Ireland votes on legalizing gay marriage; verdict on Saturday

Gay marriage, Ireland Gay marriage, gay marriage legal, gay marriages, gay, LGBT community, LGBT news, world news, indian express news Leaders of the country's dominant faith, Roman Catholicism, have fueled opposition to the measure.

For months, Ireland has debated whether to legalize gay marriage. Now it’s time to vote, and the choice is a simple yes or no.

Friday’s referendum on amending the Irish constitution to give marriage rights to homosexuals is expected to be approved, based on all opinion polls that have given “yes” voters a double-digit lead throughout the two-month campaign.

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But government officials and gay rights activists are expressing caution given Ireland’s track record in producing surprise referendum results.

They say achieving a high voter turnout is crucial, particularly among younger citizens who traditionally don’t vote in great numbers.

Leaders of the country’s dominant faith, Roman Catholicism, have fueled opposition to the measure.

Polls opened at 7 am (0600GMT) and close at 10 pm (2100GMT). Results will be announced Saturday.

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Senate blocks bill that would end US bulk data dragnet

Barack Obama, US Telephone records, US bulk data dragnet, NSA intelligence gathering, NSA intelligence, NSA, US news, world news, indian express US President Barack Obama (AP Photo)

The US Senate rejected legislation early on Saturday aimed at reforming NSA intelligence gathering, a blow to President and others who support ending the bulk collection of Americans’ telephone records.

The House of Representatives passed the measure overwhelmingly last week, with Democrats and Republicans uniting in their desire to rein in the National Security Agency’s highly controversial program that scoops up data from millions of Americans with no connection to terrorism.

But it got hung up in the Senate, where it fell three votes shy of the 60 necessary to advance in the chamber. The Senate immediately turned to consideration of a two-month extension that would temporarily reauthorize the telephone data dragnet and other parts of the USA Patriot Act which are set to expire June 1 without congressional action.

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But that bill failed to reach the 60-vote threshold as well. When Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell proposed quickly voting on extensions lasting until June 8, or June 5, or even June 3- two days after returns from its break- Republican Senator Rand Paul objected, placing the fate of key national security provisions in jeopardy.

In addition to the telephone metadata collection, provisions authorising roving wiretaps and lone-wolf tracking are also set to expire when the clock strikes midnight at the end of May.

With lawmakers scrambling for a solution in the dead of night before the Senate goes on a scheduled one-week break, the White House yesterday drove home the very real prospect that national security operations could lapse on June 1.

“There is no plan B,” acknowledged White House spokesman Joshua Earnest to reporters. “These are authorities that Congress must legislate (and are) critically important to ensuring that the basic safety and security of the American people is protected, and that the
basic civil liberties of the American people are protected.”

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Islamic State purge Syrian town of Assad loyalists

Syria IS, Syria Islamic State, Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, Syria, Syria under IS, IS attack syria, IS attack Palmyra, Palmyra under attack, palmyra, syria palmyra, Bashar Assad, Syria civil war, Ramadi syria IS, Sheikh Rafie al-Fahdawi, UN against IS, international news, news In this picture released on Wednesday, May 20, 2015 by the website of Islamic State militants, Islamic State fighters take cover during a battle against Syrian government forces on a road between Homs and Palmyra, Syria. (Source: AP)

Islamic State group militants hunted down Syrian government troops and loyalists in the newly captured town of Palmyra, shooting or beheading them in public as a warning, and imposing their strict interpretation of Islam, activists said Friday.

The purge, which relied mostly on informants, was aimed at solidifying the extremists’ grip on the strategic town that was overrun Wednesday by IS fighters.

It also was part of a campaign to win the support of President Bashar Assad’s opponents, who have suffered from a government crackdown in the town and surrounding province in the last four years of Syria’s civil war.

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The strategy included promises to fix the electricity and water grids – after Palmyra is cleared of regime loyalists, according to an activist in the historic town. The man is known in the activist community by the nom de guerre of Omar Hamza because he fears for his security.

The capture of Palmyra has raised alarm that the militants might try to destroy one of the Mideast’s most spectacular archaeological sites – a well-preserved, 2,000-year-old Roman-era city on the town’s edge – as they have destroyed others in Syria and Iraq. For the moment, however, their priority appeared to be in imposing their rule, with activists saying there were no signs the group moved in on the ancient ruins.

In neighboring Iraq, IS militants made more territorial gains, seizing the small town of Husseiba, less than a week after capturing the provincial capital of Ramadi, said tribal leader Sheikh Rafie al-Fahdawi.

They captured the Iraqi side of a key border crossing with Syria on Thursday after Iraqi forces pulled out. The fall of the al-Walid crossing in Anbar province will help the militants shuttle weaponry and reinforcements more easily across the border of the two countries where they have declared a self-styled caliphate.

The IS militants imposed a curfew in Palmyra from 5 p.m. until sunrise and banned people from leaving town until Saturday morning to ensure that none of the government figures they seek manage to escape, activists and officials said. Jihadis went through the streets telling residents via loudspeakers not to give refuge to Assad loyalists.

IS commanders also fanned out to Palmyra’s mosques to deliver sermons during Friday’s weekly communal prayers. Mosques were packed after fighters on Thursday had urged people to attend and told women to cover their faces.

The sermons were mostly about the importance of performing the five-times-a-day prayers in the mosques and women having to cover their faces and dress in loose clothes, Hamza said via Skype. At the mosque where he prayed, the person delivering the sermon was a non-Syrian Arab, as were most of the leaders in the group in town, he said, while the fighters were Syrians.

In his sermon, the speaker warned that women not wearing the proper Islamic attire will be flogged.

Fighters were carrying out a bloody, door-to-door search to find and kill fugitive soldiers and known Assad loyalists, several activists said.

Prompted by the IS warnings not to provide shelter, some residents came forward with information about troops who had tried to melt into the population when the militants stormed into the town, said another activist who goes by the nom de guerre of Bebars al-Talawy for his security.

Amateur video posted on a pro-IS Facebook page showed residents and militants gathering around two bloodied men in military uniforms on a Palmyra street.

“Let all the residents see them,” one of the men shown in the video told an IS fighter. Photos circulating on pro-IS Twitter feeds showed purported government troops shot to death or decapitated.

The video and photos appeared genuine and corresponded to other Associated Press reporting.

Hamza and al-Talawy said as many as 280 loyalists and government soldiers were summarily killed, some shot in the head or beheaded in a public square.

Militants abducted soldiers and pro-government gunmen from homes, shops and other places where they had sought to hide, said al-Talawy, who is based in the nearby city of Homs.

“The search is going from house to house, shop to shop, and people on the streets have to show identity cards,” said Osama al-Khatib, an activist from Palmyra who is now in Turkey. Al-Khatib last contacted his friends and relatives Friday morning in Palmyra before the government cut off phones and Internet service in the town. The communication was later partially restored.

Al-Khatib said some 150 bodies lay in the streets, including 25 residents who were members of the pro-government militia known as the Popular Committees.

The door-to-door hunt was similar to a purge the militants carried out in Ramadi after it fell Sunday.

The UN Security Council condemned the “barbaric terrorist acts” by the Islamic State group and expressed deep concern for the thousands of people still in Palmyra after the takeover, especially women and children. The council statement called for safe passage for people leaving the city and pointed out that “the primary responsibility to protect its populations lies with the Syrian authorities.”

On Thursday, gunmen believed to be from IS kidnapped a Christian priest, the Rev. Jacques Mourad, from the village of Qaryatayn, southwest of Palmyra. The 48-year-old Mourad and his bodyguard were taken to an unknown location, according to a priest in in Damascus, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals. He said the priest’s computer and car also were seized.

UN Special Envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura said he received with “deep sadness” the news of Mourad’s abduction.

Hamza said the public killings in Palmyra appeared aimed at winning support of residents who opposed Assad’s rule, and that the strategy was succeeding with some.

“People don’t seem to be resentful of the new guidelines. They are saying it is much better than the regime, which used to terrorize the whole town, especially through the arrest campaigns,” Hamza said.

He said electrical power – which had been out for 10 days as Syrian troops and Is militants battled each other – was partially restored Friday.

Hamza said there were no signs the group was moving on the ancient ruins in Palmyra, a caravan oasis that linked the civilizations of Persia, India, China with the Roman empire through trade.

Instead, IS fighters had moved into all the government buildings, he added.

But he and other activists reported that Syrian aircraft dropped barrel bombs near the military security headquarters at the northern edge of the ancient ruins. There were no reports of casualties or damage to the site.

Maamoun Abdulkarim, the head of the Antiquities and Museum Department in the Syrian capital of Damascus, said there were no gunmen in the area of Palmyra’s ruins, which once attracted thousands of tourists.

But he acknowledged that “there are arrests and liquidations in Palmyra.” He added that IS fighters are “moving in residential areas, terrifying people and taking revenge.”

Gov. Talal Barazi of the central province of Homs, which includes Palmyra, said IS fighters have abducted men and “might have committed massacres.” He added that about 1,400 families fled the town of 65,000 before IS halted the exodus Thursday.

Hamza said most of those who left are regime supporters, including a clan from the neighboring Deir el-Zour province that had been based in Palmyra to help defend the government.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and al-Talawy said the next target for IS appears to be the Tayfour air base near Palmyra, where many government troops had retreated. They said the militants were moving reinforcements to the area.

Activists al-Talawy and al-Khatib said IS had also captured the phosphate mines at Khunayfis, near Palmyra.

The town of Husseiba in Iraq’s Anbar province had fallen overnight to IS forces when police and tribal fighters withdrew after running out of ammunition, said al-Fahdawi, the tribal leader.

“We have not received any assistance from the government. Our men fought to the last bullet and several of them were killed,” he told the AP in a telephone interview.

Husseiba is about 7 kilometers (4 miles) east of Ramadi, where IS militants routed Iraqi forces in their most significant advance in nearly a year.

Al-Fahdawi said that with the fall of Husseiba, the militants have moved closer to the strategic Habbaniyah military base, which is still held by Iraqi forces.

The UN World Food Program said it is rushing food assistance into Anbar province to help tens of thousands of residents who have fled the latest fighting.

About 25,000 people received emergency food assistance Thursday, and supplies for an additional 15,000 displaced people were en route to another area near the militant-held city of Fallujah, the WFP said.

The Iraqi government plans to launch a counteroffensive in Anbar involving Iranian-backed Shiite militias, which have played a key role in pushing back IS militants elsewhere in the country. The presence of the militias could fuel sectarian tensions in the overwhelmingly Sunni province, where anger and mistrust toward the Shiite-led government runs deep.

In Washington, US defense officials said Iran has entered the fight to retake a major Iraqi oil refinery in Beiji from IS militants, contributing small numbers of troops – including some operating artillery and other heavy weapons – in support of advancing Iraqi ground forces.

Two US defense officials said Iranian forces have taken a significant offensive role in the Beiji operation in recent days, in conjunction with Iraqi Shiite militia. The officials were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Iran’s role in Iraq is a major complicating factor for the US as it searches for the most effective approach to countering the Islamic State group. US officials have said they do not oppose contributions from Iran-supported Iraqi Shiite militias as long as they operate under the command and control of the Iraqi government.

The US has been leading a coalition that has been conducting airstrikes against IS militants in Iraq and Syria.

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At least 10 Afghan police officers killed in Taliban assault

Taliban assault,  Afghan police officers killed, Mohammad Ismail Hotaki, Sangin district, international news, news, afghanistan The Taliban have launched a number of attacks across many parts of Afghanistan since their warm-weather offensive began on April 24. (Source: AP photo)

Officials in Afghanistan say at least 10 police officers have been killed in an ongoing Taliban assault in the country’s volatile south.

Mohammad Ismail Hotaki, director of Helmand province’s Joint Coordination Office, says Taliban fighters attacked 10 police checkpoints in the province’s Sangin district. He says three have been captured by Taliban and they are surging forward in their assault Sunday.

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Officials say there are a large number of Taliban fighters involved in the attack.

The Taliban have launched a number of attacks across many parts of Afghanistan since their warm-weather offensive began on April 24. Police checkpoints are regular targets as they are often poorly manned and vulnerable.

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Gaza’s unemployment rate is the highest in the world, says World Bank

Gaza, Gaza blockade, World bank, Gaza occupation, Jerusalem, Gaza economy, Jerusalem economy, Gaza unemployment, Jerusalem unemployment, unemployed Gaza, Gaza strip unemployment,  Gaza unemployed, Gaza news, world news The World Bank on Friday released a report stating that Gaza's economy is on the "verge of collapse," saying the unemployment rate there is now the highest in the world. (Source: AP)

Gaza’s economy is on the “verge of collapse,” a new World Bank report warned Friday, saying the unemployment rate there is now the highest in the world and calling on Israel and international donors to remedy the situation.

It charged that “blockades, war and poor governance have strangled” the economy of the Gaza Strip, ruled by the Islamic militant group Hamas.

The report said Gaza’s GDP would have been four times higher if not for conflicts and restrictions, including a blockade in place since 2007.

Israel and Egypt imposed the blockade on Gaza after Hamas violently seized the territory from forces loyal to the Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. Israel says the blockade is necessary to prevent Hamas from getting weapons and building militant infrastructure, while critics say it amounts to collective punishment.

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Since its takeover, Hamas has fought three wars with Israel, including 50 days of fighting last summer in which thousands of Gaza buildings were either destroyed or damaged. Over 2,200 Palestinians, including hundreds of civilians, were killed during the war. On the Israeli side, 67 soldiers and six civilians were killed.

The report said Gaza’s economy is badly hurt as a result of the fighting, especially the agriculture, construction, manufacturing and electricity sectors.

It said about 43 percent of Gaza’s 1.8 million residents are unemployed; a figure it said is the highest in the world. Youth unemployment reached about 60 percent by the end of last year, it said.

“The current market in Gaza is not able to offer jobs leaving a large population in despair particularly the youth,” Steen Lau Jorgensen, World Bank country director for the West Bank and Gaza, said in the report. “The ongoing blockade and the 2014 war have taken a toll on Gaza’s economy and people’s livelihoods.”

The report warned that the “status quo in Gaza is unsustainable.” It said the coastal territory’s recovery depends on an easing of the blockade and on donor countries honoring their pledges made at an international conference in Cairo after last year’s war.

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US Senate passes bill on fast-track trade authority for Obama

US President Barack Obama (AP Photo) US President Barack Obama (Source: AP photo)

In a major victory for President , the US Senate overcame bitter divisions  and approved a bill that gives him the authority to swiftly negotiate and forge international trade pacts.

A coalition of 48 Senate Republicans and 14 Democrats voted for Trade Promotion Authority last night, sending the legislation to a difficult fight in the House of Representatives, where it faces more entrenched opposition from Democrats.

The passage of the bill from the Senate by 62 to 37 votes was immediately welcomed by the US President.

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“Today’s bipartisan Senate vote is an important step toward ensuring the United States can negotiate and enforce strong, high-standards trade agreements,” Obama said in a statement.

“If done right, these agreements are vital to expanding opportunities for the middle class, levelling the playing field for American workers, and establishing rules for the global economy that help our businesses grow and hire by selling goods Made in America to the rest of the world,” Obama said.

This Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) legislation includes strong standards that will advance workers’ rights, protect the environment, promote a free and open Internet and it supports new robust measures to address unfair currency practices, he said.

The legislation also includes an important extension of Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) to help all American workers participate in the global economy, Obama said.

Passage of the bill allows the administration to finalise negotiations with 11 other Asian and Pacific nations and bring the trade deal to for a vote, with lawmakers not permitted to make changes.

Trade Promotion Authority bill’s passage is a critical step toward enabling US to negotiate modern trade agreements in the Asia-Pacific and Europe that reflect its values, said US Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker.

This will open up new markets, level the playing field for US businesses and workers and create more high-paying American jobs, she said.

US Trade Representative Michael Froman said the Trade Promotion Authority is a critical tool for advancing trade agreements that support jobs, protect workers and promote core American values.

“The legislation the Senate passed today will update Congress’s marching orders to the Administration on trade policy and put in place unprecedented new requirements for transparency and congressional consultation,” he said.

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Year-old Thai coup imposes superficial calm but little else

 Gen. Prayuth Chan ocha , Thai coup, Thailand, international news, news,  superficial calm,  superficial calm Speaking to reporters the same day, Prayuth acknowledged that seizing power "was wrong." (Source: AP)

Shortly after seizing power in a coup that followed months of debilitating street protests, Gen. Prayuth Chan ocha vowed to end Thailand’s decade of political upheaval once and for all. In his words, “to bring everything out in the open and fix it.”

A year later, the military can boast that it has restored stability and kept this Southeast Asian nation calm. But the bitter societal fissures that helped trigger the putsch are still simmering below the surface, unresolved.

“Our differences have just been pushed under the rug by a junta that prohibits freedom of expression,” said Sunai Phasuk, a senior researcher for Human Rights Watch. “Nothing has been done to address the root causes of Thailand’s deep divide.”

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What is happening now is the imposition of peace by force, Sunai said. “There’s no guarantee that whenever the junta lets go of their iron grip, the country will not to fall back into conflict,” he added.

On Friday, the anniversary of the takeover, police quashed a small, peaceful demonstration in Bangkok, triggering scuffles as those who took part were dragged away. At least 37 students were detained before being released Saturday after 11 hours of questioning. Seven others who staged a similar protest in the northeastern city of Khon Kaen were also freed.

Speaking to reporters the same day, Prayuth acknowledged that seizing power “was wrong.” But he nevertheless defended the overthrow of Yingluck Shinawatra’s government, saying “we cannot fix the past, but we can build for the future.”

The problem, critics argue, is that the junta may be sowing the seeds of more conflict by building that future on its own terms — with reform committees, a rubber-stamp legislature and no input from the party it toppled, Pheu Thai, whose supporters likely still represent a majority of the electorate.

The latest point of contention, a constitutional draft released in April, has been criticized even by groups who supported the putsch.If approved, the charter would significantly weaken the power of political parties, shifting it to unelected agencies like a proposed “National Moral Assembly” that would be empowered to investigate politicians for offenses as minor as “impolite” speech — ultimately initiating the path to their removal.

The charter’s drafters say such reforms are designed to check abuse by corrupt politicians, a problem acknowledged by all sides. But Pheu Thai officials say the real aim is to prevent their party from governing effectively if it wins again.

“Nobody knows how these agencies would be made accountable themselves,” said Democrat Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva, a former premier who was among those who called for Yingluck to resign as prime minister before the coup. Speaking of the junta, he added: “They should be more concerned with making elected governments more accountable, rather than making them weaker.”

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Roadside bomb kills 2, including Afghan district chief

An Afghan official says a roadside bomb has killed that two people, including a district administrative chief, in the country’s south.

Dost Mohammad Nayab, spokesman for the provincial governor of Uruzgan province, said today that Mohammad Ismail Haqyar, district chief of Charcheno, along with his bodyguard were killed while they were on their way to their office.

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Nayab says a friend of Haqyar was wounded in the attack, which took place in Charcheno district.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack. However, Taliban insurgents often use roadside bombs and suicide attacks against Afghan security forces and government officials across the country.

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Video purports to show kidnapped Chinese tourist in Pakistan

Taliban, Chinese national Pakistan, Kidnapped chinese man, china man Pakistan, Taliban Chinese national Taliban fighters.

A militant video purports to show a Chinese tourist kidnapped by the Taliban in Pakistan a year ago asking for his government to help him be released.

The video was released Sunday by a militant known to belong to a Taliban splinter group. While it could not be independently verified by The Associated Press, the man in the video resembled other known photographs of Hong Xudong, kidnapped in May 2014.

In the video, the man identified as Hong asks for the Chinese government to honor his kidnappers’ ransom demands, without ever stating them. Chinese officials and state media did not immediately comment on the video Sunday.

Hong went missing after entering Pakistan from neighboring India in April 2014. He was abducted near Pakistan’s lawless tribal regions, a haven for militants.

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IS claims responsibility for suicide blast that killed 21 in Saudi Arabia

Saudi suicide attack, saudi arabia suicide attack, IS terror attack, IS attack, IS saudi attack, suicide bomber, saudi under attack, saudi terror attack, saudi arabia under terror attack, shia saudi attack, Imam Ali mosque, al-Qadeeh, Shia Houthi rebels, Yemen, international news, news A family member of a victim mourns at the mosque in al-Qadeeh village. (Source: Reuters)

A suicide bomber killed 21 worshippers during Friday prayers in a packed mosque in Shia-dominated area of eastern Saudi Arabia, residents and the health minister said, in an attack claimed by the Islamic State militant group.

It was one of the deadliest assaults in recent years in the kingdom, where sectarian tensions have been frayed by nearly two months of Saudi-led air strikes on Shia Houthi rebels in neighbouring Yemen.

More than 150 people were praying when the huge explosion ripped through the Imam Ali mosque in the village of al-Qadeeh, witnesses said.

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A video posted online showed a hall filled with smoke and dust, with bloodied people moaning with pain as they lay on the floor littered with concrete and glass. More than 90 people were wounded, the Saudi health minister told state television.

“We were doing the first part of the prayers when we heard the blast,” worshipper Kamal Jaafar Hassan told Reuters by phone.

It was the first attack targeting minority Shias since November when gunmen opened fire during a religious celebration in al-Ahsa, also in the east where most of the group live in predominantly Sunni Muslim Saudi Arabia.

Islamic State said in a statement that one of its suicide bombers identified as Abu ‘Ammar al-Najdi carried out the attack using an explosives-laden belt that killed or wounded 250 people, US-based monitoring group SITE said on its Twitter account.

A photograph posted on social media showed the mutilated body of a young man, said to be the bomber.

The Saudi Interior Ministry described the attack as an act of terrorism and said it was carried out by “agents of sedition trying to target the kingdom’s national fabric”, according to a statement carried by state news agency SPA.

The agency quoted an Interior Ministry spokesman as saying that the bomber detonated a suicide belt hidden under his clothes inside the mosque.

“Security authorities will spare no effort in the pursuit of all those involved in this terrorist crime,” the official said.

A hospital official said that “around 20 people” were killed in the attack and more than 50 were under treatment at the hospital, some of them suffering from serious injuries.

In Yemen, a bomb at a Houthi mosque in the capital Sanaa on Friday was also claimed by Islamic State.

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Mass graves of hundreds of suspected trafficking victims found in Malaysia

Malaysia Mass graves, Mass graves, Malaysia Trafficking victims, Trafficking victims Mass graves, Malaysia news, asia news, world news, indian express news The Star newspaper reported on its website that nearly 100 bodies were found in one grave on Friday. (Source: AP photo)

Mass graves believed to contain bodies of hundreds of migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh have been found in Malaysia, media reported said on Sunday.

Police discovered 30 large graves containing the remains of hundreds of people in two places in the northern state of Perlis, which borders Thailand, the Utusan Malaysia newspaper reported.

The Star newspaper reported on its website that nearly 100 bodies were found in one grave on Friday. A police spokeswoman declined to comment saying a news conference on the issue would be held on Monday.

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A police official who declined to be identified said police commandos and forensic experts from the capital, Kuala Lumpur, were at the site but it was not clear how many graves and bodies had been found.

It was also not clear if the bodies were members of a Muslim minority from Myanmar known as Rohingyas, the official said.

Northern Malaysia is on a route for smugglers bringing people to Southeast Asia by boat from Myanmar, most of them Rohingyas, who say they are fleeing persecution, and people from Bangladesh seeking work.

Smugglers have also used southern Thailand and Utusan Malaysia said police believed the discovery had a connection to mass graves found on the Thai side of the border this month.

Twenty-six bodies were exhumed from a grave in Thailand’s Songkhla province, over the border from Perlis, near a camp with suspected links to human trafficking.

More than 3,000 migrants, most of them from Myanmar and Bangladesh, have landed on boats in Malaysia and Indonesia this month after a crackdown on trafficking in Thailand.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak on Thursday pledged assistance and ordered the navy to rescue thousands adrift at sea.

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Saudi Arabia says suicide bomber was Islamic State operative

The suicide bomber. (Source: AP) The suicide bomber. (Source: AP)

Saudi Arabia has confirmed that Friday’s suicide bombing at a Shiite mosque in the east of the country that killed 21 was carried out by an Islamic State militant, backing up an earlier claim by the group.

The Interior Ministry identified the bomber as Saudi citizen Saleh bin Abdul rahman Al-Qashaami in a statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency late Saturday.

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It says he was wanted for being an active member of an Islamic State-linked terrorist cell, and that the explosive use in the bombing was a military-grade compound known as RDX.

The attack in the village of al-Qudeeh in the eastern Qatif region was the deadliest assault by militants in the kingdom since a 2004 al Qaida attack on foreign worker compounds.

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Islamic State asserts responsibility for Shiite mosque blast in Saudi Arabia

The Islamic State said Friday that it was behind a blast that killed or wounded scores of worshipers at a Shiite mosque in Saudi Arabia, marking the first time the militant group has claimed an attack in the oil-rich kingdom and raising fears of an expanding sectarian conflict in the region.

There was no immediate comment from Saudi authorities on the Islamic State’s assertion of responsibility, which was carried in written and audio statements distributed by accounts linked with the Islamic State on Twitter.

The Islamic State communique said that a “martyrdom-seeking brother” set off an explosive belt during a gathering of “impure” worshippers, according to the SITE Intelligence group, which monitors militant postings on social media and elsewhere.

The Sunni extremist group views Shiites as Muslim heretics and opposes ties by Saudi Arabia’s Sunni leadership with the West. The same statement called the attack a “unique operation” and referred to the group’s newly declared “Najd Province,” which encompasses central Saudi Arabia and includes the Saudi capital, Riyadh. The Saudi monarchy presides over Islam’s two holiest sites, making the kingdom a hugely symbolic target for Islamist militants.

[]

In a statement also posted Friday on Twitter, the Saudi Health Ministry said 21 people were killed and 123 wounded in the blast.

The suicide bomber targeted worshipers at a mosque in the village of Qadeeh in the province of Qatif, part of a mostly Shiite enclave about 240 miles northeast of the capital.

An activist, Naseema al-Sada, told the Associated Press that a suicide bomber detonated explosives as worshipers marked the birth of the 7th-century Shiite saint Imam Hussein. The official Saudi News Agency reported an explosion at the mosque but had no further details. The report said authorities launched an investigation into the attack.

Saudi Arabia’s eastern region, which is the heartland of the kingdom’s Shiite minority, has been the scene of sporadic unrest and violence for years. Shiites, who account for an estimated 12 percent of the Saudi population, say they face widespread discrimination from the kingdom’s Sunni leaders. And Shiite protesters have clashed with Saudi security forces during demonstrations for greater rights in the past.

In November, gunmen opened fire on a Shiite religious procession, killing seven people. Saudi officials blamed the attack on militants linked to the Islamic State, a radical al-Qaeda offshoot also known as ISIS or ISIL.

At the time, an audio statement from a person claiming to represent the gunmen praised the Islamic State’s leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, but did not specify any group linked to the slayings, SITE reported.

A statement from U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on Friday condemned the attack “in the strongest terms” and said “such attacks on places of worship are abhorrent and intended to promote sectarian conflict.”

Also on Friday, Saudi journalist Sukina Meshkhis posted a tweet saying that the Islamic State does “not represent Sunnis.”

“Their filthy hands do not distinguish between Sunni and Shia,” Meshkhis said of Islamic State militants. “May God protect this nation from their evil.”

[]

In March, a Saudi-led military coalition began weeks of airstrikes in neighboring Yemen against Shiite rebels who Saudi officials say are backed by Iran. Tehran has denied it supports Yemen’s Shiite rebels, known as Houthis.

But many Shiite leaders in Saudi Arabia have pledged support for the military campaign in Yemen, where the Houthis practice Shiite traditions different from those in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere.

Security has been increased in the Shiite areas of Saudi Arabia since the air war began.

Murphy reported from Washington. Karen DeYoung in Washington and Heba Habib in Cairo contributed to this report.

Erin Cunningham is an Egypt-based correspondent for The Post. She previously covered conflicts in the Middle East and Afghanistan for the Christian Science Monitor, GlobalPost and The National.
Brian Murphy joined the Post after more than 20 years as a foreign correspondent and bureau chief for the Associated Press in Europe and the Middle East. He has reported from more than 50 countries and has written three books.
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NATO hopes to keep a base in Afghanistan, U.S. general says

The leaders of the United States and other NATO nations are intensifying discussions about future support for Afghanistan, probably meaning at least some American troops will remain here well after President Obama leaves office, a U.S. Army general said Saturday.

Gen. John F. Campbell, commander of the U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan, said that NATO military commanders plan to establish a base in Kabul to help distribute aid, facilitate weapons sales and continue efforts to train Afghan security forces.

Although Campbell stressed that NATO civilian officials probably will be in charge of the new mission, a contingent of troops also would be needed to secure the base. Campbell said that NATO forces also could be used to help bolster the Afghan air force and intelligence service.

“Countries will see that there are areas where they can help Afghanistan, and they will want to do that. And instead of trying to figure it out on their own, there will be a NATO headquarters where they can synchronize this,” said Campbell, adding it was too early to speculate how many NATO personnel would remain in Afghanistan and where they would be housed.

But preliminary discussions about the matter were held in mid-May when foreign ministers from the 28-nation NATO alliance met in Turkey. There was also a NATO defense chiefs meeting in Brussels last week. NATO leaders hope to finalize decisions about Afghanistan ahead of a scheduled NATO summit in Warsaw next summer, Campbell said.

“Our future presence will be led by civilians. It will have a light footprint, but it will have a military component,” NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said in a statement.

The talks are another sign that Obama will face continued difficulty in trying to fulfill his promise to withdraw all U.S. forces from Afghanistan by the time he leaves office in January 2017. Earlier this year, Obama pledge to slash the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan by half over the course of the year.

Instead, with the Taliban and the Islamic State posing continued threats in Afghanistan, Obama agreed to keep 9,800 American troops in the country into next year. They form the bulk of the 13,200 international troops currently stationed here.

Obama has stressed, though, that he plans to complete the withdrawal during his final months in office.

But any post-2016 NATO operation would be in addition to what Campbell said are already plans to leave a residual force of American troops behind to guard the U.S. Embassy. Preliminary planning for that calls for about 1,000 troops and contractors, Campbell said.

Talks about a long-term international presence in Afghanistan are taking place amid growing signs that the Afghan military is struggling to repel the Taliban insurgency.

Since the start of the annual spring fighting season in late April, Afghan forces have been with Taliban militants in at least 10 provinces. In northern Afghanistan, the challenges facing the Afghan army are so persistent that it is paying local militias to help it fight the Taliban, .

Campbell is also worried by the expansion of the Islamic State into Afghanistan and Pakistan. Citing local officials, Afghanistan’s Friday that Islamic State militants now control most of Nangahar province in northeastern Afghanistan.

Campbell dismissed those reports, saying neither Islamic State nor the Taliban control large areas of territory in Afghanistan. But Campbell said that the threat posed by the Islamic State has been steadily increasing over the past six months.

“We are not seeing it operationalized to the point of like what you are seeing in Syria,” Campbell said. “But I think, given time, that is where they want to go, so I think we have to squash that out now while we can.”

As part of a security agreement between Afghanistan and the United States, American forces are continuing raids and airstrikes against targets deemed a security risk. Campbell declined to comment on whether those targets now include Islamic State militants, but he said he has “all the appropriate authorities” to protect coalition troops.

If all U.S. troops in Afghanistan fall under NATO command in 2017, though, Campbell said new negotiations would be needed to continue those operations.

Tim Craig is The Post’s bureau chief in Pakistan. He has also covered conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan and within the District of Columbia government.
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Yes or no? Ireland decides whether to legalize gay marriage

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Voters in once staunchly Catholic Ireland were deciding Friday whether to legalize gay marriage in what the government’s equality minister called “a referendum like no other.”

Opinion polls suggest that the government-backed amendment favoring gay marriage will be approved. But gay rights activists expressed caution based on previous votes when anti-government sentiment and low turnout produced surprise referendum defeats. Voting ends Friday night, but results won’t be announced until Saturday.

Electoral officers reported stronger-than-usual turnout at polling stations in Catholic schools, church halls and pubs across this nation of 3.2 million registered voters. Some lines built up outside stations before the 7 a.m. opening.

Ireland has no system for mail-in voting, so residents from places like London, New York, Bangkok and Nairobi planned weekend trips home. Many documented their journeys on Twitter, often under the hashtags #HomeToVote or, for some of those in neighboring Britain, #GetTheBoatToVote. One posted a picture on a ­London-to-Wales train with travelers decked out in the rainbow colors and balloons of the gay rights movement.

Voters questioned as they left Dublin polling stations demonstrated a clear generational gap. Those under 40 were solidly “yes,” with older voters much more likely to have voted “no.”

“You can give the gays their rights without redefining the whole institution of marriage,” said Bridget Ryan, 61, as she voted with her border collie in tow at a Catholic parish hall.

The government’s minister for equality, Aodhan O Riordain, cast his “yes” ballot and declared it the most important vote of his life. He took heart from signs of a strong turnout, since involvement by young, first-time voters was considered key for passage.

“This is a referendum like no other,” O Riordain said. “There’s a buzz and an anticipation of this like I’ve never seen before.”

A second proposed amendment to lower the minimum age of presidential candidates from 35 to 21 was not expected to pass.

On the gay marriage question, leaders of the country’s predominant faith, Roman Catholicism, have led the opposition, arguing that legalization would undermine marriage as a pillar of society and trigger unintended legal consequences in Irish courts, where adoption and surrogacy rights loom as legal battlegrounds.

Yet even within the church, a vocal grass-roots minority voted in favor, arguing that their bishops had no right to stop the state from managing civil wedding rules.

“A lot of practicing Catholics are voting yes, and it’s no different in the clergy,” said the Rev. Tim Hazelwood, a 56-year-old County Cork parish priest who told his flock from the pulpit at weekend Masses that he was defying the bishops’ line on the vote.

“We didn’t get much leadership from our leaders. I was hearing cold and clinical arguments against gay marriage, and what they said didn’t represent my view of Gospel values at all,” said Hazelwood, a psychotherapist who counsels gay parishioners on how to cope in an often-unfriendly world.

He said he knows of at least four fellow priests who also voted yes and estimates that one in 10 did nationwide. “They would share my view that Ireland and the church have caused gay people a lot of unnecessary hurt and pain, and it’s time for that to stop,” he said.

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In El Salvador, beatification of slain archbishop reopens old wounds

Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to convene in a central plaza here Saturday to celebrate the beatification of Archbishop Óscar Romero, 35 years after he was shot in the heart while celebrating Mass.

Romero, a towering and polarizing figure in Salvadoran history, was chosen by Pope Francis this year to be beatified, the last step before sainthood. It is the first time a Salvadoran has received this religious honor. After years in which the process was stalled, Francis’s decision was a “surprise and a thrill for everyone,” said Simeon Reyes, a spokesman for the Catholic Church in El Salvador.

But not quite everyone. Within the church, even among the hierarchy in El Salvador, some conservatives have opposed Romero’s bid for sainthood, seeing him as a symbol for the Latin American left and the Salvadoran guerrillas who fought the U.S.-backed military in the 1980s.

For a politically divided country still struggling with , Romero’s ceremony has revived memories of the Cold War era and a 12-year civil war that left tens of thousands in this impoverished Central American country dead.

“There was so much controversy because there were always priests who were not in agreement with him,” said Gaspar Romero, the slain archbishop’s brother. “But the Vatican has recognized him as a saintly man, a man of faith, a man who spoke for the neediest, defending the poor from injustices, and who was killed for it.”

Romero’s legacy has been debated since his death in 1980. Known as a conservative prelate for most of his career, he became archbishop of San Salvador in 1977 and evolved into an unabashed advocate for the poor and a fierce critic of the government.

His opponents viewed him as a subversive and a revolutionary. Amid the debate, Romero’s case for sainthood became bogged down in church politics.

Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, who guided Romero’s beatification cause through the process, said this year that Salvadoran church representatives lobbied the Vatican to not approve Ro­mero. Over the years, the archbishop’s opponents argued that he was too politically controversial and a follower of “liberation theology,” a movement within the church focused on fighting injustice and inequality.

“The mountain of paper, unfortunately, weighed down” his case, Paglia was .

Romero was famous in El Salvador for his radio sermons, in which he catalogued killings and disappearances attributed to the military government. He also wrote to President Jimmy Carter asking him to halt military aid to the Salvadoran government. The day before the archbishop died, he called on soldiers to disobey orders and cease their abuse of the population.

The violence Romero encountered, including killings of fellow priests, “radicalized Romero and made him aware that the repression had no limits, that they would attack anyone equally, including the church,” said Jose Jorge Siman, a friend for many years.

Siman remembered how Romero once kept a senior U.S. official waiting while he spoke with a peasant. “The priority was the poor people,” he said.

Romero’s death was a watershed moment in El Salvador, a slaying that helped propel the country into civil war. He was shot March 24, 1980, while in a church at a hospice for cancer patients, where he lived. A “truth commission” set up after the war former army Maj. Roberto d’Aubuisson, a suspected leader of a right-wing death squad, ordered the killing, but he denied involvement and was not tried. He was the founder of the conservative ARENA party, which governed El Salvador until 2009 and now is in opposition.

“His death, for a whole generation of Christians in Latin America, was a demonstration of the high degree of barbarity of the military dictatorships,” said Bernardo Barranco, president of the Center of Religious Studies, an institute in Mexico City, who met Romero the year before he was killed. “Some categorize him as a subversive, but he wasn’t a revolutionary. He didn’t have an agenda for the country, including socialism — his only demand was to protect the people.”

After Romero’s death, his message was taken up by both Catholic parishioners and left-wing opponents of the military regime.

“He was seen by many bishops as giving cover to a Marxist infiltration of the church,” said Matthew Whelan, a Duke University doctoral student researching a dissertation on Romero at the church’s archives in San Salvador. “There’s a sector of the church that’s very supportive and a sector that’s much more cautious. What they don’t like is how Romero was taken up by the left. They don’t like that conflation.”

The decision to beatify Romero suggests that the pope, an Argentine well-acquainted with military repression in his home country during the “dirty war” of the 1970s and ’80s, found Romero’s saintly cause compelling regardless of the concerns of his political opponents. But the progress of the case also signifies that the Cold War wounds are gradually healing. Today, a former Marxist guerrilla commander, Salvador Sánchez Cerén, is president of El Salvador.

“The Vatican froze the cause of Romero, but now, with the presence of Pope Francis, a sensible Latino who knows the history of Latin America, the process has been revived,” Barranco said. “It’s an acknowledgment of a figure of the church who has been denied for decades.”

Martinez reported from Mexico City.

Joshua Partlow is The Post’s bureau chief in Mexico. He has served previously as the bureau chief in Kabul and as a correspondent in Brazil and Iraq.
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