Elizabeth II to Become U.K.'s Longest-Serving Monarch - Tuesday September 8th, 2015 at 2:21 PM
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When Queen Elizabeth II becomes the longest-serving monarch in British history on Wednesday, she doesn’t want any fuss, royal aides say.
The government has been preparing for months as the humanitarian crises on Europe’s periphery grew, but as the crisis wears on, states and municipalities are starting to groan under the burden.
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Baltimore to Pay Family of Freddie Gray $6.4 Millionby webdesk@voanews.com (VOA News)
The city of Baltimore will pay a $6.4 million wrongful death settlement to the family of Freddie Gray, the African American man who died in April after being critically injured while in police custody. In a statement, Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake says the proposed settlement would "resolve all civil claims related to the City of Baltimore, the Baltimore Police Department, individual officers, and any other persons or institutions who might be deemed responsible for the...
Bernie Sanders Surge Reflects US Shift on Socialismby webdesk@voanews.com (William Gallo)
Free college tuition. Doubling the minimum wage. A single-payer, universal health care system. Those are just a few of the campaign promises by Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, who does not try to hide that he embraces a form of socialism. The independent Vermont senator's self-identification as a socialist is a rarity for politicians in the United States, which, unlike most other Western democracies, does not have any sort of significant socialist presence...
Russian Orthodox Americans Support Church Tradition, Not Politics by webdesk@voanews.com (Daniel Schearf)
A group of Russian Orthodox Americans was in Moscow this past week to learn traditional Orthodox singing from Russian experts. The organizers say they are motivated by the need to strengthen the friendship between the Russian and American peoples in this time of political tensions, but the Russian Orthodox Church is also connected to the Kremlin's anti-western agenda. As a group of 35 amateur singers in Russia for their first time practiced the Slavonic tradition, choirmaster...
Refugees are continuing to pour into Europe with the hopes of finding new homes. France and Britain both agreed Monday to accept at least 20,000 of them from the war-torn Middle East, but that number is dwarfed by the masses of migrants hoping to jumpstart their lives in Germany. VOA's Mike Richman reports.
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French President Urges Four-way Talks on Ukraine Peace Dealby webdesk@voanews.com (Jonas Bernstein)
French President Francois Hollande has called for a meeting with his German, Russian and Ukrainian counterparts to ensure the peace agreement for eastern Ukraine is carried out, with an eye to lifting Western sanctions against Moscow. In a wide-ranging press conference in Paris on Monday, Hollande said he would propose that a meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko be held in Paris before the start of this...
Arab Media Report: Syria, Russia Reviving 1980 'Friendship' Treaty by webdesk@voanews.com (Edward Yeranian)
Arab media are reporting that the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has reactivated a 1980 “friendship” treaty between Damascus and Moscow, handing over the Latakia airbase in Assad's mostly Alawite Mediterranean coastal enclave. Other Arab media reports say Russia is anticipating an eventual partition of Syria and hopes to bolster the military of a smaller geographic configuration of Syria under Assad. The London-based, Saudi-owned Arab daily Al Hayat reported Monday...
Scholar: Migrants a Short-term Cost, Long-term Help to Economy by webdesk@voanews.com (Jim Randle)
The flood of refugees from Syria and other war-torn nations toward wealthy parts of Europe could, eventually, be good for the economies of Germany and some other nations, according to a scholar at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. Some other economists have been questioning whether Europe's economy can sustain the rapid influx. Jacob Kirkegaard says last year about 1 million migrants arrived in Europe, and this year may see a surge of hundreds of thousands of new...
Iraqi F-16s Conduct First Airstrikes Against Islamic Stateby webdesk@voanews.com (VOA News)
Iraq has carried out its first airstrikes against the Islamic State group using the country's own F-16 fighter jets provided by the United States. Iraqi military officials said Sunday the jets had conducted 15 airstrikes targeting the militants who seized control of large areas in northern and western Iraq last year. "Definitely they will have a positive impact in the battles in the future," Iraqi Defense Minister Khaled Al Obaidi said. The U.S. delivered the first...
Panel Rejects Mexican Government's Probe of Missing Students by webdesk@voanews.com (VOA News)
International experts reviewing the Mexican government's probe of the 2014 abduction and disappearance of 43 students have rejected the government's official narrative, accusing investigators of mishandling evidence and relying solely on statements from suspects. A more than 400-page analysis was released Sunday by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights - the autonomous rights arm of the Organization of American States. It does not speculate on the ultimate fate of...
Kurds Say Attack on Turkish Military Convoy Kills 15by webdesk@voanews.com (VOA News)
Kurdish militants attacked a convoy of Turkish troops Sunday near the borders with Iran and Iraq, putting hopes for peace even further out of reach. Guerrillas from the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party - the PKK - say they killed 15 solders when they fired on two military vehicles in Hakkari province. The death toll has not been independently confirmed. Turkey's Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu hurried back to Ankara from the city of Konya for an emergency meeting with his...
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Europe Braces for New Wave of Refugeesby webdesk@voanews.com (Luis Ramirez)
Europe is preparing for a new wave of refugees as word filters back to others that the passage through Hungary is now easier. Hundreds arrived Sunday at Vienna’s Westbahnhof station aboard trains from the Hungarian border, after officials in Hungary decided to allow thousands of refugees who had been stranded in Budapest to travel by train to the border. Trains carrying refugees from the Hungarian border town of Hegyeshalom were met by cheers and applause from Austrian onlookers...
Rights Group Report Discredits Mexico Case Over 43 Missing Students by webdesk@voanews.com (Associated Press)
An independent report released Sunday dismantles the Mexican government's investigation into last year's disappearance of 43 teachers' college students, starting with the assertion that the giant funeral pyre in which the attorney general said they were burned to ash beyond identification simply never happened. While the government said the September 26 attack was a case of mistaken identity, the report said the violent reaction to the students, who were hijacking buses for...
Tajik Leader Blames Attacks on IS Sympathizersby webdesk@voanews.com (Reuters)
Tajikistan's leader said on Sunday attacks on police had been staged by militants sharing the views of the Islamic State group and aimed to undermine his rule of the Muslim nation, local media reported. Nine policemen were killed in gun attacks in the capital Dushanbe and the nearby city of Vahdat on Friday, police said. According to police, the insurgents, led by a sacked deputy defense minister, General Abdukhalim Nazarzoda, then fled to a gorge, where they were surrounded by...
ON THE SCENE: Syrians Refugees Struggle to Get Back Home, Too by webdesk@voanews.com (Heather Murdock)
For Syrian refugees in Turkey, it is often as difficult to get back into Syria as it was to get out. This morning I took a taxi to a village with a main road along the barbed-wire border with Syria. On our way, the driver picked up a husband and wife, both Syrian refugees, from their home – they were going the same way. It was the third day in a row they had made the trip. The wife was trying to get back to Syria to secure her job, when or if the war ever ends. Medical...
Turkey-PKK Violence Continues With Airstrikes, Bus Bombingby webdesk@voanews.com (VOA News)
Turkish fighter jets carried out more airstrikes Tuesday morning targeting Kurdish militants, while a bomb attack on a minibus in eastern Turkey killed at least 10 police officers. Turkish officials said more than 40 jets took part in six hours of airstrikes in northern Iraq that killed tens of fighters from the banned Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK. It was the second night of airstrikes since PKK fighters used roadside bombs to hit a troop convoy and kill 16 Turkish soldiers....
Pentagon Reportedly Preparing to Overhaul Syrian Rebel Forceby webdesk@voanews.com (Victor Beattie)
The New York Times says U.S. defense officials are drawing up plans to revise the training of moderate Syrian rebels to fight Islamic State in Syria following “significant shortcomings” in training and tactics. The assessment comes as Washington asks Greece to close its airspace to Russian supply flights to Syria amid concerns of a Russian military buildup in Syria. The newspaper, citing four senior Defense Department and Obama Administration officials, says the proposed changes follow a...
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