Toronto Mayor Rob Ford to take leave of absence

Embattled Toronto Mayor Rob Ford will take a leave of absence to seek treatment for substance abuse, he said Wednesday, as a report surfaced about a second video of the mayor smoking what appears to be crack cocaine.

The Globe and Mail newspaper reported two Globe reporters viewed the video from a self-professed drug dealer showing Ford taking a drag from a pipe early Saturday morning.

The video is part "of a package of three videos the dealer said was surreptitiously filmed around 1:15 a.m., and which he says he is now selling for `at least six figures,"' the paper reported.

News reports of the existence of an earlier video of Ford apparently smoking crack first surfaced last May, igniting a media firestorm around Ford.

Ford, who launched his campaign for re-election earlier this year, acknowledged last year after months of denials that he smoked crack in a "drunken stupor" after police said they obtained a video that appears to show him smoking crack. The video has never been released to the public.

Ford has careened from one scandal to another, becoming a national embarrassment for many Canadians.

Also on Wednesday, The Toronto Sun reported that it obtained an audio recording of Ford making offensive remarks about other politicians at a bar on Monday night.

Ford has refused to resign, despite mounting pressure after a string of incidents, from public drunkenness to an appearance in another video that showed him threatening "murder" in an incoherent rant. Toronto's city council has stripped him of most of his powers.

Ford said last year that he quit drinking alcohol after having a "come to Jesus moment" but later acknowledged that he drank again.  A number of recordings of the mayor intoxicated have surfaced since.

Ford acknowledged "rocky moments over the past year" during his official campaign launch earlier this month but vowed to fight harder than ever to win re-election.

Ford, who was the first to register as a candidate in January, invoked the spirit of second chances during a speech in front of supporters.

Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams arrested over 1972 IRA killing

Sinn Fein chief Gerry Adams, the warlord-turned-peacemaker of the Northern Ireland conflict, was being interrogated Thursday over the grisly slaying of a Belfast widow that has haunted his political career for decades.

Adams was arrested on suspicion of ordering the killing of Jean McConville, a mother of 10 in his Catholic west Belfast power base in 1972. That was the deadliest year in four decades of bloodshed, when the outlawed Irish Republican Army was committing killings daily -- and Adams was already a commanding figure.

The IRA branded the 38-year-old woman a British spy but killed her secretly and told her children, who ranged in age from infants to teens, that she had abandoned them.

If Adams, 65, is charged with the murder of McConville -- who disappeared without trace until her bullet-shattered skull was found near a Republic of Ireland beach in 2003 -- it would be a profound surprise and deal a damaging shock to Northern Ireland's precariously balanced peace.

Study: UN spending billions on partnerships, often without oversight

The United Nations is spending billions annually on partnerships with private organizations, governments in the developing world, and think tanks, often without knowing where the money is going or how well it was spent, according to a report from a U.N. watchdog.

The partnerships, which number in the tens of thousands, stretch across economic development and humanitarian relief efforts to such things as “peacekeeping, disarmament, human rights and good governance,” it says.

The report, with the bland title of “Review of the management of implementing partners in the United Nations system,” was released earlier this month by a U.N. watchdog known as the Joint Inspection Unit, or JIU, the only organization mandated to carry out inspections across the constellation of U.N. organizations, funds and programs.

It apparently also reflects growing concern among U.N. member states over what the report calls “the lack of adequate managerial control over programs and projects carried out by third parties on behalf of the United Nations.”

The inspectors also cited concerns raised by the U.N.’s own auditors about money transfers from the U.N. to its “implementing partners,” and what the report delicately calls “the lack of robust mechanisms to provide assurance that partners are spending funds as intended, and projects are executed efficiently and effectively.”

French woman whose name sounds like Al Qaeda stopped from flying to U.S.

A French woman traveling with her husband and two small children was not allowed to board a flight to New York last week, possibly because her name sounds too close to Al Qaeda.

Aida Alic, 33, says she’s been blacklisted by the U.S. because her last name said before her first name -- as it appears on her passport -- sounds too close to the international terror group.

Alic arrived with her family for their connecting flight at Geneva airport last Wednesday, headed to New York for vacation, Britain’s Telegraph reported.  But Swiss Air officials told her they had received word from U.S. border authorities that she was barred from entering the U.S.    

The airline did not provide any other specifics, so the family had to return home to the
French Alps. The couple had paid more than $3,700 for their lost flights.

Later at home, Alic searched official U.S. travel sites to try to determine why she was stopped, and realized that it must be her name.  

“Alic Aida, Al Qaeda. When friends make the play on words to wind me up, I am used to it, but not this,” Alic told Le Dauphiné Libéré newspaper.

Alic was born in Bosnia, but is now a French national. “Especially since my name is actually pronounced 'Alitch.’ It is of Yugoslav origin. And now here, I am labeled as a risk,” she said.

The American Embassy in Paris would not comment on specific cases of people on the U.S. no-fly list. Alic says she plans to pursue why she’s been banned with U.S authorities.

She had painted her fingernails with American flags for her visit, but now will have to wait to see the States.

Mother of California stowaway teen speaks out from Ethiopia refugee camp

The Somali woman lives in a stick hut covered by ragged blankets in this dusty refugee camp. It was here that her 15-year-old son wanted to travel on a perilous journey as a stowaway on a plane from California.

Ubah Mohammed Abdule hasn't seen her boy -- who was hospitalized in Hawaii after landing there last week in the wheel well of a jetliner -- for eight long years.

Clutching her black-and-white head covering, she wept Sunday as she stood before the flimsy shelter holding her meager possessions and spoke about her son, Yahya Abdi.

She was alarmed, she said, by the dangerous journey the teenager undertook. Those who stow away in plane wheel wells have little chance of surviving, and many who attempt it are Africans desperate for a better life in Europe or America.

South Korea president apologizes for government response to ferry sinking

South Korea's president apologized Tuesday for the government's inept initial response to a deadly ferry sinking as divers fought strong currents in their search for more than 100 passengers still missing nearly two weeks after the accident.

The government also raised the death toll for what has become a point of national mourning and shame to 193. Most of the dead and missing are high school students.

Divers are largely using their hands to feel for remaining bodies as they make their way through a maze of dark cabins, stairwells, storage rooms, lounges and restaurants in the submerged ferry, which flipped upside down as it sank April 16. But they must fight strong currents swirling around the ferry and, once inside, overturned furniture, mattresses and other debris floating in the murky, sediment-heavy waters.

North Korea conducts live-fire drills near disputed sea border, South says

North Korea conducted live-fire artillery drills Tuesday near the countries' disputed western sea boundary, South Korean military officials said, in a possible indication of rising frustration in Pyongyang as it unsuccessfully pushes for outside aid.

Both Koreas regularly conduct routine artillery drills near South Korean islands and the North Korean mainland in the Yellow Sea. But they can be sensitive because of the disputed maritime line separating the countries.

Last month, South Korea fired artillery shells into the North's waters after North Korean shells from a live-fire drill landed south of the boundary. After South Korean drills in 2010, North Korea shelled a South Korean island, killing four.

A Defense Ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of office rules, confirmed that the drills had begun but provided no other details.

Netanyahu links Holocaust to Iran's suspected nuclear ambitions

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu opened the country's annual memorial day for the 6 million Jews killed in the Holocaust by issuing a stern warning Sunday to the world to learn the lessons of the past and prevent another Holocaust.

At the opening ceremony at the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial, Netanyahu linked the Nazi genocide to Iran's suspected drive to acquire nuclear bombs and its leaders' repeated references to the destruction of Israel and its denial of the Holocaust. Netanyahu said that just like before World War II, there were those in the world today who refused to face uncomfortable truths.

"In this place I have said many times that we must identify an existential threat in time and act against it in time and tonight I ask 'why in the years before the Holocaust did most of the world's leaders not see the danger ahead of time?' In hindsight, all the signs were there," he said.

"Has the world learned a lesson from the mistakes of the past? Today we are again faced with clear facts and before a real danger. Iran calls for our destruction, it develops nuclear weapons."

Bad weather hinders search for South Korea ferry dead

Divers on Monday renewed their search for more than 100 bodies still trapped in a sunken ferry after weekend efforts were hindered by bad weather, strong currents and floating debris clogging the ship's rooms. Officials said they have narrowed down the likely locations in the ship of most of the remaining missing passengers.

Divers found only one body Sunday after a week that saw an increasing number of corpses pulled from the ship as divers made their way through its labyrinth of cabins, lounges and halls. The number of dead from the April 16 sinking is 188, with 114 people believed missing, though a government emergency task force has said the ship's passengers list could be inaccurate. Only 174 people survived, including 22 of the 29 crew members.

Senior coast guard officer Kim Su-hyeon said that most of the remaining missing passengers are believed to be in 64 of the ship's 111 rooms. Divers have entered 36 of those 64 rooms, coast guard officers said, but may need to go back into some because floating debris made it difficult for divers to be sure that there are no more dead bodies.

Ko Myung-seok, an official with the emergency task force, said Monday that 92 divers would search the ferry. He also said that the government was making plans to salvage the ferry once search efforts end but that details wouldn't be available until officials talk with families of the victims.

On Sunday, South Korea's prime minister resigned over the government's handling of the sinking, blaming "deep-rooted evils" in society for the tragedy.

South Korean executive power is largely concentrated in the president, so Chung Hong-won's resignation appears to be symbolic. Presidential spokesman Min Kyung-wook said President Park Geun-hye would accept the resignation, but did not say when Chung would leave office.

Chung's resignation comes amid rising indignation over claims by the victims' relatives that the government did not do enough to rescue or protect their loved ones. Most of the dead and missing were high school students on a school trip.

Officials have taken into custody all 15 people involved in navigating the ferry Sewol, which sank April 16. The seven surviving crew members who have not been arrested or detained held non-marine jobs such as chef or steward, according to senior prosecutor Yang Jung-jin.

The arrested crew members are accused of negligence and of failing to help passengers in need. Capt. Lee Joon-seok initially told passengers to stay in their rooms and took half an hour to issue an evacuation order, by which time the ship was tilting too severely for many people to get out.

Lee told reporters after his arrest that he withheld the evacuation order because rescuers had yet to arrive and he feared for passengers' safety in the cold, swift water.

Lawyers: Egypt judge sentences 683 to death in mass trial, including Muslim Brotherhood leader

A judge in Egypt sentenced to death 683 alleged supporters of the country's ousted Islamist president on Monday over acts of violence and the murder of policemen in the latest mass trial in Egypt that included the Muslim Brotherhood's spiritual leader, defense lawyers said.

Under the law, Monday's verdicts in the southern city of Minya have to be referred to Egypt's Grand Mufti, the top Islamic official, said one of the attorneys, Ahmed Hefni.

Such a move is usually considered a formality but the same judge in the trial on Monday also reversed most of the death sentences out of 529 that were passed in a similar case in March, and commuted the majority of them to life imprisonment.

Monday's case is linked to deadly riots that erupted in Minya and elsewhere in Egypt after security forces violently disbanded sit-ins held by Brotherhood supporters in Cairo last August.

Hundreds were killed as part of a sweeping campaign against supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi, who was removed by the military last July.

Among those convicted and sentenced to death on Monday was Mohamed Badie, the Brotherhood's spiritual guide. If his sentence is confirmed, it would make him the most senior figure in the Brotherhood to be sentenced to death since one of the group's leading ideologues, Sayed Qutb, was executed in 1966.

After Mufti's decision, the same court will hold another session on June 21 to issue the final verdicts.

Monday's stunning decision sparked an outcry among families of the defendants, with women fainting and relatives wailing and crying out "Why? This is unfair!"

"My three sons are inside," said a woman outside the court who only gave her first name, Samiya, as she screamed in grief. "I have no one but God."

Another lawyer, Ali Kamal, said the hearing lasted only eight minutes.

Security forces surrounded the court building and blocked roads, preventing families and media from attending the proceedings.

"This is against the spirit of the law. The verdicts will be easily appealed," Kamal told reporters.

The same judge, Said Youssef, last month sentenced 529 Morsi supporters to death but on Monday commuted the sentences of all but 37 defendants. The remaining 490 were given life sentences.

At the time, those rulings brought heavy international criticism from the United Nations, United States and European Union.

Amnesty International called them "grotesque" and Egyptian rights groups were stunned at the swift verdicts, passed after only one hearing -- and without defense presenting its case.

Egypt's interim, military-backed government has branded the Brotherhood a terrorist group, a claim it denies.

Some 16,000 people have been arrested since the military ousted Morsi last July, including most of the group's top leaders. Large numbers of pro-Morsi protesters have also been rounded up and detained by police.

Spain begins search for remains of 'Don Quixote' author Miguel de Cervantes

Miguel de Cervantes, Spain's greatest writer, was a soldier of little fortune. He died broke in Madrid, his body riddled with bullets. His burial place was a tiny convent church no larger than the entrance hall of an average house.

No more was heard of the 16th-century author until the rediscovery of a novel featuring an eccentric character called Don Quixote rescued him from oblivion.

By then, nobody could remember where his grave was. Four centuries later, Spain intends to do the great man justice.

A team that will search for Cervantes's remains begins excavations Monday and final conclusions -- should the search succeed -- will be known by the year's end. The estimated cost of the operation is 100,000 euros ($138,000).

A three-phase search will take place at the Convent of the Barefoot Trinitarians in Madrid's historic Barrio de las Letras -- or Literary Quarter.

When Cervantes moved to Spain's capital in 1606 he had already published the novel that was to change Spanish literature: "The Adventures of the Ingenious Nobleman Don Quixote of La Mancha."

Although his book enjoyed some success, it did not make him famous -- and the author was better known in Spain as an ill-fated soldier.

Cervantes had been wounded in battle and spent years captive in Algiers. He had been seized by Turkish pirates who boarded the ship on which he was returning to Spain after fighting in a war against the Ottoman Empire.

The Trinitarian order negotiated his release and helped pay a ransom that ruined Cervantes' family.

Cervantes was compelled to live as an errand-runner for the convent to give thanks for his deliverance.

He lived in a neighborhood of narrow streets, small houses and taverns full of artists and hustlers, where wine flowed and tapas was served. Other authors of Spain's golden age of literature, such as Francisco de Quevedo, Lope de Vega and Luis de Gongora, ignored him.

Then in 1616, aged 69, he was buried. Years later the chapel was expanded to its current -- still modest -- proportions.

According to Fernando Prado, the historian in charge of the project, just five people, including a child and Cervantes, are buried there.

"We know he is buried there," Prado said. "History teaches us that churches never throw bones away. They might relocate them under roofs and vaults if necessary, but no one would dare throw them into a common ossuary."

The first phase will consist of underground exploration using radar: "We will clearly see if there is altered terrain that will give us clues," said radar operator Luis Avial.

Avial's report will be ready in a month.

Then the investigation turns to Spanish forensic anthropologist Francisco Etxeberria, who participated in the autopsy that confirmed the suicide of former Chilean president Salvador Allende.

Forensic identification will be the last -- and possibly most delicate -- part of the process. Any bones found may have been mixed up. Prado said that with no living Cervantes descendants, DNA analysis is unlikely to lead anywhere.

The investigation will refer to the author's portraits and his own stories, in which he relates that shortly before dying he only had six teeth.

But the most obvious marks will be the battle wounds that Cervantes sustained. In 1571 the writer was wounded in the Battle of Lepanto, which pitted Ottoman Turkish forces against the Holy League, led by Spain. Aboard the ship La Marquesa, Cervantes was hit with three musket shots, two in the chest and one in his hand.

He spent several months in a hospital in Sicily, but managed to recover.

Although historic texts often speak of the "one-armed man of Lepanto," doctors never amputated his limb. He did, however, completely lose its use.

Should the bones be found, they will be returned to the church.

"He will be re-buried there, but with a plaque to remember his name and who he is," said Prado.

MH370: New phase to include private contractors, may cost $60 million

The next phase in the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 will be a more intense underwater search that will use private contractors, take months and cost about $56 million, officials said Monday.

"I regret to say that thus far none of our efforts in the air, on the surface or under sea, have found any wreckage," Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said Monday.

Because it's "highly unlikely" that any debris will be found on the ocean surface, authorities will be suspending aerial searches. By now, most of the debris will have become waterlogge

d and will have sunk, he said.

During Obama visit to Manila, Philippine president defends record on journalist deaths

Philippine President Benigno Aquino III is pushing back against criticism that his government has done too little to address extrajudicial killings of journalists and others.

Aquino was asked about human rights during a news conference with visiting U.S. President Barack Obama.

Aquino says his government's track record speaks for itself. He's citing the prosecution of those implicated in a 2009 massacre that killed 52 journalists and civilians.

But Aquino also says sometimes investigators determine journalists weren't killed because of their profession. He says out of respect for privacy, officials don't always disclose what they discover about, in his words, "shall we say, other issues."

Aquino says those who accuse his government of stifling dissent should look at local media where he says criticism of the government is tolerated.

North Korea admits detaining a US tourist who demanded asylum

North Korea said on Friday it had detained a 24-year-old American this month who demanded asylum after arriving in the country on a tourist visa in "a gross violation of its legal order."

The announcement was made while U.S. President Barack Obama was visiting South Korea, one of Washington's closest allies and still technically at war with Pyongyang.

"A relevant organ of the DPRK put in custody American Miller Matthew Todd, 24, on April 10 for his rash behaviour in the course of going through formalities for entry into the DPRK to tour it," North Korea's KCNA news agency said, using the country's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

KCNA said the detained man had a tourist visa for the DPRK, but tore it to pieces and shouted that he had come "to the DPRK after choosing it as a shelter."

The U.S. State Department said it was aware of reports that a U.S. citizen had been detained in North Korea and it was in touch with the Swedish Embassy in Pyongyang on the issue.

In their own words: Pope John Paul II and Pope John XXIII

“I simply wish to note that the figure of Mary of Nazareth sheds light on womanhood as such by the very fact that God in the sublime event of the Incarnation of his Son, entrusted himself to the ministry, the free and active ministry of a woman.”

 —John Paul II, Redemptoris Mater

"The family, founded upon marriage freely contracted, one and indissoluble, must be regarded as the natural, primary cell of human society. The interests of the family, therefore, must be taken very specially into consideration in social and economic affairs, as well as in the spheres of faith and morals. For all of these have to do with strengthening the family and assisting it in the fulfillment of its mission."

—John XXIII, Pacem in Terris. 1963



"Born poor, but of humble and respected folk, I am particularly happy to die poor."
- Pope John XXIII


Respect for life requires that science and technology should always be at the service of man and his integral development. Society as a whole must respect, defend and promote the dignity of every human person, at every moment and in every condition of that person's life.

—John Paul II, Evangelium Vitae



To have accepted with simplicity the honor and the burden of the pontificate, with the joy of being able to say that I did nothing to obtain it, absolutely nothing; indeed I was most careful and conscientious to avoid anything that might direct attention to myself. As the voting in Conclave wavered to and fro, I rejoiced when I saw the chances of my being elected diminishing and the likelihood of others, in my opinion truly most worthy and venerable persons, being chosen.

—John XXIII, Journal of a Soul (p. 325)



"The Ecumenical Council will surely be, even more than a new and magnificent Pentecost, a real and new Epiphany, one of the many revelations which have been renewed and are continually being renewed in the course of history, but one of the greatest of all."

—John XXIII, Apostolic Exhortation 'Sacrae Laudis,' 1962



"When there is a question of defending the rights of individuals, the defenseless and the poor have a claim to special consideration. The richer class has many ways of shielding itself, and stands less in need of help from the State; whereas the mass of the poor have no resources of their own to fall back on, and must chiefly depend on the assistance of the State. It is for this reason that wage-earners, since they mostly belong to the latter class, should be specially cared for and protected by the government." (Rerum Novarum)…the more that individuals are defenseless within a given society, the more they require the care and concern of others, and in particular the intervention of governmental authority."

—John Paul II, Centesimus Annus



"Born poor, but of humble and respected folk, I am particularly happy to die poor, having distributed, according to the various needs and circumstances of my simple and modest life in the service of the poor and of the holy Church which has nurtured me, whatever came into my hands -- and it was very little -- during the years of my priesthood and episcopate."

—John XXIII, Spiritual Testament, Journal of a Soul (p.343), 1954



"I invoke the comforting and strengthening gifts of God's unfailing love upon those who suffer from AIDS and upon all those who are generously engaged in caring for them. At the same time I appeal to those who are working to find an effective scientific response to this illness not to delay and above all not to allow commercial considerations to detract from their committed efforts."

—John Paul II, Message in Uganda, 1993





Source: The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

Ukraine leader gets 'peace' pen from pope, skipping sainthood Mass to head back home

Ukraine's acting prime minister has met with Pope Francis at the Vatican, but escalating Ukrainian-Russian tensions prompted him to return home instead of staying for the sainthood ceremony on Sunday.

Members of Arseniy Yatsenyuk's delegation told journalists he was returning to Ukraine later Saturday. The pope was meeting with foreign leaders arriving for the ceremony Sunday that will raise Popes John Paul II and John XXIII to sainthood.

Francis gave Yatsenyuk a fountain pen, telling him, "I hope that you write 'peace' with this pen."

Yatsenyuk replied: "I hope so, too."

Helicopter crash kills 5 NATO troops in south Afghanistan

Five NATO troops died in a helicopter crash in southern Afghanistan on Saturday, the U.S.-led military coalition said.

The coalition said in a statement it was investigating the circumstances of the crash but gave no other information. The nationalities of those killed were not released, citing its policy that home countries should identify their casualties.

The deaths bring to seven the number of international troops killed in Afghanistan this month. The NATO force is preparing to withdraw its troops from Afghanistan at the end of this year, and it has already turned over the job of fighting the Taliban insurgency to the Afghan army and police.

Violence has increased in Afghanistan ahead of the NATO withdrawal and also in the weeks leading up to the country's April 5 election. Preliminary results of the vote are due later Saturday.

Also Saturday, an Afghan university official identified the two Americans killed in a shooting at a Kabul hospital earlier this week.

The vice chancellor of Kabul University, Mohammad Hadi Hadayati, named the two as health clinic administrator Jon Gabel and his visiting father, Gary.

Hadayati said that Jon Gabel's wife was wounded in the attack Thursday saw that an Afghan police security guard open fire as the family entered the grounds of Cure International Hospital.

The Gabel family was visiting pediatrician Dr. Jerry Umanos of Chicago, who was also killed in the shooting.

Hadayati said Jon Gabel ran a clinic at the university providing low-cost medicine and also volunteered to teach computer classes.

He said Gabel worked with U.S. charity Morning Star Development.

G-7 leaders say further sanctions against Russia could be announced as early as Monday

The United States and other nations in the Group of Seven say they could move as early as Monday to impose additional economic sanctions on Russia in response to its actions in Ukraine.

The announcement followed President Barack Obama's telephone conversations with French President Francois Hollande, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, British Prime Minister David Cameron and Italian Premier Matteo Renzi.

In a joint statement released Friday night by the White House, the leaders said they would act to intensify "targeted sanctions" which would include but not be limited "to the economic, trade and financial areas."

The statement said the G-7 will continue to prepare broader sanctions on key Russian economic sectors if Moscow takes more aggressive action.

The White House said U.S. sanctions could be announced as early as Monday.

Hong Kong compromises with Philippines over apology for tourists death in 2010 hostage-taking

Hong Kong and the Philippines have reached a compromise over Hong Kong's demand for an apology for the deaths of eight tourists in a bungled rescue attempt during a 2010 hostage-taking in Manila that soured relations.

In a statement Wednesday, Hong Kong authorities said that "the Philippine Goverment expresses its most sorrowful regret and profound sympathy, and extends its most sincere condolences for the pain and suffering of the victims and their families."

Missing was the word "apology," which had been a longstanding demand of the families of the victims.

The Philippine Goverment has previously said it would not apologize.

Manila Mayor Joseph Estrada arrived in Hong Kong on Tuesday to discuss the issue.

The tourists were taken hostage on a Manila tour bus by a disgruntled former police officer.

North Korea steps up activity at its nuclear site, South says

North Korea has stepped up activity at its main nuclear test site, possibly preparing to carry out a fourth underground blast, South Korea said Tuesday.

The report comes just days before U.S. President Barack Obama is due to arrive in South Korea as part of a visit to several Asian countries.

"We confirm that we have spotted several activities related to the nuclear test in Punggye-ri in North Korea," the South Korean Defense Ministry said in a statement. It declined to specify what the activities were, saying the information was classified.

The ministry said it had increased its military preparedness since Monday morning and was monitoring around the clock for signs of activity at the Punggye-ri site in a northeastern region of North Korea.

In Nigeria , abducting scores of girls from school isn't sshocking

The heavily armed militants stormed the girls dormitory in the middle of the night, hearding more than 200 students on to vehicles and burning down nearly buildings as they made their escape.

That was a week ago Monday.

Of the 230 students abducted from the Goverment Girls Secondary School in the Nigerian town of Chibok, about 190 are still missing, one official said.

The number of girls taken from the school has been revised by officials several times, and on Monday, who said a new figure of at least 230 was determined after reviewing records and taking reports from parents.

Isa Umar Gusau, a spokesman for the Borno provincial governor's office, put the number at 234 - 129 science students and 105 art students.

Car bomb kills Somali lawmaker en route to security conference

The Islamist rebel group AI-Shabaab claimed responsibility for Monday's bombing in a statement posted to a pro-militant website.

Prime Minister Abdiweli Sheikh Ahmed said thoose behind the "cowardly" attack would be found.

"Somalia has today lost a committed parliamentarian who worked tirelessly to serve the people of Somalia and help rebuild our country," Ahmed said in a statement.

"This cowardly attack will not derail the progress made in Mogadishu and across Somalia. The security agencies will investigate this cowardly killing and ensure that those who carries out this attack face justice."

Avalanche in Everest six killed

Tourism ministry spokesman, Mohan Krishna Sapkota, said the climbers were all Nepalese and were preparing the route to the summit ahead of the summer climbing season which kicks off later this month.

"The sherpa guides were carrying up equipment and other necessities for climbers, when the disaster happened," Sapkota told AFP.

"Rescuers have found two people alive, and they are trying to find six other who are still missing," he said.

Another tourism ministry official said three rescue helicopter had been deployed to scour the site and airlift the injured to safety.

The Kathmandu-based climbing company Himalayan Climbing Guides Nepal confirmed that two of their guides were among the dead and four were missing.

Magnitude 7.2 earthquake hit in southern mexico

The quake's depth at the epicenter was a shallow 15 miles (24 kilometers), the U.S. Geological Survey said.

The Mexican National Seismological Service measured its depth at 6 miles (10 kilometers) and its magnitude as 7.0.

USGS classifile any quake magnitude 7.0 to 7.9 as "major," and any at 8.0 or mor
e as "great."

The earthquake's timing and location could have proved devastating it occurred on the Pacific coast between major resort towns of Acapulco and Zihuatanejo during Holy Week, when Mexican's traditionally flock to the beach, and resort typically run at full capacity.

Turkish parliament debates controversial bill increasing spy agency's powers

Turkey's parliament looks set to pass a bill that increases the powers and immunities of the country's spy agency. It is the latest in a string of moves critics say is undermining democracy in the country that is a candidate to join the European Union.

The bill, expected to be voted on Thursday, gives the National Intelligence Agency greater eavesdropping and operational powers and increase its immunities and abilities to keep tabs on citizens. Journalists publishing classified documents would face prison terms.

The goverment insists the overhaul will make the agency more efficient and meet "new security and foreign policy needs."

Opposition parties say the bill grants the agency far-reaching powers and will turn Turkey into an surveillance state.

Russia's President Vladimir Putin has dismissed claims that Russian special forces are in eastern Ukraine as "nonsense."

Russia`s President Vladimir Putin has dismissed claims that Russian special forces are in eastern Ukraine as "nonsense."

Speaking Thursday in a televised call-in show with the nation, Putin said that people in eastern Ukraine have risen against the authorities in Kiev ignoring their rights and legitimate demands.

Putin said that the goverment's decision to use the military to uproot the protests in the east was a "crime."

A wave of protests, which Ukraine and the West said was organized by Russia and involved Russian special forces, have swept eastern Ukraine over the past weeks, with gunmen seizing goverment offices and police stations in at least 10 cities.

Putin rejected the claims of Russian involvement, saying that the goverment in Kiev should engage in a dialogue with protesters.

Breaking News Iran's defense minister says Tehran will not discuss its ballistic missiles program

Iran's defense minister says Tehran will not discuss its ballistic missiles as part of on going talks with world powers on a final agreement to curb the Iranian nuclear program.

Gen. Hossein Dehghan's remarks rebuffed recent comments by U.S State Department's nuclear negatiator, Wendy Sherman, who said iran's ballistic capabilities should be addressed as part of a comprehensive agreement with iran.

The semiofficial Fars news agency on Wednesday quoted Dehghan as saying iran's missile program has "nothing to do" with the nuclear negotiations.

Ballistic missile can be used to deliver nuclear warheads. Iran insists its missiles program has no nuclear dimensions.

Iran and the six world powers are currently negotiating a final deal that would remove all possibilities that the Islamic Republic could use its capabilities to build a nuclear weapons.

290 people ramained missing in South Korea ferry

The ferry, carrying mainly school students, was travelling from the port of Incheon, in the north-west, to the southern resort island of Jeju.

A major recue effort is under way, using dozens of ships and helicopters.

Several hours after the disaster, at least 290 people remained missing, local media said.

South Korean officials had earlier said that 368 people had been plucked to safety, but later said there had been a counting error.

They have now revised down the number rescue to about 180, Yonhap news agency reported.

Images showed the ferry listing at a severe angle and then later almost completely submerged, with only a small part of its hull visible.

200 people kills bomb blast has rocked a bus station in Nigeria

A loud bomb blast has rocked a bus station on the outskirts of Abuja, the Nigerian capital.

The station at Nyanya, was crowded with workers and people going to Abuja, Nigerian capital Abuja on Monday.

Many people were feared injured, said Manzo Ezekiel, spokesman of the National Emergency Management Agency.

"This morning there was an explosion at the Nyanya Motor Park," Ezekiel said. Nyanya is located 33 kms from the capital.

"Rescue teams are already on ground. There were so people there at that time, so we think there must have been some injuries," he added. The cause of the blast was not yet known.

Syria goverment forces and rebels in the northern city of Aleppo have killed at least 28 people

Activists say shelling and firefights between Syria goverment forces and rebels in the northern city of Aleppo have killed at least 28 people.

The Britain-base Observatory for Human Right said Sunday that at least 16 rebels  are among those who died in the overnight combat with President Bashar Assad's forces. At least 13 civilians were also killed when government aircraft dropped barrel bombs on the city's three rebel-held districts Saturday, the Observatory said.

Another activist group, the Syria-base Local Coordination Committees also reported heavy fighting in Aleppo, saying Assad's warplanes launched fresh airstrikes there on Sunday.

Aleppo, Syria's largest city and its onetime commercial center, has been a key front in the civil war since July 2012 when rebels launched an offensive there.

Pacquiao punching power 'way harder' in first fight Bradley

Timothy Bradley admitted Manny Pacquiao was able to hurt him throughout their WBO welterweight title rematch that lasted another 12 rounds Saturday (Sunday in Manila).

Bradley's face swelled from the purches he took from Pacquiao but Bradley was convinced that the former pound-for-pound king's power was no longer the same from the time they met in the ring the first time nearly two year ago.

"I believe in the  first fight his punching power was way harder but I was able to take it," Bradley, who suffered his first loss after winning straight, said during the post-fight presser.

"I mean it was very effective tonight, he was able to daze me a couple of times during the fight but I still was able to stay up on my feet but I had no control of my balance this time around."

Pacquiao said he looked for the knockout but just couldn't pull it off as Bradley managed to hang on.

"There was a time  I was looking for the knockout but he was moving around," Pacquiao said after a decisive 116-112, 116-112, 118-110 unanimous decision win.

8 stabbed at Pennsylvania high school, authority say

A suspect was in custody after eight students were stabbed Wednesday morning at western Pennsylvania`s Franklin Regional Senior High School, authorities said.

One of the injured students was being flown to a local hospital, said Dan Stevens, an emergency management agency spokesman.

Information on what led to the stabbings and the conditions of the injured were not immediately released.

The school is in Murrysville, about 15 miles east of downtown Pittsburgh.

The school was releasing student to their parents after the incident, Steven said.

"Domeng" now tropical depression, moving slowly for expected landfall thursday

Light rains and isolated thunderstorms are forecast in Mindanao and Eastern Visayas on Tuesday even as "Domeng" has weakened into a tropical depression.

Domeng was last spotted 620 kilometers east of Davao City, with maximum sustained winds of 55 kilometers per hour near the center, the Philippine Atmospheric Geophusical and Astronomical Services Administration said.

The tropical cyclone continued to move slowly west northwest at 5 kph.

Metro Manila and the rest of the country will be partly cloudy to cloudy with isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms mostly in the afternoon or evening.

Pacquiao Bradley II weight in set on Saturday

Before both fighters exchange swing and blows, they first have to set the scales.

According to East Side Boxing, eight division World Champion Manny Pacquiao and World Boxing Organization Welterweight Champion Timothy Bradley are set to tip the scales on Saturday (Philippine Time) at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

Sport broadcasters Jim Lampley would host the weight in program that would be the precursor to the WBO Welterweight title bout.

On their previous weight in in 2012, both Pacquiaom then the champion, and Bradley tipped the welterweight limit of 147 pounds.

Around 187 million eligible voters visit polls in Indonesia

Jakarta, Indonesias Poll opened for around 187 million Indonesians eligible to vote in single day legislative elections, a huge feat in the still young democracy that's expected to help clear the path for the country's next president.

After three weeks of peaceful outdoor campaigning, voters across three time zones cast their ballots Wednesday for members of national and local legislatures and representatives at more than a half million makeshift booths from the eastern Papua province to the devout Muslim province of Aceh in the west.

For many, the election was more about supporting a specific party than voting for individual candidates, to help boost the chances for their favorite presidential hopefull three months from now.

Many believe Jakarta Gov. Joko Widodo, know affectionately as Jokowi, is a shoo in to become the next president.

Explosion near Pakistani capital of Islamabad 10 killed in bomb blast in fruit market

Islamabad, Pakistan A police official says a bomb blast in the Pakistani capital has killed 10 people.

Islamabad police chief Sultan Azam Taomori, in televised comments to reporters at the scene, said 10 people were killed 37 wounded.

The bomb went off in a fruit and vegetable market on the outskirts of Islamabad.

Police official Yasin Malik said the bomb had approximately five kilograms ( 11 pounds ) of explosives hidden in a fruit carton.

While such explosions happen frequently in Pakistani cities such as the northwestern city of Peshawar or the southern port of Karachi, they are relatively rare in the capital.


Oscar Pistorius recounts night of killing

South African athlete Oscar Pistorius has begun to describe in court the moments leading up to the shooting of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp.

The athlete denies deliberately shooting dead Ms Steenkamp in his home on Valentine's Day last year, arguing he mistook her for an intruder.

He said he was overcome with fear after hearing a noise from the bathroom.

Earlier he cried when describing Valentine's Day gifts they were to give each other.

On his first day on the stand, he made a tearful apology to Ms Steenkamp's family.

If found guilty, the 27 year old athlete could face life imprisonment.

Describing hearing the noise, he told his murder trial in a voice trembling with emotion:"That's the moment everything changed".

"I thought that there was a burglar that was gaining entry to my home," he said.

The athlete, 27 , said he wanted to protect Ms Steenkamp and went to get his gun.

"I whispered to Reeva to get down and phone the police," he said.

Shortly afterwards, he retched as a photograph of her body was briefly shown on a screen in court.

He also faces charges illegally firing a gun in public and of illegally possessing ammunition, which he denies.

There are no juries at trial in South Africa, and his fate will ultimately be decide by the judge, assisted by two assessors.

Ukraine crisis: Ukraine in bid to retake buildings

The Ukraine authorities say they have seized back control of the regional administration building in the eastern city of Kharkiv  from pro-Russia separatists.

They say they hope buildings in Luhansk and Donetsk will be freed shortly as well.

On monday, pro-Russia demonstrators seized goverment buildings in the three cities.

Russia recently annexed the peninsula of Crimea following a referendum.

Kiev and the West say the referendum in the territory, where the majority of people are Russian speakers, was illegal.

Moscow has thousands of troops massed along its border with eastern Ukraine.

Although it insists it has no intentionof invading Ukraine, it says it reserves the right to defend ethnic Russians in the country.

Malaysia Flight 370: 'We're throwing everything at this difficult, complex task'

(WWTN) The underwater pulses that an australian navy ship detected over the weekend have not been heard since, but authorities are not letting that deter them in the search for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. "We have atleast several days of intense action ahead of us," Australian Defense Minister David Johnston told reporter tuesday. "We're throwing everything at this difficult, complex task."

The investagators hope the signals could be locator beacons from the plane's data recorders,  but there not sure yet. but buoyed by the hope that there closing in, they reduced the size of the search  area. Now, they are focusing on on a smaller area in the Indian Ocean: 30,000 square miles (77,580 square kilometers) about 1,400 miles (2,270 kilometers) northwest of Perth. that's about a third of the size of the previous search zone.

"Instead of looking at an area the size of texas. we're now looking in an area the size of houston ," aviation expert Alvin John told WWTN. Time, however , is running out. The batteries powering the beacons, which are designed to start sending signals when a plane crashes into the water, last about 30 days after the devices are activated. Tuesday marks the 32nd day since the plane, carrying  239 people, disappeared en route from  Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia to Beijing.

Experts have said it`s possible that the batteries could last several days longer if they were at their full strength. "We need to continue ... for several days right up to when the point at which there's absolutely no duobt that the pinger batteries will have expired." said retired Air Chef Marshal Angus Houston, the chief of the Austrialian agency coordinating the search. Retired Royal Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Kay said he sees the hunt for the pingers going another week and a half.

"We know that the batteries can last up to 40 days," Kay told WWTN. "If i was Angus Houston, I would be putting the search out to atleast 42, 43 (days) to make absolutely sure that the batteries had failed."

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