's clinical 67th minute penalty, which not only makes him the competition's top scorer with five goals from four matches, also gave him 23 European goals, one more than former England international Martin Chivers. Chivers, who scored 13 goals in 24 matches for England, helped the side win the same competition in 1972 when it was known as the UEFA Cup.


US to lose vote at UNESCO, incurs debts

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 02:32 PM PST

FILE- This Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2013, file photo shows a general view of the UNESCO prior to the opening of General Conference in Paris, France. American influence in culture, science and education around the world will take a high-profile blow on Friday as the US is stripped of its vote at the world's premier cultural agency, UNESCO. The U.S. loses its vote at the Paris-based U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization following Washington's decision in 2011 to cut all funding to the U.N. agency over the vote giving Palestine member-state status. (AP Photo/Benjamin Girette, file)PARIS (AP) — American influence in culture, science and education around the world is facing a high-profile blow Friday as the U.S. is stripped of its voting rights at the world's cultural agency, UNESCO. And it would cost the U.S. hundreds of millions of dollars to win this voice back.


Libya militias clash after leader dies: security official

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 02:14 PM PST

A general view shows the Libyan capital Tripoli on August 22, 2011Tripoli (AFP) - Members of two Libyan militias clashed in Tripoli Thursday after the death of one of their leaders, witnesses and security officials said as intense gunfire could be heard in the capital.


Military base bombings, attacks in Iraq kill 30

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 02:06 PM PST

Iraqi firefighters hose down a burned car after a car bomb attack in Kirkuk, 180 miles (290 kilometers) north of Baghdad, Iraq, Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2013. A parked car bomb went off in front of Iraqi Islamic Bank in Kirkuk, home to a mix of Arabs, Kurds and Turkomen, each of the ethnic groups has competing claims to the oil-rich area, the Kurds want to incorporate it into their self-ruled region in Iraq's north, but Arabs and Turkomen are opposed. (AP Photo/Emad Matti)BAGHDAD (AP) — A series of attacks in Iraq, including a double suicide car bombing targeting a military base, killed 30 people across the country Thursday, officials said.


Morocco king hits back at W.Sahara rights criticism

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 02:02 PM PST

A handout released by the Moroccan Royal Palace shows King Mohammed VI delivering a speech to the nation on the 38th anniversary of the Green March, which marks the end of Spanish colonisation of Western Sahara and its annexation by MoroccoKing Mohammed VI has reacted angrily to international criticism of Morocco's human rights record in the annexed Western Sahara, insisting the kingdom needed no lessons from anybody. The king said late Wednesday the human rights situation was far worse in the small part of the former Spanish colony controlled by the pro-independence Polisario Front and in the refugee camps it runs in the Tindouf region of neighbouring Algeria. In a speech commemorating the so-called Green March of 1975 in which Morocco sent in tens of thousands of settlers to lay claim to the territory, the king reserved particular anger for Algeria, Rabat's regional rival and the Polisario's main backer.


Senior Iran negotiator says 'a bit optimistic' on nuclear deal

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 02:00 PM PST

GENEVA (Reuters) - A senior Iranian negotiator said on Thursday that it was too early to say with certainty whether a nuclear deal between Iran and six world powers would be possible this week, though he voiced cautious optimism that an agreement was close. "Too soon to say," Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister and senior negotiator Abbas Araqchi told reporters after the first day of talks between Iran and the five permanent U.N. Security Council members and Germany. "I'm a bit optimistic," he added when asked about the possibility of a deal this week. (Reporting by Louis Charbonneau)

Makenga, DRC's wily rebel chief seen as war criminal by UN

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 01:56 PM PST

The head of the M23 rebel military forces, Brigadier-General Sultani Makenga, leans on a car on November 25, 2012 on the grounds of a military residence in GomaGoma (DR Congo) (AFP) - Sultani Makenga, the 39-year-old chief of the Democratic Republic of Congo's M23 guerrillas, proved a wily commander in his long military career -- but also, according to the UN, a vicious war criminal. The chief of the former insurgents and his fellow M23 commanders have been branded "among the worst perpetrators of human rights violations in the DRC, or in the world for that matter," by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay. Born Emmanuel Sultani Makenga on Christmas Day -- December 25, 1973 -- in the chronically unstable North Kivu region of the DRC, north of Goma, he grew up to spend almost all of his adult life fighting in various rebellions. Like many of the ethnic Tutsi officers who fought alongside him, he cut his teeth in the ranks of the Rwandan Patriotic Front, now in power in neighbouring Rwanda, when it launched a rebellion in the early 1990s.


Iraqi Kurdistan reiterates objection to BP's Kirkuk oil deal

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 01:53 PM PST

Iraq's Kurdistan region reiterated its objection to a deal between BP and the central government to develop the northern Kirkuk oilfield, a day after the local governor, a Kurd, voiced full support for the British company's plans. Kirkuk lies on the disputed boundary between the autonomous Kurdish region and the rest of Iraq, and is at the heart of a dispute between Baghdad and the region over territory and resources. The Kurdistan Regional Government's (KRG) difference with the Kirkuk governor's stance on the BP deal also points to tensions within the autonomous region over how to manage resources.

Bachelet lead firm in Chile election, but runoff likely: IPSOS

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 01:43 PM PST

Chilean presidential candidate Michelle Bachelet of the "Nueva Mayoria" (New Majority) coalition of political parties takes part in a campaign event in Valparaiso cityFront-runner Michelle Bachelet is holding onto her substantial lead ahead of Chile's presidential election on November 17, an IPSOS survey showed on Thursday, but the pollster again suggested she won't garner enough support to avoid a December runoff. Center-left favorite Bachelet was supported by 32 percent of likely voters, with undecideds included, compared to 20 percent for Evelyn Matthei, the candidate for the right-wing incumbent coalition. The results were unchanged from an October 22 IPSOS poll and well below the 50 percent of votes Bachelet needs to pocket to dodge the December 15 runoff. The clear favorite and Chile's first woman president from 2006 to 2010, Bachelet has been urging supporters to hand her a clear-cut victory in November.


UK spymasters say Al-Qaeda 'lapping up' Snowden leaks

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 01:42 PM PST

A screen grab from the UK's Parliamentary Recording Unit (PRU) shows from (L-R) MI5 chief Andrew Parker, MI6 boss John Sawers, and head of GCHQ Iain Lobban, before parliament's Intelligence and Security Committee in London on November 7, 2013Britain's top spy chiefs warned in an unprecedented television appearance on Thursday that Al-Qaeda and other enemies were "lapping up" intelligence leaks by Edward Snowden and using them to change the way they operate. The heads of the foreign spy agency MI6, the domestic intelligence service MI5 and the electronic listening station GCHQ however used their appearance before a parliamentary committee to deny that Britons were under mass surveillance.


Sudanese rebels tell world to 'wake up' to war

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 01:40 PM PST

By John Irish PARIS (Reuters) - The main rebel alliance fighting Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir called on the world on Thursday to "wake up" to the war, saying atrocities in Sudan were as bad as those in Syria. Sudan has suffered decades of conflict. Fighting has intensified in the Blue Nile and South Kordofan states since South Sudan won independence in 2011, while international efforts have failed to bring peace to the westerly region of Darfur. Speaking in Paris on a rare lobbying visit to Europe, the president of the Sudan Revolutionary Front (SRF) accused Bashir of exploiting the world's preoccupation with wars such as those in Syria and Mali to try to crush the rebels and kill civilians through indiscriminate bombing and starvation.

DR Congo's M23 rebels surrender to Uganda

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 01:27 PM PST

This picture taken on November 25, 2012 shows M23 rebel leader Sultani Makenga in Goma, in the east of the Democratic Republic of the CongoDemocratic Republic of Congo's M23 guerrillas have surrendered en masse in Uganda, where rebel supremo Sultani Makenga is also in the hands of the army, officers said Thursday, signalling the end of an 18-month insurgency. The rebel surrender follows a crushing defeat at the hands of the UN-backed Congolese armed forces. "He is with our forces, yes, Makenga has crossed into Uganda," a senior Ugandan military officer told AFP, although he declined to clarify if he had formally surrendered or was under arrest. Paddy Ankunda, a colonel in the Ugandan army, told AFP that 1,500 men from the M23 -- a number thought to account for more or less the entire force -- had crossed into Uganda and given themselves up, and were now being held in the Kisoro border district.


Iraq attacks kill 30 ahead of Shiite pilgrimage

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 01:21 PM PST

Iraqi security forces man a checkpoint on March 12, 2012Attacks in Iraq -- including twin suicide blasts against an army base and a car bomb targeting Shiite Muslims -- killed 30 people Thursday, a week ahead of a major Shiite pilgrimage. The bloodshed follows the start of the Islamic new year just days earlier and as Shiite Muslims converge on the shrine city of Karbala, south of Baghdad, for commemoration ceremonies, a period during which Sunni militants often try to target Shiites and the security forces. Thursday's deadliest violence saw 16 people killed just north of Baghdad. A suicide bomber blew up a vehicle rigged with explosives at the entrance of an army base just north of Baghdad during the evening, before another suicide car bomber managed to enter the compound and blow himself up.


EU gay asylum ruling gets divided reception

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 01:20 PM PST

Men leave the European Union Court of Justice in Luxembourg, April 28, 2006Gays can seek asylum in the European Union when threatened with jail for same-sex activity, but only when such persecution is "sufficiently serious", Europe's top court ruled on Thursday. The judgement by the Luxembourg-based European Court of Justice was seen as divisive, with rights groups differing widely in their reading of what this could mean in practice. The court found that jail terms for homosexual behaviour could be considered "an act of persecution" warranting asylum. But it said the threat of persecution must be enforced and "sufficiently serious" with courts in home countries regularly throwing people behind bars.


Report: IRS refunded $4B to identity thieves

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 01:20 PM PST

This photo taken March 22, 2013, shows the exterior of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) building in Washington. The IRS issued $4 billion in fraudulent tax refunds last year to people using stolen identities, with some of the money going to addresses in Bulgaria, Lithuania and Ireland, according to a Treasury report released Thursday. The IRS sent a total of 655 tax refunds to a single address in Lithuania, and 343 refunds went to a lone address in Shanghai. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)WASHINGTON (AP) — The Internal Revenue Service issued $4 billion in fraudulent tax refunds last year to people using stolen identities, with some of the money going to addresses in Bulgaria, Lithuania and Ireland, according to an inspector general's report released Thursday.


Syria army retakes town near Damascus from rebels

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 01:13 PM PST

A pro-regime tank drives through the streets of Sbeineh south of Syrian capital Damascus on November 7, 2013Syrian troops backed by Lebanese Hezbollah fighters and other pro-regime militiamen retook a major rebel enclave south of Damascus on Thursday, severing a key opposition supply line. Meanwhile, US Secretary of State John Kerry said in Amman he believed peace talks that had been proposed for the end of November could still be held in the coming weeks. And in The Hague, the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) said inspectors had verified all but one of Syria's 23 declared chemical weapons sites. The regime's recapture of Sbeineh comes nine days into a campaign aimed at cutting off one of the main rebel supply lines into southern Damascus, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.


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