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- Yankees emerge as key evidence in Paul Manafort trial
- Wife Of Sutherland Springs Church Shooter Breaks Silence: I Love Him 'No Matter What'
- Rep. Chris Collins Suspends Re-Election Campaign Following Indictment
- Top Asian News 3:49 a.m. GMT
- Police charge man in shooting in Fredericton, Canada
- Dubai Lamborghini Speeder Is Unemployed And Disabled
- Authorities Investigate the Circumstances Surrounding 'Suicidal' Employee Who Stole a Plane
- Greek cat sanctuary 'overwhelmed' with emails after advertising paid job on idyllic island with 55 felines
- A new protest is organizing to get Alex Jones booted off of Twitter
- Kellyanne Conway Has Trouble Naming A Top Black White House Aide
- Crews make progress battling Southern California wildfire
- Erdogan says U.S. turned its back on Turkey, upsetting Ankara
- Ten people hurt in 'shooting' in UK's Manchester
- Judge clears way for America's first execution using fentanyl
- Charlottesville on high alert on the anniversary of white supremacist violence
- Seattle Airline Employee’s Sad Final Words Before Crashing Stolen Plane: ‘I Got a Few Screws Loose'
- White nationalist protesters arrive in Washington DC
- Trump Says Jeff Sessions Is ‘Scared Stiff’ At 'Rigged' Justice Department
- The Latest: Winds still driving Southern California fire
- Japanese man detained in North Korea: report
- Forget winged rats — photographer snaps some of the world's most unique and vibrant pigeons
- Iraq PM to visit Iran, Turkey as US sanctions bite
- Bodies, wreckage will not be recovered in Alaska crash
- Mazda Cosmo: an unexplored universe of rotary-engined exotica
- Social Media Is A Toxic Mess. It Should Be On The Companies To Fix It.
- The Latest: Containment grows for California wildfire
- Electric scooters face backlash from cities across the US after mayhem on the streets
- Israel's Arab minority rallies against new nation-state law
- Elon Musk's Tweets Spark Lawsuits Against Tesla but He Won't Stop Tweeting
- 24-Year-Old Becomes First Woman to Lead an Infantry Platoon in U.S. Marine Corps History
- Monsanto owners call weed killer 'safe' after jury orders big payout
- The latest: Tupola wins GOP primary for Hawaii governor
- Rescue Teams Continue Unprecedented Effort To Save Young Sick Orca
- The One Trump Tweet That Mattered
- Perseids to peak this weekend as one of 2018's best meteor showers
- BMW 2 Series Gran Coupe Coming Next Year With 300 HP
- Turkey ready to create more safe zones in Syria
- 11-year-old Thai bride returns from Malaysia after uproar
- Who Will Fund Elon Musk's Tesla Takeover? It Could Be Saudi Arabia
- 24 Sizzling Grilled Seafood Recipes
- The Latest: Activists gather in Charlottesville
- Stephen King Causes Meme Meltdown With Trump 'Space Force' Twitter Request
- Crews battle growing wildfire near homes in California
- WATCH: Cars swept away by floodwaters at New Jersey car dealership
- Erdogan says U.S. set deadline for pastor's release
Yankees emerge as key evidence in Paul Manafort trial Posted: 10 Aug 2018 08:43 PM PDT |
Wife Of Sutherland Springs Church Shooter Breaks Silence: I Love Him 'No Matter What' Posted: 12 Aug 2018 10:56 AM PDT |
Rep. Chris Collins Suspends Re-Election Campaign Following Indictment Posted: 11 Aug 2018 08:36 AM PDT |
Posted: 11 Aug 2018 08:50 PM PDT JAYAPURA, Indonesia (AP) — Rescuers in Indonesia say a child is the only survivor from the crash of a light commercial plane in a mountainous region of the easternmost province of Papua that left eight other passengers dead. The Swiss-made Pilatus PC-6 Porter single-engine plane operated by Dimonin Air was on an estimated 42-minute flight when it was reported missing Saturday. The local army chief says the plane was found after crashing near the airport of Oksibil. Col. Jonathan Binsar Sianipar says a child is the only passenger found alive and has been evacuated to Oksibil. He gave no other details, including the child's age or condition. |
Police charge man in shooting in Fredericton, Canada Posted: 11 Aug 2018 05:22 PM PDT Police charged Matthew Vincent Raymond, 48, with four counts of first degree murder, according to a statement on Saturday. The four people killed, including police officers Sara Mae Burns, 43, and Lawrence Robb Costello, 45, were shot at an apartment complex in Fredericton, capital of the province of New Brunswick. |
Dubai Lamborghini Speeder Is Unemployed And Disabled Posted: 11 Aug 2018 02:00 AM PDT |
Posted: 11 Aug 2018 10:01 AM PDT |
Posted: 12 Aug 2018 10:13 AM PDT The job advert on Facebook sounded almost too good to be true. A living wage, a car, a lovely house to live in - bills paid - with a terrace overlooking the Aegean, just a short walk from a pristine beach on the Greek island of Syros. The job? Caring for up to 70 cats amounting to four hours of work per day. Nearly 1,000 Britons applied for the role after the announcement posted by Greek cat sanctuary owner Joan Bowell on Facebook last week went viral. Her inbox is brimming with applications from hopeful cat caretakers convinced they are the "responsible, reliable, honest, practically inclined" person with a heart of gold she is looking for. Veterinarians, doctors, even refugees applied. "We were doing a quiet thing on a Greek island - but no more," Mrs Bowell's husband, Richard, 65, told The Telegraph. The job involves just four hours work per day Credit: Facebook Mrs Boswell, a Briton, and Mr Boswell, from Denmark, moved to the island of Syros seven years ago. They found kittens thrown away in garbage cans, bony cats relying on scraps, feral and injured cats that needed care. The couple began taking in strays and working with local veterinarians to improve the health of village cat colony and the overall island population. They backed a sterilisation project, funded dental operations, had sick eyes removed, and nursed motherless kittens through the night. If cat dies, Mrs Bowell buries them and places a stone. "Now you hardly see distressed cats on Syros," Mr Bowell says. "It all started here." Sanctuary owners Joan and Richard Bowell have been overwhelmed by the interest in the advert Credit: Facebook Today the sanctuary is home to anywhere from 55-70 cats, all led around by the resident caretaker cat, Snowy. Mrs Bowell founded God's Little People Cat Rescue charity to support the sanctuary with donations and started a Facebook page. At first her posts got a handful of likes as she tried to find homes for cats on Syros. "Then she posted this, it went viral and people have been phoning from all over the world." This fall, the couple plans to return New York, where Mr Bowell has work commitments with the United Nations. They have drafted five volunteers across Europe to narrow down the 3,000 applications from people offering to take their place – mostly Americans and British nationals – to a pool of 50-100. The job also comes with a car, bills paid, and a stunning view of the Aegean Credit: Facebook There are those that start out with: "I've always wanted to live on a Greek island," those who boldly proclaim: "I am your person" and those who say: "What is behind this?" and want to know more about the sanctuary's philosophy. "Those are the ones that catch our attention," Mr Bowell said of the latter. "Sometimes whispers are best heard." The position comes with a salary up to €600 (£536) a month, with bills, housing and veterinary expenses paid, starting November 1, after a voluntary two-week transition period in October. There are bonus points for veterinarian skills, cat psychology skills for handling feral or non-sociable felines. |
A new protest is organizing to get Alex Jones booted off of Twitter Posted: 12 Aug 2018 11:57 AM PDT Alex Jones is still on Twitter, despite the fact that he repeatedly violated the platform's rules of conduct. But this is 2018, and Twitter users are ready to protest. Before we go any further, let's be clear about some terminology: Jones supporters would have you believe that his recent removal from other platforms is an act of censorship and a violation of First Amendment rights. That's simply untrue. SEE ALSO: How the dominoes in Alex Jones' social media empire all fell at once The First Amendment's free speech protections apply to all citizens, including the people behind the social media companies that gave him the boot. If these private interests decided they didn't want Jones peddling his conspiracy theories on their platforms, that's their right. Jones is free to say whatever he wants, but there are no guarantees on where he can say it. Facebook decided, after lots of pressure, that Jones maintaining a presence on the platform was worse for business than his forced removal. So now he's gone. Twitter made the opposite determination. Jones broke the platform's rules. CNN even proved it. But the company has made its stance clear: Evidence or not, Jones won't be punished for his past behavior. The hypocrisy is hard to miss when all of this came just a few days after Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey shared his thoughts on Jones being removed from other platforms. Truth is we've been terrible at explaining our decisions in the past. We're fixing that. We're going to hold Jones to the same standard we hold to every account, not taking one-off actions to make us feel good in the short term, and adding fuel to new conspiracy theories. — jack (@jack) August 8, 2018 (Note: The above tweets are part of a larger thread.) Here's the thing about Twitter, though: Just like Facebook, it's a business. Also like Facebook, ad dollars are a big part of what helps the company stay afloat. Promoted tweets, hashtags, and accounts are moneymakers. The other thing about Twitter that's important here: Users have control over what they see when they look at their timeline. If an undesirable account appears in your feed, you can mute or block it and that's that. This safety feature works regardless of whether the account being blocked/muted is paying to promote a tweet or not. Right now, a protest action is taking shape that encourages users to block Twitter's advertisers en masse, using a block list. It's a simple concept: If lots of users publicly and loudly block the interests that pay for the audience reach Twitter provides, those interests might apply the pressure needed to get Jones removed from the platform. The protest is being spearheaded by Shannon Coulter, an activist who founded a similar action called GrabYourWallet, which puts pressure on companies for carrying Trump-related products. Though it should be noted that Coulter credits the idea to her friend (also the founder of MeetingPlanner.io and AmericaPossible.com) Jeff Reifman. Coulter laid out how this GrabYourWallet-adjacent protest against Twitter's lack of action would work in a Sunday thread. Good morning! To encourage Twitter to drop Alex Jones, I just blocked the Twitter accounts of every Fortune 500 company w/ a Twitter presence. Ready to mass block Twitter's most lucrative advertisers with me? There are three quick & easy ways. Instructions are in this thread. — Shannon Coulter (@shannoncoulter) August 12, 2018 The thread runs through a number of different options. There's a blocking tool that Coulter created, accessible right here. The advantage to using the tool is you don't have to do anything beyond adding it to your profile. If Twitter does boot Jones, all the companies listed will be unblocked automatically. For those that would rather avoid authorizing Twitter account access, there's also this handy Google Doc. It's the same list of companies, but you need to block them manually — a process that would obviously take some time. "Even if you only blocked the top 25 to 50 , that would have impact," Coulter wrote. The third option is for those that don't mind getting a little more technical. Twitter allows users to import block lists via .CSV files. You'll need to grab this Google Doc containing the Twitter IDs for all the to-be-blocked companies, but the process is fairly simple. Then go to "Settings & Privacy" in your Twitter account. Select "Blocked Accounts" on left. Select "Advanced Options" & "Import a List." Select "Attach a File to Upload" then choose the CSV file. When Twitter drops Jones, you'll have to manually unblock the companies one by one. — Shannon Coulter (@shannoncoulter) August 12, 2018 Coulter adds that you should be willing to unblock the affected companies if Twitter does relent on its stance of protecting Jones. Blocking these accounts until Twitter drops Alex Jones means you'll no longer see either these companies' timeline Tweets or promoted Tweets. You'll still see their promoted hashtags, but that's not something most companies do very often. — Shannon Coulter (@shannoncoulter) August 12, 2018 A few notes: not all Fortune 500 companies actually have a Twitter presence but every one that does is on this list. We also added several larger companies that are not in the Fortune 500 but that have run large Twitter ad campaigns in the recent past like Samsung & HR Block. — Shannon Coulter (@shannoncoulter) August 12, 2018 The whole effort is happening under its very own hashtag: #BlockParty500. It's still early — Coulter only laid out the idea in full, action plan and all, on Sunday. But there's already a lot of activity at that hashtag, and Coulter herself has provided one update so far (as of this writing) on how it's spreading. Adding on to the original thread to say that we're now up to 5,380 people participating in the mass block of Fortune 500 companies on Twitter. That means for the last hour, we've continued to add about 40 new subscriptions per minute! How I love watching you all flex! �� — Shannon Coulter (@shannoncoulter) August 12, 2018 These types of protests have proven themselves to be effective in recent times, so give it a shot if you're furious at the double-standard Twitter apparently applied to protect Jones. WATCH: Is it a bird? Is it a plane? No. It's an inflatable Trump baby flying around London |
Kellyanne Conway Has Trouble Naming A Top Black White House Aide Posted: 12 Aug 2018 08:58 AM PDT |
Crews make progress battling Southern California wildfire Posted: 11 Aug 2018 11:43 PM PDT |
Erdogan says U.S. turned its back on Turkey, upsetting Ankara Posted: 11 Aug 2018 06:41 AM PDT The United States has turned its back on its NATO ally Turkey over a Christian American pastor and such treatment has annoyed and upset Ankara, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday. "If the U.S. is turning its back on us...choosing a pastor instead, sorry...we continue our path with decisive steps," Erdogan told a crowd of supporters in Black Sea coastal city of Rize. "This treatment by America of its strategic partner has annoyed us, it has upset us." The two governments have been at odds over a wide range of topics - from diverging interests in Syria, to Turkey's ambition to buy Russian defense systems and the case of evangelical pastor Andrew Brunson, who is on trial in Turkey on terrorism charges. |
Ten people hurt in 'shooting' in UK's Manchester Posted: 12 Aug 2018 04:36 AM PDT Ten people, including two children, were taken to hospital on Sunday with pellet-type wounds after reports of a shooting in Manchester in northern England, police said. "Nine people went to hospital, including two children, with pellet-type wounds that are not believed to be serious," a statement from Greater Manchester Police said. |
Judge clears way for America's first execution using fentanyl Posted: 10 Aug 2018 10:00 PM PDT A judge on Friday refused to block Nebraska from carrying out the state's first-ever lethal injection despite a pharmaceutical company's claims that the state illicitly obtained its drugs, clearing the way for the country's first execution with fentanyl. US District Judge Richard Kopf denied the company's request to temporarily block state prison officials from executing Carey Dean Moore, one of the nation's longest-serving death row inmates. Moore is scheduled to die on Tuesday in Nebraska's first execution since 1997 with a never-before-tried combination of drugs. Moore, who was convicted of killing two cab drivers five days apart in 1979, has stopped fighting the state's efforts to execute him. Mr Kopf said granting the drug company's request would "frustrate the will of the people," referring to the 61 percent of Nebraska voters who chose to reinstate capital punishment in 2016 after lawmakers abolished it. "I will not allow the plaintiff to frustrate the wishes of Mr Moore and the laws of the state of Nebraska," he said during the hearing. At a glance | Fentanyl Attorneys for the drug company, Fresenius Kabi, filed a lawsuit earlier this week arguing that state officials improperly obtained at least one of the company's drugs. Attorney Mark Christensen said the company planned to file an immediate appeal of Friday's ruling. In Nevada, a judge indefinitely postponed an execution last month after drugmaker Alvogen filed a similar lawsuit over one of its products. Moore is scheduled to be executed with a combination of four drugs: the sedative diazepam, commonly known as Valium, to render him unconscious; fentanyl citrate, a powerful synthetic opioid, which would help render him unconscious; cisatracurium besylate to induce paralysis and halt his breathing; and potassium chloride to stop his heart. US death penalty by state Fentanyl is among the drugs that have fuelled America's opioid epidemic. Prince died after accidentally overdosing on the painkiller. Pharmaceutical companies have become increasingly intent on preventing their life-saving or pain relieving products being tainted with use in executions. Campaigners against capital punishment believe it has left American states with a finite supply of lethal chemicals. Fresenius Kabi argues that it manufactured the state's supply of potassium chloride and possibly the cisatracurium. Nebraska state officials have refused to identify the source of their execution drugs, but Fresenius Kabi alleges the state's supply of potassium chloride is stored in 30 millilitre bottles. Fresenius Kabi said it's the only company that packages the drug in vials of that size. Fresenius Kabi said Nebraska's use of its drugs would damage its reputation and business relationships. The company said it takes no position on capital punishment, but strongly opposes the use of its products for use in executions. No other public evidence has surfaced to confirm the supplier's identity. A state judge in Nebraska ordered prison officials in June to release documents that might reveal the source of the drugs, but the state has appealed that ruling. State attorneys deny Fresenius Kabi's allegation that prison officials obtained the drugs illicitly. |
Charlottesville on high alert on the anniversary of white supremacist violence Posted: 11 Aug 2018 01:59 PM PDT A group of anti-fascist activists rallied peacefully in downtown Charlottesville as the city marks the anniversary of last summer's white supremacist violence. Saturday marks a year since white nationalists marched through the University of Virginia campus with torches, clashing with a group of counterprotesters. The following day, a much larger gathering of white nationalists near a downtown park erupted into violence. |
Posted: 11 Aug 2018 07:49 AM PDT |
White nationalist protesters arrive in Washington DC Posted: 12 Aug 2018 12:15 PM PDT |
Trump Says Jeff Sessions Is ‘Scared Stiff’ At 'Rigged' Justice Department Posted: 11 Aug 2018 03:19 PM PDT |
The Latest: Winds still driving Southern California fire Posted: 10 Aug 2018 08:32 PM PDT |
Japanese man detained in North Korea: report Posted: 11 Aug 2018 01:09 AM PDT A Japanese man has been detained in North Korea, and government officials are trying to gather information on his safety, the Asahi Shimbun reported on Saturday. It quoted one of the sources as saying that North Korea could use him as a bargaining chip in any future diplomatic talks. Japan, in addition to demanding that North Korea abandon its nuclear weapons and missile programs, has also sought the return of abductees kidnapped during the 1970s and 1980s. |
Forget winged rats — photographer snaps some of the world's most unique and vibrant pigeons Posted: 12 Aug 2018 07:44 AM PDT |
Iraq PM to visit Iran, Turkey as US sanctions bite Posted: 11 Aug 2018 06:46 AM PDT Iraq's Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi is to visit top trading partners Turkey and Iran next week, an official said Saturday, days after Washington slapped new sanctions on Tehran and piled economic pressure on Ankara. Abadi "will head to Turkey on Tuesday and Iran on Wednesday to discuss economic affairs with the two countries," the official said on condition of anonymity. |
Bodies, wreckage will not be recovered in Alaska crash Posted: 10 Aug 2018 06:04 PM PDT |
Mazda Cosmo: an unexplored universe of rotary-engined exotica Posted: 11 Aug 2018 11:00 PM PDT |
Social Media Is A Toxic Mess. It Should Be On The Companies To Fix It. Posted: 11 Aug 2018 04:01 AM PDT |
The Latest: Containment grows for California wildfire Posted: 11 Aug 2018 08:10 AM PDT |
Electric scooters face backlash from cities across the US after mayhem on the streets Posted: 11 Aug 2018 10:34 AM PDT Electric scooters, billed as the new and environmentally friendly way of commuting, are facing a backlash from cities across the US. Billions of dollars have been pumped into innovative high-tech companies like Lime, Bird and Spin, headquartered in California. Combined, the companies operate in more than 100 US cities as well as around half a dozen in Europe, including Paris. They are still banned in the UK. The scooters are booked via an app. They normally cost around one dollar (78 pence) to unlock and 15 cents (12p) a minute to rent. Users can then zip around town, avoiding urban gridlock as they weave around traffic and, in some cases, pedestrians. But according to many city authorities, the result has been mayhem on the streets. Pedestrians have complained of having to take evasive action to get out of the way of scooters which can reach top speeds of 15mph. Residents have also been incensed by the clutter of scooters being haphazardly dumped by riders when they have finished using them. Now several municipalities have declared enough is enough. Riders make their way across a street on Bird electric scooters in the Venice Beach section of Los Angeles Credit: AP/Richard Vogel San Francisco, for example, served cease and desist orders on electric scooter companies which led to the vehicles being taken off the streets. Santa Monica instructed police to enforce road traffic laws, requiring riders to have a driving licence and wear a helmet. Kansas City has banned them from the shopping areas. On the east coast, Boston's Mayor Martin Walsh has said the electric scooters will be impounded if they appear. "The scooters just arrived one day," said Julian Gold, the Mayor of Beverly Hills in California. "It is not as if they came up to us and said they were going to do this. People ride Lime and Bird scooters along the strand in Santa Monica, California Credit: Richard Vogel/AP "They gave no thought to the consequences and the consequences were pretty significant. People were riding in a dangerous manner, they were not wearing helmets, they were falling off. "People in the hospital emergency room were telling us that the number of injuries was pretty significant. "They weren't like rental bikes which were put back into a rack, they were being left anywhere, on people's lawns or in their driveways," Dr Gold said. "We have our police department enforcing this and it is taking up resources which should be devoted to fighting crime. "We were left playing catch up. The backlash has not just been at the government level but from residents as well." The industry regards these difficulties as teething troubles as cities get used to a new form of transport. "Cities and Bird share a common goal of reducing carbon emissions," said a Bird spokesman. "We want to collaborate and have productive conversations to bring this equitable and environmentally friendly transportation option to people globally." |
Israel's Arab minority rallies against new nation-state law Posted: 11 Aug 2018 04:07 PM PDT Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has defended the law, which says only Jews have the right of self-determination in the country and downgrades Arabic from an official language, saying it is necessary in order to fend off Palestinian challenges to Jewish self-determination. "The law legitimizes racism," said Laila al-Sana, 19, from a Bedouin village in Israel's southern Negev desert. Israel's Arab population comprises mainly descendants of the Palestinians who remained on their land after the 1948 war at the time of the creation of the modern state of Israel. |
Elon Musk's Tweets Spark Lawsuits Against Tesla but He Won't Stop Tweeting Posted: 11 Aug 2018 02:51 PM PDT |
24-Year-Old Becomes First Woman to Lead an Infantry Platoon in U.S. Marine Corps History Posted: 11 Aug 2018 01:09 PM PDT |
Monsanto owners call weed killer 'safe' after jury orders big payout Posted: 11 Aug 2018 12:30 PM PDT Monsanto's German owners insisted Saturday that the weed killer Roundup was "safe," rejecting a California jury's decision to order the chemical giant to pay nearly $290 million for failing to warn a dying groundskeeper that the product might cause cancer. While observers predicted thousands of potential future claims against the company in the wake of Monsanto's defeat, Bayer -- which recently acquired the US giant -- said the California ruling went against scientific evidence. "On the basis of scientific conclusions, the views of worldwide regulatory authorities and the decades-long practical experience with glyphosate use, Bayer is convinced that glyphosate is safe and does not cause cancer," the company said in a statement. |
The latest: Tupola wins GOP primary for Hawaii governor Posted: 12 Aug 2018 12:45 AM PDT |
Rescue Teams Continue Unprecedented Effort To Save Young Sick Orca Posted: 11 Aug 2018 06:02 PM PDT |
The One Trump Tweet That Mattered Posted: 12 Aug 2018 03:01 AM PDT |
Perseids to peak this weekend as one of 2018's best meteor showers Posted: 11 Aug 2018 09:29 AM PDT |
BMW 2 Series Gran Coupe Coming Next Year With 300 HP Posted: 11 Aug 2018 11:00 AM PDT |
Turkey ready to create more safe zones in Syria Posted: 12 Aug 2018 10:14 AM PDT Turkey said on Sunday it had finalised preparations to create more safe areas in Syria, which would allow the return of refugees who have fled the civil war. Speaking at his AK Party's provincial headquarters in the Black Sea city of Trabzon, President Tayyip Erdogan said a quarter of a million people had already returned to liberated areas in Syria. "God willing soon we will have liberated more places and made more areas safe," he said. |
11-year-old Thai bride returns from Malaysia after uproar Posted: 11 Aug 2018 03:39 AM PDT An 11-year-old child bride returned to Thailand this week following widespread outcry over her marriage to a Malaysian man 30 years her senior, an official told AFP on Saturday. Malaysian Muslims below the age of 16 are allowed to wed with the permission of religious courts but news of the union between the girl and the 41-year-old trader went viral on social media, reigniting calls to end child marriage. The ceremony took place in June over the border in Thailand's Muslim-majority south in Narathiwat province, where the girl returned to Wednesday in the wake of "immense pressure from Malaysian media", provincial governor Suraporn Prommool said. |
Who Will Fund Elon Musk's Tesla Takeover? It Could Be Saudi Arabia Posted: 12 Aug 2018 11:21 AM PDT |
24 Sizzling Grilled Seafood Recipes Posted: 12 Aug 2018 08:24 AM PDT |
The Latest: Activists gather in Charlottesville Posted: 12 Aug 2018 06:24 AM PDT |
Stephen King Causes Meme Meltdown With Trump 'Space Force' Twitter Request Posted: 11 Aug 2018 01:28 AM PDT |
Crews battle growing wildfire near homes in California Posted: 10 Aug 2018 08:34 PM PDT |
WATCH: Cars swept away by floodwaters at New Jersey car dealership Posted: 11 Aug 2018 08:49 PM PDT |
Erdogan says U.S. set deadline for pastor's release Posted: 12 Aug 2018 08:30 AM PDT The United States gave Turkey a deadline until last Wednesday, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said on Sunday, to release an American pastor being tried by a Turkish court. The case of Andrew Brunson, an evangelical Christian, is one of a series of disputes that lies at the heart of deteriorating ties between the two NATO allies. Speaking to supporters in the Black Sea coastal city of Trabzon, Erdogan revealed details of negotiations held last week between the two countries, saying Washington had threatened sanctions if Turkey refused to release the pastor. |
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