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Catholic News 2

(Vatican Radio) An anti-trafficking conference begins in Rome on Sunday, and it brings together members of religious congregations working to end the scourge and to rescue victims.The organization behind the event is RENATE, which stand for Religious in Europe Networking Against Trafficking and Exploitation.The theme of the event is “Ending human trafficking begins with us.”“Is a very, very important title, because unless every human being works together to fight this clandestine criminal act then there is no way in fact that people will be rescued,” said Sister Imelda Poole IBVM, the president of RENATE.Sister Poole has been working with trafficking victims in Albania for the past 11 years.Listen to the interview with Sr. Imelda Poole: One of the highlights of the conference will be on Monday, when the RENATE produced film Giving Voice to the Voiceless. The film expresses, in a dynamic way, the RENATE mission against human trafficking, in many European co...

(Vatican Radio) An anti-trafficking conference begins in Rome on Sunday, and it brings together members of religious congregations working to end the scourge and to rescue victims.

The organization behind the event is RENATE, which stand for Religious in Europe Networking Against Trafficking and Exploitation.

The theme of the event is “Ending human trafficking begins with us.”

“Is a very, very important title, because unless every human being works together to fight this clandestine criminal act then there is no way in fact that people will be rescued,” said Sister Imelda Poole IBVM, the president of RENATE.

Sister Poole has been working with trafficking victims in Albania for the past 11 years.

Listen to the interview with Sr. Imelda Poole:

One of the highlights of the conference will be on Monday, when the RENATE produced film Giving Voice to the Voiceless. The film expresses, in a dynamic way, the RENATE mission against human trafficking, in many European countries including Albania.

The 2nd RENATE assembly takes place in Rome from 6-12 November.

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(Vatican Radio) Thirtyeight martyrs killed between 1945 and 1974 by the Communist regime have been beatified in the city of Shkodër in northwestern Albania.The ceremony took place in the Square of St. Stephen’s Cathedral and was presided over by Cardinal Angelo Amato, Prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints.In his homily Cardinal Amato said:  “While the persecutors dissolve like so many black shadows which are lost forever in the darkness of eternal oblivion,  martyrs are guiding lights  that shine in the sky of humanity, showing the true face of  man’s goodness, his profound identity created in the image of God”.The canonical process for the recognition of the martyrdom and the official approval of the witness and sacrifice for the faith culminated in a decree promulgated by Pope Francis in April 2016 which gave the green light for the beatification of the martyrs.Saturday’s beatifications double the number of Ca...

(Vatican Radio) Thirtyeight martyrs killed between 1945 and 1974 by the Communist regime have been beatified in the city of Shkodër in northwestern Albania.

The ceremony took place in the Square of St. Stephen’s Cathedral and was presided over by Cardinal Angelo Amato, Prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints.

In his homily Cardinal Amato said:  “While the persecutors dissolve like so many black shadows which are lost forever in the darkness of eternal oblivion,  martyrs are guiding lights  that shine in the sky of humanity, showing the true face of  man’s goodness, his profound identity created in the image of God”.

The canonical process for the recognition of the martyrdom and the official approval of the witness and sacrifice for the faith culminated in a decree promulgated by Pope Francis in April 2016 which gave the green light for the beatification of the martyrs.

Saturday’s beatifications double the number of Catholics declared blessed after having died during communist rule in Eastern Europe.

Father Anton Zogaj was shot on a beach near Durres after refusing to divulge confessional secrets.

Father Lazer Shantoja, a nationally admired poet, was shot in the head after being forced to crawl in excruciating pain when his arms and legs were broken under torture.

Archbishop Nikolle Vincenc Prennushi of Durres, who died of torture and exhaustion in 1949, two years into a 20-year hard labor sentence as an “agent of foreign powers.” 

Bishop Frano Gjini of Lezhe, who died in 1948 declaring his “spirit and heart are with the Pope,” according to the execution record.

Father Shtjefen Kurti was sentenced and shot for “reactionary anti-state activities” in 1971 after secretly baptizing another convict’s child at a labor camp.

Father Giovanni Fausti, Italian vice provincial of Albania’s Jesuit order, who was beaten and spat at by communist onlookers during his trial and execution.

The list also features two priests drowned in 1948 when their heads were forced down in a prison cesspit with rifle butts; several foreign clergy, including one who was shot for giving last rites to a wounded fugitive; and three lay Catholics including 22-year-old Franciscan novice, Sister Maria Tuci, who died in Shkoder’s civic hospital after being tied in a sack and tortured.

Archbishop Angelo Massafra of Shkoder, President of the Albanian Bishops’ Conference reportedly said the list of martyrs had been agreed upon after Church consultations in 1994 and 2000, but added that many others could also be declared blessed in future.

Around 130 Catholic priests were executed or died through imprisonment, alongside thousands of lay Christians, under communist rule in Albania, which lasted from 1944 to 1991.

Catholics currently make up a tenth of Albania’s population of 2.9 million, according to a 2011 census, making them the second largest religious group after Muslims, many of whom also died under communist rule.

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Nobel laureates and eminent leaders around the globe will meet in the Indian capital New Delhi next month to discuss why children suffer the most in conflicts though they don't cause them, Nobel Peace Prize winner Kailash Satyarthi said on Thursday. "Children are never responsible for any wars, conflicts or violence, yet they are the worst sufferers in any such hideous situation. This is completely unacceptable," he said while announcing a global initiative for children.  Through the Kailash Satyarthi Children's Foundation, the 2014 Nobel laureate is convening the first gathering of "(Nobel) Laureates and Leaders for Children Summit" that will see a global participation.  The Dec. 10-11 summit will be inaugurated by President Pranab Mukherjee at his Rashtrapati Bhavan residence.  About 25 Nobel laureates and others have confirmed their participation in the summit which will also attract eminent personalities from academia, corporate secto...

Nobel laureates and eminent leaders around the globe will meet in the Indian capital New Delhi next month to discuss why children suffer the most in conflicts though they don't cause them, Nobel Peace Prize winner Kailash Satyarthi said on Thursday. "Children are never responsible for any wars, conflicts or violence, yet they are the worst sufferers in any such hideous situation. This is completely unacceptable," he said while announcing a global initiative for children.  Through the Kailash Satyarthi Children's Foundation, the 2014 Nobel laureate is convening the first gathering of "(Nobel) Laureates and Leaders for Children Summit" that will see a global participation.  The Dec. 10-11 summit will be inaugurated by President Pranab Mukherjee at his Rashtrapati Bhavan residence.  

About 25 Nobel laureates and others have confirmed their participation in the summit which will also attract eminent personalities from academia, corporate sector, sports and civil society.  The Dalai Lama, former Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, Ratan Kumar Nag (Grameen Bank), Yemeni rights activist Tawakkol Karman, Liberian peace activist Leymah Roberta Gbowee, South African humanitarian and Nelson Mandela's widow Graca Machel, Netherlands Princess Laurentien and American human rights activist Kerry Kennedy will take part in the December summit.  Nobel Prize laureates Yuan Lee and Jose Ramos-Horta will also attend.

"It is for the first time that such revered personalities will assemble together to give a clarion call for prioritizing the issues of children in global political and social discourse," Satyarthi said. "No event of this stature has taken place before on Indian soil."  Satyarthi said that presently, "about 168 million children worldwide are serving in labour - almost 10 per cent of the world's population between the ages of 5 and 17. Around 5.5 million kids are in slavery".  "More than half of these child labourers and around 85 million are involved in hazardous work. "Millions of children are continuously losing their childhood in conflict-prone environments," he said.  "In Syria, an entire generation is being deprived of their rights. An approximate 5.6 million children are living in dire situations and face poverty, displacement and violence."

Satyarthi asked why millions of children were deprived of childhood despite the institutions of governance, laws and conventions.  "It is because of the serious moral deficit that results in social apathy and lack of political will for our children.  "At the Laureates and Leaders Summit, we intend to build a strong moral platform for the protection of children worldwide. We need to ensure that every child is free, safe, healthy and educated," he added.  "We will launch a '100 million for 100 million' campaign, which aims to mobilize 100 million youth and children for 100 million underprivileged children across the world to end violence against children over the next five years," Satyarthi said. 

While announcing the Nobel laureates’ summit, Satyarthi also condemned the burning of schools in Kashmir saying that extremists are doing it as they are scared that education will open up the minds of children and they wouldn’t be able to use them for their vested interests. (Source: IANS…)

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Sri Lankan president Maithripala Sirisena has handed over a hundred new houses to the ‎internally displaced people (IDPs) living in camps in the Tamil-majority north of the island nation.  "We ‎can finally live in peace. We can thank our president for this settlement" some of the beneficiaries told ‎AsiaNews.  The houses were built in record time (four months) in Keeramalai, on the Jaffna peninsula ‎as a result of his visit to the Konartpulam IDP camp in ‎Tellippalai, Kankasenthurai, shortly after his election.  Inaugurated on 31 ‎October in a solemn ceremony, the houses were built by the army, but also by former Tamil Tiger rebels ‎and the beneficiaries themselves.  ‎ The ‎Keeramalai Housing Project covers an area of 47 acres, near the Palaly army cantonment area. It also ‎has a community centre, a fish market, a police station, a playground and a nursery.‎This initiative is not the first of its kind. The p...

Sri Lankan president Maithripala Sirisena has handed over a hundred new houses to the ‎internally displaced people (IDPs) living in camps in the Tamil-majority north of the island nation.  "We ‎can finally live in peace. We can thank our president for this settlement" some of the beneficiaries told ‎AsiaNews.  The houses were built in record time (four months) in Keeramalai, on the Jaffna peninsula ‎as a result of his visit to the Konartpulam IDP camp in ‎Tellippalai, Kankasenthurai, shortly after his election.  Inaugurated on 31 ‎October in a solemn ceremony, the houses were built by the army, but also by former Tamil Tiger rebels ‎and the beneficiaries themselves.  ‎ The ‎Keeramalai Housing Project covers an area of 47 acres, near the Palaly army cantonment area. It also ‎has a community centre, a fish market, a police station, a playground and a nursery.‎

This initiative is not the first of its kind. The president has already returned land to its rightful Tamil ‎owners who had had it expropriated during the three decades of civil war.  When he met some of the ‎IDPs, he was shocked that some were still living in tents after more than 20 years.  After that meeting, ‎Sirisena ordered the Ministry of Defence to build the houses and close the refugee camp as soon as ‎possible.  Various regiments worked day and night to deliver the houses, each measuring 50 sqm. with ‎two bedrooms, a living room, a dining room with kitchen, and a bathroom.   

When the keys were handed over to new residents, they could not hide their emotion. One of them, ‎Rasamani Sivaneshwaram, 46, spent half his life in tents. "We are grateful to the president,” he said. ‎‎“This means a lot to me and my family. We have the security of a home in which to sleep."  (Source:AsiaNews) 

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Rome, Italy, Nov 5, 2016 / 09:52 am (CNA/EWTN News).- For religious sisters working to end forced-prostitution through human trafficking, there is one thing consistently left out of the conversation: the clients – who they are and how they are dealt with.“We are especially looking at the problem of clients. It’s a topic no one talks about. Everyone talks about victims, victims, victims. It’s true, women become victims – of the passion of men,” Sr. Monica Chikwe told journalists Nov. 4.She pointed to how in the bible, there was a woman who had been caught in adultery and brought to Jesus, but “if in the act of adultery, I ask ‘where is the man?’ No one speaks about the man.”“It’s the same thing today. Many speak about the victims, but who is using these victims? Who is the client?” Sister Monica asked, explaining that the clients aren’t homeless living on the street or men with some sort of mental dis...

Rome, Italy, Nov 5, 2016 / 09:52 am (CNA/EWTN News).-
For religious sisters working to end forced-prostitution through human trafficking, there is one thing consistently left out of the conversation: the clients – who they are and how they are dealt with.

“We are especially looking at the problem of clients. It’s a topic no one talks about. Everyone talks about victims, victims, victims. It’s true, women become victims – of the passion of men,” Sr. Monica Chikwe told journalists Nov. 4.

She pointed to how in the bible, there was a woman who had been caught in adultery and brought to Jesus, but “if in the act of adultery, I ask ‘where is the man?’ No one speaks about the man.”

“It’s the same thing today. Many speak about the victims, but who is using these victims? Who is the client?” Sister Monica asked, explaining that the clients aren’t homeless living on the street or men with some sort of mental disability. Instead, they are “good men, office men, fathers of families, men who put on a tie and go out on the street as if it weren’t a bad thing.”

It’s these men who go out to exploit and use women, she said, adding that her organization seeks to address the problem of clients more directly at the State and government level.

Sr. Monica, a member of the RENATE network against human trafficking, spoke to journalists at a press briefing about their upcoming Nov. 6-12 conference in Rome, titled “The End of Trafficking Begins with Us.”

RENATE is a European network of religious who are committed to work together in the fight against human trafficking and exploitation. Members consist of women religious, priests and laypersons who all have professional training in fields such as psychology, counseling, law and law enforcement. 

Taking place at the Roman hotel Tra Noi, the conference focuses on the mission that they are “Called to give voice to the voiceless.” In addition to hearing several talks and visiting shelters, participants will also have an audience with Pope Francis Monday, Nov. 7.

In her comments to journalists, Sr. Monica, who has worked in Italy for a number of years, said what they will focus on, other than their slogan, will be how “to stop human trafficking beginning with you.”

“It’s a topic in which each one of us must say, ‘what can I do so that this modern phenomena, this cancer, ends?’” she said, explaining that in her work with trafficked women forced into prostitution, the topic of clients is one of the most urgent. 

She recounted the story of a young man who went with a group to distribute food and clothing to prostitutes in Rome. When they were getting out of their vehicle, he looked out and saw father’s car.

“He was very shocked. It was something so big that this young man had to do rehab, because it destroyed everything for him,” Sr. Monica said.

In another example, the Sister recalled the story of a married man who worked in office, and one night called a prostitute before going home.

As the two were headed out to have sex, the man’s wife called and asked if she should throw in the pasta, since it was his usual time to get home. However, the man said he still had a lot of work to do and that he’d call when he was on his way.

Once he hung up the phone, the prostitute looked at him and said, “What love do you have for your family?” particularly given the love his wife had just shown him. 

This problem, Sr. Monica said, “is one everyone needs to face,” particularly in a country like Italy, where domestic violence rates are especially high and a campaign is currently ongoing in a bid to end violence against women.  

“Today we have many feminicides (killings of women) in society...because men use family resources and give them to the prostitute. The love he should have for his wife and family, goes to the prostitute,” she said, noting that when a man then goes home, “his wife is no longer anything.”

“His wife is someone to eliminate, to kill. So this problem needs to be confronted from all sides! Because it’s ruining society at every level,” she said. “It must be confronted with the problem of the clients. And the clients aren’t in the sky, they’re among us.”

Sr. Imelda Poole, President of RENATE and a member of the English province of IBVM Loreto Congregation, told CNA that she thinks greed is the ultimate cause of human trafficking. 

“We’ve developed a society globally through consumerism, but it’s one in which to be rich, to be powerful, to reach your goal. But the richer you become, the more riches you want. And in that greed there’s an annihilation of love,” she said.

Greed also brings an annihilation of respect and human rights, she said, since the “total selfishness” driving greed “leads a person become very brutal because their conscience becomes totally suppressed, because they’re only operating from themselves.”

It’s ultimately “the ruination that’s the human being,” whether they are the trafficker or those being trafficked, she said.

Sr. Monica said that to end the market for trafficking, particularly forced-sex trafficking, education and the enforcement of laws are needed. 

“If a girl is there all day today, tomorrow and no one calls her, the traffickers will understand that this merchandise needs to change,” she said. “It starts with the law, it starts with good education.” 

Modern society has lost the fundamental values that ought to govern the life and actions of the human being, she said, adding that “we must reform our conscience.”

While in many cases laws do exist, they are not applied, the Sister noted, saying they have helped several girls and young women that reported their traffickers, only to have them go to prison for a few days and end up back on the streets. 

If the problem of trafficking is faced at its roots, “automatically the traffickers bring their product to the market, it’s not purchased, they will change their craft. The government must have a law that punishes and the law must be applied, whatever it is,” she said.

Referring to Red Light Districts in some countries where prostitution is legal, Sr. Monica said “thank God” it wasn’t legalized in Italy, but in other European countries such as Germany the girls aren’t simply wandering the streets, but “are put in a glass container.”

“You have to go and cry” after seeing this, she said, “because they are in glass cases like dresses to go and choose.” 

“Many times this makes me cry,” she said. “It makes me cry because women shouldn’t be reduced in this way! Woman was not created for this! It isn’t licit for men to take women and make them merchandise!”

We must “appeal to the consciences of men,” Sr. Monica said. Since 2012, her organization has rescued and re-integrated 34 women in a systematic, personalized process. 

The problem must also be tackled at the root in the girls’ home countries, she said, because when they feel the need to leave due to a lack of opportunities or in order to provide for their families, “this is trouble.”

“Even when we rehabilitate them psychologically, they are damaged,” she said. “Effectively they are destroyed. Even humanly speaking, they are no longer persons. Because what happened is terrible.”

In her comments to CNA, Sr. Imelda said the role of religious women in the effort to end trafficking is key not only due to the professional skills of the members of their organization, but because “we come with a careful understanding that we’re here for protection.”

“We’re here for rescue, but for protection and we understand the boundaries of our work,” she said, adding that “we work right across every discipline that can help support this work holistically.”

The key element of RENATE, she said, “is that we have love at the heart of our mission, and we are passionate about this.”

Rather than seeking “competition or power or business acumen,” the Sisters are there because “we actually love the human person and we believe that it’s God’s will that each human being has a right to be fully who they were born to become.”
 


For religious sisters working to end forced-prostitution through human trafficking, there is one thing consistently left out of the conversation: the clients – who they are and how they are dealt with.

“We are especially looking at the problem of clients. It’s a topic no one talks about. Everyone talks about victims, victims, victims. It’s true, women become victims – of the passion of men,” Sr. Monica Chikwe told journalists Nov. 4.

She pointed to how in the bible, there was a woman who had been caught in adultery and brought to Jesus, but “if in the act of adultery, I ask ‘where is the man?’ No one speaks about the man.”

“It’s the same thing today. Many speak about the victims, but who is using these victims? Who is the client?” Sister Monica asked, explaining that the clients aren’t homeless living on the street or men with some sort of mental disability. Instead, they are “good men, office men, fathers of families, men who put on a tie and go out on the street as if it weren’t a bad thing.”

It’s these men who go out to exploit and use women, she said, adding that her organization seeks to address the problem of clients more directly at the State and government level.

Sr. Monica, a member of the RENATE network against human trafficking, spoke to journalists at a press briefing about their upcoming Nov. 6-12 conference in Rome, titled “The End of Trafficking Begins with Us.”

RENATE is a European network of religious who are committed to work together in the fight against human trafficking and exploitation. Members consist of women religious, priests and laypersons who all have professional training in fields such as psychology, counseling, law and law enforcement. 

Taking place at the Roman hotel Tra Noi, the conference focuses on the mission that they are “Called to give voice to the voiceless.” In addition to hearing several talks and visiting shelters, participants will also have an audience with Pope Francis Monday, Nov. 7.

In her comments to journalists, Sr. Monica, who has worked in Italy for a number of years, said what they will focus on, other than their slogan, will be how “to stop human trafficking beginning with you.”

“It’s a topic in which each one of us must say, ‘what can I do so that this modern phenomena, this cancer, ends?’” she said, explaining that in her work with trafficked women forced into prostitution, the topic of clients is one of the most urgent. 

She recounted the story of a young man who went with a group to distribute food and clothing to prostitutes in Rome. When they were getting out of their vehicle, he looked out and saw father’s car.

“He was very shocked. It was something so big that this young man had to do rehab, because it destroyed everything for him,” Sr. Monica said.

In another example, the Sister recalled the story of a married man who worked in office, and one night called a prostitute before going home.

As the two were headed out to have sex, the man’s wife called and asked if she should throw in the pasta, since it was his usual time to get home. However, the man said he still had a lot of work to do and that he’d call when he was on his way.

Once he hung up the phone, the prostitute looked at him and said, “What love do you have for your family?” particularly given the love his wife had just shown him. 

This problem, Sr. Monica said, “is one everyone needs to face,” particularly in a country like Italy, where domestic violence rates are especially high and a campaign is currently ongoing in a bid to end violence against women.  

“Today we have many feminicides (killings of women) in society...because men use family resources and give them to the prostitute. The love he should have for his wife and family, goes to the prostitute,” she said, noting that when a man then goes home, “his wife is no longer anything.”

“His wife is someone to eliminate, to kill. So this problem needs to be confronted from all sides! Because it’s ruining society at every level,” she said. “It must be confronted with the problem of the clients. And the clients aren’t in the sky, they’re among us.”

Sr. Imelda Poole, President of RENATE and a member of the English province of IBVM Loreto Congregation, told CNA that she thinks greed is the ultimate cause of human trafficking. 

“We’ve developed a society globally through consumerism, but it’s one in which to be rich, to be powerful, to reach your goal. But the richer you become, the more riches you want. And in that greed there’s an annihilation of love,” she said.

Greed also brings an annihilation of respect and human rights, she said, since the “total selfishness” driving greed “leads a person become very brutal because their conscience becomes totally suppressed, because they’re only operating from themselves.”

It’s ultimately “the ruination that’s the human being,” whether they are the trafficker or those being trafficked, she said.

Sr. Monica said that to end the market for trafficking, particularly forced-sex trafficking, education and the enforcement of laws are needed. 

“If a girl is there all day today, tomorrow and no one calls her, the traffickers will understand that this merchandise needs to change,” she said. “It starts with the law, it starts with good education.” 

Modern society has lost the fundamental values that ought to govern the life and actions of the human being, she said, adding that “we must reform our conscience.”

While in many cases laws do exist, they are not applied, the Sister noted, saying they have helped several girls and young women that reported their traffickers, only to have them go to prison for a few days and end up back on the streets. 

If the problem of trafficking is faced at its roots, “automatically the traffickers bring their product to the market, it’s not purchased, they will change their craft. The government must have a law that punishes and the law must be applied, whatever it is,” she said.

Referring to Red Light Districts in some countries where prostitution is legal, Sr. Monica said “thank God” it wasn’t legalized in Italy, but in other European countries such as Germany the girls aren’t simply wandering the streets, but “are put in a glass container.”

“You have to go and cry” after seeing this, she said, “because they are in glass cases like dresses to go and choose.” 

“Many times this makes me cry,” she said. “It makes me cry because women shouldn’t be reduced in this way! Woman was not created for this! It isn’t licit for men to take women and make them merchandise!”

We must “appeal to the consciences of men,” Sr. Monica said. Since 2012, her organization has rescued and re-integrated 34 women in a systematic, personalized process. 

The problem must also be tackled at the root in the girls’ home countries, she said, because when they feel the need to leave due to a lack of opportunities or in order to provide for their families, “this is trouble.”

“Even when we rehabilitate them psychologically, they are damaged,” she said. “Effectively they are destroyed. Even humanly speaking, they are no longer persons. Because what happened is terrible.”

In her comments to CNA, Sr. Imelda said the role of religious women in the effort to end trafficking is key not only due to the professional skills of the members of their organization, but because “we come with a careful understanding that we’re here for protection.”

“We’re here for rescue, but for protection and we understand the boundaries of our work,” she said, adding that “we work right across every discipline that can help support this work holistically.”

The key element of RENATE, she said, “is that we have love at the heart of our mission, and we are passionate about this.”

Rather than seeking “competition or power or business acumen,” the Sisters are there because “we actually love the human person and we believe that it’s God’s will that each human being has a right to be fully who they were born to become.”
 

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. economy is lifting job growth and wages but not voters' spirits....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. economy is lifting job growth and wages but not voters' spirits....

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SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- Tens of thousands of South Koreans poured into the streets of downtown Seoul on Saturday, using words including "treason" and "criminal" to demand that President Park Geun-hye step down amid an explosive political scandal....

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- Tens of thousands of South Koreans poured into the streets of downtown Seoul on Saturday, using words including "treason" and "criminal" to demand that President Park Geun-hye step down amid an explosive political scandal....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Latest on the 2016 presidential race (all times local):...

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Latest on the 2016 presidential race (all times local):...

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TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- Long on swagger and short on time, Donald Trump declared Saturday he would spend some of the last hours of the presidential campaign in Democratic strongholds, promising to pull off a shocker in states that haven't voted for a Republican in decades....

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- Long on swagger and short on time, Donald Trump declared Saturday he would spend some of the last hours of the presidential campaign in Democratic strongholds, promising to pull off a shocker in states that haven't voted for a Republican in decades....

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The idea had never occurred to the Rev. Adam Hamilton at the conclusion of past presidential campaigns. But this Election Day, the megachurch he leads in the Kansas City suburbs will invite congregants, and anyone else who chooses, to stop in and pray for the nation to heal itself....

The idea had never occurred to the Rev. Adam Hamilton at the conclusion of past presidential campaigns. But this Election Day, the megachurch he leads in the Kansas City suburbs will invite congregants, and anyone else who chooses, to stop in and pray for the nation to heal itself....

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