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- Tamika Mallory: 'Movement begins again' when the officers charged with killing George Floyd head to court
- Police officer who put middle fingers up at protesters stripped of his powers
- George Floyd death: Why US protests are so powerful this time
- Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie called out by opponent for displaying Confederate battle flag at home
- 14 Beautiful Examples of When Historic and Modern Architecture Come Together
- Sweden says 34 year mystery of Palme assassination is solved
- Coronavirus live updates: U.S. cases top 2 million
- Homicides in Los Angeles Increase 250 Percent from Previous Week
- Trump's troop cut in Germany blindsided senior U.S. officials, sources say
- Australia rejects China's racism warning to students
- Virus pummels global economy, jobs - even without 2nd wave
- How the U.S. Army Is Testing Its New Mobile Protected Firepower Vehicle
- Louisville police release the Breonna Taylor incident report. It's nearly blank.
- India and China: How Nepal's new map is stirring old rivalries
- Biden still wants to increase funding for police departments by $300 million to 'reinvigorate community policing'
- Minnesota state troopers admit deflating tires during protests
- The human remains found in doomsday author Chad Daybell's yard belong to his missing stepchildren, JJ Vallow and Tylee Ryan, their family says
- Israel's Supreme Court strikes down law legalizing settlements on private Palestinian land
- D.C. Mayor: We Had to ‘Defend Our Borders’ From Trump’s Troops
- Philippine journalist Ressa scared but strong ahead of verdict
- This Urban Home in India Maximizes Its Tiny Footprint
- Virginia judge blocks governor's demand to pull down Confederate statue
- China Carries Out Large-Scale Drills in Latest Showdown With India
- Dozens killed in attack in northern Nigeria
- An electric pickup truck with a longer range than Tesla's Cybertruck will soon be up for preorder — check out the Nikola Badger
- No masks, no water: New York protesters held in ‘abysmal’ conditions, experts say
- President Trump, Senate Republicans to put forward proposals for possible police reform
- Even Trump supporters can't possibly believe the 75-year-old bloodied by Buffalo police is Antifa
- Peru surpasses 200,000 coronavirus infections: health ministry
- ‘They Folded Like House of Cards’: McConnell Mocks NYT for Caving to Critics of Tom Cotton’s Op-ed
- American, Delta say demand uptick helping cash burn; United requiring health checklists
- Kill the Carrier: The DF-100 Anti-Ship Missile Is Crucial To China's Pacific Plans
- Fact check: Cruise ships are registered abroad but they didn't seek a US bailout
- Ex-cops charged with assault sue Atlanta's mayor and police chief
- He trained the San Jose police about racial bias. An officer shot him with a rubber bullet during a protest.
- Chinese fighters briefly enter Taiwan airspace: Taipei
- U.S. protesters topple Columbus statue and throw it in a lake
- D-Day by the Numbers: Here's All the Data You Could Want About That Famous Invasion
- 2 Chicagoans say police attacked them at Illinois mall, plan to sue officers involved
- Malaysia detains 269 Rohingyas, find body in damaged boat
- Officer in Breonna Taylor shooting accused of sexual assault
- For Italy's Muslims, lack of burial space deepens grief in pandemic
- U.S. policy of expelling migrant kids faces first legal challenge
Posted: 09 Jun 2020 10:53 AM PDT |
Police officer who put middle fingers up at protesters stripped of his powers Posted: 09 Jun 2020 02:27 PM PDT A Chicago police officer who raised his middle fingers to demonstrators during George Floyd protests last week, has been assigned to desk duty.During the protests last Thursday, an officer was photographed raising the middle fingers of both of his hands at protesters, as police drove away from the demonstrations. |
George Floyd death: Why US protests are so powerful this time Posted: 09 Jun 2020 01:09 AM PDT |
Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie called out by opponent for displaying Confederate battle flag at home Posted: 10 Jun 2020 12:06 PM PDT |
14 Beautiful Examples of When Historic and Modern Architecture Come Together Posted: 10 Jun 2020 07:59 AM PDT |
Sweden says 34 year mystery of Palme assassination is solved Posted: 10 Jun 2020 07:02 AM PDT Closing a chapter on Sweden's most notorious unsolved crime: the assassination of Prime Minister Olof Palme. [Head of investigation, Hans Melander, spoke via a translator on Wednesday:] "Well we can say that this is one of the biggest police investigations in the world. It is often compared to the assassination of JFK and also with the Lockerbie bombing and if we look to Sweden then of course it is by far Sweden's biggest criminal investigation ever.'' Palme, the leader of Sweden's Social Democrats, was shot dead in central Stockholm in 1986 after a visit to the cinema. A Swedish prosecutor closed the case on Wednesday (June 10). Krister Petersson, who has led an investigation into the case since 2017, said the killer was Stig Engstrom, a suspect long known to Swedes as "Skandia man" after the company where he worked, with offices near the scene of the shooting. Engstrom, known to have been at the scene, was repeatedly questioned in early investigations but dismissed as a serious suspect at the time. He died in the year 2000. Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven said on Wednesday (June 10) that he hoped the findings could begin healing the wounds left by the national trauma of the assassination 34 years ago. Lofven said that while a conviction and more definitive evidence would have been desirable, the current investigation had gone further than previous inquiries. Palme's son, Marten, told public service radio he also believed Engstrom was the killer, but said, quote, "unfortunately there is no real conclusive evidence." Conspiracy theories around the assassination blamed a range of forces, from the CIA and Kurdish separatists to the South African security services. |
Coronavirus live updates: U.S. cases top 2 million Posted: 10 Jun 2020 02:03 PM PDT |
Homicides in Los Angeles Increase 250 Percent from Previous Week Posted: 10 Jun 2020 05:56 AM PDT The Los Angeles Police Department announced that murders increased by 250 percent last week in the wake of national unrest following the death of George Floyd, and just as Los Angeles officials announced plans to slash the city's police budget by up to $150 million.The LAPD announced that, compared to the previous week, "homicides went up 250% and victims shot went up 56%" from May 31 to June 6. The department also said that the city had seen four separate shootings — one resulting in a homicide — over the last 24 hours.> The week of 5/31 to 6/6, homicides went up 250% and victims shot went up 56% compared to the previous week. > > The past 24 hrs has seen 4 shootings, one of those resulting in a homicide. Detectives are following leads to ID & arrest the suspects—but we're also asking for your help pic.twitter.com/UXwZD7pPze> > -- LAPD HQ (@LAPDHQ) June 9, 2020Last week, Mayor Eric Garcetti said that the city would "identify $250 million in cuts so we can invest in jobs, in health, in education and in healing," for women and minority communities, and the black community in particular. L.A. Police Commission President Eileen Decker then revealed that $100 million to $150 million would come in reductions to the police budget.Garcetti said there would be cuts "to every department, including the Police Department, because we all have to be part of this solution together. We all have to step up and say, 'What can we sacrifice?'" The stance marks a major shift from Garcetti's position of just a few weeks ago, when he proposed significantly increasing the LAPD budget during the 2020-21 fiscal year from $1.189 billion to $1.86 billion.The city's police union, the Los Angeles Police Protective League, responded to the announcement by warning the cuts would not make the city safer."What you need to do is ask the citizens of Los Angeles, Do they feel comfortable with cutting $150 million from the police budget?' I would say, No.' Can you imagine if that money was cut and the same situation happened in a year or two? I think it would be 10 times worse," Detective Jamie McBride, a member of union's board of directors, said in response to the news. |
Trump's troop cut in Germany blindsided senior U.S. officials, sources say Posted: 08 Jun 2020 08:22 PM PDT President Donald Trump's decision to cut U.S. troop levels in Germany blindsided a number of senior national security officials, according to five sources familiar with the matter, and the Pentagon had yet to receive a formal order to carry it out, Reuters has learned. Trump decided to remove 9,500 troops from Germany, one of America's strongest allies, reducing the number there to 25,000 from 34,500, a senior U.S. official said on Friday. |
Australia rejects China's racism warning to students Posted: 09 Jun 2020 06:01 PM PDT Australian officials and leading universities on Wednesday rejected China's claims students should be "cautious" in choosing to study Down Under because of concerns over racist incidents during the coronavirus pandemic. China's ministry of education warned students on Tuesday there had been "multiple discriminatory incidents against Asians in Australia" during the pandemic, ramping up diplomatic tensions between the two countries. The advisory was the latest in an escalating dispute between Beijing and Canberra that was deepened by Australia's call for an independent inquiry into the origin and handling of the coronavirus in central China last year. |
Virus pummels global economy, jobs - even without 2nd wave Posted: 10 Jun 2020 03:09 AM PDT The virus crisis has triggered the worst global recession in nearly a century -- and the pain is not over yet even if there is no second wave of infections, an international economic report warned Wednesday. Hundreds of millions of people have lost their jobs, and the crisis is hitting the poor and young people the hardest, worsening inequalities, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said in its latest analysis of global economic data. "It is probably the most uncertain and dramatic outlook since the creation of the OECD," Secretary General Angel Gurria said. |
How the U.S. Army Is Testing Its New Mobile Protected Firepower Vehicle Posted: 09 Jun 2020 07:45 AM PDT |
Louisville police release the Breonna Taylor incident report. It's nearly blank. Posted: 10 Jun 2020 12:17 PM PDT |
India and China: How Nepal's new map is stirring old rivalries Posted: 10 Jun 2020 08:01 AM PDT |
Posted: 10 Jun 2020 08:03 AM PDT |
Minnesota state troopers admit deflating tires during protests Posted: 09 Jun 2020 01:23 PM PDT |
Posted: 10 Jun 2020 11:35 AM PDT |
Israel's Supreme Court strikes down law legalizing settlements on private Palestinian land Posted: 10 Jun 2020 03:31 AM PDT |
D.C. Mayor: We Had to ‘Defend Our Borders’ From Trump’s Troops Posted: 09 Jun 2020 07:45 AM PDT Trump sent in goons from the Bureau of Prisons and National Guardsmen from as far away from Utah to take over her town. Then he attacked her on Twitter.In Episode 15 of The New Abnormal, The Daily Beast's podcast for a world gone off the rails, Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser tells Molly Jong-Fast and Rick Wilson what it was like to be under siege from the president of the United States—and how she tried to resist."We have spent the last week trying to defend our borders, defend our autonomy, and make sure protesters could be in the city peacefully," Bowser says. Then the "siege" of Lafayette Park happened."We don't really know for sure who was in charge, who gave the order, what the chain of command was," she says. What she does know is that she was attacked by the president on Twitter and he lost: "Not to sound like I'm in the kindergarten, but he started it."Molly also talks about the GOP's ability to "seize defeat out of the jaws of defeat" and the two reveal the spin job that Trump hopes will save him from election doom.Are We All Trapped in Tom Cotton's Authoritarian Wet Dream?"He thinks this is going to be the sort of secret sauce, the magic that's going to undo the fact he has plunged this country into epidemiological, cultural, social, and economic chaos," says Rick.Plus, Trump's "just the tip" excuse; "deep state" ninjas; and Rick's secret past as a NASCAR driver.Listen to The New Abnormal on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and Stitcher.Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Philippine journalist Ressa scared but strong ahead of verdict Posted: 09 Jun 2020 11:21 PM PDT High-profile Philippine journalist Maria Ressa says the libel charge that could see her jailed next week is a government ploy to intimidate all critical voices, but she refuses to be silenced and still holds out hope of winning. "I've been the cautionary tale: be quiet or you're next... that's part of the reason why I have been targeted," said Ressa, 56, the co-founder of news site Rappler and a former CNN journalist. "It's a chilling effect... not just to me and to Rappler, but to journalists and to anyone who asks critical questions." |
This Urban Home in India Maximizes Its Tiny Footprint Posted: 10 Jun 2020 10:28 AM PDT |
Virginia judge blocks governor's demand to pull down Confederate statue Posted: 08 Jun 2020 10:14 PM PDT |
China Carries Out Large-Scale Drills in Latest Showdown With India Posted: 10 Jun 2020 05:30 AM PDT |
Dozens killed in attack in northern Nigeria Posted: 10 Jun 2020 10:02 AM PDT |
Posted: 09 Jun 2020 08:22 AM PDT |
No masks, no water: New York protesters held in ‘abysmal’ conditions, experts say Posted: 10 Jun 2020 12:00 AM PDT More than 2,000 people have been arrested in the city and the police treatment of those detained is emboldening people * George Floyd killing – latest US updates * See all our George Floyd coverageProtesters in New York have been unnecessarily arrested and detained for as long as 48 hours in "abysmal" conditions without access to masks, food and water, according to legal experts.Since the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis just over two weeks ago, tens of thousands of people have taken to the streets of New York City in protest over police brutality. More than 2,000 people had been arrested in the city as of Thursday – around a fifth of the total of over 10,000 arrested nationally – on charges such as resisting arrest, disorderly conduct and violating the now cancelled city-wide curfew. New York Police Department (NYPD) declined a request for updated arrest figures, saying they will be available "in the near future". Lawyers say the NYPD is also denying many of those arrested their right to a phone call, leaving their friends and families fearful for their lives. Details of arrests are not publicly available, but anecdotally, lawyers said protesters are facing charges for disorderly conduct, obstructing governmental administration and for violating the curfew, which was considered a Class B misdemeanour, carrying a maximum sentence of up to three months imprisonment.Despite the coronavirus pandemic, they said most police officers do not wear masks and in some cases confiscate those of protesters who are being "packed" into cells with no regard for social distancing.Corey Stoughton, head of the special litigation unit at the Legal Aid Society, said: "We have heard from our clients who have been arrested that the conditions in the holding cells that they are held in, in many cases for 10-20 hours, are abysmal. Especially following some of the larger demonstrations and mass arrests, that there are extremely crowded conditions, that the cells are dirty and unsanitary and unsafe."Police officers, she added, "rarely" wear masks. "So really an arrest is a decision by the police department to put protesters into a situation that is dangerous for their health and safety."Most protesters that are arrested are taken to a police station and held before being released on a summons ordering them to appear in court at a later date. The protesters the Guardian spoke to had received summonses for September. If they face higher charges, they are arraigned, which means they are detained until they have seen a judge – who either sets bail or releases them.Rigodis Appling, a staff attorney at the Legal Aid Society, where she is a founding member of the Black Attorneys of Legal Aid caucus, said some protesters were held for 48 hours. Ordinarily this would be illegal under New York state's 24-hour arrest-to-arraignment rule but it was suspended as a result of the crisis and upheld by a Manhattan supreme court judge."The people I saw had been sitting in the Tombs [the nickname for where people are detained underneath the courthouse in Manhattan] for 48 hours … in New York, typically you're supposed to see a judge within 24 hours," said Appling. She said of those who were arraigned, were "majority, almost all, black and Latino" and that many were "over-charged" with higher crimes. She has also seen multiple essential workers who were not necessarily a part of the protests in arraignments. Describing the conditions in the Tombs, she said: "Filthy would be an understatement." While she said it is always like that, Covid-19 makes it "even scarier" for her clients. Porsha-Shaf'on Venable, a supervising attorney public defender in New York and an attorney for Good Call, a hotline offering 24-hour free legal support to people who have been arrested in the city and their friends and family, said police treatment of protesters is tantamount to an "act of terror".She added: "People are scared … And if there was any confidence, if there was any modicum of confidence in the NYPD before, they have successfully diminished that. It is gone. And you can hear it in every mother's voice that calls the hotline."Good Call has been flooded with close to 2,000 calls since the protests started and expanded its team of lawyers, who Venable said are working "around the clock".On Thursday night, when protesters in the Bronx were zip-tied, she said they were taken to another borough, Queens."Some of them were ultimately released, but it was still during curfew time with no way to get back home and with real fear of being arrested again for violating the curfew."Many of the arrests are unnecessary, said Jared Trujillo, defence attorney and president of the association of Legal Aid Attorneys. "Ultimately someone who's just out there protesting there is no reason that police officers can't issue an appearance ticket – if they have to arrest them at all."Rather than scaring off protesters, police treatment of those arrested is in some ways "emboldening" people to demonstrate, he said.The Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus Vance, announced on Friday that he will not prosecute protesters for low-level offenses.However, Trujillo said there was no guarantee. "Something to note about the Manhattan DA is oftentimes they say they're not going to prosecute certain things and they do it anyway."Student Kellen Gold, 22, was arrested for violating the curfew on Wednesday night at a march in Manhattan. Gold, who uses they/them pronouns, said they were charged by police on bikes so they ran and kneeled before being "thrown to the ground and then cuffed" and taken to a police station in Brooklyn."I've been arrested a bunch of times [for activism] … this is the first arrest where I've been violently handled," said Gold, who was released at around 1.15am and given a court date in September.Almost all of the officers were not wearing masks, said Gold, and protesters were required to share water cups.Johnathan, 35, a videographer from Brooklyn who did not want to give his last name, said he was arrested for trespassing at the Barclays Centre on 29 May after walking up the sloping grass-covered roof of the train station to get a better vantage point to film.At One Police Plaza, NYPD's headquarters in Manhattan, he claims it was "chaos". He said he was not given a phone call and officers were not wearing masks or social distancing. In a holding area of about 50 people, he said he was the only one wearing a mask.He said he has been summoned to appear in September but that officers told him they will not charge him with trespassing. "I don't know what's in store," he added.The experience has changed him, he said, and he believes the police should be defunded. He added: "If they're messing that up, what else are they messing up? … The fire that has now been lit under me is to hold the police accountable."The NYPD, which Mayor Bill de Blasio announced on Sunday would have its $6bn budget cut following pressure from protesters, said it "supports and respects the rights of protesters to express their views" and that they are given "numerous warnings to disperse" if officers decide to clear the street. It said if directions are ignored, "a person may be subject to an arrest or summons."Sergeant Mary Frances O'Donnell, a spokeswoman for the deputy commissioner, public information, said: "While the majority of the protests have been peaceful, our officers have encountered agitators with different agendas who have used the guise of the protests to commit criminal acts and violence. "Since May 25, our officers have been shot at, stabbed, assaulted with rocks, bricks and other debris, have been struck by vehicles and have even had molotov cocktails thrown inside their vehicle. This behaviour is unacceptable and will not be tolerated." |
President Trump, Senate Republicans to put forward proposals for possible police reform Posted: 09 Jun 2020 03:16 PM PDT |
Posted: 09 Jun 2020 09:45 AM PDT |
Peru surpasses 200,000 coronavirus infections: health ministry Posted: 09 Jun 2020 02:31 PM PDT Peru emerged as a global COVID-19 hotspot on Tuesday as the health ministry registered more than 200,000 cases, ranking the South American country as the eighth-highest in the world by number of infections. The death toll rose to 5,738 and the total number of infections climbed to 203,736, an increase of more than 4,000 cases from the previous day. The figures show Peru as second only to Brazil as Latin America's worst-affected country by number of overall cases, and third after Brazil and Mexico in terms of deaths. |
‘They Folded Like House of Cards’: McConnell Mocks NYT for Caving to Critics of Tom Cotton’s Op-ed Posted: 10 Jun 2020 10:31 AM PDT Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell on Wednesday accused the New York Times of lying about the substance of Senator Tom Cotton's controversial op-ed for which the paper later apologized after an outcry from readers and Times journalists.During a floor speech, McConnell mocked the Times for bowing to criticism of the paper's decision to publish Cotton's opinion op-ed, titled "Send in the Troops," which called for military intervention to quell the rioting across the country in the wake of the death of George Floyd."One of our nation's most storied newspapers just had its intellectual independence challenged by an angry mob, and they folded like a house of cards," McConnell said from the Senate floor. "A jury of people on Twitter indicted them as accessories to a thought crime and instead of telling them to go take a hike, the paper pleaded guilty and begged for mercy."After the column's publication, several Times staffers tweeted that, "running this puts Black @NYTimes staff in danger." The backlash eventually resulted in the resignation of James Bennet, the Times editorial page editor, on Sunday.The Times has since added a lengthy note editor's note to the op-ed saying that "the essay fell short of our standards and should not have been published." While Cotton's "basic arguments" represent a "newsworthy part of the current debate," the note reads, the "life-and-death importance of the topic" and the Arkansas Republican's "influential position" warranted further substantial revisions." Editors also lamented the "needlessly harsh" tone of the essay and singled out several claims Cotton makes which they said should have been fact-checked.Cotton wrote that "nihilist criminals are simply out for loot and the thrill of destruction, with cadres of left-wing radicals like antifa infiltrating protest marches to exploit Floyd's death for their own anarchic purposes." The Times's editor's note takes issue with those assertions, saying Cotton's claims are unsubstantiated and have been "widely questioned."McConnell acknowledged that Cotton's view was "controversial" but said it remains a "legitimate" one.Afterwards, the Times "began lying about what Senator Cotton had said," saying he had "called for a crackdown on peaceful protests when he had specifically distinguished them from violent rioters," McConnell said.McConnell noted that in the past, the Times has published op-eds from Russian president Vladimir Putin, the Iranian foreign minister, and a leader of the Muslim brotherhood."Presumably it was understood that pushing the envelope and airing disagreements are necessary in a free market of ideas," the Kentucky Republican said. "But one week ago, the Gray Lady finally met her match. Vladimir Putin? No problem. Iranian propaganda? Sure. But nothing, nothing could have prepared them for 800 words from the junior senator from Arkansas.""The New York Times had erred grievously by making people confront a different viewpoint," McConnell said mockingly. "It hurt their feelings by making them confront a different point of view." |
American, Delta say demand uptick helping cash burn; United requiring health checklists Posted: 10 Jun 2020 08:34 AM PDT American Airlines Group Inc |
Kill the Carrier: The DF-100 Anti-Ship Missile Is Crucial To China's Pacific Plans Posted: 09 Jun 2020 04:00 PM PDT |
Fact check: Cruise ships are registered abroad but they didn't seek a US bailout Posted: 10 Jun 2020 08:46 AM PDT |
Ex-cops charged with assault sue Atlanta's mayor and police chief Posted: 10 Jun 2020 03:22 PM PDT |
Posted: 09 Jun 2020 04:29 PM PDT |
Chinese fighters briefly enter Taiwan airspace: Taipei Posted: 08 Jun 2020 10:49 PM PDT Chinese fighter jets briefly entered Taiwan's airspace on Tuesday, forcing the island to scramble its fighters, the same day Taipei announced plans for its largest annual live-fire military drill. The Taiwanese defence ministry said it broadcast warnings and "took active responses to dispel" multiple Chinese Su-30 fighters to the southwest of the island. The incursion came as the ministry announced that the "Han Kuang" live-fire drill would be held next month, including computer simulations and an exercise to defend against forces landing on the island. China has ramped up fighter flights and warship crossings near Taiwan or through the Taiwan Strait since President Tsai Ing-wen was first elected in 2016, as she has refused to acknowledge that the island is part of "one China". Beijing claims Taiwan as part of its territory and has vowed to one day seize it, by force if necessary. On February 10, a Chinese military jet briefly crossed the median line of the Taiwan Strait separating the two sides in the first major incursion since Tsai's landslide re-election in January. Tsai has lashed out at Beijing for "meaningless and unnecessary" moves. In March last year, two Chinese J-11 fighter jets crossed over the line for the first time in years, prompting Taipei to accuse Beijing of violating a long-held tacit agreement in a "reckless and provocative" move. |
U.S. protesters topple Columbus statue and throw it in a lake Posted: 10 Jun 2020 06:59 AM PDT A wave of demonstrations has swept across the United States and Europe following the death of George Floyd. Protesters have torn down statues linked to empire and the slave trade. Columbus was born in Genoa, Italy in 1451 and his voyages across the Atlantic opened the way for European colonisation of the Americas. |
D-Day by the Numbers: Here's All the Data You Could Want About That Famous Invasion Posted: 09 Jun 2020 02:00 PM PDT |
2 Chicagoans say police attacked them at Illinois mall, plan to sue officers involved Posted: 09 Jun 2020 05:52 PM PDT |
Malaysia detains 269 Rohingyas, find body in damaged boat Posted: 08 Jun 2020 08:47 PM PDT |
Officer in Breonna Taylor shooting accused of sexual assault Posted: 10 Jun 2020 11:21 AM PDT |
For Italy's Muslims, lack of burial space deepens grief in pandemic Posted: 08 Jun 2020 09:10 PM PDT Italy's Muslim community, like others, suffered many deaths as the coronavirus pandemic hit the Mediterranean country hard. Imams and Muslim community leaders are now calling for more Islamic cemeteries, or additional space in the country's existing graveyards, as the faithful increasingly want to be buried in Italy, their home. "We have experienced the pain (of the pandemic), but it has sometimes been deepened when some families could not find a place to bury their dead because there were no Muslim sections in the town cemeteries," Abdullah Tchina, imam of the Milan Sesto mosque, told AFP. |
U.S. policy of expelling migrant kids faces first legal challenge Posted: 10 Jun 2020 08:07 AM PDT |
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