Yahoo! News: Brazil
Yahoo! News: Brazil |
- Trump on Charlottesville violence: 'To me, it's very, very sad'
- Charlottesville Violence Highlights Worsening Race Relations in U.S.
- American Man Punched for Nazi Salute in Germany
- In Tucson, Competing Interests Fight for Solar Energy Profits
- Russia says bellicose rhetoric on North Korea is 'over the top'
- Another F-18 Aircraft Crashes, This Time In Bahrain
- Two girls aged 12 and 13 killed after 14-year-old crashes car during police pursuit
- Faith, history and community in Bosnia
- Nepal revives railways as China, India vye for influence
- Graphic video shows moment when car drives through protesters
- Trump: If North Korea attacks US, it 'will regret it fast'
- Lebanon's Hezbollah says U.S. can't hurt it, dismisses sanctions
- Kidnapped glamour model Chloe Ayling hits out at the 'lies' about her ordeal in one of her first interviews
- Virginia white supremacist rally: Two die after police helicopter monitoring violence crashes
- Palestinian woman stabs, wounds Israeli in Jerusalem: police
- 'Most Wanted' MS-13 Gang Member Caught in Virginia
- Amazon wants to send you pre-cooked meals thanks to military technology
- Kindhearted Firefighter Adopts Dog He Helped Save From Fire: 'It's Great For Titus'
- A Sonic Attack in Cuba? How an Acoustic Weapon Might Work
- 10 Lemon Blueberry Sweets To Make Before Summer Ends
- Xi calls for calm after Trump says US is 'locked and loaded'
- Nigeria's Buhari "feels ready to go home", awaiting doctor's OK
- Charlottesville Rally: Condolences Pour In After Death Of Virginia Paralegal
- Shoplifter gets job after police officer buys him interview clothes
- Top South Korean official: U.S. government moved from 'strategic patience' to 'strategic confusion'
- The FCC is actively working against consumers
- Trump's Tweets on North Korea 'Dangerous and Wrong'
- Court temporarily halts recall effort of California judge
- Danish police say mystery submarine seems to have been sunk on purpose
- Kristoff St. John Still Angry Over Son’s Death
- Protestors occupy Shell plant in Nigeria
- Lion rescued from Syria zoo gives birth in Jordan reserve
- Trump mulling 'military option' on Venezuela
- The Only Woman That Was Training to be a Navy SEAL Just Dropped Out
- White supremacists carry torches and chant Nazi slogans at rally in Virginia
- Ex-officer charged in murder case cites tribal membership
- Today’s Amazon deal on Dyson’s Ball Animal vacuum is so good, it has to be a mistake
- How to Grill Lettuce
- Russia probe counsel wants to interview senior White House officials: NYT
Trump on Charlottesville violence: 'To me, it's very, very sad' Posted: 12 Aug 2017 01:04 PM PDT |
Charlottesville Violence Highlights Worsening Race Relations in U.S. Posted: 12 Aug 2017 09:08 AM PDT |
American Man Punched for Nazi Salute in Germany Posted: 13 Aug 2017 07:49 AM PDT |
In Tucson, Competing Interests Fight for Solar Energy Profits Posted: 12 Aug 2017 09:15 AM PDT |
Russia says bellicose rhetoric on North Korea is 'over the top' Posted: 11 Aug 2017 09:40 PM PDT By Dmitry Solovyov MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Friday the risks of a military conflict over North Korea's nuclear program are very high, and Moscow is deeply worried by the mutual threats being traded by Washington and Pyongyang. "Unfortunately, the rhetoric in Washington and Pyongyang is now starting to go over the top," Lavrov said. "We still hope and believe that common sense will prevail." Asked at a forum for Russian students about the risks of the stand-off escalating into armed conflict, he said: "The risks are very high, especially taking into account the rhetoric." "Direct threats of using force are heard... The talk (in Washington) is that there must be a preventive strike made on North Korea, while Pyongyang is threatening to carry out a missile strike on the U.S. base in Guam. |
Another F-18 Aircraft Crashes, This Time In Bahrain Posted: 12 Aug 2017 06:38 AM PDT |
Two girls aged 12 and 13 killed after 14-year-old crashes car during police pursuit Posted: 12 Aug 2017 10:28 AM PDT According to the accident report, the boy was trying to outrun police when the car flipped over, ejecting three of the five passengers who were not wearing seatbelts. Katana Richley, 13, has been named as one of the victims. "[Katana and her friend] were supposed to be spending the night at my house. |
Faith, history and community in Bosnia Posted: 13 Aug 2017 02:00 AM PDT Bosnia's religious leaders say politicians are standing in the way of peaceful coexistence between Muslim, Jewish and Christian communities trying to forgive and forget after the atrocities of a devastating 1990s war. Hundreds of churches, mosques and synagogues bear witness to more than five centuries of Bosnia's pluralistic past, and the capital Sarajevo is known locally as a "small Jerusalem" with its main ethnic groups — Orthodox Serbs, Catholic Croats and Muslim Bosniaks — all worshipping within yards of each other. |
Nepal revives railways as China, India vye for influence Posted: 12 Aug 2017 08:05 PM PDT Three years after its last train hit the buffers, landlocked Nepal is building a new railway network to boost its ailing economy -- helped by the rivalry between its powerful neighbours, China and India. The railway to India was a lifeline for the small southern frontier town of Janakpur, used to import everything from sweets to clothes and cosmetics and fuelling a vibrant border economy. Now it is being rebuilt with Indian backing, one of three new rail lines -- one funded by China in the north and a third by Nepal itself -- that the country hopes will help boost international trade. |
Graphic video shows moment when car drives through protesters Posted: 12 Aug 2017 03:11 PM PDT |
Trump: If North Korea attacks US, it 'will regret it fast' Posted: 11 Aug 2017 10:00 PM PDT BEDMINSTER, N.J. (AP) — President Donald Trump on Friday issued fresh threats of swift and forceful retaliation against nuclear North Korea, declaring the U.S. military "locked and loaded" and warning that the communist country's leader "will regret it fast" if he takes any action against U.S. territories or allies. |
Lebanon's Hezbollah says U.S. can't hurt it, dismisses sanctions Posted: 13 Aug 2017 11:01 AM PDT The leader of Lebanon's Hezbollah on Sunday dismissed the prospect of tougher U.S. sanctions against his group, which is backed by Iran, and said the U.S. administration had no way to harm it. "The American administration, with all available and possible means, will not be able to damage the strength of the resistance," Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said in a televised address to mark the anniversary of the end of Hezbollah's 2006 war with Israel. Nasrallah said Lebanon was being subjected to intimidation and threats over Hezbollah - which is part of the Beirut government but classified as a terrorist group by Washington - and alleged that Lebanese officials had been told that Israel could launch a war. |
Posted: 13 Aug 2017 02:47 AM PDT A British model has hit out at claims she fabricated her kidnap ordeal describing indepth how she was paralysed with fear after being drugged, handcuffed and gagged in a bid to sell her as a sex slave. Chloe Ayling, 20, has spoken of her week-long ordeal which saw her drugged with ketamine, taken by balaclava clad men and chained to a chest of drawers in a remote Italian farmhouse after being lured to Milan with the promise of a spoof modelling contract. Critics have questioned her account after she was seen buying shoes with her captor and laughing and joking with him in coffee shops and admitted to sharing a bed with him during her ordeal. But in an interview on Sunday, the model claims she was "desperate" to try and "build a bond" with her alleged captor Lukasz Herba in the hope he would set her free. "I understand why people have questions. People need to understand that everything I did was so I could survive," the model told the Mail On Sunday. "I was in a crazy situation and I was terrified." Miss Ayling was put in a bag in the boot of a car by kidnappers who then tried to to sell her as a sex slave in an online auction. She says it was the "worst day of her life" when her captors told her they were part of an online organisation called 'Black Death' and threatened to sell her on the 'deep web' if her agent failed to pay a ransom of $300,000 (£270,000). "I was in shock. That will always be the worst day of my life," she said. The place where a man identified as Lukasz Pawel Herba, a Polish citizen with British residency, held a young British model Credit: ITALIAN POLICE PRESS OFFICE / HANDOUT "Then he said he wanted to help me because I had been taken by mistake. He asked me what my family had to offer. It was just me and Mum at home, there was no way we could afford a ransom. I gave him the names of three people who might help.' I spent the first night seminaked and handcuffed to the chest of drawers." She was told that she would probably by trafficked to the Middle East where, once the man who bought her bored of her, she would be passed on to someone else or fed to the tigers. Lukasz Pawel Herba, 30, a Polish national who lives in the UK, has been arrested by police and confessed to the kidnapping which investigators described as an elaborate plot that involved months of planning. His home in Oldbury, in the West Midlands, has been raided by British officers. It was reported last night that Milan magistrate Dr Giovanna Campanile had ruled Mr Herba was "highly dangerous to society" and should remain in custody ahead of his trial later this year. What is the dark web? 01:33 "There is grave evidence of the guilt of the arrested person, who has admitted to the Public Prosecutor that he was involved in the kidnap," he said. It is claimed Mr Herba has also implicated nine men in the plot, three from Birmingham, but has made no mention of Miss Ayling. Miss Ayling told Italian police that her agent had booked her a photo shoot in Milan on July 11 but when she turned up at the abandoned building she was attacked. "A person wearing black gloves came from behind and put one hand on my neck and one on my mouth to stop me from screaming,"she said in her statement. Photo released by police of a man identified as identified as Lukasz Pawel Herba, a Polish citizen with British residency Credit: Italian Police Photo via AP "A second person wearing a black balaclava gave me an injection in my right forearm. I think I lost consciousness. When I woke up I was wearing a pink bodysuit and the socks I am wearing now. "I realised I was in the boot of a car with my wrists and ankles handcuffed, adhesive tape on my mouth. I was inside a bag and was only able to breathe through a small hole." She claims she was initially forced to lie on the floor next to a chest of drawers and was handcuffed but later was allowed to move freely and sleep in the same bed as her alleged captor. She added: "People might think I'm gullible. It's easy to say that if you've not been through what I've been through. "I didn't want to upset him – he had told me he was a killer. Anyone in my position would have done the same. "I couldn't run. I was paralysed with fear. I thought they would track me down." They had taken compromising photographs of her whilst she was unconscious which were posted on the dark web with the view to auctioning her off. A screenshot of a "Black Death Group" document on a laptop belonging to Lukasz Pawel Herba, Credit: REUTERS However, one of them confessed to her that they had made a mistake seizing her because she was the mother of a young child. He said it was against the "rules" of his organisation and his superiors were angry. They later released her and drove her to the British Consulate in Milan on July 17. The day before the pair had been seen in a shop together buying shoes, and Miss Ayling told police that she "made him believe we could be more intimate when the incident ended" so that she could escape. Since her release Miss Ayling has been helping Italian police. She told police she had met Mr Herba a few months earlier on a shoot that was aborted in Paris. |
Virginia white supremacist rally: Two die after police helicopter monitoring violence crashes Posted: 12 Aug 2017 04:50 PM PDT Two people have been killed after a police helicopter monitoring violent clashes between white supremacists and anti-fascists in Charlottesville, Virginia, crashed. In a message on Twitter, Donald Trump said: "Deepest condolences to the families and fellow officers of the Virginia State Police who died today. Some were dressed in paramilitary uniforms and carried assault rifles, while others were had shields, helmets and gas masks. |
Palestinian woman stabs, wounds Israeli in Jerusalem: police Posted: 12 Aug 2017 03:19 AM PDT A Palestinian woman stabbed and wounded an Israeli man near an east Jerusalem flashpoint on Saturday, before she was arrested, police said. The woman, a Jerusalem resident aged about 30, was arrested at the scene, police added. The Old City is located in east Jerusalem, which was occupied by Israel in 1967 and later annexed in a move never recognised by the international community. |
'Most Wanted' MS-13 Gang Member Caught in Virginia Posted: 12 Aug 2017 03:35 PM PDT |
Amazon wants to send you pre-cooked meals thanks to military technology Posted: 12 Aug 2017 10:19 AM PDT Amazon is already web's largest retailer, and having mastered the digital sale and delivery of everything from audio books to baby wipes, it was only a matter of time before the company tackled ready-to-eat meals, too. As reported by Reuters, the ecommerce giant is hard at work on a system that would allow it to provide fully pre-cooked meals to customers without the need for expensive and complicated refrigeration requirements. The report is sourced from a startup that is pitching the technology, and alleges that Amazon is already working out the logistics of how it would market and distribute pre-cooked meals to customers using its existing warehouse structure. The plans could get off the ground as soon as 2018. If the company does indeed plan on adopting this approach, Amazon's ready-to-eat meals would be made possible by preservation technology originally pioneered by the military to provide food for troops. Called microwave-assisted thermal sterilization, the system uses microwaves to eliminate bacteria while also sealing the meal to prevent any contamination. Thanks to this combination of cleanliness and preservation, the meals can remain viable for up to 12 months before spoiling. Such a product offering would put Amazon in a heated battle with other meal delivery services like Blue Apron and Plated. Those services provide mail-order meal packages that include all the ingredients needed to prepare a meal, but still require the customer to actually do the preparation and cooking. Cutting out those steps with completely pre-cooked meals which require just reheating would seemingly fit perfectly with Amazon's convenience-above-all-else approach, but it remains to be seen whether customers would be comfortable with such non-refrigerated meal packages. |
Kindhearted Firefighter Adopts Dog He Helped Save From Fire: 'It's Great For Titus' Posted: 12 Aug 2017 12:19 PM PDT |
A Sonic Attack in Cuba? How an Acoustic Weapon Might Work Posted: 12 Aug 2017 05:58 AM PDT A supersecret sonic weapon being used to attack diplomats in a foreign country may sound like the start of a sci-fi novel, but that's exactly what several U.S. diplomats in Cuba may have been exposed to, the U.S. State Department recently announced. The physical symptoms, which the State Department would not confirm, but which some news reports have suggested included hearing loss, got so bad that some of these officials had to be recalled from their duties in Havana. "Some U.S. government personnel who were working at our embassy in Havana, Cuba, on official duties — so they were there working on behalf of the U.S. embassy there — they've reported some incidents which have caused a variety of physical symptoms," Heather Nauert, a spokeswoman for the State Department, said in a news briefing Aug. 9. |
10 Lemon Blueberry Sweets To Make Before Summer Ends Posted: 13 Aug 2017 07:23 AM PDT |
Xi calls for calm after Trump says US is 'locked and loaded' Posted: 12 Aug 2017 06:26 AM PDT |
Nigeria's Buhari "feels ready to go home", awaiting doctor's OK Posted: 13 Aug 2017 12:18 AM PDT Nigeria's President Muhammadu Buhari has said he feels ready to return home from medical leave in Britain, and is awaiting his doctor's permission, a presidency statement said on Saturday. Buhari's extended absence for an undisclosed ailment, his second this year, left many in Nigeria questioning whether he was well enough to run the country. The president has spent more time since the beginning of 2017 in Britain than in Nigeria. |
Charlottesville Rally: Condolences Pour In After Death Of Virginia Paralegal Posted: 13 Aug 2017 12:57 AM PDT |
Shoplifter gets job after police officer buys him interview clothes Posted: 13 Aug 2017 05:31 AM PDT A policeman who bought a would-be shoplifter clothes for an interview has revealed he got the job. Constable Niran Jeyanesan arrived to arrest a potential thief at a Walmart in Toronto, but decided to buy the 18-year-old the clothes after hearing what he wanted them for. Mr Jeyanesan was intrigued because the man was attempting to steal a shirt, socks and tie. |
Posted: 13 Aug 2017 09:42 AM PDT |
The FCC is actively working against consumers Posted: 12 Aug 2017 08:42 AM PDT The Federal Communications Commission is arguably the federal government's least-loved and geekiest body. 30 seconds of talk about rural broadband deployments and spectrum allocation is enough to send most people running from the room. But don't be fooled: the FCC wields a huge amount of power over one of the nation's most critical pieces of infrastructure, and right now, it's a mess.
The hot-topic issue in the FCC is net neutrality. We're not going to try and rehash the argument right now, but in a nutshell, Trump-appointed commissioner Ajit Pai is moving to roll back rules that allow the FCC to enforce net neutrality rules on internet service providers. Net neutrality is bad for the bottom line of internet providers, since it prevents them from using the regional monopoly power that they have to rip off customers. Pai has given lip service to being in favor of net neutrality -- he wants a gentleman's agreement with the ISPs to uphold the "spirit" of net neutrality -- but he's working to dismantle the framework that allows the FCC to make and enforce rules to protect net neutrality. Pai, a former Verizon lawyer, claims (falsely) that net neutrality hurts investment by ISPs, and that the magic free hand of capitalism will protect consumers anyway (it won't). But the FCC's anti-consumer agenda doesn't end at net neutrality. In recent days, the commission has considered redefining "high-speed" broadband at a lower speed -- 10Mbps, to be specific, down from the 25Mbps it's currently at. Doing so would overnight make the US's internet market look a lot better. Right now, 80% of Americans have only one option for high-speed broadband at home, assuming they have any choice at all. That's because for most people, the only high-speed option is the cable network, and as you well know, most people don't have a choice of cable provider. But alongside the cable line running into your house, there's also normally a copper telephone line. It's possible to get ADSL internet speeds of up to 10Mbps over a phone line, which means that if you redefine "high-speed" as 10Mbps, many more Americans will overnight get a second option for high-speed internet. Expect President Trump to crow about how more Americans than ever before have access to high-speed internet in the coming days. Then, there's the FCC's new advisory panel. As The Daily Beast notes, Pai has filled the 30-person Broadband Deployment Advisory Committee (BDAC) with 28 reps from telecoms companies, and just two from local cities. The committee was supposed to work out how cities and companies can work together best to deploy high-speed wireless internet; instead, it will likely be a list of telecoms industry wishes that the FCC will use its power to push through local government. This isn't how it's supposed to work. Without wanting to wave the hammer and sickle while singing Les Mis, internet service providers are using valuable public resources -- our roads, airwaves, and federal subsidies -- to provide a valuable service. The FCC is supposed to regulate those services and ensure that our scarce resources are being used optimally, not work out how to best maximise profits for a handful of gargantuan corporations. You can guess which the current FCC is doing. |
Trump's Tweets on North Korea 'Dangerous and Wrong' Posted: 12 Aug 2017 07:59 AM PDT |
Court temporarily halts recall effort of California judge Posted: 11 Aug 2017 07:23 PM PDT |
Danish police say mystery submarine seems to have been sunk on purpose Posted: 13 Aug 2017 05:15 AM PDT By Teis Jensen and Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Danish police said on Sunday they had found nobody in the wreck of a submarine owned by an inventor charged with the manslaughter of a woman who had been on board - but added the vessel seemed to have been deliberately sunk. Police have said that Swedish journalist Kim Wall, 30, is missing after taking a ride on Peter Madsen's homemade 17-metre sub, which sank on Friday morning. Madsen was rescued by the navy. |
Kristoff St. John Still Angry Over Son’s Death Posted: 12 Aug 2017 03:42 AM PDT |
Protestors occupy Shell plant in Nigeria Posted: 12 Aug 2017 09:30 AM PDT Hundreds of protesters have occupied a Nigerian oil facility owned by Anglo-Dutch oil giant Shell, demanding that a local company take over its operations, a community leader said Saturday. "We want Shell to hand over the operations of the flow station to Belema Oil Company because it appreciates our challenges and needs," community leader Godson Egbelekro told AFP. |
Lion rescued from Syria zoo gives birth in Jordan reserve Posted: 13 Aug 2017 12:10 PM PDT |
Trump mulling 'military option' on Venezuela Posted: 11 Aug 2017 09:47 PM PDT |
The Only Woman That Was Training to be a Navy SEAL Just Dropped Out Posted: 13 Aug 2017 06:27 AM PDT |
White supremacists carry torches and chant Nazi slogans at rally in Virginia Posted: 12 Aug 2017 03:56 AM PDT Hundreds of white supremacists carrying burning torches and chanting Nazi-era slogans rallied in Virginia on Friday night before violently clashing with counter-protesters. The brawl at the University of Virginia came ahead of a much larger rally planned for Saturday, when thousands are expected for what monitors described as the "largest hate-gathering of its kind in decades in the US". The "alt-Right" demonstrators gathered late on Friday and chanted "blood and soil" and "one people, one nation, end immigration" as they carried burning torches through the university campus. #Charlottesville 9:56pm �� CHANTS: "One people, one nation, end immigration" & "blood and soil" pic.twitter.com/FbM1N8Ie1r— Alejandro Alvarez (@aletweetsnews) August 12, 2017 "Blood and soil" was a phrase commonly used by the Nazis to hail their ideas about racial superiority and traditional rural life. The mostly male crowd marched through the empty campus in Charlottesville and rallied around a statue of Thomas Jefferson, who designed the university's grounds. There they clashed with a small group of counter-protesters, who had linked arms around the statue. Several people were injured as punches were exchanged and pepper-spray was fired. Mike Signer, the mayor of Charlottesville, called the white nationalist march "a cowardly parade of hatred, bigotry, racism, and intolerance march down the lawns of the architect of our Bill of Rights". Larry Sabato, a professor at the university, said it was "the most nauseating thing I've ever seen" in his 47 years of being associated with the university. In my 47 years of association with @UVA, this was the most nauseating thing I've ever seen. We need an exorcism on the Lawn.— Larry Sabato (@LarrySabato) August 12, 2017 Richard Spencer, the provocateur credited with coining the term alt-Right, was also at the rally. The torch lit scenes on the university campus may be only a foreshadowing of the much larger demonstrations expected on Saturday at the Unite the Right rally - which is expected to bring together different factions of the alt-Right. Police expect that between 2,000 and 6,000 demonstrators will gather in Emancipation Park around a statue of Robert E Lee, a Confederate general during the American Civil War. White nationalist protesters have angrily opposed plans to take down statues of Lee and other Confederate figures who fought for the cause of slavery during the war. Don't make the white kids angry.#UniteTheRight#Charlottesvillepic.twitter.com/mBqUYAhVnK— Alt-Knight Right † (@populationwatch) August 12, 2017 The demonstrators accuse local governments of trying to erase history by removing the statues and often chant "you will not replace us" as they rally around the statues. The Southern Poverty Law Center, a group that tracks extremist organisations in the US, said that Saturday's rally may be the "largest hate-gathering of its kind in decades in the US". The city of Charlottesville had tried to get the protest moved to another park but the rally organisers sued and a judge ruled they must be allowed in Emancipation Park. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), a civil liberties group, supported the nationalist demonstrators in their suit, saying that freedom of speech "applies equally to everyone regardless of their views". The ACLU has previously defended the right of the Ku Klux Klan and other extremist groups to hold rallies. The governor of Virginia has urged people to stay away from the rally and not to take part in counter-protests. |
Ex-officer charged in murder case cites tribal membership Posted: 12 Aug 2017 03:32 PM PDT |
Today’s Amazon deal on Dyson’s Ball Animal vacuum is so good, it has to be a mistake Posted: 12 Aug 2017 05:51 AM PDT If you want Dyson's latest Ball Animal vacuum, it's going to cost you $400. For those who don't mind dumping that much money into a vacuum, it's well worth the price. But what if we told you that on Saturday, for one day only, you can snag a refurbished version of the original Animal for just $262? No, seriously, Amazon's deal of the day on Saturday slashes the Dyson Ball Animal Complete Upright Vacuum with Bonus Tools refurb to its lowest price ever — the previous low was $349 — and it'll probably never be this low again. Here's what you need to know from the product page:
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Posted: 13 Aug 2017 07:00 AM PDT This article, How to Grill Lettuce, originally appeared on Chowhound. When I think about lettuce, I usually think of salad. And when I think of salad, I don't usually think about throwing one of those bad boys on the grill. But it turns out that grilling lettuce is more than just possible—it's delicious. The smoky aroma and lightly charred taste takes eating lettuce from chore to summertime treat. |
Russia probe counsel wants to interview senior White House officials: NYT Posted: 12 Aug 2017 01:36 PM PDT The special counsel investigating whether Russia interfered in the U.S. presidential election and possible collusion between Moscow and the Trump campaign wants to speak with current and former senior White House officials, the New York Times reported on Saturday. Robert Mueller, the special counsel leading the investigation, is in talks with the White House about potential interviews, including with former White House chief of staff Reince Priebus, the newspaper said, citing three unnamed sources briefed on the discussions. |
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