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	BOSTON, Massachusetts (CNN) -- She was called "the littlest refusenik," one of the many Soviet Jews denied permission to leave the Soviet Union because her father had been exposed to government secrets. But the case of Jessica Katz was special because she was a baby born with a nutritional deficiency that stopped her from growing. She was a tiny baby dying in a Moscow hospital, getting weaker by the day. It was U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy who, her parents say, eventually saved her life. Jessica was born in Moscow in 1977 with malabsorption syndrome, which prevented her from digesting food or milk properly. All she needed was baby formula, but it wasn't available in the Soviet Union.
@highlight
Jessica Katz was born with nutritional deficiency that stopped her from growing
@highlight
The Katzes were among many Soviet Jews denied permission to leave country
@highlight
Senator Kennedy traveled to Soviet Union, urged Brezhnev to let Katzes leave
@highlight
In U.S., Kennedy helped Boris Katz get a job and remained in touch with family | 
	Despite the report, however, the @placeholder authorities denied it, Katz recalls. | 
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| 
	BOSTON, Massachusetts (CNN) -- She was called "the littlest refusenik," one of the many Soviet Jews denied permission to leave the Soviet Union because her father had been exposed to government secrets. But the case of Jessica Katz was special because she was a baby born with a nutritional deficiency that stopped her from growing. She was a tiny baby dying in a Moscow hospital, getting weaker by the day. It was U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy who, her parents say, eventually saved her life. Jessica was born in Moscow in 1977 with malabsorption syndrome, which prevented her from digesting food or milk properly. All she needed was baby formula, but it wasn't available in the Soviet Union.
@highlight
Jessica Katz was born with nutritional deficiency that stopped her from growing
@highlight
The Katzes were among many Soviet Jews denied permission to leave country
@highlight
Senator Kennedy traveled to Soviet Union, urged Brezhnev to let Katzes leave
@highlight
In U.S., Kennedy helped Boris Katz get a job and remained in touch with family | 
	On landing in Boston, @placeholder was the first person they met. | 
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| 
	BOSTON, Massachusetts (CNN) -- She was called "the littlest refusenik," one of the many Soviet Jews denied permission to leave the Soviet Union because her father had been exposed to government secrets. But the case of Jessica Katz was special because she was a baby born with a nutritional deficiency that stopped her from growing. She was a tiny baby dying in a Moscow hospital, getting weaker by the day. It was U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy who, her parents say, eventually saved her life. Jessica was born in Moscow in 1977 with malabsorption syndrome, which prevented her from digesting food or milk properly. All she needed was baby formula, but it wasn't available in the Soviet Union.
@highlight
Jessica Katz was born with nutritional deficiency that stopped her from growing
@highlight
The Katzes were among many Soviet Jews denied permission to leave country
@highlight
Senator Kennedy traveled to Soviet Union, urged Brezhnev to let Katzes leave
@highlight
In U.S., Kennedy helped Boris Katz get a job and remained in touch with family | 
	She got engaged last year, on the same weekend @placeholder's cancer diagnosis was announced to the public. | 
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| 
	BOSTON, Massachusetts (CNN) -- She was called "the littlest refusenik," one of the many Soviet Jews denied permission to leave the Soviet Union because her father had been exposed to government secrets. But the case of Jessica Katz was special because she was a baby born with a nutritional deficiency that stopped her from growing. She was a tiny baby dying in a Moscow hospital, getting weaker by the day. It was U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy who, her parents say, eventually saved her life. Jessica was born in Moscow in 1977 with malabsorption syndrome, which prevented her from digesting food or milk properly. All she needed was baby formula, but it wasn't available in the Soviet Union.
@highlight
Jessica Katz was born with nutritional deficiency that stopped her from growing
@highlight
The Katzes were among many Soviet Jews denied permission to leave country
@highlight
Senator Kennedy traveled to Soviet Union, urged Brezhnev to let Katzes leave
@highlight
In U.S., Kennedy helped Boris Katz get a job and remained in touch with family | 
	@placeholder, she said, proved that some politicians have a desire to accomplish good things and fight injustice. | 
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| 
	BOSTON, Massachusetts (CNN) -- She was called "the littlest refusenik," one of the many Soviet Jews denied permission to leave the Soviet Union because her father had been exposed to government secrets. But the case of Jessica Katz was special because she was a baby born with a nutritional deficiency that stopped her from growing. She was a tiny baby dying in a Moscow hospital, getting weaker by the day. It was U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy who, her parents say, eventually saved her life. Jessica was born in Moscow in 1977 with malabsorption syndrome, which prevented her from digesting food or milk properly. All she needed was baby formula, but it wasn't available in the Soviet Union.
@highlight
Jessica Katz was born with nutritional deficiency that stopped her from growing
@highlight
The Katzes were among many Soviet Jews denied permission to leave country
@highlight
Senator Kennedy traveled to Soviet Union, urged Brezhnev to let Katzes leave
@highlight
In U.S., Kennedy helped Boris Katz get a job and remained in touch with family | 
	And that may be the best thing @placeholder has left behind. | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- A 2-year-old boy who was reportedly the son of Minnesota Vikings star Adrian Peterson died Friday of injuries he suffered after allegedly being abused, police said. Sioux Falls, South Dakota, police said Joseph Robert Patterson, 27, has been charged with aggravated battery of an infant and aggravated assault. If convicted on the charges, both felonies, Patterson could face up to 40 years in prison and an $80,000 fine. Prosecutors are considering filing additional charges against Patterson in light of the boy's death, according to police. Soon after the news came out of the boy's death, Adrian Peterson took to Twitter to express his gratitude to his family, fans and the "fraternity of brothers" in the NFL for their support.
@highlight
NEW: Athletes voice support, with LeBron James saying the death "makes no sense at all"
@highlight
The boyfriend of the toddler's mother is accused of assaulting the child
@highlight
St. Paul Pioneer Press: Grandfather says the child is Adrian Peterson's son
@highlight
Adrian Peterson tweets his thanks for the support he's received | 
	@placeholder called authorities about 5:45 p.m. Wednesday to report that a 2-year-old was choking in his Sioux Falls apartment, police spokesman Sam Clemens said. | 
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| 
	By Frances Hardy PUBLISHED: 17:51 EST, 4 June 2013 | UPDATED: 17:51 EST, 4 June 2013 Tragic: Mother-of-two Shirely Pooley died of pneumonia aged just 51 three days after this picture was taken on Christmas Day 2010 The photo shows a smiling Shirley Pooley, her face radiating health and happiness. Taken on Christmas Day 2010, there is no clue that less than three days later she would be dead from pneumonia, aged just 51. The fact that her untimely death left behind a loving husband, Gary, and their two teenage children, Megan, then 19, and Gareth, 14, is tragedy enough. The thought that she could still be alive today had she not been failed by a shambolic out-of-hours doctor service adds another layer of anger and regret to her grieving family’s terrible loss.
@highlight
Shirley Pooley died just two days after becoming sick on Boxing Day 2010
@highlight
Despite her husband's calls to 111, no help arrived until he dialled 999
@highlight
‘I got the impression Shirley had fallen completely off the radar,’ he says. | 
	'She was our linchpin': @placeholder pictured in 2003 with Megan, then 11, and Gareth, then six. | 
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| 
	By Jason Groves and Emily Allen PUBLISHED: 07:51 EST, 26 March 2012 | UPDATED: 13:13 EST, 26 March 2012 David Cameron today faced demands for an independent inquiry into 'cash for access' allegations after he confirmed he had wined and diners wealthy individuals - who had between them donated millions of pounds to the Conservative Party - at Downing Street and Chequers. The Tories released a list of 12 donors who were invited with their wives and partners to four dinners in Downing Street since Mr Cameron's election in 2010. A second list of five donors invited for informal lunches at the PM's country residence Chequers was released later.
@highlight
Billionaire City businessman Michael Spencer among the 26 invited along with secretive tycoon David Rowland and his wife
@highlight
Mr Cameron said most of the guests were long standing acquaintances
@highlight
Vows to publish details of all meals with party donors on quarterly basis
@highlight
Tory treasurer Peter Cruddas offered access to PM in return for cash
@highlight
He suggested donors who agreed to give £250,000 a year would have their ideas 'fed in' to Downing Street | 
	The @placeholder said that Mr Cameron hosted a post-election | 
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| 
	Lionel Messi was the smiling birthday boy at training on Tuesday but it's the Barcelona ace who's been the one giving out the gifts to Argentina. Sporting a special edition pair of boots from adidas to mark his 27th birthday, Messi shone particularly bright among his team-mates as they went through final preparations for their clash with Nigeria in Porto Alegre. The ostentatious boots are a technicolor version of the adizero f50 Messi boots, which the superstar has been wearing in Brazil while effectively piggy-backing his nation through the group stages. Magic man: Lionel Messi in action as Argentina prepare for their final Group F match against Nigeria on Wednesday
@highlight
Messi wore special edition technicolor birthday boots in at Beira-Rio Stadium
@highlight
The Barcelona star has scored two of Argentina's three goals so far
@highlight
Argentina play Nigeria on Wednesday in Group F table-topping decider
@highlight
A draw will see Messi's side avoid a last-16 meeting with France
@highlight
Nigeria must win to top the group after recording a win and a loss so far | 
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| 
	PHOENIX, Arizona (CNN) -- Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain conceded the presidential race before a crowd of supporters in Phoenix on Tuesday. He also congratulated Sen. Barack Obama. Here is a transcript: Sen. John McCain concedes defeat in the presidential election to Barack Obama. McCain: Thank you. Thank you, my friends. Thank you for coming here on this beautiful Arizona evening. My friends, we have -- we have come to the end of a long journey. The American people have spoken, and they have spoken clearly. A little while ago, I had the honor of calling Sen. Barack Obama to congratulate him. Watch McCain's speech »
@highlight
McCain: Sen. Obama has achieved a great thing
@highlight
McCain: I urge all Americans who supported me ... to bridge our differences
@highlight
McCain: We must work together to get our country moving again | 
	Tonight -- tonight, more than any night, I hold in my heart nothing but love for this country and for all its citizens, whether they supported me or Sen. @placeholder -- whether they supported me or Sen. Obama. | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- Family and close friends will say goodbye to Whitney Houston with a private funeral and burial Saturday in her native New Jersey, trying to come to grips with grief that the pastor of her childhood church called "very deep." "We are all hurting," Pastor Joe Carter of New Hope Baptist Church in Newark told CNN's Jason Carroll on Tuesday. "That voice is silenced. But she left us with so much." Earlier in the day, Carolyn Whigham -- the owner of Whigham Funeral Home in the northern New Jersey city -- said that Houston's funeral will start at noon Saturday at that church.
@highlight
NEW: A police spokesman says the coroner's report could be done in 2 to 3 weeks
@highlight
Marvin Winans, a gospel singer and Detroit pastor, will give the eulogy, a pastor says
@highlight
The invitatiton-only service will be held at the late singer's childhood church in Newark
@highlight
Its pastor says that the singer's "voice is silenced, but she left us with so much" | 
	And a singer who participated in an impromptu duet with @placeholder at a party Thursday night said Houston was not behaving erratically. | 
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| 
	Nestled in the rolling foothills of the French Pyrenees, market day in the tiny farming community of Bugarach has never been busier. But shoppers aren't there to sample the fresh meat, wine and dairy for which the town is locally famed, they are there to pick up their own piece of end-of-the-world memorabilia. This is because Bugarach - population 176 - has been earmarked by doomsday cults as the only place in the world which is going to survive Armageddon, scheduled for December 21 this year by an ancient Mayan prophecy. Scroll down for video Mayan teaching: According to prophecy/internet rumour, aliens will emerge from their 'spaceship garage' hidden deep within the town's imposing Pic de Bugarach mountain and pluck anyone in the vicinity to safety
@highlight
Bugarach - population: 176 - has been earmarked by doomsday cults as the only place in the world which is going to survive Armageddon
@highlight
It is based on an interpretation of the Mayan calendar which claims a planet is on a crash course with Earth and will impact on December 21 2012
@highlight
According to prophecy aliens will emerge from their 'spaceship garage' in the town's Pic de Bugarach mountain and pluck believers to safety
@highlight
'Authentic Bugarach stones' are on sale for €1.50 a gram while a bottle of water from the local spring will cost an eye-watering €15
@highlight
One landowner is offering up his four-bedroom home for £1,200 a night and can offer a camping space in his field for £324
@highlight
'Apocalypse pizza' and 'End of the World vintage' wine also available | 
	Souvenirs include 'authentic Bugarach stones' from @placeholder's rock-face itself, on sale for €1.50 (£1.20) a gram, and 'natural pyramids of pyrite iron' from underground. | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- "Jurymen seldom convict a person they like, or acquit one that they dislike." -- Clarence Darrow A moussed, tousled brown hairstyle is murder trial defendant Phil Spector's latest look. Since April, the murder trial of music producer Phil Spector has been playing out in Los Angeles, California, oddly contrasting gruesome CSI details with the defendant's daily fashion emergency. Jurors finally will go behind closed doors for deliberations at the end of the week. Their impressions of Spector's over-the-top fashion statements and  nebbish-like demeanor could weigh as heavily, legal analysts say, as any of the conflicting expert testimony about ballistics, blood spatter and other forensic evidence.
@highlight
Jury deliberations to begin soon in Phil Spector's murder trial
@highlight
Legal analysts say demeanor, odd looks could be a factor
@highlight
Spector is accused of fatally shooting actress Lana Clarkson
@highlight
Spector's defense says Clarkson shot herself | 
	In heels, she stood about 6 feet tall, according to testimony, while @placeholder is 5 feet, 4 inches tall. | 
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	(CNN) -- "Jurymen seldom convict a person they like, or acquit one that they dislike." -- Clarence Darrow A moussed, tousled brown hairstyle is murder trial defendant Phil Spector's latest look. Since April, the murder trial of music producer Phil Spector has been playing out in Los Angeles, California, oddly contrasting gruesome CSI details with the defendant's daily fashion emergency. Jurors finally will go behind closed doors for deliberations at the end of the week. Their impressions of Spector's over-the-top fashion statements and  nebbish-like demeanor could weigh as heavily, legal analysts say, as any of the conflicting expert testimony about ballistics, blood spatter and other forensic evidence.
@highlight
Jury deliberations to begin soon in Phil Spector's murder trial
@highlight
Legal analysts say demeanor, odd looks could be a factor
@highlight
Spector is accused of fatally shooting actress Lana Clarkson
@highlight
Spector's defense says Clarkson shot herself | 
	Jurors heard during the prosecutor's case how the bullet severed her spinal cord and shattered her teeth, spraying bloody saliva in a two- to six-foot arc, about how her dying gasps may have sprayed onto @placeholder's white jacket. | 
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| 
	Since the early days of his first presidential run, Barack Obama made a pledge -- to talk directly with America's enemies -- that most other politicians found naive. The approach famously drew snickers from Republicans and Democrats alike, who derided it as irresponsible -- a criticism that followed Obama into the White House. In the twilight of his administration, Obama's Wednesday announcement on normalizing relations with Cuba represented his last best chance to turn this idea into a doctrine that outlives his presidency. "Change is hard — in our own lives, and in the lives of nations," Obama said. "Change is even harder when we carry the heavy weight of history on our shoulders. But today we are making these changes because it is the right thing to do."
@highlight
Obama makes good on vow to engage US enemies
@highlight
Cuba offers hope to legacy needing big foreign policy wins
@highlight
Republicans accuse president of appeasing dictators | 
	"For a presidency that has at best modest achievements in the region ... to take the United States to the pathway of normalization is a clear legacy for @placeholder," he said. | 
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| 
	The positive impact of Glasgow 2014 will be felt in the city for many years to come, according to the event's chief executive. David Grevemberg believes the XX Commonwealth Games have not only been a huge success in terms of sporting action, but their legacy will be a very powerful one. Grevemberg, an American who came to the Games organising committee via the International Paralympic Committee, has spent the past five years living in Scotland and witnessed the transformation of the city. Legacy: Commonwealth Games chief executive David Grevenmberg has praised the impact of the Games Grevemberg said: 'The ambitions and aspirations of Glasgow 2014 were greater than the Games themselves. There is a big emphasis on legacy.
@highlight
Chief executive David Grevemberg believes 20th Games have been a success
@highlight
The American has spent the last five years in Glasgow seeing city transform
@highlight
He believes there will be a lasting legacy for Scotland and Glasgow
@highlight
He denies the absence of stars like Mo Farah has affected the events | 
	On the sporting front, the @placeholder have attracted some critics for their perceived lack of high-quality fields. | 
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| 
	By Katy Winter PUBLISHED: 14:02 EST, 5 December 2013 | UPDATED: 14:11 EST, 5 December 2013 News of Allesandra Pacchieri, the Italian woman whose baby delivered by caesarean section without her consent and then removed from her by Essex social services has shocked the nation over the past week. Ms Pacchieri was admitted to a psychiatric hospital in the UK while here for a training course. Her lawyers have launched a legal action in a bid to try to get her daughter back and have said the mother-of-three suffers from a relatively minor mental illness, a bipolar condition that can be treated with medication.
@highlight
Kelly McWilliams, 37, became depressed after her son died aged 10
@highlight
She admitted herself to hospital and made a good recovery
@highlight
Two years later she became pregnant
@highlight
She was told by a social worker during pregnancy that everything was fine
@highlight
Two social workers arrived when Kelly was in labour and told her they were taking her daughter immediately after birth
@highlight
Ultimately it took Kelly over four months to get baby Victoria back | 
	Clearly becoming emotional as she recalls the traumatic event Kelly explains: ‘They said to me “@placeholder we’re here because you’re not very well and we are going to be placing your baby into foster care two hours after you give birth” | 
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| 
	Los Angeles (CNN) -- The Los Angeles Kings will have to wait until at least Saturday to see whether the Cinderella skates fit. The Kings lost to the New Jersey Devils 3 to 1 in Game 4 of the Stanley Cup finals Wednesday, in a game that could have clinched L.A's improbable run to its first ever Stanley Cup Championship. The Kings lead the series 3 to 1 and game 5 with be played Saturday in New Jersey. If the Kings win Saturday, the series would end in New Jersey to the chagrin of some. "I want them to win the Cup in six games so we can see them win here in Staples Center," said Joey Giffee, as he held his ticket for the sixth game in Los Angeles.
@highlight
Kings are having a Cinderella run in the playoffs
@highlight
They are up 3-1 in championship finals going into Wednesday's game against New Jersey
@highlight
The hockey team entered the postseason as the lowest seed in their conference | 
	A record crowd of 18,867 fans were at a fever pitch Wednesday night, but the @placeholder hushed the crowd with three third period goals. | 
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| 
	Los Angeles (CNN) -- The Los Angeles Kings will have to wait until at least Saturday to see whether the Cinderella skates fit. The Kings lost to the New Jersey Devils 3 to 1 in Game 4 of the Stanley Cup finals Wednesday, in a game that could have clinched L.A's improbable run to its first ever Stanley Cup Championship. The Kings lead the series 3 to 1 and game 5 with be played Saturday in New Jersey. If the Kings win Saturday, the series would end in New Jersey to the chagrin of some. "I want them to win the Cup in six games so we can see them win here in Staples Center," said Joey Giffee, as he held his ticket for the sixth game in Los Angeles.
@highlight
Kings are having a Cinderella run in the playoffs
@highlight
They are up 3-1 in championship finals going into Wednesday's game against New Jersey
@highlight
The hockey team entered the postseason as the lowest seed in their conference | 
	The Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, home of the @placeholder, is seeing a run on team apparel. | 
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| 
	Los Angeles (CNN) -- The Los Angeles Kings will have to wait until at least Saturday to see whether the Cinderella skates fit. The Kings lost to the New Jersey Devils 3 to 1 in Game 4 of the Stanley Cup finals Wednesday, in a game that could have clinched L.A's improbable run to its first ever Stanley Cup Championship. The Kings lead the series 3 to 1 and game 5 with be played Saturday in New Jersey. If the Kings win Saturday, the series would end in New Jersey to the chagrin of some. "I want them to win the Cup in six games so we can see them win here in Staples Center," said Joey Giffee, as he held his ticket for the sixth game in Los Angeles.
@highlight
Kings are having a Cinderella run in the playoffs
@highlight
They are up 3-1 in championship finals going into Wednesday's game against New Jersey
@highlight
The hockey team entered the postseason as the lowest seed in their conference | 
	"It's just great to see the focus on the @placeholder now instead of those other teams," Medina said. | 
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| 
	By Jill Reilly and Ian Drury Britain is to be investigated by the International Criminal Court over claims of war crimes by troops. Prosecutors in the Hague have launched a 'preliminary examination' into allegations UK forces tortured and mistreated Iraqi prisoners between 2003 and 2008. It is the first time the ICC, which usually prosecutes dictators who systematically maim and kill civilians, has investigated Britain for alleged war crimes. The prosecutor of the International Criminal Court says she has reopened a preliminary investigation into Iraq to examine allegations that British soldiers may have committed war crimes by abusing prisoners from 2003 to 2008 (file photo)
@highlight
Examine allegations that British soldiers may have committed war crimes by abusing prisoners from 2003 to 2008
@highlight
Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda said she would review 'new information'
@highlight
Earlier investigation closed in 2006, Iraq not member of the court, Britain is | 
	That does not apply to the @placeholder, which has the | 
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| 
	By Ruth Styles Resplendent in a bright pink striped dress, a fluorescent shell and bead necklace and a gleaming lion skin robe, Meekulu Mwadinohmo looks every inch the Queen. One of the Namibia's last tribal monarchs, Queen Meekulu, leader of the Okwanyama tribe, offered photographer Eric Lafforgue a rare glimpse into her world and allowed him inside the royal palace, which is protected by an elaborate labyrinth. From within her sprawling thatched palace, she rules over the Okwanyama's 55 villages with the help of a council, or board, whose members she chooses herself and can fire at will. Indeed, according to Lafforgue, she did so just before the visit on the grounds that the offending councillor was 'lazy'.
@highlight
Queen Meekulu Mwadinohmo rules the Okwanyama people of Nambia's northern Ovamboland region
@highlight
She took the throne in 2005 after being elected by tribal elders and lives in a palace concealed within a labyrinth
@highlight
Says Queen Elizabeth II should visit and learn from the traditions of her people
@highlight
Role includes managing the omaada or royal granary which is opened when famine strikes
@highlight
A widow, she lives with her four children and has adopted an HIV positive boy who lives in the palace | 
	Colourful: Queen @placeholder says that the part of Okwanyama tradition she's most keen to preserve is the gorgeous colourful clothes and traditional jewels | 
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	By Ruth Styles Resplendent in a bright pink striped dress, a fluorescent shell and bead necklace and a gleaming lion skin robe, Meekulu Mwadinohmo looks every inch the Queen. One of the Namibia's last tribal monarchs, Queen Meekulu, leader of the Okwanyama tribe, offered photographer Eric Lafforgue a rare glimpse into her world and allowed him inside the royal palace, which is protected by an elaborate labyrinth. From within her sprawling thatched palace, she rules over the Okwanyama's 55 villages with the help of a council, or board, whose members she chooses herself and can fire at will. Indeed, according to Lafforgue, she did so just before the visit on the grounds that the offending councillor was 'lazy'.
@highlight
Queen Meekulu Mwadinohmo rules the Okwanyama people of Nambia's northern Ovamboland region
@highlight
She took the throne in 2005 after being elected by tribal elders and lives in a palace concealed within a labyrinth
@highlight
Says Queen Elizabeth II should visit and learn from the traditions of her people
@highlight
Role includes managing the omaada or royal granary which is opened when famine strikes
@highlight
A widow, she lives with her four children and has adopted an HIV positive boy who lives in the palace | 
	Friends: When the Queen was reinstated after @placeholder regained independence, younger members of the tribe welcomed her back | 
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	Nambia | 
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| 
	By Daily Mail Reporter PUBLISHED: 01:38 EST, 26 June 2013 | UPDATED: 04:49 EST, 26 June 2013 The new girlfriend of a Washington man accused of bludgeoning to death his estranged wife gave a bizarre interview to a local TV station conceding he could be guilty. Alan Smith has been named a suspect in the brutal murder of Susann Smith in her Bothell, Washington home, in February. While Smith's new girlfriend of just over a month, Love Thai, stands by him, she made a startling admission to KOMO-TV in a recent sit-down interview about the possibility of Smith's guilt.
@highlight
As police hone in on Alan Smith over the brutal slaying of his estranged wife, the 37-year-old has given a bizarre interview about the former 'love of his life'
@highlight
Smith told KOMO-TV he did not kill Susann Smith, who he once loved
@highlight
His new girlfriend Love Thai said she doesn't know what her new lover is capable of | 
	In a sit-down interview with KOMO-TV hours before he was arrested on Thursday, a barefoot Smith said he once loved @placeholder. | 
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	Smith | 
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| 
	By Oliver Wadeson PUBLISHED: 17:00 EST, 16 February 2013 | UPDATED: 09:24 EST, 17 February 2013 Peter Sellers’ role as Inspector Clouseau in the Pink Panther films brought the actor vast wealth. And he spent lavishly: he had a penchant for fast cars and bought properties all over the world. But unlike his fellow Goon Michael Bentine, who was educated at Eton, Sellers, the son of variety entertainers, did not enjoy a privileged childhood. One of his first homes was in Highgate, North London, a modest early 19th Century two-up, two-down terrace that is currently on the market. Inspector's pad: The Miller family outside their terrace house in Highgate, London where Peter Sellers grew up
@highlight
Peter Sellers' childhood home in Highgate, London on sale for £645,000
@highlight
Pink Panther actor lived in the house from to age of 10 to 14 | 
	Upstairs, however, you get an impression of how cramped the house would have been in @placeholder’ day. | 
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	Peter Sellers | 
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| 
	Pretoria, South Africa (CNN) -- Oscar Pistorius will go on trial on March 3, accused of premeditated murder in the death of his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp. At a hearing Monday, prosecutors indicted Pistorius in the Valentine's Day shooting death. Pistorius has been charged with planned and premeditated murder, which comes with a mandatory sentence of life behind bars. The indictment says "the accused did unlawfully and intentionally kill a person." Pistorius also was indicted for allegedly violating South Africa's firearms control act. In South Africa, people can possess ammunition only if they're licensed to own a gun, and their ammunition must be specific to that weapon. Pistorius has acknowledged storing ammunition for a gun his father owned.
@highlight
Oscar Pistorius is indicted in a Valentine's Day shooting death
@highlight
Monday would have been the 30th birthday of Reeva Steenkamp, his dead girlfriend
@highlight
Pistorius says he mistook her for a home invader when he shot her in February
@highlight
The Olympic sprinter's trial will begin in March 2014, a prosecutor says | 
	The uncle said his faith has helped him forgive @placeholder. | 
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	Oscar Pistorius | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- Prosecutors on Monday for the first time sought to link Washington Mayor Vincent Gray to campaign finance irregularities stemming from his successful 2010 bid as well as an effort to cover them up. The allegations were made during a hearing at which a local businessman, Jeffrey Thompson, pleaded guilty to conspiracy for masterminding a nearly $670,000 illegal "shadow campaign" for Gray in 2010, federal prosecutors said. Moreover, prosecutors publicly claimed Gray was aware of the illegal fundraising and had agreed with Thompson to cover it up. Thompson was expected to cooperate with the government and could receive a reduced sentence.
@highlight
For first time, prosecutors say Mayor Vincent Gray knew about campaign finance irregularities
@highlight
Local businessman pleads guilty to masterminding "shadow campaign," prosecutors say
@highlight
Mayor has long claimed he did nothing wrong in 2010 and is running for reelection | 
	They alleged in court documents that @placeholder, 58, used his companies to funnel millions of dollars in off-the-book contributions to various federal and city candidates. | 
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	Jeffrey Thompson | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- Prosecutors on Monday for the first time sought to link Washington Mayor Vincent Gray to campaign finance irregularities stemming from his successful 2010 bid as well as an effort to cover them up. The allegations were made during a hearing at which a local businessman, Jeffrey Thompson, pleaded guilty to conspiracy for masterminding a nearly $670,000 illegal "shadow campaign" for Gray in 2010, federal prosecutors said. Moreover, prosecutors publicly claimed Gray was aware of the illegal fundraising and had agreed with Thompson to cover it up. Thompson was expected to cooperate with the government and could receive a reduced sentence.
@highlight
For first time, prosecutors say Mayor Vincent Gray knew about campaign finance irregularities
@highlight
Local businessman pleads guilty to masterminding "shadow campaign," prosecutors say
@highlight
Mayor has long claimed he did nothing wrong in 2010 and is running for reelection | 
	None of the candidates were identified by name in the charging documents, but prosecutors said in court @placeholder was a key recipient of the funds. | 
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	Gray | 
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| 
	Harare, Zimbabwe (CNN) -- The trial of controversial Zimbabwean politician Roy Bennett took a new twist Tuesday when prosecutors told the judge they wanted to impeach their star witness. The prosecution called arms dealer Michael Peter Hitschmann to the stand to implicate Bennett in the procurement of the arms. Bennett is a senior official of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and Zimbabwe's deputy agriculture minister-designate. He has pleaded not guilty to charges of terrorism and inciting people to carry out terrorism. He could face the death penalty if convicted. The MDC -- led by Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai -- says the case against Bennett is politically motivated and was aimed at keeping him out of the unity government it formed with President Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF party last February.
@highlight
Attorney General tells court that prosecution wants to impeach star witness
@highlight
Micheal Peter Hitschmann cast doubt on some of the prosecution's evidence during his testimony
@highlight
Zimbabwe politician Roy Bennett is on trial for terrorism, banditry and insurgency
@highlight
Bennett denies the charges, which his party alleges are politically motivated | 
	@placeholder's lawyers objected, saying the prosecution was trying to "confuse" people. | 
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	Bennett | 
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| 
	Harare, Zimbabwe (CNN) -- The trial of controversial Zimbabwean politician Roy Bennett took a new twist Tuesday when prosecutors told the judge they wanted to impeach their star witness. The prosecution called arms dealer Michael Peter Hitschmann to the stand to implicate Bennett in the procurement of the arms. Bennett is a senior official of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and Zimbabwe's deputy agriculture minister-designate. He has pleaded not guilty to charges of terrorism and inciting people to carry out terrorism. He could face the death penalty if convicted. The MDC -- led by Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai -- says the case against Bennett is politically motivated and was aimed at keeping him out of the unity government it formed with President Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF party last February.
@highlight
Attorney General tells court that prosecution wants to impeach star witness
@highlight
Micheal Peter Hitschmann cast doubt on some of the prosecution's evidence during his testimony
@highlight
Zimbabwe politician Roy Bennett is on trial for terrorism, banditry and insurgency
@highlight
Bennett denies the charges, which his party alleges are politically motivated | 
	"During that time the prosecution did not indicate that he had acted in common purpose with the accused (@placeholder)." | 
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	Bennett | 
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| 
	Harare, Zimbabwe (CNN) -- The trial of controversial Zimbabwean politician Roy Bennett took a new twist Tuesday when prosecutors told the judge they wanted to impeach their star witness. The prosecution called arms dealer Michael Peter Hitschmann to the stand to implicate Bennett in the procurement of the arms. Bennett is a senior official of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and Zimbabwe's deputy agriculture minister-designate. He has pleaded not guilty to charges of terrorism and inciting people to carry out terrorism. He could face the death penalty if convicted. The MDC -- led by Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai -- says the case against Bennett is politically motivated and was aimed at keeping him out of the unity government it formed with President Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF party last February.
@highlight
Attorney General tells court that prosecution wants to impeach star witness
@highlight
Micheal Peter Hitschmann cast doubt on some of the prosecution's evidence during his testimony
@highlight
Zimbabwe politician Roy Bennett is on trial for terrorism, banditry and insurgency
@highlight
Bennett denies the charges, which his party alleges are politically motivated | 
	Throughout the court proceedings, @placeholder -- clad in a blue suit, matching blue tie and a light blue shirt -- sat motionless, gazing into the sky once in a while. | 
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	Bennett | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- May has been a bad month for relations between Taiwan and the Philippines. Taiwan has reacted angrily after one of its fishermen was killed by a Philippine coast guard vessel last week. It has recalled its diplomatic envoy from Manila, frozen applications from Filipinos seeking to work in Taiwan and held naval drills near Philippine waters. The Philippine coast guard has said the crew of one of its ships fired at the Taiwanese fishing boat on May 9 after it tried to ram a Philippine boat. Manila insists that the shooting took place in waters inside its exclusive economic zone and that the loss of life was "unintended."
@highlight
A Taiwanese fisherman was killed by gunfire from a Philippine coast guard vessel last week
@highlight
Taiwan's president describes it as a "cold-blooded murder"
@highlight
The Philippines says the fisherman's death was "unintended"
@highlight
Taiwan has imposed a series of punitive measures to show its displeasure | 
	"We have demanded that the @placeholder side take the case seriously, find out the truth as quickly as possible and punish those responsible." | 
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	Filipinos | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- A video of a British man and his Saudi wife being assaulted by members of Saudi Arabia's religious police has gone viral across the Arab world. The video, which shows a man in a headscarf leaping off a car to attack another man in a parking lot, was filmed after the couple reportedly used a women-only cashier line at a supermarket in Riyadh. In a statement published on the website of a well-known Saudi writer and blogger, the British man said that while he and his wife were shopping, they noticed three young men who looked "religious" following them. As they were going through the cashier line reserved for women and families, he said the men "started pushing and shoving" and verbally abusing them.
@highlight
Video shows Saudi Arabia's religious police attacking British man and his Saudi wife
@highlight
The couple reportedly used a women-only cashier line at a supermarket in Riyadh
@highlight
Office of head of religious police (CPVP) says video is authentic, condemns attack as "unacceptable"
@highlight
CPVP says four of its members have been transferred to administrative jobs outside Riyadh | 
	The incident has been heavily covered in @placeholder and Arab press and generated much discussion online. | 
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| 
	Sanaa, Yemen (CNN) -- The deputy leader of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and one of the most wanted men in Saudi Arabia has been killed, a prominent jihadist announced Tuesday, though officials in the group's home base of Yemen said they had no evidence of his death. Abu Sufyan al-Azdi, also known as Saeed al-Shahri, died "after a long journey in fighting the Zio-Crusader campaign," jihadist Abdulla bin Muhammad said on his Twitter account. The tweet was reported by SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors global terrorism. Read more: Senior al Qaeda leader killed in Pakistan, officials say It was not clear how al-Azdi died. SITE said media reports indicated he died of injuries incurred in a December drone strike.
@highlight
Abu Sufyan al-Azdi was deputy leader of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
@highlight
A prominent jihadist announces his death
@highlight
Three senior Yemeni defense officials, however, say they can't confirm it
@highlight
Al-Azdi was one of the most wanted men in Saudi Arabia | 
	He said more than 80 suspected al Qaeda militants have been killed since early December but that @placeholder is still out there. | 
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| 
	By Lucy Crossley PUBLISHED: 12:08 EST, 20 November 2013 | UPDATED: 13:30 EST, 20 November 2013 Killed: Schoolboy Radwan Uddin, nine, was playing with his brother when he was struck by uninsured driver Ibrahim Waseem, 23 An uninsured driver who killed a nine-year-old boy playing on his bike with his older brother has been jailed for 21 months. Ibrahim Waseem, 23, was driving at nearly double the speed limit when he struck schoolboy Radwan Uddin, who was riding on the handlebars of his older brother’s bicycle, near a park. In the force of the crash, the nine-year-old was thrown into the windscreen of the silver Mazda and up into the air, before he landed in the middle of the road.
@highlight
Motorist Ibrahim Waseem was driving at 39mph in 20mph zone
@highlight
Schoolboy Radwan Uddin was riding on the handlebars of brother's bike
@highlight
Child was thrown onto windscreen and suffered catastrophic head injures
@highlight
Waseem jailed for 21 months after admitting causing Radwan's death | 
	‘But unfortunately the fact is that you @placeholder were going too fast and if you had been going less quickly the consequences might have been different. | 
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| 
	An independent Scotland may not be allowed to have a team at the next Olympics, it was claimed yesterday. A Yes vote would also cause divided loyalties and concerns over sports funding. Sir Craig Reedie, a Scot who is Britain’s most senior Olympic figure, believes there has been a lack of detailed information about the impact on sport of separation. Sir Craig is vice-president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), president of the World Anti- Doping Agency and was chairman of the British Olympic Association at the time of London’s 2012 Games bid. Scroll down for video Sir Craig Reedie, a Scot who is Britain's most senior Olympic figure, said Sir Craig Reedie, a Scot who is Britain's most senior Olympic figure
@highlight
'Yes' would cause divided loyalties over sports funding, Sir Craig Reedie said
@highlight
Sir Craig Reedie is a Scot who is Britain’s most senior Olympic figure
@highlight
Believes there is lack of information about impact on sport of separation | 
	Sir Craig added: ‘If the outcome of the referendum is Yes, there will be a period of uncertainty for @placeholder sport. | 
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	Tom Brady fired three touchdown passes and LeGarrette Blount rumbled for three more as the New England Patriots demolished the Indianapolis Colts 45-7 on Sunday to book their sixth trip to the Super Bowl in 14 years. The Patriots head to Arizona for the February 1 National Football League showcase where they will face the defending Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks, who clinched their return with a heart-pounding 28-22 overtime comeback win over the Green Bay Packers. Seattle will be bidding to become the first team to win back-to-back Super Bowls since Brady took the Patriots to consecutive titles in 2004 and 2005.
@highlight
The New England Patriots reached the Super Bowl with a convincing win
@highlight
Tom Brady fired three touchdown passes to book their sixth trip in 14 years
@highlight
The Patriots will take on defending champions the Seattle Seahawks | 
	For all their success, Brady and his bunch are still hungry having gone 10 years since their 2005 Super Bowl triumph, when @placeholder won a third title in a four-year span. | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- In the playgrounds across Dortmund they will be re-enacting this night for years to come. Each child will take it in turns to take on the role of Felipe Santana, another will pretend to follow in the footsteps of Marco Reus, while others will fight it out to pull on the imaginary shirt of Robert Lewandowski. It is nights like these which inspire not only those inside the stadium, but the next generation of footballers. It's what makes the intangible, tangible. Trailing 2-1 to Malaga going into stoppage time in Tuesday's Champions League quarterfinal second leg, the Dortmund dream lay in tatters.
@highlight
Borussia Dortmund scored twice in stoppage time to secure a 3-2 win over Malaga
@highlight
German side trailed 2-1 after 90 minutes before stunning late show
@highlight
Galatasaray claims 3-2 win over Real Madrid in Istanbul
@highlight
Spanish side prevails 5-3 on aggregate with Cristiano Ronaldo scoring twice | 
	But that goal, which arrived after 25 minutes, only served to stir @placeholder into action. | 
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| 
	Jerusalem (CNN) -- Palestinian leaders privately agreed to accept a very limited return of the 6 million Palestinian refugees and their descendants to previous homes in what is now Israel, leaked documents showed Tuesday. The leaked documents dealing with the sensitive issue of the "right of return" for Palestinian refugees comes a day after the Arab news network Al-Jazeera began releasing documents revealing details of Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations. The leaks have prompted protests and outrage in the West Bank and Gaza. According to the minutes of a meeting in January 2010 Palestinian Chief Negotiator Saeb Erakat told U.S. State department official David Hale that the Palestinians had accepted a "symbolic number" of refugees returning to Israel.
@highlight
New documents show Palestinian leaders agreed to accept a "symbolic" return of Palestinian refugees to Israel
@highlight
The "right of return" is a very sensitive issue for Palestinians
@highlight
The leaked documents, which have prompted outrage, cover negotiations over a number of years | 
	Several demonstrators also attempted to storm the offices of the al-Jazeera office but were turned back by @placeholder police personnel. | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- So used to being the only British man in the second round at grand slams -- especially outside Wimbledon -- Andy Murray will have company at the U.S. Open. Although Murray didn't play his first-round match against Michael Llodra on Monday, the defending champion is fully expected to defeat the French veteran. And if he indeed gets to the round of 64, he will find qualifier Dan Evans alongside him. Evans became the first men's player outside the top 150 in the world rankings to defeat a top-15 rival at the U.S. Open in six years when he dispatched Japan's Kei Nishikori.
@highlight
Daniel Evans pulls off a major upset on the opening day of tennis' U.S. Open
@highlight
Evans, ranked 179th, beats No. 11 seed Kei Nishikori in straight sets in New York
@highlight
Venus Williams, Agnieszka Radwanska and Li Na were first-round women's winners
@highlight
James Blake will retire after the U.S. Open, putting an end to his 14-year pro career | 
	Once described as the bad boy of British tennis because he liked partying and didn't practice hard enough, @placeholder has seemingly turned his career around in recent months. | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- A new French government was announced Tuesday, one day after it dissolved amid turmoil among top ministers. The biggest change was the naming of a new economic minister, Emmanuel Macron, who replaces Arnaud Montebourg. French media reported that the upheaval was caused by public calls from Montebourg for a major reorientation of economic policy in a country where growth has stalled and unemployment remains high. Macron, a close associate of President Francois Hollande's, is a former banker. The former economic minister's comments were seen as a challenge to the authority of Hollande, and the change tightens the President's reins over the ministry.
@highlight
France announces new ministers
@highlight
The government dissolved Monday amid political turmoil
@highlight
The economic minister who was blamed for the upheaval was replaced | 
	@placeholder has the worst approval ratings of any French President on record. | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- FIFA presidential candidate Mohamed Bin Hammam wants the current head of world football Sepp Blatter to be included in the organization's investigation into bribery. Bin Hammam, who is the sole challenger to Blatter in presidential elections scheduled for June 1, is due to be quizzed by FIFA's ethics committee this weekend along with Jack Warner, who runs the CONCACAF federation covering Central and North America. The pair have been accused of bribery by FIFA executive committee member Chuck Blazer in relation to a meeting the two held with the Caribbean Football Union (CFU) on May 10 and 11 this year.
@highlight
Mohamed Bin Hammam wants Sepp Blatter included in probe into bribery claims
@highlight
Bin Hammam has been accused of breaking FIFA rules and must face ethics board
@highlight
Qatari is accused of bribery along with fellow FIFA executive Jack Warner
@highlight
FIFA president Blatter insists he "takes no joy" in Bin Hammam's plight | 
	A statement sent to CNN by the Qatari read: "@placeholder, member of the executive committee of FIFA, was surprised by yesterday's accusations of bribery. | 
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	Bin Hammam | 
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| 
	Tehran, Iran (CNN) -- Iran has sentenced a former U.S. Marine to death, accusing him of espionage. A court convicted Amir Mirzaei Hekmati of "working for an enemy country," as well as membership in the CIA and "efforts to accuse Iran of involvement in terrorism," the semi-official Fars news agency reported Monday. Hekmati's family and the U.S. government deny the allegations. The sentence came down five months after Hekmati's arrest. The news came amid rising tensions between the United States and Iran. The International Atomic Energy Agency confirmed Monday that uranium enrichment has begun at a nuclear facility in northern Iran. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was on a visit to Venezuela, where President Hugo Chavez said the two of them were working together to stop the "imperial insanity" of the United States.
@highlight
White House: The U.S. takes the matter "very seriously"
@highlight
An Iranian court finds Amir Hekmati "corrupt on Earth," state media say
@highlight
He was arrested in August while visiting relatives
@highlight
Prosecutors allege he was hired to deliver information to Iran | 
	Three @placeholder hikers, also accused of spying, were arrested in 2009 and ultimately released. | 
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| 
	By Harriet Arkell Lying six miles off the Suffolk coast, it appears to be an old oil platform to the casual observer. But the Principality of Sealand, as residents call it, claims to be the world’s smallest country, with its own Royal Family, currency, and even postage stamps. The tiny state (though no other country officially recognises it as such) occupies a 5,290sq ft Second World War fort consisting of two concrete towers connected by an iron platform a few miles off Felixstowe, in international waters. But since 1967, Sealand's residents - all 22 of them - have declared themselves independent of Britain.
@highlight
Tiny state consists of two concrete towers connected by an iron platform
@highlight
Originally built as WW2 defence, it was claimed as 'principality' in 1967
@highlight
No other country recognises it as such, but locals cling to independence
@highlight
Lying six miles offshore from Felixstowe, state is 'ruled' by Prince Michael, 63
@highlight
His father, Roy Bates, claimed platform as his own and crowned himself king
@highlight
Residents catch their own fish and lobster and produce drinkable water
@highlight
They make money by selling titles (a Count is £200) and Sealand memorabilia
@highlight
Tourist trips to the 5,290sq ft fort are being planned for later this summer | 
	In October 2012, Roy Bates died at the age of 91, and the Sealand crown passed to his son, Michael, 63, who is still said to live on @placeholder with his family and friends. | 
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| 
	North Korea is dangerously close to crossing a line. Not the line that leads to a missile attack on the United States, but the one that separates being a rogue state from being a parody of a rogue state. Pyongyang's bluster is as comical as its nuclear threats are implausible. This does not mean the United States should take the threats lightly. As Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has explained, when a country with a big army and nuclear weapons starts getting reckless, it is irresponsible to dismiss the possibility that it would actually do something insanely self-destructive. But the bigger concern has to do with why North Korea is rattling its saber. The reason may reflect more on the United States than we care to acknowledge.
@highlight
David Rothkopf: Pyongyang's bluster comical and implausible, but it must be taken seriously
@highlight
He says enemies may mistakenly believe U.S. caution on intervention means it's "soft"
@highlight
He says more often than not, U.S. posture is policy, but testing resolve would be error
@highlight
Rothkopf: Obama has shown that when threat is most urgent he does not hesitate to act | 
	If @placeholder's enemies think that we are shrinking away from crises, that rhetoric and nonintervention are now our standard operating procedure, that would indeed be worrisome. | 
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	U.S. | 
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| 
	North Korea is dangerously close to crossing a line. Not the line that leads to a missile attack on the United States, but the one that separates being a rogue state from being a parody of a rogue state. Pyongyang's bluster is as comical as its nuclear threats are implausible. This does not mean the United States should take the threats lightly. As Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has explained, when a country with a big army and nuclear weapons starts getting reckless, it is irresponsible to dismiss the possibility that it would actually do something insanely self-destructive. But the bigger concern has to do with why North Korea is rattling its saber. The reason may reflect more on the United States than we care to acknowledge.
@highlight
David Rothkopf: Pyongyang's bluster comical and implausible, but it must be taken seriously
@highlight
He says enemies may mistakenly believe U.S. caution on intervention means it's "soft"
@highlight
He says more often than not, U.S. posture is policy, but testing resolve would be error
@highlight
Rothkopf: Obama has shown that when threat is most urgent he does not hesitate to act | 
	Were North Korea to misread @placeholder's restraint as a lack of resolve, it won't survive the response it triggers. | 
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	U.S. | 
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| 
	North Korea is dangerously close to crossing a line. Not the line that leads to a missile attack on the United States, but the one that separates being a rogue state from being a parody of a rogue state. Pyongyang's bluster is as comical as its nuclear threats are implausible. This does not mean the United States should take the threats lightly. As Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has explained, when a country with a big army and nuclear weapons starts getting reckless, it is irresponsible to dismiss the possibility that it would actually do something insanely self-destructive. But the bigger concern has to do with why North Korea is rattling its saber. The reason may reflect more on the United States than we care to acknowledge.
@highlight
David Rothkopf: Pyongyang's bluster comical and implausible, but it must be taken seriously
@highlight
He says enemies may mistakenly believe U.S. caution on intervention means it's "soft"
@highlight
He says more often than not, U.S. posture is policy, but testing resolve would be error
@highlight
Rothkopf: Obama has shown that when threat is most urgent he does not hesitate to act | 
	@placeholder's troop and weapons movements in recent days are a welcome clarification to those who doubt the country will protect its national interests wherever they are actively challenged. | 
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	U.S. | 
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| 
	Los Angeles, California (CNN) -- Rain pounded water-logged Los Angeles on Thursday, and Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said more than 300 city residents were ordered to evacuate because of the threat of mudslides. "We continue to urge the public who live in these areas to evacuate, to heed the warnings of our police officers and firefighters, our first responders, who are there to protect your public safety," the mayor said. Just over 500 Los Angeles County residents who were advised to flee their homes earlier had done so by Thursday morning, said Capt. Sam Padilla of the Los Angeles County Fire Department.
@highlight
Just over 500 Los Angeles County residents also were evacuated
@highlight
Mudslides a serious threat to areas near hills stripped of vegetation by wildfires
@highlight
Snow closes roads in mountain areas of Southern California | 
	Villaraigosa said the brunt of the storm was supposed to hit by 6 p.m. Rainfall totals of 1 to 4 inches are expected across coastal sections of @placeholder with isolated additional rainfall amounts of 7 inches possible, forecasters said. | 
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	California | 
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| 
	Do you know someone inspirational? The search for the 2013 winner is on The Daily Mail is proud to be running our seventh Inspirational Women of the Year Awards, in association with British Gas and the charity Shelter. Over the coming weeks, we want you to nominate the special women who deserve to be recognised. Here, we tell the story of one of our remarkable nominees. When Emma Salisbury learned her four-year-old son Tommy had an incurable condition which would cause him slowly to go blind, she held him close and wept, grieving for the sight he would lose, imagining his life in a blanket of darkness.
@highlight
Emma was devastated when she learned her son had inherited a disease
@highlight
Choroideremia is a genetic condition that results in blindness
@highlight
Emma decided to help raise money to fund research for a cure
@highlight
The mother-of-three raised a staggering £300,000
@highlight
As a result, the world's first treatment for the disease has been developed | 
	The rate at which choroideremia progresses varies - @placeholder's grandfather wasn't diagnosed until his 20s. | 
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	Emma | 
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| 
	Do you know someone inspirational? The search for the 2013 winner is on The Daily Mail is proud to be running our seventh Inspirational Women of the Year Awards, in association with British Gas and the charity Shelter. Over the coming weeks, we want you to nominate the special women who deserve to be recognised. Here, we tell the story of one of our remarkable nominees. When Emma Salisbury learned her four-year-old son Tommy had an incurable condition which would cause him slowly to go blind, she held him close and wept, grieving for the sight he would lose, imagining his life in a blanket of darkness.
@highlight
Emma was devastated when she learned her son had inherited a disease
@highlight
Choroideremia is a genetic condition that results in blindness
@highlight
Emma decided to help raise money to fund research for a cure
@highlight
The mother-of-three raised a staggering £300,000
@highlight
As a result, the world's first treatment for the disease has been developed | 
	@placeholder has also become a great support for many other parents she has met who are affected by choroideremia. | 
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| 
	The man, who called himself Abu Osama and spoke with a Northern English accent, claimed he had been training with militants in Syria. File photo A British Jihadi who claims he is fighting alongside militants in Syria has said he will return to the UK when he sees 'the black flag of Islam' hanging over Buckingham Palace. The man, who called himself Abu Osama, said he had been taking part in military training, making bombs and fighting with the extremist Al-Nusra Front, which is linked to al Qaida, for the past year. Osuma, whose accent suggested he comes from the north of England, claimed to have been fighting for the establishment of a caliphate - which he referred to by the Arabic term Khilafah - across the Islamic world.
@highlight
'Abu Osama' says he has been fighting with the radical Al-Nusra Front
@highlight
He branded UK 'pure evil' and said it would become part of an Islamic state
@highlight
Speaking with a northern English accent, he told of his parents' worries
@highlight
But he claims they now back his decision to fight and expect him to die
@highlight
Comes as British religious leaders urged young men not to go to Middle East
@highlight
100 imams say Muslims should help Syrians 'in responsible way' from UK | 
	and when I come back to @placeholder it will be when this Khilafah - this | 
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	British | 
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| 
	The Conservatives were today accused by Labour of 'getting excuses in early' by issuing warnings about the global economy to explain grim news about the levels of government borrowing. Chancellor George Osborne said Britain is not 'immune' to a global economic slowdown while David Cameron said red warning lights' were 'flashing on the dashboard of the global economy'. But Labour leader Ed Miliband said the government needed to stop 'blaming everybody else' for failures in cutting the deficit. Labour leader Ed Miliband said David Cameron should 'stop blaming everyone else' for problems in the UK With two weeks until Mr Osborne delivers his Autumn Statement, there are fears low tax revenues and higher borrowing will make it difficult for him to offer any respite for hard-pressed families ahead of the election.
@highlight
David Cameron warned that the global economy risked another crash
@highlight
Six years since 2008 crash, it's important to maintain finances, he said
@highlight
He added that global instability and Ebola threatened Britain's recovery
@highlight
'Eurozone is teetering on brink of possible third recession,' he said
@highlight
Mr Cameron said during credit crunch Labour offered easy answers
@highlight
He claimed easy answers have failed UK while long-term plan prospers | 
	'@placeholder should be trying to strengthen growth and make sure working people finally benefit from it, not making excuses for slower growth. | 
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	Cameron | 
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| 
	From Rory McIlroy's wins at Wentworth and Hoylake to Henrik Stenson's flying finish in Dubai via a Ryder Cup victory for Europe at Gleneagles, it's been quite a year on the European Tour. That's not even mentioning Justin Rose claiming victory in Scotland, Pablo Larrazabal beating McIlroy in Abu Dhabi or Oliver Wilson beating, yes McIlroy again, on the Old Course to win the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship. But amid all those great achievements, who was the one player to hit the best single shot of the year? The European Tour have selected their top shots from each month in which tournaments were played in 2014 for you to decide.
@highlight
Rory McIlroy features on list of top European Tour shots of 2014
@highlight
Jamie Donaldson's Ryder Cup winning wedge also makes the list
@highlight
Donaldson and Henrik Stenson have two shots each on the list | 
	@placeholder hit the shot that clinched the Ryder Cup for Europe | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- When a group halfway around the world, without setting foot on American soil, can claim responsibility for preventing a man in Wichita, Kansas, or a woman in Shreveport, Louisiana, from gaining online access to his or her own money in the local bank, it would seem to be a pretty big deal. Something to worry about. That is allegedly what happened in recent weeks, as six big U.S. banks had their websites jammed, one after another, preventing their customers from logging on to their personal or business accounts, and from paying bills online. The banks affected were Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, U.S. Bank, Wells Fargo and PNC. A hacker group, saying it was based in the Middle East, asserted it was behind the cyberattacks; it remains uncertain whether they, or someone else, carried out the attacks.
@highlight
Bob Greene: Six banks apparently were hacked recently, cutting customer access to money
@highlight
He says for many "cyber" is like "virtual"--intangible, not real. More and more, that's not true
@highlight
He says as aspects of our lives bound to digital world, we're vulnerable to cybercrime
@highlight
Greene: Officials agree we're inadequately protected, and cyberattacks are up. It's real | 
	"The top American military official responsible for defending the @placeholder against cyberattacks said Thursday that there had been a 17-fold increase in computer attacks on American infrastructure between 2009 and 2011, initiated by criminal gangs, hackers and other nations. | 
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	American | 
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| 
	Born out of the Iraqi War in 2003, Islamic State's deadly grip has stretched across the Middle East and into northern-Africa where today, only the Mediterranean Sea separates the militants from Europe. It has conquered regions of Iraq, Syria and recently Libya while building a terrifying support structure in Turkey, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Egypt's Sinai Province, Afghanistan, Tunisia and Algeria. And this tyrannical expansion is all part of its 'global strategy' to seize control of destablised countries while 'engaging in all-out battle against the West,' The Institute for the Study of War told MailOnline. Counter-terrorism analyst Harleen Gambhir said: 'What we've started to see is ISIS has begun to accelerate its operation to activate these sleeper groups that its reaching out to and it's having international effects.'
@highlight
ISIS began as Al-Qaeda in Iraq in 2004 and militants had just 1,000 soldiers, but it has grown to more than 30,000
@highlight
Reach of ISIS now spans Middle East and northern Africa, with only the Mediterranean sea separating from Europe
@highlight
Terrorist groups around the world now pledging allegiance to Islamic State as groups seize destabilised countries
@highlight
Experts say ISIS' control in Libya could create potential 'disaster scenario' and coalition airstrikes are fueling the militants' manipulative propaganda
@highlight
ISIS has 31,500 loyal fighters according to CIA but estimates place this far higher at around 200,000 militants | 
	When it expanded into Syria in April 2013, it finally transformed into the Islamic State of Iraq in Syria (@placeholder) as it exists today. | 
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	Al-Qaeda in Iraq | 
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  "passage": 410,
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| 
	Born out of the Iraqi War in 2003, Islamic State's deadly grip has stretched across the Middle East and into northern-Africa where today, only the Mediterranean Sea separates the militants from Europe. It has conquered regions of Iraq, Syria and recently Libya while building a terrifying support structure in Turkey, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Egypt's Sinai Province, Afghanistan, Tunisia and Algeria. And this tyrannical expansion is all part of its 'global strategy' to seize control of destablised countries while 'engaging in all-out battle against the West,' The Institute for the Study of War told MailOnline. Counter-terrorism analyst Harleen Gambhir said: 'What we've started to see is ISIS has begun to accelerate its operation to activate these sleeper groups that its reaching out to and it's having international effects.'
@highlight
ISIS began as Al-Qaeda in Iraq in 2004 and militants had just 1,000 soldiers, but it has grown to more than 30,000
@highlight
Reach of ISIS now spans Middle East and northern Africa, with only the Mediterranean sea separating from Europe
@highlight
Terrorist groups around the world now pledging allegiance to Islamic State as groups seize destabilised countries
@highlight
Experts say ISIS' control in Libya could create potential 'disaster scenario' and coalition airstrikes are fueling the militants' manipulative propaganda
@highlight
ISIS has 31,500 loyal fighters according to CIA but estimates place this far higher at around 200,000 militants | 
	'What we've seen in a few different places is @placeholder ability to transfer new military expertise, explosives planning, new planning to other groups to win over their allegiance and we're seeing that in Libya.' | 
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	Al-Qaeda in Iraq | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- AC Milan are all but through to the quarterfinals of the Champions League after thrashing Arsenal 4-0 at the San Siro on Wednesday. Brazilian striker Robinho scored twice as the Serie A champions dominated the first leg of the last-16 tie with the north London club. Kevin Prince Boateng put Milan ahead in the 15th minute with a sumptuous half-volley after chesting down a chipped pass from Alberto Nocerino. The Ghana midfielder's strike flew in off the underside of the bar leaving Wojciech Szczesny with no chance. Robinho doubled the lead seven minutes before the break heading home a cut-back from Zlatan Ibrahimovic.
@highlight
AC Milan demolish Arsenal 4-0 at the San Siro to almost guarantee place in last eight
@highlight
Zenit St Petersburg beat Benfica 3-2 in first leg of last 16 encounter
@highlight
Juventus drop points on the road in Serie A to stay in second behind AC Milan | 
	Juve's 10th draw of the league season (and their sixth on the road) means that @placeholder still head the league table but only by one point. | 
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| 
	Washington (CNN) -- Former Congresswoman Gabby Giffords is urging Arizona voters to supporter her successor, Rep. Ron Barber, who is locked in a tough race for re-election, with a personal video appeal. Giffords, who has been recovering since being seriously wounded in a 2011 shooting, speaks clearly into the camera as she says, "We expect our leaders to fight for us, not the special interests. Ron Barber is independent, he's courageous, and most of all he's Arizona through and through." This ad from the political action committee founded by Giffords -- Americans for Responsible Solutions -- follows some controversy about a previous ad from the same group attacking Barber's opponent, Republican Martha McSally.
@highlight
Gabby Giffords continues to recover from a 2011 shooting
@highlight
She's recorded a video ad for her successor, Ron Barber
@highlight
Barber is in a tough re-election campaing, opposed by Republican Martha McSally | 
	But when you talk about allies, the ad was run by someone who is highly regarded in this community and across the country for her work to prevent gun violence and that's @placeholder. | 
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| 
	Washington (CNN) -- Former Congresswoman Gabby Giffords is urging Arizona voters to supporter her successor, Rep. Ron Barber, who is locked in a tough race for re-election, with a personal video appeal. Giffords, who has been recovering since being seriously wounded in a 2011 shooting, speaks clearly into the camera as she says, "We expect our leaders to fight for us, not the special interests. Ron Barber is independent, he's courageous, and most of all he's Arizona through and through." This ad from the political action committee founded by Giffords -- Americans for Responsible Solutions -- follows some controversy about a previous ad from the same group attacking Barber's opponent, Republican Martha McSally.
@highlight
Gabby Giffords continues to recover from a 2011 shooting
@highlight
She's recorded a video ad for her successor, Ron Barber
@highlight
Barber is in a tough re-election campaing, opposed by Republican Martha McSally | 
	@placeholder released a statement saying: "No organization or person -- no matter which party they say they represent -- should think they can come to Southern Arizona and pretend to speak for me ... | 
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	Gabby Giffords | 
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| 
	Washington (CNN) -- As President Barack Obama prepares to deliver one of the most important addresses of his presidency, the American public remains deeply skeptical and confused about his plan to strike Syria -- what it would accomplish, and whether it is even necessary now, given the Russian proposal to place Syria's chemical weapons stockpile under international control. With many Americans saying they are still unclear about what Obama wants to do, here are five questions the president must answer before he can begin to sway the court of public opinion in his favor. 1. Now that there may be a diplomatic alternative -- the Russian plan -- why does the U.S. still need to attack?
@highlight
Obama is scheduled to address the nation Tuesday night from the White House
@highlight
He will need to answer several key questions for the American public
@highlight
Poll: Many think Obama has not done a good job explaining the need to attack Syria
@highlight
New Russian proposal on Syria's chemical weapons may alter Obama's message | 
	Even more, 72%, say a @placeholder airstrike would not achieve significant U.S. goals. | 
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	American | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- Vladimir Putin's gala address before Russian parliamentarians and officials Tuesday surprised no one when he announced Russia's annexation of Crimea. The interesting part was his distorted view of Russian history, and his proclamation that a bizarre kind of simultaneously aggrieved and aggressive hyper-nationalism is now Russia's official ideology. In discussing Ukraine, however, Putin seemed to go out of his way to suggest he had no aggressive intentions and was not planning to divide the rest of the country. Listening to Putin, one could easily forget that Russia is and for many centuries has been the largest country in the world and that it acquired its territories by imperialist expansion often accompanied by genocide and ethnic cleansing.
@highlight
Alexander J. Motyl: Putin describes both an aggrieved and aggressive Russia
@highlight
Motyl: He rewrites history, portraying Russia as a victim of the West and Communists
@highlight
Motyl: Putin says Russia has the right to be a bully, dismisses its previous abuses
@highlight
Motyl: West must hold him to his statements that he wants peace with Ukraine | 
	This @placeholder, the new Russia, is both victim and bully: | 
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	Russia | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- Vladimir Putin's gala address before Russian parliamentarians and officials Tuesday surprised no one when he announced Russia's annexation of Crimea. The interesting part was his distorted view of Russian history, and his proclamation that a bizarre kind of simultaneously aggrieved and aggressive hyper-nationalism is now Russia's official ideology. In discussing Ukraine, however, Putin seemed to go out of his way to suggest he had no aggressive intentions and was not planning to divide the rest of the country. Listening to Putin, one could easily forget that Russia is and for many centuries has been the largest country in the world and that it acquired its territories by imperialist expansion often accompanied by genocide and ethnic cleansing.
@highlight
Alexander J. Motyl: Putin describes both an aggrieved and aggressive Russia
@highlight
Motyl: He rewrites history, portraying Russia as a victim of the West and Communists
@highlight
Motyl: Putin says Russia has the right to be a bully, dismisses its previous abuses
@highlight
Motyl: West must hold him to his statements that he wants peace with Ukraine | 
	This Russia, the new @placeholder, is both victim and bully: | 
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	Russia | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- Vladimir Putin's gala address before Russian parliamentarians and officials Tuesday surprised no one when he announced Russia's annexation of Crimea. The interesting part was his distorted view of Russian history, and his proclamation that a bizarre kind of simultaneously aggrieved and aggressive hyper-nationalism is now Russia's official ideology. In discussing Ukraine, however, Putin seemed to go out of his way to suggest he had no aggressive intentions and was not planning to divide the rest of the country. Listening to Putin, one could easily forget that Russia is and for many centuries has been the largest country in the world and that it acquired its territories by imperialist expansion often accompanied by genocide and ethnic cleansing.
@highlight
Alexander J. Motyl: Putin describes both an aggrieved and aggressive Russia
@highlight
Motyl: He rewrites history, portraying Russia as a victim of the West and Communists
@highlight
Motyl: Putin says Russia has the right to be a bully, dismisses its previous abuses
@highlight
Motyl: West must hold him to his statements that he wants peace with Ukraine | 
	Naturally, he first denounces the new democratic government as illegitimate and in the thrall of imaginary fascists and asserts Russia's obligation to help defend @placeholder and Russian speakers from their supposed assaults and predations. | 
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	Russia | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- Vladimir Putin's gala address before Russian parliamentarians and officials Tuesday surprised no one when he announced Russia's annexation of Crimea. The interesting part was his distorted view of Russian history, and his proclamation that a bizarre kind of simultaneously aggrieved and aggressive hyper-nationalism is now Russia's official ideology. In discussing Ukraine, however, Putin seemed to go out of his way to suggest he had no aggressive intentions and was not planning to divide the rest of the country. Listening to Putin, one could easily forget that Russia is and for many centuries has been the largest country in the world and that it acquired its territories by imperialist expansion often accompanied by genocide and ethnic cleansing.
@highlight
Alexander J. Motyl: Putin describes both an aggrieved and aggressive Russia
@highlight
Motyl: He rewrites history, portraying Russia as a victim of the West and Communists
@highlight
Motyl: Putin says Russia has the right to be a bully, dismisses its previous abuses
@highlight
Motyl: West must hold him to his statements that he wants peace with Ukraine | 
	Naturally, he first denounces the new democratic government as illegitimate and in the thrall of imaginary fascists and asserts Russia's obligation to help defend Russians and @placeholder speakers from their supposed assaults and predations. | 
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	Russia | 
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  "passage": 418,
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| 
	(CNN) -- Vladimir Putin's gala address before Russian parliamentarians and officials Tuesday surprised no one when he announced Russia's annexation of Crimea. The interesting part was his distorted view of Russian history, and his proclamation that a bizarre kind of simultaneously aggrieved and aggressive hyper-nationalism is now Russia's official ideology. In discussing Ukraine, however, Putin seemed to go out of his way to suggest he had no aggressive intentions and was not planning to divide the rest of the country. Listening to Putin, one could easily forget that Russia is and for many centuries has been the largest country in the world and that it acquired its territories by imperialist expansion often accompanied by genocide and ethnic cleansing.
@highlight
Alexander J. Motyl: Putin describes both an aggrieved and aggressive Russia
@highlight
Motyl: He rewrites history, portraying Russia as a victim of the West and Communists
@highlight
Motyl: Putin says Russia has the right to be a bully, dismisses its previous abuses
@highlight
Motyl: West must hold him to his statements that he wants peace with Ukraine | 
	"Don't believe those who terrify you with @placeholder, who shout that other regions will follow Crimea. | 
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	Russia | 
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  "passage": 418,
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| 
	Tottenham left Belgrade with a solitary point to show for their efforts in the Group C opener against a spirited Partizan side. As Mauricio Pochettino made his entry into full European competition the chances were slim for both sides, although Harry Kane went close for the visitors early hitting the crossbar and Hugo Lloris was tested more than his counterpart. Sportsmail's Dan Ripley was there and rates the Tottenham players' performances below. Tottenham striker Harry Kane's shot hits the cross bar in one of the best chances to break the deadlock TOTTENHAM Hugo Lloris - 6.5 Not the busiest of nights for the French stopper, who was otherwise reliable when called upon between the sticks.
@highlight
Harry Kane hit the crossbar in one of the 0-0 draw's rare chances
@highlight
Mauricio Pochettino made his debut in full European competition
@highlight
Jan Vertonghen impressed with a number of crucial blocks
@highlight
Paulinho was a passenger and replaced on the hour by Roberto Soldado | 
	Striker Roberto Soldado came on with half an hour to go to add spice to @placeholder attack and chase a goal | 
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	TOTTENHAM | 
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| 
	Mohammed Abu Khedair, a Palestinian teenager who was abducted and killed in Jerusalem this week, died from being burned alive and hit on the head with a blunt object, according to Palestinian General Prosecutor Mohammed al-Auwewy, citing a medical autopsy. Al-Auwewy said the autopsy discovered traces of smoke inside the lungs of the 16-year-old, indicating that it was inhaled while the fire was burning. Mark Regev, spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said his country is aggressively investigating the killing. "We'll get to the bottom of it and catch those responsible," he told CNN on Saturday. Relatives accuse Israeli forces of beating visiting U.S. teen.
@highlight
Israeli military: 10 sites targeted in Gaza "following constant rocket fire"
@highlight
16-year-old Palestinian Mohammed Abu Khedair was burned alive, prosecutor says
@highlight
Spokesman for Israeli PM says Israel is aggressively investigating the killing
@highlight
His U.S. cousin was beaten a day later by uniformed men, relatives say | 
	The teenager's death sparked widespread outrage among Palestinians, many of whom believe he was killed in retaliation for the abduction and killing of three @placeholder teens. | 
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	Israel | 
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| 
	By Emma Innes PUBLISHED: 04:55 EST, 26 August 2013 | UPDATED: 05:25 EST, 26 August 2013 A set of twins who were born three months early and were not expected to survive are to start school this term. Fraser and Ewan White suffered breathing problems, bleeding in the brain, heart defects and hernias and doctors said it was a miracle that they survived. Now almost six years later, the boys are a picture of health and ready to start their first day of school - a date that their mother, Julie, 36, feared she would never see. Fraser and Ewan White, now six, were born three months prematurely and it was feared that they would not survive. They both suffered breathing difficulties, bleeds on the brain and hernias
@highlight
Fraser and Ewan White were delivered by emergency C-section at 29 weeks
@highlight
In the womb they developed twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome - a potentially fatal disease of the placenta that can affect identical twins
@highlight
Ewan developed absent end diastolic flow - a life-threatening condition which stops the blood flowing properly through the umbilical cord
@highlight
After birth they both had breathing difficulties and bleeding on the brain
@highlight
Fraser also had a hole in his heart and both boys suffered hernias | 
	@placeholder had to be delivered as quickly as possible, but if he arrived too early, he would be too weak to survive. | 
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	Ewan | 
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| 
	(CNN)Kayla Mueller made helping people her life's work. After graduating from college in 2009, she traveled to northern India, the Palestinian territories and Israel to assist humanitarian groups, her family said through a spokeswoman. She then went to Syria to help people whose lives had been torn apart by war, especially children. "Syrians are dying by the thousands and they're fighting just to talk about the rights we have," the humanitarian worker told The Daily Courier, her hometown paper in Prescott, Arizona, in 2013. "For as long as I live, I will not let this suffering be normal." ISIS said in an online posting this month that a female American it was holding had died in a Jordanian airstrike on Raqqa, Syria. The Mueller family confirmed her death on Tuesday and said ISIS took her captive in August 2013.
@highlight
Kayla Mueller's family confirms death
@highlight
Ex-professor: Mueller "a peacemaker" who was willing to make sacrifices for others
@highlight
Family and friends: The 26-year-old devoted her life to activism, humanitarian causes | 
	"When @placeholder hear I'm an American, they ask, 'Where is the world?' | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- Trayvon Martin went out to buy some Skittles -- and was shot dead before he made it home. The case is horrifying, maddening, grotesque. And -- perhaps worst of all -- there may be nothing Florida law enforcement can do about it. As the world now knows, the 17-year-old Martin walked to a store in Orlando to buy some snacks on the night of February 26. George Zimmerman, a volunteer Neighborhood Watch captain, thought the boy looked suspicious and called 911. The 911 operator told Zimmerman to keep his distance -- police would be sent -- but there was a confrontation between Zimmerman and Martin. Martin was killed with a single shot to the chest. Florida authorities have not arrested Zimmerman, and federal authorities recently joined the investigation.
@highlight
Jeffrey Toobin: Trayvon Martin, 17, was shot dead out buying candy in horrifying case
@highlight
"Stand your ground" law allows killing if shooter feels "reasonably" threatened, he says
@highlight
Toobin: Law means alleged shooter's killing is justified by his own perception of threat
@highlight
Trayvon no longer here to give his side, Toobin says | 
	In this case, then, the question is whether @placeholder was in such a place and felt reasonably threatened. | 
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	George Zimmerman | 
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| 
	Legendary actor Robert Mitchum was known as a tough guy, but even he might not have had the stomach for U.S. politics, as son Chris Mitchum is now learning. The younger Mitchum has accused his opponent in a Southern California congressional race of running 'deceptive' campaign ads that twist his words. Mitchum is squaring off against longtime Democrat incumbent Rep. Lois Capps. Scroll down for video Congressional candidate Chris Mitchum has accused his opponent in a Southern California congressional race of running 'deceptive' campaign ads that twist his words He previously ran for office as a Republican in 2012 but did not get beyond the primary voters.
@highlight
Mitchum is squaring off against longtime Democrat incumbent Rep. Lois Capps
@highlight
The ad shows Mitchum apparently telling an interviewer that he doesn't 'intend to got to Washington to represent the 24th District'
@highlight
Mitchum says the appearance is part of a longer clip where he makes a point about pet projects | 
	'@placeholder neglected to respond to the media about the issue, and in fact has been a no-show at five debates planned by community groups.' | 
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| 
	By Michael Zennie PUBLISHED: 13:25 EST, 23 April 2013 | UPDATED: 09:51 EST, 24 April 2013 Charges have been dropped against a Mississippi man charged with sending ricin-laced poison letters to President Barack Obama, a U.S. senator and a state judge after his lawyer argued that he has been framed by a former friend. 'I've never heard of ricin or whatever. I thought they said rice. I told them I don't eat rice,' Kevin Curtis said at a press conference today, describing the moment he was questioned by federal authorities. Defense lawyer Christi McCoy said whoever framed her client was able to lead the FBI to his door simply by including Curtis' catch-phrase 'I'm KC and I approve this message' and a few other clues in the threatening notes that were mailed to Washington.
@highlight
Kevin Curtis was set free on Tuesday after the FBI arrested him last week based on clues included in the poison letters sent to three politicians
@highlight
Defense lawyer said Curtis was framed by former friend who wrote Curtis' online catchphrase in the notes: 'I'm KC and I approve this message'
@highlight
Attorney claims FBI should be investigating J. Everett Dutschke, a former political candidate and accused child molester
@highlight
Dutschke had a disagreement and a harsh email exchange with Curtis recently, lawyer says | 
	'@placeholder is absolutely 100 per cent innocent,' McCoy told CNN today. | 
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| 
	My daughters Lily and Clio were barely conceived before I found out what sex they were. For both, I had private scans at 12 weeks, not only because I wanted to check if they were healthy, but also to find out their gender. So by doing so, have I committed the alarming-sounding new crime of ‘moral kitsch’ - as author Ian McEwan would have it – and consigned my daughters to a ghastly 'pink fate’? Speaking at the Hay Festival at the weekend the Booker Prize-winning novelist, who has penned books such as Atonement and On Chesil Beach, strayed into the subject of discovering a baby's gender before it is born.
@highlight
Novelist Ian McEwan says finding out sex of baby is 'moral kitsch'
@highlight
Also says it confers a 'blue or pink fate' on a child before it is born
@highlight
Award-winning author was talking at the Hay Festival
@highlight
Strayed onto subject when discussing the sex of his characters
@highlight
Parenting expert Tanith Carey, 47, found out her babies genders as soon as possible
@highlight
She hits back explaining knowing the gender can be essential
@highlight
Accuses McEwan of mixing up 'fiction with real life' | 
	@placeholder, who has been married twice and has two sons, added: 'It is above all a | 
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	Ian McEwan | 
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  "passage": 435,
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| 
	(CNN) -- It hasn't been a blockbuster year for Nintendo, the video-gaming company that brought us "Donkey Kong," "Super Mario Bros." and the Wii. Sales of the Wii U, Nintendo's latest gaming system, have been soft and the company has struggled to get enough top-tier games in front of the players clamoring for them. And while Microsoft and Sony have made headlines at E3, the video game industry expo underway this week in Los Angeles, Nintendo has kept a lower profile, forsaking its usual splashy keynote in favor of a smaller news conference. But Satoru Iwata, president and CEO of Nintendo, believes the company can rebound by focusing on Wii U games. In an interview this week for CNN, Iwata admitted the company made missteps with the introduction of the Wii U. But he remains convinced a strong lineup of upcoming Wii U software will get gamers excited about the living-room console.
@highlight
Nintendo president says new titles will turn around lackluster Wii U sales
@highlight
Japanese company has kept low profile at this year's E3 video-game expo
@highlight
Iwata compares Wii U to Nintendo 3DS, which started slow then picked up
@highlight
New "Mario Bros.," "Zelda" and "Donkey Kong" titles are on the way | 
	"But the fact of the matter is @placeholder has yet to prove what is so unique (about it), unlike how ... with a first glance, people were able to understand how different Wii was." | 
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  "passage": 438,
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| 
	The wife of an American Christian pastor imprisoned in Iran for evangelizing is praying for a miracle as she awaits her husband's impending trial and possible death sentence. Naghmeh Abedini, who lives near Boise, Idaho, has been told by her husband’s attorneys that she should expect the worst at Monday's trial, where Saeed Abedini, a father of two, faces the capital charge of compromising national security. Those who have been following Mr Abedini’s trial believe the charges are directly related to his work nearly a decade ago when he started a house church movement in the Islamic country. Deep fear: Naghmeh Abedini, the wife of American Christian pastor Saeed Abedini, who was imprisoned in Iran for evangelizing, is praying for a miracle as she awaits her husband's impending trial and possible death sentence
@highlight
In November of 2005, Christian pastor Saeed Abedini, 32, and his wife Naghmeh, 35, were forced to flee Iran for evangelizing in the Islamic country
@highlight
In 2009, the couple decided to return to Iran and take a chance facing the charges against them
@highlight
Mr Abedini was arrested and sent back to the U.S.
@highlight
Last summer, the pastor and father of two went back to Iran to help open an orphanage with the state’s backing, his wife says
@highlight
He was arrested again and now faces trial on Monday | 
	‘He loves the @placeholder, but he missed his family,’ Ms Abedini said. | 
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| 
	By Sarah Dean For Daily Mail Australia A teenager whose passport has been cancelled on security grounds turned up to a TV discussion about Australians fighting in Syria wearing an Islamic State flag symbol and then dramatically stormed out. Abu Bakr, 19, who is on the radar of security services, walked off set during an SBS Insight episode due to be shown on Tuesday night. The teenager, who was born in Australia but has an Italian and Iraqi background, turned up to the discussion wearing an Islamic State flag logo on his black jacket. Bakr thinks Muslims are obligated help fellow Muslims overseas and reportedly does not feel connected with his home country of Australia.
@highlight
Abu Bakr, 19, has had his passport revoked on security grounds
@highlight
Walked out when Insight show turned to the issue of passports
@highlight
His lawyer says he was duped to appear on the show
@highlight
Jenny Brockie fronts the programme Tuesday night at 8.30pm on SBS One
@highlight
Other Australian supporters of the Islamic State, formerly known as ISIS, also take part in the show | 
	He said 'in order for me to be connected to the values here of Australia, the @placeholder government needs to stop picking on the Muslims here.' | 
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| 
	Cannibal killer: Andrew Chimboza who ripped out a man's heart and ate it to 'show he was not gay' has apologised to his victim's family 'for exceeding the boundaries of self-defence, a court heard A businessman who ripped a man's heart out and ate it to 'prove he was not gay' has apologised to his victim's family for 'exceeding the boundaries of self-defence'. Andrew Chimboza, 35, who runs a window tinting business, pleaded guilty to murdering Mbuyiselo Manona, 62, in the South African township of Gugulethu last year. He told police after he was arrested that he gouged out Mr Manona's heart and ate it as he lay bleeding to death 'to show him that I am not a moffie [gay]'.
@highlight
Andrew Chimboza stabbed Mbuyiselo Manona in a frenzied attack last year
@highlight
As he lay bleeding to death, Chimboza gouged out his heart before eating it
@highlight
Chimboza told judge: 'I'm sorry for what I've done. I have genuine remorse' | 
	@placeholder confirmed to the hearing that Manona had called him certain names, that they then fought and that he had stabbed him to death. | 
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	Andrew Chimboza | 
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| 
	By Chris Pleasance One of Germany's most famous fortune tellers is fighting for her life in intensive care after being stabbed repeatedly by a man unhappy with her advice. The fortune teller Zagorka Jovanovic, 68, who advertises on white magic websites as Esmeralda aus Bilk, charged hundreds of euros for a sitting in which she claimed to use the spiritual world to settle relationship disputes. But she was stabbed outside her flat in Dusseldorf, a city in western Germany, by Turkish man Metin Kolkilic, after advising his lover to leave him. Zagorka Jovanovic, 68, who goes by the name of Esmeralda aus Bilk, is fighting for her life in hospital after being repeatedly stabbed on her doorstep by a man unhappy with one of her readings
@highlight
Zagorka Jovanovic, 68, repeatedly stabbed on her doorstep in Dusseldorf
@highlight
Was attacked by Metin Kolkilic after advising his lover to leave him
@highlight
Kolkilic is now on the run and police think he may be in Turkey | 
	According to police 43-year-old @placeholder had started a relationship with a local woman after she had walked out on her previous partner. | 
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| 
	His eyes filling with tears, Browns wide receiver Andrew Hawkins spoke passionately about a decision he knew would bring backlash and possibly harm his reputation. For Hawkins, there was no choice. A day after he wore a T-shirt protesting two shootings in Ohio involving police and victims carrying fake guns,  Hawkins said he was motivated out of fear that one day something tragic could happen to his 2-year-old son. Scroll Down for Video Cleveland Browns wide receiver Andrew Hawkins wears a shirt calling attention to two black Ohioans killed during encounters with law enforcement before an NFL football game against the Cincinnati Bengals in Cleveland
@highlight
Hawkins said he was motivated out of fear that one day something tragic could happen to his 2-year-old son
@highlight
Hawkins wore the black shirt during pre-game warmups before Cleveland hosted the Cincinnati Bengals
@highlight
He said he wanted to address the situation after Cleveland police union president Jeff Follmer called his actions 'pathetic' | 
	Hawkins' one-man protest was supported by the @placeholder, who said in a statement that they respected both the police and their players' rights to take on causes. | 
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| 
	As the White House sews together a patchwork of agency responses to the Ebola epidemic, Sen. John McCain and other Republican lawmakers are demanding that President Obama appoint a single 'Ebola czar' to oversee the government's efforts to contain the virus. 'From spending time here in Arizona, my constituents are not comforted,' McCain, an Arizona Republican, said Sunday on CNN. 'There has to be more reassurance given to them. I would say we don't know exactly who's in charge. There has to be some kind of czar.' That represents a 180-degree turn from McCain's view in 2009, when he lambasted the administration for taking a 'czar' approach to everything from drugs and green jobs to the Great Lakes and California's water supply.
@highlight
White House has had a rotating cavalcade of experts from seven different agencies briefing Congress and the press on Ebola
@highlight
Sen. John McCain said on Sunday that he would 'like to know who's in charge' of the White House's plan
@highlight
But during Obama's first year in office, he mocked the president for having 'more czars than the Romanovs'
@highlight
Rep. Jack Kingston demanded 'one person in charge' on Saturday to lead 'one central office that's a clearinghouse'
@highlight
In 2009 he pushed legislation to defund White House 'czars' as unaccountable apparatchiks | 
	@placeholder wasn't always a fan of naming 'czars' – point-people – to consolidate the government's responses to a crisis | 
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| 
	An Indian bride ended up marrying a guest at her own wedding after her husband-to-be suffered an epileptic fit during the ceremony. Groom Jugal Kishore was just about to exchange vows when he collapsed with a seizure and was rushed to hospital. Angry that she had not been informed of his condition, the 23-year-old bride, Indira, asked a member of her brother-in-law's family, Harpal Singh, to marry her instead. Scroll down for video An Indian bride ended up marrying a guest at her own wedding after her husband-to-be suffered an epileptic fit during the ceremony because she angry she had been told about her fiances condition (file picture)
@highlight
Groom rushed to hospital after collapsing with seizure during ceremony
@highlight
Bride married guest in anger because she wasn't told about his condition
@highlight
Fight broke out when groom recovered and realised what happened | 
	Mr @placeholder and his family later filed a complaint with police which was later retracted. | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- If Adam Silver were commissioner of the NFL, would running back Ray Rice have already been banned from the league? And if Roger Goodell were in charge of the NBA, would Donald Sterling still be the owner of the Los Angeles Clippers? What-ifs and role reversals can make your head spin. What we have are two leagues and two vastly different responses to separate hot-button issues: racism and domestic violence. Silver had little time to settle into his new job. He took over from longtime NBA commissioner David Stern on February 1, and by late April, he was already embroiled in the Sterling controversy.
@highlight
NFL and NBA commissioners have each faced member conduct challenges in 2014
@highlight
Adam Silver took over the NBA and immediately faced the Sterling crisis
@highlight
Roger Goodell has been the NFL boss for eight years.
@highlight
There's a growing chorus calling for Goodell's resignation | 
	Within days, Silver acted, banning the Clippers owner for life, fining him $2.5 million and initiating proceedings to terminate @placeholder's ownership rights. | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- If Adam Silver were commissioner of the NFL, would running back Ray Rice have already been banned from the league? And if Roger Goodell were in charge of the NBA, would Donald Sterling still be the owner of the Los Angeles Clippers? What-ifs and role reversals can make your head spin. What we have are two leagues and two vastly different responses to separate hot-button issues: racism and domestic violence. Silver had little time to settle into his new job. He took over from longtime NBA commissioner David Stern on February 1, and by late April, he was already embroiled in the Sterling controversy.
@highlight
NFL and NBA commissioners have each faced member conduct challenges in 2014
@highlight
Adam Silver took over the NBA and immediately faced the Sterling crisis
@highlight
Roger Goodell has been the NFL boss for eight years.
@highlight
There's a growing chorus calling for Goodell's resignation | 
	In it, @placeholder repeatedly apologized and denied accusations that he's racist, saying he'd been "baited" into making what he called "terrible" remarks. | 
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| 
	By Victoria Woollaston PUBLISHED: 09:20 EST, 13 November 2013 | UPDATED: 10:34 EST, 14 November 2013 Motorola officially unveiled its ‘budget’ Moto G handset in Brazil yesterday, with hopes of capturing the emerging markets. The £135 Moto G is a 4.5-inch handset running the latest version of Android and will launch across Latin America, Europe, Canada and parts of Asia in the coming weeks. A notable omission in the rollout plans, however, is China - a region that Apple recently considered important enough to include in its iPhone and iPad release, but one that has a chequered past with Motorola's parent company, Google.
@highlight
Moto G has a 4.5-inch screen and costs £135 in the UK and $179 in the U.S
@highlight
It is a budget alternative to the Moto X handset released in August
@highlight
Launch comes after reports only 500,000 Moto X handsets have been sold
@highlight
Google-owned Motorola reported losses of $342 million earlier this year
@highlight
Phone is launching initially in Brazil and Europe - but China will miss out | 
	However, reports claim the company has sold just half a million of these high-end phones meaning there's a lot resting on the success of @placeholder | 
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| 
	Alex Jones is in no doubt: stepping on to the Strictly dancefloor is guaranteed to give you sweaty palms and a racing heart. ‘Being on that dancefloor on Saturday night in front of the studio audience is one of the most terrifying things I’ve ever done,’ she says. And it doesn’t seem to get any easier. Several weeks into the competition, and despite talking to Weekend fresh from performing a beautifully executed waltz that won praise from the judges, she’s still full of trepidation. ‘It was lovely to get some good comments but as soon as we go back to Latin I predict a dip.’ Her anxiety is understandable: The One Show presenter performed a distinctly underwhelming cha cha cha with her dance partner, James Jordan, on her first week on the show.
@highlight
Now can Welsh lass go one better than her co-host on Strictly Come Dancing | 
	I had to have a word with myself afterwards and say, “Alex, get a grip.”’ Like many Strictly competitors, the 34- year-old is only just realising the extent to which @placeholder requires not only physical but also emotional dedication. | 
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| 
	Proud Australian produce purchasers would have had a difficult time buying asparagus from one local Woolworths recently, after the supermarket giant displayed a puzzling label. James Anderson, from Turbo Productions, took a snap of the confusing tag at his local Woolworth in Docklands, Victoria, to share his disappointment that the supermarket wasn't sourcing its asparagus from nearby local growers. A Woolworths spokesperson explained to Daily Mail Australia that in the case of asparagus, the vegetable is sourced from Australian sources when it is in season – from September through to March. At other points of the year, it is imported from Peru and Mexico.
@highlight
Woolworths in Docklands, Victoria, labelled its asparagus with a sign reading 'Product of Australia or Peru or Mexico'
@highlight
A spokesperson from the Australian Made Campaign has slammed the vague sign saying it's 'not good enough'
@highlight
95 per cent of fresh food stocked at major supermarkets is Australian produce, however the origin of most packaged foods remains unclear | 
	'Consumers need confidence that they're buying the product from either @placeholder or elsewhere and it should be clearly labelled as such,' he said. | 
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| 
	By John Hall and Emma Innes A Polish woman who was disfigured by a huge facial tumour has revealed her new face at a press conference. The 26-year-old, identified only as Joanna, underwent Poland's second ever facial transplant after neurofibromatosis – a genetic condition causing benign tumours - left her unable to chew, talk or swallow. During a press conference yesterday, Joanna thanked doctors and the family of the person who donated their face, and told journalists: 'I have nice eyebrows now'. Transformed: The 26-year-old, identified only as Joanna, underwent Poland's second ever facial transplant after neurofibromatosis – a genetic condition causing benign tumours - left her unable to chew, talk or swallow
@highlight
Joanna, 26, struggled to chew, swallow or talk before the massive operation
@highlight
It took 23 hours and involved replacing 80 per cent of the skin on her face
@highlight
She suffered from neurofibromatosis - a genetic condition causing tumours
@highlight
The tumour will not grow back because skin on new face has different genes | 
	colleagues performed @placeholder's first face transplant on a man whose face | 
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	Poland | 
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| 
	Italy launched a massive rescue last night of more than 2,000 stricken migrants crossing the Mediterranean from Libya, where fears are growing over the rise of Islamic extremists. Coastguard officials reportedly recovered 2,164 people who had been crammed onto a dozen boats in the latest in a string of increasingly desperate attempts to enter Europe. It came on the same day Italy said it was evacuating 100 embassy staff in Libya, where extremists from the self-styled Islamic State group have beheaded 21 Coptic Christians in a gruesome video. Scroll down for video Rescue: Another 2,000 stricken migrants were rescued from the Mediterranean by Italian officials last night
@highlight
Massive rescue of a dozen stricken vessels last night near Lampedusa
@highlight
Italian island near Libya has seen vast influx of migrants over ISIS fears
@highlight
Extremists have beheaded 21 Coptic Christians they captured in Libya
@highlight
Interior minister Angelino Alfano warns of 'exodus without precedent'
@highlight
'Caliphate's militias advancing faster than global community', he said | 
	Survivors: Not all migrants who try to reach @placeholder are so lucky. | 
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	Italian | 
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| 
	Washington (CNN) -- The Denver Post Editorial Board endorsed Republican House Rep. Cory Gardner on Friday, just six years after it backed Gardner's opponent Democratic Sen. Mark Udall for the position. "Congress is hardly functioning these days. It can't pass legislation that is controversial and it often can't even pass legislation on which there is broad agreement. Its reputation is abysmal, and even its members rarely dispute the popular indictment," the editorial board said in a statement. "It needs fresh leadership, energy and ideas, and Cory Gardner can help provide them in the U.S. Senate." The surprising decision could give Gardner the significant edge he needs to pull ahead of Udall in the closely contested race. Just last week, a CBS/New York Times poll found Gardner six percentage points ahead of Udall. Real Clear Politics rules the race a "toss up."
@highlight
Denver Post announced its endorsement for Rep. Cory Gardner
@highlight
Says Congress is in "need of fresh leadership, energy and ideas"
@highlight
Mentions that Sen. Mark Udall "is not perceived as a leader in Washington"
@highlight
The race is contested and currently rated as a tossup by many pollsters | 
	"@placeholder has sound ideas on tax reform that could help the economy take off and has expressed willingness to compromise on immigration despite a fairly hard line over the years. | 
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| 
	Washington (CNN) -- The Denver Post Editorial Board endorsed Republican House Rep. Cory Gardner on Friday, just six years after it backed Gardner's opponent Democratic Sen. Mark Udall for the position. "Congress is hardly functioning these days. It can't pass legislation that is controversial and it often can't even pass legislation on which there is broad agreement. Its reputation is abysmal, and even its members rarely dispute the popular indictment," the editorial board said in a statement. "It needs fresh leadership, energy and ideas, and Cory Gardner can help provide them in the U.S. Senate." The surprising decision could give Gardner the significant edge he needs to pull ahead of Udall in the closely contested race. Just last week, a CBS/New York Times poll found Gardner six percentage points ahead of Udall. Real Clear Politics rules the race a "toss up."
@highlight
Denver Post announced its endorsement for Rep. Cory Gardner
@highlight
Says Congress is in "need of fresh leadership, energy and ideas"
@highlight
Mentions that Sen. Mark Udall "is not perceived as a leader in Washington"
@highlight
The race is contested and currently rated as a tossup by many pollsters | 
	Yet the @placeholder went defensive against Gardner's conservative opinions on same-sex marriage and abortion rights. | 
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	Denver Post | 
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| 
	Washington (CNN) -- The Denver Post Editorial Board endorsed Republican House Rep. Cory Gardner on Friday, just six years after it backed Gardner's opponent Democratic Sen. Mark Udall for the position. "Congress is hardly functioning these days. It can't pass legislation that is controversial and it often can't even pass legislation on which there is broad agreement. Its reputation is abysmal, and even its members rarely dispute the popular indictment," the editorial board said in a statement. "It needs fresh leadership, energy and ideas, and Cory Gardner can help provide them in the U.S. Senate." The surprising decision could give Gardner the significant edge he needs to pull ahead of Udall in the closely contested race. Just last week, a CBS/New York Times poll found Gardner six percentage points ahead of Udall. Real Clear Politics rules the race a "toss up."
@highlight
Denver Post announced its endorsement for Rep. Cory Gardner
@highlight
Says Congress is in "need of fresh leadership, energy and ideas"
@highlight
Mentions that Sen. Mark Udall "is not perceived as a leader in Washington"
@highlight
The race is contested and currently rated as a tossup by many pollsters | 
	Yet the Denver Post went defensive against @placeholder's conservative opinions on same-sex marriage and abortion rights. | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- Seal admits to Piers Morgan that the hardest thing he ever had to do was sit his children down and tell them that their parents were parting ways. "It doesn't really make sense," Seal said, referring to the recent bombshell news of his separation from his wife of more than six years, supermodel Heidi Klum. "The truth of the matter is all I can tell you most sincerely is that it wasn't any one particular thing." The London-born musician, 48, whose full name is Seal Henry Olusegun Olumide Adeola Samuel, is a guest on Friday's "Piers Morgan Tonight."
@highlight
Seal on separation from his wife, Heidi Klum: "It wasn't any one particular thing"
@highlight
He says he hasn't taken off his ring "because I'm still married to this incredible woman"
@highlight
Seal told CNN's Piers Morgan that his love for Klum "has not waned one iota" | 
	When rumors began swirling that @placeholder filed for divorce as a result of Seal's "volcanic" temper, the musician told the CNN host he checked out an online article about his so-called temper problem, he said, in the interest of shielding his children from "outside negativity." | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- Seal admits to Piers Morgan that the hardest thing he ever had to do was sit his children down and tell them that their parents were parting ways. "It doesn't really make sense," Seal said, referring to the recent bombshell news of his separation from his wife of more than six years, supermodel Heidi Klum. "The truth of the matter is all I can tell you most sincerely is that it wasn't any one particular thing." The London-born musician, 48, whose full name is Seal Henry Olusegun Olumide Adeola Samuel, is a guest on Friday's "Piers Morgan Tonight."
@highlight
Seal on separation from his wife, Heidi Klum: "It wasn't any one particular thing"
@highlight
He says he hasn't taken off his ring "because I'm still married to this incredible woman"
@highlight
Seal told CNN's Piers Morgan that his love for Klum "has not waned one iota" | 
	The musician said that @placeholder made him "a better man," describing his wife as "the most fantastic woman I've ever met, and I still believe that now, as I did eight years ago, the day I met her." | 
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| 
	Jerusalem (CNN) -- Yair Lapid, the charismatic journalist-turned-politician who surprisingly vaulted to second place in Israel's national election, has long been a familiar face across the Jewish state. The 49-year-old leader of the centrist Yesh Atid party is a former journalist and talk show host, son of a prominent politician, and a one-time amateur boxer with a rep as one of Israel's sexiest men. Lapid segued his journalism into politics and emerged as an archetype -- a voice of the middle-class Israeli striving for success, but anxious about the high cost of living, a voice representing Israelis who've had it with the exemptions from mandatory military service for the ultra-Orthodox, a voice of everyday optimism.
@highlight
Yair Lapid focuses on middle-class issues
@highlight
An author who is a well-known journalist and TV personality
@highlight
His Yesh Atid list is a cross-section of Israel
@highlight
One rabbi says Lapid's optimism is a "breath of fresh air" | 
	He is not a hyphenated @placeholder, whose loyalty to the state depends on its fulfillment of an ideological agenda. | 
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	Israel | 
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| 
	By Associated Press PUBLISHED: 16:17 EST, 15 November 2013 | UPDATED: 14:43 EST, 16 November 2013 Macy's is moving rocker Joan Jett off the South Dakota tourism float in its Thanksgiving Day parade after ranchers complained about having a vegetarian and animal rights advocate representing their state. Orlando Veras, Macy's parade spokesman, said today that Jett and her band, the Blackhearts, will be moved to another float. Veras said that the annual parade in New York City is about entertainment, not advocacy, and that Macy's was making the change 'to prevent any further distraction from our entertainment mission.'
@highlight
Ranchers had complained about having a vegetarian and animal rights advocate representing their state
@highlight
Jett and her band will be moved to another float
@highlight
Macy's wants to 'prevent any further distraction from our entertainment mission', they said | 
	@placeholder (seen in New York) wants to keep its entertainment value and not be distracted by other issues | 
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| 
	(CNN) -- The 16-year-old son of actors John Travolta and Kelly Preston died Friday morning after suffering a seizure while vacationing with his family in the Bahamas, Travolta's attorney told CNN. Jett Travolta, right, joined his father weeks ago in Paris, where John Travolta has been filming a movie. "At this point, we know that John Travolta and Kelly Preston's only son, Jett, had a seizure at around 10 a.m. this morning," attorney Michael Ossi said. "All attempts to revive him were unsuccessful." The boy hit his head after the seizure, but the exact cause of death is not known, Ossi said. An autopsy will be conducted Monday. His body will be transferred to Ocala, Florida, for burial, he said.
@highlight
NEW: Relationship between Travolta and son Jett called loving, affectionate
@highlight
NEW: Couple said chemicals in cleaning products triggered son's rare disease
@highlight
Jett Travolta was elder child of John Travolta and Kelly Preston
@highlight
Jett Travolta died in Freeport, Bahamas, where family was well-liked by community | 
	It was a nod to @placeholder's experience as a licensed pilot. | 
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| 
	Ghana manager Avram Grant was in jovial mood on Saturday ahead of the Africa Nations Cup final against Ivory Coast, saying he was going to telephone Chelsea captain John Terry to get advice about taking penalties. Terry famously missed a shootout spot-kick which would have won Chelsea, then managed by Grant, the 2008 Champions League final against Manchester United. But the defender slipped and sent his shot against the post, giving United a lifeline which they took to go on and lift the trophy in Moscow. Jon Terry missed a crucial penalty in the 2008 Champions League final shootout against Manchester United
@highlight
Avram Grant jokes he will call Jon Terry for advice on penalties
@highlight
Terry famously missed a penalty in the 2008 Champions League final
@highlight
Grant managed Chelsea in the 2007-2008 season, losing two cup finals
@highlight
He has led Ghana to the Africa Cup of Nations final against Ivory Coast | 
	@placeholder remembers the 2008 miss in Moscow as one of the darkest moments in his career | 
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| 
	Tim Sherwood has taken a step closer to being appointed Queens Park Rangers manager after Real Madrid coach Paul Clement ruled himself out of the running. However, an agreement over personal terms for Sherwood is still to be reached - though the ex-Tottenham manager is still understood to be on course to replace Harry Redknapp, who left Loftus Road earlier this week. Chairman Tony Fernandes, who still has to pay Redknapp the remaining six months of his contract, would prefer to offer his next boss a heavily-incentivised deal, which could yet be a stumbling block towards Sherwood’s appointment. Following Harry Redknapp's resignation, Tim Sherwood has emerged as the front-runner for the QPR job
@highlight
Tim Sherwood has taken a step closer to QPR appointment
@highlight
Real Madrid coach Paul Clement rules himself out of the running
@highlight
Tony Fernandes still has to pay rest of Harry Redknapp's contract | 
	67-year-old Redknapp has left @placeholder, but will still be paid his contract until the end of the season | 
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| 
	Tim Sherwood has taken a step closer to being appointed Queens Park Rangers manager after Real Madrid coach Paul Clement ruled himself out of the running. However, an agreement over personal terms for Sherwood is still to be reached - though the ex-Tottenham manager is still understood to be on course to replace Harry Redknapp, who left Loftus Road earlier this week. Chairman Tony Fernandes, who still has to pay Redknapp the remaining six months of his contract, would prefer to offer his next boss a heavily-incentivised deal, which could yet be a stumbling block towards Sherwood’s appointment. Following Harry Redknapp's resignation, Tim Sherwood has emerged as the front-runner for the QPR job
@highlight
Tim Sherwood has taken a step closer to QPR appointment
@highlight
Real Madrid coach Paul Clement rules himself out of the running
@highlight
Tony Fernandes still has to pay rest of Harry Redknapp's contract | 
	And Clement has paved the way for @placeholder to take control after revealing he does not want the job either. | 
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| 
	Sao Paulo, Brazil (CNN) -- The violin she uses is cheap by most standards: made in China, it costs about $150. But that's an absolute fortune for Yanca Leite. On the day we visited her, the 15-year-old aspiring musician couldn't even afford breakfast. Yanca shares a one-bedroom shack with eight relatives in a sprawling shantytown on the outskirts of Sao Paulo called Paraisopolis, or Paradise City. The narrow path leading to their door is lined with the bottles and cans they collect to supplement their income. "The guy who recycles these bottles didn't pick them up and pay us," Yanca said. "So we didn't have money to buy bread."
@highlight
A program in Brazil is offering free classical music training to children in the slums
@highlight
It's empowering the children and giving them a chance at a brighter future
@highlight
There are 11 million Brazilians living in slums; more than 1 billion worldwide are in slums
@highlight
Top 10 CNN Hero Thulani Madondo is educating hundreds of slum kids in South Africa | 
	He reinvented himself as a successful composer, and seven years ago he went to one of @placeholder's notorious favelas, or slums, in search of raw talent. | 
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	Brazil | 
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