Yahoo! News: Brazil
Yahoo! News: Brazil |
- Trump Reportedly Uses Private Cell Phone More Often Amid Kelly's Waning Influence
- Southwest airlines cancels dozens of flights for engine inspections after deadly midair explosion
- Police Arrest Waffle House Shooting Suspect, Ending Manhunt
- 13 semi truck drivers line up under bridge to stop man from committing suicide
- Rural districts are the new frontier for women running for office
- No, A Monkey Can't Copyright His Selfies, Federal Appeals Court Rules
- Van plows down multiple pedestrians in Toronto
- The Latest: Dad says 'incompetency' led to school shooting
- Construction Workers May Have Found the Mummy of a Long-Lost Iranian Shah
- Russia, China to obstruct U.S. attempt to sabotage Iran nuclear deal: TASS
- Canadian police seek motive in van attack that killed 10
- Father of Waffle House shooting suspect was told to keep guns away from son
- Prince William, Duchess Kate Welcome Baby Boy to the Royal Family
- Man shackled for days in prisoner transport van files suit
- A Woman Says Smallville Actress Allison Mack Tried to Recruit Her Into an Alleged Sex Cult
- Melania Trump plans dinner menu for Macrons celebrating New Orleans cuisine
- Who controls the world's longest river?
- Canadian lynched by villagers in Peruvian Amazon after death of elderly healer
- 12 Questions People In Polyamorous Relationships Are Sick Of Hearing
- Nikol Pashinyan: from fugitive to victorious protest leader
- Uranus Is Actually A Giant Ball Of Farts Floating In Space, Study Finds
- Toronto: Police name suspect in van attack that killed at least 10 as Alek Minassian
- Appeals court sides with states over fuel economy standards
- Waffle House shooting suspect in custody
- UN chief strongly condemns air strikes on Yemen wedding
- Peru judge orders two arrested for allegedly lynching Canadian
- Vision Mercedes-Maybach Ultimate Luxury Concept
- NRA members destroy products of outdoor company that cut ties with the organisation
- The Latest: Bush hoping to get to Maine despite illness
- Russia's S-300 or S-400: F-35 Killer or Overhyped?
- France's Macron visits Trump as Iran nuclear deal hangs in balance
- Nashville Waffle House Shooting Suspect Arrested
- Chinese carrier leads live fire drill in East China Sea
- Video Shows the Moment 'Killer Grandma' Lois Riess Is Arrested After 5 Weeks on the Run
- Armenia's leader quits amid protests, saying 'I was wrong'
- Second disturbing video of Syracuse frat brothers published
- Under fire by Trump, Rosenstein moonlights at U.S. Supreme Court
- 20 Mother's Day Bouquet Ideas
- Police probe Korean Air chairman's wife over abuse
Trump Reportedly Uses Private Cell Phone More Often Amid Kelly's Waning Influence Posted: 24 Apr 2018 01:25 AM PDT |
Southwest airlines cancels dozens of flights for engine inspections after deadly midair explosion Posted: 23 Apr 2018 08:52 AM PDT |
Police Arrest Waffle House Shooting Suspect, Ending Manhunt Posted: 23 Apr 2018 11:16 AM PDT |
13 semi truck drivers line up under bridge to stop man from committing suicide Posted: 24 Apr 2018 01:08 PM PDT |
Rural districts are the new frontier for women running for office Posted: 23 Apr 2018 08:16 AM PDT Esther Roberts stands in her friend's field in Somers, Wis., which sits directly across the road from the massive Foxconn development site in Pleasant Prarie, WIs. At the moment when Esther Roberts decided to run for elected office, she was standing far from her home in Somers, Wisc., amid a sea of pink hats at the March for Women in Washington, D.C., in January 2017. Roberts is typical of the thousands of women who have entered the political arena in the past 18 months in the wake of Donald Trump's election. |
No, A Monkey Can't Copyright His Selfies, Federal Appeals Court Rules Posted: 23 Apr 2018 09:49 PM PDT |
Van plows down multiple pedestrians in Toronto Posted: 23 Apr 2018 01:30 PM PDT |
The Latest: Dad says 'incompetency' led to school shooting Posted: 24 Apr 2018 10:50 AM PDT |
Construction Workers May Have Found the Mummy of a Long-Lost Iranian Shah Posted: 24 Apr 2018 07:49 AM PDT |
Russia, China to obstruct U.S. attempt to sabotage Iran nuclear deal: TASS Posted: 23 Apr 2018 02:22 AM PDT MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Monday he had agreed with his Chinese counterpart that Moscow and Beijing would try to block any U.S. attempt to sabotage the Iran nuclear deal, Russian state news agency TASS reported. "We are against revising these agreements, we consider it very counter productive to try to reduce to zero years of international work carried out via talks between the six major powers and Iran," TASS quoted Lavrov as saying after talks with Wang Yi, China's top diplomat, in Beijing. ... |
Canadian police seek motive in van attack that killed 10 Posted: 24 Apr 2018 02:41 AM PDT Canadian police sought a motive Tuesday for a van attack on a bustling downtown Toronto street that left at least 10 pedestrians dead. It took place in broad daylight around 16 kilometers (10 miles) from a conference center hosting a meeting of G7 ministers, but officials said they had no evidence of a link to the event. "The actions definitely looked deliberate," Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders told journalists. |
Father of Waffle House shooting suspect was told to keep guns away from son Posted: 23 Apr 2018 03:46 PM PDT New details are emerging about Travis Reinking, the man accused of killing four people at a Waffle House in Tennessee. He was arrested last June for threatening someone with an AR-15, and was arrested near the White House after demanding to see President Trump. CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann has the latest. |
Prince William, Duchess Kate Welcome Baby Boy to the Royal Family Posted: 22 Apr 2018 09:00 PM PDT |
Man shackled for days in prisoner transport van files suit Posted: 24 Apr 2018 01:29 PM PDT |
A Woman Says Smallville Actress Allison Mack Tried to Recruit Her Into an Alleged Sex Cult Posted: 23 Apr 2018 08:22 PM PDT |
Melania Trump plans dinner menu for Macrons celebrating New Orleans cuisine Posted: 23 Apr 2018 10:47 AM PDT Donald and Melania Trump sit for dinner with the French president Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte Macron at the Jules Verne restaurant at the Eiffel Tower on 13 July 2017. First lady Melania Trump has planned a state dinner for French president Emmanuel Macron that incorporates the celebrated gastronomy of New Orleans – a city founded by the French and still famous for its French Quarter. |
Who controls the world's longest river? Posted: 23 Apr 2018 09:03 AM PDT With Ethiopia signaling it may start filling its towering $4 billion Grand Renaissance Dam this year, safeguarding scarce Nile water resources has surged to the top of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi's policy agenda as he begins a second term. Egypt, which relies almost exclusively on the Nile for farming, industry and drinking water, has sought assurances that the dam will not significantly cut the river's flow to its rapidly growing population. Ethiopia, the source of the Blue Nile which joins the White Nile in Khartoum and runs on to Egypt, has said the dam will not disrupt the flow and hopes the project will transform it into a power hub for the electricity-hungry region. |
Canadian lynched by villagers in Peruvian Amazon after death of elderly healer Posted: 23 Apr 2018 09:36 AM PDT Police in Peru were last night preparing a series of arrests over the lynching of a Canadian man accused by villagers of murdering an 81-year-old medicine woman. Sebastian Woodruffe's body was found in a shallow grave on Saturday in a remote village in the Amazonian region of Ucayali. The 41-year-old had been accused by locals of the murder of Olivia Arevalo, a traditional healer of the Shipibo-Conibo tribe. She was shot twice and died on Thursday near her home, said Ricardo Palma Jimenez, the head of a group of prosecutors in Ucayali. Arevalo had been working with traditional plant medicine since the age of 15, and came from a long line of healers, according to the Temple of the Way of Light centre, where she worked. The centre published a YouTube video that shows her singing one of her curing songs. Ricardo Franco, Arevalo's nephew, described her to a Peruvian TV station as "the mother that protects the Earth in the jungle". He said she was "the most beloved woman" in the tribe. Woodruffe was believed to have been one of her clients, and some reports on social media suggested that she was killed for refusing to perform an ayahuasca ceremony – a hallucinogenic spiritual ritual increasingly popular with Westerners. Other reports indicated a row over debts. Arevalo's sons disputed both versions, however, saying that she had stopped performing ayahuasca ceremonies due to her health. Sebastian Woodroffe was found buried. Villagers in remote parts of Peru often punish suspects according to local customs and without the involvement of authorities Locals told an indigenous news outlet that witnesses saw Woodroffe shoot Arevalo multiple times after she sang an ikaro, or curing song. He then fled, local residents alleged, prompting Arevalo's family members to post a "wanted" bulletin online and on Facebook, showing Woodroffe's photo, identifying him by name and nationality, and offering a reward. Distressing mobile phone footage, shared on social media, showed the attack on Woodruffe. He is seen in the film groaning in a puddle near a thatched-roof structure, as another man puts a rope around his neck and drags him, with others looking on. Mr Jimenez said the footage was being studied, and Peru's ministry of the interior said in a statement issued on Monday that they were close to making arrests in the case. "The prosecutor is concluding his file soliciting the preliminary arrest of the person seen in the video," a ministry source told Peruvian newspaper El Comercio. Canada's foreign ministry said they were investigating. "Canada extends its deepest condolences following the reported assassination of Olivia Arévalo Lomas, an Indigenous elder and human rights defender," said Global Affairs Canada, which manages Canadian foreign relations, in a statement. "We are also aware that a Canadian was killed in a related incident. Consular services are being provided to the family of the Canadian." Woodruffe, who is the father of a nine-year-old boy, grew up in the Comox Valley on Vancouver Island. His friend Yarrow Willard told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation that Woodroffe worked odd jobs in recent years and did some professional diving. Woodroffe said in a YouTube video in 2013 that he decided to leave his job and leave his home in Canada to study plant medicine in Peru. A relative's battle with alcoholism had inspired him to "fix the family's spirit" and pursue a career as an addictions counsellor, he said. Woodroffe began raising money for an apprenticeship with traditional healers in the Amazon, writing on his fundraising page that he felt a responsibility to "support this culture and retain some of their treasure in me and my family, and share it with those that wish to learn." But Mr Willard said Woodroffe had become more distant after trying ayahuasca in Peru in 2016, and came back "troubled" from his retreats there. He described Woodroffe as a person "who likes to poke, and likes to test the boundaries of people's beliefs, but is very much a gentle person underneath all that." He found it hard to believe that his friend would ever be involved in a violent crime. "He had a beautiful spark to him that people respected and loved." He added: "This man has never had a gun or talked about anything along that line," suggesting that Woodroffe may have become a scapegoat for Arevalo's murder. Arevalo's murder prompted outrage in Peru following other unsolved murders of indigenous activists who had repeatedly faced death threats related to efforts to keep illegal loggers and oil palm growers off native lands. Policing is scant over much of the Peruvian Andes and Amazon and villagers in far-flung provinces often punish suspected criminals according to local customs and without the involvement of state police and prosecutors. "We've just been in shock," said Mr Willard. "It just felt like a scam because there is no way this person is capable of that." Woodroffe becomes the second Westerner to die at a Peruvian retreat. In December 2015 Joshua Andrew Freeman Stevens, 29, killed 25-year-old Briton Unais Gomes after Gomes tried to stab him at a ceremony involving the hallucinogens. Mr Freeman Stevens' actions were ruled self defence and he returned home to Canada. Mr Jimenez said that an autopsy showed Woodroffe died of strangulation, after receiving several blows to his body. "We will not rest until both murders, of the indigenous woman as well as the Canadian man, are solved," he said. "We want the people of the Amazon to know that there is justice, but not justice by their own hands." A Peruvian vice minister visited the community at the weekend to reassure locals that they would find the truth behind both murders. But the villagers were sceptical. "There is justice for those with money," one local resident, Alder Rengifo Torres, told TV Peru. Another local woman was captured on Peruvian television telling the minister: "A foreigner can come and kill us, day after day, like dogs or cats, and nothing happens. The state does nothing." A Peruvian ombudsman wrote tweets condemning the killing of Arevalo, "a promoter of the cultural rights of the Shipibo-Conibo indigenous people." He urged the government to protect indigenous people "in the face of an increase in illicit activities that put their lives at risk." But the ombudsman's office also expressed its "resounding rejection of the lynching and murder of the alleged perpetrator" of Arevalo's killing, adding: "We ask the authorities for an in-depth investigation." |
12 Questions People In Polyamorous Relationships Are Sick Of Hearing Posted: 24 Apr 2018 06:00 AM PDT |
Nikol Pashinyan: from fugitive to victorious protest leader Posted: 24 Apr 2018 10:25 AM PDT Armenia's opposition lawmaker Nikol Pashinyan led mass anti-government protests that culminated in the resignation of newly appointed Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian and has declared he is ready to lead the country. A fortnight ago, few in Armenia would have believed that the 42-year-old could bring tens of thousands of people out onto the streets of Yerevan and other cities, eventually forcing the veteran leader to resign. Before these protests, Pashinyan was mostly associated with the tragic events following the 2008 presidential vote that first brought Sarkisian to power, when 10 people died in clashes between police and supporters of the defeated opposition candidate. |
Uranus Is Actually A Giant Ball Of Farts Floating In Space, Study Finds Posted: 24 Apr 2018 02:01 AM PDT |
Toronto: Police name suspect in van attack that killed at least 10 as Alek Minassian Posted: 23 Apr 2018 05:11 PM PDT Police have named they suspect in a deadly van attack in Toronto as 25-year-old Alek Minassian. Authorities say Mr Minassain drove his car through a busy street in Toronto on Monday at 1:30pm local time, killing at least 10 people and wounding at least 15 others. The suspect came from the Toronto suburb of Richmond Hill, police said. |
Appeals court sides with states over fuel economy standards Posted: 23 Apr 2018 04:27 PM PDT |
Waffle House shooting suspect in custody Posted: 23 Apr 2018 03:17 PM PDT |
UN chief strongly condemns air strikes on Yemen wedding Posted: 23 Apr 2018 11:36 AM PDT UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday strongly condemned airstrikes on a wedding in Yemen that killed dozens of people, including children, and called for an investigation. Yemen's Huthi rebels have blamed the Saudi-led coalition for the attack on the wedding in northern Hajjah province late Sunday. Guterres "strongly condemns the airstrikes on a wedding party in Hajjah and on civilian vehicles in Taez, where at least 50 civilians, including children, were reportedly killed and scores of others injured," said a UN statement. |
Peru judge orders two arrested for allegedly lynching Canadian Posted: 23 Apr 2018 05:05 PM PDT A Peruvian judge on Monday ordered the arrests of two men accused of lynching a Canadian man last week in a remote Amazonian village as retribution. The Canadian, 41-year-old Sebastian Woodroffe, had been accused by villagers of murdering an indigenous medicine woman in the region of Ucayali and was killed in revenge by a "mob," according to Peru's interior ministry. A minute-and-a-half-long cellphone recording of the lynching, which was posted on Facebook, showed two men dragging Woodroffe by a noose around his neck as others looked on. |
Vision Mercedes-Maybach Ultimate Luxury Concept Posted: 24 Apr 2018 07:00 AM PDT |
NRA members destroy products of outdoor company that cut ties with the organisation Posted: 24 Apr 2018 09:05 AM PDT National Rifle Association (NRA) members have been posting videos of destroying products made by Yeti after the company cut ties with the group in the wake of the Parkland, Florida school shooting. Yeti primarily makes high-end outdoors products, including iceboxes costing between $250 to $1,300 according to the Washington Post. The company had been offering NRA members a discount on its products often used for outdoor events. |
The Latest: Bush hoping to get to Maine despite illness Posted: 23 Apr 2018 07:10 PM PDT |
Russia's S-300 or S-400: F-35 Killer or Overhyped? Posted: 23 Apr 2018 04:48 AM PDT The Pentagon is casting doubt on the effectiveness of Russian-made air defense systems. The Pentagon's move appears to be aimed at deterring Turkey from purchasing the Russian-made S-400. Until the Pentagon's April 19 press briefing, the Defense Department would routinely scaremonger how the S-400 would effectively turn an area into an anti-access/area denial (A2/AD) bubble. |
France's Macron visits Trump as Iran nuclear deal hangs in balance Posted: 23 Apr 2018 04:22 PM PDT By James Oliphant and Marine Pennetier MOUNT VERNON, Va./WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron emphasized pomp and ceremony on Monday as Macron began a state visit to Washington likely to be dominated by differences with the United States over trade and the nuclear accord with Iran. As Macron headed to the United States, the Iranian government urged European leaders to convince Trump not to tear up the 2015 deal between Tehran and six world powers. |
Nashville Waffle House Shooting Suspect Arrested Posted: 23 Apr 2018 11:23 AM PDT |
Chinese carrier leads live fire drill in East China Sea Posted: 23 Apr 2018 09:55 PM PDT China's sole aircraft carrier has led a flotilla of naval vessels in a "live combat drill" in the East China Sea, state media reported Tuesday, the latest show of force by Beijing's burgeoning navy. Xinhua said the drill, which took place on Sunday, included multiple take-offs from the deck of the Liaoning aircraft carrier by J-15 fighter jets and that "anti-air missiles were fired from ships surrounding the carrier". The manoeuvre occurred in the East China Sea, though the report did not give an exact location. |
Video Shows the Moment 'Killer Grandma' Lois Riess Is Arrested After 5 Weeks on the Run Posted: 23 Apr 2018 12:57 PM PDT |
Armenia's leader quits amid protests, saying 'I was wrong' Posted: 23 Apr 2018 01:26 PM PDT |
Second disturbing video of Syracuse frat brothers published Posted: 23 Apr 2018 04:47 AM PDT |
Under fire by Trump, Rosenstein moonlights at U.S. Supreme Court Posted: 23 Apr 2018 11:58 AM PDT By Lawrence Hurley WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Only for embattled Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein could a half hour of tough questioning from U.S. Supreme Court justices be seen as a break from his stressful day job. Dressed in the traditional long-tailed jacket that government lawyers wear at the high court, Rosenstein tussled with the justices over convicted drug dealer Adaucto Chavez-Meza's bid to reduce his sentence by six months. Rosenstein appeared comfortable, occasionally looking down at his notes, as he parried tough questions from both ideological wings of the court. |
20 Mother's Day Bouquet Ideas Posted: 24 Apr 2018 08:28 AM PDT |
Police probe Korean Air chairman's wife over abuse Posted: 23 Apr 2018 02:49 AM PDT Seoul police on Monday launched a probe into whether the wife of Korean Air's chairman illegally abused employees -- the latest accusation against a powerful, wealthy family with members known for their tantrums. The hot-tempered clan landed in hot water earlier this month after chairman Cho Yang-ho's second daughter was accused of throwing water into an advertising agency manager's face in a fit of rage during a business meeting. The incident was dubbed "nut rage", prompting the sister's case to be described as "water rage". |
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