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WorldNews

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  1. [attach=full]19118[/attach] Two men were killed and more than ten were wounded after gunmen opened fire in a pub in a suspected gang-related attack in the Swedish city of Gothenburg, police said. "Two died and between ten and fifteen were wounded," police spokesman Bjoer Blixte told AFP, adding that up to four of those injured were in a serious but stable condition. "We are assuming that this is gang-related and not a terrorist attack," he said. Sweden and neighbouring Denmark have a longstanding problem with criminal gangs, including Hells Angels, Bandidos and several immigrant groups which battle for control of the local drug trade. Continue reading...
  2. [attach=full]19117[/attach] BANGKOK (AP) — Thailand's Supreme Court announced Thursday that former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra will stand trial for her role in overseeing a rice subsidy program spearheaded by her ousted government that lost billions of dollars, a move likely to deepen the long-running political crisis in the military-ruled nation. Continue reading...
  3. [attach=full]19116[/attach] Two British people were "caught up" in a gun attack on Tunisia's national museum that killed 17 foreign tourists, a spokesman for the Foreign Office said on Thursday. The Foreign Office did not clarify whether the two British people had been hurt in the attack in the capital Tunis. "We can confirm that two British nationals were caught up in the shootings in Tunis on Wednesday and that we are providing consular assistance," the Foreign Office spokesman said. Prime Minister David Cameron has condemned the attack, writing on Twitter "Appalled by sickening terrorist attack in Tunis - my thoughts are with those affected. Continue reading...
  4. Three Japanese citizens were killed in an attack on Tunisia's national museum and not five as Tunisia said, Japanese government officials said on Thursday. Earlier, Tunisian Prime Minister Habib Essid said five Japanese were among 19 people killed when gunman wearing military uniforms stormed the museum on Wednesday. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said earlier Japan strongly condemned terrorism and the government was gathering information about the attack in Tunisia. Continue reading...
  5. [attach=full]19107[/attach] LONDON (AP) — American tennis player Wayne Odesnik was banned Wednesday for 15 years after a second doping violation, a sanction that essentially ends his career and was widely applauded by several top players. Continue reading...
  6. [attach=full]19106[/attach] Gunmen stormed Tunisia's national museum, killing 17 tourists of various nationalities and two Tunisians in an attack that raised fears for the birthplace of the Arab Spring. The brazen daylight assault sparked panic at the nearby parliament and the National Bardo Museum itself, a magnet for the tourists who contribute so much to the economy. The gunmen, dressed in military uniforms, opened fire on the tourists as they got off a bus then chased them inside the museum, said Prime Minister Habib Essid. Among the dead were five Japanese, four Italians, a Colombian mother and child and one each from Australia, France, Poland and Spain, Essid announced on television in what he said was a definitive toll. Continue reading...
  7. [attach=full]19105[/attach] Fourth seeded Andy Murray, trying to rebound from a subpar 2014, defeated Adrian Mannarino 6-3, 6-3 in the fourth round of the Indian Wells ATP Masters. The 27-year-old Scot's game is gathering steam as he cruised into the quarter-finals of the joint WTA and ATP hardcourt event with a 90-minute victory on Wednesday. Murray moves on to face Spain's Feliciano Lopez who upset fifth seed Kei Nishikori of Japan 6-4, 7-6 (7/2) on centre court. His best finish is runner-up in 2009, when he lost to Rafael Nadal in the final. Continue reading...
  8. NEW YORK (AP) — Henrik Lundqvist is back with the New York Rangers, though it could be some time still before he is ready for a game. Continue reading...
  9. By Maria Caspani UNITED NATIONS (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The Ebola epidemic in West Africa exacerbated violence against women and rolled back access to reproductive healthcare in the region, ministers from Guinea and Liberia said on Wednesday. In Guinea, data indicates a 4.5 percent increase in cases of gender-based violence since before the epidemic including twice as many rapes, Sanaba Kaba, the country's minister of social action, women and children, said on a panel at the United Nations 59th Commission on the Status of Women. Liberia also saw more cases of gender-based violence as a result of the outbreak, said Julia Duncan Cassell, minister of gender and development in that country. Continue reading...
  10. LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) — Bolivia's soccer federation wants its friendly match in Nigeria scheduled for March 26 to be postponed because of the African nation's internal conflict. Continue reading...
  11. [attach=full]19099[/attach] Russia and pro-Moscow rebels on Wednesday condemned Ukraine for ratifying two bills on greater autonomy for the separatist east, saying they violated a peace deal and threatened a shaky month-long truce. The latest wrangling over the east Ukraine peace plan came as Moscow celebrated the one-year anniversary of the annexation of Ukraine's Crimea peninsula, a key moment in the crisis that shattered ties with Kiev and the West. President Petro Poroshenko late Wednesday signed into law two bills giving the rebel-held east more self-rule, a key part of a February peace deal aimed at ending over months of fighting in which more than 6,000 people have died. Continue reading...
  12. [attach=full]19098[/attach] DORTMUND, Germany (AP) — Carlos Tevez scored two and set up another as Juventus beat Borussia Dortmund 3-0 away to reach the Champions League quarterfinals with a 5-1 aggregate victory on Wednesday. Continue reading...
  13. [attach=full]19097[/attach] Celtic booked a place in the last four of the Scottish Cup with a 4-0 win over Dundee United in their quarter-final replay on Wednesday as both sides had a man sent off. United arrived in Glasgow without a win at Celtic Park in nearly 23 years and never looked like changing that statistic or avenging last Sunday's League Cup final defeat after falling behind in the 17th minute to a header from Jason Denayer. Leigh Griffiths volleyed home a second in the 57th minute before Kris Commons rounded off the scoring with a calm finish in the 79th minute. The red mist descended in the final minutes as Celtic striker Anthony Stokes was sent off in the 87th minute for lashing out at Paul Paton following a challenge before Ryan McGowan was given a straight red for a hefty challenge on substitute Liam Henderson a minute later. Continue reading...
  14. ISLAMABAD (AP) — Officials say the Pakistan government has stayed the execution of a man whose family alleges he was only 14 when he was sentenced to death. Continue reading...
  15. [attach=full]19089[/attach] Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, fresh from a sweeping election victory Wednesday, quickly came under pressure from Washington to step back from hardline campaign promises over the conflict with the Palestinians. As beaten rival Isaac Herzog ruled out forming a unity government, the White House gave a tepid acknowledgement of Netanyahu's victory, with President Barack Obama yet to call to congratulate him. After a close-fought campaign, Netanyahu's rightwing Likud party confounded expectations and won 30 of the 120 seats in parliament, against 24 for Herzog's centre-left Zionist Union. It was a victory Netanyahu himself described as "against all the odds", proving him once again to be Israel's master of political brinkmanship. Continue reading...
  16. [attach=full]19088[/attach] Britain's Prince Charles and his wife Camilla mingled with gobsmacked young Americans on Wednesday as they hit some of Washington's top attractions on the first full day of a US tour. Bright sunlight but chilly temperatures prevailed as the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall inspected the Lincoln Memorial and Martin Luther King monument. Later they ventured out to Mount Vernon to look around George Washington's patrician home, which commands a grand view over the lower Potomac. Prince Charles also took time to inspect the National Archives' copy of the Magna Carta, signed eight centuries ago this year by his predecessor, England's King John. Continue reading...
  17. [attach=full]19087[/attach] NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks rallied Thursday after the Federal Reserve signaled that it may move slowly to raise interest rates. Continue reading...
  18. MIAMI (AP) — The Pentagon official in charge of war crimes proceedings at Guantanamo Bay has resigned after coming under fire for trying to force military judges to relocate to the U.S. Navy base in Cuba. Continue reading...
  19. [attach=full]19078[/attach] Sierra Leone leader Ernest Bai Koroma began the search for a new deputy and potential successor on Wednesday after sacking his vice-president in a bid to end a political crisis engulfing the fragile nation. Samuel Sam-Sumana's dismissal comes almost two weeks after he was expelled from the governing All People's Congress (APC) and went into hiding, claiming he was in danger and asking for asylum in the United States. Koroma said he was relieving Sam-Sumana "of the duties and from the office of vice president of Sierra Leone with immediate effect". The president said he was in talks with his party to find a replacement for Sam-Sumana, his running mate in successful 2007 and 2012 presidential campaigns. Continue reading...
  20. [attach=full]19077[/attach] Premier League strugglers Sunderland announced on Wednesday that winger Adam Johnson is to return to training following his arrest on suspicion of sexual activity with an under-age girl. The 27-year-old England international, arrested two weeks ago, had his bail extended by five weeks on Tuesday and does not need to report back to police until April 23. Sunderland suspended Johnson pending the outcome of the police investigation, but following consultation with players' union the Professional Footballers' Association (PFA), he has been allowed to resume training. "The club has discussed the current position in detail with both the PFA and Adam's representatives," Sunderland said in a statement. Continue reading...
  21. (Reuters) - Commercial navigation on the lower Ohio River near Cairo, Illinois, has resumed following a brief river closure early on Wednesday after a barge tow struck a highway bridge and its 12 corn barges broke free, the U.S. Coast Guard said. The Cairo highway bridge sustained only cosmetic damage and nine of the breakaway barges were undamaged, a Coast Guard spokesman said. High water has restricted shipping traffic on the lower Ohio River this month as melting snow and heavy rains swelled the major grain shipping waterway that links eastern Midwest farm areas with export terminals at the Gulf of Mexico. Several grain elevators along the Ohio River are unable to load barges because vessels do not have access to grain loading spouts. Continue reading...
  22. An Egyptian policeman was charged on Wednesday with murdering a suspected Muslim Brotherhood member and two members of the security forces were charged with concealing evidence in the death of a protester, judicial and security sources said. Judicial actions against members of the security forces are rare in Egypt, where the police have reasserted powers eroded during and after the 2011 popular uprising that ousted autocrat Hosni Mubarak. Critics say the police now act with impunity, an accusation the Interior Ministry denies. Judicial and security sources said a public prosecutor in Giza referred a police officer to court on a murder charge after he confessed to shooting dead a member of the outlawed Brotherhood last month in a hospital. Continue reading...
  23. [attach=full]19076[/attach] FIFA's decision to hold the 2022 World Cup in winter takes some heat off Qatar but the Gulf state still faces major challenges in the next seven years. The treatment of migrant workers and just the question of whether the giant project can be delivered are worries for football leaders. Qatar said it was happy to have a tournament at any time. Longstanding concerns over conditions for migrant workers in Qatar will be raised at the Zurich meeting. Continue reading...
  24. Iran's foreign ministry said on Wednesday it saw no difference between Israel's political parties and called them all aggressors, semi-official Mehr News Agency reported after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's election victory. Netanyahu, whose Likud party unexpectedly won Israeli elections on Tuesday, warned U.S. President Barack Obama's administration this month that it was negotiating a "bad deal" with Iran over its nuclear program. Continue reading...
  25. By Dan Williams JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Embarrassed at failing to predict Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's election victory, Israeli pollsters said on Wednesday they were blindsided by reticent rightist voters and may have unwittingly prodded waverers to back the incumbent. Netanyahu's Likud won 30 of parliament's 120 seats in Tuesday's ballot, against 24 for the center-left Zionist Union - upsetting opinion surveys that as recently as Friday gave the challenger a four-seat lead. Exit polls also proved unreliable. Israel's top three television stations, airing first returns as voting booths closed, found the parties close or tied. Continue reading...
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