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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Faced with a sweeping set of demands, Qatar insisted Friday it can indefinitely survive the economic and diplomatic steps its neighbors have taken to try to pressure it into compliance, even as a top Emirati official warned the tiny country to brace for a long-term economic squeeze....
MILWAUKEE (AP) -- The scars of the violence that erupted in a Milwaukee neighborhood after a police officer killed a 23-year-old black man remain visible nearly a year later, reminders of how little things have changed....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Robert Mueller, the somber-faced and demanding FBI director who led the bureau through the Sept. 11 attacks, and James Comey, his more approachable and outwardly affable successor, may be poles apart stylistically but both command a wealth of respect in the law enforcement and legal community....
LONDON (AP) -- One London community is evacuating some 800 households from five publicly owned apartment towers because of safety concerns following the devastating fire that killed 79 people in a west London high-rise last week....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pressure mounted on the U.S. Defense Department Friday after multiple U.S. senators called for investigations into reports that U.S. military interrogators worked with forces from the United Arab Emirates who are accused of torturing detainees in Yemen....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Nevada Republican Dean Heller became the fifth GOP senator to declare his opposition to the party's banner legislation to scuttle much of Barack Obama's health care overhaul on Friday, more than enough to sink the measure and deliver a stinging rebuke to President Donald Trump unless some of them can be brought aboard....
Aleppo, Syria, Jun 23, 2017 / 10:06 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Christians who fled Aleppo because of the four year battle for the city are now returning, and in the face of such challenges as poverty, destruction, and a shortages of basic goods, they persevere with the help of the local Church.Fr. Ibrahim Alsabagh, a Franciscan priest in the city, told CNA that between January and June, 18 Catholic families have returned to Aleppo from places like Armenia, France, Germany, and Venezuela. In addition, 400 Christian families of the Armenian community returned to the area.He said these families have decided to return because in their host countries “they live in poverty and feel like foreigners. Also because they miss the warmth of the Christian community that welcomes, heals, and accompanies each family with all its needs.”“When they see they aid that we give to the Christians in Aleppo, they say, ‘Why don’t we return home, to our culture, to our society when t...
Washington D.C., Jun 23, 2017 / 11:10 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The U.S. bishops' conference has warned that the proposed Senate health care bill will put serious burdens on poor families and is “unacceptable as written.”After the draft of a Senate health care bill was finally released on Thursday, Bishop Frank Dewane of Venice, chair of the U.S. bishops’ domestic justice and human development committee, stated that “this proposal retains many of the fundamental defects of the House of Representatives-passed health care legislation, and even further compounds them.”He had previously explained, in a March letter to members of Congress, how the House bill was problematic for vulnerable populations such as the poor, the seriously ill, and the elderly.After the Senate draft, known as the Better Care Reconciliation Act, was released June 22, he reiterated that “it is precisely the detrimental impact on the poor and vulnerable that makes the Senate draft...
IMAGE: CNS photo/Miguel Gutierrez, EPABy Junno Arocho EstevesVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Two former Latin American presidentssaid the world is running out of time to find a solution to the crisis inVenezuela as President Nicolas Maduro aims to consolidate power over thecountry.Despite widespread protests, Maduro's push to "put a group ofhis friends in what is called a 'constituent assembly,' would be the end ofdemocracy and the annihilation of the Republic of Venezuela," said JorgeQuiroga, former president of Bolivia. That election "will install a Soviet state inVenezuela, liquidate democracy, end the Congress, cancel elections and turnVenezuela into a sort of Caribbean 'North Korea,'" he said. Joined by former Colombian President Andres Pastrana, Quirogaspoke to journalists at the Vatican June 23 on the deteriorating situation in Venezuela andattempts to diffuse the crisis following their meeting with Cardinal PietroParolin, Vatican secretary of state. Protests began after March 29, whe...
IMAGE: CNS photo/Leonardo Munoz, EPABy Rhina GuidosWASHINGTON (CNS) -- Days after rebels in Colombia announced turningin the last of their cache of weapons over to international observers, theVatican announced June 23 details of Pope Francis' September trip to thewar-torn South American country.The pope is scheduled to visit four cities, starting histrip in the Colombian capital of Bogota Sept. 6, followed by day tripsto Villavicencio and Medellin Sept. 8 and 9, respectively, and headingback to Rome from Cartagena after Mass Sept. 10.Colombian president Juan Manuel Santos had said the pontiffhad promised him he would visit Colombia if the government and the rebel group knownas FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias) signed a peace agreement. Though Colombianvoters last year rejected a referendum on the peace agreement between thegovernment and FARC, Santos later negotiated a modified deal withColombian opposition leader and former President Alvaro Uribe. The process camewith help fr...
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