Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters
Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters |
- Intrigue surrounds Argentine prosecutor's death
- Syria begins destruction of chemical weapons facilities
- McCain urges 'boots on the ground' to combat IS
- Tributes, protests mark Martin Luther King Jr. Day
- FAA probing near miss between planes at New York airport
- Oil spills in Montana's Yellowstone River after pipeline leak
- Plea to imams to fight extremism draws Islamophobia charge
- Attorney's biggest challenge: Defending the accused Boston Marathon bomber
- 'Selma' stars including Oprah march in Alabama
- Which current members of Congress voted against making MLK Day a federal holiday?
- EU calls for anti-terror alliance with Arab countries
- Yemeen rebels seize state media, battle soldiers
- Patriots roll over Colts, will play Seahawks in Super Bowl
Intrigue surrounds Argentine prosecutor's death Posted: 19 Jan 2015 04:48 PM PST |
Syria begins destruction of chemical weapons facilities Posted: 19 Jan 2015 06:52 AM PST |
McCain urges 'boots on the ground' to combat IS Posted: 19 Jan 2015 03:29 PM PST US Senator John McCain on Monday urged the deployment of international ground forces to combat jihadists in Syria and Iraq, as he toured the Middle East with a Senate delegation. "For months we've been bombing (Syrian border town) Kobane and we still haven't driven ISIS out," the Senate Armed Services Committee chairman told reporters in Jerusalem, using an acronym for the Islamic State group. "The reality is, we need more boots on the ground... we need intelligence, we need special forces, and we can't treat Iraq and Syria as different battlegrounds because it's the same enemy," McCain said. |
Tributes, protests mark Martin Luther King Jr. Day Posted: 19 Jan 2015 04:12 PM PST By Laila Kearney and Sebastien Malo NEW YORK (Reuters) - Tributes to civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. were held nationwide on Monday as protests over the treatment of minorities by law enforcement rolled on across the country. Observers of Martin Luther King Jr. Day have this year linked the federal holiday to a rallying cry in recent months during demonstrations over police brutality: "Black lives matter." King's 1960s dream of racial equality was being viewed through a lens focused on the recent deaths of unarmed black men after confrontations with police, including Eric Garner, who died in July after being put in a chokehold in New York City, and Michael Brown, shot in Ferguson, Missouri, in August. More than 1,800 people pressed into a King commemoration service at the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, where King once preached, some holding signs with his famous quote "I am a man," others with placards reading "I can't breathe" in Garner's memory and "Hands up! Don't shoot!" to honor Brown. |
FAA probing near miss between planes at New York airport Posted: 19 Jan 2015 02:20 PM PST The Federal Aviation Administration said on Monday that it was investigating whether an air traffic control problem caused a near miss between two planes in New York over the weekend. A JetBlue Airways Corp flight to Austin, Texas, was preparing to takeoff at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport on Saturday when a Caribbean Airlines flight crossed its path, the FAA said in a statement. The Caribbean Airlines Boeing 737 was returning from South America's Guyana. The departing JetBlue Airbus 320 had received control tower clearance when it attempted to takeoff but returned to the gate after the mishap, JetBlue said in a statement. |
Oil spills in Montana's Yellowstone River after pipeline leak Posted: 19 Jan 2015 01:13 PM PST (Reuters) - Bridger Pipeline LLC said on Monday it has shut the 42,000 barrel per day Poplar pipeline system after a weekend breach that sent as much as 1,200 barrels of crude oil into the Yellowstone River near Glendive, Montana. The pipeline system runs from the Canadian border to Baker, Montana, where it meets the Butte pipeline. Despite the shutdown, the price of Bakken crude was little changed on the Martin Luther King holiday. |
Plea to imams to fight extremism draws Islamophobia charge Posted: 19 Jan 2015 08:26 AM PST By Andrew Osborn LONDON (Reuters) - Muslim groups accused the British government of copying the language of the far right on Monday and of stoking Islamophobia after ministers wrote to imams asking them to explain to Muslims how Islam is compatible with being British. In a letter to over 1,000 imams last Friday, Eric Pickles, the minister for local government and communities, asked them to explain to Muslims how Islam can be "part of British identity", arguing they had a duty to do more to fight extremism and root out anyone preaching hatred. Muslim groups said the letter unfairly singled them out. "The letter has all the hallmarks of very poor judgment which feeds into an Islamophobic narrative, which feeds into a narrative of us and them," Tahla Ahmad of the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) told Sky News. |
Attorney's biggest challenge: Defending the accused Boston Marathon bomber Posted: 19 Jan 2015 02:16 AM PST |
'Selma' stars including Oprah march in Alabama Posted: 18 Jan 2015 09:07 PM PST |
Which current members of Congress voted against making MLK Day a federal holiday? Posted: 19 Jan 2015 02:11 AM PST |
EU calls for anti-terror alliance with Arab countries Posted: 19 Jan 2015 11:22 AM PST |
Yemeen rebels seize state media, battle soldiers Posted: 19 Jan 2015 02:11 PM PST |
Patriots roll over Colts, will play Seahawks in Super Bowl Posted: |
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